Friday, 17 March 2017

Conservation society mollycoddles fracked LNG (Whitehorse Star coloumn Mar. 2017

Conservation society mollycoddles fracked LNG  part 1/2

During the March 3 Midday Café interview with Leonard Linklater, Anne Middler, the senior energy analyst for the Yukon Conservation Society (YCS), glossed over troublesome liquified natural gas (LNG) facts and accommodated misleading statements made by the Calgary frack gas promoter, Ferus Inc.

The interview followed up on Yukon Energy Corporation's latest Frack & Pony show, this time a closed door event featuring Ferus on the morning of March 1 in the Old Firehall. 

The main theme in the Old Firehall was to use LNG plans of the Casino mine proposal as vehicle for an introduction of deep natural gas infrastructures across Yukon. 

A team of presenters decked out in company uniform dresses and seamless Prozac happiness had rolled out a tightly controlled message and multi media track. Benefit of such by invite-only sessions, there was some plain text such as carbon pricing subsidizes fracking (accurately referenced in the Alberta Climate Plan).

Claims of supposedly clean fracked LNG, long debunked, she accommodated as "dubious". 

In response to facts that are too solid and obvious to be simply overturned introducing such false doubt to scientific proof (not hypothesis, not theory) is a classic feature of toxic cigarette and fossil industries discourse.

During the Oct. 2013 Yukoners Concerned PPT presentation to the YG frack committee I had elaborated on my link in the PPT, showing a University of Colorado study of total mass measurements of methane emissions in a Utah frack gas field.

Since then, from journals like Scientific American to the academic literature, we have seen building an avalanche of high-calibre evidence that fracked natural gas has the dirtiest GHG output of all fossil fuels, including coal and fracking-derived diesel. 

With no evidence to the contrary long lists of peer reviewed papers published by Sourcewatch: goo.gl/PNrTJR, and Cornell University : goo.gl/N2Wrjn, are summed up well by fracture engineer and fracking pioneer Dr. Tony Ingraffea: "Shale Gas is not the cleanest, not the least worst of all the fossil fuels, it is the dirtiest, it is the worst."

Of course, LNG is dirtier yet as it means a double-whammy of pollution in comparison to above referenced, increasingly fracked natural gas in general, because of the massive additional emissions involved in liquifying natural gas into LNG.

Anne Middler further ceded supposed economic benefits of establishing an ever broader frack LNG infrastructure in Yukon. 

She suggested, for example, in the case of a truly massive LNG fuelled electrical generation for the Casino Mine proposal, a measly renewable energy quota along with fracked LNG should be required.

The YCS continue to overlook that Yukon is not an economic island and that it is unethical and economically destabilizing for Yukon to saddle B.C. or Alberta with incentives for even more public debt, private sector investment fraud and structural unemployment.

It is irresponsible for experts like her, perceived to be impartial and objective, to give feed back that contributes to sooner or later leaving public and industrial energy needs high and dry, and leaving planning unaware of supply unreliability and price volatility of short sighted frack gas perspectives.

Frack gas speculators like Ferus focus on pumping up the next quarterly balance sheet while a big mining project is planned for decades to come, very incompatible. 

Once infrastructure dependencies reach a critical mass many expect natural gas prices to go up ferociously, roughly to Pacific Rim levels. 

It is noteworthy that after years of $100-plus plus per barrel crude prices (until 2014) no Canadian jurisdiction has relevant savings. 

In the case of the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund, it is in the 0% - 1% range of Norway's Sovereign Wealth Fund, at best.

Norway, with savings of about $1.5 trillion, extracts crude from once-profitable conventional reservoirs and reinvests almost exclusively into renewables.

Whereas somewhere around half of current Canadian oil and gas extraction and practically all of its new fossil energy projects unfold as unconventional tar and frack expansion, with no useful net energy output while bleeding financial losses and proliferating economic failure.

And with depletion of 'low hanging fruit' resources those efficiency losses of fracking are getting ever-bigger.

Super-intense efforts of breaking the back of the Earth in unconventional operations seamlessly across vast sacrifice regions require expenditure of financial and energy resources that is economically very different to a once profitable conventional extraction, with typically localized spot impacts.

The YCS consistently ignored, or by now shall I say has hidden as in the interview, the massive economic and ecological outcome differences when expanding into unconventionally vs. once conventionally derived fossil fuels.

When the chips were down YCS had endorsed (sneak) fracking, the dishonest NDP and Liberal way of going about it paired with no-frack lip service. 

Strikingly, before the unanimous passing of the Dec. 2015 Yukon Oil and Gas Act (YOGA), the YCS responded "Agreed” to eight out of 11 frack enabling proposals in YG's related online consultation.

Tony Ingraffea, a well-known Cornell University professor, in the fall of 2016 provided a reality check to Yukoners by pointing out the YOGA never even mentions “shale” or “fracturing”, “conventional” or “unconventional”, not in any form.

He explicitly responded to the author in agreement on the deceptive character of the YOGA, which, in Ingraffea’s review, could only be matched on the negative scale by Texas regulatory fracking implementations.

Ecological, industrial and social challenges before us are immense, but without ethical core there is no hope. 

One could start by transitioning from technocratically shackled, spineless slithering to re-learning upright walking. 

The Yukon Conservation Society has a bad habit of regurgitating oil industry talking points, and generally does not recognize independently and broadly accepted energy basics such as these:

As indispensable but vanishing backbone of the entire fossil energy outlook, global conventional O & G extraction is declining since around 2005; North American reserves and production are in worse shape. 

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers estimates a final decline of natural gas resources from 2025 onward.

The only significant LNG exporter, Qatar, ships almost half of the world's exports. 

Even the only two other relevant conventional natural gas producers, Russia and Iran, have reserves too far from tidewater to afford the wasteful LNG option.

The freezing down to 162 degree Celsius (260 Fahrenheit) is so energy intensive that nearly half of the natural gas is used up right then and there. 

It also means the frack gas extraction from short-lived wells in overrated reserves with no useful net energy or revenue output from Alberta and B.C. interior shale geology is an LNG pipe dream of pipe dreams. 

LNG is typically understood as non-viable oddball fossil fuel that historically evolved in highly unusual trade scenarios such as the Qatar export - Japan import connection, not at all suitable for most energy logistics and architectures.  

Seasoned oil and gas industrialists like Art Berman and analysts like Deborah Rogers or petroleum geologists like David Hughes, state clearly that fracking and LNG are investment fraud based on wildly inflated reserve statements and energy wasting, more than realistic resource production.

Matthias Bichsel, then project and technology director at Shell, summed it up this way, cited by the Financial Post on Oct. 18, 2013: “The United States oil and gas industry has “overfracked and overdrilled’.” The reader can fill in "Canadian tar and frack bubble will be short lived".

Part 2 of this two-part commentary will be published Monday. 

It will show how the YCS following its Oct. 5, 2012 backroom deal with the oil industry, misreads energy economics and presents misleading renewable energy as well as oil cartel-coined climate advice.



Yukon Conservation Society Mollycoddles Fracked LNG  part 2/2


P.E.I. with about one-third penetration of wind energy on the power grid, produces the wind component at 5 cents/kWh. 

If critical mass was moved beyond Yukon Energy Corp.'s (YEC's) renewable Mickey Mouse approach, and thereby pushing down Northern overhead costs such as construction crane use, Yukon might expect closer to Dawson Creek's 8 cents/kWh wind energy production cost.

On top of that, a first Yukon wind park such as the Ferry Hill 10 - 20 MW proposal, is mostly base load power because of so far unused storage potential at the Aishihik power dam and therefore decades overdue, also with regard to loads for electric vehicle charging. 

Crucially in winter months that have lots of wind, with wind farm operations, water can be held back at Aishihik.

Then, when there is little wind, it can be reliably used instead of the current fossil fuel generators. 

This cost competitive edge of wind energy is agreed on, but hidden under a "mountain of disjointed, incoherent facts" (out of Tarkovsky's movie Solaris) by YEC.

Battery electric transit busses have been successful in many places.

Winnipeg Transit is now considering going all electric with 618 busses; electric busses for over half a century had been successful in Winnipeg.

As one example, the BYD K9 model purchase cost and maintenance cost are competitive to the latest diesel bus orders by Whitehorse city council and of course fuels up for 20 percent of diesel fuel's cost. 

In five years since the previous order of new city busses, which already should have been electric, significant diesel expenses and GHG emissions have frivolously occurred.

City council's lack of perspective or fossil default mentality aligns with the scandalous Feb. 2016 EV study YEC had commissioned with the ICF oil and gas consultancy in California. 

The study discourages any vehicle charge infrastructure initiative.

As a planning goal into the future, it advises that electrical vehicle traffic in the Yukon should be referred to and limited to block heater outlets, a total no-no in EV infrastructure development 101.

This frozen situation is not ecology- or economics-based, but ideological, and even less likely to change as time goes on with the irrational fossil eggheads digging in and advancing further their already adversarial stance.

Michael Brandt, YEC's Vice-President and face of frack gas continuity through and beyond Dave Morrison's days, is a seasoned expert in irrational frackonomics, which he proved once again during the LNG promotional event in the Old Firehall March 1, 2017.

Unchallenged by the Yukon Conservation Society (YCS), he made the disingenuous, circular statement that Yukon's electric infrastructure is not robust enough to power or partially power large mining projects.

In reality, every step of the way in years, Brandt had opposed any sensible, incremental options to cost-competitively, robustly, resiliently and adaptively electrify Yukon's energy, industrial and transportation capacities. 

He is still the enemy of a Ferry Hill wind farm. Hydro dams once were considered renewable but are not any longer in forward planning, which the fossilized Brandt has not learned. 

Renewable energy is competitive; always-wasteful conversion of fossil resources into energy is not. 

Oil, coal and gas are politically and militarily influential, which is an entirely different piece, or beast.

A big problem with YCS is they are trying to pull the wool over our eyes by selling us one for the other with Exxon Mobile-sponsored carbon price indoctrination.

The climate crisis is unravelling livable conditions on our planet. It is time now to stop or wake up the climate deniers, be it flat-earthers or carbon-pricers with their own attack on atmospheric science and energy economics.

Carbon taxes and carbon off set trade speculation only validate and navigate current GHG emission levels. 

Conversely, unequivocally climate science as well as climate/north-south justice (Kyoto Principle) understand accumulated emissions, not current emission levels, as core data point.

But it is the dishonest indoctrination by carbon-pricers that enable and multiply the flat-earth and Trump followers who understand very well being lied to, just are confused what exactly about.

It is the carbon-pricing narrative of YCS and others to confuse the morbid end-game of fossil cartel subsidies with the capitalist or simply industrial cycle of private/public infant industry investment.

It is a crucial failure to overlook or forget the mechanics for crossing critical mass thresholds for network technologies, like rail, air travel, phone service, communication and energy sectors.

As with other technology standard changes, fossils do not transition to renewables but are disrupted by change. 

Illegal fossil actions, such as violations of the Competition Act section 15.1 with the fraudulent carbon-price claim of lowering emissions, when in fact it it increases emissions, need to be stopped.

Like the VW emission lowering claims for petroleum sphere products that blocked renewable paths for an actual reduction of emissions, the emission increasing carbon pricing fraud of the petro-political complex will be prosecuted under competition legislations by an initiative of the author.

Remember muckraking journalist Ida Tarbel and Republican US president Theodore Roosevelt, who broke up the criminal cartel operations of Standard Oil? 

In today's anti-democratic corporatism, they could be considered far left of the neoliberal phonies from Blair-Mulcair New Labour. 

Fully interchangeable, Yukon wise, fill in Premier Sandy Silver or Yukon NDP Leader Liz Hanson.

The Silver government is getting their ducks in a row for fracking in Northern and South-East Yukon, which is plain text for already initiated Oil and Gas development of shale resources, such as in the Kandik Basin.

There is danger at the door; neoliberal carbon pricers outfrack and outpipeline neoconservatives everywhere.

It is a bandwagon That Peter Turner, the president of the Yukon Chamber of Commerce was quick to jump on with the now-familiar emphasis on frack subsidies through carbon-pricing. 

Yukon has zero proven conventional Oil or Gas reservoirs according to comprehensive literature of Yukon O & G geology available through the Yukon Geological Survey. Sandy Silver and Peter Turner can't seem to get it into their heads.

For such a surreal scene of endlessly and brainlessly parroted frack promos, in the coming out year 2012 for Yukon Frack and Pony shows, on Oct. 5, the YCS framed the picture. 

YCS set the tone for a fossil default standard of frack double talk by signing a backroom deal with the oil industry.

The document borrows language from similar agreements that are often facilitated by the fossil-controlled and funded group Synergy Alberta. 

The psychologically clever term "polarized spectrum" has a track record for degrading fact- and science-based research as supposedly extreme.

The mental image of "polarized" pushes frack critical views to beyond an acceptable, allowable scope. 

Under the contract, packaged as a joined letter of YCS and Northern Cross, YCS is to seek "common ground" with the frackers.

"There is a need for the public to be engaged in an open and informed discussion about the oil & gas industry, including the benefits and risks of various oil and gas industry activities such as hydraulic fracture stimulation (fracking), and how Yukon's regulations govern these activities."

In the sophisticated legalese of the frack lobby culture the YCS has entered – need for an informed discussion – implies that frack objections in the community forum are supposedly –uninformed –, and frack lobbyists like YCS/Northern Cross by petitioning government assume expert authority, and importantly gain false legitimacy in sidelining the citizens by covering the consultation requirement in such elitist style.

The deceptive frack beautification of the  "benefits and risks" language frame later set the Gov's select committee on course. 

Long shadows continue to be thrown on Wealth and Health for Yukon with powerful language in YCS's oil backroom deal.

Anne Middler's signature is on it –  goo.gl/DPYYg5 .

Monday, 21 November 2016

Renewable opportunity from carbon pricing setback, Whse Star, 21 Nov. 2016

Renewable opportunity from carbon pricing setback

In her column “U.S. bombshell need not be a curse for Trudeau”, Chantal Hebert had examined cross-border opportunities and challenges such as having to rethink carbon pricing in Canada. 

She overlooked a potential for increased Canadian competitiveness from sustainable economies during a Donald Trump presidency.

Carbon pricing has a track record of subsidizing fossil expansions and for framing a status quo to slow down long-overdue renewable infrastructure initiatives. 

Let’s not be fooled and oiled by the good cop, bad cop routine of carbon pricers, like Exxon Mobile CEO Rex Tillerson or B.C. Premier Christy Clark and their support crew of Flat-Earthers, climate deniers.

We should have stepped out of carbon price magical thinking already and put the shoulder to the wheel of profitable renewable energy production and export such as from wind power.

Suppressed rights and freedoms, as well as deeply wounded economic and ecological justice, have a way of reasserting themselves destructively.

The resentment that brought Trump into the White House has a regressive flavour beyond the frequent confederate flags at his rallies, harkening back to another troubled changeover in energy economies.

Borrowing from Leonard Cohen’s title for his poetry collection The Energy of Slaves, Calgary journalist and author Andrew Nikiforuk named his book on the political unpleasantries of petro-oriented economies like Canada The Energy of Slaves: Oil and the new Servitude.

Staying in Nikiforuk’s analogy, we can use for a moment the Mason-Dixon line along the Ohio River that once had separated northern states from a South where slavery was legal, to better visualize modern divisions between outdated and appropriate energy initiatives. 

French writer Alexis de Tocqueville travelled widely in the U.S., and his observations from 1831 deliver a warning from history: 

“On the north bank of the Ohio, everything is activity, industry. Labour is honoured, there are no slaves.

“Pass to the south bank and there appear changes so suddenly that you think yourself on the other side of the world. The enterprising spirit is gone.”

Canada can push back economic weakness and lower emissions, without B.C.-type carbon accounting fraud, and thrive with resilience as industrial society.

With the Trumpists in charge of the White House, Congress, Senate and soon the U.S. Supreme Court, the opening Canadian opportunity is logically not in unconventional oil and gas expansion, but in renewable development.

Perhaps this means energizing the 49th parallel not as wall but as quasi Mason-Dixon-inspired demarcation of Canadian independence going hand-in-hand with sustainable players in North America and beyond.

Peter Becker
Energy consultant
Whitehorse

Wednesday, 9 November 2016

U.S. result was predictable months ago (Whitehorse Star, Nov. 9, 2016)

U.S. result was predictable months ago (Whitehorse Star, Nov. 9, 2016)

Re.“Clintonomics created Trump; only Sanders can beat him” (Star column, June 17, 2016). 

Quality journalism is often published in the Star. If you can’t find it in your newspaper stack or in the Star online archives, just go to:

http://yukonblogger.blogspot.com/2016/06/clintonomics-created-trump-only-sanders.html or simply google yukonblogger. 

Seriously, many who are not sucked or plugged into the neoliberal echo chambers of mainstream media like the CBC, or the U.S. equivalents National Public Radio and CNN, etc., could see Trump coming.

Independent American authors and journalists, among them Barbara Ehrenreich and Thomas Frank, through months and years, had warned and left little doubt that people needed revenge on the elites and were going to get it.

Ehrenreich and Frank are a joy to read; they are that good. Also, one comes along much better prepared for what happens and when it happens.

Their wisdom inspired me to write the opinion piece for the Star, which I feel has become even more relevant.

Peter Becker
Whitehorse

Carbon tax commands no GST like compliance (Whitehorse Star column Nov. 8, 2016)

Carbon tax commands no GST like compliance (Whitehorse Star column Nov. 8, 2016)

Nobody asks for a carbon tax from renewable energy drivers Denmark or Germany, where carbon pricing is a joke, so they would live up to Paris and previous climate agreements.

Similarly, the announcement for a federal carbon tax has its specifics so far spelled out in the Vancouver Declaration which requires greenhouse gas-reducing actions, but not carbon pricing.

The heavy climate lifting lies in infrastructure reform from which substantial behaviour change can follow.

One can only get on an electric transit bus, like in Winnipeg, if it’s there.

Carbon pricing puts the cart before the horse, in the all-important problem awareness, to prevent such improvements.

The climate survival crisis is a global one and renewables climate action that is for real breaks the bind of the carbon tax shell game scientifically, morally and also legally.

There is broad precedence building internationally but also nationally, where many of the First Nations in Canada have taken a lead in the Canadian climate discourse by denouncing the emission-increasing, pipeline-pushing fraud of carbon pricing.

The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report part 3, with input from thousands of scientists, spells it out clearly that carbon pricing has never worked anywhere.

But it acknowledges that a regionally adaptive diversity of renewable energy frameworks and ecological agriculture reforms have proven more than emission reductions, even carbon sequestration success.

A new generation of First Nation leaders is especially tough-minded and brilliant, and have evolved from uphill struggles for justice where they could never afford to be scholarly illiterate like streamlined political elites.

Universalism of the oil status quo/carbon pricing kind always was a mark of empire ideologies. French, British, German, Dutch, American, Roman, Persian, Mongol and Spanish empires projected one and one only concept of marching, dinner etiquette, economics, power structure, etc.

The non-Western learning understands this very well, and the Global South overwhelmingly rejects carbon pricing as frozen group think levied by undemocratic fossil cartels and morbid financial speculators.

Not everybody supports a sales tax, but its revenue-collecting purpose is widely understood or agreed upon.

Whereas a carbon tax is climate-counterproductive, politically divisive and legally self-combusting, as it offends a sense of evidence based thinking.

Peter Becker is a Whitehorse energy consultant.

Friday, 28 October 2016

Electric mail delivery fleet lowers energy costs, gases (Whse Star. Oct. 27, 2016)

Electric mail delivery fleet lowers energy costs, gases (Whse Star. Oct. 27, 2016)

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A long overdue initiative for electric road transportation is here, and its perspectives pack punch for meeting Vancouver declaration and Paris agreement requirements.

The first part of this two-part commentary, published Tuesday, summarized the back story of energy economics.

A Yukon Party media release of Oct. 17: “This investment of $160,000 will allow the purchase of four electric vehicles and the installation of eight charging stations throughout Whitehorse (some open to public use).”

It is the first concrete climate/energy deliverable of the election campaign.

Coming from the Yukon Party, this may surprise some.

However, it is not so much on the strength of their overall platform that the initiative shines, but it’s helped by the feebleness of the carbon price talk from the opposition parties.

Electric vehicle batteries hold a key for storing energy on the grid through the use of eventually bi-directional chargers as well as for lowering the energy cost of doing business in the community.

Highway fast charge points are the logical follow-up that people will demand.

Helping soon is the close, hands-on visibility of these electric trucks or vans and cars that run on 15 per cent energy and 20 per cent of fuel costs and 10 per cent of maintenance cost of equivalent combustion-powered vehicles.

The carbon tax claim to add a price signal of five or 50 per cent on top of the better than 500 per cent renewable fuel advantage is as false as it sounds.

The carbon pricing myth of viable fossil fuel into the long future is being busted wide open.

Coincidentally, carbon price advocating organizations like the Yukon Conservation Society and the Yukon NDP have often marginalized discussing EV policy options.

They might not realize how much their ecological aspirations have been and especially will be shackled to carbon pricing agendas of the fossil resource industry, locally and beyond.

Unfortunately, widely reported fracking slushfund operations under the cover of B.C. carbon tax refunds have never been denounced by these carbon price advocates who in fact praise the B.C. carbon tax as model.

A disturbing backdrop to the five priorities of the 2011 NDP election platform, which never even mentioned the word energy, creating an invitation, a vacuum that was filled by the Yukon Party with fracking and LNG proposals.

“Putting a price on carbon,” as if there was none, taunts the cord woodcutter who is trying to make it with an old pickup truck and the single mom with an empty gas tank.

Intentionally or not, the annual carbon tax refund, if it was for real, which it isn’t, laughs at the many families who live from paycheque to paycheque.

First Nations from northern B.C. to Treaty 3 lands in Ontario say no to carbon pricing, as it is an ideological bulldozer for pipelines they don’t want.

The Indigenous Environmental Network, likewise to the G-77 developing Nations in Paris, rejected this renewed and racialized finance colonialism.

Developing and First Nations are working toward renewable energy leapfrogging because it is economically and environmentally more realistic than the status quo nickle-and-diming by the carbon price to subsidize unconventional oil and gas expansion.

The tricky carbon tax title automatically locks in the expansion of emitter rights and free emission permits for carbon off-set traders, wherever there is a carbon tax from B.C. to Alberta (by 2017) to Australia (until 2014), Sweden and the U.K., for the purpose of capping emission reductions.

The energy policy study tour NDP Leader Liz Hanson participated in and reported on was offered by the German diplomatic service to Paris conference participants.

It centred around the effects of the EEG from 1999, the successful renewable energy source legislation she never mentioned and which had to fight its way against carbon tax lobbyists who tried and still try to stop it. She should know better than technocratic same old.

J. R. Saul observes in his book The Comeback (of aboriginal peoples) in the chapter History Is Upon Us:

“But the key to dealing with a real crisis, one that goes beyond our personal realities, lies in our ability to move outside what we think of as normal.

“If the crisis is big enough, we have to reconsider the narrative or we can be destroyed by it.”

The electric vehicle initiative is striking as the carbon price lobby of the oil cartel fights hardest to defend a 95 per cent control of the transportation sector.

Premier Darrell Pasloski’s statement that carbon pricing does not work in the North does not go far enough because it does not work – period.

Peter Becker is a Whitehorse energy consultant.

By Peter Becker

Carbon pricing is counterproductive to climate/energy realities (comment Whse Star Oct. 25, 2016)

Carbon pricing is counterproductive to climate/energy realities (comment Whse Star Oct. 25, 2016)

Conventional oil production, which generates or underwrites almost all of the profits, usable net energy output and economic vitality of the global, fossil energy-based economy, has been declining since 2005.

For the simple reason of real economic strength being in decline, actually below phoney GDP growth figures, picking up adequate pace of a renewable energy transition is more difficult now than it was a decade ago.

And it will be harder yet 10 years from now to, for example, push for an overdue wind power expansion.

The high carbon price, if that was a valid term, which it isn’t, or better too high fossil energy costs, is already siphoning off more and more of renewably needed investment.

That is particularly out of sync because wind energy long held the technological maturity to deliver the crucially necessary wealth from affordable, very high net energy output that oil-gushing wells once had until around 1960.

Carbon pricing mechanisms in their real effect subsidize a status quo of unaffordable, unconventional oil and gas expansion and emission increases.

However, even if the carbon price advocacy of slow change held water, it still shows how fundamentally out of touch a carbon tax is with the accelerating pace of change in climate and energy realities.

Growing greenhouse gases, other pollution and increasing financial debts have converged.

High pollution levels increasingly mirror a lot of unconventional extractive process intensity that expends vast financial, energy and mineral resources.

The deadliest bottleneck of energy transition is not an also very important home heating need, but transportation, which is currently 95 per cent oil-dependent.

That includes the often overlooked running of farm tractors that are crucial for food production, locally or otherwise.

Inviting minimum enviro-impact, high energy and profit outputting wind power, similar to Bear Mountain Wind Park in Dawson Creek, B.C., is a no-brainer. But the electric transportation initiative is equally pressing.

Part two of this commentary, to be published later this week, will reflect on the first concrete climate/energy deliverable of the 2016 Yukon election campaign to bring on an electric mail delivery fleet, including charge stations available to the public.

Peter Becker is a Whitehorse energy consultant.

By Peter Becker

Friday, 14 October 2016

Yukoners Concerned is trapped in 21 recommendations (Whse Star Comment Oct. 14, 2016)

Yukoners Concerned is trapped in 21 recommendations (Whse Star Comment Oct. 14, 2016)

Almost two years from the release of the legislature’s fracking committee’s report, Don Roberts continues to misread its 21 recommendations on their face value; green-washing recommendation which converge onto a one-way frack-lane.

In his otherwise mostly acceptable letter to the Star on Oct. 12, Mr. Roberts again asked the Yukon government to fulfil or apply these 21 recommendations, as if they advocated honest environmental protections.

Unlike Mr. Roberts, I have repeatedly questioned the frack report and have not bought into it, thereby also avoiding lending false legitimacy for fracking, which was the purpose of the report to begin with:

“The committee did agree that the following [21] recommendations should be addressed before hydraulic fracturing is considered.”

Recommendation 6, full text: “THAT baseline ground and surface water data be collected for an appropriate period of time, in order to ensure that comprehensive data is available.”

It’s B.C.-style soft legalese as part of Frack while Talk procedures, but no trust building, as in comprehensive baseline work must be carried out and completed. 

Recommendation 6 inevitably brings on especially B.C. best practices, as announced and complied with by the Yukon government. Those nowhere and never have included comprehensively concluded baseline water testing.

There is reason and logic to it. Alberta, Pennsylvania, British Columbia are examples, which will include the Yukon with frack procedures already permitted and initiated.

Industry-controlled regulators claim especially high levels of methane toxicity in the water of fracked regions are supposedly naturally occurring and pre-existing. 

Recommendation 10 recommends requiring to make public the frack chemicals. 

The entire 25-page frack report hides Fracfocus by making no single mention of this centrepiece of best practice regulations.

There is no excuse. Duty of care aside, on several occasions I had made sure all the committee members and legislature audience regulars are aware.

It is almost certain that the Fracfocus chemical disclosure registry will in time be implemented, as it is in place across North America, including in B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Fracfocus is a Kafkaesk masterpiece of deception and nihilism.

It requires disclosure reports, but not until 30 days after frack operations have ended and all specific individual compound disclosures are voluntary.

Medical associations complain that Fracfocus pushes back even those patients’ rights, disclosure obligations, legal remedies and helpful liabilities that existed before Fracfocus.

Herding everybody into establishing a narrow single-issue regulatory focus of water management really manages control of communities that in truth face broad destructive impacts (the Yukon government calls it Yukon Water Strategy, 2014).

It does so by diluting effective resistance against destroying the fullness of natural and economic life support systems.

Yukoners Concerned about Oil and Gas Exploration/Development, but especially Don Roberts, accommodated this government strategy by overplaying the message track: “It’s all about the water.”

Mr. Roberts never exposed or rejected Fracfocus.

Recommendation 11, full text: “THAT research be conducted to demonstrate whether well integrity can prevent migration of liquids or gases in the long term.”

Such research is not available. Supporting these recommendations retells government’s misleading statements, which can only get us fracked.

During the January 2014 Yukon legislature presentations/hearings, University of Alberta Prof. Bernhard Mayer had expressed doubt on industry claims regarding well integrity.

The Merchants of Doubt chutzpah by which his talk hid reality and statistics of the rate of well failures was remarkable.

The author of Sustainable Fossil Fuel, Mark Jaccard, a former advisor to former prime minister Stephen Harper, together with Rick Chalaturnyk, Royal Dutch Shell’s face for leaky carbon storage drilling, led the Merchants of (false) Doubt charge during the hearings.

Guaranteed frack harms were hidden consistently behind fixable or to-be-regulated “risks” by silver-tongued charmers with mediocre science credentials throughout the hearing.

There was frequent applause from all MLAs and the NGO crowd that had included Yukoners Concerned executives.

Synergy Alberta frack recruiting methods were explained and anticipated by short video docs on world-leading fracture engineer Tony Ingraffea that I had embedded into a PPT (http:// goo.gl/Oy8CtZ ).

During this Yukoners Concerned PPT presentation to the committee in October 2013, I had alerted the fracking committee members specifically to the Mayer/Jaccard type sleight-of-hand by carefully unpacking it.

In the PPT video material, fracture engineer Dr. Ingraffea strongly emphasized that engineers never use the word “prevent” when it comes to well failures, especially of frack wells.

His professional and poignant advice was critical, yet was totally suppressed and censored out from the report that Yukoners Concerned unfortunately endorses.

Recommendation #12 deals with air quality baseline testing as fraudulently as #6 does to water.

Merchants of Doubt piece #13 recommends research on greenhouse gases’ impact but ignores the U. of Colorado report with total mass measurement data of fugitive emissions of about nine per cent in a Utah frack field I had referred to and linked to in the Yukoners Concerned PPT.

I had pointed out how essential it is to include research such as the one of the U. of Colorado in the face of frack PR that to this day paints as outlier a well-known Cornell University study on the climate impact of methane emissions.

The remaining 16 frack implementations are mostly filler and fluff that provide a false sense of security while being screwed, diverting attention from the killer portion that has holes big enough to literally drive through frack truck loads by the millions.

Mr. Roberts’ letter is somewhat compromised in its credibility by letting off the hook the opposition parties which have underwritten the report and its 21 pro-frack recommendations.

It is what led to a highly deceptive Yukon Oil and Gas Act (2015 amended Yukon Oil and Gas Act) voted for by all parties, with the NDP failing its responsibility as official Opposition caucus that commanded resources to at least know and express what is going on.

What kind of silliness is at play trying to stop a wrong, while giving assistance to all its surrounding support limbs? After five years of fracking danger, the word disobedience, in civil disobedience, has not yet been learned.

Peter Becker is a Whitehorse energy consultant.