Saturday, November 27, 2021

Bioethicist: The climate crisis calls for fewer children


Travis N. Rieder, Director of the Master of Bioethics degree program at the Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University

Sat, November 27, 2021

Should a future parent consider the impact more people will have on the Earth? 
child via www.shutterstock.com

In 2016, I found myself in the middle of a lively debate because of my work on climate change and the ethics of having children.

NPR correspondent Jennifer Ludden profiled some of my work in procreative ethics with an article entitled, “Should we be having kids in the age of climate change?,” which summarized my published views that we ought to consider adopting a “small family ethic” and even pursuing fertility reduction efforts in response to the threat from climate change. Although environmentalists for decades have worried about overpopulation for many good reasons, I suggest the fast-upcoming thresholds in climate change provide uniquely powerful reasons to consider taking real action to slow population growth.

Clearly, this idea struck a nerve: I was overwhelmed by the response in my personal email inbox as well as op-eds in other media outlets and over 70,000 shares on Facebook. I am gratified that so many people took the time to read and reflect on the piece.

Having read and digested that discussion, I want to continue it by responding to some of the most vocal criticisms of my own work, which includes research on “population engineering” – the intentional manipulation of human population size and structure – I’ve done with my colleagues, Jake Earl and Colin Hickey.

In short, the varied arguments against my views – that I’m overreacting, that the economy will tank and others – haven’t changed my conviction that we need to discuss the ethics of having children in this era of climate change.
How bad will things get?

Some comments – those claiming climate change is a hoax, devised by those who wish to control the world’s resources – are not worth responding to. Since 97 percent of all relevant experts cannot convince climate change skeptics of the basic scientific facts, then nothing I say will change their minds.

Other concerns, however, do require a response. Many people reacted to my work on procreation ethics by saying climate change will not be so bad, and so curbing individual desires, such as having children, in its name is unnecessary fear-mongering.

In my work, I suggest that 1.5-2 degrees Celsius warming over preindustrial levels will be “dangerous” and “very bad,” while 4 degrees C will be “catastrophic” and will leave large segments of the Earth “largely uninhabitable by humans.” Here is a very brief survey of the evidence for those claims based on what I consider reputable sources.

At 1.5-2 degrees C, a World Bank report predicts an increase in extreme weather events, deadly heat waves and severe water stress. Food production will decrease, and changing disease vectors will create unpredictable infectious disease outbreaks. Sea levels will rise, combining with increased storm severity to place coastal cities at risk. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that from the years 2030-2050 – as we reach this level of warming – at least 250,000 people will die every year from just some of the climate-related harms.



Perhaps many of us in rich countries (the “us” who might be reading this) will be largely protected from these early harms; but that doesn’t make them less real to the vulnerable citizens of, say, Bangladesh, Kiribati or the Maldives. In fact, it escalates the injustice, as the global wealthy have benefited from and contributed to climate change the most, while the global poor will be hurt first and worst.

At 4 degrees C warming, the World Bank predicts that every summer month will be hotter than any current record heat wave, making the Middle East, North Africa and the Mediterranean deadly during the summer months. Many coastal cities will be completely under water, and all low-lying island nations will likely have to be abandoned. Hundreds of millions, if not billions of people could become climate refugees, as their homelands become uninhabitable.

Based on these descriptions, I stand by my predictions.

No, environmentalists don’t hate babies

Other critics have argued that advocating for a lower birth rate = hating babies or being “anti-life.”

Obviously I don’t hate babies! I’m pretty wild about my own kid, and small humans in general.

This anti-life charge is more interesting, but equally wrong. The premise seems to be that those who wish to lower fertility rates must be misanthropic, or fail to see the value of humans. But that gets things exactly backwards: A radical concern for climate change is precisely motivated by a concern for human life – in particular, the human lives that will be affected by climate disruptions.

A valuable philosophical contribution here is the distinction between “making people happy” and “making happy people.” When I feed a hungry person, or prevent a harm from befalling someone, I improve a person’s well-being. But when I create a person whom I will then feed and prevent from harm, I make a person who will predictably be well off. In the first case, I added happiness to the world by helping an existing person; whereas in the second case, I added happiness by creating a person who will be happy. See the difference?

I, like many philosophers, believe that it’s morally better to make people happy than to make happy people. Those who exist already have needs and wants, and protecting and providing for them is motivated by respect for human life. It is not a harm to someone not to be created.

In fact, I would argue that it is more “anti-life” to prioritize creating new life over caring for, or even not harming, those who already exist.

Can the economy grow with lower population growth?


Another opposing argument: People are not only consumers – they are also producers, and so will make the world better.

Yes, humans are producers, and many wonderful things have come from human genius. But each person, whatever else they are (genius or dunce, producer or drag on the economy) is also a consumer. And this is the only claim needed in order to be worried about climate change.

The problem here is that we have a finite resource – the ability of the Earth’s atmosphere to absorb greenhouse gases without violently disrupting the climate – and each additional person contributes to the total amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. So although humans will hopefully save us (we do, in fact, desperately need brilliant people to develop scaleable technology to remove carbon from the air, for instance), the solution to this cannot be to have as many babies as possible, with the hope that this raises our probability of solving the problem. Because each baby is also an emitter, whether a genius or not.

Lastly, there’s the view that lowering fertility rates will kill the economy.

Several commenters point to low-fertility countries like Japan, Italy and Germany, and argue that problems experienced by such countries are proof that the “real” population crisis is our dropping fertility rate. We need more babies to grow into healthy young producers to keep our economic engine humming.

The truth in this objection is the following: An economy that requires infinite growth to be healthy will be harmed in a world of finite resources. But if it’s true that our economies can’t survive slowing or even reversing population growth, then we’re in some trouble no matter what.

Why? It’s simple logic that we cannot grow our population forever. We can either reflect now on how to protect our economy while working toward a sustainable population, or we can ignore the problem until nature forces it on us, perhaps violently and unexpectedly.

I’ll conclude with one, final thought: I don’t enjoy arguing for a small family ethic, or a population engineering scheme. Despite snide accusations to the contrary, I get no research funds or any other incentive for making this case. I’m arguing these points because I’m genuinely worried about the future of our planet, and the people who will inherit it, and I believe difficult yet civil discussion is the crucial first step to making that future one we won’t be condemned for creating.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.

Read more:

Mental health: depression and anxiety in young mothers is up by 50% in a generation


Your choice of holiday destination is a political act


It’s harder than you might expect for charities to give back tainted money

Travis N. Rieder does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Turkish police break up 'violence against women' protest

Women march against gender-based violence, in Istanbul

Thu, November 25, 2021,

 


ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Riot police fired pepper gas to disperse demonstrators who gathered in Istanbul on Thursday to protest violence against women, some chanting "government resign", nearly five months after Turkey withdrew from a treaty on the issue.

The group of several thousand, mostly women, marched to the city centre's Taksim Square, blocked off with barriers amid a heavy police presence. The police fired the gas and scuffled with the protesters after urging the crowd to disperse.

The protest, held to mark the international day for the elimination of violence against women, coincided with other small anti-government protests this week over the sharp slide in the value of the lira currency.


The protesters chanted and help up banners, demanding urgent action against gender-based violence in Turkey.

"We are not silent, not afraid, not obeying," chanted the demonstrators, who rushed at the police barriers.

At the start of July, Turkey withdrew from an international treaty to combat violence against women, known as the Istanbul Convention and negotiated in Turkey's biggest city in 2011, in a move strongly criticised by Western allies.

Erdogan announced the withdrawal in March, saying Turkey would use local laws to protect women's rights.






The day Josephine Baker refused to sing in segregated Miami club

Author: AFP|
Update: 27.11.2021 

In this photo taken on November 27, 1973, US-born dancer and singer Josephine Baker performs during a France-US gala at Versailles Castle, outside Paris / © AFP/File

In December 1950, Josephine Baker received a telegram from Copa City, a posh nightclub in Miami Beach, inviting her to give a series of concerts.

But with segregation rife in the United States, the Black French singer refused to perform in a venue where African-Americans were not accepted, a decision that became a turning point in her struggle for racial justice.

On November 30, the US-born star, who died in 1975 at age 68, will become the first Black woman to be entombed in the Pantheon in Paris, a mausoleum that houses the remains of the most notable figures of French history.

By the late 1940s, the singer, music hall dancer, and member of the French Resistance, Baker was already a world star who triumphed in the cabarets of Paris, where she had lived since 1925.

But even Baker's fame did not prevent her from facing discrimination in the country of her birth.

In 1948, many New York hotels refused to host Baker with her white husband, Frenchman Jo Bouillon. A trip she took to the American South that summer, alone and incognito, made her even more resentful.

That's why Baker did not hesitate to turn down Copa City's offer and repeat her stance to the manager of the club, Ned Schuyler, who personally travelled to Havana to try to convince her.

Segregationist laws in southern US states prevented African-Americans from accessing beaches, restaurants and other public venues, unless they worked there.

"I cannot work where my people cannot go," Baker told him, according to an article by Mary Dudziak, a civil rights historian in the United States. "It's as simple as that."

Faced with Baker's resolve, Schuyler signed a document that guaranteed entry to all customers regardless of their skin color.

- Historical tour -

On the opening night of her concert at Copa City in January 1951, Baker told the audience: "This is really my first appearance in this, my native land in 26 years."


Josephine Baker, seen here in 1968, will be the first Black woman to be entombed in the Pantheon in Paris, the mausoleum that houses the remains of the most notable figures of French history
/ © UPI/AFP/File

She added, according to Dudziak: "The other times didn't count. Now it is different. I am happy to be here and to be performing in this city under these circumstances when my people can be here to see me."

Baker's concerts at the Copa City were a success. Praised by the media, she undertook a new tour of the United States in 1951, demanding every time that the host desegregate.

In Los Angeles, Baker had a white man arrested for insulting her and refusing to eat breakfast alongside her. It would still be another 13 years before the Civil Rights Act of 1964 against racial segregation was passed.

Using her voice, her money and her popularity, Baker fought against racial discrimination in the United States.

"Because of her fame and her wealth, she was able to do things at the cutting edge of the civil rights movement that very few other people would have been able to do without danger of physical harm or state repression," Matthew Guterl, a professor at Brown University, explained in his book "Josephine Baker and the Rainbow Tribe."

- Accusations -


In this photo taken on June 23, 1949, Josephine Baker poses during an automobile elegance contest at the Bois de Boulogne near Pari
s / © AFP/File

But Baker's activism also began to make some people uncomfortable.

In October 1951, she complained that the waiters at the prestigious Stork nightclub in New York were ignoring her for being Black.

The ensuing scandal cost Baker some contracts she had signed to perform in clubs in the city. But the Stork Club faced no backlash.

Soon after, Baker was accused of being a Communist, a common complaint used to silence voices critical of the United States during Senator Joseph McCarthy's campaign against people perceived as disloyal.

After those accusations, Baker left the United States and did not return for the next decade.
ONLY FASCISTS OPPOSE AI
Thailand probes Amnesty International after ultra-royalist complaint


FILE PHOTO: A person holds a portrait of Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn, as royalists wait for the arrival of royal couple, in Bangkok, Thailand, November 25, 2020

Fri, November 26, 2021

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand is investigating whether Amnesty International has broken any laws, its prime minister said on Friday, after ultra-royalists called for the human rights group to be expelled for its support of activists facing prosecution.

An ultra-royalist group sent a letter to the government on Thursday saying Amnesty's campaigns to bring an end to criminal charges against protesters calling for reforms of the monarchy had undermined national security.

More than 1,600 activists are now facing security-related charges, including at least 160 people charged under Thailand's strict laws against insulting the monarchy, which carry a potential prison term of up to 15 years.

Traditionalist Thais consider the monarchy sacrosanct and view insults to King Maha Vajiralongkorn as a threat to the fabric of society. Youth-led protests which started last year have challenged the decades-old taboos against any criticism of the king.

Asked about the royalists' request at a news conference, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, said: "We are checking whether there are any violations to the law and this involves the police and the interior ministry."

"If there are wrongdoings, then it (Amnesty's licence) will be revoked," he added.

Amnesty said in a statement that it has been in Thailand for several decades and will continue to work on preventing, monitoring and holding states, corporations and others accountable for human rights abuses under international law.

"We will continue to do this independently and impartially on the basis of facts," said Amnesty, which is among several human rights groups that have been vocal about the Thai government's prosecution of political activists.

(Reporting by Panu Wongcha-um; Editing by John Geddie, William Maclean)
Protesters block roads in Serbia over lithium mining project

Hundreds of environmental protesters blocked roads in Belgrade and other Serbian towns on Saturday, angered at mining giant Rio Tinto's plans to extract lithium in the Balkan nation.
© Andrej ISAKOVIC 
Hundreds of environmental demonstrators block a main highway in Belgrade on Saturday

Substantial deposits of lithium, a key component for electric car batteries, are found around the western town of Loznica, where the Anglo-Australian company has started to buy land but is still waiting for the green light from the state to begin mining.

In Belgrade, protesters blocked the main bridge in the capital and a major intersection for an hour, after scuffles with security forces who eventually let them carry on with their action.

"I am here because I don't want them to sell off the land of my ancestors. Serbia is not for sale," one of the protesters, Milan Milosavljevic, a 31-year-old musician, told AFP.


Protesters also blocked roads in several other Serbian towns, including Novi Sad in the north, central Kragujevac, Sabac in the northwest and the western town of Valjevo, according to the N1 television channel.

Rio Tinto discovered lithium reserves in the Loznica region in 2006.


The company intends to invest $2.4 billion in the project, according to Vesna Prodanovic, director of Rio Sava, Rio Tinto's sister company in Serbia.

mbs-rus/lpt/pvh/mbx
Iran riot police deployed after 67 arrested in Isfahan

Issued on: 27/11/2021 - 



















Map locating Isfahan in Iran AFP

Tehran (AFP) – Riot police were deployed in force Saturday in the Iranian city of Isfahan, a day after dozens were arrested in violent protests over the drying up of a lifeblood river.

Security forces fired tear gas during the clashes with stone-throwers in the protest in the dry bed of the Zayadneh Rood river that crosses the city, Fars and ISNA news agencies said.

"We have arrested 67 of the main actors and agitators behind the troubles," police General Hassan Karami told on Saturday. He said between 2,000 and 3,000 "rioters" took part in the protest.

On Saturday, the situation was "calm" and streets empty, with riot police deployed on the city's Khadjou bridge, a Isfahan city resident said.

The demonstration was the latest since protests kicked off on November 9 in Isfahan, some 340 kilometres (210 miles) south of Tehran, a tourist magnet due to its majestic mosques and heritage sites, including a historic bridge across the river.

But it was the first to turn violent.

Between 30,000 and 40,000 farmers and city residents turned up for the gatherings last week, estimated Karami.

The riverbed has been the rallying spot for farmers and other people from across Isfahan province protesting the lack of water since November 9.

Drought is a cause, but they also accuse the authorities of diverting water from the city to supply the neighbouring province of Yazd, which is also desperately short on supplies.

"I used to walk along the riverbed with friends, but today the riot police are deployed in large numbers near the Khajou bridge and they are asking people to avoid the area," said a woman in her 50s.
'Mercenary thugs'

During the clashes on Friday, some people set fire to objects in the city, Fars and ISNA reported.

"After the farmers left, the opportunists and counter-revolutionaries were left behind, which made it easy for the security apparatus, especially the police, to identify and arrest those who destroyed public and state property," Isfahan police chief Mohammad-Reza Mirheidari said on television.

But members of the security forces were hit by fire from hunting rifles, he said, without specifying how many.

One of them was stabbed, although his condition was not believed to be critical.

A Fars journalist said two bulldozers were used to destroy a pipe taking water from Isfahan province to Yazd.

"Among the injured demonstrators, two are in a serious condition," Nourodin Soltanian, spokesman for Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, told the Mehr news agency on Saturday.

Recently, there have been almost daily protests in the region of Isfahan, which has been particularly hard-hit by drought.

On Saturday, the ultra-conservative daily Kayhan pointed the finger of blame for the violence at "mercenary thugs", whereas the pro-reform Etemad said the protests in Isfahan showed a "lack of trust in the government".

Last Sunday, more than 1,000 people marched towards the governor's office in the western province of Chahar-Mahal Bakhtiari to demand a solution to water shortages, state media reported.

According to Fars, farmers and local authorities struck a deal on Thursday about water distribution.

President Ebrahim Raisi met with representatives from the provinces of Isfahan, Yazd and Semnan earlier this month and vowed to resolve water issues.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said the topic is the country's top problem, without making reference to the protests.

© 2021 AFP
German car goals not tough enough to protect climate, NGOs say


Victoria Waldersee and Markus Wacket
Thu, November 25, 2021, 

BERLIN, Nov 25 (Reuters) - Environmental groups hoping for more radical action to promote electric vehicles were disappointed at Germany's new coalition agreement, saying it falls short of what was needed to meet climate goals.

The agreement by the Social Democrats (SPD), Greens, and liberal Free Democrats (FDP) included raising Germany's target for the number of electric vehicles (EVs) on roads by 2030 https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/new-german-government-aims-least-15-mln-evs-by-2030-2021-11-24 to at least 15 million and supporting expansion of charging infrastructure.

But key policies which environmentalists had demanded to reduce emissions further - like a speed limit on highways and higher taxes on fossil-fuel emitting cars - were missing, organisations including climate think-tank Agora and NGO Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) said.

A commitment to meet the EU's proposal for an effective ban on carbon-emitting cars by 2035 'earlier' was seen as too vague.

"The transport sector section [of the agreement] violates the climate protection decision of federal courts," DUH said, referring to a ruling in Germany in May that the transport sector's emissions should be cut 50% by 2030 https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/germany-raise-2030-co2-emissions-reduction-target-65-spiegel-2021-05-05

"With what's written in that agreement, we will not achieve our climate targets," said Christian Hochfeld, director at think-tank Agora Energiewende.

'CATCH UP, GET BETTER'

Germany's world-leading auto industry is facing an existential challenge from carmakers in China and the United States in the global transition to EVs.

Outgoing chancellor Angela Merkel was criticised for not pushing the country's automakers to adapt more quickly to the pressures of climate change.

But carmakers and politicians have at times faced resistance from unions protecting the industry's 800,000 or so workers who fear that a quick and badly managed transition could cost tens of thousands of jobs.

Still, the presence of Germany's Greens in the new coalition meant climate advocates expected a clearer shift in policy, including harsher punishments for purchasing carbon-emitting cars.

A 6,000-9,000 euro($10,099.80) subsidy for electric cars is in place until 2025 but the agreement did not state whether it would be extended.

Meanwhile, an existing tax on gasoline, heating oil, coal and natural gas consumption - making combustion engine cars more expensive - will not be increased, the agreement said.

"It's not clear how they will incentivise people to buy these 15 million EVs. You could give people money to buy them, or you can make CO2 more expensive. But they didn't dare do that," car industry expert Ferdinand Duddenhoeffer said.

Carmakers BMW and Daimler welcomed the agreement's emphasis on expanding charging infrastructure, with auto industry VDA stating this was an area where Germany must "catch up and become significantly better on almost all fronts".

Still, Bernstein analyst Arndt Ellinghorst said EV subsidies would no longer be fruitful past 2025, as ultimately it was up to the market to offer more attractive and affordable models.

Signals like BlackRock's 700 million euro investment in charging venture Ionity https://www.reuters.com/markets/deals/blackrock-joins-e-car-charging-venture-ionity-788-mln-funding-round-2021-11-24 showed that private industry was filling the infrastructure gap, Ellinghorst said.

"I don't think we need the watering can from Berlin," he said. "This needs to be achieved by consensus across private industry sectors." ($1 = 0.8911 euros) (Reporting by Victoria Waldersee, Markus Wacket Editing by Keith Weir)
Arctic Ocean started to warm decades earlier than scientists thought


Researchers reconstructed the recent history of ocean warming near the Arctic Ocean in a region called the Fram Strait, between Greenland and Svalbard, finding that the Arctic has been warming for much longer than earlier records suggested. Photo courtesy of Sara Giansiracusa

Nov. 24 (UPI) -- The Arctic Ocean has been warming since the beginning of the 20th century, fueled by a process known as Atlantification, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances.

The new research highlights the connection between the North Atlantic and Arctic between Greenland and Svalbard, a region known was Fram Strait, where warmer, saltier water from the south has been steadily infiltrating northern waters.

"Pinpointing the exact timing of the onset of Atlantification in the Arctic can give us some important clues as to the exact driving mechanisms behind this phenomenon," study co-lead author Francesco Muschitiello told UPI in an email.

A more precise Arctic warming timeline will also allow scientists to compare the history of climate change in the Arctic to changes in volcanism, solar activity, freshwater, greenhouse gases, aerosols and more.

"[This] will ultimately help better quantifying the sensitivity of Arctic warming to natural versus anthropogenic forcing," said Muschitiello, a marine scientist with the University of Cambridge's Department of Geography.

For decades, scientists have noted changes in Arctic climate patterns. The atmosphere and ocean near the poles are warming at a rate double the global average, ocean waters continue to grow saltier and sea ice remains on the retreat.

But the mechanisms driving these accelerated changes remain a point of contention among Arctic researchers.

"There is some ongoing debate in our community as to what drives the recent rapid sea ice retreat in the Atlantic portion Arctic," University College London climate scientist Michel Tsamados told UPI in an email.

The drivers of Arctic warming and sea ice loss either are oceanic or atmospheric or some combination of the two.

"Some of the recent views are that most of the variability is atmospheric-driven, with winds and temperature driving sea ice variability that in turns imprints the ocean temperatures," said Tsamados, who was not involved in the new study.

"Others have hypothesized regional mechanisms by which localized tipping points in sea ice decline are driven by the combined effect of the thinning sea ice cover and Atlantic warm current influxes in the region," Tsamados said.

To figure out exactly when and how the Arctic Ocean began warming at an accelerated rate, researchers studied chemical changes in the fossil shells of microorganisms from ocean sediments.

The seafloor sediment cores provided researchers with geochemical and ecological data stretching back 800 years.

For most of those 800 years, researchers noted the Arctic Ocean's temperature and salinity were relatively stable. But the geochemical signatures began to shift around the beginning of the 20th century, revealing a significant uptick in temperature and salinity.

When scientists compared their updated warming timeline with records of ocean circulation at lower latitudes, they found the shift corresponded with a slowdown of dense water formation in the Labrador Sea.

Scientists expect deep water circulation within this subpolar region to decelerate as the planet warms and temperature differences between polar and mid-latitude regions decrease. As result, researchers predict climate change will continue to spur Atlantification in the Arctic Ocean.

"Establishing accurate timing between events in the Arctic proper and sub-Arctic areas is critical for understanding linkages and causation of changes observed in the polar basins," University of Alaska atmospheric scientist Igor Polyakov told UPI in an email.

"Various temporal and spacial scales of processes involved in communication of the Arctic Ocean with lower latitude basins make this analysis very difficult and each new study is a welcome addition to the previous efforts," said Polyakov, who has studied Atlantification in the Arctic, but was not involved in the most recent paper.

Perhaps most importantly, Muschitiello and his colleagues were able to show that most climate models fail to identify this early period of warming surrounding the Fram Strait, which suggests simulations don't fully account for the mechanisms driving Atlantification in the Arctic.

The climate models used to predict how Arctic systems will behave in the future -- and influence climate systems all over the globe -- must rely on accurate reconstructions of past climate change, researchers said.

"[Pinpointing the exact timing of the onset of Atlantification in the Arctic] also provides an important 'observational' benchmark to improve historical climate model simulations and highlight physical processes that are potentially under-represented in climate models," Muschitiello said.
Biden administration calls for overhaul of oil, gas leasing on federal lands

Arctic native people of the Gwich'in Nation form a human banner on the banks of the Porcupine River near Ft. Yukon, Alaska, with a message to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from oil development in 2010. The Biden administration on Friday called for big changes to how oil and gas is extracted from public lands.
File photo by Camila Roy/UPI | License Photo


Nov. 26 (UPI) -- The Biden administration says programs that allow oil and gas production on federal lands short-changes taxpayers and the environment while rewarding speculators at the expense of consumers.

A report released Friday by the Interior Department calls for a significant overhaul of the federal government's leasing and permitting practice for oil and gas. However, the report didn't call for an end to gas or oil production on public lands.

"Our nation faces a profound climate crisis that is impacting every American. The Interior Department has an obligation to responsibly manage our public lands and waters -- providing a fair return to the taxpayer and mitigating worsening climate impacts -- while staying steadfast in the pursuit of environmental justice," Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said in a statement. "This review outlines significant deficiencies in the federal oil and gas programs, and identifies important and urgent fiscal and programmatic reforms that will benefit the American people."

The report is in response to Executive Order 14008, which was issued by President Joe Biden during his first days in office and is part of his administration's efforts to address climate change.

According to the report, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management currently manages 37,496 oil and gas onshore leases covering 26.6 million acres with nearly 96,100 wells.

However, the report states that 53% of those acres are not being used for production, allowing a "speculative approach" that "contributes to unbalanced land management." Similarly, of the more than 12 million acres of offshore lands under lease, about 45% is either producing oil or gas.

"When land is under contract for potential oil and gas activity, the shared public lands cannot be managed for other purposes, such as conservation and recreation," the report said.

The report found royalty rates that haven't been updated in more than 100 years, while states have significantly higher rates. Currently, the minimum federal royalty rate is 12.5%.

But environmental group Food & Water Watch blasted the report as a "shocking capitulation to the needs of corporate polluters."

"Releasing this completely inadequate report over a long holiday weekend is a shameful attempt to hide the fact that President Biden has no intention of fulfilling his promise to stop oil and gas drilling on our public lands," Food & Water Watch Policy Director Mitch Jones said in a statement. "A minor increase in the royalties paid by climate polluters will have zero impact on combating the climate crisis, and will in effect make the federal government more dependent on fossil fuels as a source of revenue."

The American Petroleum Institute responded with a statement saying the reforms would mean increased costs for American energy development with "no clear roadmap for the future of federal leasing." The institute also pointed to how the Biden administration promised to use "every tool available" to lower prices and address the lack of supply.

"During one of the busiest travel weeks of the year when rising costs of energy are even more apparent to Americans, the Biden Administration is sending mixed signals," Frank J. Macchiarola, the institute's vice president of policy economics and regulatory affairs said in a statement.

Just days before the report's release, Biden ordered 50 million barrels of oil to be released from strategic reserves to help bring down gas prices. Over the summer he asked oil-exporting countries to increase production.

The Biden administration has also suspended all oil and gas leases in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Biden has also clashed with oil-rich states over his executive orders halting new drilling on federal lands.
USA
Report: Expansion of religious exemptions undermining law



The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington holds a livestream service with an empty audience in April 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Some states sought exemptions for churches to rules governing public gatherings during the health crisis.
File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo

Nov. 26 (UPI) -- A new report contends the right to religious exemptions from the law -- such as those that have allowed medical professionals to refuse to provide contraceptive healthcare and a calligraphy company to decline to sell wedding invitations to same-sex couples -- has expanded vastly in the past decade and is threatening the liberties of others.


The faith-based exemptions involve more than reproductive health and LGBTQ issues, according to the report by Columbia Law School's Law, Rights, and Religion Project in New York City. The report says some states have passed or proposed bills that include a broader right to religious exemptions than provided under the U.S. Constitution.

"By citing real cases, we demonstrate that nearly any law or policy, including those protecting crucial interests like workers' rights, public health, environmental welfare, emergency response and religious pluralism, may be limited and/or significantly undermined by religious exemptions," the policy think tank says in the report, released earlier this month.

The report says the most expansive state bills are modeled on the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which bars the government from substantially burdening a person's exercise of religion except in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest and only if an action is the least restrictive means of furthering that interest.

South Dakota and Montana passed RFRAs this year, and Arkansas will vote on a referendum in 2022 that would put RFRA-style language into the state constitution, the report says. Efforts to pass RFRAs are expected in additional states during the next few years.

Narrower bills that provide religious exemptions from COVID-19 vaccine mandates and other public health laws also are expected.

"Those who have long been sounding the alarm about the risks of overly broad exemptions often trot out a so-called 'parade of horribles.' An expansive right to exemptions, they claim, could permit religious adherents to ignore countless civil and even criminal laws," the report says.

Cat food, pasta strainer

Requested exemptions listed in the report -- some of which were allowed and others that were rejected by courts -- include paying less than the minimum wage; excluding employees from being protected by antidiscrimination laws because they are deemed "ministers"; denying jobs, housing and services to certain classes of people, including religious minorities and LGBTQ people; allowing parents to withhold necessary medical care from their children due to religious beliefs; and giving faith-based colleges exemptions from a requirement to recognize unions.

So far, no state has granted spouses a religious right to force their partner into a binding "biblical" or covenant marriage or claim a faith-based right to engage in serious crimes, the report says. It gives as an example a defendant who said he was an adherent to "Creationist Naturism" and unsuccessfully argued his post of a nude child on Pinterest was religious in nature.

The report says some exemption claims are confounding, citing a Florida man who said he had a religious obligation to eat cat food in the workplace and a Massachusetts woman who wanted to express her religious identity by wearing a pasta colander on her head in her driver's license photo.

(A federal judge ruled the man's personal religious creed concerning Kozy Kitten Cat Food was a mere personal preference that was not protected by the Constitution. After some legal wrangling between the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles and the American Humanist Association's Appignani Humanist Legal Center, the woman, a member of the secular Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and a self-described Pastafarian, was allowed to wear the strainer in her photo.)

"While not necessarily harmful, such claims underscore the challenges of a regime in which religious exemptions are too often seen as a license to get out from every conceivable law or policy," the report says.

Protecting religious minorities

The report says some exemptions are warranted.

"Religious exemptions have also been used, for example, to ensure that people in prison have access to kosher and halal food; that schoolchildren and members of the military are able to wear religious head coverings and hairstyles; and that members of small religious groups, including indigenous religions, are not criminally prosecuted for the ritual use of substances like hoasca and peyote," the report says.

Nick Fish, president of American Atheists, which advocates for church-state separation, notes that when Congress passed the RFRA in 1993, the act was meant to protect religious minorities.

"American Atheists opposed that law because we predicted it would be used to grant unfair preferences based on religion -- and we were right," Fish said in a statement.

Religious extremists have used exemptions to undermine efforts to end the COVID-19 pandemic, he says.

"In Arkansas, Oklahoma and Arizona, they worked to pass bills that would grant churches exemptions from bans on large gatherings, turning churches into super-spreader sites and putting all residents at risk," Fish says. "And in two Supreme Court cases, a court stacked with religious ideologues agreed, exempting churches from common-sense restrictions on the size of in-person meetings."

To stop bills before they make it to the courts, American Atheists has launched state advocacy teams in Oklahoma, Virginia and Florida and plans to start more in 2022, the statement says.

Former Kansas state Rep. Brett Parker is leading the teams, which will work to defend civil rights and the separation of religion and government, according to the statement. Teams also are being set up in Colorado and California, he said.
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Public health orders, especially those related to COVID-19, are a common target of religious exemption requests, Parker told UPI.

"People claiming religious exemptions to something as simple as wearing a mask," he said. "It's becoming like the get-out-of-jail-free card. If you can claim a religious exemption, then it's almost like the inference is that no restriction or law should be applied."

Parker said he will be tracking legislation with the help of the teams and partner organizations. The work will ramp up in January, when state legislatures go into session, he said.