IDA: After Ida deaths, Louisiana revokes nursing home licenses (AP), more than 400K without power nine days after Ida hits Louisiana (The Hill), growing outrage over conditions of Louisiana nursing homes after Ida (NBC)
- OIL SPILL: Divers point to a broken pipeline as the source of the gulf oil spill (NPR), Gulf oil spill shows risk from 18,000 miles of abandoned pipe (Bloomberg $), oil spill in Gulf of Mexico is one of more than 2,000 reports of water pollution after Ida (Washington Post $)
- NOLA: Many New Orleans seniors were left without power for days after Hurricane Ida (NPR), to survive future storms, New Orleans should look to its past (Bloomberg $)
COP26: COP26 will be ‘rich nations stitch-up’ if poorer countries kept away by COVID (The Guardian)
FIRES: Heat, drought and wind combine to fuel larger, more intense fires. Experts fear a rough fall fire season is ahead for the West (CBS), investigators seeking cause of 15 fires that break out around Healdsburg, one after another (San Francisco Chronicle)
OIL: Mubadala Petroleum, Eni team up on energy transition (Reuters), Enbridge buys N. America's biggest oil export hub in $3-bln Moda deal (Reuters), TotalEnergies to invest $27 billion in iraq (Wall Street Journal $)
INFRASTRUCTURE: Climate scientist: 'We have to build better infrastructure' to control the storms (MSNBC)
DEMS: Democrats propose new funding for climate, weather research (The Hill)
EPA: Bush’s EPA hid health risks from toxic dust at ground zero and thousands died (Truthout)
METHANE: Methane rule to eclipse past regulations, including Obama's (E&E)
WEATHER: Weather disasters have become 5 times as common, thanks in part to climate change (NPR)
AIR: Spare the Air alert extended until Tuesday as unhealthy air grips Bay Area (San Francisco Chronicle), sheltering inside may not protect you from the dangers of wildfire smoke (NPR)
GAS: Ford halts Mustang production in Michigan after gas leaks into sewer system (The Hill), two people seriously injured after propane explosion at Montgomery County (Washington Post $)
HEAT: Latino farmworkers more likely to die from extreme heat (Axios), Europe just had its warmest summer on record, EU scientists say (Reuters), this summer was Europe's hottest on record as Mediterranean heat soared (CNN)
IMPACTS: Larry brings large waves to the Atlantic, as Typhoon Chanthu breaks record-long quiet streak in NW Pacific (Yale Climate Connections)
WATER: San Francisco, agriculture suppliers want their water - sue state over drought restrictions (San Francisco Chronicle)
RENEWABLES:
- SOLAR: Silver miner in Australia is betting solar will drive demand (Bloomberg $)
- WIND: Wind turbine giant Siemens Gamesa claims world-first in blade recycling (CNBC), wind turbine maker starts selling blades that won’t become trash (Bloomberg $)
AVIATION: Chevron to sell test batch of sustainable aviation fuel to Delta Air (Reuters)
BATTERIES: Work starts at UK’s top storage project using Tesla batteries (Bloomberg $)
COAL: Coal companies allowed to delay environmental offsets on NSW [Australia] mines for up to 10 years (The Guardian), coal from planned Cumbria mine may go outside UK and EU, inquiry told (The Guardian)
EXXON: Exxon agrees to have some natural gas operations graded on emissions (Houston Chronicle)
EVs: Toyota to spend $9 billion on electric-car battery plants (Wall Street Journal $), Toyota spending $13.5 billion on battery development for electric vehicles by end of decade (The Hill), Virginia Democrat introduces tax credit for electric commercial vehicles (The Hill)
HYDROGEN: As DOE ramps up Hydrogen Shot initiative, debate about means of production begins (Utility Dive) BP, Macquarie study green hydrogen hub concept in Western Australia (Reuters), Hyundai sees a bright future for hydrogen solutions by 2040 (Bloomberg $), Hyundai wants hydrogen fuel cell versions of all its commercial vehicle models by 2028 (CNBC)
AMAZON: Amazon invests in the Amazon rainforest instead of just paying its damn taxes (Gizmodo)
BANKS: 5 rules to make sure coal-plant buyouts benefit the public, not the big banks (Canary Media)
GAMING: The new hot theme in gaming: climate change (Fast Company)
GUAC: Avocados and vanilla among dozens of wild crop relatives facing extinction (The Guardian)
HAITI: Haiti earthquake aid slowed by gangs, blocked roads, and shipping delays (The New Humanitarian)
FINANCE: Spain joins green rusUSh with debut sovereign bond sale (Bloomberg $)
INVESTORS: Hedge fund veteran to bet on climate change’s winners and losers (Bloomberg $), Investors call for private firms to disclose more environmental data (Reuters)
KIWIS: New Zealand records warmest winter ever as scientists blame climate change (NBC)
PARKS: A climate change-induced landslide is wreaking havoc on denali national park (TIME)
PACTS: Climate change: Vulnerable nations call for 'emergency pact' (BBC)
PONDS: Ponds, reservoirs could host floating solar in space-constrained Massachusetts (Energy News Network)
SPAIN: Spain's high-speed railway revolution (CNN), uncontrolled' Spanish wildfire was started deliberately, official says (Reuters)
TEXAS: We are way behind': power-hungry Texas looks at ways to cut demand for electricity (Houston Chronicle)
TREES: Majestic sequoia trees can live for thousands of years. Climate change could wipe them out (CNN)
UTAH: Booming Utah’s weak link: surging air pollution (New York Times $)
YOUTH: Young activist works to shut down oil drilling across Los Angeles (Yale Climate Connections)
ZURICH: Zurich Insurance sets climate steps to curb C02 emissions (Reuters)
CRITTERS: Animals are 'shape shifting' in response to climate change (CNN), British dragonfly numbers soar as warming climate attracts new species (The Guardian), one size does not fit all: climate change will impact Antarctic seal species differently (Phys.org), dragonflies spread north in warming world (BBC)
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Embrace Plastics Or We’ll Kill Elephants For Ivory, New Pro-Plastic Propaganda from CEI Suggests
A couple weeks ago, we noticed that old-school-PR-man Rick Berman, the kind of guy 60 Minutes calls “Dr. Evil” when reporting on him, was up to his old tricks in defending the beef industry in the Washington Examiner.
Well Berman’s been busy, because now he’s also working on behalf of the fossil fuel industry to defend plastics, this time in a Washington Times op-ed. In the piece that opposes plastic bag bans, Berman plays up how wonderful plastic is (“masks, gloves, and syringes have saved lives throughout the pandemic”) and tells readers “waste researchers are seemingly developing new ways to recycle plastic every day.”
Meanwhile, the industry-funded Competitive Enterprise Institute has also launched a new pro-plastics campaign, starting with a paper that claims that “plastics benefit wildlife and the environment.”
Which animals are helped by the plastics that are literally killing them by the millions? We wish this were a joke, but it’s not. CEI thinks that if we weren’t using “synthetic products like plastics,” then we would “have to harvest such resources from wild animals—such as ivory from elephants.”
Yes. Of course. Either we let the fossil fuel industry dump its byproduct plastics into our oceans, atmosphere, and bodies, or it’s back to an ivory-dependent economy. No middle ground. Plastics definitely saved elephants and destroyed the ivory trade, and any reduction in plastic use now would mean we’d go back to using ivory for pool balls and piano keys and everything else. (To be honest, they really missed an opportunity to threaten that we'd have to go back to killing great blue whales for their baleen and sperm whales for lubricants.)
this kind of very logical and good faith argumentation really bodes well for the rest of the CEI campaign! CEI will also highlight the “value that plastics have for humanity, enriching our lives in many ways, including helping improve our health and ability to fight dangerous diseases, including COVID-19." And for their third act, they’ll acknowledge “legitimate concerns about the impact of plastic litter on the environment, particularly wildlife, and how we can address those problems without banning useful products.” And then finally, they take aim at “unworkable legislation proposed on Capitol Hill.”
Through both Berman and CEI we can see the industry is fighting plastic bans with the usual playbook, with a particular focus on using recycling as a distraction to argue against bans and as we noted in the spring of 2020, using the pandemic to score PR points.
And as we know well, the focus on recycling is straight from the very-well-documented plastic disinformation handbook. Back in 2019, the Center for Public Integrity published a lengthy investigation into the long war to protect plastic, starting with a 1988 plastic bag ban in New York’s Suffolk County, and continuing to the present. It has all the same tactics as climate denial, likely because people like Berman are behind the fossil fuel industry’s disinformation on both fronts.
For example, the piece by CPI’s Tik Root explains how “when Charleston, South Carolina, was considering a plastic bag ban in 2015 and 2016, the industry countered with materials that ranged from a ‘myth vs. fact’ sheet about recycling to academic research.” The industry cited a Clemson University study saying plastic bags aren’t a litter problem, but didn’t mention that the industry paid for the research and funds Clemson’s Center for Flexible Packaging. Recycling, meanwhile, is described by industry trade official Roger Bernstein as a “guilt eraser,” and a powerful one at that, as recycling has long been a successful counter to bans. What it hasn’t been successful at, though, is actually recycling plastic.
“Today,” Root explains, “many US cities don’t accept plastic bags in their recycling stream because the thin sacks gum up sorting machinery. Just 9 percent of all plastic waste in the US was recycled in 2015, according to the latest federal estimate. That rate is almost certainly lower now: Cities were relying heavily on China to take the plastic they collected and finish the job, but last year the country all but stopped accepting those imports.”
If these fake solutions, fake experts paid by the industry, and fake arguments about the benefits of a complete source of pollution sound familiar, it should!
Because as Jim Puckett told Rolling Stone last year for its big plastic-pollution-disinformation investigation, “Plastics are just a way of making things out of fossil fuels.” Puckett is the executive director of a group called the Basel Action Network, which is focused on the international treaty called the Basel Convention. It prevents rich countries from using the developing world as a hazardous waste dump, and as of January 1, 2021, that includes plastics, which might be why the industry is ramping up its pro-plastic messaging.
That, and, of course as Rebecca Leber wrote last year for Mother Jones, “fossil fuel companies are staring down a time when their signature product will no longer be so critical in our lives. As the world transitions slowly but surely away from oil-guzzling cars, gas-powered buildings, and coal-fired power plants, industry execs must count on growth that comes from somewhere else—and they see their savior as plastics.”
And yet, the best they can do to defend their savior is recycle old myths about recycling plastics, and talk about plastics replacing ivory, all while ignoring the elephant in the room that is plastic pollution and the climate crisis. |
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