How & Why Billionaires Actually Support Global
Warming
Eric Zuesse, February 11, 2022
Global warming has been extremely profitable
for billionaires, even though many of them mouth and endorse policies (but only
failed and failing ones) against global warming. All of this
will be fully documented here.
The public are actually strongly opposed to
global warming, but they are very confused about the matter, largely because
the policies that are advocated (by billionaire-fronts) and that have been
tried against global warming, don’t work. Billionaires (and their many agents)
hide from the public the only policy that actually would work.
That, too, will be documented here.
The public’s opposition to global warming is clearly
shown in a February 8th poll published by Politico, headlining “Poll: Citizens globally blast politicians’ lack of action to combat
climate change”. It
reports that globally, fewer than 20% answer No
(including both straight-out “No” and “No, probably not”) to “Should
fossil fuel companies be held responsible for the impacts their products have
on the environment?” Depending on the individual country, from 61%
to 90% answer Yes (including both “Yes definitely” and “Yes probably”) to that
question — they strongly do want corporations to be held
accountable for their impacts on the environment. (The lowest “Yes” are in both
Japan and Germany 65%, and in U.S. 68%; the highest “Yes” is in Russia 90%.)
Though they do strongly want “accountability,”
they (as will be documented here) don’t know how it can be imposed in a way
that will actually have any realistic possibility of reducing the problem.
Furthermore, the controlling owners of the fossil-fuel corporations and
governments actually don’t want the public to know what would
be successful policies on this matter — the answer to that problem is (as was
noted above) actually hidden from the public. This combination, of ignorance by
the public, and the ongoing profitability (to investors) of global warming,
explains the failure, thus far, against global warming. It’s a failure that’s
due to both billionaires and their governments. This is the reason why publics
everywhere are disappointed at where the world is — and has been — headed on
the global-warming issue.
Of course, the world’s approximately 3,000 billionaires control fossil fuel companies (or at least the
largest ones). It’s reasonable to assume that virtually all of the top 100
fossil-fuel extraction companies are controlled either directly or indirectly
by billionaires.
In other words: the world’s few super-rich have
profited enormously from the build-up, in the atmosphere, of the global-warming
gases that caused what might now be a runaway global warming. Though global
warming is an enormous threat to the world’s future, it has immensely helped
the super-rich become super-rich, and to grow their
wealth while the rest of the global population have (in many countries)
experienced only the downside of their degraded and increasingly rapidly
heating environment.
Those fossil-fuels have thus been an immense engine of
global wealth-inequality. Though the super-rich have experienced soaring
wealth from the use of those fuels, the general population has experienced
spreading exploitation and misery, from their use. If the end-result of this
will be the end of our planet’s biosphere, then human civilization itself will
have perpetrated this massive crime against not only its own future members but all animals.
The stakes here could be that high — a curse upon all future generations.
Because of the poll that Politico published on
February 8th, we now know that especially in Russia, but even in U.S. Japan,
Germany, and the 9 other surveyed countries (South Africa, Brazil, Canada,
Mexico, Australia, China, India, France, and UK), at least two-thirds
of the public want fossil fuels companies to be held
responsible for the impacts their products have on the environment.
However — for the reasons that will be stated below —
there is actually only a single way in which this can be
done effectively; i.e., so as to actually stop global
warming (if that is still even possible to do): This one way is for the
government to outlaw purchases of investments (stocks and bonds) in fossil-fuel
extraction companies, as will be described and explained here:
These companies (fossil-fuel extractors) exist in
order to discover, extract, refine, and market, fossil fuels, in
order for these fuels to be burned — but those activities
are killing this planet. There is a way to stop this destruction of
the planet from happening, but it is not being applied, and no country is
currently even considering it. This way will be explained here. Some background
is necessary, in order to understand it:
Buying stock in, and lending money to, these firms
doesn’t purchase their products, but it does incentivize all
phases of these firms’ operations, including the discovery of yet more
fields of oil, gas, and coal, to add yet more to their existing fossil-fuel
reserves. Unless these companies’ stock-values are driven down to near
zero and no investor will be lending to them, all such operations will continue,
and the Earth will therefore surely die from the resulting over-accumulation of
global-warming gases.
To purchase stock in a fossil-fuel extractor, such as
ExxonMobil or BP, or to buy their bonds or otherwise lend to them, is to invest
in or fund that corporation’s employment of fossil-fuel explorers to discover
new sources of oil, gas, or coal, to drill. Those discoveries of new reserves
are what drive up the market-value of those firms. Such newly discovered
reserves are excess inventories that must never be burnt if this planet is to
avoid becoming uninhabitable. But these firms nonetheless continue to employ
people to find additional new places to drill, above and
beyond the ones that they already own — which existing inventories are already so
enormous as to vastly exceed what can be burnt without destroying the Earth
many times over. To buy the stock in such corporations (or else lend to them)
is consequently to fund the killing of our planet. It’s to fund an
enormous crime, and should be treated as such. The only possible solution to
the global-warming problem — if it still can be solved — is to
drive down the market-value of those firms. Outlawing new
investments in those firms will do this and will simultaneously make impossible
the continued employment by them of these explorers for new and unburnable reserves.
The only people who will suffer from
outlawing the purchase of stock in, and lending to, fossil-fuel extractors, are
individuals who are already invested in those corporations. Since
we’ve already got vastly excessive known reserves of fossil fuels, discovering
yet more such reserves is nothing else than the biggest
imaginable crime against all future-existing people, who can’t
defend themselves against these activities. Only our government, today, can
possibly protect them, and it will be to blame if it fails to do so. The single
most effective way it can do that is to criminalize the purchase of
stock in fossil-fuels extractors, and to bar loans to them. Here’s
why:
The IMF says that “To limit the increase in global temperature
to 2 degrees Celsius — the more conservative of the goals agreed to by
governments at the 2015 climate change talks in Paris — more than two-thirds of
current known reserves, let alone those yet to be discovered (see Table 1),
must remain in the ground (IEA 2012).” Obviously, then, what the oil and
gas and coal companies are doing by continuing exploration is utterly idiotic
from an economic standpoint — it’s adding yet more to what already are called
“unburnable reserves.” Thus, waiting yet longer for a technological
breakthrough, such as fossil-fuels corporations have always promised will
happen but nobody has ever actually delivered (and such as is exemplified here), is doomed, because if and when such a real
breakthrough would occur, we’d already be too late and the uncontrollably
spiraling and accelerating mutual feedback-loops would already have made the
challenge vastly more difficult to overcome than it is today. We’d simply be
racing, then, to catch up with — and to get ahead of — an even faster rise
in global temperatures than now exists. Consequently, something sudden, sharp,
and decisive, is needed immediately, and it can happen only by a fundamental
change becoming instituted in our laws, not in our technology. The solution, if it comes, will come from
government, and not even possibly come from industry. For governments to wait, and to hope for a
“technological breakthrough,” is simply for our planet to die. It’s to doom
this planet. It’s to abandon the government’s obligation to
the future.
On 13 November 2019, the International Energy
Agency reported that “the momentum behind clean energy is
insufficient to offset the effects of an expanding global economy and growing
population,” and “The world urgently needs to put a laser-like focus on
bringing down global emissions. This calls for a grand coalition encompassing
governments, investors, companies and everyone else who is committed to tackling
climate change.” Obviously, we are all heading the world straight to
catastrophe. Drastic action is needed, and it must happen now — not in some
indefinite future.
In 2020, I reached out to Carbon Tracker, the
organization that encourages investors to disinvest from fossil fuels. Their
leader, Mark Campanale, declined my request for them to endorse my proposal. He
endorsed instead “a new fossil
fuel non-proliferation treaty supported by movements calling to leave fossil
fuels in the ground.”
When I responded that it’s vastly more difficult, for states (individual
governments) to mutually pass, into their respective nation’s laws, a treaty
amongst themselves (since it requires unanimity amongst all of them instituting
into each one of their legal systems exactly that same law), than it is for any
state ON ITS OWN to institute a law (such as I propose), he still wasn’t
interested. I asked him why he wasn’t. He said “I’ve chosen a different
strategy for my organization.” I answered: “All that I am seeking from you is
an ENDORSEMENT. I am not asking you to change your ‘strategy’ (even if you
really ought to ADD this new strategy to your existing one).” He replied simply
by terminating communication with me and saying, without explanation, “We don’t
always agree.”
Here is that “treaty
supported by movements calling to leave fossil fuels in the ground”. As you can see there, it was posted in 2012, and as
of 8 years later when I checked, it had been signed by 8 individuals, no
nations (and not even by any organizations). Mark Campanale wasn’t among these
8, and subsequently no signers have been indicated.
Some environmental organizations recommend instead
improving labelling laws and informing consumers on how they can cut their
energy-usages (such as here), but even if that works, such changes, in consumers’
behaviors, are no more effective against climate-change than would be their
using buckets to lower the ocean-level in order to prevent it from overflowing
and flooding the land. What’s actually needed is a huge jolt to the system itself,
immediately. Only systemic thinking can solve such a problem.
Making such a change — outlawing the purchase of stock
in, and prohibiting loans to, fossil-fuel extractors — would impact enormously
the stock-prices of all fossil fuels corporations throughout the world,
even if it’s done only in this country. It would quickly force all of the
fossil-fuel extractors to eliminate their exploration teams and to increase
their dividend payouts, just in order to be able to be “the last man standing”
when they do all go out of business — which then would occur fairly soon. Also:
it would cause non-fossil-energy stock-prices to soar, and this
influx of cash into renewable-energy investing would cause their R&D also
to soar, which would reduce costs of the energy that clean-energy firms supply.
It would transform the world, fairly quickly, and very systematically. And all
of this would happen without taxpayers needing to pay tens or hundreds of
trillions of dollars, or for governments to sign onto any new treaties. And if
additional nations copy that first one, then the crash in market-values of all
fossil-fuels corporations will be even faster, and even steeper.
As regards existing bonds and other debt-obligations
from fossil-fuels extractors, each such corporation would need to establish its
own policies regarding whether or not, and if so then how, to honor those
obligations, since there would no longer be a market for them. Ending the
market would not be equivalent to ending the obligations. The law would nullify
the obligations, but the corporation’s opting to fulfill those obligations
wouldn’t be illegal — it would merely be optional. Perhaps most of the firms
would opt to place all investors onto a dividends-only system, which would
continue until the firm ends or is otherwise no longer producing or marketing
fossil fuels.
This would be a taking from individuals who have been
investing in what the overwhelming majority of experts on global warming say
are investments in a massive crime against future generations. We are now in an
emergency situation, which is more than merely a national emergency, a global one,
so that such governmental action would be not merely advisable but urgently
necessary and 100% in accord with the public welfare, and also in accord with
improving distributive justice.
The only way possible in order to avoid getting into
the uncontrollable feedback-cycles (feedback-loops) that might set this planet
racing toward becoming another Mars is to quickly bring a virtual end to the
burning of fossil fuels. That can happen only if fossil fuels
become uneconomic. But common methods proposed for doing that, such as by
imposing carbon taxes, would hit consumers directly (by adding a tax to what
they buy), and thereby turn them into advocates for the fossil-fuel industries
(advocates on the fossil-fuels-companies’ side, favoring elimination of that
tax upon their products). In this key respect, such proposals are
counterproductive, because they dis-incentivize the public to
support opposition to fossil-fuel extraction. Such proposals
are politically unacceptable, especially in a democracy, where consumers have
powerful political voice at the ballot-box. Any carbon tax would also anger the
consuming public against environmentalists. Turning consumers into friends of
the fossil-fuels extractors would be bad. What I am proposing is not like that,
at all. Investors are a much smaller number of voters than are consumers.
Everyone is a consumer, but only a relatively tiny number of people are
specifically fossil-fuel investors. To terminate the freedom those
investors have to sell their stock, by making it illegal for anyone to buy
that stock, is the most practicable way to prevent global burnout (if it still
can be prevented). This needs to be done right now.
How was slavery ended in the United States? It became
illegal for anyone to own slaves — and the way that this was done is that it
became illegal for anyone to buy a slave. It made slaves
unsellable — worthless to own.
Once it is done, those firms will go out of business.
(First, these firms will increase their dividend-payouts to their stockholders
while they lay off their explorers, but then they’ll cut their other costs, and
then they’ll fold. But the objective isn’t that; it is to make their products
uneconomic to produce, market, and sell; and this will do that, even before all
of those firms have become eliminated.) All of today’s existing
economies-of-scale in the fossil-fuels-producing-and-marketing industries will
then be gone, and will become replaced by new economies-of-scale that will rise
sharply in non-carbon energy, as R&D there will be soaring, while the
fossil-fuels producers fade out.
If it becomes illegal to purchase those investments,
then the market-value of them will depend ONLY upon the company’s future
dividends. The higher those would be, the sooner the company will end. Unlike
with black-market goods such as illegal narcotics, all investment-markets
need to be legal in order for a company to be able to attract new investors.
Those companies will be doomed and quickly die-off — or else STOP exploring
for yet-more fossil fuels, and would go entirely into non-fossil-fuels
endeavors. All fossil-fuels exploration will end. All
fossil-fuels-promotion will end.
This is the only realistically possible way
to avoid a possible global burnout. (Current
scientific analyses of
the vaporization of all of this planet’s water have been predicated solely upon
an increase in solar intensity, but heat-trapping gases could enormously
expedite the process, and humans would never get to
experience an oceanless Earth, because agriculture would become impossible well
before all water is gasified.)
Shell CEO Says Governments, Not Firms, Are Failing on
Climate Change
On 14 October 2019, Reuters headlined “Exclusive: No
choice but to invest in oil, Shell CEO says” and reported:
Ben van Beurden expressed concern that some investors
could ditch Shell, acknowledging that shares in the company were trading at a
discount partly due to “societal risk”.
“I am afraid of that, to be honest,” he said.
“But I don’t think they will flee for the justified
concern of stranded assets ... (It is) the continued pressure on our sector, in
some cases to the point of demonisation, that scares asset managers.”
“It is not at a scale that the alarm bells are
ringing, but it is an unhealthy trend.”
Van Beurden put the onus for achieving a
transformation to low-carbon economies on governments.
He didn’t suggest any specific policies which
governments should take, but he did say “that not enough progress had been made
to reach the Paris climate goal of limiting global warming to ‘well below’ 2
degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century.”
Furthermore:
Delaying implementation of the right climate policies
could result in “knee-jerk” political responses that might be very disruptive
to society, he said. “Let the air out of the balloon as soon as you can before
the balloon actually bursts,” van Beurden said.
He is, in a sense, trapped, as the head of one of the
world’s largest fossil-fuel extractors. He doesn’t want to be “demonised,” but
he is professionally answering to — and obligated to serve — investors who are
still profiting from destroying the world. Though he acknowledges that
consumers cannot initiate the necessary policy-change, and that investors
aren’t yet; and though he doesn’t want government to do anything which “might
be very disruptive to society,” he does want governments to
“Let the air out of the balloon as soon as you can before the balloon actually
bursts,” and he’s therefore contemplating — and is even advising — that
governments must do the job now, and not wait around any longer to take the
necessary decisive action.
Here’s what that type of governmental action would be
(and unlike the Paris Climate Agreement, it doesn’t require
an international consensus — which doesn’t actually exist among the nations).
(That international agreement is likewise just a fake.)
The “Bridge Fuels” Concept Is a Deceit
The concept of “bridge fuels,” such as methane as being a substitute for
petroleum, is a
propaganda device by the fossil-fuels industry and its agents, in order to slow
the decline of those industries. For example, on 16 November 2019, Oil Price Dot
Com headlined “Why Banning
Fossil Fuel Investment Is A Huge Mistake”, and Cyril Widdershoven, a long-time writer for and
consultant to fossil-fuel corporations, argued against an effort by the European Investment
Bank to “put more pressure on all parties to phase out gas, oil and coal
projects.” Widdershoven’s argument is that “experts seem to agree that the best
way to target lower CO2 emissions in the EU is to substitute oil and coal power
generation in Eastern Europe with natural gas.” He says, “Even in the most optimistic
projections, renewable energy options, such as wind or solar, are not going to
be able to counter the need for power generation capacity. If the EIB blocks a
soft energy transition via natural gas, the Paris Agreement will almost
certainly fail.”
The unstated “experts” that Widdershoven cited are,
like himself, hirees of the fossil-fuels industries. Furthermore, this go-slow
approach is already recognized by the IMF and IEA to be doomed to fail at
avoiding global burnout.
Furthermore — and this is perhaps the most important
fact of all — government-support has largely been responsible for the success
of fossil-fuel corporations (especially now
for natural gas),
and, if fully replaced by government-support going instead to non-fossil-fuel
corporations, there will be a skyrocketing increase in R&D in those
non-fossil-fuel technologies, which skyrocketing R&D, there, is desperately
needed, if any realistic hope is to exist, at all, of avoiding global
burn-out.
Moreover, billionaires have also hijacked the
environmental movement and made suckers of its believers. For example, Elon
Musk has become a centi-billionaire by peddling the idea of switching from
fossil fuels to electricity. But the popular concept of ‘switching from fossil fuels to electricity’ as
a supposed ‘energy source’ is fake because electricity isn’t an energy-source but
only a way of delivering energy that is produced elsewhere,
by fossil fuels, nuclear, or others. It’s a fraud, as a ‘solution’.
So, to each reader of this, I ask: If this is not what
you propose, then what do you propose? People need to start
talking about this — but NOT with the same underlying assumptions that the
billionaires have been promulgating.
P.S.: In January 2021, I had sent this to, and never received any answer
from any of the:
Dear EU Climate Commissioners:
Re:
What is needed is a method which (unlike international
agreement on carbon-trading credits) won’t require
agreement among nations, which are too corrupt to take the necessary collective
action to avert catastrophe. Here’s the solution which could be implemented by,
say, the EU, or even just Germany, or just India, or just China, alone, if not
by any of the far-right countries (such as U.S. and Brazil), which action,
taken by any one of them, would create the necessary cascading-effect that
could transform the world and perhaps save the future (and please do follow
closely the argument here, and click onto any link where you might have any
questions, because this is a truly new idea, and every part of
it is fully documented here): [and then came what you have just read. None of
them responded.
—————
Investigative historian Eric Zuesse is the author of They’re Not
Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and
of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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