Wednesday, June 21, 2023

How the US Supreme Court struck down anti-sodomy laws and paved way for same-sex marriage

Story by Joan Biskupic • CNN 

In spring 2003, Supreme Court Justices Anthony Kennedy and Sandra Day O’Connor were ready to break ground on gay rights by striking down a ban on intimate relations between same-sex couples.

The landmark decision set the country on a new path and helped lay the foundation for the 2015 court decision declaring a nationwide right to same-sex marriage. Once-private court papers reviewed by CNN and related interviews reveal the internal debate of key justices concerned with LGBTQ rights but moving carefully. Kennedy, writing for the court in the anti-sodomy case, struggled as he outlined the constitutional right at issue and considered using phrases such as “the sexual instinct.”

The papers also show that O’Connor, penning an important concurring opinion, sought guidance from a woman believed to be the only openly gay clerk in any of the nine chambers at the time.

Lawrence v. Texas, issued 20 years ago this month, came before the court at a time when stigma, social norms and violence led many gay Americans to keep their private lives hidden.

Just a few years earlier, in 1997, actor and comedian Ellen DeGeneres drew international headlines for being a rare public figure to come out. In 1996, Democratic President Bill Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act, prohibiting federal recognition of same-sex marriages; that law, which defined marriage as a union between one man and one woman, would not be struck down until 2013.

Getting to the 6-3 ruling in 2003 was no small matter. Kennedy, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan working with justices on the left side of the bench, went through nearly 10 drafts as he explained the Constitution’s protection for same-sex relations and inevitably took a major step toward same-sex marriage.

Kennedy, who held the key vote in this line of cases, was also cognizant of religious interests within the court and beyond. That tension between LGBTQ rights and religion is still evident in controversies at the high court today.

Back in 2003, the one openly gay law clerk, Amy Wildermuth, worked for Justice John Paul Stevens, and he saved suggestions that Wildermuth, now a law professor, made on O’Connor’s first draft. The document is among Stevens’ files recently opened at the Library of Congress.

At the top of Stevens’ copy of O’Connor’s first draft is the small notation, “Suggested changes to SOC’s opinion from Amy Wildermuth.” Throughout the eight-page draft are various edits, mainly concerned with the nuances of phrasing.



How the Supreme Court struck down anti-sodomy laws and paved way for same-sex marriage© Provided by CNNText from first draft of opinion in Lawrence v. Texas by Justice Anthony Kennedy. References to the "sexual instinct" were removed in subsequent drafts - CNN

“‘Are we using the right terms?’ ‘Are we saying this in a way that could be offensive?’ If you’re not in the culture, you just don’t know,” Wildermuth said in an interview with CNN about the kinds of questions that came her way.

Wildermuth, now teaching at Ohio State Moritz College of Law, emphasized the era, when justices were less familiar with LGBTQ interests. “I was happy to share my perspective,” she said. “It was not something I was uncomfortable with.”

Nothing in the Stevens files indicated why Wildermuth was enlisted. When reached by CNN, she explained, “It wasn’t unusual for people working on cases to be asked to help the clerks in other chambers, to provide feedback. It also was true that I was the only out gay law clerk at the time. That may also have prompted interest in getting feedback from me and from my co-clerks.”

(Other law clerks serving in other chambers that session similarly remembered Wildermuth as the only openly gay clerk that term.)

Kennedy conferred with Stevens, Stephen Breyer and other justices on his left. In his first draft striking down the Texas sodomy ban, Kennedy described the right in question to be “of such fundamental importance to self-definition that it is protected by the guarantee of liberty in the Due Process Clause.”

After several drafts, according to Stevens’ files, Kennedy decided to avoid the word “fundamental.”

Kennedy also withdrew language that some of his colleagues regarded as awkward or out of place, such as, “The sexual instinct is of endless fascination for the human. Its beauty and power are best respected when the individual has substantial freedom to explore it to attain a better understanding of the concept of self and the place he or she has in a larger universe.”

His final opinion, instead, said in that section, “When sexuality finds overt expression in intimate conduct with another person, the conduct can be but one element in a personal bond that is more enduring. The liberty protected by the Constitution allows homosexual persons the right to make this choice.”

And, although he dropped the reference to “a fundamental right” – a move a dissenting Justice Antonin Scalia pointed to with some satisfaction – the majority opinion deliberately retained expansive language regarding the personal liberty of gay people and forbidding states to “define the meaning of the relationship” or “demean their existence.”

Overturning a 1986 decision


The Supreme Court in 1986 had upheld sodomy bans in the Georgia case of Bowers v. Hardwick. By 2002, when the Texas case came before the court and tested whether Bowers should be reversed, only a handful of states had such laws on the books, and they were rarely enforced.

The new controversy began when police officers in Houston responded to a report of a weapons disturbance, entered the private home of John Geddes Lawrence and found him engaging in a sexual act with another man. The men were charged under a statute that criminalized “deviate sexual intercourse.” They challenged the constitutionality of the Texas ban on their private conduct.

When the nine justices considered in December 2002 whether to take up the appeal, Stevens, Kennedy, David Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg voted to hear the case. (It takes four to grant a case a hearing but five to decide it.)

Breyer signaled that he wanted to hear the case, too, Stevens’ notes indicate, but only if those ready to hear it were prepared to stick together for a majority to reverse Bowers’ holding that constitutional due process of law does not cover private same-sex relations.


Then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices O’Connor, Scalia and Clarence Thomas voted to let the lower court action and the charges against the men stand. It is not known why O’Connor voted against the appeal at this stage, but she may have wanted to avoid confronting her vote with the majority in the earlier Bowers case.

After oral arguments on March 26, 2003, the five votes held, according to Stevens’ notes from their private meeting, and O’Connor moved to their side as well. She wanted to reverse the lower court ruling, on the grounds that the Texas law violated the equal protection of the law. That allowed O’Connor, also an appointee of Ronald Reagan, to avoid casting a vote to outright reverse her Bowers v. Hardwick position.

Stevens, the senior justice on the prevailing side, had the power to assign the opinion for the court and he chose Kennedy. The centrist-conservative Kennedy was crucial to keeping their left-leaning majority together; he also had begun to express great passion about protecting the dignity and rights of gay people.

Kennedy circulated his first draft on May 14, 2003. Over the next several weeks, he worked with other justices in the majority to refine the explanation of the rights and relationships at issue. The thorny dilemma, law clerks from that session told CNN recently, was to craft an opinion that would do more than merely lift criminal penalties for same-sex conduct, by broadly protecting personal liberty, yet be cautious about laying down obvious markers toward same-sex marriage.

“After reading my first circulation, Stephen suggested revisions to make it clear we do not decide more than the question presented,” Kennedy wrote on June 10 of that year of a conversation with Breyer. “These, plus a few other edits, are contained in a new circulation to the entire Court. Stephen’s suggestions were quite constructive, and I am hoping how he can join.”

Another Kennedy draft circulated soon after emphasized that the Bowers majority had wrongly presumed a long history of laws aimed at gay relations – one of the points Breyer had raised during oral arguments.

“Contrary to the assumption underlying Bowers, there is no longstanding history in this country of laws directed at homosexual conduct as a distinct matter,” the draft opinion stated.

That sentence was further edited to say, “At the outset it should be noted that there is no longstanding history in this country of laws directed at homosexual conduct as a distinct matter.”

Wildermuth’s influence on O’Connor

The once-private files of a single justice only provide a partial view into the thinking of the nine, and it could not be determined whether some memos had been removed from the Stevens’ files before court officials turned them over to the Library of Congress. Clerks contacted by CNN from various chambers said they were aware of negotiations among justices in the Lawrence case that are not documented in the available materials.

But the thoughts of one law clerk that term, Wildermuth, endure in the Stevens’ files. O’Connor, who faulted Texas for targeting certain conduct of same-sex couples, but not opposite-sex couples, adopted some of Wildermuth’s suggestions and bypassed others.



Amy Wildermuth - Courtesy Amy Wildermuth

In her conclusion, for example, O’Connor had originally written, “A law branding one class of citizens as criminal solely because the majority disapproves of the defining characteristic of the class runs contrary to the values of the Constitution and the Equal Protection Clause.”

O’Connor changed it to Wildermuth’s suggested language: “A law branding one class of persons as criminal solely based on the State’s moral disapproval of that class and the conduct associated with that class runs contrary to the values of the Constitution and the Equal Protection Clause.”



Draft of concurrence from Justice Sandra Day O'Connor with reference to clerk Amy Wildermuth. - CNN

Conservatives’ religious objections


Throughout all of his drafts, Kennedy continued to acknowledge religious and moral objections.

When he observed that sodomy bans had flowed from condemnation of “homosexual conduct as immoral,” he added, “The condemnation has been shaped by religious beliefs, conceptions of right and acceptable behavior, and respect for the traditional family. For many persons these are not trivial concerns but profound and deep convictions accepted as ethical and moral principles to which they aspire and which thus determine the course of their lives.”

When Kennedy in 2015 wrote the Obergefell v. Hodges decision declaring a fundamental right to same-sex marriage, he echoed that additional theme. “It must be emphasized that religions, and those who adhere to religious doctrines, may continue to advocate with utmost, sincere conviction that, by divine precepts, same-sex marriage should not be condoned.”

And in a line that opponents of LGBTQ rights often repeat, Kennedy wrote, “Many who deem same-sex marriage to be wrong reach that conclusion based on decent and honorable religious or philosophical premises.”

During oral arguments this session, for example, over whether a wedding website designer can refuse same-sex couples despite a Colorado anti-discrimination law, the web designer’s lawyer, Kristen Waggoner, referred to Kennedy’s “decent and honorable” phrasing.

So did Justice Samuel Alito, a consistent dissenter on LGBTQ protections.

Responding to Alito, Colorado solicitor general Eric Olson, defending the state anti-discrimination law, noted that the reference to “honorable” people was incomplete.

Olson emphasized that in Obergefell, Kennedy had gone on to say: “(W)hen that sincere, personal opposition becomes enacted law and public policy, the necessary consequence is to put the imprimatur of the State itself on an exclusion that soon demeans or stigmatizes those whose own liberty is then denied.”

That case, 303 Creative v. Elenis, is scheduled to be announced in upcoming days; coincidentally, Olson was a law clerk to Stevens in the 2002-03 session.

Scalia’s angry dissent


Of the nine justices who heard the Lawrence case, only Thomas remains on the bench. He, along with Rehnquist and Scalia, dissented.

Scalia wrote the principal dissent for the trio, but Thomas penned an additional short statement criticizing the Texas law as “uncommonly silly.”

“If I were a member of the Texas Legislature, I would vote to repeal it,” Thomas wrote. “Punishing someone for expressing his sexual preference through noncommercial consensual conduct with another adult does not appear to be a worthy way to expend valuable law enforcement resources.”

Scalia’s dissent was characteristically lacerating, and as he worked on his own drafts in late June, he added a warning about how the case could lead to the court’s endorsement of same-sex marriage.



Justice Stevens' record of the justices' private votes on whether to hear the case of Lawrence v. Texas (that is, grant or deny certiorari) and then whether to reverse or affirm the lower court ruling against the men. - CNN

As he noted that “not once does it describe homosexual sodomy as a ‘fundamental right’ or a ‘fundamental liberty interest,’” Scalia said the majority nonetheless “dismantles the structure of constitutional law that has permitted a distinction to be made between heterosexual and homosexual unions, insofar as formal recognition in marriage is concerned.”

In his final edits, Scalia wrote, “The Court says that the present case ‘does not involve whether the government must give formal recognition to any relationship that homosexual persons seek to enter.’ Do not believe it.”

Twelve years later, to the exact June 26 day, the court declared a constitutional right to same-sex marriage.




Native American tribes say US Supreme Court challenge was never just about foster kids




Native American nations say the Supreme Court's rejection of a challenge to the Indian Child Welfare Act has reaffirmed their power to withstand threats from state governments.

They say the case conservative groups raised on behalf of four Native American children was a stalking horse for legal arguments that could have broadly weakened tribal and federal authority.

“It's a big win for all of us, a big win for Indian Country. And it definitely strengthens our sovereignty, strengthens our self-determination, it strengthens that we as a nation can make our own decisions,” Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren said Monday.

In fact, the 7-2 ruling released Thursday hardly touched on the children, who were supposed to be placed with Native foster families under the law. The justices said the white families that have sought to adopt them lack standing to claim racial discrimination, in part because their cases are already resolved, save for one Navajo girl whose case is in Texas court.

Instead, the justices focused on rejecting other arguments aimed at giving states more leverage, including sweeping attacks on the constitutional basis for federal Indian Law.

“This was never a case about children,” Erin Dougherty Lynch, senior staff attorney for the Native American Rights Fund, told The Associated Press. "The opposition was essentially trying to weaken tribes by putting their children in the middle, which is a standard tactic for entities that are seeking to destroy tribes.”

Justice Amy Coney Barrett's majority opinion said these plaintiffs wrongly claimed that “the State gets to call the shots, unhindered by any federal instruction to the contrary.”

“This argument runs headlong into the Constitution,” Barrett wrote. "The Supremacy Clause provides that ‘the Laws of the United States ... shall be the supreme Law of the Land.' ... End of story.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch spent 38 pages explaining how up to a third of Native children were taken from their families and placed in white homes or in boarding schools to be assimilated. In response, the 1978 law requires states to notify tribes if a child is or could be enrolled in a federally recognized tribe, and established a system favoring Native American families in foster care and adoption proceedings.

“In adopting the Indian Child Welfare Act, Congress exercised that lawful authority to secure the right of Indian parents to raise their families as they please; the right of Indian children to grow in their culture; and the right of Indian communities to resist fading into the twilight of history. All of that is in keeping with the Constitution’s original design,” Gorsuch wrote.

The ruling leaves an opening for another challenge that could fundamentally undermine the status of federally recognized Native American and Alaska Native nations — the idea that Natives should be treated as a racial group, not as citizens of sovereign governments with rights that derive from treaties, acts of Congress and other federal action.

The conservative Goldwater Institute had invoked “the Constitution’s nearly absolute prohibition on race-based differential treatment” in its brief, saying that the act “imposes a racial category, not a political classification” on adoptees, unconstitutionally treating them differently based “not on their religious, cultural, or political tribal identity, but on genetics.”


But Lynch, whose brief represented nearly 500 tribes, told the AP that “there is nothing racial about the law.”

“There’s no mention of blood quantum, or anything that hints at race. It’s all about citizenship in a tribe,” Lynch said. "If that was to be rewritten and understood by the court as racial in nature, literally every other law for tribes would be racial in nature.”

Attorney Matthew McGill said he'll return to Texas courts on behalf of Chad and Jennifer Brackeen of Fort Worth, who adopted a Native American boy after a prolonged legal fight with the Navajo Nation, and are trying to adopt his 5-year-old half-sister, who has lived with them since infancy.

“We took this case for one reason only: to help our foster-parent clients and their foster children whose adoptions are frustrated by ICWA,” McGill's Gibson Dunn law firm said in a statement to the AP.

But had the conservative groups prevailed, states might have gained more leverage in disputes with tribes over oil and gas pipelines and leases, social services, law enforcement, education, contracting and many other areas now governed by federal laws that define tribes as political sovereigns, Native American attorneys said.

“If Indian Law was just race-based law — if it’s just affirmative action — practically every federal law that’s ever been passed” would be struck down, said Robert Miller, an Eastern Shawnee tribal citizen and law professor at Arizona State University. “You would be stunned — it’s thousands and thousands and thousands of laws.”

Some states have long sought control over tribal matters, and they've been particularly anxious since the court's 2020 McGirt decision clarified that tribal jurisdiction still applies to much of Oklahoma, Miller told the AP. “Oklahoma is in shock now because they found out 43% of their state is Indian Country under the federal definition. So I think that’s a little bit that’s behind all of this.”

The Wisconsin-based Bradley Foundation, known for bankrolling conservative causes, granted $250,000 in 2014 to support the Arizona-based Goldwater Institute’s efforts to “restore the rights of states to exercise their authority to check federal power,” according to its news release.

The case kicked off around 2017, when Gibson Dunn, working pro bono, filed a complaint in federal court in Texas. At the time, the firm was opposing tribal objections to the Dakota Access Pipeline and preparing to win a landmark Supreme Court case that enabled states to legalize sports betting, potentially drawing business away from tribal casinos.

Attorney Mary Kathryn Nagle, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, said she considers it no coincidence that groups opposing the pipeline protests of 2016-2017 took a “profound interest in the welfare of Indian children, and decided that this fancy law firm, that invests lots of time and resources into making money from oil and gas companies, all of a sudden really cared about Indian children, and wanted to all of a sudden get involved in custody disputes.”

This was the child welfare act's third Supreme Court challenge, and though Justice Brett Kavanaugh sided with the majority this time, he invited another case with prospective foster or adoptive parents claiming they've been denied equal protection because of race.

Miller thinks Kavanaugh won't get the votes now that Barrett and Gorsuch have so firmly endorsed Indian Law as fundamental to the U.S. Constitution, which he said the founding fathers drafted in part because states were ignoring federal treaties and fomenting wars.

This historical record is hard for “originalists” to deny, Miller said: “There's no principled way they could come to a conclusion that it’s race and not a political relationship with your tribal nation.”

Still, this fight is far from over, “and probably never will be,” said Nagle, whose sister, investigative journalist Rebecca Nagle, explored the case in her “This Land” podcast. “That’s the sad thing about being Indigenous in the United States. Here it is, it’s 2023. And in some ways, we’re still fighting some of the same fights we fought since 1492.”

___

Associated Press journalist Hallie Golden contributed.

Michael Warren, The Associated Press
German woman convicted of keeping Yazidi woman as a slave in Iraq


BERLIN (AP) — A German woman was convicted Wednesday of keeping a Yazidi woman as a slave during her time with the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, and sentenced to nine years and three months in prison.

The state court in the western city of Koblenz convicted the 37-year-old of crimes against humanity, membership in a foreign terrorist organization and being an accessory to genocide, German news agency dpa reported. Authorities have identified her only as Nadine K. in line with German privacy rules.

The court found that the defendant for three years abused a young Yazidi woman “in her own interests as a household slave.” It said that her husband brought the woman to their home and regularly raped her, and that the defendant enabled those assaults and should have intervened.

Prosecutors have said that the defendant traveled to Syria with her husband in 2014 and joined IS. In 2015, the couple moved to the Iraqi town of Mosul, where they allegedly kept the Yazidi woman.

The defendant was arrested in March 2022 after being brought back to Germany from a camp in northeastern Syria where suspected members of IS have been held.

In a statement read out at her trial by a defense lawyer, she denied having coerced the Yazidi woman at any point. She said there had been frequent arguments with her husband over the woman's presence and she was ashamed of not having done more for her.

In February, the Yazidi woman testified at the trial and said she recognized the defendant.

She traveled to Koblenz again for the verdict. “She hopes that others follow her example” and that all who committed similar crimes face trial, said her lawyer, Sonka Mehner.

The trial is the latest of several in Germany involving women who traveled to regions controlled by the IS group in Syria and Iraq.

In one case, a German convert to Islam was convicted in 2021 on charges that she allowed a 5-year-old Yazidi girl she and her husband kept as a slave to die of thirst in the sun. Her husband was subsequently convicted as well.

Earlier this year, an appeals court ordered a new sentencing hearing for the woman, who was given a 10-year sentence. She now risks a longer prison term.

The Associated Press



CSIS warned B.C. Sikh temple leader of assassination threat before killing: lawyer
MODI'S SECRET POLICE ACTIVE IN CANADA

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 


Aclose associate of Sikh community leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar said his friend was warned by Canadian intelligence officials about being targeted for assassination by "mercenaries" before Nijjar was gunned down in Surrey, B.C., on Sunday.

New York-based lawyer Gurpatwant Singh Pannun said in a statement Tuesday that he spoke with Nijjar by phone the day before he was killed outside the Guru Nanak Sikh gurdwara where he served as president.

Pannun said Nijjar talked about an unofficial Khalistan referendum vote seeking a separate Sikh state that both men had been organizing, and threats to their safety related to a reward being offered by the Indian government for information leading to Nijjar's arrest or apprehension.

The reward of 1 million rupees, worth about $16,000, was offered last July by India's National Investigation Agency, the country's counterterrorism body.

The agency published Nijjar's home address in Surrey and referred to him as a "fugitive terrorist", saying he led a conspiracy to murder a Hindu priest in India.

Pannun said Nijjar told him that "gangsters" had visited him about the pair being on a "hit list," and that Nijjar received a call days later from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service warning that his life was in danger.

Pannun, who is general counsel to the advocacy group Sikhs For Justice and was also Nijjar's lawyer, said he had no doubt the killing was ordered by Indian government officials, who allege Nijjar was involved in "violent or criminal activities in India or elsewhere."

The lawyer said he has received a growing number of threats as the Sikh separatist movement gains steam globally.

A CSIS spokesman declined to comment on the circumstances of Nijjar's killing, citing the ongoing investigation by B.C.'s Integrated Homicide Investigation Team.

Sgt. Tim Pierotti of the homicide team said Monday he was aware of speculation about the motives for the attack but would let evidence lead the case.

The National Investigation Agency did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment on Nijjar's killing.

Surrey RCMP say Nijjar was shot dead in his vehicle as he was leaving the car park of the Surrey gurdwara around 8.30 p.m. Sunday.

Assistant Commissioner Brian Edwards said Monday there were numerous witnesses and he asked them to set aside their fears and come forward to help the investigation.

Surrey Centre MP Randeep Sarai said on Twitter Tuesday that he was "saddened and shocked to see what happened at Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey this Sunday."

"While this is an active RCMP investigation, I encourage anyone who knows anything about it to contact the RCMP as they take steps to ensure those responsible are brought to justice."

Provincial Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said in a statement issued Tuesday that he was confident those responsible for the "profoundly disturbing" killing will be caught.

"Our thoughts are with his loved ones and everyone who has been affected by this crime," Farnworth said. “It’s particularly troubling that the shooting took place outside a place of worship, where people should be able to gather in safety with friends, family and community members."

A vigil attended by hundreds of people was held at the Surrey gurdwara on Monday night.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2023.

The Canadian Press
MODI IS A HINDU NATIONALIST
Dozens of US lawmakers urge Biden to raise rights issues with Modi -letter

Story by By Patricia Zengerle 

U.S. President Joe Biden holds videoconference with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi from the White House in Washington© Thomson Reuters

By Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Dozens of his fellow Democrats urged U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday to raise human rights issues with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to Washington this week, according to a letter sent to Biden.

Modi left for Washington on Tuesday for a visit projected as a milestone in ties between the two countries.

"We do not endorse any particular Indian leader or political party — that is the decision of the people of India — but we do stand in support of the important principles that should be a core part of American foreign policy," said the letter, led by Senator Chris Van Hollen and Representative Pramila Jayapal.

A total of 75 Democratic members of Congress - 18 senators and 57 members of the House of Representatives - signed the letter, sent to the White House on Tuesday and first reported by Reuters.

"And we ask that, during your meeting with Prime Minister Modi, you discuss the full range of issues important to a successful, strong, and long-term relationship between our two great countries," the letter said.

Related video: Modi-Biden Summit 2023 | Indian Diaspora Holds Unity March Ahead PM Modi's Visit | World News (Times Now)
Duration 3:02

Modi has been to the United States five times since becoming prime minister in 2014, but the trip will be his first with the full diplomatic status of a state visit, despite concerns over what is seen as a deteriorating human rights situation under his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.

Washington hopes for closer ties with the world's largest democracy, which it sees as a counterweight to China, but rights advocates worry that geopolitics will overshadow human rights issues. Several U.S. rights groups plan protests during Modi's visit.

The State Department's annual report on human rights practices released in March listed "significant human rights issues" and abuses in India.

'FRIENDS CAN AND SHOULD DISCUSS THEIR DIFFERENCES'

Modi will address a joint meeting of the House and Senate on Thursday, one of the highest honors Washington affords to foreign dignitaries.

"A series of independent, credible reports reflect troubling signs in India toward the shrinking of political space, the rise of religious intolerance, the targeting of civil society organizations and journalists, and growing restrictions on press freedoms and internet access," the lawmakers said in the letter.

They said they joined Biden in welcoming Modi to the United States, and want a "close and warm relationship" between the people of the two countries, saying that friendship should be based on shared values and "friends can and should discuss their differences in an honest and forthright way."

"That is why we respectfully request that — in addition to the many areas of shared interests between India and the U.S. — you also raise directly with Prime Minister Modi areas of concern," the letter said.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. But when asked last month about human rights concerns in India, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters Biden believes: "This is an important relationship that we need to continue and build on as it relates to human rights."

(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Don Durfee and Jonathan Oatis)

India’s Modi creates conundrum for US political leaders
Story by Laura Kelly •

 The Hill

Washington will welcome Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with open arms Thursday, highlighting a bipartisan effort to move past the many differences in the U.S.-India relationship and focus on their shared problem: China.

The Indian premier’s trip comes amid a push for defense and tech deals between the two countries, and as some lawmakers and human rights groups voice criticism of the trip, viewing Modi and his political party as responsible for violence in India directed toward the country’s Muslim minority.

Modi’s invitation to deliver an address to a joint session of Congress — which will be his second such speech — has raised alarm for activists and groups critical of his administration’s push toward silencing dissenters in India.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) tweeted that she will boycott the speech, and Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) announced she’ll hold a press conference with human rights groups directly after the prime minister’s address. The lawmakers are the only two Muslim women elected to Congress.

The Biden administration has signaled it views the visit as an important step in strengthening U.S.-India ties, fanning worries among critics that the White House is willing to soften criticisms in exchange for advancing a powerful economic and military relationship.

“My hope is that this visit basically consecrates the U.S. and India relationship as the most important bilateral relationship for the United States on the global stage,” Kurt Campbell, the National Security Council coordinator for the Indo-Pacific said during an event with the Hudson Institute earlier this month.

“I think the president is less about outward and ostentatious proselytizing about democracy and human rights and more about trying to let our model and our attempt to deal with our own challenges be a kind of model for how other countries might want to deal with their own challenges,” he added.

India, a democracy with a population of more than 1.4 billion and a reputation as a hub for innovation, is a priority business market that the Biden administration feels can serve as an alternative to China.

Though the U.S. and India have different priorities when it comes to China — New Delhi is more concerned about Beijing’s military buildup on its border than an invasion of Taiwan — U.S. lawmakers see a strong partner.

“One senior Indian official — I asked him what India’s greatest challenges were, he said, ‘No. 1 was China, No. 2 was China, No. 3 was China,’” Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), co-chairman of the Senate India Caucus and chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said on a panel discussion last week.

The scope and scale of economic and security deals that could come to fruition from Modi’s visit are being watched closely.


 PM Modi's US visit: Are India US ties the 'real deal'? (India Today)
Duration 50:03  View on Watch


“I want deals to go through,” Atul Keshap, president of the United States-India Business Council at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said in an interview with The Hill.

“The defense deals, the energy deals, the digital economy deals, the e-commerce, supply chain, manufacturing deals, semiconductor deals — business-to-business is part of the glue of this relationship. … Deal flow is critical for me, and I’m looking to see what the tally sheet shows after the State visit.”

One such priority agreement is the Biden administration’s signoff for General Electric to partner with Indian defense manufacturing to produce next-generation fighter jet engines, a lucrative deal that also requires the U.S. to share sensitive military technology.

The agreement is part of a larger trend wherein the U.S. has engaged India in critical security partnerships in a counter to China, such as the “Quad” grouping of the U.S., India, Australia and Japan, and the I2U2 — a separate alliance including Israel and the United Arab Emirates.

But while Washington and Delhi have shored up military partnerships and set the stage for deepening economic ties, human rights groups and lawmakers are raising alarm that the president is abandoning his promise to put respect for human rights at the center of his foreign policy.

Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), along with more than 70 of their colleagues, sent a letter to Biden on Tuesday urging him to raise with Modi the need to protect human rights and democratic values in India.

Groups have criticized the White House for rolling out the red carpet for Modi over weakening press freedoms and silencing dissenters in India and stressed the Biden administration is “whitewashing” his record.

“America knows and the world knows what Modi is, who Modi is, in fact, he was not even allowed to come to the United States for nine years until he became prime minister,” said Rasheed Ahmed, executive director of the Indian American Muslim Council, referring to the U.S. in 2005 banning Modi’s entry due to anti-Muslim violence that took place in Gujarat state when he was a governor.

“So it’s not that the U.S. administration does not know what he has done or what he is responsible for. But in spite of that, the Biden administration providing him this kind of platform is a real problem here,” he said, adding that military and strategic economic ties should not be a free pass for the Indian prime minister “to do whatever he wants to do.”

“If the Biden administration is interested in India as a strategic partner, as a bulwark for China, they need to make sure that it is first of all, it is stable, and second, it is a democracy,” Ahmed said.

There’s also the issue of New Delhi’s close ties with Moscow — a relationship that stretches back to the Soviet Union and has left Russia as a key arms supplier to India.

India has fiercely guarded its position of nonalignment and neutrality since the early days of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, despite pressure from the Biden administration to turn away from Moscow.

That tension could play out when India hosts the G20 summit in September, where Russian President Vladimir Putin faces few barriers in attendance. New Delhi is not a member of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and not obligated to act on an ICC arrest warrant against Putin for war crimes committed in Ukraine.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) called it “a little bit disappointing, when Russia invaded Ukraine, India took a pass,” but pointed to the need to wean New Delhi off of dependency on weapons from the Kremlin.

“They’re coming our way … and it can’t happen fast enough.”


Antlers and fancy dress: Stonehenge welcomes 8,000 visitors for summer solstice



STONEHENGE, England (AP) — All hail the rising sun.

Around 8,000 revellers gathered around a prehistoric stone circle on a plain in southern England to express their devotion to the sun, or to have some communal fun.

Druids, pagans, hippies, local residents and tourists, many clad in an array of colorful costumes and even antlers, stayed and celebrated at Stonehenge for the night and greeted sunrise on Wednesday, which is the longest day in the Northern Hemisphere.

At dawn, the sun rose behind what is known as the Heel Stone in the northeast part of the horizon and the first rays shone into the heart of Stonehenge, one of the world’s most famous prehistoric monuments and a World Heritage Site.

A sun-filled dawn followed a slightly misty sunrise, which was greeted with drumming, chanting and cheering.

“Stonehenge continues to captivate and to bring people together to celebrate the seasons, just as it has done for thousands of years,” said Nichola Tasker, director of Stonehenge at English Heritage, a charity that manages hundreds of historic sites.

“There was a wonderful atmosphere from sunset to sunrise, and everybody enjoyed a very atmospheric morning," she added.

Local police said two people were arrested on suspicion of a public order offense after they were refused entry due to intoxication.

“Everyone has been joyous, enjoying the event and having a glorious time and it has been peaceful and safe," said Wiltshire Police Chief Constable Catherine Roper, who attended the solstice for the first time.

In addition to the 8,000 people present, English Heritage said that approximately 154,000 people tuned in from around the world to watch the sunset and sunrise on the charity’s livestream

All over the U.K., optimism will reign supreme as summer officially starts. It's no coincidence that the nearby Glastonbury Festival, one of the world's biggest music events, opens its doors on Wednesday, too. Both Stonehenge and Glastonbury supposedly lie on ley lines — mystical energy connections across the U.K.

For the thousands making the pilgrimage to Stonehenge, approximately 80 miles (128 kilometers) southwest of London, it is more than looking forward to Elton John at Glastonbury or a few ciders in the sun. Many of those present at Stonehenge will be making the short 50-mile (80-kilometer) journey further west to Glastonbury over the coming days.

For druids, modern-day spiritualists linked to the ancient Celtic religious order, Stonehenge has a centuries-long importance, and they performed their rituals around the solstice in their traditional white robes. It's effectively all about the cycle of life, of death and rebirth.

This year, the summer solstice at Stonehenge started at 7 p.m. Tuesday and ran through 8 a.m. Wednesday. For this one night, worshippers are allowed to spend time inside the stone circle. Some chanted or played their acoustic guitars or banged their drums. Alcohol was prohibited, as were sound systems. Blankets were allowed, but no sleeping bags, please. And definitely, no climbing on the stones.

The rules have been tightened over the decades, certainly during the coronavirus pandemic. Back in the less-restrained past, tens of thousands would travel by foot, car, bus or motorcycle to worship at the solar temple, or just have a bit of fun.

Stonehenge is a symbol of British culture and history and remains one of the country’s biggest tourist draws, despite the seemingly permanent traffic jams on the nearby A303 highway, a popular route for motorists traveling to and from the southwest of England.

Stonehenge was built on the flat lands of Salisbury Plain in stages starting 5,000 years ago, with the unique stone circle erected in the late Neolithic period about 2,500 B.C. Some of the stones, the so-called bluestones, are known to have come from the Preseli Hills in southwest Wales, nearly 150 miles (240 kilometers) away, but the origins of others remain a mystery.

The site’s meaning has been the subject of vigorous debate, with some theories seemingly more outlandish, if not alien, than others.

English Heritage notes several explanations — from Stonehenge being a coronation place for Danish kings, a druid temple, a cult center for healing, or an astronomical computer for predicting eclipses and solar events.

The charity said the most generally accepted interpretation "is that of a prehistoric temple aligned with the movements of the sun.”

After all, the stones match perfectly with the sun at both the summer and winter solstices.

___

Pylas reported from London.

Pan Pylas And Kin Cheung, The Associated Press



Summer solstice: The science behind the longest day of the year

References
By Jamie Carter published 2 days ago

The summer solstice falls on June 20 or 21 every year in the Northern Hemisphere. Here's why this day is the longest day of the year, with the most hours of daylight.

On the summer solstice, the sun appears high in the sky at noon. In contrast, the noon sun appears low in the sky on the winter solstice.
 (Image credit: (C) Jonathan Chiang/Scintt via Getty Images)

Why does the date vary?
Earth's distance from the sun
How long is summer?
What does "solstice" mean?
Why isn't it the warmest day?
When is it?
Summer solstice celebrations


The summer solstice heralds the start of astronomical summer in the Northern Hemisphere and marks the day with the most daylight for the year. But what's the science behind the longest day and shortest night above the equator?

Solstices and equinoxes are markers of the seasons, which are caused by Earth's axis being tilted 23.5 degrees with respect to its orbit around the sun, according to NASA. That tilt means different parts of Earth receive sunlight for different lengths of time depending on the time of year. On the summer solstice, the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, receiving the full glare of the sun's rays — which means the longest day of the year.

At the North Pole, the sun literally does not set on the summer solstice. The exact opposite is true in the Southern Hemisphere, which experiences its winter solstice on the same day; at the South Pole, the sun will not rise.

In 2023, the summer solstice will occur at 10:57 a.m. EDT (1457 GMT) on June 21, according to timeanddate.com. Here's everything you need to know about the Northern Hemisphere's longest day of the year.

WHAT HAPPENS TO THE SUN ON THE SUMMER SOLSTICE?

On the summer solstice, there are more hours of sunlight the farther north you go in the Northern Hemisphere. People in this hemisphere might notice that the sun is very high in the sky at noon.

On the equinoxes — the two days of the year when both hemispheres experience the same amount of daylight and nighttime — the sun appears directly overhead, at 90 degrees above the equator at noon. But on the northern summer solstice, the noon sun appears directly overhead at a higher latitude: the Tropic of Cancer, which sits about 23.5 degrees north of the equator and runs through Algeria, Niger, Libya, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, China, Taiwan, Mexico, the Bahamas, Mauritania and Mali. The Tropic of Cancer is the most northerly latitude at which the sun can appear directly overhead at noon, according to the Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System, a project based at the University of Hawaii.

WHY DOES THE SUMMER SOLSTICE DATE VARY?

Each year, the summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere falls on one of two days: June 20 or June 21. In the Southern Hemisphere, the summer solstice happens on Dec. 21 or Dec. 22.

The date varies because the Gregorian calendar has 365 days, with an extra leap day added in February every four years. In reality, Earth's orbit around the sun takes 365.25 days, according to NASA. Due to this discrepancy, the solstice doesn't always occur on the same day.

EARTH'S DISTANCE FROM THE SUN

Some parts of the Northern Hemisphere get so hot during the summertime that you might think Earth is closer to the sun. However, it's actually the opposite: Earth is farthest from the sun when it's summer in the Northern Hemisphere, according to timeanddate.com.

On average, Earth is about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) from the sun, according to NASA. However, Earth will be farthest from the sun — a moment called aphelion — at 4:06 p.m. EDT on July 6, 2023, when it will be 94,506,364 miles (152,093,251 km) from the sun, according to Almanac.com. That's about two weeks after the June solstice.

Similarly, Earth will be closest to the sun, a point called perihelion, at 7:38 p.m. EDT on Jan. 2, 2024 — two weeks after the December solstice — when it will be 91,404,095 miles (147,100,632 km) from our star.

HOW LONG IS SUMMER?

There are two definitions and dates for each season: astronomical and meteorological.

Astronomically — that is, defined by the solstices and equinoxes — summer in the Northern Hemisphere begins on the summer solstice and ends on the autumnal or fall equinox. So, summer in the Northern Hemisphere lasts from June 20 or June 21 until Sept. 21, 22, 23 or 24.

However, the seasons do not last an equal number of days because Earth's speed varies as it travels around the sun on an elliptical, or egg-shaped, orbit. Summer lasts an average of 93.6 days in the Northern Hemisphere and an average of 89 days in the Southern Hemisphere, according to timeanddate.com.

Meteorological summer in the Northern Hemisphere lasts from June 1 through Aug. 31, according to the U.K.'s Met Office. Using this definition, winter lasts exactly three months, as do all seasons.

WHAT DOES "SOLSTICE" MEAN?

"Solstice" means "sun stands still" in Latin, according to NASA. That's because the sunrise on the solstice is the farthest northeast and sunset is the farthest northwest of the year. For a few days before and after the solstice, the sun also appears close to these farthest points before slowly drifting back to rise and set due east at the following equinox.

WHY ISN'T THE SUMMER SOLSTICE THE WARMEST DAY?

If there's so much sunlight in the Northern Hemisphere during the summer solstice, why isn't it the warmest day of the year?

It's because it takes time for Earth's land and water to heat up, otherwise known as a seasonal lag, according to the Royal Meteorological Society. Seasonal lag is caused by Earth's water, which covers about 70% of the planet's surface and soaks up a lot of the heat, meaning it takes longer to heat up the land.

After the summer solstice, the days begin to get shorter in the Northern Hemisphere. Northern midlatitudes experience about 15 hours of daylight in the weeks following the summer solstice, compared with around 9 hours of daily sunlight around the winter solstice. In addition, the Northern Hemisphere is still tilted toward the sun, making it warm.

WHEN IS THE SUMMER SOLSTICE?

Year
Northern Hemisphere summer solstice
Southern Hemisphere summer solstice2023
 10:57 am EDT, June 21 Dec. 22
2024 4:50 pm EDT, June 20 Dec. 21
2025 10:42 pm EDT, June 20 Dec. 21

SUMMER SOLSTICE CELEBRATIONS

Many cultures have recognized and marked the summer solstice. The most famous prehistoric site that ties in with the solstice is Stonehenge in England. When the sun rises on the longest day of the year, the sun's rays align with Stonehenge's Heel Stone. The moment is livestreamed on the official English Heritage YouTube channel.

From the Sphinx in Giza, Egypt, the sun appears to set between the ancient pyramids of Khafre and Khufu on the summer solstice.

What International Day of Yoga, Summer Solstice, and Sun Salutations Have in Common

Tamara Y. Jeffries
Tue, June 20, 2023 



This article originally appeared on Yoga Journal

International Day of Yoga (IDY), as the name implies, acknowledges the worldwide significance of yoga. The designation recognizes the practice not only as a part of the intangible cultural heritage of South Asia, but also as a global phenomenon. Celebrated annually on June 21, the day coincides with the summer solstice.

How did International Day of Yoga become a thing?

We have Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to thank for IDY. In 2014, he proposed that the United Nations officially recognize the practice. "Yoga is an invaluable gift from our ancient tradition," he said during his address. "Yoga is not just about exercise; it is a way to discover the sense of oneness with yourself, the world, and...nature." Based on yoga's popularity, its ancient tradition, and its scientifically shown effects on health, the U.N. General Assembly voted to make June 21 International Day of Yoga.

What's the Summer Solstice?

In the Northern Hemisphere, summer solstice is the longest day of the year, which coincides with the Sun being at its highest point in the sky, offering us the most hours of daylight. It marks the official beginning of summer. The exact moment of the solstice occurs on Wednesday, June 21, 2023, at 10:58 am ET, according to Almanac.com. It's considered a significant time astrologically as it delineates the beginning of another season, both in nature and astrology, as we transition into summer and Cancer season.

RELATED: What Does the Summer Solstice Mean?
What's the Connection Between Summer Solstice and Yoga?

Two words: Surya Namaskar. Also known as Sun Salutations, this traditional sequence was created out of reverence for the Sun and became an integral part of the practice of yoga. Indian sages are believed to have practiced Sun Salutations to awaken the body, align the mind, and tone and activate the Manipura, or solar plexus chakra, which is associated with intuition, self esteem, motivation, discipline, and a sense of purpose.

Since IDY became a thing, yoga practitioners all over the world have taken the longest day of the year as an opportunity to get outside, practice yoga, and appreciate the Sun.
Why Do Some People Avoid Celebrating International Day of Yoga?

You have Modi to thank for that, too. There's concern that his conservative government is using IDY to promote Hindu Nationalism-the idea that India is a Hindu nation. While he has ensured that India receives credit as the birthplace of yoga, his Hindu-first narrative is seen as a way to exclude other South Asian groups, particularly Muslims.
How You Can Participate in International Day of Yoga Classes

Politics aside, many practitioners take the day as an opportunity to celebrate the community and benefits of yoga. Following are a handful of the hundreds of gatherings taking place all over the world in honor of the day. 



A new way of exploring the ancient past: N. Ont archeologist wants Indigenous communities to play larger role

Story by Erik White •CBC


The call came on a Sunday. A couple digging up a stump on their land not far from New Liskeard had found what they thought was an arrowhead.

Archeologist Ryan Primrose grabbed his gear and headed out there, thinking it might just be an "unusual rock."

And it was very unusual. A foot-long piece of quartz, carved into a point.

"Immediately it became clear that this was a very rare site," says Primrose.

Buried in the ground, he found dozens of other ancient stone tools, packed in with red ochre— a dye used to paint pictographs— and a small piece of charcoal dating back 3,100 years.

That's before the Roman empire and before the city of Rome was even founded.

One of the key parts of excavating that find, known as the McLean Cache, was a call to Wayne McKenzie from Timiskaming First Nation, who held a feast and ceremony on the site where his ancestors had once walked.

He says he still gets a thrill holding that 3,000-year-old piece of quartz.

"It was pretty awesome to see. Really filled my heart to see it," says McKenzie.

"I'm a traditional man. So I sing a lot of old traditional songs passed down thousands of years, but to get a touch of it. It's home."



Wayne McKenzie of Timiskaming First Nation says it 'filled his heart' to hold objects used by his ancestors 3,000 years ago. (Erik White/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

Primrose says many of the tools were never used and the people who buried them likely never intended to return for them, instead leaving them as some kind of offering.

He says there are also tools that are very similar to those found in Michigan and Illinois, suggesting a trade network connection between the Great Lakes and the Temiskaming district far earlier than originally thought.


McKenzie says this part of his people's history is not well understood, including in their own communities, and hopes more will be revealed in the coming years.

"There is kind of a messy history part there. There's also a beautiful part of what was here and how we did live," he said.



Ryan Primrose (right) is trying to change how archeology is done in northern Ontario by working alongside Indigenous elders and communities. (Erik White/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

For years, Primrose has hired Indigenous people to work on his archeological digs to "provide education as well as employment and most importantly to put them in contact with their own history."

But now he wants to take that further and develop a new process where First Nations people work along side archeologists, then take their findings back to elders to be interpreted and decide how the excavation should proceed.

"So that one is not viewed as superior to the other, but are both viewed as ways to understand the past," says Primrose, who early in his career worked on Mayan sites in central America.



Primrose says some of the tools found in the 3,100-year-old cache are very similar to those found in Michigan and Illinois, suggesting there was greater trade between the Great Lakes and the Temiskaming area than originally thought. (Erik White/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

"I think it behooves us as archeologists to involve those First Nations people in the understanding of that history, which has not yet been written, so they themselves can be authors of the past."

He wants to test out that new process at a place known as Mill Creek, which flows out of Lake Temiskaming on land owned by the City of Temiskaming Shores.

Tina Nichol grew up splashing around in the creek and playing on trails that she didn't know were likely walked by her ancestors centuries before.

When her grandfather, who used to take her down to Mill Creek, died when she was 16, they found his birth certificate in a shoebox showing that he was Indigenous.

"You felt that even as a child playing down there. You knew how special and sacred that place was," said Nichol.

"Makes you feel good to know that you were walking in their steps."



Tina Nichol, a Métis woman who grew up in Haileybury, used to play as a kid in the Mill Creek area off Lake Temiskaming and now hopes to be involved in an archeological dig on the ancient portage trail. (Erik White/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

Now working for the Keepers of the Circle, a women's hub in the Temiskaming area, Nichol helps organize an annual pow wow at Mill Creek for National Indigenous Peoples Day.

And she is excited to be involved in future archeological digs on the site and find out if ceremonies were also held there in the past.

"We're all new to this. This is a new type of relationship we're having with scientists. So I think we need to take our time and do it culturally appropriately and learn from the past," Nichol said.

"It's a deep love and very humbling to be present and witness both the findings and growing up there and seeing it unfold, you can't ask for better truth and reconciliation all at the same time."
Canada to miss net-zero 2050 emissions goal without further action -energy regulator

The Irving Oil refinery is photographed at sunset in Saint John, New Brunswick
© Thomson Reuters

By Rod Nickel

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) - Canada will fall short of reaching net-zero emissions by 2050, unless it takes actions beyond the efforts already underway, the Canada Energy Regulator (CER) said on Tuesday.

The CER's annual report laid out three scenarios around Canada's net-zero 2050 goal, an ambition that other countries have adopted as well. The report did not make recommendations on how to meet the goal.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government has implemented a carbon tax and is planning regulations to reduce emissions from electricity, fuel, and oil and gas production.

The possibility that the world's fourth-largest oil producer may miss its net-zero goal shows the challenge of cutting emissions on a national scale despite the urgency of global warming.

"It's a very ambitious and challenging goal to meet for Canada," CER chief economist Jean-Denis Charlebois told reporters. "Every industry, every province, everyone will need to make a difference."

The government has acknowledged previously that further actions are needed for Canada to reach the 2050 goal, a senior official said.

The report said Canadian oil production will continue to grow until late this decade due to high prices, even if Canada steps up emissions-cutting efforts.

In its most optimistic scenario, in which Canada reaches net-zero by 2050 through new actions and the world limits global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, Canadian crude production would peak in 2026. Output would fall to 1.2 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2050, from a record 5 million bpd in 2022.

In a scenario in which Canada achieves net-zero by 2050 but the rest of the world moves more slowly, Canadian oil production would rise until 2029, the report said.

Under the third scenario, in which Canada and the world take little additional action to reduce emissions, Canadian oil production would peak in 2035.

If Canada does achieve net-zero by 2050, it will be producing electricity by almost entirely zero-emission or low-emissions technologies, led by a sharp increase in wind generation, the report said.

Electricity demand will double by 2050 if Canada achieves the 2050 goal, the CER said.

(Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Manitoba; additional reporting by Steve Scherer in Ottawa; Editing by Leslie Adler)
White House adviser Podesta says controversial pipeline was ‘inevitable’

Story by Rachel Frazin • Yesterday 

The Hill

White House adviser John Podesta said Tuesday that the approval of the controversial Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) was “inevitable” — defending President Biden’s signing of legislation that advanced the pipeline.

“MVP was on its way to being permitted anyway,” Podesta said Tuesday following an event announcing funds for sustainable upgrades to federal buildings. “I think MVP was inevitable.”

Democrats first agreed to pass legislation approving the pipeline, a 303-mile project that would carry natural gas from West Virginia to Virginia, as part of their deal with Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) in exchange for his vote on their climate, tax and healthcare bill.

Their initial attempts to pass it as part of a permitting reform package flopped last year, but efforts to legislate the pipeline’s approval were recently revived in a deal between the White House and House Republican leadership to lift the debt ceiling.

The passage of the provision has rankled climate activists, who say the administration should not be bolstering additional fossil fuel infrastructure.
BHP warns carbon emissions to rise on bumpy net zero path

Bloomberg News | June 20, 2023 |

BHP’s Newman operations. Credit: BHP

BHP Group Ltd. is warning its carbon emissions will rise in the short term, with rapid technological advances and industrial collaboration needed if the mining giant is to reach its goal of net zero emissions by 2050.


The world’s biggest miner is on track to meet its target of a 30% reduction in operational emissions by 2030 at a cost of around $4 billion, it said Wednesday. Still, it expects a “near-term increase in emissions from production growth” from current levels, Graham Winkelman, the group’s head of carbon management, said in an investor briefing.

Carbon reduction technologies “must advance quickly from where it is now” and needs to include collaborations “with our vendors and industry,” BHP said in a presentation. The Melbourne-based company’s path to net zero would be “non-linear,” it added, with emissions rising before falling again by the end of the decade.

The major iron ore, coal and copper producer plans to reduce its operational (Scope 1 and 2) greenhouse gas emissions by at least 30% on 2020 figures by 2030, and reach net zero in those emissions by 2050. Those targets don’t include “Scope 3” emissions, including those from end-users such as steelmakers and other customers.

The admission of short-term increases in emissions from BHP comes even as its environmental targets remain less ambitious than those of its peers. Rio Tinto Group, which is a bigger emitter, aims to reduce its Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 50% by 2030 from a 2018 baseline, while Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. is aiming to reach net zero by that year.

Around 75% of the $4 billion that BHP plans to spend on decarbonization by 2030 will be spent on replacing diesel use in haul trucks. It favors battery-powered haul trucks over hydrogen power because they are more than twice as efficient, Anna Wiley, the vice president of planning and technical in the company’s Australian minerals division, said on the conference call.

‘Dynamic charging’


BHP will trial “dynamic charging” at its mines in Western Australia and Chile, allowing trucks to be charged while they are still in operation. It said its unfinished Jansen potash mine in Canada, which is due to start producing the fertilizer ingredient in 2026, would use 80% electric haul trucks from day one.

The company’s Australian iron ore mines are not connected to the grid and are powered by purpose-built gas generators. A switch to electric haul trucks will see power demand surge, and BHP plans to build 500 megawatts of renewables and storage to meet growing demand and decarbonize its electricity emissions, it said. It will also explore options for plugging into to a wider regional grid.

BHP’s coal mines in Queensland are the single biggest emitters in its Australian operations, producing almost half its pollution. Around a third of that comes from methane escaping from the coal seams, Wiley said.

It aims to capture about 50% of that methane and use it to generate electricity or sell to third parties, and said it was “exploring” options for the rest, adding that carbon offsets would likely be needed.

Still, of the $4 billion it plans to spend on decarbonization by 2030, BHP allocated a negligible amount to methane, with diesel, electricity and gas emissions the main targets. The company’s Western Australian iron ore division will be the biggest recipient of decarbonization investment between now and 2030, followed by the Escondida copper mine in Chile, it said.

(By James Fernyhough)