Chapter 1
The Choices Before Us
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Early in October 2015, Rex Wayne Tillersonâ62-year-old father of four, recent national president of the Boy Scouts of Americaâtook the stage at the 36th annual Oil and Money Conference in London. As the then-CEO of ExxonMobil, Tillerson had just been named Petroleum Executive of the Year. His topic was âUnleashing Innovation to Meet Our Energy and Environmental Needs.â
Tillersonâs half-hour-long speech did not ignore the subject of a rapidly changing global climate. He spoke of the challenge of âreducing the greenhouse gas emissions associated with energy use.â He said âthe risks of climate change are serious and warrant thoughtful action,â including his corporationâs research into alternative technologies and support of a ârevenue-neutralâ carbon tax. However, Tillerson added, âThe world will need to pursue all energy sources, wherever they are economically competitive ⊠importantly, we will need coal, oil, and natural gas.â
The highest paid executive of the richest fossil fuel corporation on the planet went on to point out: âFrom the very beginning of concern on this issue, ExxonMobil scientists and engineers have been involved in discussions and analysis of climate change. These efforts started internally as early as the 1970s.â
What Tillerson failed to mention was this: only the month before, an investigation of internal Exxon documents had revealed that those very scientists had repeatedly warned, almost forty years ago, of a potentially âcatastrophicâ warming of the planet that âendangered humanity.â But instead of responding to this red alert from their own experts by starting to shift the energy giant toward renewable resources, Exxonâs top executives, including Tillerson, had shut down the companyâs own researchâand embarked instead on a massive disinformation campaign aimed at debunking climate change as a myth.
The corporation was a ringleader in setting up the Global Climate Coalition, a massive disinformation machine bringing together the worldâs leading fossil fuel companies in an all-out effort to prevent governments from curbing their emissions. Tillersonâs company, the second largest emitter of CO2 in the world (after Chevron), dispersed millions to muddy any scientific understanding and delay any real action.
Tillerson, his predecessor Lee Raymond, and their cronies knew the truth about the fate of the planet. And yet they lied, and they paid others to lie. They lied as global temperatures began rising at record rates. They lied as droughts and wildfires swept across the American West, and as California started running out of water. They lied as tornadoes and hurricanes and snowfall levels intensified in unprecedented ways. They lied as thousands died in European heat waves, and thousands more perished in Asian floods. They lied as Greenlandâs ice turned liquid, and sea levels began to rise two-and-a-half times faster than anyone thought possible, and the oceans became increasingly acidic and filled with disease-causing bacteria. They lied and sacrificed future generations for their short-term profits.
During his visit to America in December 2015, Pope Francis issued a warning about climate change, âa problem which can no longer be left to a future generationâŠ. I can say to you ânow or never.â Every year the problems are getting worse. We are at the limits. If I may use a strong word I would say that we are at the limits of suicide.â
Six months earlier, in the popeâs encyclical on the situation, he had asked: âWhat kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us, to children who are now growing up?â And he had raised another question: âWhat would induce anyone, at this stage, to hold on to power only to be remembered for their inability to take action when it was urgent and necessary to do so?â
The president of the World Bank, Jim Kim, has spoken out along similar lines: âMy son will live through a 2, 3 or maybe even 4 degree Celsius warming. We cannot keep apologizing to our children for our lack of action. We must change course now.â
At the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, while some three billion people watched, the opening ceremony featured a video of ever-escalating global carbon pollution and simultaneously drastic rise in sea levels.
These are the facts behind the pleas of the Pope, the World Bank leader, and the Olympic Games leadership:
âąÂ   Sixteen of the seventeen warmest years ever recorded have occurred since 2001. For the third consecutive year, it was announced in January, the earth set a heat record. Across vast stretches of the Arctic Ocean, temperatures in the fall of 2016 reached an astonishing 20 to 30 degrees above normal.
âąÂ   As billions of tons of ice melt or slide into the sea, satellite data shows that oceans around the world are rising by five millimeters a year, a rate not seen since the close of the last Ice Age.
âąÂ   âMuch of the carbon we are putting in the air from fossil fuels will stay there for thousands of yearsâand some of it will be there for more than 100,000 years.ââOregon State University paleoclimatologist Peter Clark, lead author of a new study in Nature Climate Change, February 2016.
âąÂ   âGiven currently available records, the present anthropogenic carbon release rate is unprecedented during the past 66 million years.â âNature Geoscience, March 2016.
Several years earlier, in September 2013, UNICEF published the results of a five-year study about how a changing global climate affects todayâs children. âClimate change has too often been discussed and debated in abstract terms, negating the human costs and placing little attention on its intergenerational impact,â the report said. However, âmore severe and more frequent natural disasters, food crises and changing rainfall patterns are all threatening childrenâs lives and their basic rights to education, health, clean water, and the right food.â
These drastic changes in our planetâs ecosystem will have the most severe consequences, of course, on future generations. Climate change is all too often discussed in âabstract terms,â the 2013 UNICEF report noted. But the environmental upheaval associated with climate change is already having a massive impact on âchildrenâs lives and their basic rights to education, health, and [proper] food.â UNICEF has estimated that, by 2030, 25 million more children will suffer malnourishment, with another 100 million facing food insecurity due to scarcity, and between 150 and 200 million more being displaced from their homes. âWe are hurtling towards a future where the gains being made for the worldâs children are threatened, and their health, wellbeing, livelihoods and survival are compromised ⊠despite being the least responsible for the causes,â said David Bull, executive director of UNICEF in the United Kingdom.
The UNICEF report noted that âchildren and young people in developed countries are acutely aware of climate change, and are passionate and vocal about the need for action by governments to tackle the problem.â Polling in the UK indicated that nearly three-quarters of those between ages 11 and 16 in Britain worried about the planetâs environmental future. More than seven in ten wanted their government to do more, and nearly two-thirds voiced particular concern about their counterparts in developing nations. In the US, similar polling found almost three-quarters of young voters saying they were less likely to vote for a candidate who opposed President Obamaâs climate change plan. âWe need to listen to what children are saying,â the study concluded.
The goal of the entrenched interests, however, is to drown out those voicesâall the way to the classroom. In Wyoming, when the Park County School District was to vote on whether to purchase new textbooks and reading materials in 2015, one board member responded, âI will not authorize any of the $300,000 allocated for this purchase to include supplemental booklets about âglobal whiningââŠ. Our Wyoming schools are largely funded by coal, oil, natural gas, mining, ranching, etc. This junk science is against community and state standards.â
Jeff Turrentine, who wrote about this for OnEarth Magazineâs web site, added, âFor thousands of years, going back to Aristotle, humanityâs greatest minds have sought to safeguard the precepts of the scientific method by keeping them away from the corrupting influence of political culture. Defending the integrity of science from powerful people is what got Galileo imprisoned. And yet, 400 years later, here we are: watching a public official tasked with guiding the educational trajectories of his communityâs children rail against the accepted science on climate changeâbecause its conclusions threaten to undermine the local political cultureâŠ. Anyone who would deliberately misinform children about the gravity of the problem that awaits them when they grow up doesnât deserve to be in charge of their education.â
The campaign to âmisinform childrenâ is particularly aggressive in the American West, stronghold of the oil and coal industries, including in Utah, where a coalition of parents decrying âEducation Without Representationâ has intimidated the stateâs Office of Education into watering down education on climate change. Even in âleft-coastâ California, where the Democratic Party has a lock on state government, a 2015 analysis of science textbooks used in the sixth-grade classrooms revealed that the language and writing techniques âmore closely match the public discourse of doubt about climate change rather than the scientific discourse.â The study, which was conducted by Southern Methodist University, speculated that conservative media like Fox News had contributed to âa shift in public discourse, which eventually influences textbook language by creating competing interests within the textbook market.â A follow-up survey published in the journal Science in 2016 found that, while three-quarters of science teachers nationwide devote time to climate change instruction, 30 percent tell students that itâs âlikely due to natural causesâ and another 31 percent claim that the matter is unsettled. Thatâs opposed to the 97 percent of active climate scientists who contend that human activity is a primary cause. Bills have now been introduced in state legislatures of four states that promote climate change denial as part of academic freedom.
Even in 2016, as the world weathered another year of record-setting temperature rise, Americaâs presidential campaign was dominated by Republican candidate Donald Trump, who dismissed the global crisis as a âhoaxââallegedly manufactured by the Chinese in order to make US manufacturing ânon-competitiveâ and by Democrats to justify higher taxes. Meanwhile, Trumpâs Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, while acknowledging climate change as an urgent problem, amassed a huge campaign war chest from donors and lobbyists connected to the oil, gas and coal industry, while her allies headed off an attempt by Senator Bernie Sanders to hammer an anti-fracking plank into the 2016 party platform.
Despite all the calamitous news from the environmental front lines, the energy industry still wields extensive influence over the climate change debate, from the classroom to the presidential campaign trail.
How does this terrifying disconnect happen? How do our political and corporate leaders continue to defy scientific reality and mislead the public, even though the consequences of this failed leadership will certainly be disastrous for future life on the planet? How do men like Rex Tillerson explain themselves to their own children and grandchildren, inheritors of the epic environmental havoc being brought about by him and other energy moguls? As carbon dioxide has risen to atmospheric levels not witnessed on earth in millions of years, a relative handful of men have fought to maintain their power and wealth at the expense of all civilization. This book scrutinizes who these people are, their means of confusing the truth, and how they justify their actions.
You will learn about the long, sordid history of ExxonMobilâs cover-up of the looming climate-change disaster. You will learn about the clever propagandists hired by the energy industryâmen like Richard Berman, the founder of a Washington-based PR firm that launches nonprofit âcharitableâ front groups aimed at derailing any government efforts to put the brakes on the worst carbon polluters. âFactual debates,â Berman once said in a speech, often leave people âoverwhelmed by the science.â But if you could get enough people on your side, you could create âa position of paralysis about the issueâŠ. They donât know who is right.â Bermanâs son David, a singer-songwriter in Nashville, knows who is right. David Berman has publicly proclaimed that his father is âa sort of human monsterââand he himself is the âson of a demon come to make good the damage.â And so you will also hear from the children and grandchildren of these destroyers of life, some of whom struggle with an extra burden of familial responsibility.
Youâll learn of the damage being done in Oklahoma, where the release of the most potent greenhouse gas, methane, is accelerating the climate problemâand the underground disposal of water associated with oil and gas production is causing earthquakes at rates never seen before. The tracks of this attempted cover-up lead straight to Harold Hamm, billionaire CEO of Americaâs largest energy independent, Continental Resources. Hamm donates millions to the University of Oklahoma, which happens to host the stateâs Geological Survey. When its seismologists sought to sound the alarm about frackingâs connection to the rapid increase in quakes, Hamm set out to try to get them fired.
Youâll learn about the hypocritical âEnergy Povertyâ campaign put forth by Peabody Energyâs CEO Greg Boyce, as justification for vastly expanding its coal production into impoverished countries around the world. Youâll see how the coal barons have heaped praise (and poured dollars) into the bank accounts of US Representative Lamar Smith of Texas for spearheading an investigation into scientists and environmental officials who assert that climate change is a reality.
Youâll be taken inside the domain of the infamous Koch brothers, whose underhanded campaign in their native Kansas has stymied efforts to use wind energy as a primary power source. Charles and David Koch have spent a fortune buying off political candidates nationwide and funding the American Legislative Executive Council (ALEC), whose State Policy Network pushes bills aimed at slowing down deployment of renewable energy sources.
Energy titans like the Kochs have no hesitation when it comes to protecting their enormous wealth, even if it means going after supreme religious leaders. Before Pope Francis came to Philadelphia in 2015, the Heartland Institute âa nonprofit funded by the Koch brothers, ExxonMobil, and other big corporationsâcalled a press conference to denounce the pontiffâs impassioned climate change encyclical. âWhat is environmentalism but nature worship?â Heartlandâs marketing director asked. âIâm wondering as a scholar if pagan forms are returning to church.â It was a wild and absurd punch, thrown at one of the most beloved public figures in the world. But the dark lords of fossil fuels have profited extravagantly from muddying their opponents and the climate change discourse.
Free speech, if these people have their way, is an endangered species. Floridaâs Republican Governor, Rick Scott, another faithful servant of the energy industry, has ordered his Department of Environmental Protection not even to use the terms âclimate changeâ or âglobal warmingâ in any of their official communications, emails, or reports. This is a state where scientists are warning that sea-level rise could inundate much of the coastline over the next century, including great swaths of metropolitan Miami. In Wisconsin, where Governor Scott Walkerâanother favorite of the Koch brothersâruns the show, the Board of Commissioners of Public Lands has gone even further. Its staff was banned in 2015 from even discussing climate change.
During the historic December 2015 climate conference in Paris, representatives of 195 countries came together to reach a landmark accord. For the first time, there was a sense of real urgency among world leaders about what the burning of fossil fuels is doing to our planet, a political shift of global proportion thatâs been a long while coming even if it doesnât go far enough. But the climate deniers were also on-hand in Paris, spreading their propaganda at a âDay of Examining the Dataâ counter symposium held in a hotel across town from where the United Nations negotiations took place. It was co-sponsored by the Heartland Institute and the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), which is also funded by the fossil fuel companies.
Chris Horner was there, a lawyer whoâs filed numerous suits harassing legitimate climate scientists, operating behind-the-scenes on behalf of the coal companies. So was Marc Morano, once Director of Communications for US Senator and climate-change-denier James Inhofe and now running the anti-science Climate Depot website. Morano was busy promoting CFACTâs propaganda documentary film, âClimate Hustle,â aimed at confusing the public about whether the climate science is real. A Heartland spokesman described the event as âsuccessful.â In truth, it turned out to be an embarrassing flop, with only about 30 people in attendance (about twice the number of speakers).
If the dark alliance between corporate and political power makes climate change progress often feel hopeless, there are nonetheless rays of light. As musician-activist David Berman has demonstrated, the war to save the planet has literally come home, with a growing number of ânext-genâ members of fossil fuel families throwing themselves into the struggle for climate-change action, even if it brings them into direct conflict with their fathers and grandfathers and the energy companies they started or manage. A decade ago, a dozen descendants of John D. Rockefellerâfounder of the oil empire that eventually became Exxonâbegan pressuring the company to cease funding climate change deniers and to invest in renewable energy. The Rockefeller Foundation has gone so far as to divest its stock in ExxonMobil. And shareholder pressure has prompted Tillersonâs company to pull away from funding several of the leading purveyors of doubt.
Christopher Lindstrom, a great-great-grandson of the Standard Oil founder, has gone a step further. Heâs pouring his inheritance into what he calls regenerative bioenergy. Lindstrom attends the annual conference of a new organization called Nexus, held at the United Nations and bringing together some 500 millennials from around the world seeking new ways and means to invest their inherited wealth. Horsemen of the Apocalypse examines the alternative solutions that some of the energy renegades are working on. Among others, youâll meet Katherine Lorenz, whose grandfather made his fortune pioneering natural gas fracking, but whose philanthropic foundation is dedicated to moving Texas toward a clean energy portfolio.
Itâs time to hold the perpetrators accountable, end their reign of lies, and bring about the massive change in global energy policy that they have long been resisting. As Horsemen of the Apocalypse reveals, this crusade to save civilization pits the energy moguls against a younger generation that is using the courts and civil disobedience while seeking alternative sources of fuel and electricity. And the outcome of this intimate struggle will determine the fates of many generations to come.
Chapter 2
Rex Tillerson, Lee Raymond, and the Duplicity of ExxonMobil
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About a 45-minute drive north of Dallas, bordered by the communities of Flower Mound and Double Oak, lies the small Texas town of Bartonville (population: 1,469 as of the 2010 census). Besides the main drag, oddly still called 407 Farm Road, t...