"Marathon Petroleum recently announced it will 'indefinitely idle'  its Martinez Refinery. The decision will remove hundreds of jobs, billions of  dollars, and nearly 7 million gallons of gasoline, diesel and other petroleum  liquids per day from the energy-hungry California economy. 
                It will also send  fuel prices even higher for minority and other poor families that already pay by far the highest  gasoline prices in the continental United States: $1.32 more  per gallon of regular than in Louisiana and Texas.
                California’s green and political interests don’t want drilling  or fracking, pipelines, or nuclear, coal or hydroelectric power plants – or  mining for the materials needed to manufacture electric cars. They prefer to  have that work [out of sight] done somewhere else, and just import the energy, cars and  consumer goods.
                They’ve long wanted a totally electric vehicle (EV) fleet, which  they claim would be clean, ethical, climate-friendly and sustainable. Of  course, those labels hold up only so long as they look solely at activities and  emissions within California state boundaries – and not where the mining,  manufacturing and electricity generation take place. 
                That kind of 'life cycle'  analysis would totally disrupt their claims.
                Consider copper. 
                A typical internal combustion engine uses about  50 pounds (23 kilograms) of this vital everyday metal, the International Copper  Association says. A hybrid car requires almost 90 lb (40 kg); a plug-in EV  needs 132 lb (60 kg); and a big electric bus can use up to 812 lb (369 kg) of  copper. 
                If all 15,000,000 California cars were EVs, they would need  almost 1,000,000 tons of copper. But copper ores average just 0.5% metal by weight, notes energy  analyst Mark Mills. That means 200,000,000 tons  of ore would have to be dug up, crushed, processed and refined to get that much copper. 
                [Of California politicians wouldn't tell you] Almost every step in that process would require fossil  fuels – and emit carbon dioxide and pollutants.
                [And] That’s just California. 
                According to Cambridge University  Emeritus Professor of Technology Michael Kelly, replacing all the United Kingdom’s  vehicles with next-generation EVs would require more than half  the world’s annual production of copper; twice its annual cobalt; three  quarters of its yearly lithium carbonate output; and nearly its entire annual  production of neodymium.
                Just one electric car or backup-power battery weighs 1,000  pounds and requires extracting and processing some 500,000 pounds of various  ores, Mills says. The true costs of 'green; energy are staggering.
                Imagine replacing all of the USA’s nearly 300,000,000 cars,  SUVs, pickup trucks, buses, trucks and other vehicles with electric versions  under the Green New Deal –  and then charging them daily. 
                The millions of wind turbines, billions of solar  panels, billions of backup-power batteries, thousands of miles of new  transmission lines, grid upgrades and million or so fast charging stations all  across America would also require copper, concrete, all these other metals and  many more materials, in incomprehensible quantities.
                Alaska’s Pebble Mine  deposit has an estimated 35 million tons of high-grade copper  ore and 3 million tons of molybdenum and other critical GND ores. The copper  alone is nearly two times the world’s 2019 output of that essential element. 
                Permits were blocked for years for questionable  reasons. But the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers recently found that  mining would not have a 'measurable effect' on sockeye salmon numbers in the  Bristol Bay watershed and should be allowed to proceed, under tough U.S.  pollution control, reclamation, wildlife protection, workplace safety, fair  wage and child labor laws.
                Environmentalists intend to delay the Pebble Mine as long as  possible – and block other U.S. exploration and mining projects. 
                That’s why most  mining and processing is done overseas [and away from U.S. shores], much of it in  China and Mongolia or by Chinese companies in Africa, Asia and  Latin America, where none of these laws apply. [Like those Nike Sneakers.] 
                Most of the world’s rare earth ores are extracted near Baotou,  Inner Mongolia by pumping acid into the ground, then processed using more acids  and chemicals. 
                Producing one ton of  rare earth metals releases up to 420,000 cubic feet of toxic gases, 2,600 cubic  feet of acidic wastewater, and a ton of radioactive waste. The resulting black  sludge is piped into a foul, lifeless  lake. Numerous local people suffer from severe skin and respiratory  diseases, children are born with soft bones, and cancer rates have soared.
                Lithium comes largely from Tibet and arid highlands of the  Argentina-Bolivia-Chile 'lithium triangle.' Dead, toxic fish  join carcasses of cows and yaks floating down Tibet’s Liqi  River, which has been poisoned by the Ganzizhou Rongda mine. 
                Native people in  the ABC triangle say lithium operations contaminate streams needed for humans,  livestock and irrigation, and leave mountains of discarded salt.
                The world’s top producer of cobalt is the Democratic Republic of  Congo, where some 40,000  children as young as four toil with their parents for less than  $2 a day up to 12 hours a day. Many die in cave-ins, or more slowly from  constant exposure to toxic, radioactive mud, dust, water and air that puts  dangerous levels of cobalt, lead, uranium and other heavy metals into their  bodies. 
                [But leftist U.S. politicians don't care. It's not their worry. These people working in mines in other countries don't vote in American elections.] 
                The cobalt ore is sent to China for processing by the Chinese-owned  Congo Dongfang International Mining Company. That’s just to meet current raw material requirements. Try to  picture the raw material demands, Third World mining and child labor  conditions, and ecological destruction, under the Green  New Deal.
                Liberals often say they support sustainable, ethical coffee,  sneakers, handbags and diamonds. No child labor, sweat shops or unsafe  conditions tolerated. But it’s a different story with green energy and EVs. 
                In  2019, California Assembly Bill 735 proposed that the state certify that 'zero  emission' electric vehicles sold there are free of any materials or components  that involve child labor. 
                Democrats voted it  down. 
                The matter is complicated, they 'explained. It would be  too hard to enforce, cost too much and imperil state climate goals. And  besides, lots of other industries also use child labor. (So shut up about it.)
                Last month, the U.S. House of Representatives had an opportunity  to legislate a national certification that federally funded electric buses and  charging stations would not include minerals mined with child labor. The  Transportation Committee approved the amendment 43-19 (all 19 nay votes were  Democrats). 
                But Pete DeFazio(D-OR) quietly replaced the  enforceable certification language with a meaningless statement that 'it is the  policy of the United States' that funds 'should not be used' for items  involving child labor. DeFazio claimed certification is unnecessary because U.S. trade  agreements prohibit child labor. But there is no agreement with Congo, and  China has shown no interest in ending child labor in its supply chains. 
                (Plus,  the matter is complicated, hard to enforce and perilous for climate and Green  New Deal goals.)
                It’s easy for Nancy Pelosi and her colleagues to wear Kente  cloth stoles in solidarity with Black Lives Matter. And for Sierra Club staff  to criticize the organization’s 'history and culture of white supremacy' – what  I call callous, deadly and arguably racist eco-imperialism and carbon  colonialism. 
                We need real reform, and an end to the cancel culture that  silences discussion about the horrors of what’s going on in too many non-white  areas of the United States and world.
                The human and ecological realities of GND policies cry out for  debate. 
                
                  [And] So do the violence and death that preceded and followed George Floyd’s  inexcusable death. Not just the 25 police killings of unarmed blacks  all across America in 2019 that have become the narrow focus of Black Lives  Matter, politicians and rioters. 
                  But also the murders of David  Dorn, Patrick Underwood and other police officers; Mekhi James, LeGend Taliferro,  Secoriea Turner and other black  children gunned down by their fellow blacks; and as many as  7,000 American black men, women and children murdered by blacks every year.
                  In Chicago, over the July 4 weekend, police reported 87  shootings and 17 deaths, and nearly a dozen of those shot were children caught  in the crossfire, the New York Post despaired. In fact, the black-on-black  Windy City murder toll over almost any two recent successive weekends exceeds  those 25 police killings.
                  'Every single person who has been shot in New York City [so far]  this July, nearly 100 in total, has been a member of the minority  community,' NBC News reporter Tom Winter tweeted, 'and 97% of shooting  victims in June were members of the city’s minority community.' The solution is  defunding the police?
                
                ALL these African, Asian, Latin American and minority American  lives matter. 
                It’s time to talk about it honestly, figure out what’s really  driving the inhumanity and create a world we can [finally] be proud to live in.