Features

Mar 122013
 

Hugo Chavez portrayed as tyrant because he challenged Western oil domination.

by Linda McQuaig

Had Hugo Chavez followed the pattern of many Third World leaders and concentrated on siphoning off his nation’s wealth for personal gain, he would have attracted little attention or animosity in the West.

Instead, he did virtually the opposite — redirecting vast sums of national wealth to the swollen ranks of Venezuela’s poor, along with free health care and education.  No wonder he alienated local elites, who are used to being first in line at the national trough.

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Mar 112013
 

Globally, governments gave Big Oil $620 billion in 2011.

by Emily E Adams

The energy game is rigged in favor of fossil fuels — because we omit the environmental and health costs of burning coal, oil, and natural gas from their prices. Subsidies manipulate the game even further.

According to conservative estimates from the Global Subsidies Initiative and the International Energy Agency (IEA), governments around the world spent more than $620 billion to subsidize fossil fuel energy in 2011: some $100 billion for production and $523 billion for consumption. This was 20 percent higher than in 2010, largely because of higher world oil prices.

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Mar 112013
 

Canada drills while the world swelters.

by Stephen Leahy

What's happened to Canada? To the dismay of many, a country with an international reputation for relatively progressive environmental policies (at least compared to the United States) is rushing headlong to dig up all the oil, gas, and coal it can.

The country’s leaders can scarcely muster the effort to pretend to want to limit climate-heating carbon emissions. And the Canadian business establishment and media have largely gone along with the program. Put it all together, and you have a country that has become a full-blown “petrostate.”

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Mar 112013
 
GeigerCounter

Two years after Daichi disaster, Fukushima residents still on emergency footing.

from Greenpeace

TOKYO/NEW DELHI,  March 11, 2013 — On the second anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster,  hundreds of thousands of people in Japan still lack the proper support, with the public forced to pick up the costs of the triple meltdown. People in any country with reactors would be left in the same troubling state after a nuclear accident.

Kumi Naidoo, Executive Director, Greenpeace International says, “This disaster rages on for more than 160,000 people who fled the radiation from the Fukushima meltdown and still cannot return home. Families and communities are breaking up, some are in financial ruin and the divorces and mental breakdowns are mounting. The companies that caused this nuclear crisis must be held fully responsible.

"Greenpeace stands in support of those who lost loved ones in the earthquake and tsunami, but also in solidarity with every Fukushima resident whose health is still at risk from radioactive contamination. They need proper compensation and support to rebuild their lives. More than that, it's time to phase out an industry that led to their suffering."

Fukushima residents talk about feeling trapped, abandoned.

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Junichi Sato, Executive Director Greenpeace Japan says, “The Japanese government appears to have abandoned the people suffering from the triple meltdown at Fukushima. Its reckless push to bring dangerous and unnecessary nuclear plants back online shows it is out of touch with what its people want and that it has learned nothing from the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

"The people of Japan and elsewhere faced with the threat of nuclear disasters need support and protection and only a fundamental reform of nuclear laws will meet that need. It is absolutely unfair that the current system forces taxpayers and victims to pay for nuclear disasters, not the companies that cause them.

"Two years of struggle is two years too many for Fukushima evacuees. They must be compensated and the companies responsible for the accident held accountable. We must also move on with the inevitable task of phasing out nuclear power in favour of renewable energy, both in Japan and globally.”

Samit Aich, Executive Director Greenpeace India says, “The disaster at Fukushima is not only a grim reminder of how nuclear power can affect lives of millions of people in an adverse way, it also unfortunately shows how the legal system around nuclear power is skewed and goes on to protect the polluter – the company which in the first place was responsible for the accident.

"It is of paramount importance that we have laws which protect the people and not the industry. India has a strong supplier liability provision, which is under continuous threat of being diluted because of foreign pressure”

Greenpeace is calling on governments to reform the nuclear liability system to make nuclear operators and suppliers fully responsible for their failures.

Greenpeace petition

Mar 082013
 
The tarsands

Minister tells Americans that tar sands are "environmentally responsible choice."

by Tzeporah Berman

Many Canadians must have wondered if George Orwell was alive and well this week as they read that the Alberta oil sands were being pitched to US officials as “green” by Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver.

“Canada is the environmentally responsible choice for the US to meet its energy needs in oil for years to come,” the minister told an audience in Chicago – a message he repeated over and over in his US tour, part of a calculated mission to associate Alberta bitumen with ecological benefits.

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Mar 082013
 

Canada's participation in African adventures may drive desire to acquire weaponized drones.

by Steven Staples and Meagan McCorkle

If the Canadian Forces possessed a fleet of armed drones, would Prime Minister Harper be readying them for Mali?

The question is worth raising, given the Canadian military’s long-standing desire for Predators and the government’s interest in providing military support to the French troops battling ethnic Tuareg and Islamist rebels in the former West African colony, while avoiding putting any Canadian troops in harm’s way.

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Mar 072013
 

Women still earn less than men and balance more of the household, childcare and family responsibilities.

from the National Union of Public and General Employees

OTTAWA, March 8, 2013 – On March 8, International Women’s Day, people will join across the globe to celebrate the incredible achievements of women and their contributions to a better world and a better society.

This year, the National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is celebrating the work of women activists in the campaign to tackle the income inequality crisis. Through the All Together Now! campaign, Women 4 Change have been sharing personal stories about the struggles women have been facing since the start of the economic recession in 2008. And celebrating the fact that since then, women have been at the forefront focusing on social and economic change.

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Mar 072013
 

UN Sustainable Energy for All (SE4All)  initiative maps out path to recovery.

by Stephen Leahy

UXBRIDGE, Canada, Feb 25, 2013 (IPS) — Green energy is the only way to bring billions of people out of energy poverty and prevent a climate disaster, a new study reveals. Conservative institutions like the World Bank, the International Energy Agency and accounting giant Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) all warn humanity is on a path to climate catastrophe unless fossil fuel energy is replaced by green energy.

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Mar 072013
 

Canada must heed US and European signals that climate change matters more than tar sands.

by Tzeporah Berman

US President Barack Obama, through his ambassador to Canada, has every right to ask our federal government to do more to fight climate change. The United States is on track to meet its climate targets. On February 17, in Washington, more than 30,000 people took part in the largest climate rally in US history. Obama has committed more than US$90 billion for clean energy. He recently made fighting climate change a major priority for his second term.

What’s happening in Canada? After US Ambassador David Jacobson delivered the president’s message, the federal government issued a press statement headed, “Harper government continues to make concrete progress in environmental sustainability.” Nothing could be further from the truth.

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Mar 042013
 

Spectacular flame-out triggered by fairly tame comments, as Tom Flanagan's comments go.
 

by John Baglow

There are hardly any bones left to pick over this morning, but l’affaire Flanagan calls for some sober reflection after a pretty spectacular flame-out and the virtual supernova of Schadenfreude that followed it.

So rapid was Tom Flanagan’s implosion that it reminded me of a similar one a few years ago: respected FN leader David Ahenakew spewed a few words of anti-Semitic hatred into a reporter’s mic and lost everything — his standing in his community, his Order of Canada. A lifetime of achievement was erased in a moment. In the same way, Flanagan lost his university post, his CBC gig, his wise counselor status for the Wildrose Party, a speaking engagement at the Manning Centre, and his reputation. In a matter of hours he became a creepy old has-been.

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