Friday 14 December 2018

COP24 and Canadian Greenwash

As the temperatures dipped and the rain splashed against the windows, the giant puppets found themselves in hibernation mode. Time to recharge their batteries.

Bundled in their sweaters and thick socks, the puppets were taking in the news about the COP24 talks.

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 GOOD TIME (sipping tea): NOWCA, what's in this tea? It's delicious!
image courtesy of Pixabay

NOWCA: Just rosemary and stevia leaves, Good Time. Nice isn't it?

GOOD TIME (sheepishly): Yes, very. And, um, what does COP24 actually stand for again? I know it's high level talks about the environment.

NOWCA (reading from the computer screen): "COP24 is the informal name for the 24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change."

They have a homepage and a Facebook page.

PER: I've been so impressed with 15 year old Greta Thunberg who spoke there. She's expressed what so many are feeling.

And I've been encouraged by all the people demonstrating.

GOOD TIME: Really?

PER: Yes. On December 10th right outside the talks, there was a demonstration where people demanded that their leaders do a lot more to address climate change.

And people who've joined the Extinction Rebellion have been urging people to take direct, non-violent action on climate change, and demonstrating all over the world.

Then France broke out in Yellow Vest protests against austerity. Austerity is NOT the route to a just transition to a green future. It sounds like their President, Emmanuel Macron, is listening, but I hope he goes far enough, and I hope other countries follow his lead. Our Prime Minister could learn a thing or two from the way he's giving ordinary people more spending power. Just like a lot of places in the world, life is getting harder all the time for most Canadians.

NOWCA: Speaking of Canadians, have you heard about Autumn Peltier? She's a 13 year old Anishnaabe girl from Wikwemikong First Nation who will address world leaders and the United Nations next spring about protecting water.

I hope decision makers around the world listen to her. We can't keep damaging our water the way we have been. Fracking, fish farms, tailing ponds -- they all have to become a thing of the past.

MR. PIPELINE (perking up): What?! No they don't. We need oil and gas and farmed fish.

PER: I wouldn't worry too much, Mr. Pipeline.

Sadly, Canada's doing more on paper than on the ground. For example, Environmental Defence and Stand Earth released a report at COP24 showing that emissions from the oil and gas sector in Canada continue to rise. And because of intensive lobbying from that industry, about 80 per cent of those emissions will be exempt from the federal carbon price.

This, despite the fact that the 'big five' oil companies made over $13.5 billion last year alone.

MR. PIPELINE (chuckling): You've got to hand it to them, they sure know how to manage perceptions.

NOWCA: And our governments also know how to make things look good that are actually anything but.

Look at that $40 billion LNG plant in Northern BC. Our governments are claiming this is green partly because they plan to fuel it with electricity generated from Site C. But Site C violates indigenous rights, is made up of prime agricultural land and irreplaceable wildlife habitat that the dam would destroy. Besides that it would displace people who've lived there for generations, and the land they plan to build on is unstable. And the subsidies LNG are receiving are massive. And BC's public sector pension funds are invested in LNG and other destructive industries.

So not only is that $40 billion being invested in a dirty sunset industry instead of the green technology of tomorrow, but it will still create way too many emissions, and the electricity they're claiming is green does all kinds of environmental and social damage.

PER: And don't forget the pipeline Trudeau bought for $4.5 billion as part of Canada's transition to a green economy. Is that an oxymoron or what?

MR. PIPELINE (smiling): Ya, those folks have always had a way with words.

GOOD TIME: I wonder if Autumn knows about the fish farms on our Pacific coast. Another industry that destroys our environment while depending on pension funds, this time on Canadian Pension Plan funds. No one explains the problems -- the effluent, the sea lice, the disease -- that poison our endangered Pacific Salmon like Alexandra Morton who fights tirelessly to rid our coast of them before our wild salmon stocks collapse. The thing is, the fish from those farms are highly toxic, and they're sold to restaurants and cruise ships.

MR. PIPELINE: Good Time, you're just biased. Farmed fish will feed the world!

GOOD TIME: Not according to some researchers. And what the government is doing about fish farms in our coastal waters is so confusing that I wonder if it's even relevant.

MR. PIPELINE (chuckling): Ya, when people are confused they stop paying attention. All the better
image courtesy of Pixabay
for us.

PER: You think that's funny, Mr. Pipeline? How funny is your contaminated drinking water? Right now in our own backyard our watersheds are being clearcut. And we'll all have to drink dirty water if it continues.

MR. PIPELINE (no longer smiling): I'm thinking about how we can stop it. That's too close to home for me.

NOWCA: Really, all of it's too close to home. Our planet is our home. We depend on her for our lives, and we have to care for her. Listening to these COP24 talks makes me want to wear a yellow vest like the people in France, and join the Extinction Rebellion. Our political leaders are paying lip service to the environment, and the genuine concerns of the world's people are being ignored.

What can we do when our political representatives repeatedly stand up for big business instead of the citizens they're responsible to? I don't know anymore.

PER: I know, NOWCA, it's overwhelming. But there are some hopeful rumblings. Besides the yellow vest movement and the Extinction Rebellion, there's also the Green New Deal in the USA and Canada's own Leap Manifesto. As well, Bernie Sanders and Yanis Varoufakis are launching an international movement against the far right.

And many around the world are reaching the end of their rope. Those in power don't have their best interests at heart, and many no longer believe the usual players.

GOOD TIME: I hope you're right, Per. Things just can't go on the way they are. Every year it's harder for people to get by. Something's got to give.

PER: Right now, the best we can do is rest up and rejuvenate. We're going to need all our strength to get through this crazy time in history. How about if I put on the kettle and make more of that delicious tea? It's time to relax, build our strength and get focused.

image courtesy of Pixabay
NOWCA: I agree, Per. We need to replenish ourselves.

But I think while we're at it we can manage a weekly hike with our RAPP forms and our cell phones to take pictures of what's happening in the woods.

This Monday, December 16th, there'll be one in Balfour and I hope we can arrange carpooling, since there's some seriously damaging logging they're trying to do there.

Hiking is a lovely, relaxing activity, and a great way of getting to know others who are concerned about the kind of logging that's going on here.

GOOD TIME: Bring food, take pictures, walk in the woods -- sounds like a great time to me. Let's do it!

image courtesy of Pixabay


















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