STANFORD – Twenty-five years after the adoption of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change on May 9, 1992, the world has yet to implement a treaty that effectively addresses global warming. Now, following President Donald Trump’s withdrawal of the United States from the Paris climate agreement, it is time to investigate more deeply the forces driving delay.
Throughout the 1990s, the American Petroleum Institute (API) – the largest oil and gas trade association and lobbying group in the US – repeatedly relied on economic models created by two economists, Paul Bernstein and W. David Montgomery, to argue that pro-climate policies would be devastatingly expensive. API successfully lobbied for delaying measures to address climate change solutions, using Bernstein and Montgomery’s projections to claim that job losses and economic costs would outweigh environmental benefits.
These arguments were used in 1991, to torpedo the idea of carbon dioxide controls; in 1993, against the Clinton administration’s proposed BTU tax (an energy surcharge that would have taxed sources based on their heat and carbon content); in 1996, against the goals of the UN Conference of Parties in Geneva (COP2); in 1997, against the goals of the UN Conference of Parties in Kyoto (COP3); and in 1998, against the Kyoto Protocol’s implementation. The API’s lobbying plan was repetitive. It also worked.
The oil and gas industry portrayed the reports it commissioned from Bernstein, who once worked at the Hawaiian Electric Company, and Montgomery, a former deputy assistant secretary for policy in the US Department of Energy, as factual, independent, and products of genuine economic debate. In the run-up to the 1997 meeting in Kyoto, Japan, for example, the oil company Mobil claimed in an advertisement placed in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times that “the cost of limiting emissions could range from $200 to $580 per ton of carbon,” based on “a study just issued by Charles River Associates.” Mobil didn’t name who wrote the CRA report (Bernstein and Montgomery were the first two authors) or who funded it (API).
Mobil’s message was misleading, but was the analysis that Bernstein and Montgomery authored truly flawed? Consider this: they ignored the negative costs of climate change, and suggested that clean energy would never be price competitive with fossil fuels, which is simply not true. They assumed the result that they claimed to show.
The oil and gas industry was richly rewarded for abusing the public trust. Americans eventually elected a president, George W. Bush, who bought the industry’s claims and pulled the US out of the Kyoto Protocol.
Sixteen years later, Trump stood in the White House Rose Garden and announced, with equal sophistry, that the Paris climate agreement would devastate the US economy and cost America some 2.7 million jobs, mostly in the construction industry, by 2025. That accounting, Trump said last month, was “according to the National Economic Research Associates.”
In case you’re wondering, the first two authors of the report Trump cited – just published in March – are Bernstein and Montgomery. This time, they were hired by the American Council for Capital Formation, a Washington, DC-based think tank and lobbying group with a history of commissioning deeply flawed work used to challenge climate policy.
Throughout the 1990s, the oil and gas industry and its allies perfected the art of blocking America’s support for key global climate-change initiatives. The maestros, it appears, are back, and their repertoire hasn’t changed. It never had to.
In addition to commissioning studies claiming that climate policies would hurt the US economy, the industry also consistently claimed that efforts to address global warming would be uniquely harmful to the US , would not reduce the risks , and would prevent poverty alleviation. All three of these additional arguments also appear in Trump’s announcement on the Paris accord.
When a tortoise is sitting on a post, you know it didn’t get there by itself. The reappearance of the same four arguments developed a quarter-century ago by an industry that benefits from delaying climate policies – arguments used with great success precisely because their origin and true purpose were hidden from the public – looks a lot like the tortoise’s four wiggling feet.
If history rhymes, here’s what we may expect in the months ahead: industry-sponsored economic “studies,” flashy online content, think tank reports, and polished front groups posing as grassroots organizations. These are time-tested components of the strategy used by the fossil fuel industry and others to block, obstruct, and control climate policy.
We must not let the industry continue to obstruct climate policy. That means following the money that funds the pseudo-science of delay, and exposing the co-opted scholars who feed false images of debate to the public.
The same arguments – and people – used by the fossil fuel industry to block climate policies decades ago are back. For the sake of humanity, we must not let them succeed again.
Comments
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Comment Commented Steve Hurst
War usually includes a scorched earth policy somewhere Read more
Comment Commented John Landrum
Project Syndicate once again adds to its ongoing public humiliation by publishing an “unmasking” screed against two scientists that the author disagrees with. The author, a twenty-something student, non-scientist, is supposed to be an authority on what? What is his field of expertise? Climate Policy history! That is a good one. If any readers would like to read a substantial history of the politics of global warming, you should read Rupert Darwall’s, “The Age of Global Warming: A History”. It is outstanding.
If the author’s field of study is “the manipulation of science” he should start with the Hadley CRU “Climategate” emails that clearly and conclusively show that prominent global warming scientists have manipulated global temperature numbers for years with the sole purpose of terrifying the public into adopting restrictive global warming policies”. This was Pure Politics, not science. Maybe the author should explain why the “climate models” are always wrong in their predictions. They err approximately 3 degrees Centigrade every time. Maybe the author can explain why global warming’s celebrity scientist, James Hansen, was so famously wrong in his 1998 prediction (and all that followed). “On June 23, 1988, NASA scientist James Hansen testified before the House of Representatives that there was a strong "cause and effect relationship" between observed temperatures and human emissions into the atmosphere. At that time, Hansen also produced a model of the future behavior of the globe’s temperature, which he had turned into a video movie that was heavily shopped in Congress. That model predicted that global temperature between 1988 and 1997 would rise by 0.45°C. Ground-based temperatures from the IPCC show a rise of 0.11°C, or more than four times less than Hansen predicted. The forecast made in 1988 was an astounding failure, and IPCC’s 1990 statement about the realistic nature of these projections was simply wrong.” And maybe the author can explain why scientists cannot explain the following: All human activity annually adds incremental contributions of CO2 to the atmosphere of X. How much does global temperature to increase incrementally as a result of this addition of CO2? No study has produced this answer, so how is one to believe human activity results in a global temperature increase?
With no hard science at his disposal, the twenty-something college student attempts to demonized, by “unmasking”, two scientists he disagrees with. He uses innuendo, not science to demonize. This is leftism 101 – intimidate, demonize, humiliate if you can, name call, etc., so the left can then shut off all debate on the subject. If this guy wants to pick on some scientists, the easy ones are James Hansen and Michael Mann. Get after those guys if you want to clear the air of questionable science.
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Comment Commented Colin Askin
Fantastic post John keep up the good work Read more
Comment Commented Michael Public
The death of the press as a source of the truth means that Republicans are unlikely to ever hear anything about this on Breitbart or Fox or Alex Jones or whatever. Regrettably, you have effectively unmasked nothing. Read more
Comment Commented Alex Lenferna
You mention that they are back, but it seems they never left. They've been playing this game non-stop. It's just that they now have more prominence thanks to Trump. Read more
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