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Annals of a Warming Planet
Slow-Walking the Climate Crisis
Greenwashing is too kind a term; this is more like careful sabotage.
By Bill McKibben
August 25, 2021
Travellers arriving in an unfamiliar city used to worry that theyd climb in a taxi and be driven to their destination by the most circuitous route possible, racking up an enormous bill. Thats pretty much what Big Oil and its allies in government and the financial world are doing with the climate crisisin fact, at this point, its the heart of the problem.
Yes, there are a few bitter-enders who refuse to acknowledge that change must come. Earlier in the summer, the Saudi Minister of Energy, Abdulaziz bin Salman, reportedly told a Bank of America gathering that every molecule of hydrocarbon will be drained from his countrys oil fields. But most fossil-fuel profiteers have learned to talk the talk. Jamie Dimon, the C.E.O. of JPMorgan Chase, for instance, has lent more money to the fossil-fuel industry than anyone elsebut he was wise enough to say, in April, that climate change and inequality are two of the critical issues of our time. The bank has pledged that, by 2030, it will invest a trillion dollars in green initiatives that boost renewable energy and clean technologies. Does that mean one of Americas largest financial institutions is moving away from fossil fuels? Of course not. Last year, Chase once again topped the charts as Big Oils biggest financial lifeline. Indeed, earlier this month, DeSmogBlog released transcripts from an energy capital conference held earlier in the year. There, Chases managing director, Greg Determann, was asked by one expert if the company was still going to be lending to oil and gas companies. For a long time, Determann said, without hesitation. Mr. Dimon is quite focussed on the industry. Its a huge business for us and thats going to be the case for decades to come.
The same logic that governs companies often governs countries, too. As the veteran energy analyst Ketan Joshi pointed out, the Australian Prime Minister, Scott Morrison, has set the de-rigeur target of net zero by 2050, but, in April, indicated that the trajectory to any net-zero outcome is not linear, and anyone who thinks it is I think doesnt get it. Morrison traced a curve in the air with his hand after he spoke, Joshi noted, suggesting emissions reductions occur very late in the 30 years between now and 2050. What we are seeing here is a mumbled acknowledgement of the macro problem, but an aggressive refusal to consider the micro components that comprise it, Joshi wrote. It is the core engine of climate inaction.
This is absolutely correct. We call it greenwashing, but thats too technical a term. We should call it what it is: people with a vested interest are learning how to slow-walk this crisis. Theyve done it with a thousand other crises, too, of courseone thinks of how, following the Supreme Courts ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, segregationists managed to delay action for a decade or more, focussing on a single phrase in the decision: with all deliberate speed. But here theyre doing it in the face of an absolute deadline imposed by science. As the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has made clear, we must cut emissions in half by 2030 or our chances of meeting the targets that we set in Paris just six years ago fall by the wayside. Slow-walking is sabotagesmiling, and deadly.
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https://www.newyorker.com/news/annals-of-a-warming-planet/slow-walking-the-climate-crisis