In class: Take out your statistics from the carbon footprint assessment from yesterday and your notebook.
Part 1 On the page where you were to have written an MLA heading with the title Footprints, please write 5 sentences that reflects your observations on how you compare to the average in the four categories: home, food, purchases and transportation. Include how you think your personaly affect the planet and what changes your could possibly make.
For those who did not take the assessment for whatever reason. You are responsible for this material, but there is no more classtime. Go immediately to part 2.
Part 2: I am passing out an article from the New Yorker magazine, with an accompanying graphic organizer. This is an extension of the footprint assessment you took yesterday. THIS IS INDEPENDENT WORK. As you read the article, please respond on the organizer. At the conclusion is a 250 response. This should be written on lined paper. You will find this at the front of the room. Include a correct MLA heading. The topic is Muir. All work is due by Friday. Class handouts/ copy below!
I
California is
currently ablaze, after a record hot summer and a dry fall set the stage for
the most destructive fires in the state’s history. Above: The Woolsey fire,
near Los Angeles, seen from the West Hills.
Photograph by Kevin Cooley for The
New Yorker
Coming up: carbon footprint vocabulary quiz Monday, February 11
In class:
reading / graphic organizer on Life on a Shrinking Planet
(class handouts / copy below)
LIFE ON A
SHRINKING PLANET
With wildfires heat waves, and rising sea
levels, large tracts of the earth are at risk of becoming uninhabitable.
By Bill McKibben
Thirty
years ago, this magazine published “The End of Nature,” a long article about
what we then called the greenhouse effect. I was in my twenties when I wrote
it, and out on an intellectual limb: climate science was still young. But the
data were persuasive, and freighted with sadness. We were spewing so much
carbon into the atmosphere that nature was no longer a force beyond our
influence—and humanity, with its capacity for industry and heedlessness, had
come to affect every cubic metre of the planet’s air, every inch of its
surface, every drop of its water. Scientists underlined this notion a decade
later when they began referring to our era as the Anthropocene, the world made
by man.
I was frightened by my reporting, but, at the time, it seemed
likely that we’d try as a society to prevent the worst from happening. In 1988,
George H. W. Bush, running for President, promised that he would
fight “the greenhouse effect with the White House effect.” He did not, nor did
his successors, nor did their peers in seats of power around the world, and so
in the intervening decades what was a theoretical threat has become a fierce
daily reality. As this essay goes to press, California is ablaze. A big fire
near Los Angeles forced the evacuation of Malibu, and an even larger fire, in
the Sierra Nevada foothills, has become the most destructive in California’s
history. After a summer of unprecedented high temperatures and a fall “rainy
season” with less than half the usual precipitation, the northern firestorm
turned a city called Paradise into an inferno within an hour, razing more than
ten thousand buildings and killing at least sixty-three people; more than six
hundred others are missing. The authorities brought in cadaver dogs, a lab to
match evacuees’ DNA with swabs taken from the dead, and anthropologists from
California State University at Chico to advise on how to identify bodies from
charred bone fragments.
For the past few years, a tide of optimistic thinking has held
that conditions for human beings around the globe have been improving. Wars are
scarcer, poverty and hunger are less severe, and there are better prospects for
wide-scale literacy and education. But there are newer signs that human
progress has begun to flag. In the face of our environmental deterioration,
it’s now reasonable to ask whether the human game has begun to falter—perhaps
even to play itself out. Late in 2017, a United Nations agency announced that
the number of chronically malnourished people in the world, after a decade of
decline, had started to grow again—by thirty-eight million, to a total of eight
hundred and fifteen million, “largely due to the proliferation of violent
conflicts and climate-related shocks.” In June, 2018, the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the U.N. found that child labor, after years of falling, was
growing, “driven in part by an increase in conflicts and climate-induced
disasters.”
In 2015, at the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Paris, the
world’s governments, noting that the earth has so far warmed a little more than
one degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels, set a goal of holding the increase
this century to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), with a fallback
target of two degrees (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). This past October, the U.N.’s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published a special report stating
that global warming “is likely to reach 1.5 C between 2030 and 2052 if it
continues to increase at the current rate.” We will have drawn a line in the
sand and then watched a rising tide erase it. The report did not mention that,
in Paris, countries’ initial pledges would cut emissions only enough to limit
warming to 3.5 degrees Celsius (about 6.3 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the
century, a scale and pace of change so profound as to call into question
whether our current societies could survive it.
Scientists have warned for decades that climate change would lead
to extreme weather. Shortly before the I.P.C.C. report was published, Hurricane
Michael, the strongest hurricane ever to hit the Florida Panhandle, inflicted
thirty billion dollars’ worth of material damage and killed forty-five people.
President Trump, who has argued that global warming is “a total, and very
expensive, hoax,” visited Florida to survey the wreckage, but told reporters
that the storm had not caused him to rethink his decision to withdraw the U.S.
from the Paris climate accords. He expressed no interest in the I.P. C.C.
report beyond asking “who drew it.” (The answer is ninety-one researchers from
forty countries.) He later claimed that his “natural instinct” for science made
him confident that the climate would soon “change back.” A month later, Trump
blamed the fires in California on “gross mismanagement of forests.”
Human beings have always experienced wars and truces, crashes and
recoveries, famines and terrorism. We’ve endured tyrants and outlasted perverse
ideologies. Climate change is different. As a team of scientists recently
pointed out in the journal Nature Climate Change, the physical
shifts we’re inflicting on the planet will “extend longer than the entire
history of human civilization thus far.”
The poorest and most vulnerable will pay the highest price. But
already, even in the most affluent areas, many of us hesitate to walk across a
grassy meadow because of the proliferation of ticks bearing Lyme disease
which have come with the hot weather; we have found ourselves unable to swim
off beaches, because jellyfish, which thrive as warming seas kill off other
marine life, have taken over the water. The planet’s diameter will remain eight
thousand miles, and its surface will still cover two hundred million square
miles. But the earth, for humans, has begun to shrink, under our feet and in
our minds.
“Climate
change,” like “urban sprawl” or “gun violence,” has become such a familiar term
that we tend to read past it. But exactly what we’ve been up to should fill us
with awe. During the past two hundred years, we have burned immense quantities
of coal and gas and oil—in car motors, basement furnaces, power plants, steel
mills—and, as we have done so, carbon atoms have combined with oxygen atoms in
the air to produce carbon dioxide. This, along with other gases like methane,
has trapped heat that would otherwise have radiated back out to space.
There are at least four other episodes in the earth’s
half-billion-year history of animal life when CO2 has
poured into the atmosphere in greater volumes, but perhaps never at greater
speeds. Even at the end of the Permian Age, when huge injections of CO2 from
volcanoes burning through coal deposits culminated in “The Great Dying,” the CO2 content
of the atmosphere grew at perhaps a tenth of the current pace. Two centuries
ago, the concentration of CO2 in
the atmosphere was two hundred and seventy-five parts per million; it has now
topped four hundred parts per million and is rising more than two parts per
million each year. The extra heat that we trap near the planet every day is
equivalent to the heat from four hundred thousand bombs the size of the one
that was dropped on Hiroshima.
As a result, in the past thirty years we’ve seen all twenty of the
hottest years ever recorded. The melting of ice caps and glaciers and the
rising levels of our oceans and seas, initially predicted for the end of the
century, have occurred decades early. “I’ve never been at . . .
a climate conference where people say ‘that happened slower than I thought it
would,’ ” Christina Hulbe, a New Zealand climatologist, told a reporter
for Grist last year. This past May, a team of scientists from
the University of Illinois reported that there was a thirty-five-per-cent
chance that, because of unexpectedly high economic growth rates, the U.N.’s
“worst-case scenario” for global warming was too optimistic. “We are now truly
in uncharted territory,” David Carlson, the former director of the World
Meteorological Organization’s climate-research division, said in the spring of
2017, after data showed that the previous year had broken global heat records.
We are off the literal charts as well. In August, I visited
Greenland, where, one day, with a small group of scientists and activists, I
took a boat from the village of Narsaq to a glacier on a nearby fjord. As we
made our way across a broad bay, I glanced up at the electronic chart above the
captain’s wheel, where a blinking icon showed that we were a mile inland. The
captain explained that the chart was from five years ago, when the water around
us was still ice. The American glaciologist Jason Box, who organized the trip,
chose our landing site. “We called this place the Eagle Glacier because of its
shape,” he said. The name, too, was five years old. “The head and the wings of
the bird have melted away. I don’t know what we should call it now, but the
eagle is dead.”
There were two poets among the crew, Aka Niviana, who is
Greenlandic, and Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, from the low-lying Marshall Islands, in
the Pacific, where “king tides” recently washed through living rooms and
unearthed graveyards. A small lens of fresh water has supported life on the
Marshall Islands’ atolls for millennia, but, as salt water intrudes, breadfruit
trees and banana palms wilt and die. As the Greenlandic ice we were gazing at
continues to melt, the water will drown Jetnil-Kijiner’s homeland. About a
third of the carbon responsible for these changes has come from the United
States.
A few days after the boat trip, the two poets and I accompanied
the scientists to another fjord, where they needed to change the memory card on
a camera that tracks the retreat of the ice sheet. As we took off for the
flight home over the snout of a giant glacier, an eight-story chunk calved off
the face and crashed into the ocean. I’d never seen anything quite like it for
sheer power—the waves rose twenty feet as it plunged into the dark water. You
could imagine the same waves washing through the Marshalls. You could almost
sense the ice elevating the ocean by a sliver—along the seafront in Mumbai,
which already floods on a stormy day, and at the Battery in Manhattan, where
the seawall rises just a few feet above the water.
Sign me
up
When I
say the world has begun to shrink, this is what I mean. Until now, human beings
have been spreading, from our beginnings in Africa, out across the globe—slowly
at first, and then much faster. But a period of contraction is setting in as we
lose parts of the habitable earth. Sometimes our retreat will be hasty and
violent; the effort to evacuate the blazing California towns along narrow
roads was so chaotic that many people died in their cars. But most of the
pullback will be slower, starting along the world’s coastlines. Each year,
another twenty-four thousand people abandon Vietnam’s sublimely fertile Mekong
Delta as crop fields are polluted with salt. As sea ice melts along the Alaskan
coast, there is nothing to protect towns, cities, and native villages from the
waves. In Mexico Beach, Florida, which was all but eradicated by Hurricane
Michael, a resident told the Washington Post, “The older people
can’t rebuild; it’s too late in their lives. Who is going to be left? Who is
going to care?”
In one week at the end of last year, I read accounts from
Louisiana, where government officials were finalizing a plan to relocate
thousands of people threatened by the rising Gulf (“Not everybody is going to
live where they are now and continue their way of life, and that is a terrible,
and emotional, reality to face,” one
state official said); from Hawaii, where, according to a new study, thirty-eight miles
of coastal roads will become impassable in the next few decades; and from
Jakarta, a city with a population of ten million, where a rising Java Sea had
flooded the streets. In the first days of 2018, a nor’easter flooded downtown
Boston; dumpsters and cars floated through the financial district. “If anyone
wants to question global warming, just see where the flood zones are,” Marty
Walsh, the mayor of Boston, told reporters. “Some of those zones did not flood
thirty years ago.”
According to a study from the United Kingdom’s National
Oceanography Centre last summer, the damage caused by rising sea levels will
cost the world as much as fourteen trillion dollars a year by 2100, if the U.N.
targets aren’t met. “Like it or not, we will retreat from most of the world’s
non-urban shorelines in the not very distant future,” Orrin Pilkey, an expert
on sea levels at Duke University, wrote in his book “Retreat from a Rising
Sea.” “We can plan now and retreat in a strategic and calculated fashion, or we
can worry about it later and retreat in tactical disarray in response to
devastating storms. In other words, we can walk away methodically, or we can
flee in panic.”
But it’s not clear where to go. As with the rising seas, rising
temperatures have begun to narrow the margins of our inhabitation, this time in
the hot continental interiors. Nine of the ten deadliest heat waves in human
history have occurred since 2000. In India, the rise in temperature since 1960
(about one degree Fahrenheit) has increased the chance of mass heat-related
deaths by a hundred and fifty per cent. The summer of 2018 was the hottest ever
measured in certain areas. For a couple of days in June, temperatures in cities
in Pakistan and Iran peaked at slightly above a hundred and twenty-nine degrees
Fahrenheit, the highest reliably recorded temperatures ever measured. The same
heat wave, nearer the shore of the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, combined
triple-digit temperatures with soaring humidity levels to produce a heat index
of more than a hundred and forty degrees Fahrenheit. June 26th was the warmest
night in history, with the mercury in one Omani city remaining above a hundred
and nine degrees Fahrenheit until morning. In July, a heat wave in Montreal
killed more than seventy people, and Death Valley, which often sets American
records, registered the hottest month ever seen on our planet. Africa recorded
its highest temperature in June, the Korean Peninsula in July, and Europe in
August. The Times reported that, in Algeria, employees at a
petroleum plant walked off the job as the temperature neared a hundred and
twenty-four degrees. “We couldn’t keep up,” one worker told the reporter. “It
was impossible to do the work.”
This was no illusion; some of the world is becoming too hot for
humans. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
increased heat and humidity have reduced the amount of work people can do
outdoors by ten per cent, a figure that is predicted to double by 2050. About a
decade ago, Australian and American researchers, setting out to determine the
highest survivable so-called “wet-bulb” temperature, concluded that when
temperatures passed thirty-five degrees Celsius (ninety-five degrees
Fahrenheit) and the humidity was higher than ninety per cent, even in
“well-ventilated shaded conditions,” sweating slows down, and humans can
survive only “for a few hours, the exact length of time being determined by
individual physiology.”
As the planet warms, a crescent-shaped area encompassing parts of
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and the North China Plain, where about 1.5 billion
people (a fifth of humanity) live, is at high risk of such temperatures in the
next half century. Across this belt, extreme heat waves that currently happen
once every generation could, by the end of the century, become “annual events
with temperatures close to the threshold for several weeks each year, which
could lead to famine and mass migration.” By 2070, tropical regions that now
get one day of truly oppressive humid heat a year can expect between a hundred
and two hundred and fifty days, if the current levels of greenhouse-gas
emissions continue. According to Radley Horton, a climate scientist at the
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, most people would “run into terrible
problems” before then. The effects, he added, will be “transformative for all
areas of human endeavor—economy, agriculture, military, recreation.”
Humans share the planet with many other creatures, of course. We
have already managed to kill off sixty per cent of the world’s wildlife since
1970 by destroying their habitats, and now higher temperatures are starting to
take their toll. A new study found that peak-dwelling birds were going extinct;
as temperatures climb, the birds can no longer find relief on higher terrain.
Coral reefs, rich in biodiversity, may soon be a tenth of their current size.
As some
people flee humidity and rising sea levels, others will be forced to relocate
in order to find enough water to survive. In late 2017, a study led by Manoj
Joshi, of the University of East Anglia, found that, by 2050, if temperatures
rise by two degrees a quarter of the earth will experience serious drought and
desertification. The early signs are clear: São Paulo came within days of
running out of water last year, as did Cape Town this spring. In the fall, a
record drought in Germany lowered the level of the Elbe to below twenty inches
and reduced the corn harvest by forty per cent. The Potsdam Institute for
Climate Impact Research concluded in a recent study that, as the number of days
that reach eighty-six degrees Fahrenheit or higher increases, corn and soybean
yields across the U.S. grain belt could fall by between twenty-two and
forty-nine per cent. We’ve already overpumped the aquifers that lie beneath
most of the world’s breadbaskets; without the means to irrigate, we may
encounter a repeat of the nineteen-thirties, when droughts and deep plowing led
to the Dust Bowl—this time with no way of fixing the problem. Back then, the
Okies fled to California, but California is no longer a green oasis. A hundred
million trees died in the record drought that gripped the Golden State for much
of this decade. The dead limbs helped spread the waves of fire, as scientists
earlier this year warned that they could.
Thirty years ago, some believed that warmer temperatures would
expand the field of play, turning the Arctic into the new Midwest. As Rex Tillerson,
then the C.E.O. of Exxon, cheerfully put it in 2012, “Changes to weather
patterns that move crop production areas around—we’ll adapt to that.” But there
is no rich topsoil in the far North; instead, the ground is underlaid with
permafrost, which can be found beneath a fifth of the Northern Hemisphere. As
the permafrost melts, it releases more carbon into the atmosphere. The thawing
layer cracks roads, tilts houses, and uproots trees to create what scientists
call “drunken forests.” Ninety scientists who released a joint report in 2017
concluded that economic losses from a warming Arctic could approach ninety
trillion dollars in the course of the century, considerably outweighing
whatever savings may have resulted from shorter shipping routes as the Northwest
Passage unfreezes.
Churchill, Manitoba, on the edge of the Hudson Bay, in Canada, is
connected to the rest of the country by a single rail line. In the spring of
2017, record floods washed away much of the track. OmniTrax, which owns the
line, tried to cancel its contract with the government, declaring what lawyers
call a “force majeure,” an unforeseen event beyond its responsibility. “To fix
things in this era of climate change—well, it’s fixed, but you don’t count on
it being the fix forever,” an engineer for the company explained at a media
briefing in July. This summer, the Canadian government reopened the rail at a
cost of a hundred and seventeen million dollars—about a hundred and ninety
thousand dollars per Churchill resident. There is no reason to think the fix
will last, and every reason to believe that our world will keep contracting.
All this
has played out more or less as scientists warned, albeit faster. What has
defied expectations is the slowness of the response. The climatologist James
Hansen testified before Congress about the dangers of human-caused climate
change thirty years ago. Since then, carbon emissions have increased with each
year except 2009 (the height of the global recession) and the newest data show
that 2018 will set another record. Simple inertia and the human tendency to
prioritize short-term gains have played a role, but the fossil-fuel industry’s
contribution has been by far the most damaging. Alex Steffen, an environmental
writer, coined the term “predatory delay” to describe “the blocking or slowing
of needed change, in order to make money off unsustainable, unjust systems in
the meantime.” The behavior of the oil companies, which have pulled off perhaps
the most consequential deception in mankind’s history, is a prime example.
As journalists at InsideClimate News and the Los Angeles Times have
revealed since 2015, Exxon, the world’s largest oil company, understood that
its product was contributing to climate change a decade before Hansen
testified. In July, 1977, James F. Black, one of Exxon’s senior
scientists, addressed many of the company’s top leaders in New York, explaining
the earliest research on the greenhouse effect. “There is general scientific
agreement that the most likely manner in which mankind is influencing the
global climate is through carbon-dioxide release from the burning of fossil
fuels,” he said, according to a written version of the speech which was later
recorded, and which was obtained by InsideClimate News. In 1978, speaking
to the company’s executives, Black estimated that a doubling of the
carbon-dioxide concentration in the atmosphere would increase average global
temperatures by between two and three degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit),
and as much as ten degrees Celsius (eighteen degrees Fahrenheit) at the poles.
Exxon spent millions of dollars researching the problem. It
outfitted an oil tanker, the Esso Atlantic, with CO2 detectors
to measure how fast the oceans could absorb excess carbon, and hired
mathematicians to build sophisticated climate models. By 1982, they had
concluded that even the company’s earlier estimates were probably too low. In a
private corporate primer, they wrote that heading off global warming and
“potentially catastrophic events” would “require major reductions in fossil
fuel combustion.”
An investigation by the L.A. Times revealed that
Exxon executives took these warnings seriously. Ken Croasdale, a senior
researcher for the company’s Canadian subsidiary, led a team that investigated
the positive and negative effects of warming on Exxon’s Arctic operations. In
1991, he found that greenhouse gases were rising due to the burning of fossil
fuels. “Nobody disputes this fact,” he said. The following year, he wrote that
“global warming can only help lower exploration and development costs” in the
Beaufort Sea. Drilling season in the Arctic, he correctly predicted, would
increase from two months to as many as five months. At the same time, he said,
the rise in the sea level could threaten onshore infrastructure and create
bigger waves that would damage offshore drilling structures. Thawing permafrost
could make the earth buckle and slide under buildings and pipelines. As a
result of these findings, Exxon and other major oil companies began laying
plans to move into the Arctic, and started to build their new drilling
platforms with higher decks, to compensate for the anticipated rises in sea
level.
The implications of the exposés were startling. Not only did Exxon
and other companies know that scientists like Hansen were right; they used
his nasaclimate models
to figure out how low their drilling costs in the Arctic would eventually fall.
Had Exxon and its peers passed on what they knew to the public, geological
history would look very different today. The problem of climate change would
not be solved, but the crisis would, most likely, now be receding. In 1989, an
international ban on chlorine-containing man-made chemicals that had been
eroding the earth’s ozone layer went into effect. Last month, researchers reported
that the ozone layer was on track to fully heal by 2060. But that was a
relatively easy fight, because the chemicals in question were not central to
the world’s economy, and the manufacturers had readily available substitutes to
sell. In the case of global warming, the culprit is fossil fuel, the most
lucrative commodity on earth, and so the companies responsible took a different
tack.
A document uncovered by the L.A. Times showed
that, a month after Hansen’s testimony, in 1988, an unnamed Exxon “public
affairs manager” issued an internal memo recommending that the company
“emphasize the uncertainty” in the scientific data about climate change. Within
a few years, Exxon, Chevron, Shell, Amoco, and others had joined the Global
Climate Coalition, “to coordinate business participation in the international
policy debate” on global warming. The G.C.C. coördinated with the National Coal
Association and the American Petroleum Institute on a campaign, via letters and
telephone calls, to prevent a tax on fossil fuels, and produced a video in
which the agency insisted that more carbon dioxide would “end world hunger” by
promoting plant growth. With such efforts, it ginned up opposition to the Kyoto
Protocol, the first global initiative to address climate change.
In October, 1997, two months before the Kyoto meeting, Lee
Raymond, Exxon’s president and C.E.O., who had overseen the science department
that in the nineteen-eighties produced the findings about climate change, gave
a speech in Beijing to the World Petroleum Congress, in which he maintained
that the earth was actually cooling. The idea that cutting fossil-fuel
emissions could have an effect on the climate, he said, defied common sense.
“It is highly unlikely that the temperature in the middle of the next century
will be affected whether policies are enacted now, or twenty years from now,”
he went on. Exxon’s own scientists had already shown each of these premises to
be wrong.
On a December morning in 1997 at the Kyoto Convention Center,
after a long night of negotiation, the developed nations reached a tentative
accord on climate change. Exhausted delegates lay slumped on couches in the
corridor, or on the floor in their suits, but most of them were grinning.
Imperfect and limited though the agreement was, it seemed that momentum had
gathered behind fighting climate change. But as I watched the delegates
cheering and clapping, an American lobbyist, who had been coördinating much of
the opposition to the accord, turned to me and said, “I can’t wait to get back
to Washington, where we’ve got this under control.”
He was right. On January 29, 2001, nine days after George W.
Bush was inaugurated, Lee Raymond visited his old friend Vice-President Dick
Cheney, who had just stepped down as the C.E.O. of the oil-drilling giant
Halliburton. Cheney helped persuade Bush to abandon his campaign promise to
treat carbon dioxide as a pollutant. Within the year, Frank Luntz, a Republican
consultant for Bush, had produced an internal memo that made a doctrine of
the strategy that the G.C.C. had hit on a decade earlier. “Voters believe that
there is no consensus about global warming within the scientific community,”
Luntz wrote in the memo, which was obtained by the Environmental Working Group,
a Washington-based organization. “Should the public come to believe that the
scientific issues are settled, their views about global warming will change
accordingly. Therefore, you need to continue to make the lack of scientific
certainty a primary issue in the debate.”
The strategy of muddling the public’s impression of climate
science has proved to be highly effective. In 2017, polls found that almost
ninety per cent of Americans did not know that there was a scientific consensus
on global warming. Raymond retired in 2006, after the company posted the
biggest corporate profits in history, and his final annual salary was four
hundred million dollars. His successor, Rex Tillerson, signed a
five-hundred-billion-dollar deal to explore for oil in the rapidly thawing
Russian Arctic, and in 2012 was awarded the Russian Order of Friendship. In
2016, Tillerson, at his last shareholder meeting before he briefly joined the
Trump Administration as Secretary of State, said, “The world is going to have
to continue using fossil fuels, whether they like it or not.”
It’s by no means clear whether Exxon’s deception and obfuscation
are illegal. The company has long maintained that it “has tracked the
scientific consensus on climate change, and its research on the issue has been
published in publicly available peer-reviewed journals.” The First Amendment
preserves one’s right to lie, although, in October, New York State Attorney
General Barbara D. Underwood filed suit against Exxon for lying to
investors, which is a crime. What is certain is that the
industry’s campaign cost us the efforts of the human generation that might have
made the crucial difference in the climate fight.
Exxon’s
behavior is shocking, but not entirely surprising. Philip Morris lied about the
effects of cigarette smoking before the government stood up to Big Tobacco. The
mystery that historians will have to unravel is what went so wrong in our
governance and our culture that we have done, essentially, nothing to stand up
to the fossil-fuel industry.
There are undoubtedly myriad intellectual, psychological, and
political sources for our inaction, but I cannot help thinking that the
influence of Ayn Rand, the Russian émigré novelist, may have played a role.
Rand’s disquisitions on the “virtue of selfishness” and unbridled capitalism
are admired by many American politicians and economists—Paul Ryan, Tillerson,
Mike Pompeo, Andrew Puzder, and Donald Trump, among them. Trump, who has called
“The Fountainhead” his favorite book, said that the novel “relates to business
and beauty and life and inner emotions. That book relates
to . . . everything.” Long after Rand’s death, in 1982, the
libertarian gospel of the novel continues to sway our politics: Government is
bad. Solidarity is a trap. Taxes are theft. The Koch brothers, whose enormous fortune
derives in large part from the mining and refining of oil and gas, have peddled
a similar message, broadening the efforts that Exxon-funded groups like the
Global Climate Coalition spearheaded in the late nineteen-eighties.
Fossil-fuel companies and electric utilities, often led by
Koch-linked groups, have put up fierce resistance to change. In Kansas, Koch
allies helped turn mandated targets for renewable energy into voluntary
commitments. In Wisconsin, Scott Walker’s administration prohibited state land
officials from talking about climate change. In North Carolina, the state
legislature, in conjunction with real-estate interests, effectively banned
policymakers from using scientific estimates of sea-level rise in the
coastal-planning process. Earlier this year, Americans for Prosperity, the most
important Koch front group, waged a campaign against new bus routes and
light-rail service in Tennessee, invoking human liberty. “If someone has the
freedom to go where they want, do what they want, they’re not going to choose
public transit,” a spokeswoman for the group explained. In Florida, an
anti-renewable-subsidy ballot measure invoked the “Rights of Electricity
Consumers Regarding Solar Energy Choice.”
Such efforts help explain why, in 2017, the growth of American residential
solar installations came to a halt even before March, 2018, when President
Trump imposed a thirty-per-cent tariff on solar panels, and why the number of
solar jobs fell in the U.S. for the first time since the industry’s great
expansion began, a decade earlier. In February, at the Department of Energy,
Rick Perry—who once skipped his own arraignment on two felony charges, which
were eventually dismissed, in order to attend a Koch brothers event—issued a
new projection in which he announced that the U.S. would go on emitting carbon
at current levels through 2050; this means that our nation would use up all the
planet’s remaining carbon budget if we plan on meeting the 1.5-degree target.
Skepticism about the scientific consensus, Perry told the media in 2017, is a
sign of a “wise, intellectually engaged person.”
Of all the environmental reversals made by the Trump
Administration, the most devastating was its decision, last year, to withdraw
from the Paris accords, making the U.S., the largest single historical source
of carbon, the only nation not engaged in international efforts to control it.
As the Washington Postreported, the withdrawal was the result of a
collaborative venture. Among the anti-government ideologues and fossil-fuel
lobbyists responsible was Myron Ebell, who was at Trump’s side in the Rose
Garden during the withdrawal announcement, and who, at Frontiers of
Freedom, had helped run a “complex influence campaign” in support of the
tobacco industry. Ebell is a director of the Competitive Enterprise Institute,
which was founded in 1984 to advance “the principles of limited government,
free enterprise, and individual liberty,” and which funds the Cooler Heads
Coalition, “an informal and ad-hoc group focused on dispelling the myths of
global warming,” of which Ebell is the chairman. Also instrumental were the
Heartland Institute and the Koch brothers’ Americans for Prosperity. After
Trump’s election, these groups sent a letter reminding him of his campaign
pledge to pull America out. The C.E.I. ran a TV spot: “Mr. President, don’t
listen to the swamp. Keep your promise.” And, despite the objections of most of
his advisers, he did. The coalition had used its power to slow us down
precisely at the moment when we needed to speed up. As a result, the particular
politics of one country for one half-century will have changed the geological
history of the earth.
We are on
a path to self-destruction, and yet there is nothing inevitable about our fate.
Solar panels and wind turbines are now among the least expensive ways to
produce energy. Storage batteries are cheaper and more efficient than ever. We
could move quickly if we chose to, but we’d need to opt for solidarity and
coördination on a global scale. The chances of that look slim. In Russia, the
second-largest petrostate after the U.S., Vladimir Putin believes that “climate
change could be tied to some global cycles on Earth or even of planetary
significance.” Saudi Arabia, the third-largest petrostate, tried to water down
the recent I.P.C.C. report. Jair Bolsonaro, the newly elected President of
Brazil, has vowed to institute policies that would dramatically accelerate the
deforestation of the Amazon, the world’s largest rain forest. Meanwhile, Exxon
recently announced a plan to spend a million dollars—about a hundredth of what
the company spends each month in search of new oil and gas—to back the fight
for a carbon tax of forty dollars a ton. At a press conference, some of the
I.P.C.C.’s authors laughed out loud at the idea that such a tax would, this
late in the game, have sufficient impact.
The possibility of swift change lies in people coming together in
movements large enough to shift the Zeitgeist. In recent years, despairing at
the slow progress, I’ve been one of many to protest pipelines and to call
attention to Big Oil’s deceptions. The movement is growing. Since 2015, when
four hundred thousand people marched in the streets of New York before the
Paris climate talks, activists—often led by indigenous groups and communities
living on the front lines of climate change—have blocked pipelines, forced the
cancellation of new coal mines, helped keep the major oil companies out of the
American Arctic, and persuaded dozens of cities to commit to
one-hundred-per-cent renewable energy.
Each of these efforts has played out in the shadow of the
industry’s unflagging campaign to maximize profits and prevent change. Voters
in Washington State were initially supportive of a measure on last month’s
ballot which would have imposed the nation’s first carbon tax—a modest fee that
won support from such figures as Bill Gates. But the major oil companies spent
record sums to defeat it. In Colorado, a similarly modest referendum that would
have forced frackers to move their rigs away from houses and schools went down after
the oil industry outspent citizen groups forty to one. This fall, California’s
legislators committed to using only renewable energy by 2045, which was a great
victory in the world’s fifth-largest economy. But the governor refused to stop
signing new permits for oil wells, even in the middle of the state’s largest
cities, where asthma rates are high.
New kinds of activism keep springing up. In Sweden this fall, a
one-person school boycott by a fifteen-year-old girl named Greta Thunberg
helped galvanize attention across Scandinavia. At the end of October, a new
British group, Extinction Rebellion—its name both a reflection of the dire
science and a potentially feisty response—announced plans for a campaign of
civil disobedience. Last week, fifty-one young people were arrested in Nancy
Pelosi’s office for staging a sit-in, demanding that the Democrats embrace a
“Green New Deal” that would address the global climate crisis with policies to
create jobs in renewable energy. They may have picked a winning issue: several
polls have shown that even Republicans favor more government support for solar
panels. This battle is epic and undecided. If we miss the two-degree target, we
will fight to prevent a rise of three degrees, and then four. It’s a long
escalator down to Hell.
Last
June, I went to Cape Canaveral to watch Elon Musk’s Falcon 9 rocket lift off.
When the moment came, it was as I’d always imagined: the clouds of steam
venting in the minutes before launch, the immensely bright column of flame
erupting. With remarkable slowness, the rocket began to rise, the grip of
gravity yielding to the force of its engines. It is the most awesome
technological spectacle human beings have produced.
Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Richard Branson are among the billionaires
who have spent some of their fortunes on space travel—a last-ditch effort to
expand the human zone of habitability. In November, 2016, Stephen Hawking gave
humanity a deadline of a thousand years to leave Earth. Six months later,
he revised the timetable to a century. In June, 2017, he told an audience that
“spreading out may be the only thing that saves us from ourselves.” He
continued, “Earth is under threat from so many areas that it is difficult for
me to be positive.”
But escaping the wreckage is, almost certainly, a fantasy. Even if
astronauts did cross the thirty-four million miles to Mars, they’d need to go
underground to survive there. To what end? The multimillion-dollar attempts at
building a “biosphere” in the Southwestern desert in 1991 ended in abject failure.
Kim Stanley Robinson, the author of a trilogy of novels about the colonization
of Mars, recently called such projects a “moral hazard.” “People think if we
fuck up here on Earth we can always go to Mars or the stars,” he said. “It’s
pernicious.”
The dream of interplanetary colonization also distracts us from
acknowledging the unbearable beauty of the planet we already inhabit. The day
before the launch, I went on a tour of the vast grounds of the Kennedy Space
Center with nasa’s
public-affairs officer, Greg Harland, and the biologist Don Dankert. I’d been
warned beforehand by other nasa officials
not to broach the topic of global warming; in any event, nasa’s predicament became obvious as
soon as we climbed up on a dune overlooking Launch Complex 39, from which the
Apollo missions left for the moon, and where any future Mars mission would
likely begin. The launchpad is a quarter of a mile from the ocean—a perfect
location, in the sense that, if something goes wrong, the rockets will fall
into the sea, but not so perfect, since that sea is now rising. nasa started worrying about
this sometime after the turn of the century, and formed a Dune Vulnerability
Team.
In 2012, Hurricane Sandy, even at a distance of a couple of
hundred miles, churned up waves strong enough to break through the barrier of
dunes along the Atlantic shoreline of the Space Center and very nearly swamped
the launch complexes. Dankert had millions of cubic yards of sand excavated
from a nearby Air Force base, and saw to it that a hundred and eighty thousand
native shrubs were planted to hold the sand in place. So far, the new dunes
have yielded little ground to storms and hurricanes. But what impressed me more
than the dunes was the men’s deep appreciation of their landscape. “Kennedy
Space Center shares real estate with the Merritt Island Wildlife Refuge,”
Harland said. “We use less than ten per cent for our industrial purposes.”
“When you look at the beach, it’s like eighteen-seventies
Florida—the longest undisturbed stretch on the Atlantic Coast,” Dankert said.
“We launch people into space from the middle of a wildlife refuge. That’s
amazing.”
The two men talked for a long time about their favorite local
species—the brown pelicans that were skimming the ocean, the Florida scrub
jays. While rebuilding the dunes, they carefully bucket-trapped and relocated
dozens of gopher tortoises. Before I left, they drove me half an hour across
the swamp to a pond near the Space Center’s headquarters building, just to show
me some alligators. Menacing snouts were visible beneath the water, but I was
more interested in the sign that had been posted at each corner of the pond
explaining that the alligators were native species, not pets. “Putting any food
in the water for any reason will cause them to become accustomed to people and
possibly dangerous,” it went on, adding that, if that should happen, “they must
be removed and destroyed.”
Something about the sign moved me tremendously. It would have been
easy enough to poison the pond, just as it would have been easy enough to
bulldoze the dunes without a thought for the tortoises. But nasa hadn’t done so, because of
a long series of laws that draw on an emerging understanding of who we are. In
1867, John Muir, one of the first Western environmentalists, walked from
Louisville, Kentucky, to Florida, a trip that inspired his first heretical
thoughts about the meaning of being human. “The world, we are told, was made
especially for man—a presumption not supported by all the facts,” Muir wrote in
his diary. “A numerous class of men are painfully astonished whenever they find
anything, living or dead, in all God’s universe, which they cannot eat or
render in some way what they call useful to themselves.” Muir’s proof that this
self-centeredness was misguided was the alligator, which he could hear roaring
in the Florida swamp as he camped nearby, and which clearly caused man mostly
trouble. But these animals were wonderful nonetheless, Muir decided—remarkable
creatures perfectly adapted to their landscape. “I have better thoughts of
those alligators now that I’ve seen them at home,” he wrote. In his diary, he
addressed the creatures directly: “Honorable representatives of the great
saurian of an older creation, may you long enjoy your lilies and rushes, and be
blessed now and then with a mouthful of terror-stricken man by way of dainty.”
That evening, Harland and Dankert drew a crude map to help me find
the beach, north of Patrick Air Force Base and south of the spot where, in
1965, Barbara Eden emerged from her bottle to greet her astronaut at the start
of the TV series “I Dream of Jeannie.” There, they said, I could wait out the
hours until the pre-dawn rocket launch and perhaps spot a loggerhead sea turtle
coming ashore to lay her eggs. And so I sat on the sand. The beach was
deserted, and under a near-full moon I watched as a turtle trundled from the
sea and lumbered deliberately to a spot near the dune, where she used her
powerful legs to excavate a pit. She spent an hour laying eggs, and even from
thirty yards away you could hear her heavy breathing in between the whispers of
the waves. And then, having covered her clutch, she tracked back to the ocean,
in the fashion of others like her for the past hundred and twenty million
years. ♦
An earlier version of this piece misstated the year that Hurricane
Sandy occurred.
This article appears in the print edition of the November 26,
2018, issue, with the headline “Life on a Shrinking Planet.”
·
Bill McKibben, a former New Yorker staff writer,
is a founder of the grassroots climate campaign 350.org and the Schumann
Distinguished Scholar in environmental studies at Middlebury College.
McKibb
McKibben, Bill, and Bill McKibben. “How Extreme Weather Is Shrinking the Planet.” The New Yorker, The New Yorker, 26 Nov. 2018, www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/11/26/how-extreme-weather-is-shrinking-the-planet.McKibb
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Carbon
Footprint vocabulary quiz on
Monday, February 11
1. capacity (noun)- the maximum amount
that something can contain or produce
2. theoretical (adjective)- hypothetical, conjectural, based on or calculated through theory
rather than experience or practice
3. optimistic (adjective)- hopeful and confident about the
future.
4. pessimistic (adjective)- tending to see the worst aspect of
things or believe that the worst will happen.
5. malnourished (adjective)- suffering from malnutrition. Not receiving
the proper nutrients to thrive
6. proliferation (noun)- rapid increase in numbers.
7. fjord (noun)- a long, narrow, deep inlet of the sea
between high cliff
8. force majeure (noun)-LAW: unforeseeable
circumstances that prevent someone from fulfilling a contract.
2.irresistible compulsion
or greater force.
9. consensus (noun)- a general agreement
10. zeitgeist (noun)- defining spirit or
mood of a particular period of history as shown by the ideas and beliefs of the
time.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Life on a Shrinking
Planet by Bill McKibben graphic organizer Please
use the accompanying article to respond to the following questions. You must use complete sentences with textual
evidence woven in. Remember to use quotation marks. Note that, although the
questions are in chronological order, there are no paragraph numbers; you will
need to read carefully.
1.
How have scientists come to define this age that
reflects “our capacity for industry and heedlessness”?
__________________________________________________________________________________
2.
Why has the “theoretical threat” of the greenhouse
effect become a “fierce daily reality”?
__________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________
3.
List four things, according to the text that
reflect “a tide of optimistic thinking”.
a._________________________________
b.________________________________
c. _________________________________
d.________________________________
4. How is war
different than “wars, truces, crashes and recoveries”?
____________________________________________________________________________________
5.How was “The Great Dying” different than today’s crisis?
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
6. How much carbon is the United States responsible for?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
7. What does the author McKibben mean when he says the world
is shrinking?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
8. What have Australian and American researchers determined
as “the highest survivable so-called “wet-bulb” temperature and why?
___________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________
9. How will the heat crisis change “areas of human endeavor”?
_________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________
10. Why will climate change not improve crop production?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
11. Despite knowing this problem 30-years-ago, what “has
defied expectations [on] the slowness of the response” in dealing with this
crisis?_________________-___________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
12. How has “an international ban on chlorine=containing
main-made chemicals” helped the planet?
________________________________________________________________________________
13. Why was the Kyoto agreement a moment of optimism back in
1997?
_______________________________________________________________________________
14. How has the Ayn Rand’s novel The Fountainhead influenced or reflected the corporate and economic
leaders of the last thirty years?
_________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________
15. What are two inexpensive ways to produce energy? A.
_______________________ B.______________
16. What have Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson and
Stephen Hawking have in common?
____________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________
17/ 18/ 19/
20 The environmentalist John Muir wrote
the following: “The world, we are told,
was made especially for man- a presumption not supported by all the facts. A
numerous class of men are painfully astonished whenever they find anything,
living or dead, in all God’s universe, which they cannot eat or render in some
way what they call useful to themselves.”
On the attached lined paper, write an
MLA heading, the topic being Muir. In a
minimum of 250 words, paraphrase Muir’s words and explain how they relate to
the McKibben text you have just read.
_____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
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