Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

US CLIMATE BILL WEAKENS


Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2009


14 May 2009 - Washington, DC, United States — A piece of legislation that started out as a real opportunity for the US to combat climate change has been co-opted by special interests and now threatens to do more harm than good. The Waxman- Markey bill is set to go before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Monday and could remove the ability of the US to commit to real action on climate change at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen in December.

According to reports, the 600-page draft bill on energy and climate originally aimed at providing solutions to climate change - including a plan to cap and reduce greenhouse-gas emissions in the US - has become significantly weaker over the past week and is no longer strong enough to help the US do its part to combat climate change.

Big business gets the bail out
The draft bill has always failed to explain how it would allocate the money made from the sale of pollution permits within the emissions cap and trade scheme proposed by the bill. This money should be used to build clean energy solutions – like a smart grid. Instead, the discussion draft contains giveaways and loopholes for the dirty coal industry and false solutions such as Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) Even worse, we are hearing reports that the bill has become significantly worse in this area over the past week. Bloomberg recently reported that Henry Waxman (D-CA), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, is offering as much as US $40 billion in free pollution permits to “utilities, refiners and manufacturers.”

President Obama initially called for 100 percent of pollution permits to be auctioned off and to use up to 83 percent of the revenues to help taxpayers to pay for higher energy costs. According to reports, the bill might actually end up giving as much as 55 percent of the permits away for free. The EU’s Emissions Trading Scheme originally gave away so many permits that pollution permits were trading for as little as 1 euro cent, providing no incentive for polluting industries to clean up their act. Now the fossil fuels industries – who have spent some $45 million lobbying against the bill – are succeeding in convincing House Democrats to make the same mistake.

False Solutions
There are also reports that giveaways to companies researching Carbon Capture and Sequestration, could be as much as US$10 billion. CCS is an unproven technology still decades away from large-scale implementation and is a dangerous distraction from real climate change solutions. But that still isn’t everything, the emissions targets contained in the bill seem to get worse and worse. The bill originally called for roughly what scientists say is necessary to avert the worst effects of climate change: 25 to 40 percent below 11000 emissions levels by 2020. However, now the bill looks like offering a cut of 4 percent on 11000 emission levels. To make this look good the baseline has been shifted to 2005, allowing the politicians to present it as a much bigger cut . Even worse, the conservative Democrats who have been most instrumental in watering down the bill are attempting to get that target reduced even further, to 6 percent of 2005 levels by 2020.

The bill is set to go before the full House Energy and Commerce Committee by next Monday. Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and Public Citizen, have all raised serious concerns about the direction of the bill and called on committee not to pass the bill as it is written now. Read our statement in full. For more info, you can also read Greenpeace’s original statement on the Waxman-Markey draft bill, and Friends of the Earth’s assessment.

President Obama cannot let this situation continue. He needs to tell congress to deliver an effective bill, that will make the polluters pay, rather than pay the polluters.

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Can Statoil wash its hands of the Tar Sands?

14 May 2009 - Oslo, Norway — The largest industrial project in the world. The largest capital investment in history. The world’s second largest oil field. The Canadian Tar Sands show just how desperate the oil industry is to feed its carbon habit. Now, thanks to a Greenpeace campaign investors are starting to question the wisdom paying for a project which will destroy an area of forest the size of England, then poison the ground and condemn the world to runaway climate change.

The tar sands are a source of oil buried below the Boreal Forest of northern Alberta. The tar sands are made up mostly of sand. Only 10-12 per cent is bitumen – a very heavy crude oil that must be heavily processed and refined to be turned into synthetic crude oil. Deposits of tar sands are spread out over 138 000 km2 of land. The tar sands projects threaten ecosystems over a huge area of Alberta; polluting and depleting waterways, endangering the health of wildlife and local communities, and contributing to climate change.

One of the major investors in the tar sands is Statoil, a Norweigan oil company two thirds owned by the government. The Norwegian government continues to support the project, however, the owners of the other third of Statoil, are having second thoughts

Danske Bank has expressed its opposition to the contentious project while Norway’s largest bank, DnBNOR, is holding meetings today to discuss whether continued involvement in the Alberta tar sands is a sound investment.

In addition, prominent Statoil stakeholders, Folksam, a Swedish insurance company and KPA, a Swedish pension fund, have already sent in their votes backing a Greenpeace motion demanding that Statoil withdraw its investments.

Greenpeace is making the tar sands a key issue in Norway, Sweden and Denmark in the lead-up to Statoil’s AGM on May 19th. As a minor shareholder, with just enough shares to ask questions, Greenpeace has brought forward a motion calling on Statoil to withdraw its investments from the tar sands.

The Alberta tar sands has dominated headlines and television news since a Greenpeace Canada delegation arrived in Oslo Monday. Two of the delegates, Andrew Nikiforuk and Dr. John O’Connor, have raised concerns about the environmental, social and financial risks of tar sands investments that are reverberating through the Nordic business community. A two-page story on the delegates ran today in Norway’s largest business newspaper, as well as a full-page profile on Nikiforuk.

“Hearing Canadians telling their own story about the reality of the tar sands is making all the difference,” said Martin Norman, Greenpeace Nordic energy campaigner. “Already politicians and investors are telling us they are upset they have been so misled.”

Statoil’s purchase of tar sands rights in Canada in 2007 led to headlines in Norway critical of the company and internal unrest within the company. Statoil has lately tried to create an impression that the company has chosen ‘In Situ’ extraction because it is an environmentally friendly form of extraction, and that carbon capture and storage (CCS) will solve the emission problems related to tar sands.

In Situ means pumping steam into the sands to heat the bitumen until it flows toward the wells. While this doesn't do the same damage to the surface as the alternative open cast mining technique, vast amounts of natural gas are burned to heat the steam, creating even higher CO2 emissions.

The Greenpeace delegation has been explaining that ‘In Situ’ has a much larger environmental footprint than open pit mining, and that CCS is simply not viable in the tar sands.

So far the Norweigan government is staying put. The environment minister has applauded the shareholder resolutions, but refuses to intervene. The political pressure is building though, and on the 19th of May Statoil will have the chance to wash its hands of its role in this abhorrent investment.

In the end, as was reported this month in the science journal nature, if we want to hold climate change below two degrees, which the scientific community says is the tipping point for runaway climate change, we cannot afford to touch the tar sands. It is not economic, it is not environmentally acceptable and it places a tragic burden on the people of the First Nations, whose health and way of life is being destroyed by the tar sands toxic runoff.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
Press consultantship
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