[inaudible].
Speaker 2:Hi and welcome to the angry clean energy guy podcast. I am the angry, clean energy guy, Assad resume, and this is episode 13 I am so happy you're here. Thank you. This week I am going to rent about luxury cruises, about airlines, about big corporations and about Canada. Yes. Specifically Canada's parliament. Canada's parliament is my villain of the week because only one day, just one day after declaring a climate emergency, parliament approved the expansion of a massive pipeline that will increase oil production in Alberta and release a massive amount of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. I mean that makes no sense whatsoever. Canada. That's actually crazy bonkers. Matt, what are you doing? Canada
Speaker 1:[inaudible]
Speaker 2:so let's talk about luxury cruises, but first can we all agree then in that in most places in the world, when you drive above the speed limit, you pay a fine and that when you litter, you pay or should pay the fine. That makes sense, doesn't it? And I don't understand why that simple logical fare rule isn't applied to corporations properly. Today's example is from the cruise shipping industry. Luxury cruises specifically. Yes. Those that take you to perfect vacation spots to unplug from the chaos of everyday life without the experience of waiting in line at the airport or dragging your bags to your fifth hotel. Now I understand why people might like cruises and luxury cruises, but what I don't understand is that just 47 cruise ships, 47 cruise ships owned by the largest cruise operator in the world, Carnival Corporation emitted 10 times more sulfur oxide in one year than Europe's 260 million cars. And do you know what they paid for emitting all that poison? Nothing. Zero, Zilch. They were free to pull you out. Now, sulfur oxide causes irritation of the nose, irritation of the throat, nausea, vomiting, stomach pain and damages, airways and lungs. When you breathe it, shame on you carnival corporation. Now, why is it that ships are allowed to pollute freely and not pay a dime for that pollution? Why don't we have stringent rules that stopped them from doing that? I mean, it would make perfect sense for us to have these rules. Carnival Corporation with the big bad British American cruise operator is today the world's largest leisure company. It's got a hundred vessels across 10 cruise line brands, and I'm sure some of you or most of you would have heard of these brands. They're called Carnival cruise line, Holland America line, Princess cruises, Seabourn, PNO cruises, Cunard Ida cruises, costs that cruises, et cetera. So all these nice sounding names that want us to dream about adventure are not what they sound like. The good people at Carnival Corporation have been paying heavy fines for breaking the law since 2002 but they've paid far too few and only when they were caught red handed and by mistake, and that's for breaking the law, polluting our air, by the way, with sulfur oxide is amazingly, perfectly legal. You don't pay a fine for that. They've paid a fine for other stuff in 2016 they've fade a$40 million penalty for illegally dumping all contaminated waste into the sea and then trying to cover it up. It's all in a big fat, nice lawsuit that you can Google. So the$40 million fine that carnival corporation paid in 2016 was the largest criminal penalty ever imposed for intentional pollution by vessel. Now you would think that stopped carnival corporation, but it did not this year. It's ordered to pay an additional$20 million for violating it's probation terms, which means for doing what it did before again, and that's illegally dumping oil contaminated waste into the sea and then covering it up. Now let's come back to the sulfur oxide that I referred to before. Shipping is the least regulated transport sector as regards air pollution. They use fuel, which is 100 times worse than diesel. And as a result they emit is staggering amount of poison, the sulfur oxide and knocks as well. And then that makes it into our lungs. Thanks to the shipping industry. Now, shipping is a very important industry because 90% 90% of world trade is carried across the world's oceans by 90,000 marine vessels. So every day the clothes, technology, the toys that fill the shelves in the shopping centers arrive there as if by magic via the shipping fleet. So nine out of 10 items shipped halfway around the world are shipped on board. Some of the biggest and dirtiest machines on the planet, just one container ship, one container ship can produce the same amount of pollution as 50 million cars, which means 15 just 15 big mega containerships match in terms of pollution, all the cars in the world, all of them. Now the pollution occurs far out at sea, so it's out of sight. It's out of mind and out of reach of any government because the industry does not self-respect itself. It's trying to cut corners and save money at every opportunity they dump. Not only, not only do they use the dirtiest possible fuel to power the ships, they also dump their waste water. They dumped their plastic, they dump their trash, they dump their excess oil. I mean, they are just terrible. The bunker fuel that they use, which is the leftover at the end of the refining process, is an environmental nightmare. It's heavy, it's toxic, it doesn't evaporate and it emits more poison than other fuels. It's also poisonous by the way, to fish and isn't much good for seabirds or as you just heard for humans living near ports. Now the industry is regulated by the International Maritime Organization and I'm using regulated because I have a sense of humor. Clearly the International Maritime Organization or IMO isn't doing anything much at all. They are a bunch of incompetent regulators. They have not managed to negotiate a reduction in emission from the industry and they have no teeth to stop these 90,000 vessels from polluting at well and dumping their trash in the oceans. Airlines, by the way, talking about the transport sector are not much better because they get their jet fuel tax free and there are allowed to use the skies as a public sewer at no cost zero just like ships. They are allowed to use the oceans as a public sewer at no cost. How fair is that? If we citizens litter, we pay a fine ships and airlines should be paying huge fines for what they're doing. Why is it that the citizen is always asked to be fair to other citizens, but corporations can do what they just like. They are killing us people, corporations, big bad corporations are killing us and on the subject of corporations you should know that they're all mostly bad. It's not just cruise companies in airlines. There is a recent report that accused more than 700 companies including Amazon, their school, and of course Exxon mobile of failing to reveal the full extent of their impact on the climate crisis, on Water Chore Shortages and on Deforestation. In other words, they are hiding their actions and they are lying. They pretend to report their environmental impact in their own sustainability reports, but that is completely insufficient because their reports don't use standardized data and you can't read them so you don't actually know what they're doing, so they're trying to look good while acting bad. That's exactly what they're trying to do and it's called double speak. It's called having a fork donk, it's called lying. That list by the way of 707 companies includes of course all of big oil and gas companies such as BP and Exxon, Mobil and Chevron, but it also includes palm, all giants like Genting plantations and UK high street brands including Tesco, Ocado, wh Smith marks and Spencer and many, many others.[inaudible] 47 luxury cruise ships emit more poison than all of Europe's 260 million cars. 15 mega containerships emit more warming gas. Then all the cars in the world and ships and aircraft are using the oceans and disguise as public sewers with their regulators doing absolutely nothing, actually less than nothing about it. And behind these two sectors, more than 700 companies were accused again of failing to reveal the full extent of their impact on the climate crisis of hiding their impact on the climate crisis, but also on shortages of water and on deforestation. Remember as I explained in more detail in episode 11 of the angry clean energy guy, just 90 companies are responsible for two thirds of the harmful warming gas generated since the industrial age began and all of them are oil, gas, coal, or cement companies. 90 companies are frying the planet and finally the largest 3000 companies by market capitalization cause$2 trillion of environmental damage per year,$2 trillion of environmental damage per year. So it is absolutely unacceptable that citizens are always asked to be fair to other citizens and pay their dues when corporations get away with it. The entire system is rigged in favor of big corporations and this is costing us our health, our environment, and we're frying the planet while we're at it. That needs to change.
Speaker 1:[inaudible]
Speaker 2:thank you so much for listening to me. The angry clean energy guy. This far, my hero of the week is governor Cuomo of New York state. Why? Because New York state with a population of 20 million is passing an aggressive 100% renewable energy mandate. They, New York state are going to go 70% renewable by 2030 100% zero carbon by 2040 that is another in controvertible evidence that we can do it. We can transition to 100% renewable energy. California New York are showing the way and every US state and city and every country and city in the entire world should follow suit. Renewables are cheaper, they're healthier and they don't kill us. My villain of the week is Canada's parliament because only one day after declaring a climate emergency, which you would have imagined that they are taking seriously since they're declaring it. So just one day after declaring a climate emergency, they approve the expansion of a massive pipeline that will increase oil production in Alberta, release more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and export some of the dirtiest oil on the planet. Thank you for listening. Don't hesitate, send my way. Any questions you have about clean energy, climate change, or whatever else you like and stuff in the green space. Remember that makes you angry is also always very welcome. I am working very hard on my website, the angry, clean energy guy.com that should go live in about a week and it will have in it transcripts of all the episodes. On that note, have a great week.
Speaker 1:[inaudible].