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Canada threatens EU over tar sands

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Published 20 February 2012

Canada is threatening trade retaliation if the EU tries to tighten regulations on oil from its highly polluting tar sands in a Fuel Quality Directive, according to documents seen by EurActiv.

The papers emerged after a freedom of information request to see EU documents related to tar sands – also known as oil sands – was lodged by Transport and Environment, an environmental organisation. 

But the documents were only released in heavily censored form by the EU Ombudsman P. Nikiforos Diamandouros because full disclosure “would seriously affect the current trade negotiations and Canada’s relations with the EU,” Diamandouros said in a statement.

Negotiations between Ottawa and Brussels on an EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement worth as much as $20 billion have been ongoing since 2009.

The Trade Commissioner Karel de Gucht has described them as the EU's "most ambitious [free trade negotiations] so far."

But one EU ‘steering brief’ about a June 2010 meeting between the Climate Action Commissioner Connie Hedegaard and Isabelle Muller, secretary-general of the oil refining association Europia, revealed how the two issues had become intertwined.

“Canada has been lobbying the Commission and Member States intensively to avoid a separate default value for fuel derived from tar sands,” the document says. “It has raised the issue in the context of EU-Canada negotiations on a Free Trade Agreement.”

Deleted paragraphs

Key deleted paragraphs in other documents “reveal the tensions that the commission’s proposals regarding oil sands have generated among the Canadian authorities and make reference to the measures those authorities are envisaging to adopt, in case their interests are negatively affected by the outcome of the oil sands issue,” Diamandouros said.

Nusa Urbancic, of Transport and Environment, described such revelations as “the tip of the iceberg”. 

Another document released in the batch, dated 5 July 2010, sourced to an EU Commissioner and titled ‘Agenda point: Fuel Quality Directive Article 7a methodology – Canadian oil sands’, outlines EU strategies for dealing with a Canadian case brought to the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

DG Trade, the EU’s trade directorate, "does not believe that the WTO would find in Canada’s favour,” the document says, but only if the commission could:

  • Demonstrate that the proposed [greenhouse gas emissions] value [for tar sands] is based on solid technical and scientific ground;
  • Show that other sources of high greenhouse gas crude oils (for example, Estonian oil shale) are similarly treated;
  • Show that there was clear environmental logic for any groupings of sources of crude oils;
  • Undertake to update and add to the default values.

These conditions were met in the EU's directive but environmentalists claim that DG Trade’s positioning later changed, under pressure from Ottawa over the Free Trade agreement.

“We know that Canada has been very active towards DG Trade,” the Dutch Green MEP Bas Eickhout told EurActiv. “They suddenly became very active on the issue and it was clear that they were being pushed by Canada.”

Fuel quality vote

News of the Canadian trade threats comes as experts in the EU’s fuel quality committee prepare to vote on a Fuel Quality Directive on 23 February. The directive would assign fuel from tar sands a higher greenhouse gas ranking than crude oil, reflecting the greater damage that scientists say its production causes the environment.

“Being addicted to oil is bad enough, but as easy-to-find oil starts to run out, this legislation prevents us getting addicted to ever dirtier forms of oil,” Urbancic said.

“To throw this important and smartly designed law in the bin for the sake of a trade agreement with one country would be incredibly irresponsible. Member states can not let that happen,” she said.

Observers currently expect deadlock in the fuel quality committee vote, which would push the issue back to EU ministers in the European Council.

Diplomatic démarche

An intense Canadian diplomatic démarche has apparently not been repelled by powerful member states with domestic and international oil interests, such as Britain, the Netherlands, Poland and France. 

EurActiv has seen several letters sent to European ministers this winter explaining Ottawa’s case - that the EU legislation unfairly singles out tar sands in comparison to other crude oils on which, it says, there has not been as much disclosure about their lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions.

Canada’s natural resources minister, Joe Oliver, sent a missive to EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger warning that the directive was “discriminatory and potentially violates the European Union’s international trade obligations.”

But the lobbying has not all been one way. On 16 February, eight Nobel peace laureates, including Archbishop Desmond Tutu, sent a letter urging the EU to "do the right thing" and “keep highly polluting tar sands oil out of Europe.” 

A Canadian government representative did not respond to requests for comment.

Positions: 

"It’s a disgrace that Canadian diplomats are holding up our continent’s climate efforts," Franziska Achterberg, a spokesperson for Greenpeace said. "EU governments should reject this intervention and not allow Kyoto-abandoning Canada and the oil industry to block their domestic climate policy."

Next steps: 
  • Feb. 23: EU's Fuel Quality Committee due to vote on Fuel Quality Directive
Arthur Neslen

COMMENTS

  • I don't know if you people in Europe ever use this saying but honestly, you guys need to stop drinking your own cool aid. The EU elite are lying through their teeth. The fact of the matter is that the oil sands of Alberta are produced with more regulations than most of your current middle east oil. You guys are just being protectionists of a failed green energy industry. Here is the reality, the oil sands are going to be developed anyways. Canada doesn't need you, but you will need if Canada if war ever breaks out in the Persian gulf. What will you do then? The EU is not at liberty to try to stop industrial prosperity in Canada, beggars can't be choosers. If you don't like it, do something about it. Does Canada nitpick at Europe for all the economic abuses that it blatently imposes on its citizens. Such as raping Greece for all her wealth before dumping her in the gutter? Or how about forcing Ireland to take massive bailout loans they didn't want, for the purpose of enslaving a country who has struggled for its independence for over a century. Europe may have given birth to our nation, but if your so determined to be such tools for failed UN climate science, we won't hare you for it. We'll just leave you to your own devices until you decide to come to your senses and realize your own folly. That is how the situation stands.

    By :
    David T
    - Posted on :
    20/02/2012
  • You're*

    By :
    Melissa J
    - Posted on :
    22/02/2012
  • We're coming to our senses....up you a.. Canada!

    By :
    ciccio
    - Posted on :
    25/02/2012
Background: 

The EU’s Fuel Quality Directive requires that energy providers reduce by 6% the greenhouse gas emissions of the fuel they put on the market, through methods such as cutting flaring or increased use of biofuels.

On 4 October 2011, the European Commission voted on a review of the Fuel Quality Directive which assigns a default value 107 grams CO2 equivalent per megajoule (CO2eq/MJ) for oil produced from tar sands.

This figure is higher than that assigned for other crude oils, 87.5g CO2eq/MJ average, because oil extraction from tar sands is more carbon intensive. This led Canada, which has the world’s largest reserves of oil sands, to protest the EU’s action.

Other unconventional sources of fossil fuel would also be hit hard by the proposal, with oil shale being included at a value of 131.3 CO2eq/MJ, and coal-to-liquid at 172 CO2eq/MJ.

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