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The Great Carbon Bubble: Why the Fossil Fuel Industry Fights So Hard
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.
“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.” (Photo: Creative Commons / NASA Goddard)
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.
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97 Comments so far
Show AllI remain intrigued at that photo much circulated in the media lately of that purports to be one of the whole W. hemisphere disc, but the way the US dominates the disc, it is really a "fisheye" photo of just the US part of N. America - a terribly US-centric view of the planet!
To see América in its proper proportions, updated every hour, just go here. You need to wait until noontime (1700z) to see the whole disc:
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/geo/index.php?satellite=east&channel=vis&coverage=fd&file=gif&imgoranim=img&anim_method=flash
But yes, I've never seen so little snow cover below the 49th and great lakes - the normally 70-100% ice-covered Lake Erie being completely ice-free.
Satellite is only 512 miles up, so sees only about 1/6 of earth's surface, not 1/2 as from the moon.
Which means that it is as much a distortion of the planet as a fisheye shot if it is being marketed as a view of the entire planet, which it is.
Yes. Plus this is a computerized image generated from a myriad of photographs, each of which only covered a small section of the planet.
Then why the fisheye-like view? A properly proportioned view would be better. A cursory examination shows the the northern limb of this pseudo-global disc does not show anything further north than about 40-42 degrees - not much above the Mason-Dixon line. None of Canada is visible; the north end of the Sierra/Sacramento valley is even over the limb. So, of course little snow cover can be seen - although admittedly, one would normally see more snow cover even at the visible latitudes.
It is not fisheye--it is what you get from 512 miles up. Do some basic geometry with circles and tangents!
It is obviously a fisheye view. From 512 miles over say, Oklahoma, one is either going to need a fisheye lens to get jjust barely a coast to coast image, or construct a fisheye view with multiple images.
But worse, this image is being "marketed" (and most poeple believe it is, including Mckibben) as a view of the globe - it is a distortion of reality - all too common in our commercial cultrue. USNns may beelieve very deeply that "we are (and run) the world", but the USA is not that large.
Here is a properly proportioned view from a GOES geostationary sattelite updated every 3 hours, From 22,000 miles over the equator, the whole disc is visible with an ordinary camera field of view:
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/geo/index.php?satellite=east&channel=vis&coverage=fd&file=gif&imgoranim=img&anim_method=flash
Again, it is not fisheye. A 180-degree lens would only add more peripheral blackness of space to your view.
At an altitude of 512 miles, given an Earth radius of 4,000 miles, the horizon-to-horizon field of view is only 125 degrees of the vision field (human vision field is 135 degrees in the vertical, 160 degrees in the horizontal).
Nothing fisheye about it.
well of course it's a fisheye lens; after all, we know the earth is flat not spherical as the AGW extremists would have you believe. thus the distortion in the picture from a Mercator projection must be optical.
That's a much more accurate portrayal of North America, but you know what? It's still a distortion of what the Earth is like because it is not a random view of the Earth but an intentional view that gets almost all of the two continents in the picture.
If a thousand random shots of the Earth were taken from that altitude at random places, not just over the equator with the poles up and down, the vast majority of them would show the planet being Oceania not Earth. Oh well.
No doubt this image was chosen because of a U.S.-centric point of view. However, in the context of global warming this is completely justified.
1. No other country has contributed so much to global warming as the U.S.
2. No other country is so influenced by a public that is so much in denial about the problem, and
3. No other country is doing so little, relative to their ability, to correct the problem of global warming.
Kind of looks Mexico-centric to me.
Don't be silly. Go back and look again. Its a picture of of Mexico, 100%centered in the lens. That said, the lack of snow north of the border is amazing.
But back to the topic, this is an excellent article.
But McKibben needed to be more clear that it is only through burning and depletion can the value of the remaining fossil fuel assets be driven to giddying heights! Ultimately, the enemy of action on AGW is not the fossil fuel industry; it has nothing to do with vital energy sources for manufacturing and transportation either; it is the modern regime of finance capitalism. Even if there was no longer any demand for fossil fuels, they would burn the stuff in big pits if necessary.
"the enemy of action on AGW is not the fossil fuel industry"
If that were the case, why is it Exxon and Koch (petroleum services) Industries that are paying the bill for the denial movement? Follow the money...
Thank you, Robert Riversong. It's elemental, Dr. Watson!
Your observation about the value of reserves is a good one.
Meanwhile we have the Koch Brothers funded House Republicans proposing Transportation Bill HR 7 to totally GUT all Federal Transit funding even as cars are the biggest factor in our increasing greenhouse emissions: about 38% of greenhouse emissions are due to the direct auto/truck emissions and indirectly far more.
http://t4america.org/blog/2012/02/07/oppose-house-bill-that-slashes-public-transit-funding-falls-short-on-repair-and-axes-bike-pedestrian-safety/
The Oil Companies have been in league with the Auto companies for years but somehow Autos which kill 30,000 people per year, use 63% of US oil consumption, waste 1/3rd to 1/2 of the land in many cities (12 x that required for Rail), require huge expenditures of asphalt, maintenance, ambulances traffic courts, are celebrated as symbolic of the whole American way of life.
The car is economically wasteful, chewing up 20% of GDP in the US (compared with 9% in Japan with its mass transport system). The cost of running a car soaks up one third of the working life of the average US citizen.
"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."
Precisely. So what keeps oil companies from pursuing other strategies, protecting the environment and taking these writedowns? The answer is: its the corporate law which requires directors of companies to enhance and protect shareholder value. This part of the law has no balance to it that offsets obligations to shareholders with obligations to the environment and other elements of the public interest. It should.
When our most powerful institutions have no such obligations, they do their damnest to protect their existing rights by getting involved in our democracy--delaying and frustrating the passage of new laws that would prohibit their destructive behavior. Government is unable to cope--to do its job which is to protect the public interest.
A good book that describes this problem and a potential solution is Bob Hinkley's "Time to Change Corporations: Closing the Citizenship Gap".
"Precisely. So what keeps oil companies from pursuing other strategies, protecting the environment and taking these writedowns? " That's like asking what keeps drug dealers from protecting the health of their customers. The product in each case is addictive, but is essentially a poison. Fossil fuels are killing the earth.
Kilroy, I don't know how long such a law has been in effect, but I seriously doubt passing a law saying that CEOs and Boards of Directors now have to also take the public and environmental well being of the planet into account in their decision making is going to have much of an effect. The problem is systemic to predatory capitalism and the diseased view of nature on which it is based. People who have spent their entire lives amassing huge fortunes on fossil fuels are simply people who do not CARE about else, beyond their personal desires and perhaps their families. And, of course, their corporate capitalist cronies.
How much time have you spent in the boardrooms of large companies? What do you think causes creates predatory capitalism and a diseased view of nature on which it is based? It's arises in the corporate law. This needs to be changed. Sorry, but it's that simple.
Kilroy, I've spent no time in boardrooms of large companies. And I think the diseased view of nature and the predatory capitalism upon which it is based has its roots in patriarchal values, the Techno-Logic of Europeanized humans, and the intrinsic nature of capitalism itself. We're dealing here with gyrations of the human spirit/psyche that go back several thousand years. I offer the following as a backgrounder:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcC8k4Zf0_E
Interesting perspective. You may be right.
I prefer to think that mankind evolves, but makes mistakes along the way. I know changing the corporate law to eliminate any respect for the public interest was one such mistake.
I think undoing that mistake is necessary if government of the people, for the people and by the people is salvagable. I think it's up to the current generation to correct the mistake. Otherwise, we will consign mankind to corporate slavery under a government which is really nothing more than a corporate aristocracy.
That being said, reigning in corporate behavior is only a step on the road to a more just way for human beings to live.
I don't know if you have to look for "roots", because being able to use fossil fuels is *power*. If someone uses fossil fuels, they have more power and can subjugate the ones who don't. Basically, in any short-term competition, a side that takes advantage of a source of power will inevitably dominate the one that doesn't - regardless of the long term rationality of using that power. This, in turn, forces all the sides that wish to survive to take advantage of that - and people with ideas that are against this will be eliminated or simply die off, no matter how right they are in the long term :-/
I believe humankind evolves too, and goes through ruinous periods and dark ages again and again due to its hubris. I am not opposed to reforms such as you suggest, and definitely favor, for example, eliminating corporate personhood. But I am under no illusions it will solve most of our problems, or that everything was peachy keen prior to the corporate personhood being codified into law in 1868 (or therabouts). Far from it, in fact. Also, unlike liberals, I don't view these things as "mistakes," but as illustrations of the class warfare that undergirds historical development. So yes, let's reign in corporate behavior. And then let's abolish capitalism and replace it with something better, a system that does justice to the better angels of our nature.
PS These laws have been in effect for more than 100 years now. They originated when the 50 states engaged in a Race to the Bottom to make their corporate laws more investor friendly in the second half of the 19th century.
"When our most powerful institutions have no such obligations, they do their damnest to protect their existing rights..."
You fell right into their trap: corporations have no rights under law or the Constitution, only duties and responsibilities. The problem is not so much the legal mandate to protect shareholder value, as the failure of the chartering states to enforce (including by dissolution) the legal obligation to perform a public good.
A better book is Corporations Are Not People: Why They Have More Rights Than You Do and What You Can Do About It by Jeffrey D. Clements, with foreword by Bill Moyers.
Clements is co-founder of Free Speech for People (www.freespeechforpeople.org), a former Asst MA Attorney General and Chief of Consumer Protection, and filed a Friend of the Court brief in the Supreme Court opposing the Citizens United decision. He is leading the fight for a Constitutional Amendment to return the corporation to a simple economic creation of, and controlled by, the State.
Where did you go to law school? "Corporations have no rights under the law." Where did you get that idea? "Only duties and responsibilities". Huh? Where does the law provide these? "The failure of the chartering states to enforce (including by disolution) the legal obligation to perform a public good." Nice if it were true, but it's not.
You're right though, corporations should have duties and responsibilities to at least protect (if not perform) the public good
Kilroy, It is you who needs some legal and historical education. Those facts are all from the book I noted above, written by one of the most knowledgeable and dedicated constitutional lawyers in the country.
Either he is wrong or you have misinterpreted what he has said. Do you have any citations for your statements? Where in the law does it suggest what you say?
Another book that gives a good historical/legal phenomena of Corporations, formally known as Limited Liability Corporations, and Joint Stock Company's, Banks, ect., is Ted Nace's book, "Gangs of America." Also look at Nel Minnow's website about investing in markets. We are past the point in time where public words mean what they mean, they mean roughly the opposite of what you think. Wasn't Kilroy in the Army in Europe in the 1940's, and wrote on walls where ever he went, "Kilroy was here"? I just wonder if he was fighting for "Capitalism" or for freedom. These two words are not synonyms. They have different meanings.
Corporations have spent (fact check) $__00,000,000,000 on public relations, because they used to have an image problem. This was in the 60's they began propagating the idea that they make life more convenient, better, more you. In recent years, this programming has been aimed at little kids. Corporations keep spending this money because it works. Information to the contrary is not allowed to air. Hence the lack of issues in "political" debates and reporting. "More money, less issues - We do all the thinking you need, while you relax!"
He DID cite his source, Kilroy. What do you think the title and author are?
On corporations in the context of fracking from a founder of POCLAD, see http://youtu.be/h6UK_7rmy7I and on the insanity of the fracking process see http://youtu.be/OUaR4rE2PIA
Bill McKibben says, "those of us battling for the future need to raise our game."
I totally agree with the statement and I think it is a terrible SHAME that Mr. McKibben again fails to "raise" his own part in the "game."
The republicans and the Chamber of Commerce are EASY targets. They almost beg to be the target because they are so loudly perverse.
IF Mr. McKibben was actually even interested in raising his level of effectiveness, he would take aim at the democrats also. He continues to ignore the fact that his beloved democrats use words to now blatantly deceive people into thinking that they (the dems) are concerned about global warming while simultaneously doing all they can to SABOTAGE real change for the better.
Here are a few facts to help you improve your "game" Mr. McKibben.
Every UN climate summit has been gutted of all effective action since Obama was elected because of the actions of this government.
The promotion of green technologies has been limp.
There is no member of the corporate congress who is trying desperately to save the Coal industry more than Dick Durbin.
The Obama administration will not allow the horrible atrocity of the BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico to alter its devotion to the same behavior which caused the atrocity.
The technique of mountain top removal and the lack of prosecution of coal company criminality continues.
FRACKING.
Ongoing warmongering for corporate access to petroleum and natural gas reserves around the globe.
There are other examples of democrat collusion, but I doubt that anything I say can help someone who needs to cling to the illusion that the democrats are better for the environment.
There is one corporate party with many devious faces running this government. Some of those faces shout their devotion to degradation and some of them just murmur lies while feeding you crap.
Birdbrain Alley,
McKibben's article engages in the unproductive game of blaming the Republicans, as you point out, but it also contains a vitally important insight:
It's not about how quickly or slowly we spew carbon emissions, it's about the sum total, before carbon emissions end. If most of the coal and oil is extracted and burned, we're cooked. From this established fact, McKibben begins to infer what the consequences of a carbon phase-out would be for the economic system - for which he should be applauded.
Unfortunately, much of McKibben's activism has been inappropriately partisan, given the ecological transgression by Democrats which you list for us. It's a damned shame that McKibben's good work is undercut by the distrust he engenders when he seems to be working for Democratic Party, rather than for the preservation of planet Earth.
"Aleph Null"
I am more concerned about how much McKibben is trusted than the amount of "distrust he engenders."
I do not mean to say that McKibben is a deliberate tool, but I do question his ability to address the corruption and I would hope others would also.
As long as his limited (and limiting) vision to see the whole playing field passes for objectivity, we are doomed.
McKibben is no partisan when it comes to this issue. He escalated his personal commitment by getting arrested for the first time in front of a Democratic White House which was leaning towards permitting the Keystone Pipeline.
It is irresponsible critics who pretend that this is a partisan issue who are as much to blame as Exxon and Koch in preventing a popular upwising and uprising.
It is a simple fact, however, that Republicans have more strongly endorsed the denial movement and that the US Chamber of Commerce is the single biggest player in creating the current corporatocracy, since they received the infamous Powell Memo in 1971.
(#1) But the oil companies, private and state-owned, have current reserves on the books equivalent to 2,795 gigatons.
(#2) 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.
------------------
According to these numbers the U.S. possesses over half the world's untapped carbon reserves. This does not seem correct. Donohue's number must be intentionally inflated to encourage U.S. oil exploration.
A piece about oil consumption and, not a mention of peak oil. I suspect the reserve numbers he is showing are vastly inflated. Off the top of my head I remember when Opec decided to tie oil exports with reserves, and suddenly the reserves on paper went way up so member nations could pump more of the black stuff.
The Cantarell field in Mexico is in decline, along with North Sea Oil. Oil discoveries peaked in 1964. Nobody is sure what is going on with the Saudi reservers, because it is a national secret, but that is one VERY old field.
It appears that oil production may have peaked in the early 2000s, but it will probably take another 10 years or so to be sure. Oh yea, and the world burns 85,000,000 barrels of oil a year, or 40,000 gallons of oil per SECOND.
Remember peak oil is NOT about running out of oil, it is when we can no longer pump ever increasing amounts of the stuff out of the ground, and TOTAL world output goes into a relentless decline.
Modern life REQUIRES vast amounts of oil to keep it running. Without it our economic world ceases to function. So as the gap between oil needed and oil produced widens, things will get interesting to say the least.
So throw peak oil, on top of climate change, and I'll raise you peak fish, peak fresh water, and peak top soil to mention a few. Stay tuned to what is really going to be the Greatest Show on Earth.
Good points, NC-Tom. Peak Oil is one of the great taboos, including on the left. According to my calculations global oil extraction peaked in 2005-6. While our (mis)leaders in White House & Congress twiddle their thumbs and the RepubliCONS engage in a farcical presidential campaign, outdoing each other for who can utter the most stupid and ignorant comments, we fail as a nation to prepare for the increasingly harsh landing that is to come. We should have been investing in high speed rail decades ago. We need to have a WW II level national mobilization to deal with this crisis, and to create wind farms, solar power, and other alternative energies. As the price of oil inevitably goes up, it just becomes harder and harder to invest in the needed infrastructure changes Peak Oil requires. Truly an idiotic and sociopathic system, presided over by imbecilic cretins.
As the low-hanging fruit of cheap oil disappears, and as oil prices push inexorably higher, the right tends to blame it all on the tree-huggers (we need fewer regulations! more drilling!), and the left tends to blame it all on the oil speculators and corporate conglomerates.
The reality is much more prosaic. Place "blame" where we may, once Peak Oil really hits (I predict 5 to 10 years), there's ultimately little that can be done to control the price spiral from demand outstripping supply. It was only a few years ago that the OPEC countries proposed adjusting their production to keep oil in the $25 to $30/barrel range(!). Look where we are now. So much for that. In a few more years, $100/barrel will be the good 'ol days.
I'm with you. No one wants to talk about the hard truths. Acknowledging limits to consumption has never gotten a single U.S. politician elected. They get elected by feeding our (as Kunstler likes to call it) "happy-motoring delusion". When the $250/gallon oil inevitably hits us squarely between the eyes, I hope that doesn't send American voters flocking to their nearest proto-fascist leaders who tell them what they want to hear while they dismantle what little remains of our democratic system ... but I'm not optimistic.
Memory_Hole: "We need to have a WW II level national mobilization to deal with this crisis, and to create wind farms, solar power, and other alternative energies."
Unfortunately, this is precisely the mindset that got us into this crisis: that there are always "better" technological solutions to the problems created by the last set of technological solutions.
Peak oil is the least of our problems. The 2nd Law of Thermodyamics is still the primary law of the known Universe. All thermodynamic systems are entropic - produce heat as the primary waste product. We've not just reached peak oil, but peak human activity on Earth. No other technology will save us. We simply cannot continue, in the present (and escalating) population numbers to live like we live today (and like the destitute half of the world wish to live tomorrow).
We are at the end of civilization's journey. There is only one last responsible act for humanity: The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (http://www.vhemt.org).
For an entertaining overview of the 2nd Law Problem, see http://riversong.wordpress.com/intelligent-living-universe/
"We are at the end of civilization's journey. There is only one last responsible act for humanity: The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (http://www.vhemt.org)."
Tell this to my four year old nephew, asshole. How old are you?
A 2009 study of the relationship between population growth and global warming determined that the “carbon legacy” of just one child born in America can produce 20 times more greenhouse gas than a person will save by driving a high-mileage car, recycling, using energy-efficient appliances and light bulbs, etc. Each child born in the United States will add about 9,441 metric tons of carbon dioxide to the carbon legacy of an average parent. The study concludes, “Clearly, the potential savings from reduced reproduction are huge compared to the savings that can be achieved by changes in lifestyle.” One of the study’s authors, Paul Murtaugh, warned that: “Future growth amplifies the consequences of people's reproductive choices today, the same way that compound interest amplifies a bank balance."
How old are you? Why are you still here? I promise I'll read the letter you leave behind.
Edit: I'm a god damn asshole, I should have read the link :-/ I pre-judged based on the word "extinction". Sorry, man.
I liked Robert's posts till this one, too. I thought, "Gee! One can only hope he doesn't tell his grandchildren any fairy tales." Human ingenuity may salvage life for some... however, if climate changes rev up, Mother Nature will conduct the inevitable culling. I don't think extinction is inevitable, and certainly if consumer patterns AND CO2 usage were both cut back, the odds of survival for more folks would be higher.
As for the "End of Oil" as Michael Klare has termed it, or the final phase of obtaining the "low hanging fruit," it seems to me that a shift in the calculus comes from things like the glaciers melting away to expose more Arctic deep sea oil deposits, and/or things like the Canadian Tar Sands. I believe Mr. McKibben has factored these "new" oil deposits into the higher quotients.
No one who is more concerned about themselves than about the Web of Life is going to like the idea of voluntary human extinction, but there is no more altruistic or responsible path that human beings can take today.
In indigenous cultures, infanticide and occasionally eldercide (that would be abhorrent to any proper liberal or conservative today) was the dominant method for controlling human overpopulation and an act of responsible altruism - both to the tribe and to the broader living community. Such responsibility is unimaginable to us moderns.
No, I don't tell my grandchildren fairy tales, such as human culture can continue on its merry way without the rest of creation paying for our sins. And, yes, Gaia will (already is) doing her own culling of the human parasite on the planet, but the least culpable - the poor and destitute - are always the first to go and in the largest numbers.
Those of us who have enjoyed the luxury of living at the top of the human food chain are the ones most responsible for our multiple intersecting global crises and the ones who should - if we had any ethical responsibility - be the first to volunteer to make the ultimate sacrifice.
We have always expected the young to sacrifice for family and nation in our endless wars, but those who send them off to fight for scarce resources are always unwilling to pay any price themselves. How utterly selfish we are. May our karma come back sevenfold upon us.
Robert: I respect you, and agree with MUCH that you have to offer. This subject is difficult. I'm up-to-date on the climate change indicators, beyond remorseful about yet more martial drum banging over Iran, and acutely aware of the monetary shenanigans that have rendered much of the global economy a dangerous farce. These 3 arenas are merging into an inevitable tipping point for human survival. I have no interest in playing God/Goddess here. Most of the material I've spent my life studying speaks of human life as designed for spiritual evolution with Earth, its intended school room.
Because I believe souls to be eternal, evolution will continue. I believe sentient life exists on other planets and in other realms, or energy dimensions.
The seeming rush to extinction, as seen in our nonchalant consumer habits, as driven by corporate "thneed makers," is tragic.
Will an unforeseen force step in? Will human adaptation allow for some to survive?
I think numbers will lessen as a result of war, famine, flood, etc.
When I took Driver's Ed in high school, we were told that for every MPH we were traveling, that precise number of feet (60 MPH = 60 feet) would be required to come to a full stop after we applied the brakes. The analogy holds to radical climate change. In other words, were 2 billion to suddenly "volunteer" to exit their bodies, all of the chemical and CO2 detritus already built up--which is to say, carried as momentum--would require DECADES to balance out, or come to a stop.
In other words, even with the most sane and discipline efforts at cutting back on a grand scale, the warming pattern will continue like the car still traveling at the speed it gathered--before the brakes were applied.
I can't speak for you, but while I'm still alive and kicking, I'll fight for and speak up for justice and all the ideals that I hold as sacred. Sometimes the sacrifice comes from being a role model. My ecological footprint, decidedly for a Westerner, is small. And I hope to pass on the knowledge I've accumulated to my grandchildren, and with the help of my chldren's books... all other open-minded children.
Another world is still possible.
Honestly, I misjudged without reading. I absolutely disagree with him, and I really dislike it when people speak in the name of the entire human race, especially when rich people speak in the name of the poor - Westerners for third world people - but I don't disagree with rich people choosing not to have children, which is what VHEMT seems to be about. It has no chance of working and is generally worthless but I don't disagree with it. I also do not think that a decision not to have kids is actually something respectful or brave on a personal level, that's imo just self-satisfied bullshit. But they could do worse (and I thought they were actually worse).
And finally, if you're living in a rich country, just not having children and still working and spending most of your money on yourself is pure hypocrisy. VHEMT could achieve some actual integrity if it somehow made sure that the resources that would go into bringing up children either do not get extracted and used up at all, or if they gave them to poor countries to support them.
But this doesn't change the fact that I was an asshole when I replied to him :-)