"Where Elites Fail," Craig Comstock
Huffington Post, May 20, 2011
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/craig-k-comstock/exonn-richard-heinberg_b_864534.html
"Elites in both corporations and government are often quite good at running systems they create, and bad at looking beyond these systems at larger social effects. This doubleness was on display at the Worcester Polytechnic commencement. For its main speaker, the college invited Rex Tillerson, CEO of Exxon. A group of students and faculty, disturbed that fossil fuel purveyors are causing great harm, exercised the right of protest. One student said "we will not give the Exxon CEO the honor of imparting his well-wishes for our futures when he is largely responsible for undermining [our futures]." This group invited their own speaker, Richard Heinberg of the Post-Carbon Institute and author of Powerdown, The End of Growth, and eight other books. Tillerson gave an unexceptional address (Worcester "embraces the cutting edge of technology," let colleges train more scientist and engineers, let graduates have personal integrity, take time off from your Blackberry every day). While he did allude to "creative financial schemes" that "destroy billions of value in pensions and other investments," he had nothing to say about the peak of oil production or the environmental costs of burning fossil fuel. Those who ducked out to hear Heinberg got an earful. In less than 3,000 words, Heinberg told about challenges that will require much more than personal integrity. He began by reminding his audience that U.S. oil production has been declining since 1970 (nearly a couple of generations ago) and according to the International Energy Agency in Paris, global crude oil production peaked in 2006, leaving oil, as Heinberg explained, that is lower in quality or located in places harder to access..."
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Huffington Post, May 20, 2011
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/craig-k-comstock/exonn-richard-heinberg_b_864534.html
"Elites in both corporations and government are often quite good at running systems they create, and bad at looking beyond these systems at larger social effects. This doubleness was on display at the Worcester Polytechnic commencement. For its main speaker, the college invited Rex Tillerson, CEO of Exxon. A group of students and faculty, disturbed that fossil fuel purveyors are causing great harm, exercised the right of protest. One student said "we will not give the Exxon CEO the honor of imparting his well-wishes for our futures when he is largely responsible for undermining [our futures]." This group invited their own speaker, Richard Heinberg of the Post-Carbon Institute and author of Powerdown, The End of Growth, and eight other books. Tillerson gave an unexceptional address (Worcester "embraces the cutting edge of technology," let colleges train more scientist and engineers, let graduates have personal integrity, take time off from your Blackberry every day). While he did allude to "creative financial schemes" that "destroy billions of value in pensions and other investments," he had nothing to say about the peak of oil production or the environmental costs of burning fossil fuel. Those who ducked out to hear Heinberg got an earful. In less than 3,000 words, Heinberg told about challenges that will require much more than personal integrity. He began by reminding his audience that U.S. oil production has been declining since 1970 (nearly a couple of generations ago) and according to the International Energy Agency in Paris, global crude oil production peaked in 2006, leaving oil, as Heinberg explained, that is lower in quality or located in places harder to access..."
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                                    Peak Oil: A Chance to Change the World 
Yes Magazine, May 14, 2011
http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/peak-oil-a-chance-to-change-the-world  
              
The students then invited Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow of Post  Carbon Institute, to give an alternative commencement speech. After a  few days of negotiations, the college administration agreed to give  Heinberg the podium immediately after the main ceremony. Many students  chose to walk out during Tillerson’s address. This is what Richard  Heinberg had to say.
ExxonMobil is inviting you to take your place in a fossil-fueled  twenty-first century. But I would argue that Exxon’s vision of the  future is actually just a forward projection from our collective  rear-view mirror. Despite its high-tech gadgetry, the oil industry is a  relic of the days of the Beverly Hillbillies. The fossil-fueled sitcom  of a world that we all find ourselves still trapped within may, on the  surface, appear to be characterized by smiley-faced happy motoring, but  at its core it is monstrous and grotesque. It is a zombie energy  economy.
Of course, we all use petroleum and natural gas in countless ways and  on a daily basis. These are amazing substances—they are energy-dense  and chemically useful, and they yield enormous economic benefit. America  started out with vast reserves of oil and gas, and these fuels helped  make our nation the richest and most powerful in the world.
The End of the Cheap Oil Economy
But oil and gas are finite resources, so it was clear from the start  that, as we extracted and burned them, we were in effect stealing from  the future. In the early days, the quantities of fuel available seemed  so enormous that depletion posed only a theoretical limit to  consumption. We knew we would eventually empty the tanks of Earth’s  hydrocarbon reserves, but that was a problem for our  great-great-grandkids to worry about.
Yet U.S. oil production has been declining since 1970, even with huge  discoveries in Alaska and the Gulf of Mexico. Other countries are also  seeing falling rates of discovery and extraction, and world crude oil  production has been flat-lined for the past six years, even as oil  prices have soared. According to the International Energy Agency, world  crude oil production peaked in 2006 and will taper off from now on.
Exxon Mobil says this is nothing we should worry about, as there are  still vast untapped hydrocarbon reserves all over the world. That’s  true. But we have already harvested the low-hanging fruit of our oil and  gas endowment. The resources that remain are of lower quality and are located in places that are harder to access  than was the case for oil and gas in decades past. Oil and gas  companies are increasingly operating in ultra-deep water, or in arctic  regions, and need to use sophisticated technologies like  hydrofracturing, horizontal drilling, and water or nitrogen injection.  We have entered the era of extreme hydrocarbons.
This means that production costs will continue to escalate year after  year. Even if we get rid of oil market speculators, the price of oil  will keep ratcheting up anyway. And we know from recent economic history  that soaring energy prices cause the economy to wither: when consumers  have to spend much more on gasoline, they have less to spend on  everything else.
But if investment costs for oil and gas exploration and extraction  are increasing rapidly, the environmental costs of these fuels are  ballooning just as quickly. With the industry operating at the limits of  its technical know-how, mistakes can and will happen. As we saw in the Gulf of Mexico in the summer of 2010,  mistakes that occur under a mile or two of ocean water can have  devastating consequences for an entire ecosystem, and for people who  depend on ecosystem services. The citizens of the Gulf coast are showing  a brave face to the world and understandably want to believe their  seafood industry is safe and recovering, but biologists who work there  tell us that oil from the Deepwater Horizon disaster is still working its way up the food chain. 
 Of course the biggest environmental cost from burning fossil fuels  comes from our chemical alteration of the planetary atmosphere. Carbon  dioxide from oil, gas, and coal combustion is changing Earth’s climate and causing our oceans to acidify.  The likely consequences are truly horrifying: rising seas, extreme  weather, falling agricultural output, and collapsing oceanic food  chains. Never mind starving polar bears—we’re facing the prospect of  starving people.
The Misinformation Machine
But wait: Is this even happening? A total of nearly half of all  Americans tell pollsters they think either the planet isn’t warming at  all, or, if it is, it’s not because of fossil fuels. After all, how can  the world really be getting hotter when we’re seeing record snowfalls in  many places? And even if it is warming, how do we know that’s not  because of volcanoes, or natural climate variation, or cow farts, or  because the Sun is getting hotter? Americans are understandably confused  by questions like these, which they hear repeated again and again on  radio and television.
Now of course, if you apply the critical thinking skills that you’ve  learned here at WPI to an examination of the relevant data, you’ll  probably come to the same conclusion as has been reached by the  overwhelming majority of scientists who have studied all of these  questions in great depth. Indeed, the scientific community is nearly  unanimous in assessing that the Earth is warming, and that the only  credible explanation for this is rising levels of CO2 from the burning  of fossil fuels. That kind of consensus is hard to achieve among  scientists except in situations where a conclusion is overwhelmingly  supported by evidence.
I’m not out to demonize ExxonMobil, but some things have to be said.  That company plays a pivotal role in shaping our national conversation  about climate change. A 2007 report from the Union of Concerned Scientists  described how ExxonMobil adopted the tobacco industry’s disinformation  tactics, and funded some of the same organizations that led campaigns  against tobacco regulation in the 1980s—but this time to cloud public  understanding of climate change science and delay action on the issue.  According to the report, between 1998 and 2005 ExxonMobil funneled  almost $16 million to a network of 43 advocacy organizations that  misrepresented peer-reviewed scientific findings about global warming  science. Exxon raised doubts about even the most indisputable scientific  evidence, attempted to portray its opposition to action as a positive  quest for “sound science” rather than business self-interest, and used  its access to the Bush administration to block federal policies and  shape government communications on global warming. All of this is  well-documented.
This is a big victory for ExxonMobil, but it is a disaster for democracy, for the Earth, and for your generation. And it worked. Over the course of the past few years one of our nation’s two main political parties has made climate change denial a litmus test for its candidates, which means that climate legislation is effectively unachievable in this country for the foreseeable future. This is a big victory for ExxonMobil. Its paltry $16 million investment will likely translate to many times that amount in unregulated profits. But it is a disaster for democracy, for the Earth, and for your generation.
But here’s the thing. Everyone knows that America and the world will  have to transition off of fossil fuels during this century anyway. Mr.  Tillerson knows it as well as anyone. Some people evidently want to  delay that transition as long as possible, but it cannot be put off  indefinitely. My colleagues at Post Carbon Institute and I believe that  delaying this transition is extremely dangerous for a number of reasons.  Obviously, it prolongs the environmental impacts from fossil fuel  production and combustion. But also, the process of building a renewable energy economy  will take decades and require a tremendous amount of investment. If we  don’t start soon enough, society will get caught in a trap of  skyrocketing fuel prices and a collapsing economy, and won’t be in a  position to fund needed work on alternative energy development.
In my darker moments I fear that we have already waited too long and  that it is already too late. I hope I’m not right about that, and when I  talk to young people like you I tend to feel that we can make this  great transition, and that actions that have seemed politically  impossible for the past forty years will become inevitable as  circumstances change, and as a new hearts and minds comes to the table.
Even in the best case, though, the fact that we have waited so long  to address our addiction to oil will still present us with tremendous  challenges. But this is not a problem for ExxonMobil, at least not  anytime soon. When the price of oil goes up, we feel the pain while  Exxon reaps the profits. Even though Exxon’s actual oil production is  falling due to the depletion of its oilfields, corporate revenues are  flush: Exxon made almost $11 billion in profits in just the past three  months. This translates to jobs in the oil industry. But how about the  renewable energy industry, which everyone agrees is the key to our  future?
For the past forty years, every U.S. president, without exception,  has said we must reduce our country’s dependence on imported petroleum.  Addiction to oil has become our nation’s single greatest point of  geopolitical, economic, and environmental vulnerability. Yet here we are  in 2011, still driving a fleet of 200 million gasoline-guzzling cars,  trucks, and SUVs. The inability of our elected officials to tackle such  an obvious problem is not simply the result of ineptitude. In addition  to funding climate denial, fossil fuel companies like Exxon have  contributed to politicians’ election campaigns in order to gain perks  for their industry and to put off higher efficiency standards and  environmental protections. Denying looming fuel supply problems,  discouraging a transition to renewable energy, distorting climate  science—these are all understandable tactics from the standpoint of  corporate self-interest. Exxon is just doing what corporations do. But  once again, it is society as a whole that suffers, and the consequences  will fall especially on your generation.
Mr. Tillerson may have informed you about his company’s Global Climate and Energy Project  at Stanford University. Exxon is now funding research into lowering the  cost and increasing the efficiency of solar photovoltaic devices,  increasing the efficiency of fuel cells, increasing the energy capacity  of lithium-ion batteries for electric cars, designing higher-efficiency  engines that produce lower emissions, making biodiesel fuel from  bacteria, and improving carbon capture and storage. This is all  admirable, if it is genuine and not just window-dressing.
Here’s a reality check in that regard: Exxon is investing about $10  million a year in the Global Climate and Energy Project—an amount that  almost exactly equals Mr. Tillerson’s personal compensation in 2010. Ten  million dollars also equals about three hours’ worth of Exxon profits  from last year. You tell me if you think that is a sensibly  proportionate response to the problems of climate change and oil  depletion from the world’s largest energy company.
Even if Exxon’s investments in a sustainable energy future were of an  appropriate scale, they come late in the game. We are still in a bind.  That’s because there is no magic-bullet energy source out there that  will enable world energy supplies to continue to grow as fossil fuels  dwindle.
Renewable energy is viable and necessary, and we should be doing far more to develop it. But solar, wind, geothermal, tidal, and wave power  each have limits and drawbacks that will keep them from supplying  energy as cheaply and as abundantly as we would like. Our bind is that  we have built our existing transport infrastructure and food systems  around energy sources that are becoming more problematic with every  passing year, and we have no Plan B in place. This means we will  probably have less energy in the future, rather than more.
A Chance to Change the World
Again, I am addressing my words especially to you students. This will be the defining reality of your lives.  Whatever field you go into—business, finance, engineering,  transportation, agriculture, education, or entertainment—your experience  will be shaped by the energy transition that is now under way. The  better you understand this, the more effectively you will be able to  contribute to society and make your way in the world. You will have the  opportunity to participate in the redesign of the basic systems that  support our society—our energy system, food system, transport system,  and financial system.
We are at one of history’s great turning points. During your lifetime  you will see world changes more significant in scope than human beings  have ever witnessed before. You will have the opportunity to participate  in the redesign of the basic systems that support our society—our  energy system, food system, transport system, and financial system.
I say this with some confidence, because our existing energy, food,  transport, and financial systems can’t be maintained under the  circumstances that are developing—circumstances of fossil fuel depletion  and an unstable climate. As a result, what you choose to do in life  could have far greater implications than you may currently realize.
Over the course of your lifetime society will need to solve some basic problems:
- How to grow food sustainably without fossil fuel inputs and without eroding topsoil or drawing down increasingly scarce supplies of fresh water;
- How to support 7 billion people without depleting natural resources—including forests and fish, as well as finite stocks of minerals and metals; and
- How to reorganize our financial system so that it can continue to perform its essential functions—reinvesting savings into socially beneficial projects—in the context of an economy that is stable or maybe even shrinking due to declining energy supplies, rather than continually growing.
Each of these core problems will take time, intelligence, and courage  to solve. This is a challenge suitable for heroes and heroines, one  that’s big enough to keep even the greatest generation in history fully  occupied. If every crisis is an opportunity, then this is the biggest  opportunity humanity has ever seen.
Making the best of the circumstances that life sends our way is  perhaps the most important attitude and skill that we can hope to  develop. The circumstance that life is currently serving up is one of  fundamentally changed economic conditions. As this decade and this  century wear on, we Americans will have fewer material goods and we will  be less mobile. In a few years we will look back on late 20th century  America as time and place of advertising-stoked consumption that was  completely out of proportion to what Nature can sustainably provide. I  suspect we will think of those times—with a combination of longing and  regret—as a lost golden age of abundance, but also a time of foolishness  and greed that put the entire world at risk.
 It’s a time when it will be possible to truly change the world, because the world has to change anyway.
Making the best of our new circumstances will mean finding happiness  in designing higher-quality products that can be re-used, repaired, and  recycled almost endlessly; and finding fulfillment in human relationships and cultural activities rather than mindless shopping.  Fortunately, we know from recent cross-cultural psychological studies  that there is little correlation between levels of consumption and  happiness. That tells us that life can in fact be better without fossil  fuels.
It’s time to talk honestly about collapse–no matter how others may respond. So whether we view these as hard times or as times of great possibility is really a matter of perspective. I would emphasize the latter. This is a time of unprecedented opportunity for service to one’s community. It’s a time when it will be possible to truly change the world, because the world has to change anyway. It is a time when you can make a difference by helping to shape this needed and inevitable change.
As I travel, I meet young people in every part of this country who  are taking up the challenge of building a post-petroleum future: a  25-year-old farmer in New Jersey who plows with horses and uses no  chemicals; the operator of a biodiesel co-op in Northampton; a solar  installer in Oakland, California. The energy transition will require new  thinking in every field you can imagine, from fine arts to banking.  Companies everywhere are hiring sustainability officers to help guide  them through the challenges and opportunities. At the same time, many  young people are joining energy and climate activist organizations like 350.org and Transition Initiatives.
So here is my message to you in a nutshell: Fossil fuels made it possible to build the world you have inhabited during your childhood and throughout your years in the education system. Now it’s up to you to imagine and build the world after fossil fuels. This is the challenge and opportunity of your lifetimes. I wish you good cheer and good luck as you make the most of it.
 
 
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