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“Greenpeace has taken action here today in the heart of the tar sands, the frontiers of climate destruction” said Bruce Cox, Greenpeace Canada Executive Director from the action site. “We are here to drive the message home to world governments that we need urgent climate leadership, and that means stopping the tar sands.(1)”
Tar sands oil is the dirtiest on the planet, emitting 3-5 times the emissions of conventional oil in production alone. Suncor, the second biggest emitter of greenhouse gas emissions in the tar sands, is heavily financed by numerous international financial institutions(2) Today’s action, two weeks after Greenpeace successfully stopped operations at a Shell tar sands mining operation, comes just a week after Rajendra Pachauri the Nobel Peace Prize winner and head of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said Canada is failing on climate action, and should consider putting its tar sands developments on hold.
People and the planet are literally dying from the lack of climate leadership: It is estimated that over 300,000 people will die this year due to climate change related impacts, while over 20 million more will be displaced. The action also highlighted how the tar sands not only spell climate disaster and wanton destruction, but poison the Athabasca river, a Canadian heritage river, and the people whose lives and livelihoods depend on it.
“Greenhouse gas emissions are just one element of the crimes happening in the tar sands,” said Greenpeace Canada climate and energy campaigner Mike Hudema. “Around 11 million litres of toxic chemicals, including carcinogens and other deadly poisons are leaking into groundwater and the Athabasca and poisoning entire communities. Their food is contaminated, their water unsafe to swim in, let alone drink. This is not what the world expects from Canada, but it’s the grim reality.”
It’s not too late to stop this global climate crime and embrace a clean energy future. This December, the world has an historic opportunity to step back from the brink of catastrophic climate change. At the UN Climate Summit in Copenhagen, world leaders must agree urgent measures to save the climate(3). They must agree a fair, ambitious and binding deal to avert climate chaos. The continued development of the tar sands threatens to derail international climate action and must be abandoned.
1. The tar sands cover an area larger than England. Developing them has created the largest industrial development project on the planet. Plans for further development, driven largely by European companies producing for US markets, mean that the tar sands could emit between 127 and 140 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions a year by 2020, more than the annual emissions of Denmark.
2. Investors in Suncor include RBC, Canada; Chevron, US; Barclays, HSBC, Aviva, UK; Deutsche Bank, Allianz, Germany; Stichting Pensioenfonds, ING Groep, the Netherlands; Credit Suisse, Switzerland; Crédit Agricole, Paribas, France.
3. At Copenhagen, world governments must agree: