Guardian: “Mining companies are campaigning for the G20 leaders’ meeting to support continued use of coal as a solution to the global “energy poverty” crisis, as Australia resists the inclusion of climate change on the formal agenda.”
“Peabody – the world’s largest private coal miner – has launched an online campaign titled the “Lights On” project to convince G20 leaders meeting in Brisbane next month that access to coal-fired power is crucial for “empowering” developing countries.
The G20 push, using social media and video, is part of an international campaign the company commissioned with PR firm Burson-Marsteller targeting China, America and Australia, called “Advanced Energy for Life”.
While the prime minister has resisted pressure from the United States and Europe for climate change to be included in the G20 agenda on the grounds that it does not fit the meeting’s economic focus, Peabody’s Australian president Charles Meintjes was invited to make a presentation to a workshop for the G20’s energy program in Brisbane in August.
In the presentation Meintjes argued that “coal is the only affordable fuel, at scale, to meet rising energy needs” of the world’s poor, including graphs claiming a clear correlation between rising coal consumption and rising life expectancy and global GDP.
Dr Simon Bradshaw, of Oxfam Australia, said the mining industry was “very active” in the lead up to the G20, but contrary to its arguments, renewable energy “offers a far better prospect for increasing access to electricity in most countries and most markets”.
“Climate change is a major threat in the fight against hunger and poverty and coal burning is the single biggest contributor to climate change,” Bradshaw said, adding that it would be “very unfortunate” if G20 leaders accepted the coal industry’s “self serving arguments.”
He said in his opinion the presentation, made to industry and non-government representatives and international energy officials, drew some “very dubious correlations and mounted some pretty unsophisticated arguments.”
The participants were not told to keep the slideshow confidential or secret.Guardian Australia has obtained a copy of the presentation, which can be seen here (pdf).
….But despite Australia’s reluctance, Barack Obama’s international adviser, Caroline Atkinson, told the Australian Financial Review this week that since G20 economies generated 80% of the world’s carbon emissions the meeting should give political impetus to “specific steps” to reduce global warming.
Opening a new coal mine on Monday, Abbott said: “let’s have no demonisation of coal. Coal is good for humanity.”