Do you prefer your info in video form? New Internationalist has teamed up with carbon footprint analyst (and poet!) Danny Chivers to create a series of short videos explaining climate science. The first one attempts to explain the basics in just four minutes.
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It’s great that people are using this website to keep up to date with Oxford WDM news – but did you know that we also have an email newsletter? Oxspur is ably compiled by Andrew Hodgson and comes out every month. Simply email oxfordwdm at gmail dot com to sign up to receive it. (You can unsubscribe at any time.) Oxspur currently has 135 readers – surely all those people can’t be wrong!
Nov meeting: we meet Nick Dearden
Our guest at the Oxford WDM November meeting (Tuesday 12th Nov) will be Nick Dearden, the new director of WDM. This isn’t a big public speaker meeting; it’s a chance for existing WDM activists to meet our new director and talk about the future in a small, informal setting. It should be an exciting chance to hear about his vision for the organisation.
This meeting will be in a different venue from usual: the Friends Meeting House on St Giles, OX1 3LW. The meeting will take place in the Long Room. We very much regret that this room is not wheelchair-accessible. We will have a short “business” meeting at 7:30pm, then Nick Dearden will speak at 8pm and there will be the opportunity for lots of questions.
One World Fair: Sat 16 Nov
We’ll have a stall at the One World Fair on Saturday November 16th in Oxford Town Hall. Please do say hello and sign a postcard or two. We’ll be the ones in the maroon WDM t-shirts!
Time to come clean on dirty energy
We have a problem with dirty energy – so we’re going after the banks. Doesn’t make sense? WDM’s Carbon Capital campaign might seem counterintuitive, but it reflects the complex reality of dirty energy funding.
When we talk about “dirty energy”, we mean energy production that accelerates climate change and harms communities in the area of energy extraction. That’s mostly fossil fuel projects such as oil wells and coal mines, but it also covers other projects such as dams.
Lots of energy companies are investing in these projects right now: Shell’s oil operations in Nigeria, Anglo American’s investment in a Colombian coal mine and so on. Dirty energy projects that make life worse for local people are happening all over the world. If locals actually benefited from these hugely profitable projects, Nigerian people would have a great quality of life. But the reality is the opposite: people are frequently displaced, or have their livelihoods taken away, or have to live in a polluted environment.
So why are we going after the banks, rather than the energy companies? The answer is that all energy companies need funding for new projects, and they don’t get it from their own coffers. They raise money through borrowing (loans from banks) and equity (selling shares, which are often bought by pension funds). They can’t go ahead without the backing of the financial sector.
But right now, the banks don’t have to disclose the fact that they’re loaning money for dirty energy. The law has recently changed so that British businesses have to declare their carbon emissions, which is great news – but they only have to declare direct emissions for things like travel to meetings or office lighting, not the true impact of the projects they fund. Even though those projects would not happen without the bank’s help.
The Carbon Capital campaign isn’t asking banks to stop funding dirty energy (well, not yet). We’re simply asking for transparency. We’re petitioning Vince Cable as business secretary to toughen up the rules and make banks declare all the emissions they cause.
Tell Vince Cable to make the banks come clean
How can we expect banks to think carefully about the ethics of their own investments when they know they won’t be held to account for any of it? And if banks don’t have to declare their full emissions, how can we as consumers make an informed choice about which bank to choose?
That’s why Oxford WDM was at Elder Stubbs and Banbury Canal Day asking people to sign postcards to Vince Cable. We’ll also be at the One World Fair on 16th November. Please support us and sign.
Film screening: Blood of the Amazon (Reading)
This full-length documentary covers one woman’s journey down the Amazon in a series of small boats, researching the effects of the oil industry on the environment and indigenous people. The documentary is followed by a Q&A and discussion with the director, Nicola Peel.
Held at Reading International Solidarity Centre, Main Hall, 35-39 London Street, Reading, RG1 4PS.
Date: Wednesday 23 October 2013.
Time: 7:30pm-10pm
Watch the trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1VfKt4qPiI
Read the Guardian review: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/blog/2011/oct/28/blood-of-the-amazon-nicola-peel
This event is not organised by WDM.