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Papers Today
// Why Oil Companies Don’t Want Us Talking About Climate Change
If we could see the world with a particularly illuminating set of spectacles,
one of its most prominent features at the moment would be a giant carbon bubble,
whose bursting someday will make the housing bubble of 2007 look like a lark. As
yet –– as we shall see –– it’s unfortunately largely invisible to us. In
compensation, though, we have some truly beautiful images made possible by new
technology. Last month, for instance, NASA updated the most iconic photograph
in our civilization’s gallery: “Blue Marble,” originally taken from Apollo 17 in
1972. The spectacular new high-def
image shows a picture of the Americas on January 4th, a good day for
snapping photos because there weren’t many clouds. It was also a good
day because of the striking way it could demonstrate to us just how much the
planet has changed in 40 years. As Jeff Masters, the web’s most widely read
meteorologist, explains, “The U.S.
and Canada are virtually snow–free and cloud–free, which is extremely rare for a
January day. The lack of snow in the mountains of the Western U.S. is
particularly unusual. I doubt one could find a January day this cloud–free with
so little snow on the ground throughout the entire satellite record, going back
to the early 1960s.”
In fact, it’s likely that the week that photo was taken will prove “the driest first week in recorded U.S. history.” Indeed, it followed on 2011, which showed the greatest weather extremes in our history –– 56% of the country was either in drought or flood, which was no surprise since “climate change science predicts wet areas will tend to get wetter and dry areas will tend to get drier.” Indeed, the nation suffered 14 weather disasters each causing $1 billion or more in damage last year. (The old record was nine.) Masters again: “Watching the weather over the past two years has been like watching a famous baseball hitter on steroids.”
In the face of such data –– statistics
that you can duplicate for almost every region of the planet –– you’d think we’d
already be in an all–out effort to do something about climate change. Instead,
we’re witnessing an all–out effort to… deny there’s a problem.
Our GOP
presidential candidates are working hard to make sure no one thinks they’d
appease chemistry and physics. At the last Republican debate in Florida, Rick
Santorum insisted that he should be the nominee because he’d caught on earlier
than Newt or Mitt to the global warming “hoax.”
Most of the media pays
remarkably little attention to what’s happening. Coverage of global warming has
dipped
40% over the last two years. When, say, there’s a rare outbreak of January
tornadoes, TV anchors politely discuss “extreme weather,” but climate change is
the disaster that dare not speak its name.
And when they do break their
silence, some of our elite organs are happy to indulge in outright denial. Last
month, for instance, the Wall Street Journal published an
op–ed by “16 scientists and engineers” headlined “No Need to Panic About
Global Warming.” The article was easily debunked.
It was nothing but a mash–up of long–since–disproved arguments by people who turned out mostly not
to be climate scientists at all, quoting other scientists who immediately said
their actual work showed just the opposite.
It’s no secret where this
denialism comes from: the fossil fuel industry pays for it. (Of the 16 authors
of the Journal article, for instance, five had had ties to Exxon.) Writers
from Ross Gelbspan to Naomi Oreskes have made this case with such overwhelming
power that no one even really tries denying it any more. The open question is
why the industry persists in denial in the face of an endless body of fact
showing climate change is the greatest danger we’ve ever faced.
Why doesn’t
it fold the way the tobacco industry eventually did? Why doesn’t it invest its
riches in things like solar panels and so profit handsomely from the next
generation of energy? As it happens, the answer is more interesting than you
might think.
Part of it’s simple enough: the giant energy companies are
making so much money right now that they can’t stop gorging themselves.
ExxonMobil, year after year, pulls in more money than any company in history.
Chevron’s not far behind. Everyone in the business is swimming in
money.
Still, they could theoretically invest all that cash in new clean
technology or research and development for the same. As it happens, though,
they’ve got a deeper problem, one that’s become clear only in the last few
years. Put briefly: their value is largely based on fossil–fuel reserves that
won’t be burned if we ever take global warming seriously.
When I talked
about a carbon bubble at the beginning of this essay, this is what I meant. Here
are some of the relevant numbers, courtesy of the Capital
Institute: we’re already seeing widespread climate disruption, but if we want to
avoid utter, civilization–shaking disaster, many scientists have pointed to a
two–degree rise in global temperatures as the most we could possibly deal
with.
If we spew 565 gigatons more carbon into the atmosphere, we’ll
quite possibly go right past that reddest of red lines. But the oil companies,
private and state–owned, have current reserves on the books equivalent to 2,795
gigatons –– five times more than we can ever safely burn. It has to stay in the
ground.
Put another way, in ecological terms it would be extremely
prudent to write off $20 trillion worth of those reserves. In economic terms, of
course, it would be a disaster, first and foremost for shareholders and
executives of companies like ExxonMobil (and people in places like
Venezuela).
If you run an oil company, this sort of write–off is the
disastrous future staring you in the face as soon as climate change is taken as
seriously as it should be, and that’s far scarier than drought and flood. It’s
why you’ll do anything –– including fund an endless campaigns of lies –– to
avoid coming to terms with its reality. So instead, we simply charge ahead. To
take just one example, last month the boss of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce, Thomas Donohue, called
for burning all the country’s newly discovered coal, gas, and oil ––
believed to be 1,800 gigatons worth of carbon from our nation
alone.
What he and the rest of the energy–industrial elite are denying,
in other words, is that the business models at the centre of our economy are in
the deepest possible conflict with physics and chemistry. The carbon bubble that looms
over our world needs to be deflated soon. As with our fiscal crisis, failure to
do so will cause enormous pain –– pain, in fact, almost beyond imagining. After
all, if you think banks are too big to fail, consider the climate as a whole and
imagine the nature of the bailout that would face us when that bubble finally
bursts.
Unfortunately, it won’t burst by itself –– not in time, anyway.
The fossil–fuel companies, with their heavily funded denialism and their record campaign
contributions, have been able to keep at bay even the tamest efforts at
reining in carbon emissions. With each passing day, they’re leveraging us deeper
into an unpayable carbon debt –– and with each passing day, they’re raking in
unimaginable returns. ExxonMobil last week reported
its 2011 profits at $41 billion, the second highest of all time. Do you
wonder who owns the record? That would be ExxonMobil in 2008 at $45
billion.
Telling the truth about climate change would require pulling
away the biggest punchbowl in history, right when the party is in full swing.
That’s why the fight is so pitched. That’s why those of us battling for the
future need to raise our game. And it’s why that view from the satellites,
however beautiful from a distance, is likely to become ever harder to recognize
as our home planet.
Bill McKibben
(c) Oil–price.com
Reads: 271
Added: 21/03/2012
Added By: Peter
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