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Josh on Pachauri’s “hacked” emails and resignation
Anthony Watts / 1 hour ago February 24, 2015
Apparently, Pachauri’s troubles are all just due to an “unfortunate series of incidents”… and his resignation from the IPCC is just to give time to set the record straight.

Meanwhile, the world awaits the inevitable mug shot and the perp walk.

February 24, 2015 in IPCC, Satire.
 

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And true to form the smear that OBD was very concerned with for "Soon" is full tilt by OBD on "Pachauri"
Yes a double standard. Typical .....
 
Good try at a defence.
 

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Good try at a defence.
Have at her... I know you won't disappoint.
Go hard and get it out of your system.
Show us what you are made of....
 
'Harasser' who lifts staff like little girls


Rajendra Pachauri
New Delhi, Feb. 21: Rajendra Pachauri, the chief of the Nobel-winning UN climate change panel, preyed serially on women employees for at least a decade at his New Delhi-based non-profit energy organisation, senior lawyers claimed today, citing a police complaint and a testimony filed by two women.

The lawyers' claims and interviews with two long-term employees at The Energy and Resources Institute (Teri) suggest that Pachauri reigned over a culture of high-fives, hugs and other forms of physical contact that some women found loaded with sexual innuendoes.

Pachauri is the chairperson of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which shared the Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore, the former US Vice-President, in 2007 "for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change". Pachauri is also the director-general of Teri.

The testimony from a woman who says she was among Pachauri's victims when she worked at Teri in 2005 reads: "A sexual harasser 10 years back, a sexual harasser today. He did it to me and others then. He has done it to her and possibly others now.... His physical advances and sexual innuendoes and acts, often reduced to as 'inappropriate behaviour', have been common knowledge and corridor gossip."

She wrote in a letter to lawyer Vrinda Grover how she and other women who have worked in Teri "have in different points of time and capacities either been through similar harassment through his hands or known someone who did".

Grover said that this was not the only victim who had reached out to her after a 29-year old employee of Teri filed an FIR with the Delhi police on February 18, accusing Pachauri of sexual harassment.

"I know of at least three such cases, and the pattern is the same in every case," Grover said.

In the FIR, the complainant, who works as a research associate at Teri, has described how she was forcibly kissed and touched by Pachauri despite her repeated protests.

She has also attached text messages and mail detailing how he had continued to make lewd suggestions despite knowing that they were making her uncomfortable, she said.

The testimony, which the victim plans to publish soon, also refers to alleged incidents that happened on the rooftop garden of the Teri office where, she said, Pachauri "lifted female employees as if they were little girls. Some would run away seeing him approach them."

Another former employee who did not want to be named said that such inappropriate behaviour was commonplace at office, and the women working in the director-general's office - mostly researchers, scientists and academics - were referred to as the "fifth-floor girls" by the office grapevine.

At one point of time or another, the employee claimed, these women would get calls on their personal mobile numbers, enquiries on their personal lives, invitations for wine and dinners, handholding and kisses.

All these women, including the complainant, would have a nickname given to them by him - a derivative of their official name, the testimonial claimed.
 
Look, more B.S?
Nature Magazine/ University Of Arizona Take Climate Fraud To Spectacular Heights

Sea levels north of New York City rose by 128mm in two years, according to a report in the journal, Nature Communications.

Coastal areas will need to prepare for short term and extreme sea level events, say US scientists.

Climate models suggest extreme sea level rises will become more common this century.

“The extreme sea level rise event during 2009-10 along the northeast coast of North America is unprecedented during the past century,”Prof Jianjun Yin of the University of Arizona told BBC News.

“Statistical analysis indicates that it is a 1-in-850 year event.”

BBC News – US sea level north of New York City ‘jumped by 128mm’

Fraudulent science doesn’t get any worse than this. There was a larger jump around 1875, which probably wasn’t 850 years ago. Almost all of the 2009-2010 gain has seen been lost. This event had nothing to do with climate.



Data and Station Information for NEW YORK ( THE BATTERY)
Nature Magazine/ University Of Arizona Take Climate Fraud To Spectacular Heights

Sea levels north of New York City rose by 128mm in two years, according to a report in the journal, Nature Communications.

Coastal areas will need to prepare for short term and extreme sea level events, say US scientists.

Climate models suggest extreme sea level rises will become more common this century.

“The extreme sea level rise event during 2009-10 along the northeast coast of North America is unprecedented during the past century,”Prof Jianjun Yin of the University of Arizona told BBC News.

“Statistical analysis indicates that it is a 1-in-850 year event.”

BBC News – US sea level north of New York City ‘jumped by 128mm’

Fraudulent science doesn’t get any worse than this. There was a larger jump around 1875, which probably wasn’t 850 years ago. Almost all of the 2009-2010 gain has seen been lost. This event had nothing to do with climate.

ScreenHunter_7405 Feb. 24 18.42

ScreenHunter_7397 Feb. 24 18.03

Data and Station Information for NEW YORK ( THE BATTERY)

The rate of sea level rise atNew York hasn’t changed in 160 years. These scientists are engaged in massive fraud, intended for propaganda purposes only. Their work has nothing to do with science.
The rate of sea level rise atNew York hasn’t changed in 160 years. These scientists are engaged in massive fraud, intended for propaganda purposes only. Their work has nothing to do with science.
 

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Look, more B.S?
Nature Magazine/ University Of Arizona Take Climate Fraud To Spectacular Heights


ScreenHunter_7397 Feb. 24 18.03

Data and Station Information for NEW YORK ( THE BATTERY)

The rate of sea level rise atNew York hasn’t changed in 160 years. These scientists are engaged in massive fraud, intended for propaganda purposes only. Their work has nothing to do with science.
The rate of sea level rise atNew York hasn’t changed in 160 years. These scientists are engaged in massive fraud, intended for propaganda purposes only. Their work has nothing to do with science.

It's stunning OBD that you can't see a cherry pick when ScreenHunter points it out.
Still in denial so that clouds your thinking I guess.
Here I will point it out......
Thousands of tide gauges across the eastern US with 10's of thousands of records and your team picks one tide gauge to make a point. Yea a "fraud of spectacular heights" but for who? Team denial and it's fan club.

Link to the paper
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2013GL057992/abstract

Link to the news clipping
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31604953

Tell us something OBD.. don't you get tired of your spectacular fails?
 
Regardless of which "side" of this discussion you are on, here's an interesting paper that explains much of what is going on in this thread

Science vs Conspiracy: Collective Narratives in the Age of Misinformation

Selected quotes [My restatement thereof]

"The World Wide Web has changed the dynamics of information transmission as well as the agenda-setting process [1]. Relevance of facts, in particular when related to social relevant issues, mingle with half-truths and untruths to create informational blends [2, 3]. In such a scenario, as pointed out by [4], individuals can be uninformed or misinformed and the role of corrections in the diffusion and formation of biased beliefs are not effective. In particular, in [5] online debunking campaigns have been shown to create a reinforcement effect in usual consumers of conspiracy stories. In this work, we address users consumption patterns of information using very distinct type of contents—i.e., main stream scientific news and conspiracy news. The former diffuse scientific knowledge and the sources are easy to access. The latter aim at diffusing what is neglected by manipulated main stream media. Specifically, conspiracy theses tend to reduce the complexity of reality by explaining significant social or political aspects as plots conceived by powerful individuals or organizations. Since these kinds of arguments can sometimes involve the rejection of science, alternative explanations are invoked to replace the scientific evidence. For instance, people who reject the link between HIV and AIDS generally believe that AIDS was created by the U.S. Government to control the African American population [6]. The spread of misinformation in such a context might be particularly difficult to detect and correct because of the social reinforcement—i.e. people are more likely to trust an information someway consistent with their system of beliefs [7–17]. The growth of knowledge fostered by an interconnected world together with the unprecedented acceleration of scientific progress has exposed the society to an increasing level of complexity to explain reality and its phenomena. Indeed, a shift of paradigm in the production and consumption of contents has occurred, utterly increasing the volumes as well as the heterogeneity of available to users. Everyone on the Web can produce, access and diffuse contents actively participating in the creation, diffusion and reinforcement of different narratives. Such a large heterogeneity of information fostered the aggregation of people around common interests, worldviews and narratives." [It is unlikely that anyone is going to change anyone's mind with additional information and in fact continued discussion reinforces hard held beliefs.]

"Our analysis starts with an outline of information consumption patterns and the community structure of pages according to their common users. We label polarized users—users which their like activity (positive feedback) is almost (95%) exclusively on the pages of one category—and find similar interaction patterns on the two communities with respect to preferred contents. According to literature on opinion dynamics [37], in particular the one related to the Bounded confidence model (BCM) [51]—two individuals are able to influence each other only if the distance between their opinion is below a given distance—users consuming different and opposite information tend to aggregate into isolated clusters (polarization)." [Unless you're not too far apart in your beliefs at the beginning, more online discussion will not sway the other person.]

Perhaps (after 253 pages) it's time to let this thread die.
 
The rate of sea level rise at New York hasn’t changed in 160 years. These scientists are engaged in massive fraud, intended for propaganda purposes only. Their work has nothing to do with science.






It's stunning OBD that you can't see a cherry pick when ScreenHunter points it out.
Still in denial so that clouds your thinking I guess.
Here I will point it out......
Thousands of tide gauges across the eastern US with 10's of thousands of records and your team picks one tide gauge to make a point. Yea a "fraud of spectacular heights" but for who? Team denial and it's fan club.

Link to the paper
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2013GL057992/abstract

Link to the news clipping
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31604953

Tell us something OBD.. don't you get tired of your spectacular fails?
 

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The rate of sea level rise at New York hasn’t changed in 160 years. These scientists are engaged in massive fraud, intended for propaganda purposes only. Their work has nothing to do with science.

Well that's an odd statement considering you just posted this graph that you prove there has been a change....
Check your move....
edit:
I missed the "rate" part guess I was blown away by the Hoax part.
So I guess what your trying to tell us is that the tide station at Manhattan is not showing an increase in the rate of rising sea level. Mind you with that graph you posted it's hard to tell anything. Now to rest your case on Global sea level rise on one or two tide stations is weak at best. Why don't you search the science journals and prove your point? Mind you it's already been done and the science say's that the sea level is rising and it is increasing in speed. Some areas have the land going up and some areas have the land going down. There will be winners and there will be losers. The problem is the losers are going to have to pay and they will be looking to us to help them cover the cost one way or another. But no worries OBD you are safe as it will most likely be you kids and grand kids that pay.

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http://www.alaskapublic.org/2015/02..._campaign=Feed:+aprn-news+(APRN:+Alaska+News)

Southeast Alaska King Salmon Head North In Search Of Cooler Waters

By Robert Woolsey, KCAW - Sitka | February 24, 2015

Some king salmon reared in Southeast Alaska are traveling farther north as ocean temperatures rise.

This news was delivered to the Alaska Board of Fisheries as their spring meeting opened in Sitka Monday afternoon.

The three-year meeting cycle of the Board of Fish is designed to take the board to different regions of the state, and a substantial portion of each ten-day meeting is devoted to education — of the board. Regional managers and biologists from the Department of Fish & Game deliver literally reams of data about salmon harvest levels, escapement, and economics.

St. Matthew Island sits just north of the 60th Parallel. Like Sitka’s St. Lazaria, St. Matthew is part of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge system.

Most of this information rolls in and out with the tide, and generates little comment from the board. But this fact caught their attention: The king salmon hatched in Southeast’s four top-producing river systems, the Alsek, Situk, Taku, and Stikine, are going very far afield.

This is ADF&G Sportfish coordinator Ed Jones.

“All four of these stocks are considered outside-rearing, or what we term the far-north migrators. This means that shortly after the juveniles enter the marine environment to rear, they essentially take a right and head out to the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea.”

Again, these rivers are the four largest producers of king salmon in Southeast. Board member Orville Huntington wanted to know more.

“Do you guys know where it is they’re going?”

Huntington wanted to know if the Department used any sort of telemetry to track the fish.

It turns out telemetry isn’t needed. Jones knows exactly where the kings are going. The National Marine Fisheries Service has increased trawl surveys in the Western Gulf in recent years. The surveys are catching king salmon, some of which have tiny coded-wire tags embedded in their skulls. Those salmon were tagged in Southeast, says Jones.

“They’re typically found from Kodiak west, and what’s interesting to me is that in years of really warm water — which took place in 2005 – 2006 — most of our coded-wire tags were found in the Bering Sea. So that told me that the fish are being opportunistic, and moving with water temperatures. They’re going out to that part of the world, and moving as water temperatures dictate.”

Board member Sue Jeffrey asked Jones to elaborate on this idea.

Jeffrey – You’re saying that warm waters create different patterns. Are they moving to cooler waters then?
Jones – In 2005 – 2006, those very warm water years, they found a Taku coded-wire tag all the way up by St. Matthew Island, which is quite a bit north of the Bering Sea. So that’s what is going on: They have a preferred temperature that their feed is in, that they like to operate in, and they’re moving with it.

Although the Taku, Alsek, Situk, and Stikine produce most of Southeast’s king salmon, Jones said that there are seven smaller stocks that the department considers “inside rearing.” Once these fish enter the marine environment as juveniles, Jones said they remain in regional waters until maturity.
 
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http://www.nrdc.org/oceans/acidification/state-vulnerability.asp


States are Vulnerable to Ocean Acidification


•More than a century of burning fossil fuels has dramatically increased the amount of carbon dioxide entering the ocean, increasing the ocean's acidity and posing a serious threat to the web of life underwater.
•Coastal communities in 15 states are at high economic risk from ocean acidification due to their dependence on shelled mollusk fisheries, which bring in a billion of dollars annually.
•The most effective step toward healthier oceans is to stop pumping carbon dioxide into the sea from cars, factories, and power plants. But policymakers and residents in vulnerable states can take steps to make a difference now.

Read More

State Fact Sheets

fact sheet

Connecticut (PDF)

Florida (PDF)

Louisiana (PDF)

Maine (PDF)

Maryland (PDF)

Massachusetts (PDF)

New Jersey (PDF)

New York (PDF)

Pacific Northwest (PDF)

Rhode Island (PDF)

Virginia (PDF)

Maps

map

Social Vulnerability (PDF)

Economic Sensitivity (PDF)

More from NRDC

Recent Blog Posts

•New study: algae pollution makes coastal communities vulnerable to ocean acidification damage
•"No Blue, No Green" -- New Sylvia Earle Film Shows Power of Protecting Our Oceans
•A Spotlight on Ocean Issues During Capitol Hill Ocean Week and Beyond
•Ocean Health on the Horizon with Ocean Planning Efforts and Limits on Carbon Pollution

According to a new assessment of the most vulnerable communities across the United States to ocean acidification, 15 states are at high risk of economic harm. The study, Vulnerability and Adaptation of US Shellfisheries to Ocean Acidification, breaks new ground by identifying the communities along our nation's shores that will most likely suffer long-term economic harm from ocean acidification, revealing a mosaic of vulnerability to ocean
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nclimate2508.html
 
That looks like a pretty steady climb to me, or should I say, "rate".
You right... I missed the "rate" part of his statement. I guess I was so blown away by the hoax part that i missed it. I'll edit my original post.
 
IPCC Needs to Transform to Scientific Organization – Think Tank

MOSCOW (Sputnik), Daria Chernyshova — One of the world’s most influential organizations in the sphere of climate change — the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) — should be drastically reformed, the Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) urged Wednesday following the resignation of the IPCC chairman amid sexual harassment allegations.

“[The] IPCC is seen as a green lobby-group rather than a scientific authority. And that is a problem because governments themselves need to trust this organization,” GPWF director Benny Peiser told Sputnik news agency Wednesday.

On Tuesday, Rajendra Pachauri stepped down as the chair of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning IPCC. He was accused of sexual harassment by a researcher. The IPCC unites presidents and prime ministers attempting to tackle climate change, and the IPCC chairman is seen as one of the most influential people advising governments in the area of energy and climate policy. Pachauri was at the IPCC helm for over 13 years.

A worker pulls a cart in front of the smoking chimneys of a power plant
© REUTERS/ Stringer
UN Climate Process to Lose Credibility if Paris Talks Fail: Ex EU Official
In his resignation letter, Pachauri said that "For me the protection of Planet Earth, the survival of all species and sustainability of our ecosystems is more than a mission. It is my religion and my dharma."
Interpreting the letter, the GPWF director stressed it is very alarming that “the whole issue of climate change is [a] religion.” He noted that the IPCC has been one-sided and not objective, as it pushed out all those who disagreed with the “group’s religion.”

“The organization is extremely one-sided, it has pushed out anyone who has not accepted the general philosophy, the gist of the organization and instead of issuing balanced and objective reports, it has tended over the years to exaggerate the issue,” Peiser told Sputnik adding that the IPCC should include critical scientists, who are not a part of the organization at the moment.

At the same time, Peiser noted that the organization’s reports were quite good, but the “leadership cherry-picked the negative aspects and ignored the positive aspects that were also covered in the reports.”

“The lack of moderation, lack of balance and the lack of credibility – that is at the core of the problem and all we are asking the governments to do is to make the IPCC a more reliable and less alarmist organization that the governments could trust,” Peiser said.

The IPCC is an intergovernmental body under the auspices of the UN which has a leading role in the assessment of climate change. It was established in 1988 to provide the world with a clear scientific view on the current state of knowledge on climate change.
 
by Bishop Hill
Magic wands and the greens
Feb 25, 2015
Energy: gas Greens
I think it was Bryony Worthington who once asked a bunch of environmentalists what they would happen if a fairy could wave a magic wand and do away with the warming effects of carbon dioxide. Would they be happy for mankind to continue to burn fossil fuels?

The answer of course was "no".

Interesting then to read the news that Roman Abramovich has made a major investment in a company that claims to be able to fracture rocks without any fluids at all.

Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich has invested $15 million in Houston-based Propell Technologies Group, Inc. (OTC:PROP) and its new fracking technology from wholly owned subsidiary Novas Energy. Significantly, this new enhanced oil recovery (EOR) technology enables ‘clean’ hydraulic micro/nano fracturing of oil reservoirs—that is, without water, without polluting chemicals and without earthquakes.

According to Propell, the Plasma Pulse patented downhole tool creates a controlled plasma arc within a vertical well, generating a tremendous amount of heat for a fraction of a second. The subsequent high-speed hydraulic impulse wave emitted is strong enough to remove any clogged sedimentation from the perforation zone without damaging steel. The series of impulse waves/vibrations also penetrate deep into the reservoir causing nano fractures in the matrix which increase reservoir permeability for up to a year per treatment.

It sounds like the shale gas industry's very own magic wand. You can almost sense the dismay among the green fraternity.
 

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http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwo...talk-climate-change-culture-resilience-159326

Wisdom of the Elders in Alaska Talk Climate Change, Culture, Resilience
Terri Hansen

2/22/15

News about climate change appears almost daily, it seems. Yet for many readers, it’s abstract science they don’t connect to their busy lives. But Native peoples have our indigenous elders living with its disruptions who can bridge that divide, if we would just reach out to them.

That’s what Wisdom of the Elders, http://wisdomoftheelders.org/ a Portland-based nonprofit organization, did. They produced two films and a radio series that offer listeners and viewers a wealth of stories, songs and fascinating details of traditional lifeways in programs framed by culture, traditional knowledge, and climate science.

Wisdom’s project was motivated by five decades of unprecedented environmental and climate issues that Alaska Native peoples have been experiencing, said executive director Rose High Bear (Deg Hit’an Dine, or Alaskan Athabascan).

In the fall of 2012 Mrs. High Bear traveled with her crew to Alaska, a state where climatic changes are clearly evident. Inupiat and Athabascan elders were recorded at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention in Anchorage for the Wisdom of the Elders Radio Series, Indigenous Response to Environmental and Climate Issues. http://wisdomoftheelders.org/radio-series-four-update/

“We want to help them tell their story of changes they are experiencing, especially in their subsistence lifestyle,” Mrs. High Bear said.

Additional funding allowed Wisdom to return to Alaska in the fall of 2013 to record more stories for a two film project, “Climate Issues from the Perspective of Alaska Native Peoples.” The films run nearly 30 minutes each.

“We want to share the oral history and cultural arts of these peoples so the peoples of the world are aware of the rich cultural heritage being impacted and becoming jeopardized due to today's changing climate,” Mrs. High Bear said. The stories also reveal the indefatigable resilience of Alaska Native peoples.

“We are strong, resilient and highly adaptable people,” Mrs. High Bear said. “Archaeology shows that Alaska Native peoples have been here for 14,500 years and more. Our ancestors lived through climate issues of the past. So we know that we will survive the hardships coming our way, but it will not be easy.”

Today's impacts upon our Alaska Native people are directly related to the world's energy production, she said. “We are asking world citizens to do their part to mitigate today's climate issues.”

The film series has been screened for the Native community and general public in Portland, Oregon, at the 2014 National Indian Education Association Convention, and is included in Wisdom’s curriculum for it’s environmental and climate program, Discovering YidongXinag for middle schools. Mrs. High Bear plans to enter the films in film festivals, continue holding Film Screenings and Community Consultations, and seek funding for future climate films featuring Pacific Northwest tribes.

See a clip from one of the films at The Cutting Edge: Climate and the People of the Caribou. http://wisdomoftheelders.org/climate-and-the-people-of-the-caribou/

ICTMN contributor Terri Hansen serves on the board of Wisdom of the Elders.

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwo...talk-climate-change-culture-resilience-159326
 
http://www.vancouverobserver.com/opinion/how-harpers-disastrous-diplomacy-crushed-keystone-xl

How Harper's disastrous diplomacy crushed Keystone XL
Sandy Garossino
|Feb 25th, 2015
President Obama's veto of the Keystone XL pipeline is nothing less than a devastating indictment of Stephen Harper's foreign policy.

Despite the imperative that Canada diversify our access to foreign markets, no relationship is or ever will be more important to this country's fortunes than the one it has with the US, and most of all, the White House.

But the weight of Harper's ambition and ego brought that historic relationship to its knees, and with it, the prime minister's own defining economic and foreign policy objectives.

Canada's leadership lost its credibility and moral suasion at the White House by being drawn into the poisonous scorpion's nest of DC politics. No foreign leader, but especially not the Canadian prime minister, can afford to be seen to meddle in American domestic affairs.

Stephen Harper managed to do it.

Indeed, its hard to imagine a more disastrous economic and foreign policy strategy than the one adopted by this prime minister. As Barack Obama entered the final period of his presidency, the indications were clear that climate change would become a pillar of his administration. John Kerry, well-known as a strong environmentalist, is Secretary of State, and holds the portfolio responsible for the Keystone decision.

Faced with this landscape, it might have behooved the prime minister to harmonize his energy policy with the White House climate objectives, as China has done to great success. But Harper doubled down, announcing that he "would not take no for an answer"on Keystone, calling climate regulations on the oil and gas industry "crazy," and pursuing an unseemly vendetta against Canadian environmentalists linked with eminent American scientific foundations.

It's impossible to decipher the true source of such self-destructive behaviour, but the Obama administration would surely tie this almost delusional conduct to the Koch brothers. It's no coincidence that Keystone, a project of only marginal importance to American interests, has emerged as a primary Republican cause. The Kochs, bedrock GOP funders who are committing nearly $1 billion in their attempt to defeat the Democrats in 2016 are key Alberta oilsands leaseholders, and seasoned practitioners of the dark arts of American politics. That the GOP has made the calculation that a donnybrook over Keystone is worth the trouble is not a good outcome for Canada. We cannot be seen as a sock-puppet for the GOP's top funders. And yet we are.

All of this could have been avoided had Stephen Harper conceded the vital importance of aligning Canada's domestic energy policy with Obama's climate objectives. It may have been a huge climbdown for a leader captivated by his vision of Canada as an oil super-power, but Keystone's success depended on it.

Today we don't have Keystone, we've shredded our key international partnership, and the oil sands and Canadian economy face a dire and uncertain fate. This isn't just the failure of the Keystone XL project, it's the failure of Prime Minister Harper.
 
http://www.rollingstone.com/politic...eto-dashes-canadas-superpower-dreams-20150224

Crude Awakening: How the Keystone Veto Dashes Canada's 'Superpower' Dreams

Oil prices are crashing and Obama has vetoed Keystone XL. Will Canada double down on its dirty tar sands?
By Tim Dickinson February 24, 2015

Keystone
Victor Juhasz

Barack Obama's veto of Keystone XL has placed the export pipeline for Canadian tar-sands crude on its deathbed. Earlier in February, the Environmental Protection Agency revealed that Keystone could spur 1.37 billion tons of excess carbon emissions — providing the State Department with all the scientific evidence required to spike the project, permanently. If the news has cheered climate activists across the globe, it also underscored the folly of Canada's catastrophic quest, in recent years, to transform itself into a dirty-energy "superpower."

In the minds of many American right-wingers, Canada may be a socialist hell-scape of universal health care and quasi-European welfare policies. But it is also home to 168 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, the third-largest in the world. Since ultraconservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper — famously described by one Canadian columnist as "our version of George W. Bush, minus the warmth and intellect" — took power in 2006, he's quietly set his country on a course that seems to be straight from the Koch brothers' road map. Harper, 55, has gutted environmental regulation and fast-tracked colossal projects to bring new oil to market. Under his leadership, Canada has also slashed corporate taxes in half and is eliminating 30,000 public-sector jobs.

Riding record-high oil prices — $107 a barrel as recently as last June — Harper's big bet on Canadian crude appeared savvy. The oil boom had driven a seven percent surge in national income, helping Canada ride out the Great Recession with less anguish than most developed nations. And with fossil fuels swelling to nearly 40 percent of net exports, Harper's Conservative government was on track to deliver a Tea Party twofer in advance of federal elections this fall: a budget surplus and a deep tax cut for the country's richest earners.

But today, with the price of oil cut in half, the Canadian economy is staggering. Tar-sands producers have clawed back billions in planned investments and begun axing jobs by the thousands. The Canadian dollar, recently at parity with the U.S. dollar, has dipped to about 80 cents. Instead of a federal budget surplus, economists are now projecting a C$2.3 billion deficit. "The drop in oil prices," said Stephen Poloz, the nation's central banker, in January, "is unambiguously negative for the Canadian economy."

If low oil prices hold, the pain will get worse. Most of Canada's reserves are locked up in tar sands. The industrial operations required to get the oil from the ground to your gas tank are not only filthy and energy-intensive — generating up to double the greenhouse emissions of conventional oil — they also take years of construction to bring online. Because of investment decisions made during the boom years, tar-sands production is projected to expand by seven percent this year, exacerbating the glut. The collapse of crude is threatening to take Harper's nearly dec-ade-long rule down with it. Canada's Liberal party, headed by 43-year-old Justin Trudeau (son of legendary Canadian PM Pierre), is running neck and neck in the polls, and bashing Harper where he used to be strongest — his management of the economy. "It's not fiscally responsible," said Trudeau in January, "to pin all your hopes on oil prices remaining high, and when they fall, being forced to make it up as they go along."

As we, in the United States, consider the fate of our own massive oil reserves and confront the specter of yet another Bush presidency, Stephen Harper's Canada offers a cautionary tale — about the economic and political havoc that can be unleashed when a first-world nation yokes itself to Tea Party economics and to the boom and bust of Big Oil.

Stephen Harper came of age in Alberta, a land of cowboys and oil rigs sometimes referred to as "Texas of the North." He began his career in the mailroom of Imperial Oil (today an offshoot of Exxon). He rose through Parliament promising a revolution in federal affairs under the battle cry "The West wants in!" Following his election to prime minister in 2006, he wasted little time unveiling his plan to open up his nation's vast oil reserves. Before an audience of British businessmen in 2006, he spoke of "the emerging energy superpower our government intends to build," and rhapsodized about the "ocean of oil-soaked sand [that] lies under the muskeg of northern Alberta." He framed the challenge of bringing that crude to market as though it were a Wonder of the World. "It requires vast amounts of capital . . . and an army of skilled workers," he said. "It is an enterprise of epic proportions, akin to the building of the pyramids or China's Great Wall. Only bigger."

Championing dirty oil meant that Harper had to undermine traditional Canadian values — including environmental stewardship and international collaboration. In 2011, Canada unceremoniously abandoned its climate obligations under the Kyoto Accord, which Harper had once blasted as "a socialist scheme to suck money out of wealth-producing nations."

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http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/big-oils-big-lies-about-alternative-energy-20130625
Big Oil's Big Lies About Alternative Energy

As President Obama calls for greater investments in alternatives, the biggest energy companies are doubling down on riskier, more destructive oil sources

By Antonia Juhasz June 25, 2013
An oil drilling rig burning off natural gas. Cameron Davidson

Since the Gulf oil disaster in 2010, BP has spent hundreds of millions of ad dollars to cleanse its image as a dirty-energy giant. In the company's latest TV ad, wind turbines whirl in the sun as a voiceover touts the number of American jobs created by BP and promises, "We're working to fuel America for generations to come." There's just one problem: BP's commitment to wind energy is virtually nonexistent.

In April, BP announced that it is selling off its entire $3.1 billion U.S. wind energy business – including 16 farms spread across nine states – as "part of a continuing effort to become a more focused oil and gas company," according to a company spokesperson. Indeed, though it famously rebranded itself "Beyond Petroleum" in 2000, BP also exited the solar energy business back in 2011. Today, its alternative energy investments are limited to biofuels and a lone wind farm in the Netherlands.

And BP is far from alone. You wouldn't know it from their advertising, but the world's major oil companies have either entirely divested from alternative energy or significantly reduced their investments in favor of doubling down on ever-more risky and destructive sources of oil and natural gas.

Not that those commitments to alternatives were ever particularly grand. Using very generous estimates, BP holds the oil industry record for the highest percentage of expenditures committed to alternatives, with just 6 percent of its overall expenditures in 2011, right before it started selling off its solar operations. Chevron and Shell run a distant second with highs of 2.5 percent; none of the others have ever even cracked 1 percent.

"The bottom line is that oil companies only invested a drop in the bucket [in alternatives] even in the 'heyday' of the early 1980s," says Douglas Cogan, vice president of investment firm MSCI ESG Research. "Most of the largest [oil company] investors have dropped out in recent years, following the precedent that Exxon set 30 years ago."

Take ConocoPhillips, which highlights its "emerging technologies and alternative energy sources" activities on its website – but fails to mention that in April 2012 it divested all of these activities to focus exclusively on its "core business" of exploring for and producing oil and natural gas, and specifically to take advantage of the North American "shale revolution" and tar sands production in Canada. "ConocoPhillips is an independent oil and gas company," says a spokesperson. "We do not have an active renewable energy segment within our portfolio."

The newly created Phillips 66 (already the third-largest U.S. oil company) took over ConocoPhillips' "downstream" activities – meaning everything after exploration and production. Other than limited investment in second-generation biofuel research, Phillips 66, too, has abandoned alternatives.

How about Shell *– the world's largest corporation, according to Fortune? In 2010, the company launched an ad campaign called "Let's Go," hyping its efforts to "broaden the world's energy mix." The ads are still running today. But the numbers tell a different story. Shell reports spending about $400 million a year on alternatives, out of the $23 billion it spent on all expenditures in 2012. At its peak in 2007, Shell was spending just 2.5 percent of its total capital expenditures on alternatives. Today it's down to 1.5 percent.

Shell abandoned solar in 2006 and maintains only minor investments in wind and some hydrogen research today. The bulk of Shell's alternative investments today are in biofuels. Meanwhile, it presses ahead with the world's deepest offshore oil well in the Gulf of Mexico and refuses to do more than "pause" plans for drilling in the U.S. Arctic – even after one of its drilling rigs ran aground in Kodiak, Alaska in January.

As with all these companies, the expenditures that Shell reports publicly on alternatives are difficult to pin down or verify. Shell includes the money it spends on carbon capture initiatives and "other CO2 related work"; both are commendable, but neither one is an alternative energy source. BP, similarly, uses the mysterious phrase "lower-carbon businesses." In fact, no major oil company has ever spent enough on alternatives for it to amount to even 10 percent of its revenues or assets – the Security and Exchange Commission's threshold for public reporting requirements on financial expenditures.

In 2010, Chevron launched its "We Agree" public relations campaign, with ads announcing "It's time oil companies get behind the development of renewable energy," that still run today. Yet Chevron's alternative investments have been falling as a proportion of its total expenditures, not rising, for years: From 2.5 percent of overall expenditures in 2008, alternative energy dropped to 2.3 percent in 2010 and 1.5 percent in 2012.

In 2011, Chevron's Corporate Responsibility report – which for years had been an alternatives showcase – announced that the company would take "a pragmatic approach" to these investments, focusing on geothermal energy, next-generation biofuels and efficiency solutions. Yet wind and biofuels are conspicuously absent from the 2012 report; the words "alternative energy" and "renewable energy" do not appear anywhere in its pages. "Chevron spent $5.4 billion from 2002 to 2012 on alternative energy," says company spokesperson Morgan Crinklaw. That's about $500 million a year, out of $34 billion total expenditures in 2012 alone. (This figure includes the work of its private subsidiary, Chevron Energy Solutions, which does work on solar, but does not have to provide public disclosure of its finances.) Meanwhile, Chevron remains one of the world's oiliest oil companies, with one of the highest percentages of oil assets among the majors.

Like ConocoPhillips, Marathon, the nation's fifth largest oil company, divested all its downstream activities in 2011, for similar reasons – in order to expand its U.S. shale and Canadian tar sand operations. Today, it maintains partial ownership of a methanol plant that converts natural gas into motor fuel, while the newly spun-off MPC includes ethanol in its portfolio.

Of course, some companies were never into alternatives. Since 2002, Exxon Mobil, which took in $45 billion in profit last year alone, put a grand total of $188 million into its alternative investments, compared to the $250 million it dedicated to U.S. advertising in the last two years alone. (This figure and previously cited advertising data were provided by Kantar Media.)

It's worth mentioning one slight exception to the trend: France's Total, the world's 9th-largest oil company, which greatly increased its solar operations in the last year. But Total, too, had a long way to improve. The latest available figures from MSCI ESG Research put its alternative investments at just about $84 million a year from 2005 through 2010, or, at best, less than 0.6 percent of total expenditures. Moreover, the company's fairly extensive coal operations stand in contrast to the good it's doing in alternatives.

There are clear reasons why some biofuel investments remain while wind and solar have all but disappeared. Since 2009, both the U.S. and the European Union have had policies in place requiring biofuels in motor fuel, compared to on-again, off-again tax credits for wind and solar energy. And why bother putting real investments in alternatives at all, when polished ad campaigns have already convinced the public that the companies are still "green"?

In reality, all of the companies are putting more and more resources toward dirty energy sources that were never before accessible – or never before considered acceptable. With limited regulation and oversight, and with plenty of subsidies and tax breaks, all of the companies discussed here are upping their oil and natural gas antes by drilling deeper than ever into the oceans (including Exxon in the Russian Arctic), increasing operations in the Canadian tar sands, dramatically expanding hydraulic fracking in ever-more parts of the U.S. and the world, and – with the exception of ConocoPhillips – hunting and drilling for oil in Iraq and/or Kurdistan. It all makes perfect sense, if you go by what Exxon vice president J.S. Simon told Congress in 2008: "[T]he pursuit of alternative fuels must not detract from the development of oil and gas."

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