2024 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #34

A listing of 30 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, August 18, 2024 thru Sat, August 24, 2024.

Story of the week

Our Story of the Week is another stab at "connecting the dots," drawing a line between not one but two different stories sharing common foundations.

First there's Emily Atkin writing for HEATED with a critical commentary on Elon Musk, in Why vilify the oil and gas industry?As detailed by Atkin, in a recent interview with a US presidential party nominee and candidate Musk made an odd statement, one that with all charity can only be interpreted as remarkably chumpish and naive. Musk asserted in connection with climate change that "I don’t think we should vilify the oil and gas industry." Unsurprisingly this article generated a lot of buzz in social media. Musk's assertion is starkly at odds with the fossil fuel industry's amply documented footprints of concerted, effective deception as recorded in public perception, public policy— and certainly not least— investigative journalism.

Assuming for a moment that Musk is somehow genuinely ignorant of a rich and obvious historical record, his information and cogitation could be improved by reading another article we shared this week, Oil firms and dark money fund push by Republican states to block climate laws by Peter Stone, writing for The Guardian. Stone's piece is certainly important in terms of ongoing situational awareness. But except in terms of details there's fundamentally little new in this article for anybody generally familiar with the struggle between the fossil fuel industry's desperate effort to prolong monetization of its outmoded and dangerous resouces versus modernization and cleanup of our energy systems.

For decades the fossil fuel industry has been fighting tooth and nail to preserve the anachronistic revenue stream it enjoys. Against the trillions of dollars of revenue at stake, a few hundred milllions spent on paying for favorable legislation and judicial bench-stuffing is not even noise on the bottom line. It doesn't need Musk's genius to see this but rather only a few minutes of attention by a person of average intelligence.

It's hard to credit that anybody of Musk's intelligence and insight into the materiality of energy supplies could truly be so ignorant. But ignorance is innocent, so let's be fair and call Elon Musk ignorant rather than a liar.

Elon Musk can also fairly be seen as a brutally pragmatic technological visionary, a person with a strong record of success as defined by context. In company with Nissan (first to offer a practical and affordable mass market EV) his automotive company has delivered a powerful and largely positive object lesson to the entire transport sector. Meanwhile, Musk's SpaceX is littering the skies with a largely useful and successful  but also problematic constellation of communications satellites, creating a puzzling inconsistency in terms of Musk's avowed inclinations toward sustainability. 

Musk also seems increasingly burderned by counterproductive ideological baggage, much along the lines of Henry Ford. Elon Musk and Henry Ford share some strong resemblances in terms of single-handed upheaval of large segments of the industrial sector. Yet for all his brilliance at vertically integrated manufacturing, Ford stepped outside of his lane of competence and ultimately was heard apologizing for and disclaiming his own publications, which diverged far from matters of industrial prowess and dived into a sewer of bigotry. 

Although far removed from Ford's particular fallibility, Musk seems to be following a roughly parallel path of plutocratic downfall as did Ford, not expressed as feelings of hatred of a population but rather the property of expediently  selective or truly genuine ignorance, as expressed in his facile or shallow exculpation of the fossil fuel indiustry for its truly baroque record of deceptions and prevarications. 

When Elon Musk says we shouldn't vilify the fossil fuel industry, he's right about the working class members of that sector but he's plainly completely wrong about its leadership. He has only to pick up a newspaper to learn better. Stone's expose is part of a practically daily chorus of exposure. One need not be a rocket scientist to join the clue train. 

Before August 18

August 18

August 19

August 20

August 21

August 22

August 23

August 24

If you happen upon high quality climate-science and/or climate-myth busting articles from reliable sources while surfing the web, please feel free to submit them via this Google form so that we may share them widely. Thanks!

Posted by BaerbelW on Sunday, 25 August, 2024


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