Climate crisis gatecrashes OPEC gathering by Staff Writers Vienna (AFP) Dec 6, 2019 The climate crisis was the unexpected guest at this week's gathering of the OPEC bloc of oil producers and its allies which this time happened to coincide with the UN's climate summit in Madrid. In many countries the 'Fridays for Future' movement have been mobilising young people weekly in order to agitate for action on climate change. On Friday a hundred people marched to OPEC's headquarters with banners demanding "Keep it in the ground" and representations of humanity and nature standing on blocks of ice in mock gallows. OPEC insisted in a statement at the end of the two-day meeting that "all OPEC member countries are actively engaged and supportive of the Paris Agreement," the 2015 deal which aims at limiting global warming to "well below" two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). On Thursday, Venezuela's Oil Minister -- and current OPEC chair -- Manuel Quevedo said: "One of most important issues affecting the industry is the climate challenge." That was after dozens of climate change activists gathered outside OPEC headquarters in a silent protest, holding banners that read: "Burn injustice not oil" and "Fossil fuels have got to go." OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo received several of them and re-assured them that "there are no climate change deniers in OPEC". At OPEC's last meeting in July Barkindo raised eyebrows by attacking what he called "unscientific" attacks on the oil industry by climate change campaigners, calling them "perhaps the greatest threat to our industry going forward".
Natural gas drives record CO2 emissions in 2019 Paris (AFP) Dec 4, 2019 Global carbon emissions boosted by soaring natural gas use are set to hit record levels in 2019 despite a decline in coal consumption and a string of countries declaring a climate emergency, researchers said Wednesday. In its annual analysis of fossil fuel trends, the Global Carbon Project said CO2 emissions were on course to rise 0.6 percent this year - slower than previous years but still a world away from what is needed to keep global warming in check. In three peer-reviewed studies, authors ... read more
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