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Bush and Exxon get religion on climate change, sort of

Adam Stein | January 14, 2007

 

exxon.jpgTwo bits of related news: Exxon Mobil, the most significant industry climate change skeptic, has cut ties with the Competitive Enterprise Institute and begun participating in a series of talks on greenhouse gas regulations in the U.S. Meanwhile, the Guardian reports that George Bush is preparing to use his State of the Union address to formally shift his stance on global warming and signal a willingness to accept caps on U.S. emissions.

Officially, Exxon says that its position on global warming has not changed and has been widely misunderstood. Regardless, the break with CEI and newfound interest in regulation represents a clear shift in emphasis for the company. CEI, you probably recall, is the lobbying firm that gained a measure of notoriety this past summer by airing a series of cheesy pro-CO2 ads timed to coincide with the release of An Inconvenient Truth.

The news about Bush is still in the realm of hearsay. Aides to Tony Blair claim that Bush revealed his policy shift in a series of private talks with the British Prime Minister shortly before Christmas. We’ll have to wait until Bush’s speech on the 23rd before we know more.

Critics will be quick to question the motives of both Exxon and Bush, or to cast doubt on the depth of their commitment to fighting climate change. Exxon in particular has likely just read the writing on the wall and realized that it can more advantageously position itself by participating in the legislative process rather than throwing bombs at it. Bush may be considering his legacy, or seeking issues on which he can forge bipartisan consensus, or looking to leave his mark on legislation that he views as inevitable, or truly convinced of the importance of climate change.

These conjectures largely miss the point, though. Environmentalists are probably never going to find champions in either Exxon or the current administration. But these shifts signal a major realignment in the bounds of the debate over global warming. We are very rapidly reaching a point where it’s no longer tenable to deny the reality of manmade global warming, or question whether action needs to be taken to forestall its consequences. The only question now appears to be what form that action should take.

Watch over the course of the next year as the new terms of the debate trickle through the popular culture. Gone will be the measured he-said/she-said media stories that give equal column space to the dwindling supply of global warming skeptics. Gone will be the cocktail-party boor who claims that climate change is a hoax.

In their place will be a debate over what measures to take, and when, and how much they will cost, and who will pay. That debate will be fierce, but at least it’s the right one to have.

Update: This is what I mean by missing the point. In a post entitled, “Exxon’s Conversion: A Sober Second Look,” Desmog Blog notes that “there are several reasons to question the sincerity of the world’s biggest oil merchant.”

I’d put this a little more strongly. There are absolutely no reasons at all to believe Exxon has any sincere interest in tackling climate change. But it doesn’t matter all that much. The news here is not that the Sierra Club has great new ally in the battle to curb greenhouse gas emissions. The news is that the ground has shifted enough that even companies like Exxon can no longer deny the obvious.

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Comments

6 comment(s) on this post. Leave your own!


  • 1.

    Another option for why Bush is doing this is to attempt to partially eliminate a campaign issue for Democrats -- if the Republican president has already come out in favor of fighting global warming, Democrats may have a tougher time campaigning on the issue. This will create a challenge for major Democratic candidates, who will have to have a coherent message and will need to point out the incredibly poor record of this president on this issue over the full course of his presidency.


    Reply
  • 2.

    Good article, Adam.

    On thing to remember as we go forward is that we must accept that sometimes global warming prevention measures will LOSE some of these debates you mentioned. Not everything that could mitigate climate change is cost effective. It is a difficult question to ask which is better for Bangladeshis - spending money to mitigate climate change and thereby reduce flooding, or spending the money on providing them with water untained with arsenic, which is poisoning hundreds of thousands of people there.

    To deny these trade-offs exist, and that sometimes the other side of the ledger rather than the one we are championing is the more important, only makes us look like childish fools.


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  • 3.

    I wouldn't get so excited about the State of the Union address. Whitehouse press secretary Tony Snow said yesterday in a press conference, "If you're talking about enforceable carbon caps, in terms of industry wide and nationwide, we knocked that down. That's not something we're talking about."

    That's a pretty straight forward statement saying that the Administration *is not* interested in a carbon trading market. So what's the great Bush plan? Some kind of voluntary carbon trading market? I can't wait to see what the next Orwellian "Clear Skies" initiative we have to look forward to is.


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  • 4.

    If the democrats don't lose their nerve, they will be able to point to the many, many times the WH has said that it will do something with a nice-sounding name which on second look proves to be the exact opposite. It seems clear that everything environmental that Bush has actually done is the exact opposite of what he hopes to convince he public to think he has done. Any "action" on global warming is likely to be similar, and the Dems must say so loud and clear. After all, they have to make the the same argument on the Iraq War, don't they?


    Reply
  • 5.

    Please read for intelligent global change: www.complexxon.org
    Global solution; Europe should confront Bush with Exxon's industrial dominance and abusive conduct since 1963 (european Gasunie with Shell and dutch government)

    The only way out: european confrontation politics on global energy-diplomacy. The pegged Euro -into the U.S. dollar- should stand alone: Natural gas should be coupled to the Euro and oil be left to the dollar.

    The global problem is Cheap Oil, stupid!
    And don't forget COAL as well!


    Reply
  • 6.

    I read that George Bush is indifferent to global warming; he just doesn't care. And apparently Bush is focused more on Cheney's interests in the energy industry. Probably both Bush and Cheney will ignore global warming... they don't want to sign the Kyoto Protocol. Environmentalists will be angry at them, but then again much of the American public doesn't care about climate change.

    Myself, I can't decide... depends whether global warming disasters will happen soon, or in 20 years or 100 years... who knows...


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