This is an award richly desrved by New Zealana and Canada
Canada,
New Zealand awarded the 'Colossal Fossil'
8
December, 2012
The
humorous “Fossil” awards, given to countries judged to have done
their “best” to block progress at the 2012 United Nations Climate
Change Conference in Doha, Qatar, culminated with the “Fossil of
the Year” award, presented on the Dec. 7, the final day of the
conference.
The
year’s “Fossil,” also called the “Colossal Fossil,” went to
Canada and New Zealand, marking the fifth year Canada has won the
award.
“It
seems Canada is refusing to bow out gracefully into the irrelevance
that comes with being an historic climate laggard,” said the
Climate Action Network (CAN), a group of roughly 700 NGOs whose
members voted to select this year’s “Fossils.”
New
Zealand had “fought hard” to unseat the 5-time “Colossal
Fossil” winner, CAN noted. “Although Canada can share the honor
for one more year, Fossil feels that Canada’s tar sands are,
frankly, giving Canada an unfair advantage in this competition –
Canada has been carbon doping!” the organization said.
New
Zealand’s emissions are similar in scale to the Canadian tar sands,
and it has demonstrated exceptional blindness to scientific and
political realities, according to CAN.
Tar
sands, or oil sands, are a type of unconventional petroleum deposit.
Figures from the International Energy Agency show that carbon dioxide
emissions from oil sands are 20 percent higher than average emissions
from the petroleum production. Oil sands are found in extremely large
quantities in Canada.
The
Climate Action Network is a worldwide network of 700 non-governmental
organizations working to promote actions and policies that limit
human-induced climate change to ecologically sustainable levels, both
at the government and individual level.
I wonder how well (or should we say bad) America did.
ReplyDeleteI take it as a given that America led the pack (of the bad guys)
ReplyDelete