Avaaz – Live hearing in days — Stop “Fox News North”

In days, the CRTC could decide whether Canadians should be forced to pay for Sun News or ‘Fox News North’. Both Avaaz and Sun News have been asked to appear at the hearing, and Sun News has built a petition of 53,000 over months. We have just a few days to blow it out of the water.

SIGN PETITION HERE

After Harper and his top spin doctor Kory Teneycke met secretly with Rupert Murdoch, Teneycke was involved in modelling Sun News after Murdoch’s Fox News, the political propaganda network that has poisoned U.S. politics. It’s Canadian crony-media — run by a political crony, pushing a political agenda, and now seeking to be funded by a government handout, asking the CRTC to force it onto our basic cable packages.

Sun News have been pushing their petition non-stop for months. If we can double it in a few days, it will send a powerful signal to the CRTC about where Canadians stand – click below to sign and share this email with everyone whocares about Canadian democracy.

As concerned citizens we stand together in urging you to deny Quebecor’s application to grant their Sun News Network exceptional status and force it into our homes at our own expense. Sun News may have the right to offer its views to those who want to listen, but we as consumers have the right not to be forced to pay for it.

 
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Hundreds of Baby Seals Saved from Slaughter

Courtesy by: Piper Hoffman. Care 2

Unknown-5A seal slaughter in Canada has been cancelled!

The Huffington Post reports that the annual hunt on Hay Island was called off. The seals of Hay Island were spared last year as well. The Hay Island hunt usually kills a few hundred seals each year, out of the hundreds of thousands bludgeoned to death off the Newfoundland coast.

A spokesman for the hunters said that they had suspended the hunt because of low market demand for seal pelts. The president of the Canadian Seals Association agreed: “Right now we’re in a situation where we don’t have very many markets.” He added, “if there is no market, no buyers, there’s not much point in taking the seals.” It is comforting to learn that the killers weren’t bashing in the heads of helpless baby seals just for fun — it was just for money.

The targeted seals really are babies. “Hunters are permitted to kill seal pups when they start to moult their downy white fur at around 12-15 days. As a result many of the seals are only babies that haven’t even eaten their first solid meal or taken their first swim.” 98% of the seals killed are less than three months old.

Here’s how the hunt works, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica Blog:

“For six to eight weeks each spring, the ice floes of the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the eastern coast of Newfoundland and Labrador turn bloody, as some 300,000 harp seal pups, virtually all between 2 and 12 weeks old, are beaten to death—their skulls crushed with a heavy club called a hakapik—or shot. They are then skinned on the ice or in nearby hunting vessels after being dragged to the ships with boat hooks. The skinned carcasses are usually left on the ice or tossed in the ocean.

“Thousands of other wounded pups (estimates range from 15,000 to 150,000 per year) manage to escape the hunters but die later of their injuries or drown after falling off the ice (pups younger than about 5 weeks cannot swim).”

Growing international opposition to these slaughters is drying up demand for seal products. Activism has finally led to governments around the world taking action. Perhaps most important is the Russian Federation’s 2011 decision to prohibit importing seal products from Canada, because it was one of the largest markets for the Canadian hunters’ grisly products according to CTV News. (Harp Seals, however, offers government statistics showing that Norway is by far the biggest importer, and it still actively defends Canadian hunts.)

The Russian Federation’s ban followed the adoption of a similar ban in the European Union in 2009. The United States outlawed trade in seal products way back in 1972. The international bans were a seminal coup for the friends of seals because, unlike appeals to the hunters’ hypothetical basic decency, they hit the hunters where they lived — in their wallets.

A long and active history of protests led up to those bans. Going back to the 1970s, “images of fuzzy white seal pups were everywhere as activists fought to end the seal hunt in Canada.” In the 1980s, activism continued, with the International Fund for Animal Welfare calling for a boycott on Canadian seafood. During that time, Canada banned vessel-based seal hunting, which made a big dent in the number of seals massacred, but the motivation was to give the seal population time to recover after hunting dramatically lowered their numbers. The plan was still to resume the killing in time.

Soon the ban on vessel-based hunting was lifted, apparently because of arguments that seals were devastating the populations of certain species of fish, especially cod. Activists went back to work educating the public about the killing and lobbying public officials.

The hunters’ refusal to stop massacring seals because it is the right thing to do has been stubborn and lasting. They have had the backing of Canada’s government, even though most Canadians opposed funneling their tax dollars to subsidize this bloody industry.

The Hay Island slaughter is a drop in the bucket of seal blood Canadian hunters shed each year, but it is a sign that the tide may be turning against the industry.

Can the new EPA chief stop Obama approving the Keystone XL pipeline?

Courtesy by: Richard Schiffman. The Guardian. 

images-1Environmentalists got some bad news when the State Department released a report on Friday – a full month earlier than had been anticipated – saying that there are no convincing environmental reasons that the Keystone XL pipeline should not be built.

This just two weeks after thousands of demonstrators gathered at the National Mall for what has been called the largest climate rally ever. Environmental groups have joined in a rare united front to block the pipeline. If built, activists predict that the pipeline will hugely increase greenhouse gas emissions and reverse the progress that has been made in recent years toward switching to renewable sources of energy.

The usually measured Sierra Club president, Michael Brune, called last week’s State Department report “nothing short of malpractice”, and suggested that the president toss it in the garbage. In an email interview, 350.org spokesperson Daniel Kessler characterized the pipeline as “a boondoggle perpetuated by monied interests” whose impact on the climate would be “horrific”.

But there has been a lot of pressure on the administration from the fossil fuel industry to ratify the pipeline. According to Marty Durbin, executive vice-president of the American Petroleum Institute:

“The latest impact statement from the State Department puts this important, job-creating project one step closer to reality.”

A little over a month ago, Nebraska’s Republican governor, Dave Heineman, removed a major hurdle to the construction of Keystone when he approved a new path for the pipeline – one that avoids the environmentally sensitive Sand Hills region. President Obama had rejected an earlier route because of the state’s objections, and the dangers of a spill to underground water in the critical Ogallala aquifer.

Obama’s decision on the pipeline will be seen as a litmus test of the direction which he will take on the environment in his second term. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (Democrat, Rhode Island) said that last month’s historic climate rally was intended to “get the fellow in the White House to follow up on the wonderful things he’s said in speeches recently and put a really strong regulatory regime in.”

But if Friday’s report is any indication of the administration thinking, the president may be preparing to give the controversial pipeline the green light. While the 2,000-word document makes no policy recommendations, it does give Obama a degree of political cover should he decide – as seems increasingly likely – to approve the project: the pipeline that would bring 800,000 barrels a day of crude oil from the tar sands of northern Alberta to refineries on the US Gulf coast.

The State Department document claims that “the proposed project is unlikely to have a substantial impact on the rate of development in the oil sands.” Many outside observers disagree, saying that if Keystone were nixed by the administration, it would significantly slow the exploitation of the Canadian tar sand reserves. Alternate pipeline routes, which would take the oil to ports in Canada, have faced fierce opposition in British Columbia, and would undoubtedly be challenged in court.

Some environmentalists were encouraged by the president’s nomination Monday of Gina McCarthy for the post of EPA administrator, to replace the outgoing Lisa Jackson. McCarthy served as a top official in charge of air quality at the EPA and has the reputation of being a fighter for tougher environmental standards.

She is expected to face resistance from congressional Republicans and the coal industry, which have consistently opposed regulations. Tyson Slocum, director of Public Citizen’s energy program, told me:

“The Gina McCarthy pick is outstanding. The question is: what support the president will give her.”

Some observers believe that Lisa Jackson decided to leave her post as head of the EPA because the administration failed to back her efforts to draft stronger ozone limits and emissions standards for power plants. As I reported in the Guardian in January, there was also speculation that Jackson, an opponent of the Keystone XL pipeline, resigned because the president had already decided to approve the project.

The president is expected to announce his final decision on Keystone XL pipeline in the Spring. If it is true that his mind is already made up – to approve it – there may be little that Gina McCarthy, or Secretary of State John Kerry (who is known as a “climate hawk”), can do to change the administration’s course.

Oil, Global Food and New Community Systems: Michael Lewis – YouTube

Michael Lewis is executive director of the Canadian Centre for Community Renewal in Vancouver and the author of The Resilience Imperative, published this last summer.

Mr. Lewis will come to Salt Spring this March. He’ll share information that we can all use to move forward in this transitional times.

WATCH VIDEO HERE

Climate failure from Kyoto to Doha in one simple chart

Courtesy: Barry Saxifrage

Posted: Dec 11th, 2012

The United Nations’ 18th annual climate change meeting just wrapped up in Doha, Qatar. The official storyline is the same as always: important progress was made.

Few seem to believe it anymore.

In my opinion, everything you really need to know about the effectiveness of the United Nations’ multi-decade efforts to stop climate change can be seen in my chart below. It shows the annual increase in CO2 in the atmosphere along with the annual UN Conference of Parties (COP) climate meetings for each year.

Eighteen years of COP meetings, task forces, brinkmanship, declarations, policies, promises and protocols have not slowed the rise in global CO2 one tiny bit. Zip. Nada. Cero. Nulis. Zyro. Null. Sunna. Zero. Sefr. Ling. Nol. Yeong. Not even a tiny bit.

The governments of the world separately, and together via their UN-led process, have completely failed — for decades — to halt the relentless increase in fossil fuel pollution that is driving us off the “climate cliff.”

Meanwhile the storm clouds of climate changes gather and darken. Record smashing extreme heat events, deluges, floodingstorms, droughts, crop losses, sea level rises, wave heights, wind speeds, forest and coral reef die-offs, wildfires, species extinction, permafrost meltdown, ice loss and ocean acidification are all growing ever worse.

Often the dramatic changes are emerging much faster than even worst case projections of a few years ago.

As one of the world’s leading climate scientists, James Hansen of NASA, says:

“Ladies and gentlemen, your governments are lying through their teeth. You may wish to use softer language, but the truth is that they know that their planned approach will not come anywhere near achieving the intended global objectives. Moreover, they are now taking actions that, if we do not stop them, will lock in guaranteed failure…”

“The problem is that our governments, under the heavy thumb of special interests, are … pursuing policies to get every last drop of fossil fuel”

Sure enough, top global institutions that specialize in energy forecasts –the World Bank, the International Energy Agency, the United Nations, the Global Carbon Project, PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology — have all recently warned that we are on a dirty energy path leading to a climate “catastrophe” of 4.0 C to 6.2 C of global warming during the lives of our children.

Oops, sorry kids.

This is five to eight times the amount of warming we have seen so far. Beyond 2.0 C the climate science and the nations of the world have said human civilization faces dire threats. Nobody wants to live in a world where the weather has been turbo-charged by 4 to 6 more degrees of global heat energy. It will be real misery on a global scale.

Despite the increasingly dire warnings from some of the world’s most respected organizations, just take a look at what some of our own politicians and leadership are doing:

  • The Port of Metro Vancouver is pushing through a massive increase in coal exports with the goal of making our port the largest coal exporter on the continent. More climate pollution already goes out of this one port as coal than the entire economy of BC burns. Yet, amazingly, in BC today there are still no climate limits of any kind on the extraction or export of the direst fossil fuel of all — coal. And not one the millions of tonnes of coal will be asked to pay even a penny of our carbon tax. Clean talk, dirty actions.
  • YVR airport is pushing for a doubling of jet fuel burning. This will more than wipe out decades of greenhouse gas reductions from the rest of the Vancouver region. Despite the scale of the climate damage involved, there are no absolutely no climate limitations on the billions of litres of jet fuel for out of province flights. Not one litre of that jet fuel will be asked to pay even a penny of our carbon tax. Clean talk, dirty actions.
  • The Clark provincial government is pushing hard for massive increases in the amount of coal and fossil methane (aka “natural gas”) that will be extracted each year. The increase in climate pollution being extracted under these plans are many times larger than all the fossil fuel burned in BC’s economy today. Once again there are still absolutely no climate limits in BC on either coal or fossil methane extraction or exports. Once again none of the hundreds of millions of tonnes of fossil carbon will have to pay even a single penny of our carbon tax. Clean talk, dirty actions.
  • The Harper federal government is sweeping away any laws and people that threaten to moderate its agenda of radically expanding the extraction of carbon out of the Alberta tar sands deposits. Despite the“carbon bomb” scale of the threat, there are no federal or provincial climate limits restricting the amount of carbon that can be extracted from the Alberta tar sands. None. Rapid expansion of fossil carbon extraction is an unchecked, priority number one for Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Despite 18 years of clean talk at UN-led climate negotiations, politicians here and around the world still refuse to do the one thing required to preserve a safe, stable climate: reduce the total amount of fossil fuels extracted and burned.

“It may seem impossible to imagine that technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we are now in the process of doing.”

– Elizabeth Kolbert, Field Notes from a Catastrophe

The Foul Legacy of the Tar Sands: Lakes Turned Into Cancer Sites

Courtesy by: Kristina Chew. Care 2

Back in 2010, residents near the shores of Canada’s Lake Athabasca called on the government to commission an independent study about the impact of the tar sands development in northern Alberta and Saskatchewan on the environment. Lake Athabasca is located downstream from one of the major tar sands developments and residents, who had found more and more fish with deformities (including huge tumors), demanded that a system of environmental monitoring be put in place and an investigation be carried out.

On Monday, the study resulting from these concerns was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) and the verdict is clear: tar sands are bad for our health and for the environment.

In the study, Canadian researchers found that, since the 1960s when the tar sands development was started, the level of pollutants — specifically, of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which have been shown to adversely affect birds and aquatic organisms — has risen in six freshwater lakes. By examining sediment from five lakes within a 22-mile radius of the tar sands and one remote lake about 60 miles north, scientists found that PAH levels are now 2.5-23 times greater than than had been around 1960.

In the past decades, there has been a huge increase in developing the tar sands, as these are viewed as an increasingly important part of the world’s oil reserves at a time of rising energy prices and insatiable demand.

The tar sands in northern Alberta and Saskatchewan are the third largest reserve in the world and contain 97 percent of Canada’s reserves. Some speculate that Canada has been drawing heavily on the tar sands, and overlooking the environmental impact, as a way to “cushion the Canadian economy from shocks in global energy prices.”

Tar Sands Development Has Made Wildlife Ponds As Polluted As Urban Ones

The title of the study is “Legacy of a half century of Athabasca oil sands development recorded by lake ecosystems.” Based on the dirty evidence in once pristine lakes, that “legacy” is one we don’t want.

Indeed, the scientists’ long-term findings are all the more crucial as the tar sands industry has contended that pollution is “natural.” PAHs can be found in coal, crude oil, petroleum and in products made from fossil fuels, such as creosote and asphalt; they can also be released into the air when fossil fuels and organic matter are burned and are produced by volcanoes and forest fires.

But the researchers found, since 1978 (when large-scale production of tar sands got underway), that the levels of PAH deposits have been “steadily rising” from what they had been at for centuries. As the study simply states,

Because of the striking increase in PAHs, elevated primary production, and zooplankton changes, these oil sands lake ecosystems have entered new ecological states completely distinct from those of previous centuries.

“We’re not saying these are poisonous ponds. But it’s going to get worse. It’s not too late but the trend is not looking good,” as the study’s lead author, John P. Smol, a professor of biology at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, said in the New York Times. The wildlife ponds have become as contaminated as those in urban areas, he also noted.

The results of the Canadian scientists’ study make it even more clear why we need to stop the construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline which is to transport oil down through the western U.S. to refineries along the Gulf Coast. Who knows what damage the pipeline could do to so many lakes, ponds and other freshwater sources; to our flora and fauna, to us?

Canadian Wildlife Federation: Canadians expect strong Federal leadership on protecting species at risk

From Canadian Wildlife Federation

 

White-headed Woodpecker Photo: Glenn Bartley

 

 

 

 

 

 

December 13, 2012

Canadians overwhelmingly support a strong Federal government commitment to protecting species at risk in Canada no matter where they are found and regardless of their status in other countries.

The vast majority of Canadians view protecting Canada’s endangered animals and plants as an important issue (97%) and feel that the Federal government’s current commitment to the protection and recovery of Canada’s species at risk should be maintained or strengthened (96%), according to a new Ipsos Reid poll released today.

Reports from Canada’s Environment Minister, the Honourable Peter Kent, regarding potential changes to the Species at Risk Act raised concerns that the Act could be substantially weakened. The Ipsos Reid poll, commissioned by the Canadian Wildlife Federation, was designed to gauge the value Canadians place on protecting our at-risk species.

A large majority (85%) of Canadians agree that federal laws protecting species at risk are essential to the diversity and abundance of wildlife, which in turn are crucial to our economy and health.  Only a small percentage of Canadians (15%) feel these laws negatively impact the economy and reduce job growth.

“It is clear from the poll results that Canadians believe a strong economy can be maintained while continuing to protect our wildlife. In fact, only 3% of Canadians feel that industry should be unrestricted by the need to protect species at risk,” says James Pagé, Species at Risk Specialist for the Canadian Wildlife Federation.

When it comes to whether Canadians value some at-risk species more than others, the poll found that Canadians expect a commitment to protecting all species at risk in Canada, regardless of whether they happen to be abundant outside of our borders (77%).
A recent decision by the federal government to not protect three species (Coast Manroot, Laura’s Clubtail and Four-leaved Milkweed) included the argument that since they do not occur on federal lands, they do not require federal protection.

“The vast majority of Canadians would not support that argument. Only 8% think that the Act should only apply to species found on federal lands,” says Pagé. “This decision raises concern that the federal government may be looking to step back from its responsibility of providing federal oversight for all species at risk in Canada.” “This poll shows that Canadians care deeply about the state of our endangered wildlife and they expect the Federal government to play a lead role in protecting these species,” says Pagé. “Any review of the Species at Risk Act and its implementation should be done with an aim to improve recovery efforts for our most vulnerable species.  We understand the federal government is looking for efficiency in delivering on species at risk protection, but this must be accomplished without compromising on the outcomes for Canada’s at-risk species.”

What Canadians expect from the Federal Government:

•    The federal government should not decrease their current efforts for species at risk. Only 4% of Canadians think that the federal government is doing too much and should step back their current efforts. 96% want to see the federal government do at least as much (34%) or more (62%) for species at risk.
•    The federal government should either maintain or increase its current financial investment in species at risk (92%). Only 8% of Canadians think fewer resources should be invested in species at risk by the federal government.
•    Over half (52%) of Canadians believe the federal government must bear the primary responsibility of protecting and recovering species at risk.
•    Over three quarters (77%) of people think that scientific advice should take precedence in decisions regarding species at risk. Within this, 62% believe economic considerations should carry some weight.
•    Canadians (74%) do not want to see business operate at the expense of species at risk and (85%) think that the current law protecting species at risk are in fact crucial to our economy and health.
•    There is little support (only 8%) for the Species at Risk Act to be restricted to only apply to lands under federal jurisdiction. Three in five Canadians (59%) think the federal Act should apply to all lands in Canada including provincial and privately owned land.
•    Canada needs to be responsible for all our species at risk regardless of whether or not they occur in the United States (78%). Only 16% of Canadians think that the federal government should not protect a species at risk in Canada if it is common elsewhere.
•    The majority of Canadians (74%) believe that businesses should only operate in a way that does not harm species at risk. In fact, almost no Canadians (3%) believe that industry should be unrestricted by the need to protect species at risk.

The poll was carried out between November 2nd and November 6th to gauge the public’s opinions around key issues with respect to species at risk in Canada. A sample of 1005 Canadians was surveyed using Ipsos’ standardized online panel. Weighting was used to ensure a balanced demographic representing the adult population in Canada. The precision of Ipsos online polls is measured using a credibility interval.  In this case, the poll is accurate to within +/- 3.5 percentage points had the entire Canadian adult population been surveyed. All sample surveys and polls may be subject to other sources of error, including, but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.

CWF has a long history of working with species at risk, operating the leading non-government program of its type in Canada.  CWF supports researchers and on-the-ground action through the largest funding program in Canada outside of government, providing $500,000 per year to enable key research on at-risk species.

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About the Canadian Wildlife Federation
The Canadian Wildlife Federation is a national non-profit charitable organization dedicated to ensuring an appreciation of our natural world and a lasting legacy of healthy wildlife and habitat.  By improving knowledge of human impacts on the environment, developing and delivering programs, recommending policy changes and cooperating with like-minded partners, CWF encourages a future in which Canadians can live in harmony with nature.  For more information, visit CanadianWildlifeFederation.ca

Contact:
Pam Logan
(613)222-1405
pamelal@cwf-fcf.org

White-headed Woodpecker Photo: Glenn Bartley

Mega-quarry victory shows people have the power

Courtesy by: David Suzuki

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world.” These words, attributed to anthropologist Margaret Mead, capture the power that we, as citizens, have to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds to protect the environment.

It just happened in Ontario, where Highland Companies announced it was withdrawing its plan to build a massive open-pit limestone quarry in the rural countryside north of Toronto. The controversial proposal to blast a billion tonnes of limestone from beneath some of the finest farmland in North America initially drew the ire of a handful of local farmers and residents who faced overwhelming odds to stop it.

Rules governing aggregate mining in the province are weak, provide little protection against large projects and too often sacrifice prime agricultural land and nature to industry. And it’s easy to understand why cash-strapped, rural-based municipalities would be tempted to accept industrial projects, with their promise of local employment and an improved tax base.

Making the battle against the quarry more challenging was the fact that Highland was backed by a Boston hedge fund, the Baupost Group, with assets of more than $25 billion. It was also represented by Hill and Knowlton, the high-priced PR firm that infamously worked with Big Tobacco to convince smokers that cigarettes don’t cause cancer.

Citizens rallied, though, and showed that the real issue was the protection of local food lands and drinking water, things of importance well beyond the borders of their community. Opponents of the mega-quarry reached out to people who may not have considered how they would be affected if a company succeeded in destroying thousands of acres of fertile fields close to a large urban centre like Toronto.

Groups like the North Dufferin Agricultural and Community Taskforce successfully brought the battle to the city, through tireless outreach at events like farmers markets. Thousands of “Stop the Mega Quarry” signs sprouted in yards in towns and cities across southern Ontario.

In 2011, renowned chef Michael Stadtlander, from the nearby community of Singhampton, produced Foodstock with the Canadian Chefs Congress and local farmers. The protest event drew 28,000 people to a farm field a few hundred metres from where the quarry would be built.

This past October, that celebration of local food and protest was replicated in Toronto, when the David Suzuki Foundation (which had earlier provided scientific research and submissions for the regulatory process) and the Canadian Chefs’ Congress hosted Soupstock. More than 200 top chefs from Canada and the U.S. prepared gourmet soup from donated local ingredients for more than 40,000 supporters. They sent a strong message to the company that urbanites stand in solidarity with the farmers of Melancthon to oppose the mega-quarry.

Soupstock showed the movement was gaining momentum, but no one predicted that Highland would raise the white flag a month later.

People power won! And it wasn’t the first time it’s happened in Canada.

In 1984, I heard about a controversial plan to log the pristine Stein Valley, the last untouched watershed in the southern Coast Mountains, northeast of Vancouver. The battle to protect the Stein began with a small group of conservationists and scientists but soon grew to include tens of thousands. In 1988, the B.C. government placed a moratorium on logging. A few years later the area was protected through the creation of the 1,060-square-kilometre Stein Valley Nlaka’pamux Heritage Park.

Similar grassroots victories have helped stop logging on Haida Gwaii, prevented giant dams from being built in northern Quebec and halted highway projects that, if established, would have wiped-out historical neighbourhoods in downtown Toronto and Vancouver.

Canada’s political and corporate leaders should take note. Controversial megaprojects like the Northern Gateway Pipeline are being met with increasing criticism and public opposition.

Although we’ll celebrate this victory over the mega-quarry, the Ontario government must also seize this call to overhaul its policies for aggregate mining that allowed the proposal to be considered in the first place. No community should have to fight so hard to ensure that prime farmland and valuable nature aren’t sacrificed to the interests of big business.

But for now, we can savour success. Together, tens of thousands of people accomplished something that only months ago seemed impossible: stopping the mega-quarry.

Investment Treaties Like FIPA Spin Huge Profits for Lawyers

 

By Jamie Biggar and Emma Pullman, 30 Nov 2012, TheTyee.ca

 

 

 

 

 

 

Canadians from across the political spectrum have come together to oppose the secretive and extreme Canada-China FIPA investor deal. The FIPA would allow foreign corporations to sue the Canadian government if they believe any level of government has done anything to limit their interests, and the lawsuits would be heard in investor-state arbitrations that function as secret tribunals outside the Canadian court system.

Within Canada, citizen opposition has fueled a media debate that has, in turn, been dominated by people who have an apparent financial stake in the outcome that has not been disclosed to the public.

And now, a new report shows that while other countries like Australia are rejecting investor-state arbitration, this radical form of democratic override is fast becoming a booming industry that is costing taxpayers billions, and challenging government decisions and common sense laws all around the world.

Broad opposition to FIPA

The opposition to the Canada-China FIPA is widespread and growing. Through Leadnow.ca and SumOfUs.org’s campaigns alone, over 80,000 Canadians have sent messages opposing the FIPA deal to their MPs and party leaders. This community has written hundreds of letters to the editor and funded radio and print ads to challenge Conservative MPs on their home turf. Nearly 20,000 Canadians wrote statements opposing this FIPA to the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade when they asked for public comment on their environmental assessment of the investor deal. Thousands have also spoken out against the Canada-China FIPA through campaigns organized by groups like the Council of Canadians, ForestEthics, Avaaz and the David Suzuki Foundation, and spontaneous protests have been organized around the country.

From First Nations to conservative pundits, opposition to this FIPA is diverse and strong. First Nations leaders from across the country, such as the BC Union of Indian Chiefs and Chiefs of Ontario, have condemned the binding investor deal because it would break constitutionally enshrined Aboriginal rights and title by granting China’s companies special extra-constitutional legal rights that could supercede the ability of First Nations to self-govern their territory. Conservative commentators like Diane Frances have also slammed the Harper Conservatives, writing in the Financial Post that “Ottawa capitulated to China on everything” by negotiating an agreement that will give Canadian investors little protection in China, while granting China’s companies the ability to undermine democratic control in Canada.

Many expected Prime Minister Harper to pass the Canada-China FIPA on Nov. 1, immediately after a mandatory 21-day waiting period. But the broad-based pressure seems to be having an effect and the treaty is now sitting idle, ready to be ratified at any moment, but with no clear indication of when or if that might happen.

Expert voices in the media

As the days have turned into weeks, a group of FIPA proponents have spread out across Canadian media to laud the benefits of this controversial investor deal and downplay the risks to our democracy and economy while Prime Minister Harper regroups. For Canadians trying to make sense of trade agreements and this FIPA, it is important to understand that there are surprisingly few Canadians with deep expertise on the subject of FIPA agreements and investor-state arbitration, a new and rapidly changing field. Prof. Gus Van Harten is a Canadian expert with international stature who has been sounding the loudest alarm from the beginning. He has never earned income by representing a corporation or working as an arbitrator in an investor state arbitration. In contrast, in media interviews professor Andrew Newcombe has largely dismissed concerns that the Canada-China FIPA will undermine Canada’s democratic control. Prof. Newcombe shares something with many of the FIPA proponents who have been writing op-eds and conducting media interviews over the last few weeks: he has an apparent financial stake in the matter because he has earned income representing corporations in the growing investor-state arbitration industry, and could benefit from that industry’s further growth if the Canada-China FIPA is signed. In fact, on his LinkedIn profile, Newcombe lists himself as available for “consulting offers” and “expertise requests” in relation to international arbitration.

In professor Newcombe’s case, he represented (and may still represent) Commerce Corporation in a lawsuit that used the CAFTA investor deal to challenge El Salvador’s moratorium on industrial gold mining. Newcombe also provides a private for-profit newsletter service to these firms that charges a premium for commercial firms engaged in this work.

For an even more prominent example, consider Matthew Kronby and Milos Barutciski, a pair of lawyers who have been advocating the Canada-China FIPA with op-eds in The Globe and Mail and Financial Post. These lawyers are partners at Bennett Jones, a firm that proudly offers its investor-state arbitration services to corporate clients who want to sue governments.

Prior to Bennett Jones, Kronby was the head of the federal government’s Trade Law Bureau. He was the government of Canada’s lead lawyer on the controversial CETA trade deal with Europe, and left mid-negotiation to take a job in the private sector. Barutciski used to be a lobbyist for Enbridge, the company hoping to build the Northern Gateway oil pipeline from Alberta’s oil sands to Kitimat on the B.C. coast.

Canada sued for $250 million via NAFTA

Barutciski’s recent actions, on the other hand, have completely undermined one of the most important arguments put forward by the industry insiders of the benefits of FIPA: that corporate lawsuits heard behind closed doors in the Canada-China FIPA’s secret tribunals will not undermine Canada’s ability to make common sense laws to protect our environment, create good jobs or stop dangerous projects. Barutciski, on behalf of Bennett Jones, is representing U.S. energy company Lone Pine Resources that has just declared that it will use the investor-state arbitration mechanism in NAFTA to sue the Canadian government for $250 million because Quebec put a moratorium to halt shale gas fracking, including Lone Pine’s exploration permits, in order to study the health and safety impacts of the increasingly controversial practice. In doing so, Barutciski has powerfully demonstrated that foreign corporations can use these secretive mechanisms to threaten Canadian taxpayers with massive penalties for prudent democratic decisions, even if those decisions, like Quebec’s moratorium on fracking, affected both foreign and Canadian corporations.

Investor-state arbitration lawyers have a right to share their views, and we have a right to know where they’re coming from. Just like you’d expect a financial analyst to tell you if they owned the stocks that they were trying to sell you, the legal industry that specializes in this area should declare its interest when they comment publicly on an issue of such mammoth common concern.

The upshot is that while opposition to the Canada-China FIPA has spread rapidly, far too many Canadians, including many Members of Parliament, don’t really understand the stakes of the Canada-China investor deal. For example, Conservative MPs have responded to the tens of thousands of emails they are receiving from their constituents with a nearly identical set of talking points, likely crafted in the Prime Minister’s Office, that reflect the industry insiders’ message. In addition, few politicians and pundits have recognized that this looming FIPA dramatically raises the stakes of the CNOOC-Nexen takeover. If the Harper Conservatives approve the $15 billion takeover, CNOOC will be treated as a Canadian company and be able to buy control over more Canadian resources without having to face another test to see if it is of “net benefit” to Canada. If this FIPA passes, CNOOC will then be able to sue Canadian governments in secret tribunals if those governments do anything to counter its growing interests.

Hurtling down an expensive legal road

A new global system is spinning out of control.

One of the biggest problems with the Canada-China FIPA is that it could lock us into this investor-state arbitration system for 31 years, and we have no way of predicting how this system will develop. How will the arbitrators interpret the interests of corporations and responsibilities of governments? How big will the damages be? How often will the threat of a lawsuit stop legislation before it’s put in place? Today, investor arbitration is already becoming a big global business, with huge consequences for taxpayers and democratic control.

According to a new report, “Profiting from injustice: How law firms, arbitrators and financiers are fuelling an investment arbitration boom” by the Corporate Europe Observatory and the Transnational Institute, investor arbitration has boomed in recent years, from 38 cases in 1996 to 450 known cases as of last year. And, these are only the known cases — there are cases that are not public, but we do not know how many.

A small group of elite firms with for-profit arbitrators and lawyers are getting rich from these deals. Today, legal and arbitration costs average over US$8 million per dispute — and sometimes exceed US$30 million. Entire legal teams handle cases with elite law firms charging as much as US$1,000 per hour, per lawyer. Arbitrators also earn hefty salaries: as much as US$1 million per case.

Taxpayers are paying much of the bill for these law firm profits and the awards they are securing for their corporate clients, and we are talking about big money here. A WTO arbitration panel just ordered Ecuador to pay U.S. oil company Occidental Petroleum $1.7 billion, and one of China’s companies, the Ping An Insurance Group, has launched a lawsuit against Belgium for $2 billion. The growing damages are creating an incentive for investor-state arbitration firms to advise their corporate clients to sue governments for ever larger sums — and the lawsuits are weakening or preventing laws that would put the public good ahead of narrow corporate interests.

The report maps an inner network of highly influential firms that it alleges are disproportionately involved personally and financially in these cases and arbitration. The report claims many arbitrators play double or triple roles, alleging that these arbitrators act as counsel, as academics, as government advisors, as lobbyists and as media commentators. The report also alleges that some have strong personal and commercial ties to companies. All this gives these firms huge influence over the debate about the investor arbitration system, which they have a vested interest in sustaining.

Historically, the international investor-state arbitration system was justified and put in place by Western governments to protect corporations’ investments from perceived bias and corruption within non-Western national courts. But the report argues that the so called “independent” arbitration system is becoming a self-serving multimillion-dollar industry dominated by a narrow exclusive elite of law firms. When you combine this with the track records of the tribunals and their generous interpretation of “corporate rights,” it’s time to ask serious questions about the industry’s commitment to unbiased judgments and the interests of Canadians. 
Now is the time because this system is being extended to the developed world, led by Canada, right now by the Harper Conservatives.

Finally, and perhaps most troubling of all, the report also describes a new trend in the investment arbitration industry: third-party funding. Investment arbitration is becoming so lucrative that investment funds will actually speculate on cases, lending money to companies so they can sue governments — and then they’ll take a cut of 20 per cent to 50 per cent from the final award.

Nations rejecting investor-state arbitration

Countries are starting to rethink and reject investor-state arbitration, and return to settling disputes through national courts and diplomacy. Bolivia, Ecuador and Venezuela have terminated several investment treaties and withdrawn from the World Bank International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), the main handler for these arbitrations. Argentina refuses to pay arbitration awards. South Africa has just announced that it will neither sign new investment agreements nor renew those that are set to expire.

In April 2011, the Australian government announced it would no longer include investor state dispute settlement provisions in its trade agreements. Specifically, it said it will not negotiate treaty protections “that would confer greater legal rights on foreign businesses than those available to domestic businesses” or that “constrain the ability of Australian governments to make laws on social, environmental and economic matters in circumstances where those laws do not discriminate between domestic and foreign businesses.” The Australian Productivity Commission completed a report on investor arbitration that found no compelling economic rationale for including investor-state arbitration mechanisms in its trade and investment agreements, and found few clear benefits along with several worrying risks associated with investor arbitration.

Barring constitutional challenges, if Prime Minister Harper signs the Canada-China FIPA investor agreement he will lock Canada into an investor-state arbitration system that seems to be growing increasingly self-serving — a network of firms that would have a significant financial interest to court Beijing’s business by delivering results for them. We are being told that this is a good idea by people who may have a financial interest in the outcome, and their views are being repeated by Conservative MPs who are simply repeating talking points sent to them by Ottawa.

The Harper Conservatives are changing the structure of the country without public debate and with a backwards view that ignores the lessons learned by other countries. Just as they expanded mandatory minimum prisons sentences despite Texan Republicans telling them that their “fill-the-prisons” approach to justice had utterly failed in Texas, they are moving Canada towards even more secretive and extreme investor deals. Australia, India, South Africa are all moving to protect their right to make domestic policy by rejecting investor-state arbitration. But in Canada the goal is to lock in Prime Minister Harper’s vision for the country as a mass exporter of raw resources. It’s hard to get rid of prisons once they’re built, and it’s hard to get rid of pipelines once they’ve been rammed through with the threat of secretive billion dollar lawsuits.

You can’t lead a country by keeping it divided and in the dark, and in the cross-partisan opposition to the Canada-China FIPA and CNOOC-Nexen takeover we are seeing fertile soil for a broad rejection of their stealthy agenda.  [Tyee]

One man is selling out our democracy

TAKE ACTION

Harper is about to sign a crazy deal with China that would set up secret courts where China’s companies can sue Canada if we pass laws to protect our health and environment that effect their profits.

But Harper’s been thrown by the growing public opposition to his plan – even among conservatives — and we actually have a chance to kill this disaster. He’s already delayed signing the deal, and if we can crank up the pressure we can force him to back down.

We need to show just how many people oppose this thing if we’re going to win. Join the campaign now and forward this to everyone you know — when we’re 50,000 strong, we’ll take our voices to Ottawa with a message Harper can’t ignore:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/one_man_is_selling_out_our_democracy/?brLXfdb&v=19678

The treaty, known as the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Act (FIPPA), is a bad deal for Canada: China keeps way more exemptions for national subsidies, protects more industries from Canada’s investors and it creates a secret tribunal that’s unlikely to do any good for Canada if China breaks the terms of the deal – in the last 15 years, no country has successfully sued China under one of these agreements!

This is also a desperate attempt by Harper to ramp up exploitation of our natural resources. The treaty could drastically hamper our ability to legislate to protect our environment. Big business in China has already spent $13 billion on the tar sands and want a large stake in the Northern Gateway pipeline — and this deal could mean any attempt to stop or regulate those projects could cost billions in Canadian taxpayer dollars. 

Belgium signed a similar deal with China and it’s already being sued for billions. We can make sure this doesn’t happen here. For once, Harper’s been genuinely thrown by the depth of opposition to this deal, and we have to keep up the pressure. Sign now and share with everyone:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/one_man_is_selling_out_our_democracy/?brLXfdb&v=19678

Together, we know we can beat the worst of Harper’s brutal agenda. Last year, more than 100,000 Canadian Avaazers came together to defeat an attempt to set up a “Fox News North” and protect balanced reporting in Canada. With thousands of Canadians already speaking out against this sovereignty fire-sale to China we can stop Harper and safeguard our democracy again.