Last month, 11,258 scientists from virtually every country in the world published a study on climate change, writing that they collectively declared โclearly and unequivocally that planet Earth is facing a climateย emergency.โ
That comes six years after a widely cited 2013 study reported 97 percent agreement among publishing climate scientists that human activity causes climate change โ a consensus that has grown stronger in the years since. John Cook, lead author of that study, described this summer a 99 percent scientific consensus that humans cause globalย warming.
Despite this widespread scientific agreement, shale pipeline executives attending this yearโs Marcellus Utica Midstream conference last week in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, heard a very different message on theย climate.
โThere’s a premise that has now become standard that I don’t accept: the idea that we know,โ Mark Mathis, president of the Clear Energy Alliance, told the gathered pipeline executives. โFor a scientist, for a climatologist to say, ‘we know that we’re the cause,’ okay, ‘and the consequences are extreme’ โ well, we’ve got these giant natural factors, you know, sun spot activity, oceans, cloud formations, these are all extraordinarily complex things,ย okay?โ
โThere’s a lot that we don’t understand,โ Mathis continued. โWe’re just now trying to get our finger onย it.โ
Itโs a mantra thatโs been heard for decades from fossil fuel advocates โ but itโs worn increasingly thin as the world comes to grips with the political and scientific reality of the ongoing climate crisis. The United Nations warned in March that the world has โonly 11 years left to prevent irreversible damage from climateย change.โ
John Powell, Senior Vice President of Crestwood Equity Partners, presented during the Marcellus Utica Midstream conference, similarly telling the pipeline industry that โwe need to change the narrative.โ Credit: Sharon Kelly,ย DeSmog
At the December 3โ5 pipeline conference, Mathis called for more study, and falsely claimed that the science does not back up the notion that fossil fuelโburning has caused climateย change.
โLet’s continue to work through the science side of it and understand that this extreme case scenario [of fossil fuelโcaused climate change] โ it’s a constant mantra, people are beginning to accept it, but the science simply does not back that up,โ he told the crowd during a panel titled โBreaking Through the Regulatoryย Wall.โ
For the record, the science does in fact back up the notion that people โ mainly by burning fossil fuels โ are causing the climate to rapidly warm. Climate scientists have carefully examined the role of the sun and sunspots in climate change, as Marshall Shepherd, director of the University of Georgiaโs Atmospheric Sciences Program and former president of the American Meteorological Society, explains in detail in Forbes.
The short version: Scientists have measured the amount of the sunโs energy arriving at the top of our atmosphere since 1978 and have found no risingย trend.
In fact, a study released the same day that Mathis spoke at the Marcellus Utica Midstream conference found that climate models have proved to be remarkably on point. Even some of the earlier climate models going back to the 1970s, which have been refined and updated in significant ways since, accurately predicted the warming that weโve seen in the past 40 to 50ย years.
In March 2018ย Mark Mathis comparedย climate models to fortune tellers in aย Clear Energy Alliance video, listing off a range of unrelated computer models (for elections, hurricanes, and stock markets) as evidence that climate change modelsย areย unreliable.
The Clear Energy Alliance was created in 2017, DeSmog reports in its profile of the organization, and does not disclose its funders, though Mathisโs earlier projects have confirmed that the groupย took fossil fuel funding. According to a Clear Energy Alliance biography, Mathis has โtestified before Congress on the dangers of anti-energy extremist groupsโ and appeared as โkeynote speaker for many dozens of organizationsโ including the National Football League and the Independent Petroleum Association of America. His organization also has created and circulated cartoonish YouTube videos and political ads mocking climate science and itsย findings.
‘I donโt even buy itย myself’
A second panelist at the conferenceโs regulatory session said he thought policy makers and the public no longer bought the idea that climate science is unreliable. And, he added, a second fossil fuel industry talking point, the notion of natural gas as a โbridgeโ to renewables, also no longerย works.
โI really โ I don’t think that sort of denial, it’s complicated, I don’t think that’s going to work,โ Mathisโs fellow panelist, Steven C. Russo, chair of the environmental practice at law firm Greenberg Traurig, said. โIt’s certainly not going to work in Democratic states. I don’t even buy itย myself.โ
โThat may be an approach and maybe it’ll work in some places,โ he continued, โbut I think it’s working less and less and I think it’s working less and less with the youngerย generation.โ
Russo, according to his law firm biography, previously served as general counsel of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Prior to joining Greenberg Traurig, Russo represented a range of clients, according to Martindale, including a solar farm developer, a โmajor companyโ under federal investigation for knowing violations of hazardous waste laws, and large utilities. While at Greenberg Traurig, Russo registered as a lobbyist for National Fuel Gas Co. and other energy industry clients, according to the grassroots watchdog Public Accountabilityย Initiative.
This is real world stuff, but the reality is that the political climate now is very concerned with limiting the use of fossil fuels. #MUMConf The climate issue is not going to go away. The conversation has turned and we have to decide how to deal withย this.
โ Hart Energy Events (@HartEnergyConf) December 4, 2019
โThe climate issue is not going to go away,โ Russo told the gathered pipeline executives. โIt’s not going to go away politically. It’s not going to go away as a problem. I mean, because it is aย problem.โ
โAnd for years, natural gas was able to be in on that conversation because they were saying, ‘hey, we are actually bringing the numbers down in this country. We are displacing much dirtier fuels and we are a bridge to the future. Yes, we all want to get there eventually but it’sย complicated.โโ
โAnd the conversation was kind of good,โ he said. โBut it hasย turned.โ
Instead, Russo suggested that the pipeline industry should present gas as more reliable and cheaper than renewable energy, and to suggest a slow response that mirrors the long rise of the fossil fuel industry over the last century and a half or so. โBut I think saying to people, listen, we got into this problem over a long, long period of time and we didn’t know anything about this, and we have other issues such as reliability and price,โ heย said.
As DeSmog โ as well as the Wall Street Journal, S&P Global, Bloomberg, and many others โ have reported, the shale drilling industry has spent years raising naturalย gas production while racking up huge financial losses, putting the long-term prospects that gas prices will remain at historic lows potentially atย risk.
Trade show booths and luncheon tables at the 2019 Marcellus Utica Midstream conference, which occupied a smaller portion of the David L. Lawrence convention center in Pittsburgh than conferences in prior years. Credit: Sharon Kelly,ย DeSmog
The industryโs financial troubles were apparent at this yearโs Marcellus Utica Midstream conference, where attendance was sparse compared to years past, and the conference trade show occupied only a fraction of the convention center space used in yearsย prior.
Even at todayโs prices, the natural gas industry faces an increasingly uphill battle using price as a talking point.ย A pair of September studies by the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI)ย concluded that within just 16 years, it will be cheaper to scrap natural gas power plants โ even those built today or in the future โ and replace them with renewable energy powerย generation.
โThe analysis presents compelling evidence that 2019 represents a tipping point,โ RMI wrote, โwith the economics now favoring clean energy over nearly all new U.S.ย gas-firedย generation.โ
Main image: Marcellus Utica Midstream presentations in Pittsburgh on Decemberย 4, 2019. Credit: Sharon Kelly,ย DeSmogSubscribe to our newsletter
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