20/02/2021

(USA) Undercover Investigation Reveals Supermarkets Are Destroying the Climate

Gizmodo - Dharna Noor

Grocery stores refrigerators are releasing planet-warming pollution. Photo: Thomas Samson (Getty Images)

The world’s food system is a major source of greenhouse gas pollution, from the emissions caused by farming and ranching to those released by the planes, trains, and trucks used to transport groceries. 

A new report shows the freezer aisle in the grocery store could also be an even bigger source of pollution than we thought.

Most cooling technology emits greenhouse gases called hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), which have thousands of times more heating potential than carbon dioxide. Environmental Investigation Agency, an environmental advocacy nonprofit, conducted an undercover study using industry-standard leak sensors to detect HFC emissions at 45 big-box chain supermarkets in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia. 

The group also used an infrared camera to make the illicit leaks visible to the human eye. (You can check out this video to see an example from a Giant grocery store.) The investigation focused mostly on Walmart because is the largest retailer in the U.S., but also examined other chains, including ALDI, Safeway, Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods.

The authors found that more than half of the stores they surveyed were emitting HFCs. Of the 20 Walmarts the investigators visited, they detected HFC pollution at 60% of them. They documented leaks at 55% of the other supermarkets they visited, “consistent with concerns that refrigerant leaks are an industry-wide problem,” the report says.

The amount of pollution the sensors picked up varied widely, from as little as 2 parts per million (ppm) to 182 ppm. But according to the company Bacharach, which manufactured the leak detectors the investigators used, even a 2 ppm reading can indicate a bigger problem.

“Always keep in mind that leaks are going to be a dispersion, so 2 ppm in [one location] could be a much greater leak as the air mixes and disperses throughout the unit,” an instructional video from the company says.

The leaks occurred despite promises from some of the chains to get a handle on refrigerant pollution. In 2010, for instance, Walmart as well as other mega-retailers signed the Consumer Goods Forum Refrigerant Resolution to begin phasing out HFCs starting in 2015. But it’s not clear if they’ve made any progress, since the firm’s 2020 Environmental, Social, and Governance report made no mention of refrigerant-related goals.

Last September, the company seemingly redoubled its efforts, promising that it is “transitioning to low-impact refrigerants for cooling and electrified equipment for heating in its stores, clubs, and data and distribution centers by 2040.” But as the new report notes, the promise is vague.

“In this announcement, ‘low-impact refrigerants,’ are not defined, nor are any intermediary goals over the next two decades to achieve these objectives,” the authors of the report wrote. “Walmart also failed to offer a plan to address current leaks of HFCs from its stores in its announcement.”

U.S. retailers’ procrastination is having an awful climate impact. New data from the Environmental Protection Agency released Friday shows that national HFC pollution increased by 4 million metric tons between 2018 and 2019. Supermarkets aren’t the only source of these emissions or the increase; HFCs are commonly used in many industries as well as home air conditioning. 

Still, according to previous Environmental Investigation Agency report based on EPA data, the country’s tens of thousands of supermarket grocery stores’ HFC refrigerants produce as much global warming pollution annually as burning 49 billion pounds (22 billion kilograms) of coal.

Without big changes, federal projections indicate that HFCs will be the equivalent of up to 19% of carbon dioxide emissions by 2050. But it doesn’t have to be that way. We have the technology to change course right now. Alternative coolants with far less climate impact, like carbon dioxide, propane, and ammonia are already on the market. 

There are already some 600 supermarkets across the U.S. that use exclusively HFC-free refrigerants, but the nation is lagging far behind progress in other parts of the world. Europe, for instance, already has 26,000 supermarkets that use these technologies.

According to the EPA, addressing HFC emissions is the nation’s single largest opportunity for climate change mitigation. Thankfully, it seems the U.S. may finally getting serious about regulating these super-polluting chemicals out of use, though. 

 In December, Congress passed a plan to rapidly phase down production and use of HFCs. And last month, President Joe Biden directed his government to join the Kigali Amendment, an international agreement to stop using the refrigerant chemicals by mid-century.

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(AU) Australians Fear Climate Change More Than Catching Covid, Survey Shows

The Guardian

Edelman Trust Barometer records big gains for attitudes towards government, media and business, but not technology

After a horror year of bushfires and coronavirus lockdowns, a survey has found Australians are more worried about the effects of climate change than catching Covid-19. Photograph: Sandra Sanders/Reuters

A new survey has found Australians are more afraid of climate change than catching Covid-19 – and they want government to do something about it. The 2021 Edelman Trust Barometer asked 1,350 Australians questions on a range of topics between October and November 2020.

While the survey found that Australians were most immediately concerned with job security after the pandemic, climate change ranked as the second biggest issue of concern – even above risks posed by the pandemic itself.

More than four in five respondents reported that they were concerned about losing their jobs, with two-thirds saying their hours had been slashed during the pandemic.

Beyond immediate material concerns, the next biggest issue was the need to tackle climate change with 66% saying they were worried about its effects and – a feeling that has grown since the last survey: 32% said it was more important now than ever.

In addition, 36% people said they were more afraid of climate change than they were of contracting Covid-19. Only 25% of respondents were worried about the risk of infection.

The survey also found that during the pandemic trust had grown for every major institution except technology, with government, business, NGOs and media all recording gains.

While trust in government grew 12 points to 59%, one of the most trusted relationships Australians had was with their employers, with 78% saying they trusted their own boss over business more broadly.

Yet more than two-thirds also said they wanted their bosses to address social issues and act to fix problems where the government did not.

Though it was not top of the list, Michelle Hutton, CEO of Edelman Australia, said on the whole Australians had far more trust in government than the “dramatically lower” rates recorded in the US and UK.

“The astonishing gains in trust we’ve seen across the board tells us that Australians are responding well to how institutions have behaved through the pandemic,” Hutton said.

“Amid last year’s bushfires, we saw the environment emerge as a top concern for 89% of Australians, and throughout 2020, many of us have experienced first-hand the dramatic impacts of climate change as our regional communities struggled to recover.

“What’s interesting, however, is that more Australians are concerned about climate change than they are about contracting Covid-19 – suggesting there’s a rising awareness of the long-term, potentially calamitous impact to society.”

The growing concern over climate change reinforces the results of a December 2020 Guardian Essential poll of 1,032 voters that found growing support for tackling the issue through a range of policies.

These included banning fossil fuel companies from making political donations and a faster transition to a carbon-neutral economy.

Three in four voters surveyed at the time also said they wanted a more ambitious emissions reduction target of net zero by 2030, rather than the net zero by 2050 emissions being discussed.

When broken down along party lines, support for a 2050 target was not only high among Labor and Greens voters, but three-quarters of those identifying themselves as Coalition supporters.

The Edelman survey’s findings showing a growing trust in government adds to those from the Scanlon Foundation’s Mapping Social Cohesion Report.

The survey of 3,000 people released in December last year found trust in government had spiked dramatically during the pandemic as the federal response received an 85% approval.

Another 55% of respondents to that survey had a broad faith in government to generally “do the right thing” – a significant increase on previous years. Trust in government averaged 32% over the last 13 years.

These findings come in the context of a horror year in which Australians lived through a catastrophic bushfire season that burned 18.6m hectares and a global pandemic.

They suggest a newfound trust in core institutions after having to rely on government for direct financial support and health information during the pandemic – a series of direct interventions by government many would now like to see directed towards the climate crisis, at a time when the Coalition government is increasingly exposed on the issue.

In recent weeks the government was criticised for releasing a “do nothing” electric vehicle strategy while the UK has called for Australia to be hit with carbon tariffs over its inaction.

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(AU) Coal Sector Losses Near $1.5b

AFRPeter Ker


Key Points
  • Revenue ($m) 699.3, down 21pc from year-earlier 885.1
  • Pre-tax profit ($m) 37.2 v 177.3
  • Net loss ($m) 94.5 v profit of 27.4
  • Interim dividend (¢) nil v 1.5
Whitehaven Coal has added to the Australian coal sector’s tale of woe this reporting season with a $94.4 million loss for the six months to December 31.
  
The result continues a sobering week for the coal sector, where total losses are headed toward $1.5 billion after Glencore and BHP revealed huge losses on their local thermal and coking coal divisions.

All three companies were hit by extremely low prices for both coking and thermal coal between July and September as coronavirus lockdowns in many nations reduced demand.

China’s ban on Australian coal in the final three months of 2020 also did not help.

A recovery in coal prices over the Australian summer could not offset the financial damage done in the six month period.

Glencore’s Australian coal business lost $US602 million ($776 million) before interest and tax in the six months to December 31.

BHP’s Australian coal business lost a staggering $US478 million ($613.8 million) in the six month period, and that loss did not include tens of millions of dollars spent managing coronavirus precautions such as Queensland’s hard border.

There were further losses for BHP in its Colombian coal assets.

Whitehaven had not been expected to pay a dividend, under the conditions of a deal with lenders that relieved Whitehaven of certain covenants.

In good news for the company, unit costs declined to $70 per tonne during the period, down from $76 per tonne in the same period of 2019.

Unit costs have been one of the focuses of Whitehaven boss Paul Flynn’s “strive” agenda, which has sought to improve operating culture and decision making across the company.

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