Words
alone won’t hinder climate change.
He didn’t hand the Sierra Club tens of millions of dollars to
fight the coal industry like former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg. Nor did the chairman and CEO of Exxon Mobil
follow former hedge fund investor Tom Steyer‘s lead by giving political candidates with climate
cred campaign cash.
What did Tillerson, whom Forbes ranks among the
world’s most powerful people, do? He disclosed his take on
the proper role for big oil and gas companies regarding global warming,
declaring: “We’re not going to fake it.”
The head of the biggest U.S. oil company made this blunt statement after reporters and investors prodded him about the company’s climate change plans. Exxon’s European competitors, including BP, Shell, and Total, admit that fossil fuels harm the climate and want to be “part of the solution,” as Total CEO Patrick Pouyanne puts it.
These corporations are even urging world leaders to make
them pay for their carbon pollution — a move bound
to crimp oil consumption.
Most Americans worry about global warming. By refusing to
voluntarily revamp their business models, Exxon and No. 2 U.S. oil company
Chevron are leaving it up to you to use less dirty energy. You know, drive
less. Turn off more lights.
That won’t suffice. All levels of government must shrink
humanity’s collective carbon footprint through regulation, taxation, better
urban planning, and green-energy incentives.
Maybe you think President Barack Obama is on it. But he’s
consistently inconsistent with climate action. One day he’s doing something
nice for a dirty-energy industry. The next, he’s making a poignant
statement about global warming.
In recent weeks, the Obama administration has signaled that it
will open vast tracts of public land to heavily subsidized coal mining, mainly in
Wyoming, and has greenlighted offshore arctic oil drilling. Obama’s emissions-cutting plan
treats gas-fired power plants as an improvement over burning coal. Yet gas
fracking releases vast quantities of methane, a potent climate
pollutant.
Meanwhile, Obama warned during his tour of the National Hurricane Center that climate change is fueling
extreme weather. He acknowledged via an inaugural tweet that climate action is a national
security priority, and talked about that connection in a commencement address at the Coast Guard Academy.
“This is the only planet we’ve got,” Obama said in a recent radio address. “And years from now, I want to be able to look
our children and grandchildren in the eye and tell them that we did everything
we could to protect it.”
Similarly, those European oil companies whose CEOs insist they
worry about carbon emissions are exploiting previously untapped reserves.
Shell is embarking on the arctic oil drilling the Obama
administration approved off the Alaskan coast, Seattle’s kayactivists be damned. Who
cares if Ben van Beurden, its CEO, admonished fellow oil-industry
leaders for being “slow to acknowledge climate change”?
Five years after its Deepwater Horizon disaster sullied the Gulf
of Mexico, BP is on the verge of initiating oil drilling off Australia’s southern coast — a more remote area. But BP CEO Bob Dudley noted earlier this year that “the most
likely path for carbon emissions, despite current government policies and
intentions, does not appear sustainable.”
Words can’t slow the pace of climate change or protect the
environment from the other ravages of fossil-fuel extraction. And corporate and
political leaders who say they care and then fail to take meaningful climate
action are lulling the rest of us into thinking they’re doing what it takes.
In turn, that’s delaying the tough work required to shift toward
an economy fueled by greener energy. Rex Tillerson is right: They’re
faking it.
Columnist Emily
Schwartz Greco is the managing editor of OtherWords, a non-profit national
editorial service run by the Institute for Policy Studies. OtherWords.org.