Will North America Be the New Middle East? It’s Yes or No For a Climate-Killing Oil Pipeline -- and Obama Gets to Make the Call
The climate problem has moved from the abstract to the very real in
the last 18 months. Instead of charts and graphs about what will happen
someday, we’ve got real-time video: first
Russia burning, then
Texas and
Arizona on fire. First
Pakistan suffered a deluge, then
Queensland, Australia, went underwater, and this spring and summer, it’s
the Midwest that’s flooding at historic levels.
The year 2010 saw the lowest volume of Arctic ice since scientists started to measure, more rainfall on land than any year in recorded history, and the lowest barometric pressure ever registered in the continental United States. Measured on a planetary scale, 2010 tied 2005 as the warmest year in history. Jeff Masters, probably the world’s most widely read meteorologist, calculated that the year featured the most extreme weather since at least 1816, when a giant volcano blew its top.
Since we’re the volcano now, and likely to keep blowing, here’s his
prognosis: “The ever-increasing amounts of heat-trapping gases humans
are emitting into the air put tremendous pressure on the climate system
to shift to a new, radically different, warmer state, and the extreme
weather of 2010-2011 suggests that the transition is already well
underway.”
There’s another shift, too, and that’s in the response from
climate-change activists. For the first two decades of the
global-warming era, the suggested solutions to the
problem had been as abstract as the science that went with it:
complicated schemes like the Kyoto Protocol, or the cap-and-trade
agreement that died in Congress in 2010. These were attempts to solve
the problem of climate change via complicated backstage maneuvers and
manipulations of prices or regulations. They failed in large part
because the fossil-fuel industry managed, at every turn, to dilute or
defang them.
Tomgram: Bill McKibben, The Great American Carbon Bomb
These days, even ostriches suffer from heat waves. More than 1,000 of them reportedly died
from overheating on South African farms during a 2010 drought. As for
American ostriches, the human variety anyway, at the moment it should
be increasingly hard for them to avoid extreme-weather news. After all,
whether you’re in sweltering heat, staggering drought, a record fire season, or a massive flood zone,
most of us are living through weird weather this year. And if you’re
one of the lucky few not in an extreme-weather district of the USA, you
still won’t have a problem running across hair-raising weather
stories, ranging from the possible loss of one out of every ten species on this planet by century’s end to the increasing inability of the oceans to soak up more atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Then, of course, there are those other headlines. Here's a typical one: “As Water Rises, Florida Officials Sit on Their Hands”
(a former member of the just abolished Florida Energy and Climate
Commission points out that, thanks to Republican governor Rick Scott and
the legislature in the part of the country most vulnerable to rising
sea levels, “there is no state entity addressing climate change and its
impact”). And here's another: “Economy Keeps Global Warming on the Back Burner for 2012”
(American climate-change “skeptics” are celebrating because “the tide
of the debate -- at least politically -- has turned in their favor” and
“political experts say that… concerns over global warming won't carry
much weight in the 2012 election”). And then there are the polls
indicating Americans are confused about the unanimity of the scientific
consensus on climate change, surprisingly dismissive of global-warming dangers, worry less about it than they did a decade ago, and of major environmental issues, worry least about it.
It’s true, of course, that no weird-weather incident you experience
can definitively be tied to climate change and other factors are
involved. Still, are we a nation of overheating ostriches? It’s a
reasonable enough conclusion, and in a sense, not so surprising. After
all, how does anyone react upon discovering that his or her way of life
is the crucial problem, that fossil fuels, which keep our civilization
powered up and to which our existence is tethered, are playing havoc
with the planet?
TomDispatch regular Bill McKibben, author most recently of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet,
is a man deeply committed to transforming us from climate-change
ostriches to climate-change eagles. Perhaps it’s time, he suggests, for
the environmental movement to get one heck of a lot blunter. Tom
Will North America Be the New Middle East?
It’s Yes or No For a Climate-Killing Oil Pipeline -- and Obama Gets to Make the Call
by Bill McKibben
Clearly the current Congress is in no mood for real regulation, so --
for the moment anyway -- the complicated planning is being replaced by a
simpler rallying cry. When it comes to coal, oil, and natural gas, the
new mantra of activists is simple, straightforward, and hard to defang:
Keep it in the ground!
Two
weeks ago, for instance, a few veteran environmentalists, myself
included, issued a call for protest against Canada’s plans to massively
expand oil imports from the tar sands regions of Alberta. We set up a
new website, tarsandsaction.org,
and judging from the early response, it could result in the largest
civil disobedience actions in the climate-change movement’s history on
this continent, as hundreds, possibly thousands, of concerned activists
converge on the White House in August. They’ll risk arrest to demand
something simple and concrete from President Obama: that he refuse to
grant a license for Keystone XL, a new pipeline from Alberta to the Gulf
of Mexico that would vastly increase the flow of tar sands oil through
the U.S., ensuring that the exploitation of Alberta’s tar sands will
only increase.
Forget the abstract and consider the down-and-dirty instead. You can
undoubtedly guess some of the reasons for opposition to such a
pipeline. It’s wrecking native lands in Canada, and potential spills
from that pipeline could pollute some of the most important ranchlands
and aquifers in America. (Last week’s Yellowstone River spill was seen
by many as a sign of what to expect.)
There’s an even bigger reason to oppose the pipeline, one that should
be on the minds of even those of us who live thousands of miles away:
Alberta’s tar sands are the continent’s biggest carbon bomb. Indeed,
they’re the second largest pool of carbon on planet Earth, following
only Saudi Arabia’s slowly dwindling oilfields.
If you could burn all the oil in those tar sands, you’d run the
atmosphere’s concentration of carbon dioxide from its current 390 parts
per million (enough to cause the climate havoc we’re currently seeing)
to nearly 600 parts per million, which would mean if not hell, then at
least a world with a similar temperature. It won’t happen overnight,
thank God, but according
to the planet’s most important climatologist, James Hansen, burning
even a substantial portion of that oil would mean it was “essentially
game over” for the climate of this planet.
Halting that pipeline wouldn’t solve all tar sands problems. The
Canadians will keep trying to get it out to market, but it would
definitely ensure that more of that oil will stay in the ground longer
and that, at least, would be a start. Even better, the politics of it
are simple. For once, the Republican majority in the House of
Representatives can’t get in the way. The president alone decides if
the pipeline is “in the national interest.” There are, however, already
worrisome signs within the Obama administration. Just this week, based
on a State Department cable released by WikiLeaks, Neela Banerjee of theLos Angeles Times reported that,
in 2009, the State Department's "energy envoy" was already instructing
Alberta's fossil-fuel barons in how to improve their "oil sands
messaging," including "increasing visibility and accessibility of more
positive news stories." This is the government version of
Murdochian-style enviro-hacking, and it leads many to think that the new
pipeline is already a done deal.
Still, the president can say no. If he does, then no pipeline -- and in the words
of Alberta’s oil minister, his province will be “landlocked in bitumen”
(the basic substance from which tar-sands oil is extracted). Even
energy-hungry China, eager as it is for new sources of fossil fuels, may
not be able to save him, since native tribes are doing a remarkable job
of blocking another proposed pipeline to the Canadian Pacific. Oil,
oil everywhere, and nary a drop to sell. (Unfortunately that’s not quite
true, but at least there won’t be a big new straw in this milkshake.)
An Obama thumbs-down on the pipeline could change the economics of
the tar sands in striking ways. “Unless we get increased [market]
access, like with Keystone XL, we’re going to be stuck,” said Ralph Glass, an economist and vice-president at AJM Petroleum Consultants in Calgary.
Faced with that prospect, Canada’s oilmen are growing desperate. Earlier this month, in a classic sleight of hand, they announced
plans for a giant “carbon capture and sequestration” scheme at the tar
sands. That’s because when it comes to global warming, tar sands oil is
even worse than, say, Saudi oil because it’s a tarry muck, not a liquid,
and so you have to burn a lot of natural gas to make it flow in the
first place.
Now, the oil industry is proposing to capture some of the extra
carbon from that cooking process and store it underground. This is an
untested method, and the accounting scheme Alberta has adopted for it
may actually increase
the province's emmissions. Even if it turns out to work perfectly and
captures the carbon from that natural gas that would have escaped into
the atmosphere, the oil they’re proposing to ship south for use in our
gas tanks would still be exactly as bad for the atmosphere as Saudi
crude. In other words, in the long run it would still be “essentially
game over” for the climate.
The Saudis, of course, built their oil empire long before we knew
that there was anything wrong with burning oil. The Canadians -- with
American help, if Obama obliges the oil lobby -- are building theirs in
the teeth of the greatest threat the world has ever faced. We can’t
unbuild those Saudi Arabian fields, though happily their supplies are
starting to slowly dwindle. What we can still do, though, is prevent
North America from becoming the next Middle East.
So there will be a battle, and there will be nothing complicated or
abstract about it. It will be based on one question: Does that carbon
stay in the earth, or does it pour into the atmosphere? Given the
trillions of dollars at stake it will be a hard fight, and there’s no
guarantee of victory. But at least there’s no fog here, no maze of
technicalities.
The last climate bill, the one the Senate punted on, was thousands of
pages long. This time there’s a single sheet of paper, which Obama
signs… or not.
Copyright 2011 Bill McKibben