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Carmichael rail loan an abuse of taxpayer’s money, finds Greenpeace report

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Sydney, 21 December: A $1bn government loan to build the Carmichael Rail Project in Queensland is against the public interest and cannot proceed, says a Greenpeace Australia Pacific report released today.

Media reports that companies associated with the Carmichael coal mine project are accused of money laundering, corruption and financial crimes are yet more reasons why the Government should not fund Carmichael.

The Greenpeace document outlines the Northern Australian Infrastructure Facility (NAIF) Board’s network of connections to banks and mining  companies, special relationships that open questions about their independence.

“Building the Carmichael coal mine is in itself a ludicrous proposition, let alone lending the company a billion dollars of taxpayer’s money that we may never get back. Our investigation shows the public how important it is to stop Carmichael right now, before we wreck a valuable part of Queensland,” said Greenpeace Campaigner Jonathan Moylan.

The points above are detailed in ‘Off Track: Why NAIF Can’t Approve the Carmichael Rail project’, available to download at the Greenpeace Australia Pacific website.

The report argues that a $1bn loan for the Carmichael Rail Project would probably not satisfy three of NAIF’s own criteria:

  1. The project will not be of public benefit, since tax revenues and job creation will be low and the rail line cannot easily be used for other purposes;

  2. The company asking for the loan has stated it has sufficient capital to proceed without NAIF’s financial assistance; and

  3. In the long-term, falling coal prices and collapsing demand in India may mean the $1bn loan may never be repaid or refinanced.

The Greenpeace report also notes that several NAIF Board members who would be involved in approving such a loan are closely linked to the mining industry. This calls into question the Board’s ability to take an objective and unbiased decision on behalf of Australian taxpayers.

Mr. Moylan concluded: “Australians shouldn’t be paying to send coal to a country that doesn't even want it, at a time when we, India and the entire world have agreed to reduce fossil fuels and carbon emissions. Loaning $1bn to Carmichael doesn’t make any sense at all.”

 


Amazon still lags behind Apple, Google in Greenpeace renewable energy report

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Apple, Google, Facebook, and newcomer Switch are taking some of the greatest strides towards 100% renewable energy, while companies such as Netflix, Amazon Web Services, and Samsung are lagging. The findings in Greenpeace USA’s report, Clicking Clean: Who is Winning the Race to Build a Green Internet? outlines the energy footprints of large data center operators and nearly 70 of the most popular websites and applications.

“Amazon continues to talk a good game on renewables but is keeping its customers in the dark on its energy decisions. This is concerning, particularly as Amazon expands into markets served by dirty energy,” said Greenpeace USA Senior IT Analyst, Gary Cook. 

”Like Apple, Facebook, and Google, Netflix is one of the biggest drivers of the online world and has a critical say in how it is powered. Netflix must embrace the responsibility to make sure its growth is powered by renewables, not fossil fuels and it must show its leadership here” continued Cook.

Netflix has one of the largest data footprints of the companies profiled, accounting for one third of internet traffic in North America and contributing significantly to the worldwide data demand from video streaming. The company announced in 2015 that it intended to fully offset its carbon footprint, but a closer examination reveals it is likely turning to carbon offsets or unbundled renewable energy credits, which do little to increase renewable energy investment

For the first time, this year’s report also evaluates Asian companies including tech giants Tencent, Baidu, Alibaba, and Naver, which are steadily expanding globally. The region is well behind the US market in renewable commitments, due in large part to fewer clean energy options from monopoly utilities. 

“Leading tech companies in the US have shown that clean power can be both good for the environment and for business. East Asian companies must step up to embrace that reality as well,” said Jude Lee, Senior Climate and Energy Campaigner at Greenpeace East Asia.

Nearly 20 IT companies have committed to 100% renewable energy use now. Among all data centres evaluated, Switch - a new entry to this year’s report - is making the best progress to transitioning its data center fleet to renewables through both procurement and aggressive advocacy. 

The IT industry’s energy footprint accounted for 7% of global electricity in 2012, a number set to grow as global internet traffic increases, and even exceed 12% by 2017. Video streaming accounts for 63% of global internet traffic in 2015, and is projected to reach about 80% by 2020, according to Cisco Network Traffic Forecast, 2016. 

Greenpeace has benchmarked the energy performance of the IT sector since 2009. Greenpeace is calling on all major internet companies to:

  • Make a long term commitment to become 100% renewably powered.
  • Commit to be transparent on IT energy performance and consumption of resources, including the source of electricity, to enable customers, investors, and stakeholders to measure progress toward that goal.
  • Develop a strategy for increasing their supply of renewable energy, through a mixture of procurement, investment, and corporate advocacy to both electricity suppliers and government decisionmakers.




Notes to editors:

[1] Greenpeace USA’s report Clicking Clean: Who is Winning the Race to Build a Green Internet? can be found at http://www.clickclean.org/downloads/ClickClean2016%20HiRes.pdf
[2] The full Cisco Network Traffic Forecast, 2016 can be found at http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/service-provider/vni-network-traffic-forecast/infographic.html
[3] Photos and video can be accessed here: http://media.greenpeace.org/collection/27MZIFJJRUIB7

Media contacts:

Maria Elena De Matteo, Global Communications Strategist, Greenpeace East Asia, mariaelena.dematteo@greenpeace.org, phone +39 333-9860831

Greenpeace International Press Desk, pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org, phone: +31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours)

Greenpeace: Turnbull’s preposterous coal dogma smashed by record heat

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Sydney, 19 January 2016: Responding to the finding that 2016 was the hottest on record, Greenpeace climate and energy campaigner, Nikola Casule, said:

“Earlier this week, Prime Minister Turnbull claimed that his support for coal was ‘pragmatic and practical’. He said opposition to the fossil fuels that drive climate change was merely ‘ideological’.

“Mr Turnbull needs to rethink this irrational and frankly absurd position. Scientists have proven the year 2016 was the warmest on record. And it’s no secret why. The mining and burning of coal is driving global warming to record highs - creating extreme weather events like heatwaves, hurricanes and bushfires.

“As the world’s biggest coal exporter, Australia is directly responsible. Instead of flirting with the coal industry, Mr Turnbull needs to implement a ban on new coal mines and start transitioning Australia away from fossil fuels and towards clean, safe renewable energy.”

Leaked BP report sparks concerns over safety

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Sydney and London, 13 December 2016: BP’s withdrawal from the Great Australian Bight this October was an even luckier break than previously thought, said Greenpeace Australia Pacific today after The Financial Times and Energydesk published new information on the company's parlous safety information handling.

“An accident on the scale of the Deepwater Horizon disaster in 2010 would have devastated the Great Australian Bight’s ecology and industry.” said Greenpeace Oceans Campaigner Nathaniel Pelle.

“It increasingly looks like South Australia’s coastal communities, not to mention the unique wildlife of the Bight, really dodged a bullet. The people of Australia successfully pressured BP to pull out, but it’s only now that we’re learning just how poor the company’s information systems are.”

“Yet other companies like Chevron, Murphy-Santos, Bight Oil and Karoon Gas are still lining up to drill for oil on the Bight. It’s time for them all to realise the age of oil is over and South Australia doesn’t need the risk.”

See Financial Times article here: Tom Burgis, ‘Leaked BP report reveals risk of lethal accidents’, 13 December 2016

 

CONTINUES BELOW

A litany of failures in the way BP manages critical safety information may be increasing the risk of accidents at the oil giant’s plants across the world, according to analysis by leading experts of an internal BP report leaked to Energydesk.

The confidential document handed to Energydesk and shared with the Financial Times warns that systems designed to manage critical information and the reporting of incidents at a number of BP’s installations are so weak there is a real risk of leaks or vapour cloud explosions, and that the problem “requires urgent attention.”

The document has raised alarm amongst leading experts and politicians. It comes just days after news that BP has approved the $9bn Mad Dog 2 deepwater project in the Gulf of Mexico and weeks after the oil giant ditched plans to drill in the pristine waters of the Great Australian Bight. BP also jointly owns a company, Aker BP, that holds licences for offshore exploration in the Norwegian Arctic.  

The list of failures highlighted in the report ranges from missing blueprints to crucial anti-blowout devices being wrongly installed. The reports notes that, in recent years, these have resulted in “repeated near-misses” and at least one serious incident at a major refinery in the USA where an entire unit's oil contents were accidentally flared, violating EPA rules.

The document also alleges that BP lags seriously behind competitor companies, including Shell, ConocoPhillips, Chevron and Malaysian state oil company, Petronas, when it comes to information management.

The report, produced in August 2015 and based on interviews with over 150 stakeholders at nine BP sites, identified around 75 incidents caused by mismanagement of engineering information, estimating those problems to have cost the company losses of up to $180m a year.

In a startling finding, the report also reveals that 80% of those working on engineering information inside BP told researchers that they did not “believe data management was given adequate priority or the resources to be safe, reliable and efficient”.

Of the 500 recent incidents examined in the report, 15% had poor engineering information as a root cause or contributing factor. The report adds that “root causes and contributing factors in the 15% are agreed by sites and central teams to be increasing the probability of incidents.”

Renowned safety expert, Berkeley professor and former BP consultant Professor Robert Bea analysed the leaked report, and noted many of the issues raised were the same as problems he had identified in BP more than a decade ago.

“It is clear that BP have again failed to act on recommendations and address the issues raised. These failures could have very serious effects on the safety of the refinery operations,” he said.

When contacted by Energydesk, BP failed to confirm if and how the concerns in the report had been acted on.

Democratic Representative Raul Grijalva, who sits in the House of Representatives Committee on Natural Resources, reviewed Energydesk’s findings and said:

"BP’s attitude seems to be that disasters like the Deepwater Horizon oil spill are the cost of doing business, which tells me we need to crack down even harder than I thought. No company with BP’s international reach should be able to shrug at safety and maintenance issues and pass on the very high costs of their indifference to the rest of us.”

Energydesk also analysed three previous BP controversies - including the 2005 Texas City refinery explosion and the 2010 Deepwater Horizon blowout - and noted that safety issues and poor information management have long-plagued the company’s operations.

Greenpeace UK's senior climate adviser Charlie Kronick said:

"Nearly seven years have passed since the Deepwater Horizon disaster and BP’s sloppy approach to a crucial aspect of safety hasn’t changed. The same happy-go-lucky attitude that played a role in major accidents in the past is seemingly still reflected in the management of safety information across the oil giant’s operations from rig to refinery. For a company that’s been trying to drill in some of the world’s most fragile environments this is completely unacceptable.

"BP has got away with cutting corners and crossing fingers for far too long. With the ratification of the Paris climate agreement, governments should bar BP from putting sensitive ecosystems at risk for the sake of an industry that’s no longer sustainable.”

 

Greenpeace welcomes BP's withdrawal from the Great Australian Bight

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Sydney, 11 October 2016 – Responding to BP’s decision to abandon its oil exploration program in the Great Australian Bight, Greenpeace Australia Pacific Oceans Campaigner, Nathaniel Pelle, said:

“This is a welcome move from BP,  who should never have considered drilling for oil in such a pristine wilderness in the first place.

“This news will be especially welcomed by the local communities near the waters of the Great Australian Bight like First Nations peoples, tourism operators, oyster farmers and fishers who rely on it for their livelihoods.

“Malcolm Turnbull should now heed this signal from BP, stop further oil exploration in the Great Australian Bight for good, and protect this unique wilderness while he still can.

“Other companies such as Chevron, Bight Petroleum, Santos and Murphy are still eyeing the Great Australian Bight and have exploration permits. They should take the lead from BP, pack up their bags and go home.

“It’s clear that the age of oil is over, and that BP should cancel all frontier oil projects worldwide. It’s time for corporations like BP to steer clear of all extreme oil provinces as we transition away from fossil fuels forever.”

ENDS

Carmichael rail loan an abuse of taxpayer’s money, finds Greenpeace report

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Sydney, 21 December: A $1bn government loan to build the Carmichael Rail Project in Queensland is against the public interest and cannot proceed, says a Greenpeace Australia Pacific report released today.

Media reports that companies associated with the Carmichael coal mine project are accused of money laundering, corruption and financial crimes are yet more reasons why the Government should not fund Carmichael.

The Greenpeace document outlines the Northern Australian Infrastructure Facility (NAIF) Board’s network of connections to banks and mining  companies, special relationships that open questions about their independence.

“Building the Carmichael coal mine is in itself a ludicrous proposition, let alone lending the company a billion dollars of taxpayer’s money that we may never get back. Our investigation shows the public how important it is to stop Carmichael right now, before we wreck a valuable part of Queensland,” said Greenpeace Campaigner Jonathan Moylan.

The points above are detailed in ‘Off Track: Why NAIF Can’t Approve the Carmichael Rail project’, available to download at the Greenpeace Australia Pacific website.

The report argues that a $1bn loan for the Carmichael Rail Project would probably not satisfy three of NAIF’s own criteria:

  1. The project will not be of public benefit, since tax revenues and job creation will be low and the rail line cannot easily be used for other purposes;

  2. The company asking for the loan has stated it has sufficient capital to proceed without NAIF’s financial assistance; and

  3. In the long-term, falling coal prices and collapsing demand in India may mean the $1bn loan may never be repaid or refinanced.

The Greenpeace report also notes that several NAIF Board members who would be involved in approving such a loan are closely linked to the mining industry. This calls into question the Board’s ability to take an objective and unbiased decision on behalf of Australian taxpayers.

Mr. Moylan concluded: “Australians shouldn’t be paying to send coal to a country that doesn't even want it, at a time when we, India and the entire world have agreed to reduce fossil fuels and carbon emissions. Loaning $1bn to Carmichael doesn’t make any sense at all.”

 

Amazon still lags behind Apple, Google in Greenpeace renewable energy report

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Apple, Google, Facebook, and newcomer Switch are taking some of the greatest strides towards 100% renewable energy, while companies such as Netflix, Amazon Web Services, and Samsung are lagging. The findings in Greenpeace USA’s report, Clicking Clean: Who is Winning the Race to Build a Green Internet? outlines the energy footprints of large data center operators and nearly 70 of the most popular websites and applications.

“Amazon continues to talk a good game on renewables but is keeping its customers in the dark on its energy decisions. This is concerning, particularly as Amazon expands into markets served by dirty energy,” said Greenpeace USA Senior IT Analyst, Gary Cook. 

”Like Apple, Facebook, and Google, Netflix is one of the biggest drivers of the online world and has a critical say in how it is powered. Netflix must embrace the responsibility to make sure its growth is powered by renewables, not fossil fuels and it must show its leadership here” continued Cook.

Netflix has one of the largest data footprints of the companies profiled, accounting for one third of internet traffic in North America and contributing significantly to the worldwide data demand from video streaming. The company announced in 2015 that it intended to fully offset its carbon footprint, but a closer examination reveals it is likely turning to carbon offsets or unbundled renewable energy credits, which do little to increase renewable energy investment

For the first time, this year’s report also evaluates Asian companies including tech giants Tencent, Baidu, Alibaba, and Naver, which are steadily expanding globally. The region is well behind the US market in renewable commitments, due in large part to fewer clean energy options from monopoly utilities. 

“Leading tech companies in the US have shown that clean power can be both good for the environment and for business. East Asian companies must step up to embrace that reality as well,” said Jude Lee, Senior Climate and Energy Campaigner at Greenpeace East Asia.

Nearly 20 IT companies have committed to 100% renewable energy use now. Among all data centres evaluated, Switch - a new entry to this year’s report - is making the best progress to transitioning its data center fleet to renewables through both procurement and aggressive advocacy. 

The IT industry’s energy footprint accounted for 7% of global electricity in 2012, a number set to grow as global internet traffic increases, and even exceed 12% by 2017. Video streaming accounts for 63% of global internet traffic in 2015, and is projected to reach about 80% by 2020, according to Cisco Network Traffic Forecast, 2016. 

Greenpeace has benchmarked the energy performance of the IT sector since 2009. Greenpeace is calling on all major internet companies to:

  • Make a long term commitment to become 100% renewably powered.
  • Commit to be transparent on IT energy performance and consumption of resources, including the source of electricity, to enable customers, investors, and stakeholders to measure progress toward that goal.
  • Develop a strategy for increasing their supply of renewable energy, through a mixture of procurement, investment, and corporate advocacy to both electricity suppliers and government decisionmakers.




Notes to editors:

[1] Greenpeace USA’s report Clicking Clean: Who is Winning the Race to Build a Green Internet? can be found at http://www.clickclean.org/downloads/ClickClean2016%20HiRes.pdf
[2] The full Cisco Network Traffic Forecast, 2016 can be found at http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/service-provider/vni-network-traffic-forecast/infographic.html
[3] Photos and video can be accessed here: http://media.greenpeace.org/collection/27MZIFJJRUIB7

Media contacts:

Maria Elena De Matteo, Global Communications Strategist, Greenpeace East Asia, mariaelena.dematteo@greenpeace.org, phone +39 333-9860831

Greenpeace International Press Desk, pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org, phone: +31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours)

Greenpeace: Turnbull’s preposterous coal dogma smashed by record heat

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Sydney, 19 January 2016: Responding to the finding that 2016 was the hottest on record, Greenpeace climate and energy campaigner, Nikola Casule, said:

“Earlier this week, Prime Minister Turnbull claimed that his support for coal was ‘pragmatic and practical’. He said opposition to the fossil fuels that drive climate change was merely ‘ideological’.

“Mr Turnbull needs to rethink this irrational and frankly absurd position. Scientists have proven the year 2016 was the warmest on record. And it’s no secret why. The mining and burning of coal is driving global warming to record highs - creating extreme weather events like heatwaves, hurricanes and bushfires.

“As the world’s biggest coal exporter, Australia is directly responsible. Instead of flirting with the coal industry, Mr Turnbull needs to implement a ban on new coal mines and start transitioning Australia away from fossil fuels and towards clean, safe renewable energy.”


Solar panel display on Parliament House lawn marks Paris Agreement ratification

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Canberra, 11 November 2016 – A display of solar panels was set up by Greenpeace Australia Pacific on the Parliament House lawn this morning to mark Australia’s ratification of the Paris climate agreement.

The Paris climate agreement was ratified yesterday by prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. 

Greenpeace Australia Pacific climate campaigner Shani Tager said: “Ratifying the Paris climate agreement marks a new dawn for Australia’s commitment to a safe and healthy climate.

“By ratifying the agreement just hours after Donald Trump won the US election, Malcolm Turnbull has sent a strong signal that the global momentum to combat climate change will not be slowed down by those too short-sighted to see its importance.”

“The ambitious global targets that Australia now has to meet to keep our planet safe can only be accomplished by making a huge climate U-turn and banning new coal mines and upgrading Australia to clean and reliable renewable energy.

“This ratification will be meaningless unless there’s a substantial change in climate policy from the Turnbull government.” 

The potential carbon emissions from the world’s existing operational fossil fuel reserves would already exceed the Paris climate agreement upper target of a 2C temperature increase limit, making any new fossil fuel projects entirely incompatible with global climate targets. 

ENDS

Greenpeace welcomes BP's withdrawal from the Great Australian Bight

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Sydney, 11 October 2016 – Responding to BP’s decision to abandon its oil exploration program in the Great Australian Bight, Greenpeace Australia Pacific Oceans Campaigner, Nathaniel Pelle, said:

“This is a welcome move from BP,  who should never have considered drilling for oil in such a pristine wilderness in the first place.

“This news will be especially welcomed by the local communities near the waters of the Great Australian Bight like First Nations peoples, tourism operators, oyster farmers and fishers who rely on it for their livelihoods.

“Malcolm Turnbull should now heed this signal from BP, stop further oil exploration in the Great Australian Bight for good, and protect this unique wilderness while he still can.

“Other companies such as Chevron, Bight Petroleum, Santos and Murphy are still eyeing the Great Australian Bight and have exploration permits. They should take the lead from BP, pack up their bags and go home.

“It’s clear that the age of oil is over, and that BP should cancel all frontier oil projects worldwide. It’s time for corporations like BP to steer clear of all extreme oil provinces as we transition away from fossil fuels forever.”

ENDS

Carmichael rail loan an abuse of taxpayer’s money, finds Greenpeace report

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Sydney, 21 December: A $1bn government loan to build the Carmichael Rail Project in Queensland is against the public interest and cannot proceed, says a Greenpeace Australia Pacific report released today.

Media reports that companies associated with the Carmichael coal mine project are accused of money laundering, corruption and financial crimes are yet more reasons why the Government should not fund Carmichael.

The Greenpeace document outlines the Northern Australian Infrastructure Facility (NAIF) Board’s network of connections to banks and mining  companies, special relationships that open questions about their independence.

“Building the Carmichael coal mine is in itself a ludicrous proposition, let alone lending the company a billion dollars of taxpayer’s money that we may never get back. Our investigation shows the public how important it is to stop Carmichael right now, before we wreck a valuable part of Queensland,” said Greenpeace Campaigner Jonathan Moylan.

The points above are detailed in ‘Off Track: Why NAIF Can’t Approve the Carmichael Rail project’, available to download at the Greenpeace Australia Pacific website.

The report argues that a $1bn loan for the Carmichael Rail Project would probably not satisfy three of NAIF’s own criteria:

  1. The project will not be of public benefit, since tax revenues and job creation will be low and the rail line cannot easily be used for other purposes;

  2. The company asking for the loan has stated it has sufficient capital to proceed without NAIF’s financial assistance; and

  3. In the long-term, falling coal prices and collapsing demand in India may mean the $1bn loan may never be repaid or refinanced.

The Greenpeace report also notes that several NAIF Board members who would be involved in approving such a loan are closely linked to the mining industry. This calls into question the Board’s ability to take an objective and unbiased decision on behalf of Australian taxpayers.

Mr. Moylan concluded: “Australians shouldn’t be paying to send coal to a country that doesn't even want it, at a time when we, India and the entire world have agreed to reduce fossil fuels and carbon emissions. Loaning $1bn to Carmichael doesn’t make any sense at all.”

 

Amazon still lags behind Apple, Google in Greenpeace renewable energy report

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Apple, Google, Facebook, and newcomer Switch are taking some of the greatest strides towards 100% renewable energy, while companies such as Netflix, Amazon Web Services, and Samsung are lagging. The findings in Greenpeace USA’s report, Clicking Clean: Who is Winning the Race to Build a Green Internet? outlines the energy footprints of large data center operators and nearly 70 of the most popular websites and applications.

“Amazon continues to talk a good game on renewables but is keeping its customers in the dark on its energy decisions. This is concerning, particularly as Amazon expands into markets served by dirty energy,” said Greenpeace USA Senior IT Analyst, Gary Cook. 

”Like Apple, Facebook, and Google, Netflix is one of the biggest drivers of the online world and has a critical say in how it is powered. Netflix must embrace the responsibility to make sure its growth is powered by renewables, not fossil fuels and it must show its leadership here” continued Cook.

Netflix has one of the largest data footprints of the companies profiled, accounting for one third of internet traffic in North America and contributing significantly to the worldwide data demand from video streaming. The company announced in 2015 that it intended to fully offset its carbon footprint, but a closer examination reveals it is likely turning to carbon offsets or unbundled renewable energy credits, which do little to increase renewable energy investment

For the first time, this year’s report also evaluates Asian companies including tech giants Tencent, Baidu, Alibaba, and Naver, which are steadily expanding globally. The region is well behind the US market in renewable commitments, due in large part to fewer clean energy options from monopoly utilities. 

“Leading tech companies in the US have shown that clean power can be both good for the environment and for business. East Asian companies must step up to embrace that reality as well,” said Jude Lee, Senior Climate and Energy Campaigner at Greenpeace East Asia.

Nearly 20 IT companies have committed to 100% renewable energy use now. Among all data centres evaluated, Switch - a new entry to this year’s report - is making the best progress to transitioning its data center fleet to renewables through both procurement and aggressive advocacy. 

The IT industry’s energy footprint accounted for 7% of global electricity in 2012, a number set to grow as global internet traffic increases, and even exceed 12% by 2017. Video streaming accounts for 63% of global internet traffic in 2015, and is projected to reach about 80% by 2020, according to Cisco Network Traffic Forecast, 2016. 

Greenpeace has benchmarked the energy performance of the IT sector since 2009. Greenpeace is calling on all major internet companies to:

  • Make a long term commitment to become 100% renewably powered.
  • Commit to be transparent on IT energy performance and consumption of resources, including the source of electricity, to enable customers, investors, and stakeholders to measure progress toward that goal.
  • Develop a strategy for increasing their supply of renewable energy, through a mixture of procurement, investment, and corporate advocacy to both electricity suppliers and government decisionmakers.




Notes to editors:

[1] Greenpeace USA’s report Clicking Clean: Who is Winning the Race to Build a Green Internet? can be found at http://www.clickclean.org/downloads/ClickClean2016%20HiRes.pdf
[2] The full Cisco Network Traffic Forecast, 2016 can be found at http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/service-provider/vni-network-traffic-forecast/infographic.html
[3] Photos and video can be accessed here: http://media.greenpeace.org/collection/27MZIFJJRUIB7

Media contacts:

Maria Elena De Matteo, Global Communications Strategist, Greenpeace East Asia, mariaelena.dematteo@greenpeace.org, phone +39 333-9860831

Greenpeace International Press Desk, pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org, phone: +31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours)

Greenpeace: Turnbull’s preposterous coal dogma smashed by record heat

$
0
0
Sydney, 19 January 2016: Responding to the finding that 2016 was the hottest on record, Greenpeace climate and energy campaigner, Nikola Casule, said:

“Earlier this week, Prime Minister Turnbull claimed that his support for coal was ‘pragmatic and practical’. He said opposition to the fossil fuels that drive climate change was merely ‘ideological’.

“Mr Turnbull needs to rethink this irrational and frankly absurd position. Scientists have proven the year 2016 was the warmest on record. And it’s no secret why. The mining and burning of coal is driving global warming to record highs - creating extreme weather events like heatwaves, hurricanes and bushfires.

“As the world’s biggest coal exporter, Australia is directly responsible. Instead of flirting with the coal industry, Mr Turnbull needs to implement a ban on new coal mines and start transitioning Australia away from fossil fuels and towards clean, safe renewable energy.”

Solar panel display on Parliament House lawn marks Paris Agreement ratification

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0
0
Canberra, 11 November 2016 – A display of solar panels was set up by Greenpeace Australia Pacific on the Parliament House lawn this morning to mark Australia’s ratification of the Paris climate agreement.

The Paris climate agreement was ratified yesterday by prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. 

Greenpeace Australia Pacific climate campaigner Shani Tager said: “Ratifying the Paris climate agreement marks a new dawn for Australia’s commitment to a safe and healthy climate.

“By ratifying the agreement just hours after Donald Trump won the US election, Malcolm Turnbull has sent a strong signal that the global momentum to combat climate change will not be slowed down by those too short-sighted to see its importance.”

“The ambitious global targets that Australia now has to meet to keep our planet safe can only be accomplished by making a huge climate U-turn and banning new coal mines and upgrading Australia to clean and reliable renewable energy.

“This ratification will be meaningless unless there’s a substantial change in climate policy from the Turnbull government.” 

The potential carbon emissions from the world’s existing operational fossil fuel reserves would already exceed the Paris climate agreement upper target of a 2C temperature increase limit, making any new fossil fuel projects entirely incompatible with global climate targets. 

ENDS

Report: With new data showing the world moving away from coal power Australia must end taxpayer handouts to the industry

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WEDNESDAY March 20, 2017: New research highlighting the decline of coal worldwide combined with recent bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef should serve as a wakeup call to stop using taxpayers’ money to prop up a dying industry.

The report, Boom and Bust 2017: Tracking the Global Coal Plant Pipeline, was released today by Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, and CoalSwarm and showed the number of coal-fired power plants under development worldwide has sharply decreased in 2016, mainly due to shifting policies in Asia.                       

The report found:

  • A 62 per cent drop in new construction on coal plants
  • The total capacity of coal-fired power projects in planning and construction globally fell by 40 per cent from 1,428 GW in January 2016 to 855 GW in January 2017 - a drop equal to the coal-fired power capacity of the entire OECD
  • 85 per cent decline in new Chinese coal plant permits

 Greenpeace Australia Pacific is calling on state and federal governments to withdraw support for all new coal projects, and to specifically commit to not loaning almost $1 billion in funding from the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility (NAIF) to the proposed Adani mega-mine in Queensland.

 “This new report shows that the world is turning its back on coal,” Greenpeace climate and energy campaigner, Nikola Casule, said.

“India has already stated it won’t import Australian coal in less than three years’ time [1] and Chinese use of coal is rapidly decreasing. [2]”

“Despite this, Australia is considering using almost a billion dollars in taxpayer money to prop up the Carmichael coal mine while natural wonders like the Great Barrier Reef are destroyed by global warming.

“With the Reef now suffering its second bleaching event in two years, it’s crucial that our government says no to new coal projects before it’s too late”

Despite generous taxpayer subsidies to fossil fuels, the proposed Carmichael coal mine has so far been unable to secure the substantial funding it needs.

Fourteen global banks have ruled out involvement in the project forcing its proponents to go hat-in-hand to the Australian government to ask for a billion dollars of taxpayer money via the NAIF to build the huge mine.

“This is a foolish waste of taxpayer money, even if you ignore the environmental consequences of coal - like the recent mass-bleaching event on the Great Barrier Reef,” Greenpeace climate and energy campaigner, Nikola Casule, said.

“China, India, and Europe are turning their backs on coal and more than 70 per cent of the world’s annual power sector investment goes to renewables [3].

“It’s time for Australia to do the same and stop propping up dirty coal.”

[1] http://www.businesstoday.in/current/policy/govt-considering-thermal-coal-import-in-two-three-years/story/231166.html

[2] In China, coal consumption fell by approximately 1.3% in 2016, according to recently released statistics.

[3] https://www.iea.org/media/publications/wei/WEI2016FactSheet.pdf

 

For interviews contact:

Simon Black  

Greenpeace Senior Media Campaigner

Tel: 0418 219 086

Email: simon.black@greenpeace.org 


Fields of dead or dying coral seen in new Great Barrier Reef footage

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Sydney, 24 March 2017 - For the first time, the devastating coral bleaching striking the Great Barrier Reef has been captured with close range UAV footage, released today by Greenpeace Australia Pacific.

The footage, shot on 17 March at the outer reefs off Port Douglas, shows the silent and high-speed destruction of one of the world's most beautiful and fragile ecosystems from below the water line and shot for the first time in close range UAV footage from above.

“I’ve seen previous bleaching on the Reef but nothing could have prepared me to see the reality of the destruction up close,” said Alix Foster Vander Elst, a campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific.

“The world needs to know what is happening to the largest living organism in the world. People need to know that while the Great Barrier Reef dies right in front of our eyes Australia’s government continues to funnel money into new coal mines.”

The footage  shows vast areas of coral in the late stages of bleaching or death with UAV footage capturing the distressed coral forests from above.

“What is most heartbreaking about this footage is that it shows a lot of the coral that managed to survive last year is now totally bleached and on its way to dying,” Foster Vander Elst said.

“Almost all of the coral we saw was dead or bleached.”

In 2015, UNESCO placed the Great Barrier Reef on its watchlist due to concerns about the Australian Government’s management of the World Heritage Area and this week a new report, Boom and Bust 2017: Tracking the Global Coal Plant Pipeline, showed a 62 per cent drop in new construction on coal plants as well as an increase in the retirement of existing plants[2].

However, despite two sequential years of coral bleaching on the Reef and the declining coal industry the Australian government is considering giving AU$1 billion (US$760 million) of taxpayers’ money to the biggest coal mine ever built in the country.

“If it gets built, the Carmichael mega-mine will be a climate bomb that endangers the Reef and mocks Australia’s commitments under the Paris climate agreement,” Foster Vander Elst said.

“The government should make a commitment to the Reef, and to the 67,000 people who rely on the Reef for their jobs, that no taxpayer money will be used to dig up the Galilee Basin.”

Coral bleaching occurs when the surrounding water is too warm, causing the corals to expel the algae (zooxanthellae) living in their tissues.

This makes the coral take on a completely white appearance. If water temperatures don’t return to normal within six to eight weeks of the bleaching, the coral dies. In 2016, 93 per cent of the corals of the Great Barrier Reef bleached and 22 per cent of the entire Reef died [1].

Notes to editors:          

Photo and video can be accessed here: http://media.greenpeace.org/shoot/27MZIFJJD68E1

[1] Death rate of the entire reef as of June 2016,according to the Australian Institute of Marine Science

[2] http://www.greenpeace.org/india/Global/india/docs/BoomAndBust_2017_EMBARGO.pdf

Media contacts:

Simon Black, Greenpeace Senior Media, Campaigner, Greenpeace Australia Pacific, mob: 0418 219 086, email: simon.black@greenpeace.org

Greenpeace International Press Desk, pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org, phone: +31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours)

100 people converge on Commonwealth Bank HQ demanding it dump coal investments

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Sydney, Monday, 27 March 2017: Hundreds of community activists converged on CommBank’s headquarters in Darling Harbour this morning, urging the bank to stop playing with their future by investing billions of dollars in coal.

The protest is a reaction to CommBank’s latest multi-million dollar advertising campaign about securing certainty for the future, and follows new research revealing a sharp decline in coal-fired power plants under development worldwide.

Since the Paris Agreement was signed in December 2015, CommBank has loaned more money to fossil fuels than any other Australian bank.

“It’s laughable that CommBank CEO, Ian Narev, claims to support action on climate change but at the same time his bank loans billions of dollars to fossil fuel projects, making dangerous global warming worse,” said Greenpeace campaigner Nikola Casule. “We’re urging CommBank to stop funding coal projects. With the Great Barrier Reef bleaching for the second year in a row, there’s no time to lose,” he said.

In a reversal of the bank’s own advertising, dozens of CommBank customers queued up outside a nearby CommBank branch to ask their own questions about the future.

Pacific climate change spokesperson Joseph Zane Sikulu, said:

“The Commonwealth Bank is the largest single lender to the industry that is causing the destruction of Pacific countries. I’m here to call on CommBank to rule out investing in fossil fuels. Until then, Pacific people should pull their savings out of CommBank,” he said.

“CommBank hasn’t publicly committed to not financing the Carmichael coal mine - the biggest proposed coal mine in Australia and a project that must not go ahead if we’re to win the fight against climate change. If we’re to have any chance of stopping the worst effects of global warming, banks like CommBank have to stop financing fossil fuels,” said CEO of the Nature Conservation Council of NSW, Kate Smolski.

The community action was one of hundreds of events that took place around the world as part of theBreak Free movement – a global wave of people taking a stand against dirty energy.

CommBank is due to release its 2017 policy on climate change within the next few months.

For interviews contact:

Elsa Evers, Greenpeace Media Advisor, 0438 204 041, elsa.evers@greenpeace.org

Simon Black, Greenpeace Senior Media Campaigner, 0418 219 086, simon.black@greenpeace.org

Images and video available from 9.30am via Dropbox: https://goo.gl/eS95WU(Photo credit is James Alcock/Greenpeace)

Break Free 2017 is supported by:

clip_image002.jpg     Logo-Greenpeace.png

Hazelwood closure highlights the need for federal planning for transition away from coal

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TUESDAY March 28, 2017: The Federal Government must plan for a safe and fair transition for Australian communities to renewable energy rather than funnel public money into the dying coal industry.

The Hazelwood mine fire [in 2014] and Port Augusta’s recent fly ash crisis both highlight the serious threat coal poses to human health. 

“The closure of the Hazelwood coal-fired power station in the Latrobe Valley this week is a further indication that Australia’s transition away from polluting coal is well underway,” Greenpeace Assistant Campaigner Andrew Kelly said. 

“As one of the dirtiest coal-fired power stations, the closure is an important step forward in reducing Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions and mitigating the impacts of climate change.

“There are 23 other coal-fired power stations currently operating in Australia - all of which will eventually close. However, the lack of planning and direction on a federal level to ensure safe and just transitions away from coal is creating uncertain futures for Australian communities.

“Recent closures of coal-fired power stations and coal mines emphasise the need for comprehensive planning to ensure that communities are supported through the transition. This requires the support of all levels of government, and a genuine community consultation process.

“With each new closure we see a continued failure to put the wellbeing of communities first, along with a lack of comprehensive planning and environmental monitoring. As Australia moves inexorably towards a coal free future we need more planning to support the people most impacted by these changes.”

Recent reports have shown the coal industry is both declining in support from the Australian public [1] and seeing less infrastructure growth on new coal projects internationally [2].

“The Australian Government must turn its attention away from planning new coal projects and instead focus on planning for safe and just transitions for Australian communities towards a clean renewable energy future,” Mr Kelly said.

[1] http://www.afr.com/news/poll-finds-coalfired-power-not-popular-with-voters-20170326-gv6zem

[2] http://www.greenpeace.org/india/Global/india/docs/BoomAndBust_2017_EMBARGO.pdf

Media contacts:

Simon Black, Greenpeace Senior Media, Campaigner, Greenpeace Australia Pacific, mob: 0418 219 086, email: simon.black@greenpeace.org 

Plan to use giant pump to cool Great Barrier Reef shows why we should throw cold water on Carmichael coal mine proposal

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Friday, April 7, 2017: A proposal to pump cold water to areas of the Great Barrier Reef most affected by coral bleaching shows how dire the situation has become, says Greenpeace Australia Pacific.

“The failure of our governments to act on climate change is forcing tourism operators to explore costly, localised, short-term fixes that haven’t been fully scientifically tested,” Greenpeace Australia Pacific campaigner, Alix Foster Vander Elst, said.

“It’s completely understandable that tourism operators are looking at all options to save their livelihoods but it’s ridiculous that the Queensland and federal governments are working against them by supporting the Carmichael coal mine to export millions of tonnes of coal out through the Reef.

“The Carmichael coal mine would be Australia’s largest and there’s no way it should be allowed to go ahead when the situation is so dire on the Reef that it has gotten to the stage that ideas like pumping cold water are being considered.

“We can protect the Reef’s 70 000 tourism jobs and create tens of thousands of new jobs in renewable energy by investing in clean energy, which is booming internationally, instead of the coal industry, which the world is turning away from,” Foster Vander Elst said.

Read about the proposal here

Contact - Monique Vandeleur 0419 588 430 or Simon Black 0418 219 086

Greenpeace’s Head of Pacific Net slams Australia for selling out its Pacific neighbours

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“Australia - you are either with the coal industry, or with the Pacific”, said Greenpeace’s Head of Pacific Net Matisse Walkden-Brown in response to this week’s lobby trip by Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, to meet the CEO of the company behind the proposed Carmichael megamine, Mr Gautam Adani.

"This week, Australia has truly shown its tireless commitment to selling out Pacific islanders.

If the Carmichael coal mine goes ahead, it would supply 2.3bn tonnes of coal to be burnt over the next 60 years, fuelling catastrophic climate change.

“Typically, in an attempt to remain being seen as a friend to the Pacific, and continue fending off Chinese advances, Australia’s Ambassador for Climate Change, Patrick Suckling, came to Fiji in January, with a completely opposing message.

Earlier this year, Mr Suckling said, “The purpose of my visit here is to talk to the Government and the business community on how Australia and Fiji can strongly work together on the damaging impacts of climate change.”

“Both countries take climate change very seriously. It is a serious concern to the region, and part of Australia's interest in climate change is that we support and work with the Pacific Island nations in terms of meeting the challenges of climate change,” he said.

“The events this week prove once again that Australia’s climate promises to the Pacific are empty sweet nothings. While Australia may claim to consider climate change ‘a serious concern to the region’, they still have plans to double their coal exports in the next 10 years (despite already having a larger share of the seaborne coal market than Saudi Arabia has of the world oil market), which will further fuel catastrophic climate change,” Ms Walkden-Brown says.

“Not content with trampling the rights of Pacific islanders by lobbying for more coal as climate change impacts intensify, Mr Turnbull also sold out Australia’s Indigenous people this week, claiming that native title laws “will be fixed” to let the mine go ahead.

“However, in the true Pacific spirit, we remain hopeful that Australia will change their course and join us. Join us in a world moving toward 100% renewable energy. A world that recognises that gains in technology, science, medicine, and other fields that give people a chance at a higher standard of living, are now possible using 100% clean energy.

A world that accepts that developed and developing countries alike must pave the way, instead of propping up out-dated fossil fuel industries. A world that does not allow for politicised speeches to be dressed up as solutions. A world that understands climate finance is not a bargaining chip to be used against the vulnerable and unfairly affected. A world that knows words, promises, deals and temporary financial gains, can not absorb carbon. A world that needs fewer coal mines, not more.”

1. Fiji Times Online : “ Climate Change Fight” http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=387418

 2. Australian Financial Review: “Malcolm Turnbull tells Adani Native Title Issues Will Be Fixed.” “http://www.afr.com/news/politics/malcolm-turnbull-tells-adani-native-title-issues-will-be-fixed-20170410-gvi6i3

 

For more information, contact:

Simon Black, Greenpeace Senior Media Campaigner

Tel: +61 418 219 086 / Email: sblack@greenpeace.org

 

Matisse Walkden-Brown, Head of Pacific Net

Email: mwalkden@greenpeace.org

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