
Stupid Elite Could Learn From This Kid (photo: cayusa, flickr)
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Two Saturdays ago, I was walking with a friend in a park here in New York City. It was late January, but I was dressed in a light sweater and a thin fall jacket, which I had just taken off and tied around my waist. We were passing a strip of bare ground when suddenly we both did a double-take. He looked at me and said, “Crocuses!” Dumbfounded, I replied, “Yes, I see them.” And there they were, a few clumps of telltale green shoots poking up from the all-brown ground as if it were spring. Such a common, comforting sight, but it sent a chill through me that noticeably wasn’t in the air. Even the flowers, I thought, are confused by our new version of weather.
Later that same week, as temperatures in the Big Apple crested 60 degrees, I was chatting on the phone with a friend in Northampton, Massachusetts. I was telling him about the crocuses, when he suddenly said, “I’m looking out my window right now and for the first time in my memory of January, there’s not a trace of snow!”
Of course, our tales couldn’t be more minor or anecdotal, even if the temperatures that week did feel like we were on another planet. Here’s the thing, though: after a while, even anecdotes add up — maybe we should start calling them “extreme anecdotes” — and right now there are so many of them being recounted across the planet. How could there not be in a winter, now sometimes referred to as “Junuary,” in which, in the United States, 2,890 daily high temperature records have either been broken or tied at last count, with the numbers still rising? Meanwhile, just to the south of us, in Mexico, extreme anecdotes abound, since parts of the country are experiencing “the worst drought on record.” Even cacti are reportedly wilting and some towns are running out of water (as they are across the border in drought-stricken Texas). And worst of all, the Mexican drought is expected to intensify in the months to come.
And who can doubt that in Europe, experiencing an extreme cold spell the likes of which hasn’t been seen in decades — even Rome had a rare snowfall and Venice’s canals were reported to be freezing over — there are another set of all-too-extreme anecdotes. After all, in places like Ukraine, scores of the homeless are freezing to death, pipes are bursting, power cuts are growing, and maybe even an instant energy crisis is underway (at a moment when the European Union is getting ready to cut itself off from Iranian oil).
That’s just to begin a list. And yet here’s the strange thing. At least in this country, you can read the “freaky” weather reports or listen to the breathless TV accounts of unexpected tornadoes striking the South in January and rarely catch a mention of the phrase “climate change.” Given the circumstances, the relative silence on the subject is little short of eerie, even if worries about climate change lurk just below the surface. Which is why it’s good to have TomDispatch regular Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet, take a clear-eyed look at American denialism and just what it is we prefer not to take in. Tom
The Great Carbon Bubble
Why the Fossil Fuel Industry Fights So Hard
By Bill McKibbenIf 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 center 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 is Schumann Distinguished Scholar at Middlebury College, founder of the global climate campaign 350.org, a TomDispatch regular, and the author, most recently, of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet.
Follow TomDispatch on Twitter @TomDispatch and join us on Facebook.
Copyright 2012 Bill McKibben



17 Comments

“You realize that on that small spot, that little blue and white thing, is everything that means anything to you—all of history and music and poetry and art and death and birth and love, tears, joy, games, all of it on that little blue spot out there that you can cover with your thumb. And you realize from that perspective that you’ve changed, that there’s something new there, that the relationship is no longer what it was”.
[Rusty Schweickart, Apollo 9 Lunar Module Pilot]
I love Bill McKibben but at some point soon he must stop pretending that Obama an the Democrats aren’t complicit.
Case in point. This is from a new report from the State of Louisiana:
“Based on an analysis of the available scientific literature on the topic, the draft report recommends that State restoration project planners and designers plan for a 1-meter (3.3’) mean rise in the sea level of the Gulf of Mexico by 2100 compared to the late 1980s and that analyses be bounded by global sea level rise ranges of 0.5-1.5 meters (1.4’-4.9’) by 2100.”
http://coastal.louisiana.gov/index.cfm?md=pagebuilder&tmp=home&pid=240
Three feet of sea level rise will WIPE OUT New Orleans and S. LA yet Obama runs around sounding like Sarah Palin (drill baby drill!) and has now added the nightmare of fracking and Tar Sands oil to our troubles. C’mon, Bill, it isn’t just the GOP anymore that is the problem. Both parties suck.
Heh. So much for ‘peak oil,’ a concept developed in the 1950s by the oil corps for the sole purpose of upping the oil price. Oil corps make more profit on selling less oil at a higher price than on, ya know, actually mining the stuff and selling it at a lower price.
Morris Adelman, MIT economist, said in the first (1973) oil crisis that the world is awash in a sea of oil. Stick a straw in anywhere and a gusher is born. Slight overstatement, but a great one-liner. (May be my short version of what I remember his saying back then.)
Despite huge increases in oil consumption and Simons’ vaunted work on the peaking of Ghawar, supply has kept up with demand, with real oil prices well under control except for deliberate manipulation via oil wars, which keep supply off the market long enough for oil corps to make a killing (heh).
As Palast pointed out in Armed Madhouse, controlling oil supply is all about keeping vast reserves off the market so that oil corps can make higher profits. Govts complicit.
IMO, McK (hoping I’m not naive here) just doing that for ‘political’ purposes. But McK might be the naive one, not me. Who knows.
When McK was on some panel at FDL, might have been a book salon, I tried to convince him that no one (overstatement for argument sake) can understand a forecast, let alone do it. Even a month or two in advance, no matter how obvious the signs are.
Tried to convince him that, instead of talking about abstract global warming, or weather weirding, he should talk about current pocketbook manifestations, like ballooning food prices (Arab spring anyone) owing to droughts, floods.
Alas, I made NO impression on him.
OmAli from above.
You are right that earth is all that means anything to us.
But you are wrong in the sense that the universe is NOT about trivial hoomans. Oil corps, or U.S. empire or whatever may destroy planet earth, but the scheme of the universe, it will go on.
Yes, I agree that is why McK is doing it. But it isn’t working. Obama doesn’t even discuss AGW any longer and he has turned into one of the Koch Brothers on carbon fuels. So let’s stop pretending that Obama will “come around” and just start slamming him as the obstructionist he is. If nothing else, it may elevate environmentalism above silly partisan politics where it will go nowhere.
Certainly never meant to imply that it was….we may be a passing annoyance to gaia, but we are less than nothing to the universe. And I have no problem with that.
I have personally sat and talked with an ex. VP ( for exploration) of EXXON-Mobil on more then one occasion.He’s a friend of the family. Believe me when I tell you the only way we will ever get any change in the policies of these Corps. is to take their leaderships out and shoot them publically when the time comes. They couldn’t care less about Global warming, they blame any rise on global temps. ironically on the SUN. The Sun unfortunately doesn’t have a spokesperson to counter the endless lies and right wing nuttery that comes out of these greedy EVIL fucking Corps.
EXXON-Mobil is the WORST when it comes to funding AGW disinformation and propaganda. Remember that when you fill your tank.
You know back in the late 70′s and early 80′s they were working on solar cars. They tested these cars at the Baja track and did speed records on them.
There has also been invention of motors that can get over 200 miles to the gallon.
I really hate spending my money at the gas pump, and I am sure all of you do too that don’t have access to public transportation.
Wouldn’t it be great for the Capitalists to create a new American auto industry?
The concept of Peak Oil is very real. We reached a peak of oil production in 2006. There is a reason Saudi Arabia is keeping its oil capacity secret and the sources of oil are becoming ever more remote and hard to get at. Further the demand for oil from third world countries is constantly expanding and it is expected to expand much further.
There is no reason to panic and there are many viable solutions, but ignoring the problem and pretending there is a massive world wide conspiracy or that everything can be solved with a version of “Drill, baby, drill!” will just delay difficult decisions and make them more painful later.
Read Armed Madhouse, then reconsider. The Sunni triangle in Iraq is off limits for E&P bc oil corps think there’s a field there that’s bigger than Ghawar.
OK, I’m a typography nerd. I admit it. Learned it in journ school in the 80s. But why is the entire article in ITALICS? It is supposed to be used sparingly. It hurts readability. Italics should never be used for block quotes or large amounts of text because it harms readability.
http://www.webdesignfromscratch.com/basics/readability/
Italics are quite handy for emphasising words or short phrases. They tend to have a softer emphasis than emboldening. Italics should not be used for blocks of text, because they can have a similar effect to serif fonts at small resolutions, reducing readability. Sans-serif fonts that work well on screen can have poor readability in italic form.
It absolutely isn’t working, and we know what doing the same thing and expecting different results leads to. I imagine the PTB are very happy with Mr. McKibben as a do-nothing spokesperson for the environment when he could become the MLK of the movement with just a critical look at our present administration. Obama thinks we are the Saudi Arabia of natural gas. I don’t want to be the Saudi Arabia of anything, least of all losing my tapwater!
What this adherence to the ‘lesser evil’ is doing is turning energies that are devoted to the causes Mr. McKibben is seemingly devoted to away from the political process completely. If the prominent naysayers pretend that Obama is gonna be their choice, we are completely sunk when it comes to promoting real alternatives that will actually work to change the course of the disaster we’ve known here in the mountain west has been happening for a long, long time. Then, as legitimate as he seems to be, in actuality he takes on the character of a Judas-goat.
We had such a non-winter as Tom describes right at the turn of the century and we lost all our lovely pinons that had been here for hundreds of years – they weren’t able to go dormant. This stuff has been happening for a long time and our politicians, all the ones that get coverage, have totally ignored the problem. What he should also point out is that Europe seems to be going into an ice age. They had hardly any summer down in New Zealand this year either. That kind of swing could be devastating to the world’s food supplies, and it has happened in the past. This is very, very serious stuff.
The alternatives to this electoral charade HAVE to be given attention somewhere somehow!
May I rec this comment, please? ;o) I couldn’t agree more, juliania.