Every barrel of oil, every cubic meter of gas, and every ton of coal burned brings us closer to environmental catastrophe |
Los
Angeles is on fire and big oil are the arsonists
Tzeporah
Berman
Every barrel
of oil, every cubic meter of gas, and every ton of coal burned brings us closer
to environmental catastrophe
Sat 11 Jan
2025 11.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jan/11/los-angeles-fire-fossil-fuel-big-oil
Apocalyptic
flames and smoke are raging through southern California in the worst fire in
Los Angeles county’s history. At least seven people have died. Thousands of
structures have been destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of people have fled their
homes. The private forecaster AccuWeather estimates initial damage and economic
loss at more than $50bn and has the potential to be the costliest wildfire
disaster in American history. The impacts of the disruption and loss faced by
community members is incalculable.
While some
media outlets are discussing the link between the Los Angeles fires and the
climate crisis, the president-elect Donald Trump and rightwing media are using
this devastating event to foster misinformation including denying the role of
climate crisis.
These
powerful interests are ignoring what is fanning wildfire flames – fossil
fuel-driven climate change – and trying to deflect attention elsewhere. This is
not surprising. Denying science and promoting false narratives squarely falls
within the playbook of the fossil fuel industry and its proponents. Take for
example, Trump calling the climate crisis a hoax and once again threatening to
withdraw the US from the Paris agreement.
Oil, gas and
coal companies have been lying to us for decades. A 2015 investigation by
Inside Climate News revealed that ExxonMobil’s own scientists knew as early as
the 1970s that burning fossil fuels would cause global warming and increase the
likelihood of extreme weather events. Instead of pivoting toward cleaner energy
solutions, Exxon and other major players funded misinformation campaigns to sow
doubt about climate science, delaying action and worsening the crisis.
California
is part of a growing number of states and local governments challenging these
lies through litigation. The legal suits against six oil companies and the
American Petroleum Institute accuse them of deceiving the public regarding the
connection between fossil fuels and climate crisis and profiting from that
deception. The aim of the litigation is to redirect those profits into funds to
address the damage of climate crisis on California. The litigation is still
underway.
The science
is clear. Wildfires are getting worse due to climate crisis as a result of
increased temperatures and drier conditions in southern California. While more
work needs to be done to determine the specific role fossil fuels played in the
Los Angeles fires, we do know that emissions from the world’s 88 largest fossil
fuel companies are responsible for 37% of the cumulative area burned by forest
fires in the western US and south-western Canada between 1986 and 2021.
Ethically,
the responsibility is undeniable. By continuing to expand production, fossil
fuel companies are prioritizing shortterm profits over longterm planetary
survival. As academic Naomi Oreskes points out in her book Merchants of Doubt,
this is not mere negligence – it is a calculated decision to disregard human
and environmental well-being.
The
California governor Gavin Newsom is one of a small yet growing number of
political leaders around the globe calling out fossil fuels for their role in
climate crisis and generating health and environmental risks. In fact he has
called oil, gas and coal “the polluting heart of the climate crisis” and has
enacted new laws to limit their expansion and phase them out. Cities across
California are joining him. Los Angeles, which has oil production within its
jurisdiction, has banned new oil and gas drilling and committed to phasing out
the use of coal and gas in its infrastructure among other efforts.
These
leaders recognize they cannot go it alone. That international coordination is
needed to hold oil and gas companies accountable and to manage a fair shift
away from oil, gas and coal with no community, work or country left behind.
That’s why the state of California, the city of Los Angeles, Richmond and many
other communities where fossil fuel extraction is taking place have joined
other states and cities around the world, as well as 14 countries, in calling
for a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty
We cannot
allow fossil fuel companies to escape accountability while communities like Los
Angeles suffer. Policymakers must act decisively to phase out fossil fuels and
transition to renewable energy systems that give us all cleaner, safer and
affordable choices.
At the same
time, legal systems must hold these corporations liable for the damage they
have caused. A fossil fuel treaty would foster multilateral cooperation around
a binding agreement to end the expansion of fossil fuels, wind down existing
production to levels that keeps climate change in check and work together to
ensure a just transition.
Fossil fuel
misinformation obscures and diminishes certain truths. Fossil fuels are not
needed as part of this transition because there is enough renewable energy
potential in every region of the world to deliver reliable, affordable energy
security for all. Half of fossil fuels are wasted due to the industry’s
inefficient production and transportation processes. One in eight deaths each
year is due to fossil fuel air pollution.
Every barrel
of oil, every cubic meter of gas, and every ton of coal burned brings us closer
to environmental catastrophe. The wildfires raging across Los Angeles are not
just natural disasters – they are the direct result of human choices. And
fossil fuel companies, with full knowledge of their actions’ consequences, must
face the consequences of their greed.
The people
of Los Angeles – and the planet – deserve nothing less.
Tzeporah
Berman is a Canadian environmental activist, campaigner and writer
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário