We
Are Now in the Terminal Stage of Our Fossil-Fuel Addiction
Senior
politicians in both parties have become so intoxicated by the idea of
an American surge in energy production that they have lost their
senses.
Michael
T. Klare
A hard hat from an oil worker lies in oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill on East Grand Terre Island, Louisiana. (Reuters/Lee Celano)
1
April, 2014
This
article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com.
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Of
all the preposterous, irresponsible headlines that have appeared on
the front page of The
New
York Times
in recent years, few have exceeded the inanity of this
one
from early March: “US Hopes Boom in Natural Gas Can Curb Putin.”
The article by normally reliable reporters Coral Davenport and Steven
Erlanger suggested that, by sending our surplus natural gas to Europe
and Ukraine in the form of liquefied
natural gas
(LNG), the United States could help reduce the region’s heavy
reliance on Russian gas and thereby stiffen its resistance to
Vladimir Putin’s aggressive behavior.
Forget
that the United States currently lacks the capacity to export LNG to
Europe, and will not be able to do so on a significant scale until
the 2020s. Forget that Ukraine lacks any LNG receiving facilities and
is unlikely to acquire any, as its only coastline is on the Black
Sea, in areas dominated by Russian speakers with loyalties to Moscow.
Forget as well that any future US exports will be funneled into the
international marketplace, and so will favor
sales to Asia where gas prices are 50 percent higher than in Europe.
Just focus on the article’s central reportorial flaw: it fails to
identify a single reason why future American LNG exports (which could
wind up anywhere) would have any influence whatsoever on the Russian
president’s behavior.
The
only way to understand the strangeness of this is to assume that the
editors of the Times,
like senior politicians in both parties, have become so intoxicated
by the idea of an American surge in oil and gas production that they
have lost their senses.
As
domestic output of oil and gas has increased in recent years—largely
through the use of fracking
to exploit hitherto impenetrable shale deposits—many policymakers
have concluded that the United States is better positioned to throw
its weight around in the world. “Increasing US energy
supplies,” said
then-presidential security adviser Tom Donilon in April 2013,
“affords us a stronger hand in pursuing and implementing our
international security goals.” Leaders in Congress on both sides of
the aisle have voiced similar views.
The
impression one gets from all this balderdash is that increased oil
and gas output—like an extra dose of testosterone—will somehow
bolster the will and confidence of American officials when
confronting their foreign counterparts. One former White House
official cited by Davenport and Erlanger caught the mood of the
moment perfectly: “We’re engaging from a different position [with
respect to Russia] because we’re a much larger energy producer.”
It
should be obvious to anyone who has followed recent events in the
Crimea and Ukraine that increased US oil and gas output have provided
White House officials with no particular advantage in their efforts
to counter Putin’s aggressive moves—and that the prospect of
future US gas exports to Europe is unlikely to alter his strategic
calculations. It seems, however, that senior US officials beguiled by
the mesmerizing image of a future “Saudi
America”
have simply lost touch with reality.
For
anyone familiar with addictive behavior, this sort of delusional
thinking would be a sign of an advanced stage of fossil
fuel addiction.
As the ability to distinguish fantasy from reality evaporates, the
addict persists in the belief that relief for all problems lies just
ahead—when, in fact, the very opposite is true.
The
analogy is hardly new, of course, especially when it comes to
America’s reliance on imported petroleum. “America is addicted to
oil,” President George W. Bush typically declared
in his 2006 State of the Union address (and he was hardly the first
president to do so). Such statements have often been accompanied in
the media by cartoons
of Uncle Sam as a junkie, desperately injecting his next petroleum
“fix.” But few analysts have carried the analogy further,
exploring the ways our growing dependence on oil has generated
increasingly erratic and self-destructive behavior. Yet it is
becoming evident that the world’s addiction to fossil fuels has
reached a point at which we should expect the judgment of senior
leaders to become impaired, as seems to be happening.
The
most persuasive evidence that fossil fuel addiction has reached a
critical stage may be found in official US data on carbon dioxide
emissions. The world is now emitting one and a half times as much CO2
as it did in 1988, when James
Hansen,
then director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, warned
Congress that the planet was getting warmer as a result of the
“greenhouse effect,” and that human activity—largely in the
form of carbon emissions from the consumption of fossil fuels—was
almost certainly the cause.
If
a reasonable concern over the fate of the planet were stronger than
our reliance on fossil fuels, we would expect to see, if not a
reduction in carbon emissions, then a decline at least in the rate of
increase of emissions over time. Instead, the US
Energy Information Administration
(EIA) predicts that global emissions will continue to rise at a
torrid pace over the next quarter century, reaching 45.5 billion
metric tons in 2040—more than double the amount recorded in 1998
and enough, in the view of most scientists, to turn our planet into a
living hell. Though seldom recognized as such, this is the definition
of addiction-induced self-destruction, writ large.
For
many of us, the addiction to petroleum is embedded in our everyday
lives in ways over which we exercise limited control. Because of the
systematic dismantling and defunding of public transportation (along
with the colossal subsidization of highways), for instance, we have
become highly reliant
on oil-powered vehicles, and it is very hard for most of us living
outside big cities to envision a practical alternative to driving.
More and more people are admittedly trying to kick this habit at an
individual level by acquiring hybrid or all-electric cars, by using
public transit
where available, or by bicycling, but that remains a drop in the
bucket. It will take a colossal future effort to reconstruct our
transportation system along climate-friendly lines.
For
what might be thought of as the Big Energy equivalent of the 1
percent, the addiction to fossils fuels is derived from the thrill of
riches and power—something that is far more difficult to resist or
deconstruct. Oil is the world’s most lucrative commodity on the
planet, and a source of great
wealth
and influence for ruling groups in the countries that produce it,
notably Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Nigeria, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela,
the United Arab Emirates and the United States. The leaders of these
“petro-states”
may not always benefit personally from the accumulation of oil
revenues, but they certainly recognize that their capacity to govern,
or even remain in power, rests on their responsiveness to entrenched
energy interests and their skill in deploying the nation’s energy
resources for political and strategic advantage. This is just as true
for Barack Obama, who has championed
the energy industry’s drive to increase domestic oil and gas
output, as it is for Vladimir Putin, who has sought to boost
Russia’s international clout through increased fossil fuel exports.
Top
officials in these countries know better than most of us that severe
climate change is coming our way, and that only a sharp reduction in
carbon emissions can prevent its most destructive effects. But
government and corporate officials are so wedded to fossil fuel
profits—or to the political advantages that derive from controlling
oil’s flow—that they are quite incapable of overcoming their
craving for ever greater levels of production. As a result, while
President Obama speaks often enough of his desire to increase the
nation’s reliance on renewable energy, he has embraced an “all
of the above”
energy plan that is underwriting a boom in oil and gas output. The
same is true for virtually every other major government figure.
Obeisance is routinely paid to the need for increased green
technology, but a priority continues to be placed on increases in
oil, gas, and coal production. Even in 2040, according to EIA
predictions,
these fuels may still be supplying four-fifths of the world’s total
energy supply.
This
bias in favor of fossil fuels over other forms of energy—despite
all we know about climate change—can only be viewed as a kind of
carbon delirium. You can find evidence of this pathology worldwide
and in myriad ways, but here are three unmistakable examples of our
advanced stage of addiction.
1.
The Obama administration’s decision to allow BP to resume oil
drilling in the Gulf of Mexico
After
energy giant BP (formerly British Petroleum) pleaded
guilty
to criminal negligence in the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster,
which resulted in the death of eleven people and a colossal oil
spill, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) suspended
the company’s right to acquire new drilling leases in the Gulf of
Mexico. The ban was widely viewed as a major setback for the company,
which had long sought to dominate production in the Gulf’s deep
waters. To regain access to the Gulf, BP sued
the EPA and brought other pressures to bear on the Obama
administration. Finally, on March 13, after months of lobbying and
negotiations, the agency announced
that BP would be allowed to resume bidding for new leases, as long as
it adhered to a list of supposedly tight restrictions
BP
officials viewed the announcement as an enormous victory, allowing
the company to resume a frenetic search for new oil deposits in the
Gulf’s deep waters. “Today’s agreement will allow America’s
largest investor to compete again for federal contracts and leases,”
said
BP America Chairman and President John Mingé. Observers in the oil
industry predict that the company will now acquire many additional
leases in the Gulf, adding to its already substantial presence there.
“With this agreement, it’s realistic to expect that the Gulf of
Mexico can be a key asset for BP’s operations not only for this
decade but potentially for decades to come,” commented
Stephen Simko, an oil specialist at Morningstar investment analysts.
(Six days after the EPA announced its decision, BP bid
$42 million
to acquire twenty-four new leases in the Gulf.)
So
BP’s interest is clear enough, but what is the national interest in
all this? Yes, President Obama can claim that increased drilling
might add a few hundred thousand barrels per day to domestic oil
output, plus a few thousand new jobs. But can he really assure our
children or grandchildren that, in allowing increased drilling in the
Gulf, he is doing all he can to reduce the threat of climate change
as he promised
to do in his most recent State of the Union address? If he truly
sought a simple and straightforward way to renew that pledge, this
would have been a good place to start: plenty of people remember the
damage inflicted by the Deepwater Horizon disaster and
the indifference
BP’s top officials displayed toward many of its victims, so
choosing to maintain the ban on its access to new drilling leases on
environmental and climate grounds would certainly have attracted
public support. The fact that Obama chose not to do so suggests
instead a further surrender to the power of oil and gas interests—and
to the effects of carbon delirium.
2.
The Republican drive to promote construction of the Keystone XL
pipeline as a response to the Ukrainian crisis
If
Obama administration dreams about pressuring Putin by exporting LNG
to Europe fail to pass the credibility test, a related drive by key
Republicans to secure approval for the Keystone XL tar-sands pipeline
defies any notion of sanity. Keystone, as you may
recall,
is intended to carry carbon-dense, highly corrosive diluted bitumen
from the Athabasca tar sands of Alberta, Canada, to refineries on the
Gulf Coast. Its construction has been held up by concerns
that it will pose a threat to water supplies along its route and help
increase global carbon dioxide emissions.
Because
Keystone crosses an international boundary, its construction must
receive approval not just from the State Department, but from the
president himself. The Republicans and their conservative backers
have long favored the pipeline as a repudiation of what they view as
excessive governmental deference to environmental concerns. Now, in
the midst of the Ukraine crisis, they are suddenly depicting
pipeline approval as a signal of US determination to resist Putin’s
aggressive moves in the Crimea and Ukraine.
“Putin
is playing for the long haul, cleverly exploiting every opening he
sees. So must we,” wrote
former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in a recent Washington
Post
op-ed. “Authorizing the Keystone XL pipeline and championing
natural gas exports would signal that we intend to do precisely
that.”
Does
anyone truly believe that Vladimir Putin will be influenced by a
White House announcement that it will allow construction of the
Keystone XL pipeline? Putin’s government is already facing
significant economic sanctions and other punitive moves, yet none of
this has swayed him from pursuing what he appears to believe are
Russia’s core interests. Why, then, would the possibility that the
US might acquire more of its oil from Canada and less from Mexico,
Nigeria, Venezuela and other foreign suppliers even register on his
consciousness?
In
addition, to suggest that approving Keystone XL would somehow stiffen
Obama’s resolve, inspiring him to adopt tougher measures against
Moscow, is to engage in what psychologists call “magical thinking.”
Were Keystone to transport any other substance than oil, the claim
that its construction would somehow affect presidential
decision-making or events on Russia’s borders would be laughable.
So great is our reverence for petroleum, however, that we allow
ourselves to believe in such miracles. This, too, is carbon delirium.
3.
The Case of the Missing $20 Billion
Finally,
consider the missing
$20 billion in oil revenues from the Nigerian treasury. In Nigeria,
where the average income is less than $2 per day and many millions
live in extreme
poverty,
the disappearance of that much money is a cause for extreme concern.
If used for the public good, that $20 billion might have provided
basic education and health care for millions, helped alleviate the
AIDS epidemic, and jump-started development in poor rural areas. But
in all likelihood, much of that money has already found its way into
the overseas bank accounts of well-connected Nigerian officials.
Its
disappearance was first revealed in February when the governor of the
Central Bank of Nigeria, Lamido Sanusi, told
a parliamentary investigating committee that the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)
had failed to transfer the proceeds from oil sales to the national
treasury as required by law. Nigeria
is Africa’s leading oil producer and the proceeds from its
petroleum output not claimed by the NNPC’s foreign partners are
supposed to wind up in the state’s coffers. With oil prices
hovering at around $100 per barrel, Nigeria should theoretically be
accumulating tens of billions of dollars per year from export sales.
Sanusi was immediately fired by President Goodluck Jonathan for
conveying the news that the NNPC has been reporting suspiciously low
oil revenues to the central bank, depriving the state of vital income
and threatening the stability of the nation’s currency. The only
plausible explanation, he suggested, is that the company’s
officials are skimming off the difference. “A substantial amount of
money has gone,” he told The
New
York Times.
“I wasn’t just talking about numbers. I showed it was a scam.”
While
the magnitude of the scam may be eye-catching, its existence is
hardly surprising. Ever since Nigeria began producing oil some 60
years ago, a small coterie of business and government oligarchs has
controlled the allocation of petroleum revenues, using them to buy
political patronage and secure their own private fortunes. The NNPC
has been an especially fertile site for corruption,
as its operations are largely immune from public inspection and the
opportunities for swindles are mammoth. Sanusi is only one of a
series of well-intentioned civil servants who have attempted to plumb
the depths of the thievery. A 2012 report by former anti-corruption
chief Nuhu Ribadu reported the
disappearance of a hardly less staggering $29 billion from the NNPC
between 2001 and 2011.
Here,
then, is another, equally egregious form of carbon delirium:
addiction to illicit oil wealth so profound as to place the solvency
and well-being of 175 million people at risk. President Jonathan has
now promised
to investigate Sanusi’s charges, but it is unlikely that any
significant portion of the missing $20 billion will ever make it into
Nigeria’s treasury.
These
examples of carbon delirium indicate just how deeply entrenched it is
in global culture. In the US, addiction to carbon is present at all
levels of society, but the higher one rises in corporate and
government circles, the more advanced the process
Slowing
the pace of climate change will only be possible once this affliction
is identified, addressed and neutralized. Overcoming individual
addiction to narcotic substances is never an easy task; resisting our
addiction to carbon will prove no easier. However, the sooner we
recast the climate issue as a public health problem, akin to drug
addiction, the sooner we will be able to fashion effective strategies
for averting its worst effects. This means, for example, providing
programs and incentives for those of us who seek to reduce our
reliance on petroleum, and imposing penalties on those who resist
such a transition or actively promote addiction to fossil fuels.
Divesting
from fossil fuel stocks is certainly one way to go cold turkey. It
involves sacrificing expectations of future rewards from the
possession of such stocks, while depriving the fossil fuel companies
of our investment funds and, by extension, our consent for their
activities.
But
a more far-ranging kind of carbon detoxification must come in time.
As with all addictions, the first and most crucial step is to
acknowledge that our addiction to fossil fuels has reached such an
advanced stage as to pose a direct danger to all humanity. If we are
to have any hope of averting the worst effects of climate change, we
must fashion a 12-step program for universal carbon renunciation and
impose penalties on those who aid and abet our continuing addiction.
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