Half a century ago last month, President Richard Nixon signed the Endangered Species Act, which, in a move that would be unthinkable today, the Senate had passed unanimously and the House of Representatives approved in a 390-12 vote. As President Joe Biden noted in his ESA proclamation three weeks ago, he voted for the law as a freshman senator in 1973. The legislation was approved against a backdrop of fear that animals such as the gray wolf, grizzly bear, whooping crane, and bald eagle, as well as plants like the Virginia Round-Leaf Birch, Miccosukee Gooseberry, and Sulphur Hot Springs Buckwheat would vanish forever.
The law makes it a federal crime to harm species appearing on the government’s endangered and threatened lists and requires federal agencies to undertake their tasks with an eye toward avoiding threats to such species or their habitat. It is widely considered to be one of the best and most comprehensive conservation measures on the planet. Republicans have nonetheless spent years trying to eviscerate it, and they’ve recently stepped up their efforts. The Center for Biological Diversity on Tuesday released its report,—Paving the Road to Extinction—blasting Republicans for adding a record 27 anti-wildlife riders to appropriations bills. Most likely will not pass, but it only takes a few wins to cause serious harm.
Among the riders are ones to prevent the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from finalizing a rule to protect the estimated 350 North Atlantic right whales from ship strikes and the 50 remaining Rice’s whales from ship strikes and gas and oil activity. Other riders seek to remove gray wolves in the continguous 48 states from the endangered and threatened lists and eliminate protections for grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, with the proviso that courts be barred from intervening. Another rider would eliminate funding to protect the northern long-eared bat recently added to the endangered list. White-nose syndrome has wiped out 99% of the species in the past two decades. During a July hearing, South Carolina Republican Rep. Ralph Norman said, "I hope the white-nose syndrome wipes all of them out. We won't have to worry about it." That’s a perspective a lot of Republicans would happily apply to many species.
Since 1973, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service has listed 1,780 species as either “endangered”—that is, on the brink of extinction—or the less imperiled category of “threatened.” Of those species, the populations of 64 have grown enough that they’ve been removed (delisted) and another 64 have improved enough to be down-listed from endangered to threatened. Of the total on the two lists, 99% still survive, though many are barely hanging on. In the same period, 11 species have been declared extinct and 23 other species haven’t been seen for so long that they have been proposed for designation as extinct. Currently, the act protects 1,662 U.S. species and 638 foreign species. However, scientists say there are as many as 12,000 other species that need conservation attention.
In an Associated Press interview last summer, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said, “The Endangered Species Act has been very successful. And I believe very strongly that we’re in a better place for it.” Conservationists agree.
But that near congressional unanimity of 50 years ago has long since disappeared. As scientists and activists ponder the actual and potential impacts of what many call Earth’s sixth extinction, with massive losses of ecosystems and biodiversity, Republicans are continuing to sabotage the ESA. Among their key complaints is that the act doesn’t take into consideration the economic impacts, including job losses, caused by shielding certain “obscure” species like the snail darter of Tennessee and the spotted owl of Oregon.
Some critics argue the act hasn’t been as big a success as its advocates assert because if it had been far more species would by now have been delisted. Such a critique ought to presage a call for more funding of studies and a strengthening of the law. After all, a peer-reviewed study published in September 2023 found that vertebrate species are dying off at 35 times the rate they would be without human pressures.
The need for more funding is obvious. Last March, more than 120 environmental organizations sent a letter to Congress seeking hundreds of millions more budget dollars because the Fish & Wildlife Service “only receives around 50% of the funding required to properly implement the Act.” Jamie Rappaport Clark, CEO and president of the conservation group Defenders of Wildlife and formerly head of the FWS, told Benji Jones at Vox, “[The ESA] isn’t broken, it’s starving. It can do its job if it’s supported. But it’s not.” More money is the opposite of what Republicans want.
Said House Natural Resources Ranking Member Raúl M. Grijalva in December, “This year, as we celebrate 50 years of the Endangered Species Act, we know its role in maintaining biodiversity is more important now than ever, especially as we face a worsening climate crisis and mass extinction. From protecting critical habitat to creating recovery plans, the Endangered Species Act has facilitated the recovery of species like the humpback whale and bald eagle, while also protecting iconic species like grizzly bears, sea turtles, and jaguars. We know this milestone is also a time to reinvigorate our defense of Endangered Species Act protections. Each year, Republicans ramp up their attacks to undermine science-based decisions about listing, de-listing, habitat protections and recovery, so they can more easily dole out favors for polluters. We stand ready to continue our fight for species and their habitats over the next 50 years and beyond.”
It definitely will be a fight. Of those 27 anti-wildlife “poison pills” attached to appropriations bills, 26 were added by Republicans, with one from a Democrat seeking to maintain preexisting conditions.
In a statement accompanying the release of the report, Center for Biological Diversity Senior Policy Specialist Stephanie Kurose said, "Republicans have weaponized the appropriations process to launch a full-blown assault on our natural heritage. These heartless attacks would strip away lifesaving protections from our most imperiled creatures—from wolves to whales to freshwater mussels. If passed, these bills would put multiple species on a direct path to extinction."
Even the most avid ESA advocate will concede that the act has its flaws. But, as the world passes ever more deeply into the challenges and complexities of the biodiversity crisis compounded by the climate crisis, the act should be strengthened and its activities better funded.
One step in this direction is S. 1129, the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act. It would go far to extend ESA’s efforts by appropriating $1.397 billion for local and state efforts to help recover endangered species and to prevent other species from becoming endangered in the first place. The bill was introduced in March but has yet to have a hearing. Thirty years ago, the non-binding Convention on Biological Diversity that some call a “Paris Agreement for nature” was agreed to. Two hundred countries have since ratified it. The United States has not. Although President Bill Clinton signed it in 1994, the Senate wouldn’t ratify it then or since. And, of course, the U.S. has also not signed onto a key conventon document—the Global Biodiversity Framework—that was the work of many years and agreed to at the December 2022 U.N. Biodiversity Conference in Montreal.
The biodiversity crisis is the evil twin of the climate crisis. The two are inextricably entangled. They need equal attention at a level neither is yet receiving.
Related Stories: The ESA is 50 years old—here are 50 species that are recovering and Just 18% of Land Needed to Meet Biodiversity Goals Is Adequately Protected, Study Finds
WEEKLY ECO-VIDEO
RESOURCES & ACTION
GREEN BRIEFS
Phasing out fossil fuels is perceived by too many who favor it as solely a project for government mandates and corporate metamorphosis. But neither of those can be counted on to accomplish all that must be done if we are to have any chance of mitigating the worst impacts of the climate emergency. Household action is also crucial. Because, like it or not, this effort is of necessity a collaborative project.
Some household action is easy and cheap and has beneficial environmental, health, and financial impacts beyond reducing carbon emissions. Eating less meat, growing vegetables, turning down the thermostat, switching on lights only when needed, unplugging the dryer and using an indoor or outdoor clothesline, unplugging other “vampire” devices when not in use to avoid small power drains that add up, aggregating shopping trips and taking reusuable bags when you go, using public transit or commuting by bicycle, and convincing your employer to let you work remotely at least some of the time can all add up. The list of such possibles is long and mostly a matter of habit and choice.
But some alterations, including ones that make the biggest difference, aren’t cheap. Upfront costs for electric stoves, heat pumps, solar panels, and electric vehicles are daunting even for more well-off households, much less the 60% of the U.S. population that lives paycheck to paycheck. Renters, even those who aren’t hampered by low incomes, are at an even greater disadvantage since they are dependent on often reluctant landlords to invest in such additions. A new study conducted by researchers at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and published in the peer-reviewed Energy Policy journal shows those upfront costs are the major obstacle to a speedier residential uptake of green technology.
The Inflation Reduction Act’s $8.8 billion in rebates for weatherizing homes and installing efficient electric heating and appliances ought to reduce that reluctance. The problem is that, even though the IRA is 17 months old, how the rebates are administered is a state matter, and most of them still have not set up a process to achieve this.
The study—Regional assessment of household energy decision-making and technology adoption in the United States—surveyed nearly 10,000 U.S. residents with the object of determining precisely why consumer adoption is so slow and figure out how to make heat-pumps and all the rest of these subsidy-boosted technologies as widely popular as, say, flat-screen TVs.
Alison F. Takemura at Canary Media reports:
The analysis [...] reveals the key factors residents weigh, from cost to comfort, when considering home energy upgrades. The team analyzed responses from participants who’ve made decarbonizing changes (like installing a heat-pump system) and those who’ve made non-decarbonizing changes (like installing a new gas stove), because if policymakers and program administrators can tap into all residents’ motivations around home energy updates, they stand a better chance of getting more people to embrace energy-efficient, electric equipment, according to the researchers.
So what’s the biggest barrier people face to making home energy upgrades?
By far, it’s the upfront cost. About 65 percent of all respondents had concerns about the expense, more than double the 29 percent of households that stumbled over the next most identified hurdle: unclear costs and benefits. The researchers say that the cost barrier underscores how important it is to publicize and develop programs, like those in the IRA, that help people pay for decarbonizing tech.
The researchers found differences in attitudes among the five regions of the U.S. they divided their survey into. As a consequence, their primary recommendations are that the messaging about electrifying and decarbonizing programs, including the IRA rebates, be designed with those regional differences in mind. From the study:
We found regional variation in a limited set of motivation and preference variables (Table 3, Appendix B), suggesting that U.S. residents generally have similar motivations for making home energy technology changes and that their preferences for using their domestic spaces are similar, except in a few key areas. Of regional differences found, many resulted from higher ratings in the West: for reducing harmful impacts (health and environment) and for desiring more at home working spaces (home office, chef's kitchen, craft space, shop space). The West had lower ratings of repairing broken technology (compared to the Midwest) and wanting safe space (compared to Midwest and Northeast) as household decision motivators.
Even with rebates, many households won’t be able to afford the pricier products. However, people who would be able to do so first have to know the rebates are available. Last summer, a poll found that, a year after the IRA was passed, 71% of those surveyed were unfamiliar with how its particulars might affect them. (In case you’re also in that cohort, here’s How to Plug Into the Benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act and How much money can you get with the Inflation Reduction Act? Up to $10,600 per household, according to Rewiring America.)
Takemura reported nearly half the survey participants said it matters to them that these green tech products be available at big box stores like Lowe’s, Home Depot, Best Buy, and the like. Report co-author Tracy Fuentes said visibility is crucial. The research team recommended that programs that promote zero-carbon appliances make sure to include these retailers in the process.
Although the rebates come from the federal government, states are tasked with administering them. Florida is the only state that has indicated it won’t be accepting the federal money, but most states have not yet determined the details of how they will handle this and have not submitted their proposals to the Department of Energy. The deadline is January 2025. If state officials really want to make the rebate program a big success, their proposals should include serious efforts to inform people about them. Webinars, face-to-face public forums, mainstream and social media are all venues to harness for conveying that information. And they can’t just be one-offs but a continuing endeavor that lasts as long as the rebates do.
Whether it’s a video about an ancient civilization that flourished in Antarctica before the southern continent was covered in ice 34 million years ago or somebody pretending to be fluent in six languages, YouTube is obviously not fact-check central. As regards the climate emergency, the video platform has long been problematic, with people repeating debunked claims that anthropogenic climate change is a hoax and climatologists are spreading alarm because it brings in the grant money. But, as Kate Yoder at Grist writes:
A new report from the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a nonprofit based in London and Washington, D.C., working to stop the spread of disinformation, analyzed 12,000 videos from channels that promoted lies about climate change on YouTube over the last six years. Over that time, the reality of climate change long predicted by scientists has become increasingly difficult to dismiss. The report, released on Tuesday, found a dramatic shift from “old denial” arguments — that global warming isn’t real and isn’t caused by humans — to new arguments bent on undermining trust in climate solutions. [...]
One popular source is the channel of Jordan Peterson, a Canadian psychologist and culture warrior with 7 million followers. In an interview with Alex Epstein, the author of The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels, Epstein makes the case that climate advocates can’t be trusted. “Listening to a modern environmentalist is like listening to a doctor who’s on the side of the germs, somebody who doesn’t have your best interests at heart,” Epstein says in a video entitled “The Great Climate Con” that’s been viewed a million times, reiterating a point once made in the 1990s by the economist George Reisman in an article titled “The Toxicity of Environmentalism.”
From the CCDH report:
Climate deniers have shifted to a New Denial of climate impacts, solutions and advocates
• Climate experts have noted a change in climate deniers’ tactics over recent years. • Our analysis shows that climate deniers have shifted from Old Denial to New Denial: ° Global warming is not happening ° Human-generated greenhouse gasses are not causing global warming ° The impacts of global warming are beneficial or harmless ° Climate solutions won’t work ° Climate science and the climate movement are unreliable
• New Denial constitutes 70% of denialist claims in 2023, up from 35% in 2018. • This is driven by attacks on climate solutions, scientists and the climate movement. • Influential deniers including Jordan Peterson and Blaze TV followed this trend.
Climate deniers have shifted away from an Old Denial of warming and its human causes • Old Denial constitutes 30% of denialist claims in 2023, down from 65% in 2018 • This is driven by a sharp fall in denialist claims that the climate is actually cooling. • Experts suggest climate deniers have changed tactics because the results of global warmingand climate change are evident to the public.
YouTube continues to profit from ads served on Old Denial and New Denial content • YouTube is making up to $13.4 million a year from ads on the channels we studied. • YouTube’s policies bar monetization of Old Denial, but do not cover New Denial. • We collected evidence that YouTube is still serving ads on both forms of denial
A study published in November at Nature Human Behavior found that to some people disinformation on climate is more compelling than scientific facts. In their study, researchers sought to inoculate study participants in 12 countries against disinformation with a brief collection of accurate facts about climate, reminding people of the scientific consensus that humans are the main cause of the current changes. Then they doused them with 20 real tweets that blamed the sun for global warming or said “the climate hoax devised by the U.N.” or warned that elites “want us to eat bugs.”
They found this “pre-bunking” didn’t immunize participants from buying into climate science denial. The tweets made people less likely to believe that climate change is happening, and lowered their support for cutting greenhouse gas emissions and their willingness to take individual action to deal with it.
Imran Ahmed, CEO of CCDH, told Yoder, “The key right now is ensuring that we aren’t flooding our information ecosystem with nonsense and lies that make it more difficult for people to work out what’s true or not.” The CCDH report shows that this flooding is exactly what’s going on at YouTube. Channels that the center scrutinized got 3.4 billion views in 2023 and that YouTube is potentially making up to $13.4 million a year in ad revenue from channels upload climate disinformation.
CCDH’s recommendation for combatting this malicious fakery is to for YouTube owner Google to ban advertisements attached to videos pushing lies about climate fixes. “If it wasn’t profitable, would so many people see it as being a business to produce bullshit?” Ahmed said. “We’re asking platforms to not reward liars with money and attention.”
ECO-QUOTE
“We climate scientists used to always be arguing with the climate skeptics. Nowadays I feel like we’re just as likely to be arguing with someone who says civilization is going to collapse in the next 30 years. Climate change is bad enough that we don’t need to exaggerate it. [...] Whenever I tell people I’m a climate scientist, the most common question is, ‘so we’re all screwed, aren’t we?’ And I have to say, ‘Well, no, it depends what we do’.” —Zeke Hausfather
HALF A DOZEN OTHER THINGS TO READ (OR LISTEN TO)
Tribal Nations Play a Growing Role in Addressing the Biodiversity Crisis by Lindsay Botts at Sierra magazine. For most wildlife biologists, monitoring the health of animals consists of tracking wild creatures' whereabouts, radio-collaring them when necessary, and taking blood samples and weight measurements. For Mike Schrage, a biologist with the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, gray wolf conservation work comes with something extra: tobacco. Like many Ojibwe nations, the Fond du Lac uses tobacco during spiritual and cultural practices. When it comes to the band's wolf research program, tobacco is routinely used as a token of respect and reciprocity. Whenever a pup is weighed and measured, tobacco is placed near the den. When a necropsy is conducted in the field, tobacco is set on the ground near the body. These gestures reflect the band's reverence for the wolf, an animal that Fond du Lac members consider a brother. In the Ojibwe creation story, a wolf accompanied the first person who walked the earth. Across the United States, tribal nations play a vital—if often unheralded—role in species conservation. In the Lower 48, tribes manage roughly 45 million acres, an area about the size of North Dakota. This relatively undeveloped land combined with Indigenous people's traditional ecological knowledge of wildlife populations mean that tribes are uniquely positioned to help recover threatened and endangered species.
Related Story: Valuing Indigenous Knowledge in Permafrost Research
A huge battery has replaced Hawaii’s last coal plant by Julian Spector at Canary Media. Hawaii shut down its last coal plant on September 1, 2022, eliminating 180 megawatts of fossil-fueled baseload power from the grid on Oahu — a crucial step in the state’s first-in-the-nation commitment to cease burning fossil fuels for electricity by 2045. But the move posed a question that’s becoming increasingly urgent as clean energy surges across the United States: How do you maintain a reliable grid while switching from familiar fossil plants to a portfolio of small and large renewables that run off the vagaries of the weather? Now Hawaii has an answer: It’s a gigantic battery, unlike the gigantic batteries that have been built before. The Kapolei Energy Storage system’s 158 Tesla Megapacks are charging and discharging based on signals from utility Hawaiian Electric. The plant’s 185 megawatts of instantaneous discharge capacity match what the old coal plant could inject into the grid, though the batteries react far more quickly, with a 250-millisecond response time. Instead of generating power, they absorb it from the grid, ideally when it’s flush with renewable generation, and deliver that cheap, clean power back in the evening hours when it’s desperately needed.
The Food System Is Having a Big-Screen Moment by Lisa Held at Civil Eats. In Warsaw, North Carolina, René Miller’s great-great nephews are playing basketball in the yard. The gregarious little boys take a break and begin talking to the crew filming them about the breathing machine Miller uses, especially in the summer when farmers spray the crop fields directly across the street with waste from the surrounding industrial hog farms and her asthma attacks increase. Then, the older boy, Mari, has a question. “What is this movie even called?” he asks. Off screen, writer-producer Jamie Berger says, with amusement in her voice, that the team hasn’t decided yet. Does he have any ideas? “Yup,” he says, without missing a beat. “How about, ‘The Hog Farm Stinks?’” It’s a moment Berger now points to as one of her favorites in the documentary set in the country’s top hog-producing counties—although ultimately the filmmakers went with The Smell of Money. And it’s a prime example of how the filmmakers gave new, vibrant life to an environmental justice story that had been chronicled by national news organizations—including this one—for years. In the film, Berger and director-producer Shawn Bannon focus on the day-to-day struggles of a group of Black families who are engaged in a lawsuit against Smithfield, one of the biggest industrial pork companies in the world, for polluting their communities in ways that they say have devastated their health, property values, and quality of life.
ZeroAvia is exploring cryo-compressed hydrogen to produce longer-range planes by Scooter Doll at Electrek. Hydrogen-electric plane aviation technology developer ZeroAvia is exploring a form of energy-dense fuel to develop aircraft that can refuel faster and potentially fly farther. The company has signed a memorandum of understanding with hydrogen tech startup Verne to co-develop the plane integrations. Following a series of milestones in the past decade, ZeroAvia sits closer than ever to delivering commercial operations of hydrogen-electric planes en route to its goal of achieving a 40- to 80-seat aircraft with up to 700 miles of range by 2027. We’ve already seen the company achieve experimental flight certificates from the CAA in the UK and the FAA in the U.S., and it’s been one year since it completed its first flight with a 19-passenger hydrogen-electric plane. As more and more airlines take notice of the viable solutions hydrogen and electric planes can provide, ZeroAvia is now optimizing its technology to provide aircraft that can refuel faster, cheaper, and fly farther. To do so, it has enlisted the help of hydrogen fuel specialist Verne. Verne specializes in cryo-compressed hydrogen, which stores gaseous hydrogen at cold temperatures, thus increasing the fuel’s energy density. Through its research, Verne states CcH2 can deliver 40% greater usable hydrogen density compared to liquid hydrogen and 200% percent more usable hydrogen density than (350 bar) gaseous hydrogen.
Inside the last-ditch effort to stop the Mountain Valley Pipeline by Katie Myers at Grist. The Mountain Valley Pipeline company estimates that it is 94 percent complete and will be wrapped up before summer. With the approximately 303-mile pipeline approaching the final stretch after almost a decade’s work, it might seem hardly worth fighting at this point. A large contingent of steadfast opposition begs to differ — and will enthusiastically explain why. The pipeline is six years behind schedule, about half a billion dollars over budget, and, despite promises that it would be done by the end of last year, delayed once again. The remaining construction is over rugged terrain, with hundreds of water crossings left to bridge. The company recently postponed, shortened, and rerouted its planned extension into North Carolina, a proposal long stymied by permitting problems with the main line. And, just last month, Equitrans, which owns the pipeline and many others across the country, was said to be considering selling itself. The road to the pipeline’s completion remains rocky, its opponents argue, with many opportunities to make finishing it as difficult as possible. “We cannot let them destroy our land and water,” said a young woman named Ericka. Like many interviewed for this story, she gave only her first name out of fear of reprisal from Mountain Valley Pipeline LLC, which has begun suing protesters in a bid to silence them. She had brought her three children to occupy the land that day. “What are we going to drink? Where are we going to live? People have to come here and stop this.”
Grizzly Bear Poachers Flout the Endangered Species Act — and Get Away With It by Ryan Devereaux and Jimmy Tobias at The Intercept. Despite the Endangered Species Act’s fearsome reputation as a powerful tool for securing environmental protection, an Intercept investigation drawn from nearly 4,000 pages of Fish and Wildlife Service case files reveals that when it comes to grizzly bears, federal prosecutors rarely bring criminal charges under the landmark law. (The accounts of grizzly bear killings in this article are drawn from those case files, which The Intercept obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.) The Endangered Species Act turns 50 years old this year amid a growing global crisis of biodiversity loss and increasing attacks by right-wing lawmakers who see predator control as a front in the battle over states’ rights. In theory, a law that the Supreme Court has called “the most comprehensive legislation for the preservation of endangered species enacted by any nation” would serve as a critical bulwark against further ecological damage. Under Section 9 of the statute, Congress declared it illegal to kill, harm, harass, or otherwise “take” protected species; prohibited the transport or possession of such animals or their body parts; and established civil and criminal penalties for violators, including imprisonment of up to a year. Investigations into suspected ESA crimes fall to special agents of the Fish and Wildlife Service, which sits within the Department of the Interior. The investigators hand their files off to Justice Department prosecutors, who make the final call on whether to bring a case. The factors that shape those decisions, however, reveal the limits of the country’s most famous conservation law.
ECOPINION
The Chevron Doctrine: what it is and why it matters that the Supreme Court might kill it. An interview conducted by David Roberts at his Volts substack with David Doniger at the Natural Resources Defense Council. In 1984, in a ruling on the case Chevron USA v. NRDC, the Supreme Court formalized what came to be known as the Chevron Doctrine. In essence, it says that courts should give administrative agencies wide latitude in how they interpret their legislative instructions. So for instance, if Congress says in the Clean Air Act that air pollution should be reduced with the “best system of emission reductions,” it is up to the EPA, which is charged with implementing the law, to determine what the best system is. Doniger explains what the Chevron Doctrine is, why the federal judiciary has traditionally been deferential to agencies’ regulatory reasoning, and the potential fallout in the very real chance that the current Supreme Court does away with the doctrine entirely.
Friction is growing: We're reaching the point where the climate crisis slows the machine by Bill McKibben at his substack The Crucial Years. The economy of the rich world is a massive, geological force—it plows onward with glacial power, pushing through obstacles like global pandemics; if it stalls, it’s usually only momentarily before it picks up speed again. Or perhaps to use a better, internal-combustion-era metaphor, it’s a speeding tractor-trailer on a downhill run, barely able to brake even if it wanted to. But I think we’re very near the point where—thanks to the climate crisis—the economy encounters sufficient friction to slow it, and maybe even to send it in a careening spin. Last week The Wall Street Journal (whose news columns are as useful as their editorial pages are obtuse) published a long piece of reporting with a stark headline: “Buying Home and Auto Insurance Is Becoming Impossible.” The essay began by describing the way that Allstate—after suffering billions of dollars in losses last year—threatened to stop writing policies in New York, New Jersey, and California. Regulators in all three states, terrified of that possibility, let them raise rates by preposterous amounts.
Yes, Biden broke a promise. And it's okay by Jonathan P. Thompson at The Land Desk. A few weeks ago, for my monthly High Country News column, I tried to unravel the puzzle posed by wildly divergent interpretations of President Biden’s record on climate, fossil fuels, and public lands. On the one hand, the Republican National Committee whined about how the administration is waging a war on energy, particularly fossil fuels. On the other, the college arm of the Democratic National Committee was accusing Biden of “climate indifference.” My conclusion was more or less this: Biden has been good — maybe the best president — when it comes to protecting certain public lands from fossil fuel energy development, even though he has made some questionable decisions. That’s hardly climate indifference. And yet, during his watch, the U.S. oil industry has produced more crude and exported more natural gas than ever before, mostly on the strength of a drilling frenzy in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico. If Biden’s waging a war on energy, his side is losing.
Mind the Gaps: How the UN Climate Plan Fails to Follow the Science by Fred Pearce at Yale Environment 360. A study headed by Matthew Gidden, a climate modeler at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Austria, found that the rules governing how countries can declare they have reached net-zero emissions are fixed so that governments will be able to claim compliance years ahead of scientific reality.These critical technical issues have been largely under the radar until now — in part, say concerned researchers, because scientists have not wanted to confuse or naysay policymakers looking to build public support for climate action. But the discrepancies raise serious questions about whether governments are truly committed to abiding by the science. “Politicians are trying to find an easy way to meet their pledges,” said IIASA forest ecologist Dmitry Shchepashchenko. Yet the urgency for resolving the uncertainties is growing. The past year has seen the climate system enter what researchers are calling “uncharted territory.”
To Prevent Climate Chaos, We May Have to Forsake Economic Growth by Bob Berwyn at Inside Climate News. In a recent study in Environmental Research Letters, an international team of scientists wrote that reaching global goals could require focusing on ways to drive rapid changes in the way people live, move, work and eat; on making sure that global wealth is distributed more equitably; and on restoring and protecting biodiversity and ecosystems like forests, oceans, fields and rivers that are critical to removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The restorative approach should be considered soon because the pace of climate impacts to ecosystems and communities is speeding up, the authors said. Climate extremes are outpacing decades of efforts to cap global warming with tools like carbon trading and offsets. Those are hallmarks of the green growth path mapped out by various United Nations-sponsored climate pacts like the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement, as well other ancillary agreements. They all aim to keep growing the global economy while reducing greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050—partly based on assuming that large quantities of carbon dioxide will be directly removed from the air and stored by giant machines by then.
Big Oil Is Weaponizing The First Amendment by Emily Sanders at The Lever. Fossil fuel’s favorite law firm is using the concept of free speech to legally defend the industry’s misleading climate claims as well as silence its critics. Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher represents oil giant Chevron in lawsuits brought by dozens of state and local governments to hold the company accountable for deceiving consumers and the public about its products’ central role in climate change. As the evidence of Big Oil’s long-standing campaigns of climate denial piles up, and the cases inch closer to trial, the firm is deploying a defense that seeks to protect its clients’ ability to mislead the public. Chevron and other oil companies’ statements about climate change, Gibson Dunn has argued, constitute First Amendment protected “political speech” — or speech concerning public opinion and policy. “The First Amendment bars tort liability based on speech attempting to influence public support for climate policies,” reads one motion, authored by Gibson Dunn and local counsel in October 2023, to dismiss a case that the state of New Jersey brought against Chevron and other oil majors. “Under that logic, companies could lie to us about anything, and just say ‘because we think it’s political, because we think it’s important to policy, then we get to lie about it,’” said Amanda Shanor, an assistant professor and First Amendment scholar at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
What we know about toxic chemicals and children’s mental health by Ashley James at Environmental Health News. Evidence suggests chemical exposures are altering children’s brains. We need to tackle this interconnected crisis. A growing body of evidence connecting increased exposure to chemicals in the environment, such as lead, PFAS and BPA, to increased child mental health symptoms like anxiety and depression. The Covid-19 pandemic heightened an already alarming rate of youth mental health challenges. For example, between 2011 and 2021, the percentage of high school students who reported seriously considering suicide rose from 16% to 22%. Meanwhile, from 2011 to 2020, youth mental health emergency visits nearly doubled.These trends led the nation's leading pediatric health practitioners to declare a national child and adolescent mental health emergency in 2021. Across the country, this crisis impacts the lives of children and caregivers, and strains our healthcare system. At the same time, we’ve known for almost two decades that babies are exposed to hundreds of chemicals in the womb. After birth, they can be exposed to even more chemicals in food, drinking water, air, consumer goods and more. Throughout childhood, but especially in utero and during early years, children are vulnerable to these chemicals, which can disrupt important processes in brain development, including processes related to mood and emotion regulation.
GREEN LINKS
Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon Fell in Half Last Year • As Biden awards nearly $1 billion for electric school buses, can utilities keep up? • A small Texas town is home to the state’s first all-EV school bus fleet • More & More U.S. Homes Facing Flood Risk • EPA proposes methane emission fees • Interior releases review of building 1,000 wind turbines off NY coast • California water managers worried by early snowpack estimates • Third of UK teenagers believe climate change exaggerated, report shows • Homeowner’s insurance is going up in smoke • Mass Layoffs At Pioneering Nuclear Startup • Kazakhstan’s drying Aral Sea carries a message for those worried about the Great Salt Lake • This Houston Museum Teaches About Climate Change