Canada threatens trade war with EU over tar
sandsThe row over the EU's plan to label tar sands oil as highly polluting
escalates as Canada says it 'will not hesitate to defend its interests'
Canada
threatens trade war with EU over tar sandsThe row over the EU's plan to
label tar sands oil as highly polluting escalates as Canada says it 'will
not hesitate to defend its interests'
Damian
Carrington
Jiri Rezac/Jiri
Rezac /eyevine
Canada has
threatened a trade war with European Union over the bloc's plan to label
oil from Alberta's vast tar sands as highly polluting, the Guardian can
reveal, before a key vote in Brussels on 23 February.
"Canada
will not hesitate to defend its interests, including at the World Trade
Organisation," state letters sent to European commissioners by
Canada's ambassador to the EU and its oil minister, released under freedom
of information laws.
The move is
a significant escalation of the row over the EU's plans, which Canada
fears would set a global precedent and derail its ability to exploit its
tar sands, which are the biggest fossil fuel reserve in the world after
Saudi Arabia. Environmental groups argue that exploitation of the tar
sands, also called oil sands, is catastrophic for the global climate, as
well as causing serious air and water pollution in Alberta.
Darek
Urbaniak, at Friends of the Earth Europe, which obtained the new
documents, said: "These letters are further evidence of Canadian
government and industry lobbying, which continuously undermines efforts to
combat climate change. We find it unacceptable that the Canadian
government now openly uses direct threats at the highest political levels
to derail crucial EU climate legislation."
The
unveiling of Canada's threats is the latest in a series of recent
embarrassing revelations. On 12 February, the occurrence of a secret
strategy "retreat" in London in 2011 was discovered. High-level
officials discussed the "critical" issue of winning the tar
sands argument in the EU, to "mitigate the impact on the Canadian
brand" and to protect the "huge investments from the likes of
Shell, BP, Total and Statoil". Representatives of Shell, Total and
Statoil attended the meeting alongside the UK's state-owned Royal Bank of
Scotland and the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.
In December,
the Guardian revealed the secret high-level help given to the Canada by
the UK government, which included David Cameron discussing the issue with
his counterpart Stephen Harper during a visit to Canada, and stating
privately that the UK wanted "to work with Canada on finding a way
forward". Canada's minister for natural resources, Joe Oliver,
stated: "[The British] have been very, very helpful."
The UK
proposed an alternative "banded" approach to ascribing carbon
emissions to different fuel types, which does not single out tar sands.
But environmentalists dismiss it as a delaying tactic and the Guardian
understands that the UK has failed to present its proposal formally or
provide supporting evidence.
In the newly
released documents, Canada's ambassador to the EU, David Plunkett, wrote
in December to Connie Hedegaard, European commissioner for climate action,
about the EU plans under the fuel quality directive (FQD). "If the
final measures single out oil sands crude in a discriminatory, arbitrary
or unscientific way, or are otherwise inconsistent with the EU's
international trade obligations, I want to state that Canada will explore
every avenue at its disposal to defend its interests, including at the
World Trade Organisation." In October, Oliver wrote to the European
commissioner for energy, Günther Oettinger and Baroness Catherine
Ashton, vice-president of the commission, stating: "If unjustified,
discriminatory measures to implement the fuel quality directive are put in
place, Canada will not hesitate to defend its interests."
A Canadian
government spokeswoman told the Guardian: "We oppose an FQD that
discriminates against oil sands crude without strong scientific basis. The
oil sands are a proven strategic resource for Canada; we will continue to
promote Canada's oil sands as they are key to Canada's economic prosperity
and energy security."
The European
Commission disputes the charge that its plans are not based on science.
Hedegaard told the Guardian: "The Commission identified the most
carbon-intensive sources in its science-based proposal. This way
high-emission fossil fuels will be labelled and given the proper value. It
is only reasonable to give high values to more polluting products than to
less polluting products. I of course hope the member states will follow
the Commission [and vote for] this environmentally sound initiative."
Colin
Baines, toxic fuels campaign manager at the Co-operative, said:
"There is a wealth of independent science stating that tar sands
fuels emit significantly more carbon than conventional oil, no matter how
many briefings Canada gives claiming otherwise." The EU proposal is
to label tar sands oil as causing 22% more greenhouse gas emissions than
conventional oil on average. The increase results from the energy needed
to blast the bitumen from the bedrock and refine it.
Baines
added: "The Canadian government's aggressive lobbying and attempted
intimidation of the EU is making it look increasingly desperate. But its
threat of a WTO challenge faces one massive problem: tar sands oil is not
a 'like product' with crude oil so no unlawful discrimination exists under
WTO. The EU must adhere to the science and penalise the higher
emissions."
Many
European oil companies have major interests in the Canadian tar sands. In
January, the Guardian revealed a secret compromise plan that would weaken
the impact on tar sands oil, this time from the Netherlands, home of
Shell. BP, headquartered in the UK, had already in their own words
"bent the ear" of the UK's energy minister. Total in France and
ENI in Italy also have tar sands interests and those nations are believed
to be opposed to the EU plan.
If the FQD
proposal fails to win the required majority in the vote on Thursday it
faces an arduous fight for survival through the European council and
parliament. The UK's votes are seen as crucial, but a government
spokeswoman declined to say which way the UK would vote. The issue has
become a difficult one for the responsible minister, Liberal Democrat
Norman Baker, who frequently supports environmental policies. On 10
February, he said: "For climate change reasons, I do not think it
would be helpful to extend our reliance on fossil fuels any more than
necessary," before a meeting about proposals to extract shale gas
using fracking near his constituency in Lewes.
His party
colleague, Chris Davies MEP, who is the Lib Dem environment spokesman in
the European parliament, said: "It is extraordinarily naive for
ministers and officials to take the special pleading by Canada as though
it were gospel truth, rather than what it is – an attempt to protect
narrow financial interests." In 2009, Simon Hughes MP, and now deputy
leader of the Lib Dems said: "World leaders must work towards a
treaty that will outlaw tar sands extraction, in the same way they came
together to ban land mines, blood diamonds and cluster bombs."
In December,
Canada unilaterally pulled out of the world's only binding climate change
treaty, the Kyoto protocol, having increased its emissions of greenhouse
gases by a third instead of reducing them by 6%. In public, the Canadian
government claimed that tar sands are "sustainable" but in
private it has admitted there is no "credible scientific
information" to support this. Canada suffered a setback in January,
when Barack Obama rejected a proposal for a controversial pipeline called
Keystone XL to import bring tar sands oil from Alberta, though Republicans
in congress are working to reinstate the pipeline.
Caption:
Aerial view of Shell Albian mine north of Fort McMurray, Alberta,
Canada. Photograph: Jiri Rezac/Jiri Rezac /eyevine
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