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Target Global Warming, Target Exxon
With over 1400 local events, the April 14 National Day of Climate Action, www.StepItUp07.org, offered a national wakeup call, with citizens in every state raising their voice. But even as we build on this powerful day to move forward, we need to talk about why it's been so hard for Americans to recognize the climate issue's urgency.
As recently as July 2006, the acknowledgement of the crisis by ordinary Americans lagged behind not only our counterparts in Great Britain, Germany and Japan, but also behind those polled in China, India, Argentina, Nigeria and Indonesia. U.S. citizen awareness has increased significantly in the wake of this past winter's massive storms (even before the latest East Coast disaster) and coverage of the international scientific reports. But though between 77% and 83% of Americans now acknowledge that global warming poses a serious problem, only 55% in a January Pew poll say the issue requires immediate government action, and only 47% in the same Pew poll say that they believe it's human caused. This means there's still serious denial. And to dismantle its architecture means taking on the key role of ExxonMobil.
Those who dismiss global warming's threat have embraced a series of arguments, retreating from one to the next as they're trumped by reality. The planet isn't really warming, they say. If it is, it's due to random fluctuations or sunspots, not human-created greenhouse gases. And even if global warming is real, it will bring more benefits than problems. Wherever I go, people offer up the same rationales. Some even rattle off the names of dissenting scientists, websites, or journal articles. They dismiss the 99% unanimity of international climate scientists and scientific associations by saying those sounding the warning are all on the take and probably also personal hypocrites.
"They're just giving the government funding agencies what they want," a student in Colorado Springs told me two weeks ago. "If they don't, they won't get their grants." It's an odd concept of pandering, given the massive challenges faced by any elected leader who takes the scientific message seriously. But the deniers insist that a handful of contrarians whose views are refuted by every major scientific study are somehow more credible than the collective judgment of practically every climate scientist in the world.
These arguments emerge from the standard echo chamber of Hannity, Rush, and Fox News. But the spokespeople who articulate them in these venues and others more mainstream have been overwhelmingly sponsored by Exxon. As the Union of concerned Scientists explores in their meticulously detailed report, Smoke, Mirrors and Hot Air, and as George Monbiot examines in his powerful global warming book Heat, Exxon's strategy of using a handful of industry-funded dissenters to cast doubt on an overwhelming scientific consensus was borrowed from the fight over tobacco regulation. In 1992, a major EPA report warned of the medical harm from second hand smoke. In response, Philip Morris hired the PR firm APCO to create a supposedly independent group, The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC), to promote scientists who'd dispute this harm. Enlisting enough other corporate supporters so the effort didn't seem just a tobacco industry creation, TASSC's mission echoed the phrase from a memo of fellow tobacco company Brown and Williamson, "Doubt is our product."
As part of creating that doubt, APCO's Steven Milloy founded JunkScience.com, which would later become a key website for global warming denial. Milloy also became associated with other key climate change denial organizations, like the Competitive Enterprise Institute (which has called the Kyoto accords "a power grab based on deception and fear"), and later become a columnist for Fox. Major climate denial activist Frederick Seitz also had strong tobacco industry ties, drawing $585,000 from RJ Reynolds between 1979 and 1987 before going on to the George Marshall Institute. Exxon jumped in to support these efforts early on, as part of a more general assault on government regulation and action. As the scientific consensus around global warming began to solidify, they began funding a series of studies and spokespeople to insist that mainstream scientific opinion was sharply divided. Between 1998 and 2005 the company has invested over $16 million in challenging the overwhelming consensus among climatologists, spreading the resources among at least 43 different institutions to give the appearance of a broad chorus of dissent. Whether the Heartland Institute, Alliance for Climate Strategies, Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change, or the Competitive Enterprise Institute and George Marshall Institute, they all got major Exxon support for their role in arguing that no global warming crisis existed. Until recently, the efforts to sow doubt have worked, with the help of a compliant media and the Bush presidency. And though a number of other energy companies also participated, ExxonMobil was the critical initiator, and remained firmly denying the crisis even as other oil companies, like BP Amoco and Shell, acknowledged the gravity of the threat.
Many of us know Exxon's role in climate change denial, and have avoided buying their gas for that reason. Others have avoided the company because of the Exxon Valdez oil spill. But we need more than individual actions. In July 2005, major environmental groups launched an international boycott. The coordinating organization, www.exposeexxon.org, has played an important role in getting the word out about the company's role. Their petition campaign for Exxon to cease funding global warming deniers and join other oil companies in making significant investments in renewable energy has generated over a half million signatures. But their effort has mostly been a media campaign, as opposed to one focusing on grassroots organizing.
Even with this initial pressure, though, the company seemingly begun to backtrack. This January, new CEO Rex Tillerson claimed followed strong criticism of Exxon's actions by the British Royal Society, US Senators Snowe and Rockefeller, and in the Union of Concerned Scientists report, by announcing that they'd stopped funding "five or six" of the groups that promoted climate change skepticism. But except for the Competitive Enterprise Institute Tillerson refused to name all the individuals and groups Exxon has given money to or specify those they've cut off. And he gave no reason for the shift, although an Exxon spokesman did say the adverse publicity was a distraction. Meanwhile, the company is still paying a handsome salary to former American Petroleum Institute lobbyist and Bush Council on Environmental Quality chief of staff Philip Cooney, who Exxon hired after he resigned following media reports of how he edited the reports of climate scientists to render them innocuous. They even sponsor a website aimed at British primary school children, featuring a cute climate skeptic robot that claims the cause of global warming remains uncertain. And ExxonMobil continues to be rated lower environmentally than every other major multinational oil company. While the company's stated shift may be hopeful, it's by no means certain that it's anything but greenwashing.
Solving global warming will be hard enough, even without orchestrated opposition. And off course we need to focus on where we need to go, like StepItUp's call for an 80% reduction in CO2 emissions by 2050. But if we only do that and ignore the counterattacks, our efforts will continue to get Swift Boated, and it will be far harder to build the necessary political will for them to succeed. Targeting Exxon pressures them and other corporations to stop trying to undermine the scientific consensus and to stop blocking attempts to rein in greenhouse gas emissions—as in a recent Competitive Enterprise Institute ad that proclaimed about CO2, "they call it pollution, we call it life." It also highlights the roots of why so many Americans have resisted the reality of the crisis—how what many of us think this is just our personal skepticism is product of a deliberate disinformation campaign.
Some questionable companies are hard to boycott—where do you start with Haliburton? But ExxonMobil has a presence in every city in this country. Their gas stations are accessible for rallies and picketing. Every dollar that their stations lose and every bit of adverse press coverage will create further pressure.
Imagine if enough organized effort was focused so that Exxon had to sell or close some of their stations. Or if enough Americans understood their manipulative role so that both the company and the groups they'd supported lost all media and political credibility. Think about how INFACT (now the Corporate Accountability Campaign) ran their largely successful campaigns against Nestle and GE. Or how the United Farm Workers conducted their grape boycotts. Or the successful recent campaign of Florida's Coalition of Immokalee Workers to get Taco Bell and McDonalds to require their subcontractors to pay higher wages to tomato pickers. These efforts didn't just call on individuals not to buy specific products from the problematic companies. They actively organized, in communities, in congregations, and on campuses. They convinced their fellow citizens to withhold their dollars in a way that created the maximum public attention.
Global warming solutions exist, and we need to forge the political will to enact them, building on existing programs like California's "million solar roof" legislation and the climate change initiatives of the European nations. But even as public attitudes begin to shift, and major corporations like GE, Dupont and BP Amoco are at least talking about taking the issue seriously, Exxon continues to impede political progress. To prevent a future of endless climate-driven disasters, we're going to have to keep talking about their role.
Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of "The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear," named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. His previous books include Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See www.paulloeb.org To receive his monthly articles email sympa@lists.onenw.org with the subject line: subscribe paulloeb-articles.

19 Comments so far
Show AllVery good article. I recommend that people check out a new documentary, Out of Balance: ExxonMobil's Impact on Climate Change. Go to www.JoePublicFilms.org for info. Currently, the film's producer, Tom Jackson, is visiting college campuses (and other audiences) around the country, screening the film, and leading discussions. Next week he is coming here to New England College. He does great work!
Exxon is the most profitable company in the world. They're arrogant too... they are so confident that new technology won't seriously challenge oil that they have shut-down refineries to artificially increase prices of gasoline over the last 10 years:
http://69.63.136.213/cmep/energy_enviro_nuclear/electricity/Oil_and_Gas/articles.cfm?ID=11829
I think boycotts are worthwhile, but if we REALLY want change, I'd suggest supporting things like electric plug-in vehicles:
http://pluginpartners.com/whatYouCanDo/onlinePetition.cfm
If you haven't already, see the movie 'Who Killed the Electric Car.' There are proven, better alternatives to oil that can solve the climate change problem. Exxon/Mobil also spreads disinformation about these alternatives, and many people are uninformed because the corporate media eats it up and says "these things are 15 years away." That's a lie. The technology is here, it's time to support alternatives.
How do electric plug in cars help fight global warming? It is a fact that the geat majority of electricity produced in the US comes from burning fossil fuels; coal being the worst. Unless we go nuclear, electric cars are not the solution.
Burning coal is way more efficient, cleaner, and cheaper than burning fossil fuels. That's why.
Sources:
[1]"The Green Car Journal", 1993, page 116
[2]http://www.ilea.org/lcas/taharaetal2001.html
[3]http://www.teslamotors.com/display_data/21stCentElectricCar.pdf
The last post I might of sounded like I advocate coal. I don't. We need to stop burning coal. Having EVs on the grid charging up can transform the grid, and may actually "help prevent brownouts, cut the cost of electricity, and increase the use of renewable energy" according to the MIT Technology Review:
http://blog.wired.com/cars/2006/12/how_phevs_will_.html
There's nothing stopping someone from installing solar panels on their house and using clean energy for their electric car. Oil is imported all the way from Saudi Arabia (emissions), refined in a factory (more emissions) and transported to your gas tank (more emissions)... so anyone saying local energy isn't a better solution is either a fan of Exxon/Mobil disinformation campaigns or really good friends with the Saudis.
If you rely on coal-power because you can't afford solar panels right now(which will cost less in the future), driving an EV will still help reduce emissions and improve air quality. If you think electric cars are too small and not for you, you might be surprised how great the SUV EVs perform. The 2002 Toyota Rav4 EV is just as big and powerful as other SUVs, and it's greener than a Prius. Here's one happy driver:
http://geeklimit.com/2006/05/09/i-drive-a-30k-80mph-166mpg-suv/
Like I said before, the technology is here.
i appreciate what you're saying about electric cars, however, coal is a fossil fuel. perhaps you mean that it is way more efficient, cleaner, and cheaper than burning OTHER fossil fuels. i would also add that bikes are a pretty good way to get around.
How many learning back in HS history classes how the church sold indulgences to the rich, giving them the false belief they'd earned a seat in heaven? What do the heirs to the Exxon fortune think about all this money, if their own family and its elite tentacles will be so directly responsible for so much of Creation's destruction? What do these billionaires think will happen to THEIR children's children? The lack of foresight mesmerizes me. The American Indigenous GRANDMOTHERS were the council often consulted before decisions were taken that might threaten the ecology of future generations' survival. Now we have "enlightenment" as measured by and through the rubric of quarterly profits. Paul Loeb is one of the most even-tempered thinkers of our times. His book, "THE IMPOSSIBLE WILL TAKE A LITTLE WHILE.." is such helpful reading for times like these. I gave copies as gifts to friends last Christmas. One quote, "let's save pessimism for better times" is a good promo for the "medicine to the soul" that his book delivers. Thanks for being part of our planetary dialog in these troubled times Paul.
I like the article, but it's falls short on some of the most important issues. It addresses the fact of negative media coverage. While this is true, it doesn't address the real issue, and that is how we are seemingly addicted to the media in general. Not to get off the subject about Exxon, but to pin the tail on that donkey is playing the wrong game almost completely. The real issues rest in our own culture of consumerism. The web is woven so intricately that we have become entangled in it without even realizing that we wove it ourselves in the first place. Let us not forget that Exxon is run by people, not machines, that being said, the issue is really about our society, not just corporations that we all support. If you like your "Fresh" fruits and vegetables, you contribute to it. If you like your nice, comfortable, and clean clothes, you contribute. If you enjoy leaving you air conditioner on when you're not at home, you contribute. If you etc etc... The biggest issue to overcome today is first of all our addiction to information. By no means am I saying that we should let ourselves fall short of knowing what is going on around us, but the problem rests in our gullibility to trust in what we see on TV, without even a mere muscle twitch to investigate it for ourselves. This is changing mainly because of the Internet, but how secure can we feel in that medium as well. My opinion is that we can never just accept what other people tell us (call me pessimistic or whatever) I would rather investigate all avenues before coming to any half ass conclusions as to where the heart of the problem lies, but I assure you that if people just stopped to smell the shit, the would realize that it is indeed shit and not roses! Sorry for the rant, but it's true! The problem is us. If we continue to believe that government can do something, we will remain in this same state. If we continue to trust what we hear with 100% ignorance we will remain ignorant. If we continue on this path then perhaps we will indeed witness all of the calamities that have been oh so implictly advocated by scientist globally. Want to do something about it, then examine your own life, draw a list of what you can and cannot live without, you will make some stark realizations about yourself and the world around you!
Electric plug-in vehicles? There are about 211 million cars on United States roads right now -- about one-quarter of the world total. Considering the fact that less than one percent of electricity currently generated in the United States comes from wind, solar, and geothermal -- and that a good number of our rivers are already dammed for electricity generation -- it is unrealistic to think that we can generate enough "clean" electricity to run the electric plug-in equivalent of the ICE personal car. Time for Americans to start facing hard realities: we are going to be living less lavishly in the future than we currently live. Our homes will be smaller, our communities denser, our material possessions fewer.
The question is not can we transform? The answer to that is easy: yes, of course. Human beings are enormously resourceful. The real question is can we be happy without large houses, two-car garages, diets high in meat, and so on. And the answer to that is also yes -- let's just hope we realize that before we expand our Middle Eastern aggressions in Iran. We are, after all, only five to six percent of the world population.
foamweapons wrote:
Exxon is the most profitable company in the world. They're arrogant too… they are so confident that new technology won't seriously challenge oil that they have shut-down refineries to artificially increase prices of gasoline over the last 10 years:
*****************
Actually that is not quite true. Many (if not most) of the refineries that have closed and are closing have done so because of their age. They were built during the times when most crude was of lighter consistency and able to be cracked (or refined) more easily.
Today that kind of crude is becoming increasingly rare as major fields in the middle east are playing out the way those in the US did nearly 40 years ago. What are left are places like Venezuela's Orinoco basin and the Albertan tar sands in Canada.
This petroleum is like the consistency cold molasses compared to the honey pots of previous fields that have and are being increasingly sucked dry. The problem is that the cost to build the new and more sophisticated refineries to crack this gunk costs more than the current prices of its products can support.
So guess whose OPM (other peope's money) they (the oil refiners)are going to use? (HInt: Go look in the mirror!)
The following link makes interesting reading.
http://www.sandia.gov/news/resources/releases/2004/renew-energy-batt/Stirling.html
For those interested, here's a great campaign/website:
http://www.exxposeexxon.com/
P.S. The ExxposeExxon T-shirt is a great conversation starter.
I don't think other people will transform their lifestyle, so yes, the best solution in our current society is big-hulking-electric-SUVs.
I'm vegetarian, last year I drove less than 300 miles, and I try to eat organic local food. Other people... they are not going to do these things. There will be a draft to fight another war for oil, and the ice sheets will collapse before that happens. There's an information disconnect from reality among the average person that has been perpetuated by large corporations... because it's basically assumed that without money you are unsuccessful, that Milk and red-meat protein is good for you and essential, and that you need to buy more big-things in your life to be fulfilled.
You can't change the culture fast enough. By the time that happens the world will be destroyed. People will walk off a cliff before their ideology is changed, and by the time they look down they'll be falling so fast it won't matter what they think.
What you can do, is say OK, you put a $30,000 solar panel on the roof of your house and it could power all the electric family cars... even your big electric-SUV at no cost to you over the next 30 years. What if with new technology it was only $10,000 in a few years? That's a good investment, and it fits in with their lifestyle, and if everybody did it we could solve a major part of the global warming problem. I think it's better than waiting and hoping they'll make the conscientious decision themselves.
---------------------------------------------------------
@Poet
The majority of our oil doesn't come from Venezuela's Orinoco basin or the Albertan tar sands. Even if we did have really heavy oil, 3/4ths of U.S. refineries can handle heavy crude oil.[1] The increase of the API Gravity (viscosity) may be a problem in the future, but according to records of oil imports, only a few more percent is heavier crude compared to a decade ago.[2]
Senator Wyden's report in 2001 said "Specifically, the documents suggest that major oil companies pursued efforts to curtail refinery capacity as a strategy for improving profit margins; that competing oil companies worked together to subvert supply; that refinery closures inhibited supply; and that oil companies are reaping record profits." Also we are at an 8-year supply high for oil in the U.S., most of that oil is not heavy, so I don't buy the "petroleum has changed" argument.[4]
[1] http://peakoildebunked.blogspot.com/2005/10/130-heavy-crude-refining-capacity.html
[2] http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/pet_move_ipct_k_a.htm
[3] http://wyden.senate.gov/leg_issues/reports/wyden_oil_report.pdf
[4] http://www.citizen.org/documents/Natural%20Gas%20Testimony.pdf
I don't think other people will transform their lifestyle, so yes, the best solution in our current society is big-hulking-electric-SUVs.
I'm vegetarian, last year I drove less than 300 miles, and I try to eat organic local food. Other people... they are not going to do these things. There will be a draft to fight another war for oil, and the ice sheets will collapse before that happens. There's an information disconnect from reality among the average person that has been perpetuated by large corporations... because it's basically assumed that without money you are unsuccessful, that Milk and red-meat protein is good for you and essential, and that you need to buy more big-things in your life to be fulfilled.
You can't change the culture fast enough. By the time that happens the world will be destroyed. People will walk off a cliff before their ideology is changed, and by the time they look down they'll be falling so fast it won't matter what they think.
What you can do, is say OK, you put a $20,000 solar panel on the roof of your house and it could power all the electric family cars... even your big electric-SUV at no cost to you over the next 30 years. What if with new technology it was only $5,000 in a few years? That solves a big piece of the global warming problem and it fits in their lifestyle... which is better than hoping they'll make the conscientious decision themselves.
Exxon gets to keep scoring points and collecting profits as long as the prominent voices on climate change keep being hypocrites. As long as anyone who criticizes the huge houses and frequent flyer mileage of certain celebrities gets voted off the media island Exxon wins.
Since the wealthy proponents of Climate Change policy don't actually change their behavior and the non-celebrities like the guys at www.xaccess.org/(bikes) www.calcars.org(plug-in hybrids), or the folks at http://www.culturechange.org do you can guess who gets air time on Fox news. Hint: it's nobody who doesn't still drive an SUV.
All of these people will tell you realistic ways to deal with climate change. None of their solutions involve the purchase of "carbon credits" that allow you a sequoia's worth of carbon for the planting price of a seedling.
The voices that get media time on climate change are always flawed for a reason. By setting up straw-men as the voice of reason they allow easy means of destroying arguements by their advertisers. Exxon runs ads all the time; the IPCC and Friends of The Earth don't.
Great article. We should target Shell also. (Be careful if you're in Nigeria)
Funny that Canada just put out a report that the Kyoto protocols would cause a massive recession. I'm sorry I don't check the "impending doom any minute now for mankind" bulletin board today for the latest stupid prediction on climate change when these witch doctors can't even predict rain correctly in a 100 square mile area during a twenty-four hour window. Yet these fools want to tell me they can predict climate change decades out. Someone should sue them for fraud. They are simply con artists.
What enormous hubris to claim to know what is causing global warming without offering any emperical evidence to support what is truly an untested "hypothesis." What kind of arrogant maniacs want to start dictating what national economies can and can't do based on a "hypothesis." I think tea leaves are more reliable.
I'm supposed to ride a bike now! HILARIOUS!
Dave Thomas: Why don't you try to come up with some proof that fossil fuels are NOT causing global warming? Perhaps you will be able to dispute the 100 year old findings of Nobel Prize winner Svante Arrhenius. You could then dispute the report from 2,500 scientists of the Intergovernmental Panel. I would love to learn that global warming is a big hoax dreamed up by corrupt environmentalists trying to get rich.