Wednesday, October 23, 2019

UK to use £1bn meant for green energy to support fracking in Argentina







Jillian Ambrose. The Guardian. October 21, 2019

The UK is planning to invest in Argentina’s controversial oil shale industry using a £1bn export finance deal intended to support green energy, according to government documents seen by the Guardian.

UK Export Finance, the government’s foreign credit agency, promised in 2017 to offer loans totalling £1bn to help UK companies export their expertise in “infrastructure, green energy and healthcare” to invest in Argentina’s economy.

Instead official records, released through a freedom of information request, have revealed the government’s plan to prioritise support for major oil companies, including Shell and BP, which are fracking in Argentina’s vast Vaca Muerta shale heartlands.

One government memo, uncovered by Friends of the Earth, said that while Argentina’s clean energy sector was growing, it was “Argentina’s huge shale resources that offer the greatest potential” for the UK.

The briefing note was prepared before a key meeting between the UK government’s trade envoy to Latin America, the UK ambassador to Argentina and Argentina’s energy minister in February this year.

Tony Bosworth, a campaigner at Friends of the Earth, said: “With the world hurtling towards catastrophic climate change, and parliament declaring a climate emergency, it’s outrageous that the UK government is continuing to back huge fossil fuel developments abroad.”

Separate records, also uncovered by Friends of the Earth, revealed that there had been no fewer than 13 meetings between the UK and oil companies operating in Argentina’s Vaca Muerta hydrocarbon reservoir since the beginning of last year.

The companies include Shell, Andina Resources, Phoenix Global Resources and Pan American Energy (PAE), a subsidiary of BP. They have contributed donations amounting to more than £40,000 to fund birthday celebrations for the Queen held at the British embassy in Bueno Aires over the past two years. There have been no meetings with renewable energy companies, according to the records.

Argentina has become a magnet for major oil companies after discovering the world’s third largest shale reserves in the world. It hopes to replicate the US energy revolution by encouraging oil companies to exploit the reserves within the Vaca Muerta region despite strong opposition from local communities.

A Guardian investigation this month revealed that the fracking industry had already caused irreversible damage to the ancestral homeland of Argentina’s indigenous Mapuche people after an oil fire burned for more than three weeks next to a freshwater lake in Vaca Muerta.

Argentina delivered its first-ever export of light crude and liquified natural gas from Vaca Muerta earlier this summer, five years after local community protest was quashed by authorities using teargas and rubber bullets.

The UK’s loans to support work in Argentina have been modest to date, but are expected to rise as Argentina’s burgeoning shale industry increases production. One of the largest provisions has been for £346,000 to support BP’s PAE in the 2017-2018 financial year.

The government’s plan to support Argentina’s shale industry comes after an investigation revealed an eleven-fold increase in support for fossil fuels over the past year to almost £2bn.

The plans are strongly opposed by MPs on the environmental audit committee, which branded the UK’s foreign fossil fuel investments as the “elephant in the room” undermining the UK’s climate leadership.

The UK government legislated earlier this year to commit to a zero-carbon economy by 2050, and is preparing to host the UN’s next major climate talks in Glasgow next year. The government’s climate efforts will be led by a new sub-committee within the cabinet office to be headed by the prime minister.

Friends of the Earth warned that Boris Johnson must show global leadership ahead of the Glasgow UN summit by putting environmental responsibility and decarbonisation at the heart of every government policy – both at home and abroad.

“Boris Johnson’s pledge to lead the world in slashing climate-wrecking pollution will be meaningless if his government continues to back the exploitation of massive oil and gas developments in Argentina,” Bosworth said.

A UKEF spokeswoman said the credit agency’s support in Argentina was available on a case-by-case basis to all permitted business sectors, including the renewable energy sector, to ensure “that no viable UK export fails for lack of finance or insurance”. UKEF did not offer evidence that it had met any renewable energy developers in Argentina.





Brazilians rally to clean beaches amid outrage at Bolsonaro's oil spill inaction












Dom Phillips. The Guardian. October 22, 2019

On Monday evening, Sport Club Bahia – one of the biggest football teams in Brazil’s north-east – faced its rivals Ceará with black oil stains on their red, white and blue shirts. It was the latest sign of the growing outrage over a mystery oil spill that since early September has blighted a 2,200km stretch of some of the country’s most beautiful beaches – and the failure of President Jair Bolsonaro’s far-right government to handle the crisis.

Nobody knows where the oil is from or why it keeps washing up on Brazilian beaches. Yet while social media has been bombarded by videos of volunteers rolling up thick globs of oil in sand and putting them into plastic sacks, Bolsonaro sought to blame first Venezuela, then a “criminal action” to scupper a major oil tender. He has repeatedly attacked environmental protection agencies as a “fines industry” and has yet to visit affected areas.

“There is clear revulsion over the government’s inaction,” said Marcus Melo, a professor of political science at the Federal University of Pernambuco in the north-east. “The government has a certain myopia in understanding how serious this is.”

On Monday, Bolsonaro’s vice-president Hamilton Mourão announced that 5,000 more troops will be dispatched to help clean up the spill, but for many Brazilians the response was too little, too late.

Joel de Oliveira Filho, 57, proprietor of a guesthouse on Carneiras beach – one of the most famous beaches in the north-east state of Pernambuco – joined other local residents who started cleaning up oil with help from city hall employees. Nobody from federal government was there, he said.

“People in the north-east are cleaning the oil from the coast with their own hands while the federal government is immobile,” he said.

In nearby Bahia, volunteers organised the group Coast Guardians to clean beaches. It has 19,000 followers on its Instagram and has raised $4,800 online for protective gloves, boots and masks.

“This is civil society getting organised. Our movement does not support any political party, we support nature,” said Miguel Sehbe Neto, 37, a company administrator from Salvador who runs one of its 20 beach teams. “What we want is an explanation and effective action.”

Their team had help from naval personnel and environment agency staff when cleaning up two local beaches. But the government has not been able to map the slicks or stop them reaching the coast, he said – and many other beaches still need help.

“We don’t know the size of the enemy,” he said.

Bolsonaro hosted a short Facebook live on Friday flanked by his defence minister, Gen Fernando Azevedo e Silva, and naval officers who explained they believe the oil came from a ship far out to sea.

Bolsonaro said containment barriers would not have stopped the oil as it was below the surface and suggested the spill could be a “criminal act” to prejudice a multibillion-dollar, “blockbuster” auction of oil prospecting rights on 6 November.

“Could it be a criminal act to prejudice this tender? It is a question that is in the air,” Bolsonaro said.

The environment minister, Ricardo Salles, has used Twitter to defend work by federal government environment agencies, state governments, the navy and state-run oil company Petrobras in dealing with the crisis.

However, Fabiano Contarato, an opposition senator who chairs the Brazilian senate’s environment committee, said the government “could have declared an environmental emergency […] They are not taking it seriously.”

Last Thursday he hosted a senate hearing with naval officers, environment ministry officials, prosecutors and the president of the environment agency, Ibama.

“They don’t know if it was a deliberate crime, they don’t know how to remove this oil,” Contarato said. “There are many more questions than answers.”

On Thursday federal prosecutors in the north-east ordered the government to put a national contingency plan into effect and said it had been “inefficient and ineffective”. But a judge ruled the plan was already operating and said the government was doing enough.

José Álvaro Moisés, a senior professor of political science at the University of São Paulo, noted that in April Bolsonaro’s government closed two committees that were part of Brazil’s national contingency plan for oil spills.

“The government’s position is against defending the environment,” he said.





Brazil's Eduardo Bolsonaro takes over as PSL lower house whip






Reuters. October 21, 2019

BRASILIA (Reuters) - Lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro, son of Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro, took over the leadership of the Social Liberal Party (PSL) in the lower house of Congress on Monday in a bruising struggle for control of the party that is not over.

With active canvassing by his father, Bolsonaro succeeded gathering enough supporters to oust the PSL’s current leader in the chamber, Delegado Waldir, who admitted defeat in a video on social media.

The battle for control of the PSL and its large campaign war chest ahead of next year’s local elections came to a head last week when Bolsonaro attacked party founder Luciano Bivar and called for the party’s accounts to be audited.

The small PSL party surged from nowhere to become the second largest in the Brazilian Congress by serving as the platform for right-winger Jair Bolsonaro’s successful presidential run last year.

But lawmakers who sided with Bivar have not given up and said they had presented a new list of signatures on Monday afternoon to have Waldir reinstated. Congressional officers were verifying the lists to see who had the most signatures.

Even though the final outcome was still unclear, Bolsonaro lost no time in taking revenge on those who opposed him.

A spokeswoman for the PSL said he removed 12 deputy whips from the Bivar camp, including Joice Hasselmann, a congresswoman from Sao Paulo who stuck with party founder Bivar eyeing the funding she needs for a planned run for mayor of Brazil’s largest city next October.

The split in President Bolsonaro’s party will not affect the expected approval on Tuesday of his signature reform proposal to overhaul Brazil’s costly pension system, which is the main cause of the government’s unsustainable budget deficit.

But the political storm could torpedo the chances of confirming Eduardo as Brazil’s ambassador to the United States, an appointment that now appears to lack enough support in the Senate.

Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Talk Politics and 2020 with The Intercept’s Ryan Grim





https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=bRJ2fjzN7pw





















The British State: A Warning





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Leaked Audio Shows Elizabeth Warren's Medicare For All Plan Is....Kumbaya





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Fight For Someone You Don't Know





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