'Time is Running Out,' American Petroleum Institute Chief Said in
1965
Speech on Climate Change
20
November, 2018
The warning is clear and dire — and the source unexpected. “This report unquestionably will fan emotions, raise fears, and bring demand for action,” the president of the American Petroleum Institute (API) told an oil industry conference, as he described research into climate change caused by fossil fuels.
“The
substance of the report is that there is still time to save the
world's peoples from the catastrophic consequence of pollution, but
time is running out.”
The
speaker wasn’t Mike Sommers, who was named to helm API this
past May.
Nor was it Jack
Gerard,
who served as API’s president for roughly
a decade starting
in 2008.
The API president
speaking those words was named Frank Ikard — and the year was 1965,
over a half-century ago.
It
was the same year that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. led a civil
rights march from
Selma to Montgomery, Muhammad Ali felled Sonny
Liston in the first round, and Malcom X was fatally
shot in
New York. The first American ground combat troops arrived
in Vietnam and
President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the law establishing Medicaid
and Medicare.
It
would be another four years before American astronaut Neil Armstrong
first set foot on the moon — and another decade before the phrase
“global warming” would appear for
the first time in
a peer-reviewed study.
And
1965, according to a letter
by Stanford historian Benjamin Franta published this week in
the peer-reviewed journal Nature, was the year that
President Johnson’s Science Advisory Committee published a
report titled “Restoring
the Quality of Our Environment,”
whose findings Ikard described at that year’s
annual API meeting.
“One
of the most important predictions of the report is that carbon
dioxide is being added to the Earth's atmosphere by the burning of
coal, oil, and natural gas at such a rate that by the year 2000 the
heat balance will be so modified as possibly to cause marked changes
in climate beyond local or even national efforts,” Ikard
presciently added, according to excerpts from his speech published
in Nature.
Exerpt
of API President Frank Ikard's 1965 speech on climate
change and fossil fuels.
API Funded Early Research Linking CO2 and Fossil Fuels
That
prediction was based in part on information that was known to the oil
industry trade group for over a decade — including research that
was directly funded by the API, according to Nature.
In
1954, a California Institute of Technology geochemist sent the API a
research proposal in which they reported that fossil fuels had
already caused carbon dioxide (CO2) levels to rise roughly five
percent since 1854 — a finding that Nature notes has since proved
to be accurate.
API accepted
the proposal and funded that Caltech research, giving the program the
name Project 53. Project 53 collected thousands of CO2 measurements
— but the results were never published.
Meanwhile,
other researchers were reaching similar conclusions. Nuclear
physicist Edward Teller became known in 1951 as the “father of the
hydrogen bomb” for designing a thermonuclear bomb that was even
more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped in Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Teller warned the
oil and gas industry in 1959 about global warming and sea level rise
in a talk titled “Energy Patterns of the Future.”
“Carbon
dioxide has a strange property,” Teller said in
excerpts published earlier
this year by The Guardian. “It transmits visible light but it
absorbs the infrared radiation which is emitted from the earth. Its
presence in the atmosphere causes a greenhouse effect.”
A
researcher at Humble Oil Co. (now known as ExxonMobil) checked
results from a study of carbon isotopes in tree rings against the
unpublished Caltech results, and found that
the two separate methods essentially agreed.
This figure shows the history of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations as directly measured at Mauna Loa, Hawaii since 1958. This curve is known as the Keeling curve, and is an essential piece of evidence of the man-made increases in greenhouse gases that are believed to be the cause of global warming. Credit: Delorme, data from Dr. Pieter Tans, NOAA, and Dr. Ralph Keeling, Scripps, CC BY-SA 4.0
And
in 1960, Charles Keeling first published the measurements that became
the famous “Keeling
curve” —
establishing one of the bedrock findings connecting climate change to
fossil fuels. The CO2 measurements taken by Keeling back in
the late 1950s showed levels of roughly 315 parts per million (ppm)
at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii and rising.
Those CO2 levels
have since climbed
upwards to
410.13 (ppm) on the day that the Nature letter was published
— CO2 levels that scientists knew both then and now would
be dangerously high, as carbon levels in the Earth’s atmosphere
have not been over 410 ppm in millions
of years.
What the Oil Industry Knew, Then and Now
In
his 1965 talk, the API’s Ikard described the role of oil and
gasoline specifically in causing climate change. “The report
further states, and I quote: ‘… the pollution from internal
combustion engines is so serious, and is growing so fast,'” he told
the API conference, “‘that an alternative nonpolluting
means of powering automobiles, buses, and trucks is likely to become
a national necessity.’”
Three
decades later, the API urged a
different approach to climate science. “It’s not known for sure
whether (a) climate change actually is occurring, or (b) if it is,
whether humans really have any influence on it,” the API wrote in
a 1998 draft memo titled “Global Climate Science Communications
Plan,” which was subsequently leaked.
As
of publication time, an API spokesperson had not
replied to questions sent by DeSmog.
It’s
worth noting that since 1965, the science connecting climate change
to fossil fuels has grown stronger and more robust. A scientific
consensus around the hazards of climate change and the role that
fossil fuels play in causing it has formed.
“Rigorous
analysis of all data and lines of evidence shows that most of the
observed global warming over the past 50 years or so cannot be
explained by natural causes and instead requires a significant role
for the influence of human activities,” the Royal Society explains.
Today,
the API continues to call for further research on climate
change — and expanding the
use of fossil fuels in the meantime.
“It
is clear that climate change is a serious issue that requires
research for solutions and effective policies that allow us to meet
our energy needs while protecting the environment: that's why oil and
gas companies are working to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions,”
the API’s webpage
on climate change states.
“Yet
archival documents show that even before Keeling published his
measurements,” Franta's letter published by Nature says, “oil
industry leaders were aware that their products were
causing CO2 pollution to accumulate in the planet’s
atmosphere, in a potentially dangerous fashion.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.