Friday, December 03, 2021

'A small step in the fight against fossil fuels': Shell withdraws from Cambo North Sea oilfield


By Marthe de Ferrer & Agencies • Updated: 03/12/2021 - 15:46


Royal Dutch Shell has pulled out of a controversial oil project near Scotland’s Shetland Islands, saying the project no longer makes economic sense for the company.

The company said on Thursday it had scrapped plans to develop the Cambo North Sea oilfield, which became a lightning rod for climate activists seeking to halt Britain's development of new oil and gas resources.

Following a "comprehensive screening" of the Cambo field, Shell "concluded the economic case for investment in this project is not strong enough at this time, as well as having the potential for delays," the company said in a statement.

Shell had a 30 per cent stake in the Cambo project, which is opposed by environmental groups who say Britain should stop developing new oil and gas fields as part of its efforts to combat global warming.

"This is a small step in the right direction in the fight against fossil fuels," says Scottish environmental scientist and campaigner Mara. "Cambo is wholly unnecessary and it's unacceptable that the government are still considering allowing it to continue.

"How can the UK host COP26 and claim to be a green leader, while facilitating projects like this? We know from the IPCC report that extraction simply has to stop. It's a positive move that Shell has withdrawn though, and shows the power of public pressure and grassroots activism."

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Still plans for Cambo to move ahead

Private equity-backed Siccar Point, which owns the remaining 70 per cent of the field, confirmed in a separate statement that "Shell has taken the decision to not progress its investment at this stage."

The Cambo project off the Shetland Isles has been at the centre of a political debate on whether Britain should develop new fossil fuel resources as it seeks to sharply reduce its greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades.

"Cambo remains critical to the UK's energy security and economy," Siccar Point Chief Executive Officer Jonathan Roger said in a statement.

"Whilst we are disappointed at Shell’s change of position ... we will continue to engage with the UK Government and wider stakeholders on the future development of Cambo," he said.

Roger claims that developing the field 125 kilometres west of the Shetland Islands will create 1,000 jobs and help ease the UK’s transition to a low-carbon economy. However, activists and climate scientists are fiercely opposed to the development - saying it is directly opposed to the UK's climate goals.

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has urged the UK government to scrap the project since August when she made her first statement on the controversy.

"I am asking that the UK government agrees to reassess licences already issued but where field development has not yet commenced. That would include the proposed Cambo development," she said at the time.

"Such licences, some of them issued many years ago, should be reassessed in light of the severity of the climate emergency we now face, and against a compatibility checkpoint that is fully aligned with our climate change targets and obligations."

Additional sources • REUTERS, AFP, AP

This Could Mean The End To Cambo Oil Field Development

Shell announced on Thursday that it would no longer proceed with its investment in the Cambo oil field.

Shell had a 30% stake in the Cambo oilfield, in the UK’s North Sea, with Siccar Point Energy holding the remaining 70% stake.

Siccar expressed its disappointment in Shell’s exit, and said it would need to review its options for Cambo.

For Shell, the reason to exit the project was the potential for delay as well as a lack of strength of economics.

Cambo was estimated to be capable of producing 175 million barrels of oil in its first phase. Cambo has drawn the attention of environmental groups protesting its development.

“After comprehensive screening of the proposed Cambo development, we have concluded the economic case for investment in this project is not strong enough at this time, as well as having the potential for delays,” a Shell spokesman said on Thrusday.

Nevertheless, Shell said that continued investment in the UK oil and gas sector “remains critical to the country’s energy security”, stressing that it still believes in the UK North Sea.

Anti-Cambo development campaigners have hailed Shell’s move as the “beginning of the end for all new oil and gas projects,” one such campaigner from Friends of the Earth Scotland said.

Oil and Gas regulator OGUK warned that the UK would still rely on new oil and gas projects.

“This is a commercial decision between partners but doesn’t change the facts that the UK will continue to need new oil and gas projects if we are to protect security of supply, avoid increasing reliance on imports and support jobs,” Jenny Stanning, external relations director at OGUK said.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

'Protest Works': Cheers as Shell Signals Pullout of Cambo Oil Field Project


"We have to see the end of North Sea projects as well as all new fossil fuel extraction: There is no future in them."


Activists protest against the Cambo oil field project in the Shetland Islands in Glasgow, Scotland on November 11, 2021. (Photo: Andy Buchanan/AFP via Getty Images)

JULIA CONLEY
December 2, 2021

Climate campaigners in the United Kingdom applauded Thursday as oil giant Shell signaled it would not drill for oil in the proposed Cambo oil field off the coast of Scotland's Shetland Islands, following a grassroots effort to halt the project.

"Governments and oil and gas companies will—and are—being held accountable by people all over the world who know exactly who is to blame for the climate crisis."

Advocates said Shell's announcement that it had found a weak economic case for the Cambo project should deliver a "deathblow" to the proposal, and demanded the U.K. government end its support for drilling in the oil field, which would lie 78 miles west of the islands in the North Sea.

"With yet another key player turning its back on the scheme the government is cutting an increasingly lonely figure with their continued support for the oil field," Philip Evans, oil campaigner at Greenpeace U.K., told The Guardian.

Climate action group 350.org credited activists who have signed petitions, attended public actions, and pressured policymakers to scrap the project. Last summer, 80,000 people signed a letter that was sent to the U.K. government demanding the Cambo oil field be blocked.

"Protest works!" said 350 Europe.



Shell's decision to pull out of the project comes weeks after its plans to develop the Jackdaw gas field, also in the North Sea, were rejected by regulators due to the project's expected environmental impact.

The U.K. has committed to reaching net-zero fossil fuel emissions by 2050, a goal that advocates say is incompatible with drilling in the North Sea. The oil field contains over 800 million barrels of oil, the extraction of which would have a climate impact equivalent to 10 times Scotland's annual emissions.

Shell Oil would have controlled 30% of the Cambo oil field, with its partner Siccar Point Energy owning 70%. According to Reuters, it was unclear Thursday whether the oil field can be developed without Shell's involvement.

"We have to see the end of North Sea projects as well as all new fossil fuel extraction: There is no future in them," Connor Schwartz of Friends of the Earth told The Guardian. "Carrying on risks more than just balance sheets, it makes the path to 1.5°C even harder."

Tessa Khan, founder and director of climate action group Uplift, called Shell's withdrawal from the project "genuinely huge news" that could spell the end for oil and gas development in the U.K., considering Shell cited economic grounds for its decision.


"Governments and oil and gas companies will—and are—being held accountable by people all over the world who know exactly who is to blame for the climate crisis and the unavoidable implication of all those promises to preserve our climate: We have to keep fossil fuels in the ground," said Khan. "And countries like the U.K.—who are one of the biggest historical emitters of greenhouse gases, who have the resources to shift away from oil and gas, and who owe a huge climate debt to the rest of the world—have to move first."

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.


Shell U-turn on Cambo could mean end for big North Sea oil projects

Industry sources say Siccar Point will struggle to find new partner to take on Shell’s 30% stake in oilfield

Activists protest against the Cambo oilfield project in the Shetland Islands during Cop26 in Glasgow in November.
 Photograph: Andy Buchanan/AFP/Getty

Jillian Ambrose
Fri 3 Dec 2021 

Shell’s decision to back out of plans to develop the Cambo oilfield could sound the “death knell” for new large-scale North Sea projects, industry figures say, as the UK’s tougher climate agenda prompts oil companies to retreat from the ageing oil basin.

Sources said Shell’s project partner, the private equity-backed Siccar Point, would struggle to find another partner to take on Shell’s 30% stake in the new oilfield, which has provoked outrage among green campaigners.

Shell’s retreat has cast doubt over the future of a project that could yield hundreds of millions of barrels of oil, and sources say it raises fresh doubts over the North Sea’s future large-scale oil projects too.

“This is a turning point,” said one industry source, who asked not to be named. “Companies will be thinking: if Shell can’t do it, can we? I just don’t see any truly large-scale projects being sanctioned in the North Sea any more. There will still be small developments around existing fields. But this is a death knell for major new projects in the UK.”

The Guardian understands that Shell scrapped the Cambo project after the government made clear it would need to meet certain “climate concessions” to win its approval. The company said publicly that the “economic case for investment” was not strong.

Shell’s withdrawal comes weeks after the company was left disappointed by a UK regulator’s “unexpected” decision to decline its application to develop a separate North Sea project at the Jackdaw field.

“It’s a bit embarrassing for Shell so soon after announcing it would relocate its headquarters to London from the Netherlands,” the source added.

Most big listed oil companies have reduced their presence in the North Sea in recent years by selling off assets, and the companies that remain are relative minnows that would balk at the scale of the Cambo project or lack the experience to develop the field.

“There are no listed oil companies which would look seriously at this project, and the private companies don’t typically have the track record in project development which Shell brought to the table,” said the source.

There was also “a huge amount of uncertainty” around the government’s support for new oil and gas development in the North Sea, according to the source, which could put off smaller companies which require tighter project timelines than larger ones.

Caroline Rance, a campaigner with Friends of the Earth Scotland, said Shell’s exit from the Cambo field “marks the beginning of the end for all new oil and gas projects” in the North Sea.

Green campaigners have called on the government to take a clear stance against new fossil fuel developments after findings from the International Energy Agency, the global energy watchdog, that no new fossil fuel projects are compatible with the world’s climate targets.

“Both the UK and Scottish governments must now officially reject Cambo, say no to any future oil and gas developments in UK waters and get on with planning a fair and fast transition for people working in this industry,” Rance said.


Shell pulls out of Cambo oilfield project

The questions around the North Sea are likely to reignite tensions between the Treasury, which is understood to be concerned over the flight of investment from the UK post-Brexit, and the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, which leads the UK’s climate strategy.

Jonathan Roger, the chief executive of Siccar Point, said the company was in consultation with the regulator and stakeholders “on taking Cambo forward and the next steps required to do that”.

He said: “Norway continues to invest in both new oil and gas and renewable developments to deliver a fair and managed transition, but the UK is at risk of damaging its economy and increasing imports with a higher carbon impact if new developments are not brought forward during this time.”

The Guardian view on North Sea oil: keep it in the ground

Editorial

Britain won’t convince anyone else to ditch fossil fuels when it won’t do so itself


Activists at a Stop Cambo protest outside Downing Street in London.
 Photograph: Vuk Valcic/Sops Images/Rex/Shutterstock

Fri 3 Dec 2021 18.27 GMT

Does the decision by oil giant Royal Dutch Shell to pull out of the Cambo oilfield mark the end of oil and gas investment in the North Sea? For the planet’s sake, one would hope so. However, it may be more realistic to see Shell’s act as a first victory in a longer war to keep hydrocarbons in the ground. Campaigners say that there are dozens more offshore oil and gas fields coming up for approval in the next three years. To keep the climate safe and limit global temperature rises to 1.5C, none ought to go ahead. Oil majors have lost the battle for public opinion in Scotland and this has dramatically altered the calculations for the ruling Scottish National party, which for decades ran on oil. Without supportive politics, and with the science against them, oil majors – this time – bowed out.

Despite that, and despite brandishing its credentials as a climate champion at Cop26 in Glasgow last month, the UK government still wants extractive industries to suck the seabed dry. Rather than joining an alliance of nations – led by Denmark and Costa Rica, and including France and Ireland – which have set an end date for oil and gas production and exploration, Boris Johnson will allow companies to keep exploring the North Sea for new reserves.

The counter argument is that abandoning the North Sea will cost the UK jobs. But the appropriate policy response is to raise investment aimed at the transition to net zero. Last year a poll suggested that four-fifths of oil workers would consider leaving the industry. This is a pool of labour willing – provided there was a measure of security and reasonable pay – to transfer skill sets to the offshore wind and renewable energy sector. What has been lacking is the government drive to tap such desires.

One has to recognise that while fossil fuels fade, the geopolitics of energy will not. If the world achieves net zero emissions, it will not mean the end of oil and gas. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projected that if the world reached the goal of net zero by 2050, it would still be using nearly half as much natural gas as today and about one-quarter as much oil.

This would mean that as the UK constrains its domestic fossil fuel output, wealthy Gulf states that can produce oil cheaply will increase their market share. It would also see Moscow’s significance to Europe’s energy security rise before it falls. Adopting cleaner technologies will also, as the US academics Jason Bordoff and Meghan L O’Sullivan write in Foreign Affairs, give rise to new energy powers: half of the global supply of cobalt is in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; half of lithium in Australia; and half of rare earths in China. Trade may be used to pressurise countries considered too slow in greening their economies to pursue stronger climate policies.

This will be tricky to navigate for the most sure-footed of governments, let alone one that clomps around the world in shoes of concrete. The UK government must foster new technologies and use them to curb climate change, while lowering the geopolitical risks that such changes create. But Mr Johnson is prepared to sacrifice green targets to strengthen alliances; just ask Canberra. He also has a reputation as an unreliable ally, ripping up agreements within months of signing them. The essence of diplomacy is persuading others to do things you want. It is hard to see how Britain will convince anyone else to ditch fossil fuels when it won’t do so itself.

UCP CLAW BACK
Alberta subsidies slashed ahead of affordable child-care program

By Breanna Karstens-Smith Global News
Posted December 3, 2021 


WATCH ABOVE: Ottawa has pledged billions of dollars to slash child-care costs in Alberta starting next month. While that is happening, the provincial government is also slashing subsidies for low-income families. Breanna Karstens-Smith explains.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated since it was first published to clarify the minister’s statement that low-income families currently pay about $13 per day per child.

Weeks before Alberta introduces the first phase of the federal affordable child-care program, child-care operators across the province are being told subsidies to low-income families are being cut.

Families receiving the maximum amount of provincial funding were getting $644 dollars per month to help them pay for child care. In 2022, that will fall to $266 per month.

“The subsidy wasn’t decreased, it’s just different,” Children’s Services Minister Rebecca Schulz told Global News Friday.

“Instead of only having a subsidy, we have to reduce child-care fees in every single licensed space across the province and so that requires an operating grant.”


READ MORE: Trudeau, Kenney promise $10-a-day child care across Alberta within next 5 years

Come January, child-care fees will be reduced in licensed facilities across Alberta. That is being done as part of a federal deal Alberta signed in November.

Families argue they weren’t aware that would mean they would receive less funding.

Single mom of one Jessica Hawkins currently receives the full provincial subsidy. While her fees will be cut in half come January, her subsidy will drop to $266.

After splitting the cost of daycare with her child’s father, Hawkins will save $32 per month. She was expecting to save more than $100.

“So many parents I know are struggling and freaking out,” said Hawkins.

“Just before Christmas, too. Like, I used the portion that I thought I was going to get to help get Christmas presents.”

1:58 Alberta inks affordable child care deal with Ottawa – Nov 15, 2021

The executive director of Glengarry Child Care Society in Edmonton said he received the subsidy details from the province this week.

Brad West said it was heartbreaking to have to tell low-income families they will receive a lower subsidy.

“It angers me because the families that need that the most are not getting the support that they need. Not that the full fee-paying parents don’t deserve that, they absolutely do. But our most vulnerable are not receiving the support,” West explained.

Schulz pointed out low-income families currently pay about $13 per day per child on average. Many of them will drop to the $10 per day average first starting in January.

The federal government is investing $3.8 billion over the next five years to pay for the reduction in fees.


Schulz said the province is maintaining its investment of about $380 million in child care each year.


READ MORE: How much parents across Canada could save per year with the national child-care plan

One operator questioned whether Alberta is pocketing the money it is saving by cutting subsidies and wants to know whether Ottawa was told help for low-income families would be reduced when making the funding commitment.

“I would be disappointed if the federal government knew that this was the plan and that it was going to leave out fully subsidized parents,” said West.

Global News has reached out to the federal minister for comment.

West also pointed out an infant care incentive has been removed.

Child-care facilities were given $150 per month for each child between 0 and 18 months.


For West, that will decrease his operating revenue by about $12,000 in 2022.


Schulz said that funding was also being rolled into the new operating grants but admitted she has heard concerns about the incentive and is looking into whether a change could be made.
Ex-president Yahya Jammeh's victims still waiting for justice ahead of Gambia polls

Gambians go to the polls to pick a president on Saturday, in the first election in the poor West African country since ex-dictator Yahya Jammeh fled into exile. 


Issued on: 02/12/2021 - 
Text by: FRANCE 24Follow|
Video by :Sarah SAKHO

Ahead of Gambia’s December 3 presidential elections, the country's Truth, Reconciliation, and Reparations Commission (TRRC) wrapped up a sweeping three-year public inquiry on Thursday, recommending prosecutions for abuses committed during former President Yahya Jammeh's 22-year rule. FRANCE 24’s Sarah Sakho and Elimane Ndao report.

Gambians go to the polls to pick a president on Saturday, in the first election in the poor West African country since ex-dictator Yahya Jammeh fled into exile.

But the shadow of Jammeh, who seized power in Gambia in 1994 and ruled with an iron fist for 22 years, still hangs over the tiny nation – the smallest in mainland Africa, surrounded by Senegal. Voters in the Gambia are concerned about improving living conditions.

Jammeh was forced into exile in Equatorial Guinea in 2017, after President Adama Barrow, who was then a relative unknown, defeated him at the polls.

But the former dictator retains significant political support in Gambia, where his advocates have pushed for his return.

Consequently, his possible return from exile, and how to respond to the litany of alleged crimes under his rule – including rape, torture, the use of death squads and state-sanctioned witch hunts – have been central themes in the election campaign.

One Gambian who had testified to the TRRC about her husband’s assassination 27 years ago said it was impossible for her to mourn because none of the Jammeh regime’s officials have been charged: “It’s only justice that can make us forget them,” she said.

"The TRRC’s report is now in Barrow’s hands; he has 6 months to take action. It must lead to a trial", said Gambian human rights activist Mariama Jobarteh: “Of course, Yahya Jammeh was the head of everything; he must face justice. So, whoever is coming in, we want to see a government that dries the people’s tears.”

Barrow has been under fire since making an alliance with members of Jammeh’s party. But the government is keen to assure that the case is moving forward.

“The victims don't need to be worried. President Barrow established the TRRC out of his own volition, in order to fight for the truth,” said government spokesman Ibrima Sankareh.

Click on the video player  to watch FRANCE 24's report.


Antarctica breakthrough as experts set to uncover 1.5 million-year-old discovery

RESEARCHERS are about to travel more than one million years back in time by drilling into East Antarctica to collect the world's oldest ice core.


By SEBASTIAN KETTLE
Wed, Dec 1, 2021

Six teams of scientists have set up camp on Antarctica and will soon begin their quest to drill into a 1.8 mile-thick (3km) layer of ice. Until now, deep cores collected from the continent have allowed scientists to study the Earth's prehistoric climate from trapped air bubbles dating up to 800,000 years ago. But the Beyond EPICA mission is on track to go nearly twice as far back in time by collecting ice cores dating some 1.5 million years back.

Project coordinator Carlo Barbante of the Ca' Foscari University of Venice said: "During our previous EPICA project, which ended in 2008, we managed to extract and analyse an 800,000-year-old ice core.

"Now we are trying to travel back further in time: because if we are to gain a correct perspective on what the world is currently experiencing with climate change, and adopt suitable mitigating strategies, we must look back even further — which is what we are trying to do in Antarctica with Beyond EPICA."

The mission's goal is to investigate the prehistoric Antarctic climate and greenhouse gasses during the so-called Middle Pleistocene Transition (MPT), which occurred between 900,000 and 1.2 million years ago.

The MPT saw a period of "climatic periodicity" that transition from 41,000 to 100,000 between ice ages.


Scientists will soon begin to drill for the world's oldest ice core (Image: Barbante©PNRA/IPEV/L. AUGUSTIN/LABORATOIRE DE GLACIOLOGIE ET GEOPHYSIQUE DE L’ENVIRONMENT (LGGE))


The drill site is about 25 miles from the Concordia research station (Image: Barbante©PNRA/IPEV)

Professor Barbante and his colleagues want to understand why this change happened.

The ambitious £8.5million (€11million) project is being funded by the European Commission and is a follow-up to the European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA), which originally drilled into an area known as Little Dome C.

Beyond EPICA will drill at a site near where the first cores were collected, about 25 miles (40km) from the French-Italian Concordia research station.

And it's not going to be an easy task for the researchers.

Situated more than 10,000ft (3,233ft) above sea level, Little Dome C sees temperatures drop as low as -35C in the summer and -80C in the winter.

Beyond EPICA said: "It may seem absurd whilst sitting on three kilometres of water, but Dome C is as dry as the Sahara Desert, so snow accumulates slowly, gradually trapping in the ice the precious air bubbles we hope to analyse to find the atmospheric composition of the deep past of our planet.

"Careful analysis of the isotopic ratios of this ancient ice will be our deep time thermometer."

The drill site was prepared ahead of time between 2019 and 2020, and was selected after more than 2,400 miles (4,000km) of aerial and ground-based surveys.

This was carried out using a wide variety of techniques, including basal temperature assessments and age modelling frameworks.

Olaf Eisen of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) said: "It is the first time that a site for deep drilling has been selected with such a high precision and effort.

Antarctica's various territorial claims mapped out (Image: EXPRESS)


Ice cores drilled from Antarctica can shed light on Earth's prehistoric climates (Image: GETTY)

"The new radar measurement showed more clearly than before, that the ice there is well stratified and most probably very old."

The original EPICA endeavour only drilled to a depth of about 9,100ft (2,774m), which stopped short of the bedrock just 9,186ft (2,800m) down.

This was enough to recover records of the climate dating back 800,000 years.

The researchers believe the remaining feet of ice and snow will reveal an additional 700,000 years of trapped air.

Robert Mulvaney from the British Antarctic Survey told BBC News: "We already have the 800,000 years of ice, so much of the first few years of drilling will simply be a repeat of ice we already have.

"In practice, with many new PhD students coming online, and new groups getting involved, and new analytical techniques always being developed, we will make good use of the ice younger than 800,000 years.

"We will also use the younger ice to ensure our techniques are working well by the time we get to the deep ice, where we only get one chance to get all the analyses right."

Despite this being an EU-funded initiative, UK scientists will have access to the project because the funding was secured before the UK left the bloc.
US out of step with much of the world on abortion
AFP - Yesterday 

While many countries around the world have eased restrictions on abortion, the United States is going in the other direction.

The conservative-dominated Supreme Court appears all but certain to uphold a 2018 Mississippi law that would ban most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

- China and North Korea -

In the absence of any federal laws, it is the US Supreme Court that has, since 1973, guaranteed a woman's right to an abortion until "viability," when the fetus can survive outside the womb, typically between 22 and 24 weeks of pregnancy.

But the nation's highest court appears poised, following oral arguments on Wednesday, to roll back abortion rights and uphold Mississippi's 15-week ban.

Chief Justice John Roberts, a conservative, expressed concern that the United States shared its viability standard with the People's Republic of China and North Korea while the rest of the world is more restrictive.

Former vice president Mike Pence, speaking a day earlier, made the same comparison and said he hoped the court "can move America away from the radical fringe squarely back into the mainstream of Western thought."

The United States does, in fact, permit abortions later than many other countries but it is not alone with China and North Korea.

According to the Center for Reproductive Rights, 67 countries allow abortion on request, with most of them setting the limit at 12 weeks.

The United States is among a dozen nations that allow abortions to be carried out later along with China but also Britain (24 weeks), Canada (until term) and parts of Australia.

And the 12-weeks standard can be misleading because a number of countries permit legal access to abortion later for "social reasons, health reasons (and) socio-economic reasons," said attorney Julie Rikelman, arguing in favor of maintaining the status quo in front of the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

- Barriers -


Few countries present such a patchwork of differing access to abortion within their borders, and most do not have the "same barriers in place" as does the United States, Rikelman told the Supreme Court.

Conservative US states, mostly in the South, have erected a number of obstacles in recent years restricting access to abortion, forcing many clinics to close.

Six US states have only a single abortion clinic each, including Mississippi.

A Texas law banning abortions after six weeks, before many women even know they are pregnant, took effect on September 1 and the Supreme Court is yet to act on an emergency petition to stop it.

On the other hand, access to abortion is freely available in progressive states such as California and New York.

Nancy Northup, CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said the United States is an outlier "in terms of progression on abortion rights."

"The trend in the last 25 years has been liberalization of abortion laws," Northup said, citing recent developments in Mexico, Argentina and Benin.

Although the Supreme Court's decision in the Mississippi case will not be known until June, Northup said the United States is already in an "incredible regressive phase" with more than 100 abortion restrictions passed this year alone.

- Bitter debate -

The United States also sets itself apart from the rest of the world with the ferocity of the domestic debate over abortion.

Just 42 percent of Americans believe abortion should be permitted on demand compared with 75 percent in Sweden, 65 percent in Britain, 64 percent in France and 61 percent in Italy and Spain, according to a 2021 Ipsos poll.

In those other countries, the abortion debate has cooled since legalization.

Not so in the United States, where the Republican Party has used the emotional issue to mobilize voters, particularly those on the religious right.

Donald Trump, for example, was pro-choice in 1999 but ran for president in 2016 on a promise to nominate justices to the Supreme Court who were opposed to abortion.

He kept his pledge and the three justices nominated during his presidential term are expected to vote to roll back abortion rights.

chp/cl/bgs
PETA's 'human' leather campaign is horrifying. But is it effective?
Jenna Ryu, USA TODAY - 8h ago

© PETAAccording to Urban Outraged, the "Avery Jacket" is "crafted from the most luxurious skin" and features human mouths and eyes.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is making headlines once again with its latest jaw-dropping, gruesome campaign.

The nonprofit organization, known for its controversial avenues to raise animal rights awareness, launched a fake, satirical clothing store called Urban Outraged — an apparent jab at Urban Outfitters. The faux shop features a collection of clothes made from "human" leather, including bloodied jackets with human faces and boots with human teeth. Each item is also named after the "slaughtered" human whose skin was used.

“People are rightfully horrified by the idea of wearing human skin and the thought of it should make everyone’s stomach turn just as much as wearing the skin of a cow, goat, sheep, or any other animal," PETA said in a statement to USA TODAY.

Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning.

PETA intentionally causes controversy with its campaigns. In 2013, its anti-poaching ad featured images of mutilated animals, and other ads have compared naked female bodies to animal meat. The shock-factor aims to bring attention to its animal-friendly mission.

But do these scare tactics actually help the animal rights movement?

More: PETA responds to Tiffany Haddish's vow to wear fur till 'police stop killing black people'
'Fear sells': Why organizations like PETA use scare tactics for social causes

Shock campaigns have been used for an array of social agendas. For instance, drug prevention campaigns have shown frightening images of mock car crashes or people before and after addiction to elicit fear.

James Jasper, a retired professor of sociology and author of "The Art of Moral Protest," says these tactics successfully raise awareness because they relies on moral shock, or appealing to the public's guilt and empathy.

"Moral shocks bring attention to an issue. Look at all the publicity this PETA campaign is getting," Jasper says. "In the end, some people will be turned off, but others will notice the issue perhaps for the first time. And still, some will have their commitment to the cause strengthened."

The controversial approach has proven successful for PETA over the years: The group has garnered over 6.5 million members worldwide and had major successes, like convincing more than 200 cosmetics companies to permanently abandon animal tests.


© PETAThe outsoles of Urban Outaged's "Meg Boots" are made from "human teeth."

PETA controversy: PETA ridiculed, criticized for comparing 'speciesism' with racism, homophobia and ableism

But Barry Glassner, a sociologist and author of “The Culture of Fear," cautions while fear-mongering is effective, it's dangerous.

"These organizations work off of our inborn fight or flight responses when we're confronted with something scary. And of course they want us to fight this horrible situation and join the organization," he warns.

"It's an unfortunate reality, but fear sells. It's the quickest way to grab someone's attention and have them listen… and any organization whose mission is to heal the world shouldn't sully it with fear campaigns."

'Embrace the 'arm barn'': PETA calls for MLB to change term 'bullpen' to the 'arm barn' to be sensitive to cows
Graphic imagery can harm the animal rights agenda

Vegan social media influencer Nzinga Young was especially turned off by gory images of slaughtered animals, which she called "traumatizing." She aims to share upbeat content with her 100,000 followers.

Corey Wrenn, a lecturer in sociology at the University of Kent, said that may be a better strategy. Although graphic images and videos grab attention, these tactics may not actually encourage people to take action, she explains.

"There are some indications that audiences will be repelled if the campaigns are too disturbing," Wrenn says. "Without a philosophical or ethical context framing these campaigns, some folks will simply find them ridiculous or offensive and ignore them."

Glassner agrees fear alone may not lead to long term behavioral changes, like changing shopping habits or becoming vegan, and some may dismiss such extreme campaigns as "silly."


© Richard Vogel, APIn this Sept. 18, 2018, protesters with the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) hold signs to ban fur in Los Angeles.

Want to go vegan?: If you're ready to trade in your burger for a vegan tofu sandwich, start slow

Instead, effective protest movements should rely on negative and positive emotions, like "anger over current practices as well as hope for the future," Jasper suggests.

Young, for her part, tries "to focus on people who want to change, as opposed to trying to change people."

"I educate them by being personable and sharing my truth and my story in hopes that people will humanize me and say, 'Oh, she can do it. Maybe I can do it too' … It's important to have diversity in how we communicate the benefits of veganism."

Vegan birth control: What is it and does it work?

'We respect each other': Alicia Silverstone credits son's vegan diet for anger-free, 'harmonious' relationship


1 of 9 Photos in Gallery©Photo by Mike Kline (notkalvin), Getty Images
What are the most vegan-friendly cities (https://headlines.peta.org/vegan-friendly-cities-2019-top-ten/) in the U.S.? PETA has the answer for you. The nonprofit organization determined the list by gathering feedback from supporters and staffers. They analzed the availability of vegan options in every state as well as vegan culture's influence on each city. Scroll through the gallery to see which cities made the cut.


This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: PETA's 'human' leather campaign is horrifying. But is it effective?


  1. https://www.hplovecraft.com/writings/texts/fiction/dwh.aspx

    The Dreams in the Witch House By H. P. Lovecraft: Whether the dreams brought on the fever or the fever brought on the dreams Walter Gilman did not know. Behind everything crouched the brooding, festering horror of the ancient town, and of the mouldy, unhallowed garret gable where he wrote and studied and wrestled with figures and formulae when .....


Man Reckons He Found a 'Mummy' Inside a Tree in L.A.'s Oldest Graveyard

Rebecca Flood 


A man reckons he found a "mummy" at L.A.'s oldest graveyard, after finding a mysterious box wrapped up inside a tree.

The man, known as Tarpit, was walking in the Evergreen Memorial Park and Cemetery, which was established in 1877.

The artist shared a clip to his TikTok page as he came across a tree, which had been cut down.

He said: "Look what I found, okay so they felled this tree in the graveyard. I'm here picking up sticks and woodchips to burn in my kiln. This is the oldest graveyard in L.A."

He zooms in on the ground and films what appears to be a wooden box, tied with what could be string, with one side loose after years of decay.

"What is this?" he continues, as he films with one hand and uses the other to unwrap the box.

Tarpit continues: "No part two we're opening this right now. I can see something in there but it looks kind of gross. It's all wrapped up, is that a mummy?"

Inside the box is a small, figurine-type object, which appears to have been tightly bound with string or thread.

He says: "Okay I have seen what I needed to see. It's something tiny all wrapped up in string. And we're going to put it back to rest, don't you think?"

Tarpit put everything back where he found it and covered it up with some wood.

The clip, shared last week, amassed more than 200,000 views, and can be seen here.

Underlining what he thought he found, he added the on-screen caption "mummy," while also adding the hashtags #mummy #graveyard #scary and #cursed.

The clip drew numerous comments, as some people claimed what he found may have been a fetus.

Christina Breen said: "People used to do that with babies that were miscarried. They would bind them and stick them in trees. Pretty sure that is what you found."

Lil Walt agreed, saying: "Maybe a fetus."

Shelby Lynn Gruhn commented: "When you go to walk the dog and bring home a fetus spirit."

Adreena thought: "I think it's baby."

"Small pet or miscarried fetus, most likely the latter," Dayan Marquina said.

In response, Tarpit added in the comments: "It never crossed my mind it could be human remains. Letting it get mulched with the stump seemed fitting and fine.

"It seems more proportioned for a doll or a bird imo [in my opinion]. But I can totally go back and we can rebury somewhere it won't get disturbed."

Others had similar opinions, or thought he'd unleashed some bad energy, with Mark W. Caponigro reckoning: "Someone's pet buried by the tree decades ago?"

Jonathan Bessey wrote: "General rule of thumb. If you find a weird box or a bottle filled with odd stuff that was buried; no touchy."

Joshaperans joked: "Great... can't wait to see what curse you unleashed for 2022."

MatImmortal asked: "Why would you open anything in a graveyard."

WhilemSarah Bartell added: "My friend. Do you want a haunted house? Cuz this is how you get a haunted house."

According to travel website and book, Atlas Obscura, the cemetery has graves dating back to the 1830s, as families relocated their loved ones there after it opened.

It said: "Tucked away in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of East L.A., this 67-acre park is the final resting place for many of Los Angeles' past mayors, prominent citizens, and pioneers."

The graveyard, which has more than 300,000 people buried there, has areas dedicated to Armenians, Serbs, Chinese-Americans, and hundreds of carnival workers.

A monument in the center pays tribute to soldiers of Japanese descent who fought in the 442nd Infantry Regimental Combat Unit in WWII.

Newsweek reached out to Tarpit for comment.

Brian Cox debunks Big Bang theory after 'strongly suspecting' universe 'existed before'

BRIAN COX said he "strongly suspected" that the universe "existed before" the Big Bang, throwing the theory of our origins on its head.


The physicist presented the last instalment of his groundbreaking new BBC series last night, 'Universe: Where everything begins and ends'. He explored the vital question behind our existence, attempting to find out how the universe came to be. Looking at the various cutting-edge space missions that have brought us closer to the answer, he touched on how discoveries of far away galaxies have helped us to understand how we came to be, and also the technology used along the way.

Opening the documentary, he said: “Our universe is an enigma, an endless inexhaustible paradox.

"There are trillions of planets and one of them nurtured beings capable of contemplating this cosmic drama, miraculously improbable, brief candles flickering against the eternal night."

The question of where it all began has preoccupied humans for thousands of years.

For most of history, the answer has been found in religion.

But, with advances in science and the growth of a secular world, things like physics have stepped in to fill the void.

Brian Cox: The physicist said there was a time before the Big Bang in which the universe existed (Image: BBC/GETTY)

Science: Cox presented the final instalment of his 'Universe' series

Science: Cox presented the final instalment of his 'Universe' series (Image: GETTY)

Ironically, the prevailing cosmological model explaining the existence of the observable universe from the earliest known periods through to today was first suggested by a Belgian priest named Georges Lemaître in the 1920s.

He theorised that the universe began from a single primordial atom.

This has been built on by scientists through the years, and is widely accepted to be the event behind our origins.

But, according to Prof Cox, there was a time before this; a time before the Big Bang in which the universe did exist.

He made the case for this line of argument during 'Universe', and explained: "We know that 13.8 billion years ago, this space that I'm standing in now, and the space you're standing in now, and all the space out to the edge of the observable universe, containing two trillion galaxies, was very hot and veer dense and has been expanding ever since.

"Now, that implies that way back, everything was closer together.

"Everything was contained in a very small speck.

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Big Bang: It is the prevailing explanation as to our origins

Big Bang: It is the prevailing explanation as to our origins (Image: GETTY)

"But, how small was that speck? And how did it come to be?

"We used to think that the universe emerged in that state, very hot and very dense, at the beginning of time.

"And we used to call that the Big Bang.

"But now, we strongly suspect that the universe existed before that.

"And in that sense, it's possible to speak of a time before the Big Bang."

Before the Big Bang, there was no matter, and all that existed was space-time and an ocean of energy — almost still, but gently rippling.

Prof Cox says we should "picture it as a near-still ocean of energy, filling the void".

While this place contained no structures, the energy did have an effect on space, causing it to stretch.

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Universe: Cox talked about a time that preceded the Big Bang

Universe: Cox talked about a time that preceded the Big Bang (Image: BBC)

A time before time: The space before the Big Bang was relatively still but gently rippling

A time before time: The space before the Big Bang was relatively still but gently rippling (Image: BBC)

This would not have been the gentle expansion we see today, "but an unimaginably violent expansion".

That expansion is known as inflation.

Last year, Sir Roger Penrose made a similar case as he received the Nobel Prize for Physics.

Having won the award for his seminal work proving that black holes exist, he said he had found six "warm" points in the sky, which he called "Hawking Points" after the late physicist Stephen Hawking, who theorised that black holes ‘leak’ radiation and eventually evaporate away entirely.

These points were around eight times the diameter of the Moon.

The timescale for the complete evaporation of a black hole is huge — possibly longer than the age of our current universe, making them impossible to detect.

Hubble telescope: The camera has allowed us to look deep into the past

Hubble telescope: The camera has allowed us to look deep into the past (Image: Express Newspapers)

But, Sir Roger believes that "dead" black holes from earlier universes or "aeons" are observable now.

If true, it would prove Prof Hawking's theories right.

Sir Roger said: "I claim that there is observation of Hawking radiation.

“The Big Bang was not the beginning.

"There was something before the Big Bang and that something is what we will have in our future.

“We have a universe that expands and expands, and all mass decays away, and in this crazy theory of mine, that remote future becomes the Big Bang of another aeon.

Cosmic Microwave Background: The oldest photograph of the universe

Cosmic Microwave Background: The oldest photograph of the universe (Image: BBC)