Brussels, May 5 – On
the day of an EU-Canada summit, a new report [1] released by Friends of the
Earth Europe warns that global development of tar sands [2] will magnify the
climate crisis and damage the EU’s environment and development objectives.
Pressure is
on high-level representatives from the EU and Canada to discuss the issue of
tar sands and Europe’s aim to limit greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels
through its Fuel Quality Directive. Political attention currently focuses on
Canada as the major producer of oil from tar sands, but the new report reveals
that investment by European oil companies – such as BP, Shell, Total and ENI –
is expanding with developments around the world including in the Republic of
Congo, Venezuela, Madagascar, Russia, Jordan and Egypt, with potentially
disastrous consequences for the climate and local communities.
Darek
Urbaniak, extractives campaigner for Friends of the Earth Europe said: “Europe risks becoming a climate villain if it does not take effective action to prevent the
entry of oil from tar sands into European markets. The environmental damage
caused by tar sands may be outside the EU, but the trail of destruction leads
to its door.”
The
report reveals that the current EU proposal for the implementation of the Fuel
Quality Directive does not penalise oil products from high-carbon sources,
treating oil produced from tar sands as conventional oil. This could allow an
influx of oil from tar sands – heavily criticised for its poor environmental
and social record – into Europe.
Paul de
Clerck, economic justice campaigner for Friends of the Earth Europe said: “The
Fuel Quality Directive is supposed to benefit the climate, but the latest
proposal from the European Commission leaves the European market wide open for
energy-intensive fuels produced from tar sands. The EU should be a global
standard-setter, and should refrain from giving political or financial
assistance to tar sands projects, instead incentivising low carbon projects
like renewables.”
The
vast infrastructure and capital requirements of tar sands (estimated around US$
379 billion in the next 15 years in Canada alone) would be better spent
financing the shift towards a low-carbon economy, and on efforts to meet the
Millennium Development Goals, the report says.
***
For more information, please contact:
Darek Urbaniak, Extractive Industries Campaigner for Friends of the Earth
Europe,
Tel: +32 495 460 258 (Belgian mobile), darek.urbaniak@foeeurope.org
Paul de Clerck, economic justice programme coordinator at Friends of the Earth
Europe +32 494 380 959, paul@milieudefensie.nl
Francesca
Gater, communications officer for Friends of the Earth Europe, +32 2893 1010,
+32 485 930515, francesca.gater@foeeurope.org
***
NOTES:
[1] The report ‘Tar sands – Fuelling the climate crisis, undermining EU energy
security and damaging development objectives’ from Friends of the Earth Europe
is available here.
[2]
Tar sands are the most climate hostile energy source in commercial production
today. Producing oil from tar sands emits on average three to five times more
greenhouse gases (GHGs) than conventional oil production. Tar sands
exploitation also destroys pristine boreal forest and peatlands, produces huge
quantities of toxic waste, pollutes air and water, devastates local wildlife
and threatens the traditional livelihoods of indigenous communities. For
example, the development of tar sands fields in Madagascar threatens an area of
rich biodiversity, undisturbed forests and mangrove swamps awarded UNESCO World
Heritage status, and also the Ankisatra peoples of Western Madagascar. With the
current government in Madagascar, considered illegitimate by the EU, it is also
unclear whether any environmental or social issues relating to tar sands
development will be dealt with in a transparent manner.