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Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Monday, June 17, 2024

Politics in Europe > Sweden's new right-wing Government changes everything, especially Environment Agenda 2030

 

HUGE NEWS πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡ͺ 17 Jan 2024 

Sweden is SCRAPPING Agenda 2030 goals!



The new right-wing government is dismantling the work of the previous Socialist government.

*Led by the Moderate Party, the new 'right-wing' government took office in October 2022.

Sweden has been doing a lot of right things lately. They have already scrapped the renewable energy plans and have been pushing for more nuclear power. 

In the new year, Sweden REMOVED climate taxes on fuel, causing diesel prices to collapse by over 4 SEK per litre. In 2022 when the Socialist democrats were in power, the diesel price reached a whopping 28 SEK per litre. 

After the right-wing government removed climate taxes, prices in the new year reached almost as low as 17 SEK per litre. That is around 39% lower diesel prices. 

*Of course, this will affect the whole country as everything that move will become cheaper. This is the opposite of what Trudeau is doing in Canada.

Wow! But further steps have been taken... 

The previous Socialist government included formulations in directives to governmental organizations in Sweden that they had to work towards achieving the Agenda 2030 goals. 

The new government has cut the budget to municipalities and regions co-operation for Agenda 2030. And now during the Christmas holidays, they have REMOVED the Agenda 2030 goals from the directives to government organizations such as the Swedish Energy Agency, the Swedish Chemicals Agency, the Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management and the Swedish Food Agency among others. THIS IS HUGE! 

Did you know that Bill Gates has donated a whopping $1.27 BILLION towards funding the UN Agenda 2030 global goals? And a large amount of that money is going towards GLOBAL DIGITAL ID. 

This is a major win for the right-wing Swedish Democrats who are very happy about this move. "Generally, we don't see any added value with the Agenda 2030 work and welcome the development. During the reign of the Social Democrats and the Green Party, Agenda 2030 and gender equality have been put in place everywhere, and we do not think that is one of the most important tasks for authorities" said Martin Kinnunen, environment and climate spokesperson for the Swedish Democrats. 

So there we have it. Sweden has begun to go against the Agenda 2030 global goals. Will anyone else follow, do you support this move by the Swedish right-wing government?



Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Climate Change > Big Oil backing off on reducing production in favour of profits; Record number of Polar Bears in Churchill this year

..

This is like a declaration of war on Justin Trudeau who is surrounded by environmentalists. This will blow up as a battle between Alberta's Premier, Danielle Smith, and Trudeau. Unfortunately, it's a good position for Trudeau to be in. 



Suncor has been too focused on energy transition,

must get back to fundamentals: CEO


'We win by creating value through our large integrated asset base underpinned by oilsands,'

Rich Kruger says


Amanda Stephenson · The Canadian Press · 
Posted: Aug 15, 2023 2:54 PM PDT | Last Updated: August 15

Rich Kruger is the chief executive of Suncor Energy. He had retired from the same position with Imperial Oil in 2019.
(Kyle Bakx/CBC)


The man hired to turn around the flagging fortunes of Suncor Energy Inc. said Tuesday he believes the company has been too focused in recent years on the energy transition and must get back to an oil-centred business strategy.

CEO Rich Kruger, who took the reins at the Calgary-based energy giant this spring, told analysts on a conference call that the company's board of directors agrees with him that a "revised direction and tone" at the company is necessary.

He said he believes Suncor must not neglect "the business drivers of today" in favour of future-focused, clean and low-carbon energy pursuits.

"We have a bit of a disproportionate emphasis on the longer-term energy transition," Kruger said, adding that while lower emissions energy is important, it is not what is going to make money for shareholders today.

"Today, we win by creating value through our large integrated asset base underpinned by oilsands."

Kruger, the former CEO of ExxonMobil's Canadian subsidiary Imperial Oil Ltd., was lured out of retirement this year to lead a restructuring at Suncor in the wake of a spate of high-profile operational and financial challenges at the company.

His stated goal to refocus Suncor's efforts on its oilsands assets comes even as the company has publicly committed to achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

'Squeezing every last drop of oil out of the ground'


His comments also come at the tail end of a summer in which global temperatures have soared to never-before-seen heights and wildfires exacerbated by climate change have wreaked devastation across the planet.

"It's good to hear a fossil fuel CEO being honest about their intentions — squeezing every last drop of oil out of the ground, even if it means cooking our climate and harming communities in the process," said Greenpeace Canada climate campaign head Laura Ullman.

But she added Kruger appears to be blindly doubling down on business as usual in the face of an increasingly urgent need to rapidly transition to renewable energy.

"It's hard to understand how anyone who has seen the absolute devastation of this summer's fires, floods and (oilsands) leaks could continue pushing for the expansion of fossil fuels," Ullman said in an email.

'Absolutely focusing on their short-term balance sheet'


Suncor is not alone in its strategy, said Duncan Kenyon, director of corporate engagement with shareholder advocacy group Investors for Paris Compliance. Ever since crude prices spiked in the aftermath of last year's Russian invasion of Ukraine, he added, energy companies have been laser-focused on maximizing profits from oil.

After all, what's a war for?

European energy giant Shell, for example, angered climate activists earlier this year by effectively abandoning its plan to cut oil production by 1 to 2 per cent per year until the end of the decade.

British energy giant BP has also scaled back its greenhouse gas emission reduction targets in the wake of last year's record profits from oil, while ExxonMobil's CEO has boasted of "leaning in" to the petroleum products that are in demand today.

"(Suncor's move) is really consistent with where almost every major oil company globally is going," Kenyon said.

"They are all absolutely focusing on their short-term balance sheet performance."

Wind and solar assets sold off


Last year, Suncor sold off its wind and solar power assets, getting out of the renewable energy business it had been involved in for more than two decades.

Instead, the company said at the time, it would focus on advancing the development of low-carbon fuels (including sustainable jet fuel) as well as the commercial-scale deployment of carbon capture technology.

The company also increased its presence in Canada's oilsands this year, acquiring 100 per cent ownership of the Fort Hills oilsands mine in northern Alberta by buying out previous partners Teck Resources and TotalEnergies.

Suncor is a member of the Pathways Alliance, a consortium of Canadian oilsands companies that have all committed to net-zero by 2050 and have proposed working together to construct a massive carbon capture and storage transportation hub in northern Alberta to help reduce emissions from oilsands production.

Kruger said Tuesday the company remains committed to Pathways, adding the group is hoping to finalize talks with the federal and Alberta governments about a fiscal framework for carbon capture projects as early as this fall.

However, Kenyon said he thinks Suncor's focus on oil ignores the "demand erosion" risk the company faces as the pace of electric vehicle adoption picks up and buyers seek out lower-cost, lower-emission barrels in the future.

"They're trying to cash in, in the short-term," he said. "But I don't see any acknowledgment of the risk of doubling down on 'business as usual.' "

Job cuts


On Tuesday's conference call, Kruger said investors can expect to hear more on Suncor's new direction in the months to come. But he said already in the second quarter, the company has made "material progress" towards its new goal of focusing on the fundamentals.

In June, Suncor announced it would reduce its employee head count by 20 per cent, or 1,500 people, by the end of the year in order to eliminate unnecessary or "unaffordable" work.

As of Aug. 1, 535 of these job reductions have already occurred, Kruger said, resulting in a cost reduction of about $125 million so far.

"These actions, they aren't easy, and they certainly aren't taken lightly, but they are necessary for our competitiveness," he said.

$1.9B earned in Q2


Suncor said Tuesday it earned $1.88 billion in the second quarter of 2023, down from approximately $4 billion in the same period last year when oil prices were higher.

The Calgary-based energy giant says it took a $275-million restructuring charge in the quarter related to the previously announced job cut plans.

As a result of this restructuring charge, Suncor said its adjusted funds from operations for the three months ended June 30, 2023, amounted to $2.7 billion or $2.03 per share, compared to $5.3 billion or $3.80 per share in the prior year's quarter.

The company suffered a high-profile cybersecurity incident in June but said the breach did not have an effect on its financial results for the quarter.




Ten years ago, environmentalists were crying that polar bears would disappear from the Canadian North. This hysteria has been proven to be absurd, again.



Churchill on track for record number of polar bear reports

this season, conservation officers say


There have been 76 calls reporting polar bears this season, up from 18 last year


Bartley Kives · CBC News · 
Posted: Aug 16, 2023 3:00 AM PDT | 

Officials are getting more and more calls about polar bears around Churchill this summer. Ten conservation officers, Mounties and other officials recently put a heavily sedated 910-pound bear into an RCMP truck to move the animal to a temporary holding facility. (Submitted by the Government of Manitoba)


Conservation officers in Churchill, Man., say they're on track to respond to a record number of calls about polar bears wandering into the Hudson Bay town or just outside of it this season.

As of Aug. 15, Manitoba Conservation officers had responded to 76 calls about polar bears in and around Churchill and were forced to move three of the large carnivores into a holding facility east of the town.

That compares with 18 calls by the same date a year ago. And officers didn't have to capture, sedate and house any of those bears in the former military facility — a catch-and-release program that normally does not start until October.

"There are so many polar bears in and around the town of Churchill we are looking at record numbers this year and that's heavily influenced by where the last ice in the Hudson Bay melts," said Churchill conservation officer Chantal Maclean, speaking in her office on Tuesday.

During a regular spring, the estimated 616 polar bears who live along the western coast of Hudson Bay make landfall in many locations across several hundred kilometres of coastline, stretching from southeastern Nunavut to northwestern Ontario.

Only half the bears tagged by scientists usually spend their summers in Manitoba, Maclean said.

"This year, every single bear that we have tagged, except for four down in Ontario and one in Nunavut, is sitting right in Manitoba, which likely means we are going to have a very busy bear season."

Manitoba conservation officers Ian Van Nest and Chantal Maclean helped move the 910-pound polar bear west of the town of Churchill to a holding facility. The bear will be released to the wild in several weeks. (Submitted by the Government of Manitoba)


Churchill, unofficially known as the polar bear capital of the world, sits in the middle of a natural polar bear corridor. To the east of the town lies Wapusk National Park, which protects summer denning areas for the bears.

To the west of the town is Button Bay, which is often the first patch of Hudson Bay's western coastline to freeze up every fall.

During a normal season, polar bear reports pick up in the fall, allowing bears who are placed in the holding facility to remain there until freeze-up.

The three bears captured already this summer will be released after 30 days, Maclean said. The most recent guest in the facility was a 910-pound creature captured west of the town of Churchill on Aug. 8.

Conservation officers said they first try to shoo problem bears away from town in the direction of Button Bay, using shotgun shells packed with soft projectiles akin to bean bags or the noise and wind from helicopter rotors. 

If that doesn't work, polar bears are sedated and then driven or flown to the holding facility. It took 10 people to move the bear sedated on Aug. 8 into the flatbed of an RCMP truck.

The polar bear was moved to this holding facility east of Churchill, which now has three bears. 
Usually, the facility doesn't get any bears until October. (Bartley Kives/CBC)


"We are a predator coexistence program. It's a bad day for us when we have to go hands-on with a bear," Maclean said, adding she and her colleagues only move bears when they are in danger of becoming habituated to people or their food, or otherwise pose a threat to people, property or themselves.

"Down in Charleswood, where I'm from, you have a white-tailed deer walking down the street. Up here, you look out the window and you might see an 800-pound bear trying to get into your neighbour's window."

Minutes after she uttered those words, a call came in about a polar bear spotted by the beach behind Churchill's municipal complex. The previous week, a mother and her cub were observed swimming in the direction of three teens who were wading into Hudson Bay, said Ian Van Nest, the manager of Manitoba Conservation's Polar Bear Alert Team.

He and Maclean jumped into their trucks and made the short drive to the beach, where lifelong Churchill resident Alex Bennett said he spied a bear on the rocks.

He said bear sightings are so common this year, he can't enjoy the summer. 

"We used to go down to the Flats and have a picnic, you know? You can't even [expletive] do that any more, there's so many [expletive] bears," he said.

Van Nest and Maclean, however, could not locate the creature. Carrying shotguns, they walked on to the beach just to make sure no apex predators were hiding behind rocks.

Conservation officers Ian Van Nest and Chantal Maclean return from checking the beach behind Churchill's municipal complex. They were responding to a report of polar bear wandering into town but did not find one. At the same time, seven polar bears were being monitored near the shore of Hudson Bay, slightly east of the town. (Bartley Kives/CBC)


Back in his truck, Van Nest said his team is monitoring the progress of seven bears along the coast further to the east. As he drives in that direction, a cluster of vehicles full of rubber-necking tourists parked on the side of the road serves as a telltale sign at least one of those bears is nearby.

About 50 metres between the road and the bay, a roughly 440-pound bear is sunning herself on a rock. The tourists are behaving, remaining in their vans and pickup trucks. One has a camera with a telescopic lens as wide as a frisbee.

"We're for sure shaping up to be quite the season," Van Nest said. "We're going to have lots of calls, and it's only going to pick up in October and November."



Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Apple, Tesla & Other US Tech Giants Sued Over Child Labor Deaths at Cobalt Mines in Congo

Lithium Ion Batteries for cell-phones, laptops, EV-cars, wind and solar power storage, use cobalt.

Is this a price we are willing to pay for the greening of the world?

The children, of course, don't have any choice; I'm glad to see this lawsuit is giving them a voice.

A child breaks rocks extracted from a cobalt mining at a copper mine quarry and cobalt pit in Lubumbashi, Congo
© AFP / Junior Kannah

A civil lawsuit has been filed in a federal court in Washington DC against Apple, Google’s parent company Alphabet, Tesla, Microsoft, and Dell. They are accused of exploiting child labor in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of five children who were killed and 11 who were injured working in the mines of the DRC. They were aged between 13 and 17 when the incidents occurred.

The companies were part of a system of forced labor that allegedly led to the death and serious injury of the children, according to the complaint. Images in the filed court documents showed children with disfigured or missing limbs.

Six of the 14 children in the case were killed in tunnel collapses, and the others suffered life-altering injuries, including paralysis.

Child miners work for $2-3 a day “under Stone Age conditions for paltry wages and at immense personal risk,” the lawsuit said. It also alleged that the US tech giants know and “have known for a significant” amount of time that child workers are used in the “dangerous” mines where the cobalt, which ends up in their products, originates.

“These companies – the richest companies in the world, these fancy gadget-making companies – have allowed children to be maimed and killed to get their cheap cobalt,” Terrence Collingsworth, an attorney representing the families, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

A child and a woman break rocks extracted from a cobalt mine at a copper quarry and cobalt pit in Lubumbashi, Congo
© AFP / Junior Kannah

More than half of the world’s cobalt is produced in the DRC. The mineral is an essential part of lithium batteries which are used in almost all of the companies’ products.

Global demand for cobalt is expected to increase at 7 percent to 13 percent annually over the next decade, a study by the European Commission shows.

More than 40 million people have been estimated to be captive in modern slavery, which includes forced labor and forced marriage, according to Walk Free and the International Labour Organization.



Friday, October 18, 2019

Understanding the Incredible Power of Canada's Environmental Movement


This astonishing 32 minute video puts much of the environmental movement into perspective, from their roots, to their funding, to their purposes, to their results. It's nothing like you think it is. The story is very well documented and needs to be viewed by everyone with an interest in 1st Nations, politics, the environment, and the economy.




Comments late in the video dovetail nicely with articles posted on this blog previously, such as: 

USA's Own Climate Change Rep Ominously Threatens US http://northwoodsministries.blogspot.com/2016/02/usas-own-climate-change-rep-ominously.html


Please take a half hour and educate yourself as to what is really going on. You will be astonished!


Saturday, June 22, 2019

Why the Global Fossil-Fuel Phase-Out is a Fantasy Akin to Time Travel

A reality check on ending fossil fuels by 2050

To produce the power needed to offset fossil fuels, Canada would have to
build two and a half $13-billion hydro dams every year

Canada’s Green Party, said to be gaining ground, has a new platform plan,
headlined “Mission: Possible," to eliminate fossil fuels by 2050. Getty Images

Terence Corcoran
Financial Post

Judging from the headlines, Canada and the world are on track to ratchet up renewable energy and begin the rapid scale-down and ultimate phase-out of fossil fuels. Most energy analysts consider the fossil-fuel phase-out to be a scientific, economic and political fantasy, akin to levitation and time travel, but the movement keeps making news.

Governments everywhere — from Canada to the United Kingdom to states in Australia — are declaring climate emergencies and committing to variations on zero emissions. The international organization promoting emergency declarations claims “a fast transition to zero emissions is possible.”

Canada’s Green Party, said to be gaining ground, has a new platform plan, headlined “Mission: Possible,” to eliminate fossil fuels by 2050. A proposed Green New Deal in America aims to eliminate fossil fuels from the U.S. power grid by 2030 and phase gasoline out of the transportation sector.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Canada’s oil industry is on its way out: “It’s the direction the world is headed.” The newly announced Liberal and Conservative programs are leaning in the zero-carbon direction, although less explicitly.

The magnitude of the implied decarbonization effort takes us beyond the possible
and into the world of junk science fiction
   
So what are the carbon zeroists talking about? Aside from massive amounts of government intervention — almost a total takeover of the economythe practicality of it all looks a bit impossible, to put it mildly. As the graph below suggests, the required technological and economic change could be a little overwhelming.


The general scale of the operation is hinted at by Climate Mobilization, an organization promoting climate emergency declarations: “Only WWII-scale Climate Mobilization can protect humanity and the natural world.”

In keeping with the analogy, here are some indicators of the magnitude of the coming Green World War III.

In Canada, for example, Vancouver energy consultant Aldyen Donnelly calculated that to achieve the “deep decarbonization” Canada is aiming for will require massive expansions of non-fossil fuel sources of energy.

To produce the electric power needed to offset the lost fossil fuel energy, Canada would have to build 2.5 hydro power dams the size of British Columbia’s $13-billion Site C project somewhere in the country “every year for the foreseeable future” leading up to the proposed 2050 carbon reduction targets. The geographic and cost obstacles send that prospect into the realm of the impossible.

On a global basis, the magnitude of the implied decarbonization effort illustrated in the graph takes us beyond the possible and into the world of junk science fiction. In 2018, world consumption of fossil fuels rose to 11,865 million tonnes of oil equivalent (mtoe). To get that down to near zero by 2050 as proposed by the zeroists would require a lot of alternative energy sources.

University of Colorado scientist Roger Pielke Jr. did some of the rough numbers. “There are 11,161 days until 2050. Getting to net zero by 2050 requires replacing one mtoe of fossil fuel consumption every day starting now.” On a global basis, such a transition would require building the equivalent of one new 1.5-gigawatt nuclear plant every day for the next 30 years.

If not nuclear, then maybe solar? According to a U.S. government site, it takes about three million solar panels to produce one gigawatt of energy, which means that by 2050 the world will need 3,000,000 X 11,865 (should be 11,161) solar panels to offset fossil fuels. The wind alternative would require about 430 new wind turbines each of the 11,865 days leading to 2050.

So far, other tested technologies do not exist to offset the fossil fuel energy that would be lost under the green zero targets. Maybe this is a world war that should be stopped before it gets out of control.

Of course, no one approach would be used but a multiplicity of approaches, which, so far are limited to 4 - hydro power, nuclear, wind, and solar. To calculate a very rough estimate we will assume that all four power sources will grow equally. Therefore, we can divide Dr Pielke's estimates by 4. That leaves:

- Building 0.625 site C scale dams each year; that's 18.75 new dams. That should go down well with indigenous peoples, if there are 19 possible sites in Canada. Getting approval for the first one would take until 2050.

- Building a 1.5 gw nuclear plant every 4 days for 30 years; or 2790 nuclear plants; ie one for every city with 1 million people or more.

- Building 750,000 Solar panels per day for a total of 8 trillion, 370 billion, 750 million solar panels. Of course, that would mean that we would all be living underneath a solar panel.

- Building 107.5 wind turbines every day, or 1 million, 200 thousand turbines total. There wouldn't be a bird left alive on the planet.

Of course, the carbon foot-print required to build these structures would mean they would be woefully inadequate by the time they are all built. So we would have to do it again in the next 50 years. That's presuming there are no big volcanoes to make a mockery of all our doings.

But perhaps technology will provide many new ways to reduce the necessity of all this building. Let's pretend it will cut the total need in half. Try cutting my numbers in half and see if they are any less absurd. 

It looks like insanity to me. 


Saturday, March 17, 2018

China's Xi Jinping Re-Elected with VP Ally, No Term Limits

By Sommer Brokaw  

Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) and Premier Li Keqiang applaud during the National People's Congress (NPC) in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Saturday. Chinese President Xi Jinping has secured another five years as China's leader. Photo by Stephen Shaver/UPI | License Photo

UPI -- The Chinese legislature formally endorsed President Xi Jinping for another five years on Saturday, and appointed his ally, Wang Qishan, as vice president.

The National People's Congress ballot unanimously approved Xi for a second term. Wang had a total of 2,969 votes in his favor and only one against.

The election of the two allies as China's top chiefs comes just a week after the Chinese parliament removed term limits on both positions. It also comes on the heels of China planning to formalize rules for its new anti-corruption agency, the National Supervisory Commission, or NSC.

So, Xi will still have to win the election in the National People's Congress every 5 years to remain as president. He can run indefinitely.

On Saturday morning, the Chinese parliament also approved Xi's plan to reduce the cabinet by 15 positions at ministerial or vice-ministerial levels to make government "better structured," and "more efficient." State Council Wang Yong said the plan would also "strengthen the government's role in economic management," and "environmental protection."

It, in all probability, will allow Xi to remove some people who may not see eye-to-eye with him. In Communist countries this is how leaders establish control. In Communist Russia, many a politician would simply disappear.

Wang, 69, a close friend of Xi's, had served as head of corruption investigations in China since October, after stepping down from the ruling Communist Party's top echelon, the South China Morning Post reported.

Now, as vice president, Wang is expected to cover global affairs, including addressing China's tumultuous relationship with the United States in light of an expected trade war, the South China Morning Post report stated. Xi is considered the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao Zedong, who chaired the Communist Party until 1976.

"Clearly Xi is shoring up his power, but I would suggest what China also wants to do more than anything else is define a mode of government which is not liberal and at the same time ... is predictable, reliable, which is safe for businesses to invest in," director of the University China Center at Oxford Rana Mitter told CNN.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International and the Brookings Institute have been critical of the new NSC. Amnesty International told CNN it had concerns about the agency's "far-reaching powers." Brookings Institute said citizens would have "little or no legal recourse" to challenge corruption allegations.