A new report released Tuesday identifies the United States as âplanet-wrecker-in-chief,â pointing to the nationâs plans for a massive expansion of oil and gas production over the next two and a half decades even as it postures as a climate leader on the world stage.
According to Oil Change Internationalâs (OCI) research, planned oil and gas expansion in the U.S.âthe largest historical contributor to planet-warming greenhouse gas emissionsâaccounts for more than a third of prospective global oil and gas expansion through 2050. Much of the U.S. expansion is tied to fracking, the report observes.
The U.S. is one of just 20 countries that are projected to be responsible for nearly 90% of the carbon dioxide pollution from new oil and gas extraction projects between 2023 and 2050.
If those 20 countries follow through with their fossil fuel expansion plans, OCI noted, the projects will emit an estimated 173 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide, the equivalent of the lifetime emissions of more than 1,000 new coal plants.
âIf that amount of CO2 is emitted into the atmosphere, then weâre in serious trouble,â Romain Ioualalen, global policy lead for OCI and a co-author of the new report, said during a press conference on Tuesday.
Such emissions, Ioualalen warned, would blow through the worldâs dwindling carbon budget and make it âmathematically impossibleâ to limit global warming to 1.5°FC by the end of the century.
The planet-wreckers report presents unmistakable evidence of the peril of fossil fuel expansion while reckoning with the worldâs historic polluters, namely the United States.
Five rich countriesâthe U.S., Canada, Australia, Norway, and the United Kingdomâaccount for more than half of all planned oil and gas expansion globally, even though they are far less reliant on fossil fuel revenues than other nations and have the resources for a renewable energy transition, OCI said.
The new report takes the Biden administration to task for âpledging climate leadershipâ while simultaneously facilitating âthe continued expansion of fossil fuel production in the United States.â
âIn 2023 alone, the administration greenlit the Alaska Willow Project; approved multiple LNG export facilities in Alaska and along the Gulf Coast, held a massive oil and gas lease sale in the Gulf of Mexico, fast-tracked the Mountain Valley Pipeline, and oversaw the weakening of bedrock environmental laws, making it easier for fossil fuel infrastructure to move forward,â the report notes.
⥠Just Launched ⥠@PriceOfOilâs new report reveals that 20 countries are responsible for nearly 90% of CO2 pollution threatened by new oil & gas extraction projects between 2023 and 2050. These countries are planet wreckers: https://t.co/CY89l2sgH3 #EndFossilFuels pic.twitter.com/afsEx6Rqfj
â Oil Change International (@PriceofOil) September 12, 2023
The new research was released just over a week before United Nations Secretary-General AntĂłnio Guterresâ Climate Ambition Summit, which will be preceded by more than 400 mobilizations worldwide aimed at pressuring world leaders to urgently phase out fossil fuels.
âThe planet-wreckers report presents unmistakable evidence of the peril of fossil fuel expansion while reckoning with the worldâs historic polluters, namely the United States, and how we must hold them accountable,â Helen Mancini, a 16-year-old Fridays for Future activist from New York City, said in a statement Tuesday.
âThe activism youth are doing is not radical,â Mancini added,
itâs a demand for survival that the planet-wreckers must heed.
Source: Mronline.org