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Bernie Sanders backs new climate plan to curb US fossil fuel extraction

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Senator co-sponsors Keep it in the Ground Act in bid to ban all new fossil fuel leases on public lands, something activists view as a gap in Obama’s climate plan

Bernie Sanders launched a new climate campaign on Wednesday, aimed at fighting global warming by banning new coal, oil and gas mining on public land.

The Keep it in the Ground Act co-sponsored by the senator and Democratic presidential candidate aims at plugging one of the big gaps in Barack Obama’s climate change plan: his administration’s continued sanction of fossil fuel extraction on the government’s lands and waters.

The bill, authored by Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon, and supported by Democratic senators Barbara Boxer of California, Ben Cardin of Maryland, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Patrick Leahy of Vermont, and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts in addition to Sanders, says that the US could avoid the vast majority of fossil fuel emissions by stopping any new mining projects.

The bill seeks to ban new drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans as well as on government lands in the West.

On many of those areas, extraction is still in its very early stages. “The potential emissions resulting from extracting and burning all fossil fuels on Federal land and waters amounts to a significant percentage of the greenhouse gas emissions limit,” the bill says.

“Ending new leases for fossil fuels will prevent the release of 90% of the potential emissions from Federal fossil fuels,” it went on.

The International Energy Agency has declared that two-thirds of the world’s coal, oil and gas reserves must stay in the ground to avoid triggering dangerous and irreversible climate change.

Campaigners estimate up to 450bn tonnes of coal, oil and gas reserves remain in lands and water under US government control. Already, campaigners estimate, up to 4% of global greenhouse gas emissions originate from those fossil fuels mined in US public lands and waters. Extracting and burning those reserves undermine Obama’s efforts to avoid that climate-altered future.

“We need to drive this understanding that for us to be good stewards of our planet, we must keep in the ground the vast majority of fossil fuel reserves,” Merkley told reporters on a conference call on Tuesday.

The initiative adds to growing pressure on the Obama administration from campaigners to do more to fight climate change on its own turf.

In an open letter last September, more than 400 campaign groups called on Obama to stop the sale of new oil and gas leases on public lands.

“Over the past decade, the burning of fossil fuels from federal leasing has resulted in nearly a quarter of all US energy-related emissions and nearly 4 per cent of global emissions,” the letter said. “Despite this pollution and the looming climate threat, your administration continues to lease publicly owned fossil fuels, endangering the health and welfare of communities and the planet.”

Obama has made some small steps to limit fossil fuel production in lands and waters under his government’s control. The administration last month cut off the prospects for future oil drilling in Arctic waters, cancelling two oil lease auctions and turning down requests from Shell and other companies for more time on their existing leases.

Wednesday’s initiative has almost no chance of becoming law. But it accomplishes two important goals for environmental campaigners: underscoring Obama’s reluctance to tackle the supply side of climate change; and keeping climate change on the political agenda ahead of next year’s presidential elections.

Sanders’ support for the bill solidifies the Democratic presidential contender’s reputation as one of the greenest members of the Senate and – once again – puts him out ahead of Clinton in supporting strong action on climate change. Sanders was an early opponent of the Keystone XL pipeline and Arctic drilling, forcing Clinton to shift her positions on both issues in the last few months.

Obama has won widespread praise from campaigners for his efforts to fight climate change – anchored by his plan to cut carbon pollution from power plants, the biggest single source of greenhouse gas emissions. But there is growing frustration that Obama has focused his measures so far on smokestack emissions rather than heading off the use of fossil fuels at the source, such as restricting mining leases on government lands.

“President Obama has done more than any president in past to address climate change but the bills coming out of the administration have been focused on tail pipes and power plants. They haven’t been addressing the source of the emissions. But this bill would put pressure on the administration to focus on keeping fossil fuels in the grounds instead of digging them up in the first place,” said Marissa Knodel, climate campaigner from Friends of the Earth.

Democratic party operatives meanwhile exhibit growing confidence that climate change will emerge as an important wedge issue in the 2016 presidential elections, casting their Republican opponents as anti-science and detached from reality because of their refusal to acknowledge the existence of climate change or deal with its consequences.

  • This article was amended on 5 November 2015 to correct the name of the US senator from Maryland. He is Ben Cardin, not Bill Cardin.

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