U.S. Talks Green, Backs Fossil-Fuel Projects
Critics: Behavior Hypocritical
WASHINGTON - At the G-8 summit of world leaders in
June, President Bush repeated his calls for developing nations to curb
their emissions of greenhouse gases. Without their cooperation, he said,
drastic measures in the United States to battle climate change would make
little sense.
"We all can make major strides, and yet there won't be a reduction until
China and India are participants," he told reporters.
But just weeks earlier, the U.S. government had pledged to help finance
one of the world's most advanced oil refineries, taking shape in the city
of Jamnagar, India. When the facility is complete by December 2008, it
will not only produce petroleum products, it will emit nearly 9 million
metric tons of carbon dioxide - the major contributor to global warming -
into Earth's atmosphere each year.
That estimate comes from the U.S. Export-Import Bank, which announced
$500 million in loan guarantees for the project in May. And the bank's
figures do not take into account the additional emissions from the cars
that will burn the giant refinery's gasoline, or the airplanes that will
fly on its jet fuel or the cook stoves that will fry with its propane and
kerosene.
The Jamnagar refinery is only one of hundreds of fossil-fuel projects
built with the help of U.S.-controlled funding agencies. Since 1995, when
the United Nations' scientific climate change panel agreed on "a
discernible human influence" on global warming, the U.S. has helped to
finance power plants, liquefied natural gas processors, oil pipelines and
the like in more than 40 countries - in effect, extending America's carbon
footprint well past this nation's borders.
By calling for developing nations to curb their emissions while
simultaneously helping them emit more, "we're being hypocritical," said
David Waskow, international policy director for the Friends of the Earth
environmental group.
The 72-year-old Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment
Corp., founded in 1971, were set up to use loan guarantees, insurance and
other financial tools to promote U.S. exports, encourage economic
development in emerging markets and support America's foreign policy.
The federal government has promoted sales of clean-energy technology
abroad, but that effort has been dwarfed by support for fossil fuels.
Between 1995 and 2006, the Ex-Im Bank and the Overseas Private Investment
Corp. provided more than $21 billion in loans and loan guarantees to
support an array of oil refineries, pipeline projects, liquefied natural
gas plants and electric power plants around the world.
According to their own reports, the two agencies green-lighted projects in
recent years that send out a total of more than 125 million metric tons of
carbon dioxide annually - the equivalent of putting 31.3 million new cars
on the road or adding another 2 percent to U.S. emissions, according to
the Energy Department.
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