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Barack
Obama is receiving accolades from liberal environmentalists for saying
progressive-sounding things about global warming in his fifth State of
the Union Address (SOTUA) last Tuesday. The reason for this praise is
not mysterious. The President made some minimally decent comments about the leading issue of our or any time.
Mentioning
the “dangerous carbon pollution that threatens our planet,” Obama said
that “for the sake of our children and our future, we must do more to
combat climate change.” He noted that “the 12 hottest years on record
have all come in the last 15” and that “Heat waves, droughts, wildfires,
floods -- all are now more frequent and more intense.”
“We
can choose to believe,” Obama added, “that Superstorm Sandy, and the
most severe drought in decades, and the worst wildfires some states have
ever seen were all just a freak coincidence. Or we can believe in the
overwhelming judgment of science – and act before it’s too late.”
Take that, American Petroleum Institute. The President knows that the dire consensus findings of climate science aren’t bogus.
But
how excited do people who care about the fate of livable ecology really
want to get about such rhetoric in light of the president’s actual
climate record? I heard candidate Obama say similar green-sounding
things in Iowa in 2007 and 2008 only to watch his presidency green-light
expanded offshore oil drilling and almost single-handedly deep-six
efforts to restrict global greenhouse emissions at international climate
summits in Copenhagen and Durban. Obama has approved and celebrated (in
the name of “national energy independence”) the environmentally noxious
“homeland” practice of hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”), whereby the
carbon-industrial complex has discovered a deadly new way to waste
energy and poison water supplies, and to extract and spew fossil fuels.
Listen to the following judgment on the president’s less-than-inspiring climate policy résuméé in the latest issue of the legendarily Obama-worshipping magazine Rolling Stone:
Among
all the tests President Obama faced in his first term, his biggest
failure was climate change. After promising in 2008 that his presidency
would be "the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our
planet began to heal," President Obama went silent on the most crucial
issue of our time. He failed to talk openly with Americans about the
risks of continuing to pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, failed
to put political muscle behind legislation to cap carbon pollution,
failed to meaningfully engage in international climate negotiations
[that significantly minimizes his terrible role in the failure of the
global summits – P.S.], failed to use the power of his office to end the
fake "debate’ about" the reality of global warming and failed to
prepare Americans – and the world – for life on a rapidly warming
planet. It was as if the biggest challenge humanity has ever faced became a political inconvenience for the president once he became elected (emphasis added). [1]
The
president’s inspiring words are one thing; policy deeds are something
else altogether. That basic distinction ought to have been driven home
once and for all by his first term, a grand tutorial on who really runs
the country – a moneyed oligarchy that remains firmly entrenched beneath
and beyond the nation’s formally democratic character.
But
ok, fine. Let’s say you want to cut Obama some slack and give the
nation’s first technically black president a second (or third or fourth
or…) chance to be a green president (“green” as in saving the earth, not
the color of corporate and Wall Street money) in his second term. He’s
the only president we’ve got and, unlike all but a small number of
elected Republican officials, he says he agrees with climate science,
right? He can’t run for a third term and this is his chance to burnish
his “progressive legacy” by (among other things) acting to help save the
species (and other living things) from greenhouse gassing…right?
The
fact that Obama defeated Mitt Romney last fall means there’s at least a
chance of a decent decision. The Republican candidate promised to make
signing off on Keystone XL his very first action as president and
there’s no reason not to believe he would have acted in accord with that
promise…right?
As
it happens, there’s a policy decision staring Obama in the face right
now – one that goes close to the heart of the climate problem and “to
act before it’s too late.” It received no direct mention in the SOTUA,
but it had to be on his mind as tens of thousands of environmentalist
protestors prepared gather in Washington to demonstrate around that
decision.
I
am referring, of course, to whether President Obama is going to give a
thumbs up or a thumbs down to the construction of the Keystone XL
pipeline, which, “if built, is slated to bring some of the ‘dirtiest’,
oil on the planet from Alberta, Canada, to refineries on the U.S. Gulf
Coast” (Michael T. Klare). How much of this “dirty,” that is tar sands,
oil (extracted at great carbon-generating, water-wrecking, and
ecology-despoiling expense from landlocked reserves of sand and clay in
northwest Canada)? Alberta is home to a trillion barrels of this highly
toxic but carbon-rich form of petroleum, equivalent to the conventional
oil reserves of any nation except Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. According
to leading climate activist and writer Bill McKibben, releasing this
vast greenhouse reservoir into the atmosphere in coming years will “run
the atmosphere’s concentration of carbon dioxide from its current 390
parts per million (enough to cause the climate havoc we’re currently
seeing) to nearly 600 parts per million, which would bring if not hell,
than at least a world with a similar temperature.”[2]
The
leading climate scientist and current director of NASA’s Goddard
Institute for Space Studies James Hansen has been blunt about the
consequences of spilling Alberta’s distinctively filthy greenhouse load
on Mother Earth. It’s “Game Over for the climate…. If we turn to these dirtiest of fuels, instead of finding ways to phase out our addiction to fossil fuels,” Hansen noted in The New York Times last
year, “there is no hope of keeping carbon concentrations below 500 p.m.
— a level that would, as earth’s history shows, leave our children a
climate system that is out of their control.” No wonder Hansen was
perturbed to read Obama telling Rolling Stone that he expected Canada to exploit the oil in its huge tar sands deposits “regardless of what we do.” [3]
The
president who says he wants to honor “the overwhelming judgment of
science…for the sake of our children and our future” may have it in his
power to defuse this Epic Carbon Bomb. Since the Keystone XL pipeline
crosses an international (U.S.-Canada) border, it’s the president alone
who makes the final decision on whether the eco-cidal, environmentally
exterminist project should proceed. And a negative judgment from the
White House may do the trick to kill the corporate assault on Alberta
tar sands for the near future, buying us more time to save a livable
planet. This is because none of the other methods being considered to
bring Alberta’s tar sands oil to the global market appear to be
economically or politically viable. They all face steep barriers to
profitability that are likely to undercut the massive fixed capital
investment required to extract and transport Albert’s dirty oil outside
of Canada’s limited market.
Obama
may well be wrong if he believes that Canada’s tar sands oil is going
into the atmosphere “regardless of what we do” – regardless, that is, in
this context, of what he does.
Obama’s decision is likely to either save or sink the tar sands
industry. His approval would ensure investors “enough return to justify
their massive investments. It would also,” Michael Klare notes, “prompt
additional investments in tar-sands projects and further production
increases by an industry that assumed opposition to future pipelines had
been weakened by this victory.” [4]
How
will the president decide? As will surprise nobody familiar with my
writings on Obama since the summer of 2004, I am less than optimistic
about the chances that he will respect the wishes of climate scientists
and the protestors outside his gates. For what it's worth, some of his
post-election rhetoric is less than encouraging. When
asked about global warming at his first post-election press conference,
for example, the president said that “the American people have been so
focused on our economy and jobs and growth that if the message is
somehow ‘we’re going to ignore jobs and growth simply to address climate change,’ I don’t think that anybody is going to go for that” (emphasis added).
This
was a dreadful, ecologically appalling statement in two key ways.
First, Obama used the phrase “simply to address climate change” as if global warming was a minor matter compared to “jobs and growth.” That was a tellingly dismissive way in which to refer to what has become gravest current threat to human existence.
Second, Obama’s comment bought into what Mother Jones
editors Monika Bauerlein and Clara Jeffery rightly call “the jobs vs.
climate action straw man….a false and outdated dichotomy propagated by
those with a vested interest in the status quo….”[5] Tackling
climate change and other environmental ills in a meaningful way means
putting many millions of people to work at all skill levels to design,
implement, construct, conduct, and coordinate the essential
environmental, climate-friendly retro-fitting of economy and society: the ecological re-conversion of production, transportation, office space, homes, agriculture, and public space. [6]
In
his SOTUA, Obama said that “The natural gas boom has led to cleaner
power and greater energy independence. We need to encourage that. That’s
why my administration will keep cutting red tape and speeding up new
gas and oil permits.” That sounds like a thumb up to Keystone to me.
It
is relevant that Obama made no mention of Keystone in the address. It
was a curious deletion in light of the imminence of his decision and the
green-sounding rhetoric of his talk – a reflection perhaps of the vast
resources the “energy industry” has been pouring into pushing (in the
name of national “energy security” and “American jobs”) for the
pipeline’s approval.
I
could be wrong. I hope I am. I hope that Bill McKibben and his 350
comrades and allies make a loud and significant impact in Washington
D.C. this weekend. It is a hopeful sign that Obama’s recently appointed
Secretary of State John F. Kerry is a self-described “climate hawk” who
says he will be deeply engaged in the State Department’s review of the
pipeline.
Still,
I will not be surprised if and when Obama does with some delay what
Romney pledged to do right away. And I will not be surprised when a
rising number of us on the green left are (for better or worse)
considering the moral urgency of mass direct action and sabotage in
light of a post-democratic political process that long ago sold its soul
to the unelected, interrelated, and significantly petro-capitalist
dictatorships of money and empire.
Paul Street (paulstree99@yahoo.com) is the author of many books, including The Empire’s New Clothes: Barack Obama in the Real World of Power (Paradigm, 2010), Crashing the Tea Party (co-authored wit Anthony DiMaggio, Paradigm, 2011). His next book (tentatively titled They Rule),
a study of ruling class power and its environmental (among other and
related) consequences, should be available next summer or fall.
Selected Endnotes
[1] Jeff Goodell, “Obama’s Climate Challenge,” Rolling Stone, January 31, 2013, 41.
[2] Michael T. Klare, “Will the Keystone XL Pipeline Go Down?” Tom Dispatch.com (February 10, 2013) at http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175648/
[4] Klare, “Will the Keystone XL Pipeline Go Down?”
[5] Monika Bauerlein and Clara Jeffery, “The Heat is On,” Mother Jones (January-February 2013), 6.
[6] See Van Jones, The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems (New York: Harper, 2009), 10-11.
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