Today people slowed the beast again but this time we did it at the source.
After a string of pipeline victories and over a
decade of campaigning on at least three different continents, the
Alberta government has finally put a limit to the tarsands. Today they
announced they will cap its expansion and limit the tarsands monster to
100 megatonnes a year (equivalent to what projects already operating and
those currently under construction would produce).
As momentous an occasion as it is when an oil
jurisdiction actually puts limits on growth, 100 million tonnes of
carbon a year at a time when science is demanding bold reductions is
still far too much. While historic, the government’s cap needs to be
viewed as a ceiling rather then a floor, and a ceiling that we will need
to work like crazy to ratchet down until it meets the science.
On the good side what the current cap does mean is
that the two-to-five fold expansion the tar sands industry had planned
will not happen.
It means the 2,270,820 barrels a day already
approved will stay in the ground, the 1,890,850 barrels a day in the
application process will never see the light of day, and the
1,923,00 barrels a day disclosed and announced will go no further then
that. That’s 6,084,670 barrels a day that the government helped stop
today and 154.07 million tonnes of carbon a year that we will be keeping
from getting poured into the atmosphere.
All I have to say to that is BAM!
Investors better take note and start moving away from high carbon assets as soon as they can.
The Alberta government also started investing in
solutions. By 2030 30% of Alberta’s electricity will come from renewable
energy sources (the same year that the province just committed to
phasing out coal). In addition the province also announced supports for
energy efficiency, mass transit, and the start of an economy-wide carbon
tax that will start providing the resources to make it all happen.
It was people power that did that.
People concerned about Indigenous rights, about
health, about a growing climate crisis, and about the lack of
sustainable solutions that came together, and worked for years, in some
cases decades, to make todays victory possible.
It’s because we raised our voices, because we
marched, danced, risked arrest and organized community to community that
we were able to stand up to the largest corporations on the planet and
win.
People did that.
However, it’s not the end of the battle. Alberta
still has a lot of work to do to meet the demands of climate science,
and the tarsands are still bigger that what the climate can handle.
More change is necessary and possible. We need to be ready in the days
ahead to keep up the pressure and turn it up. We need to continue to
stop the pipelines, continue to constrain production, and continue to
push and mobilize for solutions till this plan meets the science and
equity.
People will do this too.
Today is a historic moment for climate activism in
Alberta and its one more win for the climate movement that continues to
rack up victories right across North America.
Just two weeks ago the President of the United
States rejected the Keystone XL tarsands pipeline ending a seven-year
battle. Last week Prime Minister Justin Trudeau put the nail in
Enbridge’s tarsands pipeline by directing his minister to implement a
tanker ban on B.C.’s north shore. Add to that the growing successes of
the fossil fuel divestment movement, the Keep It In the Ground bill 7
American Senators including Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders put
forward, the Exxon climate investigation, and the global movement we’re
building to go 100% renewable and you can see together we are building
quite the resume.
And we aren’t done yet.
It amazes me sometimes that so much beauty has come
from such a horrific place, but it is because of this project that we
found each other. We learned that as much as pipeline routes were
pathways of destruction they were also maps of resistance. They showed
us the communities we could connect to, the perspectives we could learn
from, and created lights of hope we could follow along the way. They
taught us that when we worked together and supported each other, led by
the original caretakers of the land, we could become an unstoppable
force. And what a force we are.
I have no idea what victory will come next.
All I know is that today I will celebrate, toast to
the power of people and social movements, and tomorrow I will get back
to work preparing for our next big moment in Ottawa before coming back
to Alberta to push the government to do more.
The road to climate justice is a long and hard one,
but it’s a beautiful one too that’s getting a little easier by the day.
It’s easier because now we know that when we work together with love
for each other and the land we can beat the biggest of foes, turn the
largest of tides, and make history in the process.
We already are.
Mike Hudema is a Tarsands Campaigner with Greenpeace Canada.
Mike Hudema is a Tarsands Campaigner with Greenpeace Canada.
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