ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY JUNE 16, 2010
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Take your pick on what's most infuriating about the oil crisis in the Gulf. There's the growing evidence that the platform blowout that caused all that crude to erupt out of the ocean floor was entirely preventable and should never have happened in the first place. BP cut corners on safety to save money, and regulators barely seemed to care. And now no one has any real clue how to contain the spill—we just have to watch helplessly as the ever-expanding oil slick poisons fisheries and kills off marshlands and coral reefs.
What's especially unnerving, though, is that the recklessness that helped bring about the spill, and the political reaction that followed, seem to indicate a larger inability to prevent and cope with other large-scale ecological catastrophes—particularly climate change. True, the analogy's not perfect: The Deepwater Horizon blowout was a sudden and local event, while global warming is slowly creeping up on us and, well, global. But the same set of human characteristics that precipitated the one calamity may well hinder us from stopping the other.
For one, the Gulf spill highlights our general ineptitude at properly assessing risk. As we now know, neither BP nor the government took adequate steps to make sure that a blowout didn't end up fouling huge swaths of the ocean. Partly that's because the agency responsible for oversight, the Minerals Management Service, has become a corrupt mess over the years, too cozy with the companies it's supposed to supervise. But a deeper problem is that, as Cass Sunstein argues in his book Worst-Case Scenarios, humans seem to have an inherently difficult time preparing for low-probability catastrophes—we tend to vacillate between total panic and utter neglect, with little middle ground. One senior administration official recently told McClatchy that "the last time you saw a spill of this magnitude in the Gulf, it was off the coast of Mexico in 1979. When something doesn't happen since 1979, you begin to take your eye off that thing." A disaster doesn't even have to be completely unprecedented to get ignored—it's enough merely to seem unlikely.
As a result, it's hard to convince people to pay the upfront costs of averting potential catastrophes, especially when the catastrophes seem remote and uncertain. Back in 2003, the Interior Department agreed with BP and other oil companies that installing a $500,000 acoustic shutoff switch on every offshore rig would be unreasonably expensive (even though such a switch would likely have prevented all that oil from spewing out). Of course, now that BP is staring at billions of dollars in clean-up costs and the prospect of bankruptcy, that $500,000 switch looks like a bargain, but back then, the incentives for short-term cost-cutting were persuasive.
Climate change poses a similar dilemma. We know it's coming, but there's still a fair bit of uncertainty as to how bad it could really get. And, as Harvard economist Marty Weitzman has argued, policymakers tend to pay too little attention to the low-probability extreme outcomes that global warming could bring about. Case in point: A recent paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences concluded that there's a roughly 5 percent chance that rising temperatures could render vast regions of the planet—like the eastern United States or most of India—simply uninhabitable. Even if the odds of that are relatively low, that's a gruesome enough prospect that it's worth planning for. And yet most of the policy discussions of climate change tend to involve dry discussions of the median expected costs of global warming compared with the costs of reducing carbon. And, again, few people want to pay upfront costs to prevent problems that are decades away: Politicians keep fretting that families could face small increases on their electricity bills if the United States set up a cap-and-trade system, even though the cost of truly dire warming—say, 5°F or more—would make that electricity price hike look laughably minor.
Meanwhile, with both the oil spill and climate change, there seems to be a lingering sense that technology can come along and save us if things ever get too ominous. Some conservatives point to geoengineering as the great hope for climate—surely if temperatures ever climb too high, our brightest engineers will figure something out. Maybe we can shoot sulfate particles in the air to blot out the sun, or seed plankton in the ocean to mop up any excess carbon-dioxide. And yet, as we've seen with the flailing cleanup efforts in the Gulf, there's not always a technological solution. Nature, once despoiled, can't always be fixed. Sometimes disaster strikes and there's simply nothing we (or even James Cameron) can do. What's more, when dealing with complex ecological systems, quick fixes can often make the situation worse. The chemical dispersants that BP is using to break up the surface oil could end up wreaking havoc on the food chain on the seafloor—no one really knows. Likewise, we have little idea about whether those wacky geoengineering schemes could end up, say, disrupting rainfall patterns around the globe.
What the oil spill also shows is that there's no longer any guarantee that people—and particularly politicians—will change their minds as a result of an environmental disaster. This hasn't always been the case. In 1969, a platform blowout off the coast of Santa Barbara helped kick-start the modern green movement and spurred Congress to pass a series of landmark environmental laws. Yet the reaction to the Gulf oil spill has been far more stubborn. Many conservatives have simply assimilated the BP fiasco into their worldview: Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin have (nonsensically) blamed environmentalists for the spill. George Will has scoffed that oil slicks don't kill nearly as many birds as wind turbines do. Even South Carolina's Lindsey Graham, who was once one of the few Republicans concerned about global warming, has decided to abandon the very climate bill he helped draft because it wouldn't—wait for it—do enough to expand offshore drilling. Few skeptics seem to be willing to consider that the biggest ecological disaster in U.S. history should maybe cause us to rethink our relationship to fossil fuels.
It's not hard to envision the same stubborn resistance continuing with climate change. The United States is already starting to see the effects of rising temperatures: heat waves, dwindling snowpack, shifting species habitats. In the years ahead, it's quite likely that we'll start to see even more pronounced problems: a particularly nasty heat wave, say, or a far-reaching drought. But is there any reason to think that a major environmental upheaval would change minds in Congress? Just look at the Gulf. This is a region that only a few years ago was rocked by Katrina, the sort of massive hurricane that global warming could make more likely. And now, even though Louisiana is suffering a major blow to its fishing industry as a result of the spill, its junior senator, David Vitter, has been insisting that even a temporary moratorium on offshore drilling would be far more crippling than the spill itself. (And if Vitter's standing in lockstep with the oil and gas industry in the face of devastation in his own backyard, how likely is it that he'd change his stance if, say, an unprecedented drought hit faraway Africa?)
On global warming, there seems to be an unshakeable faith among many conservatives that things could never possibly get so bad, that the worriers are just being hysterical, that if worst comes to worst, human ingenuity and technological progress will get us out of any jam. And yet the Gulf spill really does suggest that that attitude can be badly misguided, especially when we're dealing with natural forces we don't fully understand.
Bradford Plumer is an assistant editor of The New Republic.
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17 comments
I've been telling my friends for years that if you want to know how bad this whole ecological disaster thing is going to get, you'll find the answer not in physics, or chemistry, or climate models, but in animal behavior and psychology. Look at how many years the dust bowl raged, before the lessons finally started to sink in. By the time things really got turned around in 1940, several million had been driven from the plains. We've become a swarm of two-legged locusts upon the earth, and the swarm will end as all such swarms do. The sad part is a few of us, at least, are smarter than the average locust (Malthus and Jevons were, for starters), but not enough. We forget too easily now, why and how we started down this path... people started digging for coal in Europe because they'd already burned through their renewables at an unsustainable rate. The English encouraged settlement in America in part because there was no place left in Europe where they could find trees suitable for masting their fleet. White folk from all parts of Europe started leaving for foreign shores because grinding poverty and cycles of famine drove them out. Cycles of famine and poverty that ended only with the advent of non-renewable resource dependent fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides. Over here in America, we started digging oil out of the ground in earnest as a response to the fact of our having hunted the sperm whale to the brink of extinction. Pause to think for a second, in larger context, what this means. Sometime in the 1800's we had already surpassed that level of population and economic activity which is sustainable in the long term, given the natural rate of resource renewal on this earth. The growth that we've enjoyed since is strictly temporary, and will continue only for as long as the non-renewables that we are now devouring hold out. When we come to the end of those, we are headed right back where we came from. It's easy enough to do the math: some of the locusts will make it through the collapse to continue the species, but 9 out of 10 will not. Of course ultimately, none of us will make it, and the manner of our individual passing is really a minor detail. Just relax and enjoy the show, Bradford. This runaway train is too far gone for anyone to stop it.
- zaiquiri
June 16, 2010 at 2:46am
I share daiquiri's pessimism. But worse, I don't think the situation is technically beyond retrieval, just politically beyond retrieval. In a world where conservatives (what a misnomer!) are regarded as anything other than the dangerous lunatics they are, the situation is hopeless. Reality will eventually thoroughly discredit these people. But by then it will be far too late. Perhaps after the human population crashes the lessons will be learned and things will improve. I am grateful I probably won't live long enough to witness this, but I fear for my children and theirs, if they get that far.
- roidubouloi
June 16, 2010 at 8:45am
I agree with above and the sentiments in the article. The fact that even after the oil spill we can't take any significant steps at all to move away from oil tells me that no matter what disasters results from global warming, we aren't going to do anything to stop carbon emissions before it's too late.
- vips73
June 16, 2010 at 10:30am
Roid writes: "In a world where conservatives (what a misnomer!) are regarded as anything other than the dangerous lunatics they are, the situation is hopeless." And the current administration avoids this labeling how? Because they are so different from Bush how? In war and energy/oil policy, this administration is indistinguishable from Bush. The biggest difference is that BP kicked a crapload more money to Obama than McCain. But that's probably not the answer you were looking for.
- seattleeng
June 16, 2010 at 11:33am
How about this, seattleeng. Let's have the Republican party agree to support any Obama initiative, or just to refrain from using the filibuster, or even to stop spewing lies in obstruction. If Obama's policies will be just more Bush, why don't they get out of the way? If Obama did not have to contend with the demented conservatives, do you really think his policies would remotely resemble those of the Bush administration? I didn't think so. But that wasn't the answer you were looking for, was it?
- roidubouloi
June 16, 2010 at 11:41am
Roid writes: "If Obama did not have to contend with the demented conservatives, do you really think his policies would remotely resemble those of the Bush administration" Of course, because he has to deal with reality. Afghanistan? He carved that position out on his own. Drill, baby, drill? The math doens't work out on alt energy. Yet. I'm sure he got into office, wanted to know how to make a 50 MPG fleet average and was told by the engineers its impossible unless we would all drive clown cars. That was probably a learning experience for him, because most libs that I know believe 100 MPG is easy to achieve, but some evil forces are preventing it. Or that electric cars with 500 miles of range are possible, but some evil forces are preventing it. Do you really think if we could economically run everything from wind and solar that a republican would oppose that? What republicans oppose is having to fight emerging economies that will use cheap energy to reduce the price of their goods over ours that were made with expensive energy. Reality versus ivory tower. That is why Obama is floundering on the spill.
- seattleeng
June 16, 2010 at 3:14pm
I see. And your view is that Bush's policies were based on reality. Afghanistan: Actually could have succeeded had Bush not abandoned that effort to pursue the pointless war in Iraq where there were no terrorists and no WMDs. Some reality. Obama plainly was of the view that we needed to finish the job in Afghanistan and had no job to do in Iraq other than exit as smoothly and quickly as possible. What he has learned is that Bush so screwed the pooch on Afghanistan that there is no way now to go back and do what Bush should have done. Simply too late. Irremediable. So, we will end up with an unsuccessful war in Afghanistan where we might have succeeded and a pointless war in Iraq where we had no business in the first place. Both inherited from Bush. It is not necessary for the government to determine how many miles we can get to the gallon (except that it is a lot more than we are getting now), or whether windpower or anything else will make a significant contribution to carbon reduction. All that is necessary is to start raising the price of carbon emissions and let the market work, finding substitutes, while rebating the taxes collected progressively, say by reducing payroll taxes. That would actually give some reality to your bogus claims about relative tax burdens by eliminating regressive payroll taxes from the overall tax mix. If we priced in the externality of climate change, we will get a huge improvement. If it isn't enough, you just raise the price some more. Do you think the Dems would go for carbon taxes and a payroll tax offset if the Repugs weren't in the way? In a heartbeat. You have a separate reality, seattleeng, along with the rest of the neocon world. You carry on about market solutions, but the only thing you will tolerate are no solutions at all. If that is not living in a fantasy world, I don't know what is. As for Obama "floundering on the spill," that is complete nonsense. With the election of Reagan, our government went off into la-la land, believing any kind of crazy nonsense that was politically appealing. We essentially abandoned the regulatory role of government, allowing, for example, offshore wells to be drilled in whatever manner BP thought was in its interest without a shred of a plan to deal with disasters. So what is Obama supposed to do now, snap his fingers and create the technology to deal with this? Travel back in time and regulate BP's activities? Oh, I know, in the span of a year or so in office he was supposed to resurrect the entire US government that the Republicans dismantled. We can't compete withe emerging economies without managed trade. There is an enormous disequilibrium between their labor costs and ours, their labor laws and ours, their environmental laws and ours. We don't have to fight emerging economies at all if we manage our trade for balance. But, of course, the free-trade Kool-aid drinking market absolutists won't permit that either. The only way to compete without managing our trade would be to reduce ourselves to a First-World country consisting of the rich and a Third-World country consisting of everyone who works for a living. Which is exactly what you and the Republican party want. A sort of imperialism within the US in which there is a ruling class and the rest, kind of like 19th century Africa or something. And you call yourselves patriots!
- roidubouloi
June 16, 2010 at 4:20pm
How about "O Tempora, O Mores", an alternative headline. To keep it simple, Global Warming is a hypothesis, not a scientific axiom. There is much legitimate concern that the projections that are interpreted to mark the end of life as we know it may be more GIGO than valid science. Especially the positive feedback algorithms without which global warming projections are a ho hum. We'll find out more about this as the "homogenized" databases used by CRUT, NASA/GISS, and others are unraveled - those that weren't deleted, of course. Dandy "proven science". When do you plan to disclose to middle class Americans that your resolution of our fossil fuel dependency and global warming will require that they give up another 2 million jobs, pay 2X more for electricity and gas, and live under the discipline of a government controlled energy budget? Sometimes, politicians and the intellectual elites they consult with have the confidence to disclose their prescriptions to the electorate. People call this transparency, and it's viewed as a positive attribute of democracy. Why not now? I'm an elitist, maybe like you, and immune to these cost of living increases. But we live in a democratic republic, where the people affected by policy proposals get to vote. To some, these proposals represent a material increase in their cost of living. So should the elite prescribe the destiny of the proletariat, or disclose their proposals subject to an informed popular vote? Or are the unwashed truly incapable of deciding major issues their long term best interests?
- Robustus
June 17, 2010 at 1:43am
Robustus is abusing science and scientific terms. Global warming is not a hypothesis, it is by now a theory because supported by copious evidence of all sorts. There is no responsible scientific opinion that this is not occurring. The legitimate dispute is about the pace, extent, and specific locations of displacements. These are inherently unknowable with a great degree of certainty because of the complexity of the system and the inability to experiment to narrow the range of possibilities. That does not mean that there is not danger, only that there are limits to what it is possible to know. We still must make choices, with dangers of one sort -- too much, too soon -- to the left of us and danger to the right of us -- too little, too late. Simple prudence says that we are in a rather benign environment for human life and should be very wary of changing it in a massive way that we cannot undo. The claim that adjustment now, via carbon taxes or other methods that begin to shift the economy toward a reduced dependence on carbon emissions, will cost jobs is less than a hypothesis. The reduction in demand for foreign oil alone, and its replacement with domestic demand, would likely result in an increase in jobs. As well, the capital adjustments will employ more labor for a long time to come. As ever, the two things that inhibit change are that (1) our government is captive of monied interests, (2) change will without question redistribute rents within our society and those who have them now, and hence have the money, stop at nothing to prevent the loss of their preferences and privileges, and (3) a political party that no longer gives a fig for the national interest and will tell any lie, no matter how preposterous, in the service of its own power. There is such a thing as national decline and loss of national will as a result of corrupt politics exacerbated by extreme social divisions. We are living it.
- roidubouloi
June 17, 2010 at 9:07am
I should have mentioned that physics alone compels us to accept the reality of global warming. Conservation of energy is about as fundamental an axiom of science as exists. More certain than gravity. If energy enters a region of space and does not leave, it must be within that region. The solar energy impinging on our sphere is relatively constant in the near-term (and in any case not within our control). If, as is the case for well understood reasons, greenhouse gases reduce the amount of energy re-radiated to space, the difference must accumulate here. Any portion not somehow converted to chemical or mechanical energy (such as increased plant growth or faster winds -- itself perhaps a problem) must become heat, the lowest form (in the sense of the highest entropy) of energy. Q.E.D. As I said, just how the additional heat distributes itself around the globe and how different systems, winds, ice sheets, cloud cover, precipitation, etc. are affected and how quickly are much more complicated questions to which we will not have firm answers within the span of time within which we have to make very important decisions.
- roidubouloi
June 17, 2010 at 9:13am
"What republicans oppose is having to fight emerging economies that will use cheap energy to reduce the price of their goods over ours that were made with expensive energy." It makes sense now why the Chinese are investing more money than we are in renewable energy research, development, and deployment. Realizing that they are kicking the crap out of the rest of the world in terms of economic development (including us), they are generously attempting to handicap themselves and give everyone else a chance!! Thanks for (indirectly) helping explain to all of us, Seattle. You are pure genius.
- zaiquiri
June 17, 2010 at 10:16pm
Roid writes: "You carry on about market solutions, but the only thing you will tolerate are no solutions at all. " Not true. I'd tolerate a $0.25/gallon tax right now to expedite battery development for electric cars. I'd support a government effort to focus on a narrow group of smaller reactor designs that could be cookie-cuttered in a factory and operational in 4 years to help replace our fossil fuel powered electrical plants. The $0.25/gallon tax on gasoline would generate $20B/year in R&D incentive, and hopefully in a decade would have a battery 3X better than today's batteries, which means a range of 300 miles on a single charge is possible. Combined, by 2020 that could mean new car buyers were petroleum free and CO2 free. I'd support subsidies to expedite the purchase of electric cars, to ensure that by 2025 we were 90% electric, fueled by clean nuclear and wind/solar where it made sense. There is no reason (except battery technology) that we couldn't be overwhelmingly electric by 2025. What I will not support is plans that have no rational math behind them. A plan that "feels" good, but that doesn't have a single scientist saying "yes, this will avert warming" is not a plan.
- seattleeng
June 17, 2010 at 10:23pm
Zaiquiri: "It makes sense now why the Chinese are investing more money than we are in renewable energy research, development, and deployment." The chinese are understating their investment in nuclear, and overstating their investment in renewable for obvious reasons. Still, they plan to have more than 100 nuclear plants brought on line in the next decade. And more coal plants every day. And their alt energy plans relying on massive pumped water projects, in which they dam up millions of acres of land. We would never permit a pumped water effort anywhere near that scale in the US. But they do this so that when wind blows and sun shines, they pump water up hill, and when it doesn't, they let it run downhill and turn the turbines. It's how they provide baseload from unreliable alt energy. Very smart. But it has a very large environmental impact. Alt energy would have a HUGE boost in this country if pumped water storage was allowed. We could completely eliminate coal using massive reservoirs of water.
- seattleeng
June 17, 2010 at 10:32pm
Roid writes: "I should have mentioned that physics alone compels us to accept the reality of global warming." In the 1990's, it was widely believed that each doubling of CO2 would increase the temperature of the earth by nearly 6 degrees C. Today, the consensus is 2-3 degrees C. In the 90's, the math was supposedly solid. "Simple physics" was the battle cry. "Conservation of energy" you know. What turned out to be misunderstood was the impact of particulates and clouds. Certain clouds reflected energy back into space, while other coulds tended to insulate the earth like blanket. Once they started to model particulaes and clouds, the amount of warming predicted by doubling of CO2 dropped by half. So, in a decade, what was "a sure thing" was revised as they learned more. It's very possible that there could be another learning, and the sensitivity halved again. And it's also likely, because in spite of CO2 levels rising, we haven't seen any more warming in a while in spite of it being predicted. Which tends indicate we don't know what we don't know. As Rumsfeldt liked to say :)
- seattleeng
June 17, 2010 at 10:37pm
"we haven't seen any more warming in a while" I have a cousin who is a right-wing nut who also likes to claim that the predicted temperature increase are nowhere to be found which forced me to look into the matter. This is a flat-out lie (or the complete incapacity to read charts). Despite an exceptionally high year in 1998, which was then followed by a decline because that's what it means to be exceptionally high, the trend is relentlessly up, and the evidence in melting glaciers and ocean temperatures is all in the same direction. Seattleeng has just identified himself as one of the flat-earth crowd, not merely a skeptic, but someone who simply denies the evidence. We know what seattleng doesn't know -- much of anything.
- roidubouloi
June 18, 2010 at 1:09am
"In the 1990's, it was widely believed that each doubling of CO2 would increase the temperature of the earth by nearly 6 degrees C." This isn't true. The first three IPCC assessments, starting with the first in 1990, all estimated climate sensitivity as in the range of 1.5°C to 4.5°C. The fourth assessment report in 2007 refined that to "likely to be in the range 2 to 4.5°C with a best estimate of about 3°C, and is very unlikely to be less than 1.5°C." There's still a fair bit of uncertainty about feedbacks, obviously--hence the range--and there are individual researchers who think it could be higher than 4.5°C, but there's never been a "widely believed" consensus around 6°C.
- Bradford Plumer
June 18, 2010 at 3:39pm
Thank you, Mr. Plumer. As with his claims that taxes are weighted heavily against the rich (total rates are actually nearly flat across income brackets when ALL taxes are taken into account), seattleeng is found making things up again.
- roidubouloi
June 18, 2010 at 5:00pm