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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (106766)1/3/2012 7:27:45 PM
From: zeta1961  Respond to of 149317
 
A startling new study from the Center for Global Development shows that full development of the Canadian Tar Sands would have a devastating effect on global food production, especially in climate vulnerable continents such as Africa.

This is incredibly unjust. As the report says, "There is striking asymmetry in regional impacts. Full exploitation of the oil sands deposit by Canada, a high-income country, would have the most severe impacts on regions where the poorest countries are concentrated."
We've known for the last year that the full exploitation of the tar sands would mean "game over" for the climate. This new report puts into stark relief exactly what "game over" looks like: millions upon millions of starving people across the planet.


A loss in agricultural productivity due to climate change will affect more than 3 billion people around the world. Because of the massive carbon emissions from the Canadian Tar Sands, full exploitation of the resource would lead to a 5.6 percent loss in productivity, with 25 countries experiencing losses of 7.1 percent. Countries with especially damaging impacts include the already drought stricken Ethiopia, Sudan, and other Horn of Africa nations, as well as major population centers like India.

This is incredibly unjust. As the report says, "There is striking asymmetry in regional impacts. Full exploitation of the oil sands deposit by Canada, a high-income country, would have the most severe impacts on regions where the poorest countries are concentrated."
We've known for the last year that the full exploitation of the tar sands would mean "game over" for the climate. This new report puts into stark relief exactly what "game over" looks like: millions upon millions of starving people across the planet.


We couldn't put it anymore succintly and powerfully than the report itself: "Put simply, the potential destructive power in Canada’s oil sands exceeds anything modern civilization has witnessed to date."

Keeping the Keystone XL pipeline off the table and stopping Congressional attempts to resurrect the project is the single most important thing that we can do right now to prevent the tar sands from being developed. All of you who have worked with us in 2011 played a crucial role in that fight. We're going to need you more than ever in 2012.

350.org



To: stockman_scott who wrote (106766)1/4/2012 11:13:16 PM
From: zeta1961  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
SS, fortunately Europe and California are applying the brakes to Keystone and tar sand development.

energytribune.com

Canada’s oil sands hold some of the world’s biggest oil deposits and logically should be America’s best guarantor for energy security. Their development though is increasingly facing strong headwind from both US and European regulators worried about environmental impact. They are generating large and vehement opposition from both industry and members of the public.

While the US dealt the first blow by postponing approval of a new vital pipeline, European Union and Californian climate change legislation will hit oil sands where it hurts the most: the bottom line.

Development of the deposits in Alberta, just across Montana, will at the very least be delayed, with the implied consequences to world oil markets and Canadian pockets, but most won’t be scrapped because oil sands have become a state priority. Still, the industry’s future has grown uncertain, morphing from silver bullet to dubious black sheep of the oil business.

Earlier this month, the EU Commission delayed implementation of controversial fuel quality regulation that would label products from oil sands as emitting 22 percent more carbon dioxide than conventional crude, in effect making them more expensive for refiners, especially after 2013 when Europe’s carbon trading scheme goes into full force.

Europe is mirroring California, which already labeled fuels from oil sands as dirty, also making it less attractive for refiners that will have to meet emission cuts. Even before, the Obama administration postponed approval of the Keystone XL pipeline to connect oil sands all the way down to Texas ports, and requested a new route for the pipeline, keeping the project alive, but conveniently delaying any approval for after the next elections.

At the heart of the issue though is not diplomacy or lobbying, but hard numbers. Canada is looking to increase output from oil sands regardless of what the US and Europe want or say because China is not only one of the biggest investors in oil sands, it’s also a happy customer for all the planned increased output.

For Beijing it’s a win-win, but the process would be even lengthier because a pipeline crossing westward to the Pacific Ocean would be required, one already facing even more opposition.

“I am very serious about selling our oil off this continent, selling our energy products off to China,” said Prime Minister Stephen Harper last week. “I ran into several senior Americans, who all said, ‘Don’t worry, we’ll get Keystone done. You can sell all of your oil to us.’ I said, ‘Yeah we’d love to but the problem is now we're on a different track.’”

Canada has been more confrontational toward the EU, perhaps because it’s not a natural export market, as the US and China might be. The UK and European oil companies have lobbied hard on Canada’s behalf. But the European measure appears set for final approval next year.

“This fuel quality directive is not scientific, it’s discriminatory and it stigmatizes the oil sands in an unfair way,” said Canadian Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver earlier this month.

The official position though contrasts high-level concern in the Canadian government exposed in two recently leaked documents from the Environment Ministry. “National and international concern over the environmental footprint of oil sands production represents a growing threat to the economic future of the industry,” one said. “Governments need to provide assurance in order to secure the industry’s social license to operate. The [industry] needs credible scientific information on its environmental performance as soon as possible.”

Oil sands are a mixture of sand, clay, water, and bitumen, most of which is a solid unconventional oil. So far, mostly the surface portion has been trucked to complex refineries that first separate the bitumen and then upgrade it before it can be refined into consumer products. In the future, most of the remaining oil sands, those that are buried, will have to be extracted in situ by heating and diluting the bitumen to help pump it up is a more liquid form.

But surface mining of oil sands significantly alters the landscape and ecosystem because it literally implies opening holes in the ground several football fields big. Additionally, the process is water and power intensive, meaning more natural gas will be required into the future and more water will be polluted. Over 65 square miles of tailing ponds have already been carved into the ground for accumulated unwanted byproducts.

Growing uncertainty is making investments a lot more expensive and politically risky. These environmental, political, and economic risks are compounded by the capital intensive nature of the investments, with longer return periods. Canada’s targets “could be hindered by continuing debate about the environmental effects of oil sands exploitation,” the IEA said it its 2011World Energy Outlook.

The IEA estimated last year that most new oil-sands projects are profitable at prices “above $65 to $75 per barrel.” But “investment payback is spread over a much longer time period. … As oil prices increase, some of the costs, notably of gas and services, will also rise, so the price threshold for profitability will also increase.”

At stake are at least 1.5 million barrels per day from oil sands by 2020, according to the International Energy Agency and the US Energy Information Administration most recent forecast from the second half of 2011. Canada is the second biggest source of oil output growth at least for the next two decades, after Brazil, and accordingly will weigh heavily on oil price fluctuations.

Oil prices are bound to increase with ongoing delays and project cancellations, an unwanted scenario both for Europe and the US, but welcomed by oil producing antagonists like Russia, Iran, and Venezuela. Furthermore, the US energy security plan is based on a growing share of Canadian oil –even if not necessarily additional volume-, to decrease reliance on the Middle East and Venezuela.

The eventual production –and profitability- remains ultimately a political decision, and Canada appears set in delivering. But the bonanza might have to wait longer for China and other buyers less concerned about the environmental footprint. In the meantime, the European and Californian fuel directives appear set to make oil sand products more expensive.




To: stockman_scott who wrote (106766)1/18/2012 12:52:55 PM
From: zeta1961  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Keystone XL Pipeline: Obama Administration Announcing It Will Not Go Forward With Controversial Plan

Official announcement expected at 3pm...Learned of this on my Twitter sopa strike feed;-)

huffingtonpost.com

WASHINGTON -- The State Department will not approve a permit for the construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline across the U.S.-Canada border, sources told multiple media outlets on Wednesday.

The news comes after White House Press Secretary Jay Carney announced at a Tuesday afternoon press conference that President Barack Obama cannot approve the pipeline by the February 21 deadline imposed by Congress.

It also comes after House and Senate lawmakers signaled they would introduce new legislation pushing the permit forward even if the Obama administration rejected the proposal. That bill, drafted by Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.), would have shut the White House out of the decision making process around Keystone, leaving Congress full authority to issue approval of the pipeline, which would stretch an estimated 1,700 miles from tar sands in Canada to oil refineries along the Gulf Coast.

The State Department's permitting process technically applies only to the portion of the pipeline that crosses the international border between Canada and the United States. Rejecting that permit might prevent the pipeline from being built in its entirety, but sources familiar with the process tell The Huffington Post that TransCanada should be able to build a shovel-ready southern portion of the pipeline -- between Oklahoma and Texas -- without further approvals. TransCanada, the corporation that stands to profit from construction of the $7 billion pipeline, can also re-apply for the border crossing at any time, sources said.

Author and environmentalist Bill McKibben, the founder of 350.org who spearheaded the movement against the pipeline, reacted to the news in a statement on Wednesday afternoon.

Assuming that what we're hearing is true, this isn't just the right call, it's the brave call. The knock on Barack Obama from many quarters has been that he's too conciliatory. But here, in the face of a naked political threat from Big Oil to exact 'huge political consequences,' he's stood up strong. This is a victory for Americans who testified in record numbers, and who demanded that science get the hearing usually reserved for big money.We're well aware that the fossil fuel lobby won't give up easily. They have control of Congress. But as the year goes on, we'll try to break some of that hammerlock, both so that environmental review can go forward, and so that we can stop wasting taxpayer money on subsidies and handouts to the industry. The action starts mid-day Tuesday on Capitol Hill, when 500 referees will blow the whistle on Big Oil's attempts to corrupt the Congress.

Congress has pushed Obama to decide by February 21 on whether to approve the controversial pipeline.