guardian.co.uk,
Damian Carrington, Sunday 27 November 2011
The UK
government has been giving secret support at the very highest levels to
Canada's campaign against European penalties on its highly polluting tar sands
fuel, the Guardian can reveal.
At the same
time, the UK government was being lobbied by Shell and BP, which both have
major tar sands projects in Alberta, and opened a new consulate in the province
to "support British commercial interests".
At least 15
high-level meetings and frequent communications have taken place since
September, with David Cameron discussing the issue with his counterpart Stephen
Harper during his visit to Canada, and stating privately that the UK wanted
"to work with Canada on finding a way forward", according to
documents released under freedom of information laws.
Charles
Hendry, the energy minister, later told the Canadian high commissioner:
"We would value continued discussion with you on how we can progress
discussions in Brussels," with Hendry's official asking the Canadians if
they had "any suggestions as to what we might do, given the politics in
Brussels".
Canada's
vast tar sands – also known as oil sands – are the second largest reserve of
carbon in the world after Saudi Arabia, although the energy needed to extract
oil from the ground means the process results in far more greenhouse gas
emissions than conventional oil drilling, as well as causing the destruction of
forests and air and water pollution.
Nasa
scientist James Hansen says if the oil sands were exploited as projected it
would be "game over for the climate".
The
European proposal is to designate transport fuel from tar sands as resulting in
22% more greenhouse gas emissions than that from conventional fuels. This would
make suppliers, who have to reduce the emissions from their fuels by 10% by
2020, very reluctant to include it in their fuel mix. It would also set an
unwelcome precedent for Canada by officially labelling fuel from tar sands as
dirtier.
The UK and
Canada's shared opposition to the European plan puts the UK in a minority among
EU countries and will be deeply embarrassing as a new round of global negotiations on tackling climate change begins in Durban, South Africa on
Monday. Chris Huhne, the energy and climate change secretary, claimed on
Thursday that the UK was showing "leadership" in the UN negotiations,
while Canada's prime minister has blocked climate laws. The revelations are
also the latest blow to Cameron's claim to be the "greenest government
ever".
The vote to
approve the European fuel quality regulations takes place on Friday. In advance
of that, William Hague, the foreign secretary, has also given support to
Canada, sending an "immediate action" cable in September to the UK's
embassies there asking "to communicate our position and seek Canadian
views on what might be acceptable".
However,
the Department for Transport, in which the Liberal Democrat minister Norman
Baker has responsibility for tar sands issues, has released only two
presentations made to it by Shell, both heavily redacted. The DfT rejected
requests to release at least six other relevant documents on the grounds of
commercial confidentiality and adverse effect on international relations, as
did the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS), where Shell also
met ministers.
BP has
lobbied ministers, too. Its vice president in Europe, Peter Mather, has been,
in his own words, "bending the ear" of Baker. Mather also sent a
letter in which he wrote: "The regulatory burden would be considerable at
a time when the industry is already creaking under the weight of a heavy
regulatory regime."
John
Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, said: "The scale of oil
industry lobbying exposed in these documents is quite extraordinary. It's
especially worrying that Baker held a secret meeting with Shell about this key
European vote on tar sands. But worse still, he's now covering up what was
discussed."
Colin
Baines, toxic fuels campaign manager at the Co-operative, the UK mutual business
group which targets tar sands as part of its climate change campaigning, said:
"It is very disappointing that the UK government is supporting Canada's
efforts and we hope it has a rethink and puts tackling climate change ahead of
Canada's trade interests when it comes to vote on the European commission's
commonsense proposal."
The
documents were obtained by the Co-operative under environmental information
regulations, a type of freedom of information law. They include letters to and
from ministers, diplomatic correspondence and notes of meetings.
Baker said:
"The government is staying true to its aspiration to be the greenest ever
by seeking to secure the best deal it can for the environment from the
discussions ongoing in the EU about the fuel quality directive.
"We
believe that means tackling all highly polluting crudes equally, not simply oil
sands from one particular country. These certainly represent a problem, but so
do other crudes, and it makes no environmental sense to ignore these.
"This
is not about protecting one particular country – we want to deal with all
crudes, not just one type, and in a way that is based on robust and objective
data, related to their carbon emissions."
Like Baker,
Canada also argues in the newly revealed documents that it is unfair to single
out one nation and that other types of oil can be as dirty as tar sands.
But Baines
says these arguments are "myths", as the European proposal does not name any nation and on average fuel from tar sands is a greater source of carbon by a clear margin, according to a Stanford University study for the European
commission.
Furthermore,
the European commission proposal allows for changes in the emissions designated
for fuel types.
Canadian
ministers and diplomats state they support an "overarching ambition"
to reduce carbon emissions. But Canada has admitted it will fail to meet its Kyoto protocol target of a 6% cut compared with 1990 levels: in 2009 its
emissions were 34% higher.
In
September, Lord Sassoon, the UK Treasury minister for commerce, spent two days
in the Albertan capital Calgary, a few hundred miles from the vast oil sand pits excavated by 1,500-tonne diggers. The International Energy Agency expects
production to treble in the next 20 years. Sassoon met politicians and oil
executives to discuss boosting trade with the UK and told reporters that
Alberta is "one of the main focuses of British business". Alberta's
energy minister, Ron Liepert, told Sassoon privately he "was grateful for
UK efforts" on the tar sands issue in Europe.
The new
British consulate-general in Calgary was announced by Hague on 18 October, the
same day as Canadian energy minister Joe Oliver said: "[The British] have been very, very helpful and we're pleased about that. Many European companies
are heavily invested in the oil sands and they also would be concerned."
The new documents and diplomatic sources suggest the Netherlands, Spain and
Poland are among those backing the British-Canadian position.
In London,
a senior Canadian diplomat, Sushma Gera, told BIS: "Canada will not
hesitate to defend her interests," perhaps via a World Trade Organisation
dispute, a possibility also raised by Shell in its presentation to DfT.
Bill
McKibben, a leading US environmentalist, who was arrested in August protesting against a major oil sands pipeline called Keystone XL said: "The UK seems
to have emerged as Canada's partner in crime, leaning on Brussels to let this
crud across the borders. This will be among the biggest single environmental
decisions the Cameron government makes."
Greenpeace's
Sauven, along with the head of Friends of the Earth, Andy Atkins, and David
Nussbaum, leader of WWF-UK, have written to Nick Clegg, deputy prime minister
and Lib Dem leader.
The letter
says: "We ask you to intervene personally on this, to ensure that your
party's green ambitions are more effectively upheld across Whitehall."
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GLOBAL WARMING / CLIMATE CHANGE ISSUE (THRU CHANNELING)
7. Let us give you another prime example of duality, the controversial issue you call global warming. Those who believe this is a natural occurrence cite Earth’s ice ages as proof that humankind has no hand in today’s record temperatures, the melting of glaciers and the harsh climate anomalies. They believe that there is no need to change manufacturing operations or turn to alternative energy sources because doing so would be cost-prohibitive. Then there are those who believe that science proves climate change is manmade. They point to industrial pollution and the use of biofuels as the cause, and they maintain that unless action is taken to end those practices, the cost will be total destruction of the environment. With the two sides at loggerheads, no large scale efforts are underway to change business as usual.
8. The truth is, both sides have validity even though neither knows that Earth herself is in the process of restoring the moderate climate of Eden times, when her body was pristine and healthy. And pollution, a product of humanity, must stop because it is harming the planet and all of its life forms. Eventually the two sides of the global warming issue will realize that protecting and repairing the environment is essential, and formerly extreme views will be reconciled into effective methods to remedy the present critical state. Read more ..... (Q&A - November 2010 (Matthew Channeling))
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