Big Oil vs the World tells the 40 year story of
how the oil industry delayed action on climate change
BBC three-part series features never-before-seen
documents, exclusive interviews with industry players, and testimony from
leading scientists, politicians and CEOs
Published:
5:30 pm, 21 July 2022
Updated:
5:30 pm, 21 July 2022
https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/2022/big-oil-vs-the-world
As the UK
sees record-breaking temperatures and forest fires devastate major areas of
Europe, climate change is dominating news headlines. Now, a new BBC series
tells the story of how we got here, charting decades of failure to tackle
climate change.
Part of the
award-winning This World series, Big Oil vs the World is a fascinating look at
how oil giants fuelled climate change denial, despite warnings from their own
scientists of the risks carbon emissions posed to the planet.
Drawing on
thousands of newly discovered documents, the series goes on to chart, in
revelatory and forensic detail, how the oil industry then mounted a campaign to
sow doubt about the science of climate change, the consequences of which we are
living through today.
Part One: Denial
Based on a
year of investigative research, part one of the series: Denial tells the story
of what the fossil fuel industry knew about climate change more than four
decades ago, unveiling a complex campaign of media spin and political lobbying
to spread scepticism on climate change.
Speaking in
the film, former US Vice-President Al Gore describes the efforts of big oil
companies to delay the response to climate change as “the most serious crime of
the post-world war two era”.
“I think
it's the moral equivalent of a war crime… The consequences of what they've done
are just almost unimaginable,” he said.
In the
programme, scientists who worked for the biggest oil company in the world,
Exxon, reveal the warnings they sounded in the 1970s and early 1980s about how
fossil fuels would cause climate change – with potentially catastrophic
effects.
Discussing
Exxon’s failure to act over the years, Dr Ed Garvey, who joined Exxon’s climate
science research team in 1978, says that the company was aware that continuing
to burn fossil fuels would mean significant climate impacts in the future.
“it's just
squandered time, and we're going to pay for it,” he states.
Former
United States Senator Chuck Hagel, who in the late 1990s led the charge in the
US Senate against America joining an international agreement to reduce
emissions, now says that the oil industry lied and misled him. “It’s cost the
country, and it cost the world,” he admits.
‘Denial’
features first-hand accounts from politicians and activists fighting for action
on climate change, including former Vice President Al Gore, as well as PR
executives, scientists and economists paid by the oil industry.
Part Two: Doubt
Part two,
Doubt, charts how the oil industry’s campaign to block action against climate
change continued into the new millennium, even as the science grew more
certain.
George W.
Bush’s former environment chief Christine Todd Whitman explains how industry
lobbyists and Vice President Dick Cheney persuaded Bush to reverse his campaign
promise to cut emissions.
“It really
was a tragedy. I think if President Bush had gone forward with a cap on carbon,
it would have made an enormous difference,” she states.
Speaking for the first time on camera, a disaffected
former ExxonMobil geoscientist and climate change specialist, Bill Heins,
reflects on the disconnect between what the company’s scientists knew, and what
the CEO Lee Raymond was saying publicly about climate change.
The film
also unravels the story of the Koch Brothers’ extraordinarily successful effort
to block President Obama’s early efforts to pass climate change legislation,
and subsequent campaign to reshape the Republican Party into one in which climate
denialism became the mainstream position of the party.
A lawyer
who worked for Kochs through this period speaks on camera for the first time
about the campaign, as does Steve Lonegan of the Koch-funded group Americans
for Prosperity – who boasts that their effort “put an end to the whole climate
change argument. Since then till now, it’s been a dead issue.”
BP’s former
CEO Lord Browne tells the story of how BP first broke with the rest of the oil
industry in acknowledging the reality of human-caused climate change, and
re-branding as ‘Beyond Petroleum’. Accused of greenwashing by both
environmentalists and other oil majors, Lord Browne continues to defend his
record – although acknowledges that BP’s push into renewables ultimately fell
short.
“Looking
backwards over the last 25 years, we really have lost a quarter century in what
we should have been doing,” Browne states.
Part Three: Delay
The third
and final part of the series, Delay, follows the fossil fuel industry up to the
present day, and examines recent efforts to hold Big Oil legally accountable
for the climate crisis.
Delving
into the world of fracking, revealing how big oil companies courted the Obama
administration by presenting natural gas as an environmentally-friendly
alternative to oil and coal.
Obama
climate official Heather Zichal now acknowledges for the first time that the
administration did not realise how the natural gas boom would only worsen the
climate crisis. She says, “Did it turn out we had it wrong? Absolutely.”
Former ExxonMobil
engineer, Dar Lon Chang, speaks for the first time on camera alleging that as
the company increased its natural gas operations, it was not sufficiently
monitoring methane leaks that were contributing to climate change.
“There
wasn't much appetite for management to measure methane leakage because, if they
found out there was a problem, they would have to do something about it,” he
states.
But the
film also speaks with activist Sharon Wilson who has spent more than a decade
documenting methane leaks at sites operated by ExxonMobil and other oil and gas
companies. Still travelling across the US in 2022, collecting evidence of
ongoing leaks, she says: “We can have a future, or we can have oil and gas, but
we cannot have both.”
The Kochs
did not respond to requests for an interview or statement.
ExxonMobil
did not grant any interviews for the series, but told the BBC in a written
statement that its ‘public statements about climate change are, and have always
been, truthful, fact-based, transparent and consistent with the contemporary
understanding of mainstream climate science.’
ExxonMobil
said it’s been an industry leader in the effort to reduce methane emissions and
has been using advanced technology to detect leaks.
The company
says the litigation is ‘baseless’ and ‘without merit’; and ‘there is no truth
to the suggestion that ExxonMobil ever misled the public or policymakers about
climate change.’
Big Oil vs
the World: Denial airs on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer, 9pm, Thursday 21 July.
Notes to
Editors
Big Oil vs
the World is a Mongoose Pictures production for the BBC in association with
FRONTLINE. The producer and director of part one, ‘Delay’ is Jane McMullen; the
producer and director of part two, ‘Doubt’, is Gesbeen Mohammad; and the
producer and director of part three, ‘Delay’, is Robin Barnwell. The
Series Producer is Dan Edge.
CC2
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