It was inevitable that climate change deniers and some oil industry promoters would misinterpret a study by scientist Andrew Weaver before reading beyond the headlines. A letter in the Calgary Herald actually claimed that "Weaver's revelation … raises even more skepticism about the entire science behind global warming."
First, the study looked only at the emissions from
burning the fuels and not from extracting, refining, or transporting
them. The report's authors explain that these additional emissions
"would come from the other resource pools and shouldn't be
double-counted."
Original Article
Source: rabble.ca
Author: David Suzuki
The writer went on to argue that the report by
University of Victoria climate scientist Weaver and PhD student Neil
Swart is an "awakening for David Suzuki and his environmental
followers."
It's typical of the nonsense people who understand science have to put up with every day. The study, published in Nature, says the opposite.
Weaver and Swart set out to answer a simple
question: "How much global warming would occur if we completely burned a
variety of fossil fuel resources?" Their conclusion that burning all
the coal or all the gas from the entire world's resource bases would
raise global average temperatures more than burning all the Alberta tar
sands reserves is hardly a surprise.
What is surprising is their finding that emissions
from burning all the economically viable oil from the tar sands would
only contribute to a 0.03°C rise in world temperatures, and burning the
entire tar sands oil in place would add 0.36° C. That may not seem like
much, but we need to put it in context.
If we are to avoid a 2° C increase in global
temperatures, each person in the world would be allocated 80 tonnes of
emissions over the next 50 years. The emissions from burning all the tar
sands oil that is now economically viable (the reserves) would
represent 64 tonnes of carbon for each of the 340 million people in the
U.S. and Canada -- about 75 per cent of the U.S. and Canada's global per
capita allocation. If we include emissions from the extraction process,
it rises to 90 per cent or more.
The study doesn't consider any other environmental
consequences of the tar sands either, from water use and pollution to
destruction of boreal habitat. In fact, a recently uncovered memo prepared for the federal government
claims that damage from the tar sands may be irreversible and could
pose a "significant environmental and financial risk to the province of
Alberta." The memo focused on rising emissions and damage from tailings
ponds, among other effects. It concluded that "the cumulative impacts of
oilsands development are not adequately understood."
Our rush to get at the bitumen is also threatening wildlife and habitat. Conservation officers killed 145 black bears
that got too close to the operations last year. And rather than
protecting caribou habitat from destruction as extraction increases, the
federal government has decided to kill wolves that prey on caribou instead.
On the political front, the European Union recently
failed to pass its Fuel Quality Directive, which would have labelled
tar sands oil as carbon intensive and undesirable for import, but that
fight isn't over.
As I've said before, we're not going to stop using
oil overnight, so we will continue to use tar sands products, at least
in the short to medium term. But the best ways to limit environmental
impacts are to slow down and to ensure the highest environmental
standards are met and that we are getting maximum value for the oil to
which all Canadians have a right.
As Weaver and Swart conclude: "If North American
and international policymakers wish to limit global warming to less than
2° C they will clearly need to put in place measures that ensure a
rapid transition of global energy systems to non-greenhouse-gas-emitting
sources, while avoiding commitments to new infrastructure supporting
dependence on fossil fuels."
That doesn't mean putting pipelines through
pristine wilderness, extracting bitumen as quickly as possible, and
shipping it off to China in supertankers. It does mean we have to find
ways to stop using coal and gas as well as oil. As Weaver points out,
"The tar sands are a symptom of a bigger problem. The bigger problem is
our societal dependence on fossil fuels."
Source: rabble.ca
Author: David Suzuki
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