This is the Exxon that knew about the dangers of global warming almost 40 years ago and covered up their own research to bankroll climate change denial
Exxon Warns Climate Inaction Risks Warming Far Beyond 2 Degrees
9
December, 2015
Blink
and you’ll miss it, but one line in a recent Washington Post
interview on climate
changewith
experts from fossil fuel giant ExxonMobil offhandedly
suggests a nightmarish, desperate future if global leaders don’t
act fast—one that centers around a possible average temperature
rise of up to 7 or more degrees Celsius.
“With
no government action, Exxon experts told us during a visit to The
Post last week, average temperatures are likely to rise by a
catastrophic (my word, not theirs) 5 degrees Celsius, with rises of
6, 7 or even more quite possible,” writes the Post’s editorial
page editor Fred Hiatt in a piece titled “Even
ExxonMobil says climate change is real. So why won’t the GOP?“
Scientists
have long warned that allowing a global temperature rise of 2C or
higher would bring irreparable climate change and extreme
weather events.
Heads of state are assembled in Paris to negotiate a global
climate agreement to
limit global warming before the planet hits that threshold.
Grassroots climate justice groups are calling for an even narrower
target of 1.5C. But a contrarian sect of the Republican party
has threatened
to obstruct any
environmental policies that come home from Paris—which could derail
any progress made at the COP21
talks.
As
Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman explained in
a piece published last week in the New York Times:
“Future
historians—if there are any future historians—will almost surely
say that the most important thing happening in the world during
December 2015 was the climate talks in Paris. True, nothing agreed to
in Paris will be enough, by itself, to solve the problem of global
warming. But the talks could mark a turning point, the beginning of
the kind of international action needed to avert catastrophe.”
“Then
again, they might not; we may be doomed. And if we are, you know who
will be responsible: the Republican Party.”
“We’re
looking at a party that has turned its back on science at a time when
doing so puts the very future of civilization at risk,” Krugman
writes.
This
political obstructionism throws up another challenge to the American
COP21 contingent, which has already proven to be a contentious
presence at
preliminary negotiations earlier this year in Bonn,
Germany,
criticized by developing nations for its attempt to weasel out
offinancial
obligations to
frontline communities already struggling under the impacts of climate
change.
But
Krugman also points to an article published in
August in Politics & Policy, a political science journal, that
states, “The U.S. Republican Party is an anomaly in denying
anthropogenic climate change.”
That
paints an uncertain future for any agreement that emerges from the
negotiations. However, as The Nation’s environmental correspondent
Mark Hertsgaard wrote in a piece published Monday,
renewed hope is stirring among the grassroots organizations operating
from the sidelines in Paris.
Hertsgaard
writes:
“[T]he
final agreement governments hope to sign by week’s end may urge
limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius. This would
represent a major shift from the current international goal of 2
degrees C as well as a historic—and surprising—victory for the
world’s poor and most vulnerable nations. Their representatives,
joined by climate justice activists, have long criticized the 2
degrees C goal as a virtual death sentence for millions of people
already suffering from the sea level rise, harsher droughts and other
impacts unleashed by the 1 degree C of temperature rise measured to
date.”
“Previously
dismissed by most wealthy countries as economically unrealistic, the
1.5 degrees C target has re-emerged at the Paris summit due to a
confluence of factors: increased recognition by many wealthy
countries that even 2 degrees C will bring ruinous changes to food,
water and other vital systems; a more unified diplomatic posture on
the part of the 100-plus poor and highly vulnerable countries on
record supporting a 1.5 degrees C target and relentless pressure from
civil society.”
French
President Francois Hollande and German Environmental Ministry State
Secretary Jochen Flasbarth both expressed their support for the 1.5C
goal last week and, notably, acknowledged that it was environmental
campaigning that brought the world to this moment.
“We
cannot accept that the poorest countries, those with the lowest
greenhouse gas emissions, are the most vulnerable,” Hollande said.
“It is therefore on behalf of climate justice that we must act.”
Flasbarth
confirmed that the 1.5C goal was Germany’s official position and
that the target “must be mentioned” in the final agreement.
“Thus
the 1.5C goal has now been endorsed by the host nation of the summit
as well as Europe’s strongest economy,” Hertsgaard writes.
The
Guardian reported late
Monday afternoon that the U.S., Canada, China and the European Union
(EU)—the world’s biggest polluters—were “open to” the 1.5C
goal and “are working with other countries on some formulation that
would include 1.5C,” according to State Department Envoy Todd
Stern. But that announcement received lukewarm reactions from
environmental campaigners and delegates from larger, developing
countries who said it was just another attempt by wealthy nations to
pass off obligations of reducing emissions.
“Why
not 1C, why 1.5C,” said Ashok Lavasa, India’s lead negotiator.
“The moment we are talking about target we are also talking about
carbon budgets. We need to look at the development space that is
available and therefore those who are eager to maintain it below 2C
should actually be working to maintain that carbon space so that they
don’t compromise the needs of developing countries.”
Erich Pica, director of the climate group Friends of the Earth, added, “The U.S. and European countries are adopting the idea of 1.5C as a mitigation target but they are blurring of the lines on what has to happen to have a just and fair sharing of the 1.5C equation.”
Meanwhile,
The Post editorial prompts another question in light of
two groundbreaking
investigations that
recently exposed the oil giant’s role in suppressing climate change
science for decades: What else does Exxon know?
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