I support the idea of Kyoto to a point, but I'm totally against spending one penny for CO2 "credits" from other countries - it's just throwing money away.
I am against Kyoto, but for environmental protection. It's better to just let the industry change itself. Companies are already doing this.Clean coal
Alberta companies and institutions are leading initiatives to minimize the environmental impact of burning coal:
-combining coal with paper waste to test if the mix burns cleaner
examining how the makeup of different coals and cokes affects how they burn
-The University of Alberta, with the support of industry, has established an industrial research chair for advanced coal cleaning and combustion
-The Canadian Clean Power Coalition is moving forward with plans to demonstrate clean coal power generation at a new plant by 2012. The Coalition has completed the first phase of a feasibility study into technologies to eliminate greenhouse gases from coal-fired power plants
I would keep going but it's a very long PDF file...Every day, 70 per cent of Canada’s crude oil and natural gas flows from Alberta wells, providing the energy needed to heat homes, power industries and drive cars. Alberta isn’t the only beneficiary, sharing its petroleum wealth with other parts of Canada and the United States...
While all this activity is generating economic benefits for Canada, it is also producing a significant portion of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions. According to Canada’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory, Canada’s petroleum industry in 2002 contributed about 143 million tonnes (Mt), or about 20 per cent of Canada’s total GHG emissions. Of that amount, upstream oil and gas production contributed 99.2 Mt, the transmission of natural gas 16.6 Mt and the downstream (refining and marketing) 27.6 Mt. Since 1990, the upstream petroleum industry’s emissions have risen by 29.6 Mt due to increasing
exports, which resulted in a 41.6 per cent growth in GDP...
“While some companies are hoping the Kyoto Protocol will go away, a lot of others are jumping on board,” says Shell Canada’s Roy Kanten, head engineer of energy and green-house gases, E&P. Shell Canada has long been on board, joining the Voluntary Challenge & Registry (VCR, now known as the Canadian GHG Challenge Registry) in the mid-1990s and reducing its exploration and production emissions by 333,000 tonnes between 2000 and 2003. Shell has set a very challenging voluntary target: to reduce its emissions by six per cent from 1990 levels by 2008, four years ahead of Canada’s overall pledge...
Similarly, BP is committed to maintaining its overall emissions at 2002 levels throughout its global operations, while still expanding the company’s business by five per cent a year. “We have to continue making reductions to make room for growth,” says Bryan Forsyth, BP Canada’s energy efficiency and emissions specialist.“Our goal, globally, is to improve our energy efficiency, from 2002 levels, by 15 per cent by 2012.”...
“There’s very little taste in Calgary for buying foreign credits,” says BP Canada’s Bryan Forsyth.“The preference is to keep investing in Canada and finding a Canadian solution, rather than buying abroad.”
No, no. I have nothing against anyone that works at a corporation. A corporation is a legal entity that does what it is supposed to do, i.e. make money, relatively well. It has a extremely limited democratic mechanism, however; public opinion is easily shaped. Their contributions are often a few meaningless sponsorships instead of large-scale changes in the way they conduct business. There's exceptions, of course, corporations which lean towards a community structure model, in which revenue isn't a zero-sum game. But it's rare, and without some way to equal out the playing field, I don't think there's a future here.Boris550 said:Corporations are being pressured by public opinion. They don't need regulation. You act like anyone that works at a corporation isn't humane...
Sure :yes:Boris550 said:Consumption taxes are a good way to go, so long as they cut my income tax at the same time...
Indeed, I couldn't agree more.Boris550 said:Think about it. How much more likely is it that I will go out and buy a hybrid car if you let me have a little more money in my pocket and then tell me that you'll tax the crap outta me if I buy an SUV??? Thus we make the one-tonne challenge possible for the average Joe.
I don't know, public opinion seems quite easily manipulated, and with the corporation's ability to purchase airtime and other PR relation gimmicks, people can easily fall prey to corporations. After all, no interest group is stronger than pro-business groups. Transfats is a clear example of how slow it takes the industry to respond to such health issues.Boris550 said:^ I should say, I don't trust corporations completely either. I just feel that public pressure (remember, you are the consumer) does have a more powerful effect than is attributed to it. It's sad though, Canadians could be much more responsible consumers...
The Conservatives are slowly morphing into the liberal party in the sense that they're abandoning everything they believe in just to get votes. It wasn't all that long ago that Stephen Harper was part of the National Citizen's Coalition, a group that was founded by insurance companies to fight universal heathcare. It also wasn't long ago that he stood in the went on Fox news to appologize for Canada's refusal to go to Iraq, and him standing in the house of commons to say that abortion should be illegal.salvius said:^ a prudent political move is what it is, though. A solid majority is behind Kyoto; Alberta will vote for Conservatives regardless, and this makes them more palattable elsewhere. I'm sure the other parties will milk this about face for all it is worth, however.