When I was in college back in 1978, a friend of mine who was studying Environmental Science explained it to me, calling it the greenhouse effect. He said that within 40 to 50 years it would cause severe environmental events, droughts, fires, heat waves and so on. I thought, well, 40 to 50 years, we have a lot of time, we won't have to worry about that for a long time. Funny how fast 50 years goes by.
I would say, everyone should listen to the environmental scientists.
Yeah in the 1978s you could say that climate scientists were pretty sure this would happen, not fully understood yet, by the mid 80s it was certain. All of the typical objections you hear from friends or see in articles or think tank pieces are issues that were sorted out in the 1980s. ("it's the sun!, it is natural cycles!, it is happening but not because of humans!") all of that, reasonable questions in the 1970s, figured out by the mid 1980s, still tossed around today by people who think or pretend to be seriously thinking about this.
I never see those objections, instead I see the objections "I literally cannot afford the cheapest electric car and will be homeless and starving without a vehicle", "I need to heat my home to keep it habitable in sub zero temperatures in the winter", "I want to eat and not starve to death", "I want to cook food", etc.
i.e. people still need energy, and the renewable options have only very recently been viable for an individual to use, and only in some places, and often at great cost.
The objection to global warming isn't that it isn't real, it's that without fossil fuels most of us will die sooner than the worst case climate change effects ever will and so we have no choice.
> "I literally cannot afford the cheapest electric car and will be homeless and starving without a vehicle", "I need to heat my home to keep it habitable in sub zero temperatures in the winter", "I want to eat and not starve to death", "I want to cook food", etc.
Obviously we talk to different people but I've actually never heard anyone use this as a justification for our behavior. It's either non-acceptance of environment-scientific facts or acceptance.
> The objection to global warming isn't that it isn't real, it's that without fossil fuels most of us will die sooner than the worst case climate change effects ever will and so we have no choice.
The political debates I'm following, North America and Europe make me believe that actual climate change denial is very much a real thing. More so the more rural and/or the more dependent on the oil and gas industry you get.
>> Obviously we talk to different people but I've actually never heard anyone use this as a justification for our behavior. It's either non-acceptance of environment-scientific facts or acceptance.
There was a poll done recently that asked people about whether they though climate change was a problem, and also how much they would be willing to spend to help solve it:
"A strong majority of respondents said they were somewhat or very concerned about the issue of climate change. However, one of the most interesting follow-up questions was this: “How much of your own money would you be willing to personally spend each month to reduce the impact of climate change?”
The vast majority of voters were only willing to make very minimal financial sacrifices.
About 35 percent said they wouldn’t be willing to spend anything, with another 15 percent saying they’d only sacrifice $1-$10. Another 6 percent were willing to give up $11-$20, while 5 percent said they’d sacrifice $21-$30. In all, a whopping 75 percent of respondents were not willing to pay more than $50 a month."
That doesn't sound at all like "non-acceptance of environment-scientific facts or acceptance". That sounds like people think it is real but have other priorities for their money, which is what the parent poster was saying (a bit histrionically).
"Online survey among 1,200 registered voters nationwide conducted April 15 – 18, 2021. Respondents were selected randomly from optin panel participants. Sampling controls were used to ensure that a proportional and representative number of respondents were
interviewed from such demographic groups as age, gender, race, and geographic region.
Gender breakdown: 48% men – 52% women
±2.83% overall margin of error at the 95% confidence interval for overall survey. M.O.E.s for subgroups are larger."
You can find other polls that find the same results:
People agree that climate change is an issue. Most of them are willing to pay taxes to do something about it. They're just not willing to pay very much.
You'll get a budget of maybe $10 a month per taxpayer if you want majority approval.
I reject your framing entirely. Not dealing with climate change is the more expensive option.
This is the same absurd tactic that is used against some kind of sane medical system. "It'll cost 10 Billion" say the headlines. We can't afford that say the pundits. The report says, continuing on with the status quo will cost 12 Billion, but somehow we can afford that?
It's not my framing, it's the opinion of the electorate. You don't need to convince me, you need to convince them.
My framing would be that if you look at the consensus opinion of scientists on the effects of climate change, it's going to cost a few percentage points of GDP by 2100 over what we would otherwise have. Which is nothing to get hysterical about, but it would be worth doing something about it to lessen the risks of worst case scenarios. That something would be a carbon tax with the proceeds used to scrub CO2 and to do similar actions to mitigate the effects of climate change.
But a carbon tax has a 0.0% chance of being enacted. It has no political support, and if it costs the public more than a few dollars a month, they vote no.
Carbon taxes or policies that are basically equivalent have already been used in a variety of political systems across the world in various contexts and have worked well and are popular. Usually, it becomes quickly obvious that simply not emitting the CO2 in the first place is the cheapest option.
while I ma be histrionic, the only time I ever encounter any climate science denial is when it is brought up as an insult in a "oh those people who beleive this nonsense" way. I have never encountered it "in the wild", so to speak. Not once.
This is why I am sceptical that it is anything other than a fictional bogeyman to obfuscate rich climate change believers unwillingness to sacrifice luxuries, and poor climate change believers inability to live above absolute crushing poverty [without fossil fuels].
A poll conducted on behalf of an advocacy group with unpublished actual question format that conveniently aligns rather exactly with the preexisting position of the advocacy group can't safely be assumed to be a anything other than a push poll.
“Global warming is real but I cannot personally afford to be carbon-neutral in the society as it is set up” is a fine position to take, but folks making that objection should be aiming to see large-scale structural changes to the society so their descendants don’t end up living through the end of civilization. The problematic part is “... but I like how things are going and nothing should change even though it is grossly unsustainable.”
Personally I have not heard this per se. Everyone I know who is opposed to climate science / energy policy changes is a wealthy person living in material excess, largely for social signaling purposes (e.g. buying more and larger houses and cars than they need for any practical purpose), and their denials are fed by right-wing propaganda and self-serving delusion.
I don't know those people. I would like to own a car and maybe a house one day so perhaps that influences my own perspective. I would rather my descendants were able to inherit property in an industrial society with a severe climate crisis, than have them be property-less peasants with no prospects and utterly dependant on their socioeconomic "betters" for handouts in a world with diminishing global warming.
> The objection to global warming isn't that it isn't real
No, that's usually the objection. There's a reason "climate denier" is a phrase.
I don't think anyone would mind a purely technical discussion of how to provide power, mitigate impact to the poor, etc. Instead you get claims the scientists are part of some global conspiracy.
I see or hear all of those objections regularly. Facebook, Twitter, Conservative or Republican politicians. Literally on this very thread there are people claiming global warming isn't real.
The objection was absolutely "global warming isn't real" for literally decades. Only more recently, now that that the evidence is too overwhelming for those with even the slightest shred of integrity to ignore, has the argument shifted to "okay fine, it's real, but it's too late and/or we can't afford to do anything about it anyway."
> I would say, everyone should listen to the environmental scientists.
I am fascinated by the people who claim, “well those scientists are just saying that for the money”. They plainly have no idea what the financial life of a research scientist is like.
Or how they can't see how much oil companies would be willing to spend if they could prove them wrong.
Or how the basic problem is so simple physics, you'd have to bribe either a significant percentage of the population or actual laws physics to succeed in this conspiracy.
When is the public going to realize the O&G industry is quite possibly the worst conglomerate that we have ever seen.
We need to start taxing big oil and seek restitution for their crimes against the world. Billions of dollars need to be injected into solutions migrating away from fossil fuels and its various derivatives (ie, plastics).
Producers need to be held responsible for their role in bringing this world closer to the brink of destruction.
> When is the public going to realize the O&G industry is quite possibly the worst conglomerate that we have ever seen.
Ehh, I have more a nuanced view than that.
The internal combustion engine clearly cleaned up cities and improved public health. Almost nothing we do today would be possible without a history of fossil fuels and and fossil derived products (hydrocarbon plastics, fertilizers etc).
So I give them that and they are quite welcome to it.
I don’t even blame them for wanting to expand the use of their product.
The problem is they were the scaffolding on which we built a modern economy/society, and instead of dismantling the scaffolding we have allowed it to continue, and even encouraged it to metastasize.
The fact that they knew there was a problem and covered it up rather than addressing it should be considered criminal, as it should have been with the tobacco companies. But that’s now how society functions, unfortunately.
But to call it “the worst”… I don’t know. The East India Company and Big Slavery were unalloyed evil. The oil revolution is a mixed evil.
The internal combustion engine was developed at about the same time as the electric car. Battery swapping already existed in the very late 1800s. The oil and gas industry delayed real research and development of electric vehicles for 100 years.
Cities would have become even cleaner, much faster, if not for that industry.
> The oil and gas industry delayed real research and development of electric vehicles for 100 years.
Do you mean proactively somehow (as with GM and some trollycars)? I find that hard to believe and would love to learn more.
If you mean their very existence reduced incentives, well ok, but that’s simply path dependency and is the way life works.
There were other pressures on battery improvement (portability: schlepping a heavy box of protons around is a lot of work!) so I have a hard time blaming the oil and gas industry for that. But as I said I’d like to learn more, if that were the case.
Yes! I don’t have a link handy, but they patented battery technology and kept it off the market, including buying companies that could have become competitive.
O&G producers and investors must answer for the funding of climate change denial (which is a crime against humanity IMHO, and needs to be prosecuted in an international court), but the actual production of oil and gas is the fault of every man, woman and child who ever consumed a fossil-fuel-derived product.
It is futile to bring a prosecution for everyday production and consumption of fossil products, because the defendant list would include everybody, but there is a specific, small group of actors who have knowingly poisoned attempts at collective action and are intentionally blocking the path towards a better world, and those people absolutely can be put on trial.
I agree but unfortunately, the actual problem is we did not have and do not have a government willing to take responsibility for allowing this; for a total lack of public planning and a total dependency on such singular forms of energy for everything which has left us open to catastrophe. After all, its government regulation and policy which are ultimately responsible for making sure stuff like this doesn't happen. Or that if it does happen, it's part of how we plan our society so that we're prepared. There are far more delinquents in Washington, past and present, who were too busy lining their pockets to do their jobs. They get the bulk of the blame here. Companies and individuals will do whatever they can get away with. That's why we have laws.
So while I'd like these companies to also fess up and be accountable for their role, nothing will change until we have a government who understands they've been complicit (and that includes a citizenry who will not vote for action on these issues). This is literally the function of government -- to make sure we have harvests year round, clean water, sanitation and clean air. And they have failed us the world over on this task.
I was just talking about this last night with my SO.
We both agreed that history will look back and see these companies being responsible for the destruction of humanity. I really hope that's not the case, however seems to be the course we're headed. Especially with the amount of people that _still_ think it's just not real or not a problem due to the years of "PR" (propaganda).
> We both agreed that history will look back and see these companies being responsible for the destruction of humanity.
History is predicated on at least a rough continuity of records. If the rupture of that continuity of records is bad enough, the concept of history ceases to exist. All we're left with is hunter gathers stumbling across the ruins of ancient 'cities of the gods'.
So even the catharsis of imagining certain individuals or groups being vilified for eternity might be denied us.
The way things are going I suspect we will reach a tipping point where environmental organizations will start to have violent fringes and start to target carbon emitting corporate boards and C-levels.
Probably falling into the same mechanics of radicalization/conversion you have seen before with Middle-eastern groups and more recently with far-right groups.
I think part of the problem is this misconception that the solution to climate change issues require winning a war of hearts and minds. Let’s assume you cannot educate everyone, but instead climate change will be a problem understood and solved by a subset of people, maybe a single person. It may be the case we can never get the majority to care or understand; then what?
Climate change will not be the "destruction of humanity". In fact, over the next billion years humanity will have to get capable of living with large scale climate changes anyway, so this is good test case on how we deal with it - especially on short-term vs long-term trade-offs.
The way investors and financial institutions are salivating over the revenues from transition and sustainable finance, I'd say it will be expensive for most us but it won't lack financing to do things.
> When is the public going to realize the O&G industry is quite possibly the worst conglomerate that we have ever seen.
From an ecological standpoint, I'd tend to agree.
Without them, we'd still have a sub-one billion human population, the pollution level of the 18th C., plus you probably couldn't type that comment without winding up the computer first.
With most of the easy EROI gone, you do have to wonder how humanity can crawl back up from it's next collapse.
Based on my layman’s knowledge, it does seem that fossil fuel energy companies have been bad-faith actors. Or, at the very least, reacted predictably to poorly aligned incentives.
It reminds me of a Matt Damon quote from Syriana [1].
To a certain extent, that’s all of us. We are squandering one of the greatest resources to accelerate technology because it’s been so relatively easy to pull energy from the earth that we’ve been lulled into complacency.
I sometimes wonder if our level of technological advancement would even be possible without fossil fuels. If not, and we don’t actively invest in means away from it, I also wonder if that advancement is just a flash-in-the-pan on the geological time scale.
I think of it like this: fossil fuels were like the first-stage rocket for accelerating technological civilization. It was loud and wasteful, contained most of our fuel, and we burned it in a hurry to get halfway to orbit. The question is, what’s the second stage to orbit? Or are we just on a ballistic trajectory?
It does seem like much of society is predicated on burning things. I feel like we have an opportunity to change that paradigm should since the nuclear age began, but burning things is just so easy it makes us complacent
It seems to me that any system predicated on population levels over the pre-industrial standard are a sketchy proposition.
Even at the pre-industrial level, the environmental load has been high. Mediterranean goat deserts, death of large Pleistocene animals in the Americas, whale hunting. You could still have nuclear power, microelectronics, solar energy in a world with a whole lot less human meat roaming around on it.
In the pre-contraception era, the human population was almost by definition at the environmental limit; limited by starvation, disease, wars, and so on. Just as all wild creatures are.
Anti-contraceptionists are almost worse than climate change deniers.
> and seek restitution for their crimes against the world
The first counterargument to this will be "sure just as soon as you give back all the things you have benefited from as a result of cheap energy and cheap plastics."
What's the alternative, what choice do we have, realistically?
I ride my bicycle or walk for as many trips as possible, and take public transit. I don't own a car, instead I rent one when I absolutely have to. I buy/use as little single-use plastic as possible, I compost and sort whatever trash I do end up with. I've significantly reduced my meat intake and buy in-season groceries as much as possible. I buy second-hand whenever possible and keep things running for as long as possible. I repair everything I can, and only replace things whens they are irreparably broken. My desktop and laptop are both ~10 years old and still going strong. I live in a small apartment, I don't have AC, and I put on a hoodie rather than turning up the heat in winter. I use water-saving taps and shower heads, I use the shorter wash cycles on my washing machine and I line-dry all my clothes. The list goes on and on, you get the point. I try quite hard to reduce my own footprint.
Sure, I could move to an off-grid cabin in the woods, but I'm not sure my footprint would actually be smaller from doing that.
There is only so much consumers can do, when our entire economy is built upon the exploitation of natural resources and an almost complete disregard for negative externalities.
Doing the best you realistically can as an individual is good and fine, but what we really need is harsh regulation of industry heavyweights, in order to force them to do better, as they have clearly proven to have no such motivation by themselves.
Consumer demand ceased to be primarily based on natural demand a long time ago. Pervasive marketing and advertising have successfully manufactured demand, by manipulation and creating a consumer fear of missing out on the latest and greatest shiny gadget.
Breaking out of that pattern is borderline impossible. All because corporations only care about profit.
Research into environmental impacts has been held back (and still is!) by corporate interests, because it's "bad for business" if consumers are too well informed.
How can you make informed choices, when the information is censored and held back?
Plus, "vote with your wallet" only works on a small scale. Regulation of gross polluters is what's actually needed to make real change.
I will accept my less than a millionth of a percent of guilt, if all the fossil fuel companies fully accept their enormous guilt past, present and future, and actually do something to end their pollution and destruction of the environment.
the responses to this comment are the guy in the comic responding to "we should improve society somewhat" with "yet you participate in society. curious"
On the one hand, on the issue of climate change they have behaved very very poorly overall. Spending huge sums of money that have not only misled people about climate change, but have intentionally harmed the public's perception of science generally.
On the other hand fossil fuels are what fuel all of the growth and production of our modern world. Sadly the power they accumulated was not used responsibly, but then it rarely is.
Nuremberg trials for the O & G industry. A phrase I've seen thrown around by people who are angrier than I am. I suppose trials would be more fair than guillotines or summary executions.
O & G industry aren't dictators, though. People willingly buy and even demand their products. That is very different from coming to power and deciding to kill some outgroup out of hate.
I know plenty of non O & G industry people who would flip their shit if politicians proposed taxing O & G to reduce its use.
Walk around your neighborhood and ask who would vote for the person that takes away their quarter acre lots, detached single family homes, F150s and SUVs, and tropical vacations.
The effects of O & G industry have been widely known for decades, despite any attempt by O & G to obfuscate it or hide it. At this point, it is reasonable to assume the population of the developed world has decided that they might as well enjoy today today, and let tomorrow deal with tomorrow.
It is also a classic prisoner’s dilemma on the global scale, so I expect no change going forward other than miraculous advancements in technology that let us have our cake and eat it too.
Yeah, let’s only focus on the production problem. There is totally no demand for oil or plastics. I assume you are typing this on a laptop or cellphone that has plastic parts.
What does the necessity of the product have to do with malfeasance and unethical behavior?
I assert that we can produce plastics without conducting massive deception campaigns that threaten the very future of our economy, the survival of many cities and states, and mass migration across the globe to adapt to new climate.
Climate change has been widely known and understood for decades.
It is convenient to blame the oil companies, but the fault lies in all of us who live in a democracy but did not prioritize regulating carbon emissions.
If you doubt that it is our fault, look at the recent Swiss referendum that failed:
The Swiss referendum was discussed at the time here on HN, and the Swiss citizens who commented on it said it was a thinly veiled tax hike and not much more.
The difference is people are complaining about fossil fuels as they use them.
Be the first, and give up all modern medicine, modern technology, plastics, etc. Nothing wrong with innovating out of fossil fuels, but you just seem to be pointing blame.
You can't build a society on oil and gas and then, now that we're experiencing the side effects, just be mad at the companies that provided this service. We all participated in this process.
Apportioning blame isn't even particularly useful compared to just fixing the problem.
We most certainly can be mad at them for intentionally deceiving the public and shareholders.
It's one thing to provide a product honestly. It's another to provide a product dishonestly. This entire post is about the dishonesty, so just forgetting about that dishonesty and not addressing is seems odd.
You really think them being honest would change anyone’s usage of fossil fuels? Hell, oil companies are transparent about climate change now, and usage is still going up YOY. Only now that we are experiencing greater effects of climate change, everyone is jumping on half-solutions like electric cars - let’s not even get started on the ecological footprint of batteries.
So you think the O&G went on a massive, expensive, coordinated disinformation for fun, and without the intention of increasing fossil fuel usage?
Why would executives put themselves at risk for nothing? Why would they spend so much money for nothing? Why lie if the lie doesn't benefit them?
The truth is that these disinformation campaigns to this day are killing our transition away from fossil fuels. They have spawned a political movement that is far more extreme than the publicly stated opinions of the fossil fuel companies.
One prime example of this disinformation campaign is repeated by you:
> let's not even get started on the ecological footprint of batteries.
This myth that batteries are somehow worse than fuel is exactly the type of disinformation that fossil fuel companies manufacture and that others spread, seemingly willingly, because of their tribal politics motivations. You don't know the footprint of batteries for electrical cars. It's certainly no worse than what we use to make the rest of a car. I've spent hours combing the web for concrete ecological impacts. The only concrete thing anybody talks about are not ecological, but social. Indigenous people in South America not getting compensated for their land. Cobalt mining from artisanal, unaccounted mines using child labor. But the ecological footprint is a tiny shadow of all the steel, copper, etc. that goes into al the rest of society.
> You don't know the footprint of batteries for electrical cars. It's certainly no worse than what we use to make the rest of a car.
Have you heard of open-pit mines? I would call the ecological damage of that much higher than a comparable oil drilling site.
I have nothing against electric vehicles, or progress away from CO2 emitters. But EVs are a half-backed solution.
And EVs might even be net-negative for climate change. What do you think mining equipment runs on? A shit-ton of diesel. The largest cost of a gold mine is energy - diesel. I just think the mental gymnastics people use to justify the smaller ecological impact EVs is ridiculous. Heck, I even own a Tesla.
I've heard of open pit mines, but they are generally used for existing technology that lithium will replace, for example coal. Lithium tends to be mined with brines.
You have a huge bias against EVs, you call them a "half-baked solution" without any qualifications. This is a very subjective judgement that is contradicted by the large number of EVs that are replacing every day usage for people, for commuting and road trips and every aspect of life that requires a vehicle.
It's beyond ridiculous to claim that EVs be a net negative for climate change. Even the fossil fuel PR machine isn't so bold to make such ridiculous counterfactua claims. At least the people paid to lie for fossil fuel companies say that it takes until many tens of thousand is miles until an EV makes up is carbon impact, but even that is a bald-faces lie.
So I'm short, you are manufacturing ridiculous claims, without any substance, that force people to deal with extra BS and counter your lies in the public sphere. Your comments here are a drain on the discussion, fact free accusations without any merit that you are using to naysay EVs and simultaneously out of the other side of your mouth say that you have nothing against them and even own one.
This is classic FUD from the old days. If you are not paid for your efforts, you are underselling yourself. Spreading such misinformation earns many people a paycheck.
You attack me for not providing statistics when your crux is “People buying EV cars must mean they’re good”. Yeah, people buying Gamestop must mean it’s good too. Clown.
It’s widely known the environmental impact of EVs. If you want to make a real difference, look elsewhere.
When will tech’s reckoning come? Social media’s negative influence and incitement of violence? When we will start throwing engineers in prison who built these products knowing what they do?
Tech is bad, but it gets held to a far higher standard than fossil fuel companies. It doesn't take much digging to find far worse direct human death from fossil fuel companies, instead of the second-degree human death from social networks.
So if I live in a city with a corrupt water department, I 1) can't complain about it because I drink water, and 2) should realize the real problem is the concept of corruption, not punishing the corrupt.
We punish the corrupt in order to make the decision to be corrupt in future more expensive for the people considering it. A culture of total impunity doesn't help with "the problem."
I'm not talking about corruption, but the poster above seemed mad that the oil companies made us use oil, beyond just being angry about the oil companies' corrupt practices.
If you drink water from a corrupt company, by all means try to get the corruption fixed but don't blame them that we live in a water based society.
They also actively lie about oil usage effects on environment, and lobby governments to not only to allow them to continue destruction, but also give them subsidies for it.
Nah, man. This "we all did this" is just not true. Power is not equally distributed among people. A few people in charge of oil and gas companies have more power to affect the state of affairs than thousands of normal people. So, no, I do not buy that "it's everyone's fault".
We all use fossil fuels and derived products. It's not easy to replace those things with something more environmentally friendly even now that governments are getting involved.
What the parent is saying is that as long as there is legal demand for a substance, the supplier is not the only one to be held accountable. Oil and gas conglomerates emerged and flourished because they met the demand of society.
If the demand was irresponsible, then someone has failed to act in addition to the suppliers who are essentially just looking to capitalise on an opportunity in a socio-economic system where to succeed is to capitalise on any legal, available opportunity.
Governing bodies have known for decades that the consumption of fossil fuels was both unsustainable and detrimental to the health of the environment.
And yet no consequential action has been taken, for a number of understandable, yet ultimately wrong reasons.
Governments will argue that the technology wasn't there yet to make a transition away from fossil fuels, but money could have been invested to ensure that it was there.
Skip to today, one may retort that the technology is here now, and when governments are reticent and continue to drag their heels — that is perhaps when shadier motivations behind executive inaction emerge.
I do not speak as an environmentalist by any means, my net contributions to encouraging social change in this regard are practically zero, I've never made the effort.
But over the years I have been alive I have seen this problem growing and the debate becoming increasingly protracted and increasingly unhelpful.
The time for debate, inquiry and questions of accountability is not now, as this process will simply result in the burial of the actual problem facing our species and, realistically, very little punitive action against the most significant culprits.
Indeed, what point is there in trying to point the finger at suppliers meeting demands and governments seeking to remain in government by giving people what they want? It's a problem to which the solution is political suicide that any subsequent regime can likely overturn.
Like financial crises, no one supports change until the proverbial shit hits the fan. This is partially because the general population do not understand the nature or severity of the problem, the timescale, or even believe the problem exists. I would argue that this is not accidental — lots of powerful institutions and people have undoubtedly had a hand in making sure the populace do not understand or take an active interest in problems like environmental and financial crises.
This is because the existence and power of these institutions and people would be threatened by a shift in the status quo.
The time for decisive action was at least a decade ago, but there's no harm in starting now — it just means that the transition to alternative energy sources must be more abrupt and more investment must be allocated to remedial technologies that can work towards undoing at least some portion of the damage we have done to our biosphere.
Let historians and the next generations worry about whose fault it was. It is more important to secure for the next generation a sustainable and habitable future, than it is to look back at past hubris and wonder where it went wrong.
I think you've hit on the heart of the issue here. Framing the issue as if there is some kind of ethical/moral obligation to refrain from utilizing fossil fuels is completely nonsensical. As you said, when you have a legal, available profit opportunity in our economic system, you take it. If you don't, someone else will. Blaming the people who "got there first" is like blaming Samuel Colt for all gun violence. Our system by design operates at the lowest-common-ethical-denominator.
If you want to change it, you need to change the economic incentives of the all the actors involved. This includes straightforward measures that are already exist but need to be tuned up, like forcing them to recognize the negative externalities they introduce through operation more directly (carbon tax).
Of course, to the extent those actors have tried to downplay or mislead the general public as to the extent of those negative externalities, they have full culpability I'm happy to condemn them for that. But let's not pretend they are immoral for simply existing.
like what? bringing us efficient and cheap fertilizers to stop world hunger? allowing for wide use of polymers? enabling modern drugs? lifting up our whole civilization from the steam age into the information age?
Like, knowingly turning the planet into an uninhabitable place, killing millions in the process, destroying huge tracts of property with impunity, knowing they were doing this _and hiding it_.
2020: 90 million (about 8 million rely on food aid to survive)
2100: 362 million
Europe and the West can feed themselves without cheap fertilizer, they have done so for 200 years (about the time since the last major famine in France).
Cheap fertilizer is just leading to unsustainable population explosions in the developing world, where the reproduction strategies of men (these are patriachal societies where women lack consistent access to education, contraception, abortion) will inevitably push the ecosystem to its limits.
We are essentially in violation of the Prime Directive in terms of the free food, goods, technology we are giving some of these countries.
They aren't. For the most part, everybody who ever would already does.
Entire states livelihoods basically depended on said conglomerate for some time, even if it was an honestly fairly shitty livelihood. Like... you know how Utah is basically a Mormon/religion state? Well, the O&G industry is just about an all encompassing religion for some other states. Decades of time, generations of families, and billions of corporate dollars went into brainwashing these people into thinking O&G could do no wrong and anybody who said otherwise was effectively trying to take their religion from them.
It is likely that nothing is going to change this any time soon. Psychology on a mass scale is insane. Just look at the Texas recycling campaigns.
I think many already realize how bad humanity's usage of oil has been for t0+100 humanity. And let's not even talk about t0+200 humanity. The ascendance of oil has been a relatively recent phenomenon in human history, and it's pretty safe to say that even with some of the brighter minds of humankind guiding its usage, we still managed to f things up pretty badly. The bigger picture seems to be that humanity isn't so good at managing itself. Perhaps a major advance in AI is the only potential salvation for this timeline.
Our entire global economic system is predicated on companies never facing consequences for their actions. Given our astoundingly poor response to COVID, I don't think we're going to solve climate change. The human race has decided that selfishness and greed are virtues and this is the result.
I don’t think we can solely blame big oil companies.
People love gas powered planes and cars, and they love plastic even more. They choose to buy these things, and without them oil companies wouldn’t be profitable.
In the last part of the 20th century, Shell had multiple research programs into alternative energy. These were all axed under pressure from the shareholders.
Big Energy are some of the largest researchers into renewable energy, and they will become more so with the influence of ESG. ESG is flexing more muscles than ever - look at what just happened to Exxon's board thanks to a fairly small hedge fund influencing shareholders to vote in a different direction.
Even if you don’t care about the climate/environment, the impact of petrochemicals on human health cannot be understated.
They have filled our biosphere with carcinogens and endocrine disrupters for profit. It’s about more than just energy consumption, we need to eliminate the entire petrochemical industry.
You are getting some jeers but many consumers have made big lifestyle choices like this because of feeling the responsibility, so it's not useless, even though it's limited compared to collective decisionmaking.
No? Pinning all the blame on one subgroup in society is not improving society somewhat, it will make it harder to actually make the concerted, collective efforts we need to make to solve the problem.
"I live an exceptionally wasteful lifestyle, pin all the blame on other groups, and deflect any responsibility for my direct participation in excess of what is needed for a reasonable standard of living."
I assume this must have been in discussion in academic circles even before the 1958 date given in the article, John von Neumann wrote this in 1955, and he wasn't even a proper climate scientist.
> "Carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere by industry's burning of coal and oil - more than half of it during the last generation - may have changed the atmosphere's composition sufficiently to account for a general warming of the world by about one degree Fahrenheit."
(Can We Survive Technology?, Fortune magazine 1955)
I'm surprised this doesn't seem to have been taken particularly seriously back then even by government scientists.
> Editor’s Note: This narrative by Nathaniel Rich is a work of history, addressing the 10-year period from 1979 to 1989: the decisive decade when humankind first came to a broad understanding of the causes and dangers of climate change. Complementing the text is a series of aerial photographs and videos, all shot over the past year by George Steinmetz. With support from the Pulitzer Center, this two-part article is based on 18 months of reporting and well over a hundred interviews. It tracks the efforts of a small group of American scientists, activists and politicians to raise the alarm and stave off catastrophe. It will come as a revelation to many readers — an agonizing revelation — to understand how thoroughly they grasped the problem and how close they came to solving it.
That some scientists accurately predicted climate change long ago is obvious. Some of them also predicted an ice age. Now, with hindsight, we know who was right.
As the article points out, at that time, they missed data that we now have. So how certain they were about their predictions, and how did alternative scenarios compare? If we are only talking about science, it does not really matter. The important thing is that we know better today.
However, the context here is that people want to hold "big oil" accountable. This is not science anymore, it is a trial. And personally, I don't really like the idea. I mean, oil companies followed the law, and they didn't hide their activities. They only downplayed the research results that they paid for, but what do you expect? They don't pay researchers to destroy their business. No need to bring out the past, tax them for what they are doing now.
> That some scientists accurately predicted climate change long ago is obvious. Some of them also predicted an ice age. Now, with hindsight, we know who was right.
That's not a very accurate representation of what was going on. The ones predicting cooling agreed with the ones predicting warming on the effect increasing greenhouse gases would have (warming).
The difference was that the ones predicting cooling assumed that the growth in particulate matter pollution would continue to outpace the growth in greenhouse gases, and so the cooling effect from particulates would be stronger than the warming effect from the greenhouse gases.
Starting around the '70s much of the world made a major effort to get particulates under control and the particulates levels went way down.
Wait till we start spraying the stratosphere and everyone stops caring about emissions again. Then we'll have a gun to humanities head where we must spray or face guaranteed immediate ecological annihilation.
I looked up what "spraying the stratosphere" means, and I love the leading paragraph:
"The idea is simple: spray a bunch of particles into the stratosphere, and they will cool the planet by reflecting some of the Sun’s rays back into space."
Probably. When shit starts really hitting the fan (i.e. bottom lines are being directly affected) it will be knee-jerk authorized. It's the only rapidly effective technologically feasible solution we have. The "theory" is that it isn't too environmentally damaging either, so there isn't much leverage to push back against it.
It's basically like benzo addiction for the entire Earth. You take it initially to band aid your ills. You get addicted to the fix it provides. The fix is so good that you accept the bad effects. You become dependent on it to the point where quitting becomes deadly.
Does anyone have access to the reports from the scientists? I'd be really interested to see the kinds of stuff they predicted, in case there are any events that haven't occurred even on a small scale yet
I would say, everyone should listen to the environmental scientists.