As
Scientists Warn About Climate Change, Russia Eyes Vast Frack Reserves
undated
So
tomorrow is the day.
The day that the world’s leading scientists will announce they are more certain than ever that humans are changing the climate.
The
report will be met with a frothing
load of bile
from the usual skeptics linked to a network of right wing think tanks
such as the Heartland Institute in the U.S., the Global Warming
Policy Foundation in the UK or right-leaning newspapers, many of whom
are linked to a certain Mr. Rupert Murdoch.
The
skeptical response is nothing new and fits into a well-trodden
pattern of denial that now stretches back decades. The scientists
Dana
Nuccitelli and John Abraham
have pointed out that there are five stages of climate denial: deny
the problem exists, deny we are the cause, deny it’s a problem,
deny we can solve it and claim it’s too late to do anything.
The
problem with the denial is that it opens up political space for the
oil industry to carry on doing what it does best. Drill for oil and
gas.
A
parallel universe exists—the climate scientists argue that we have
to stop burning fossil fuels—and the industry carries on
regardless.
Many
organizations and people have argued for a whole that we have to
think the unthinkable and leave a large amount of fossil fuels in the
ground—somewhere between 50 to 75 percent of reserves.
The
latest senior diplomat to do so is Mary Robinson, the former Irish
president and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, who told the
Guardian
earlier in the week “There is a global limit on a safe level of
emissions. That means major fossil fuel reserves must be left in the
ground. That has huge implications for economic and social
development.”
Try
telling that to Russians, to give you one example. The country could
be the latest to experience a fracking
boom, which could have huge ramifications for the climate.
According
to the Financial
Times,
one estimate of the reserves of the vast Bazhenov geological
formation is that it contains as much as 100 billion barrels of
recoverable oil, making it five-times larger than North
Dakota’s
Bakken shale, which has led America’s fracking boom.
Bakken
may be big, but the Bazhenov is a giant. “It is bigger than the 10
to 15 next biggest shale plays combined,” Tom Reed, chief executive
of Ruspetro, a small oil company with 300,000 acres in the Bazhenov,
tells the paper.
No
wonder the Russians are excited. “In 20 years, the Bazhenov might
be Russia’s main source of oil—even bigger than the Arctic
oceans,” Leonid Fedun, vice president of Lukoil, says. “It allows
us to be a lot more optimistic about the next 50 years of our oil
production.”
So
this is the dilemma: the Russians may be looking at 50 more years of
oil with excitement, yet many people are arguing that we cannot
afford to burn that oil at all, certainly not for another 50 years.
Whether
the scientists or oilmen win the defining battle of our time—how
and when to wean ourselves off fossil fuels—will shape what this
world looks like for our children and grandchildren.
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