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Why vilify the oil and gas industry? Because It Deserves to Be . . .

Summary:
By Emily Atkin Heated World The richest man in the world has a new message about climate change: It’s real, but don’t knock the industry most responsible. “I don’t think we should vilify the oil and gas industry,”  Elon Musk said while speaking about climate change during his two-hour conversation with former president Donald Trump last week. It was a sentiment Musk repeated four times throughout the 10-minute climate discussion. “I don’t think it’s right to sort of vilify the oil and gas industry,” he said, using the same verb—vilify—every time. It’s tough to know exactly what Musk meant with his verbiage. But if he was arguing that people shouldn’t lie about the oil and gas industry, then I agree. The truth is enough for people

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The richest man in the world has a new message about climate change:

It’s real, but don’t knock the industry most responsible.

It’s tough to know exactly what Musk meant with his verbiage. But if he was arguing that people shouldn’t lie about the oil and gas industry, then I agree. The truth is enough for people to come to their own conclusions.

But if Musk’s argument was as I interpreted it—that we shouldn’t make the fossil fuel industry out to be a villain—then I think that requires some further explanation. Because after more than 10 years of reporting on the fossil fuel industry and climate change, I’ve found quite a few legitimate reasons to paint Big Oil as the bad guy.

Why paint Big Oil as a villain?

So I’m not afraid to say it: The fossil fuel industry has done a lot of great things for civilization. Industrialization and rising economic prosperity would have been impossible without oil, gas, and coal. Fossil fuels have been primarily responsible for propelling our cars, powering our businesses, and keeping the lights on in our homes—all things I personally am grateful for. And globally, the fossil fuel industry employs nearly 32 million people. (Interestingly, the clean energy sector employs even more than that, but I digress).

For some people, this alone is enough to “vilify” the fossil fuel industry. But perhaps surprisingly, it’s not enough for me. As a journalist, I understand that all energy production has negative—even sometimes catastrophic—environmental and human health effects. As long as industries are willing to be held accountable for those effects, and work in good faith to address them, I don’t think it’s fair to call them “evil.”

But here’s the thing: If an industry doesn’t acknowledge the massive harm of its products; then publicly denies those harms for decades while acknowledging them internally; then makes false promises to fix those harms once forced to acknowledge them; and then spends billions to delay time-sensitive solutions through advertising, lobbying, campaign spending, and public-school educational material – then yeah. I think it’s fair to say an industry has entered villain territory.

The fossil fuel industry has done all these things and more.

Big Oil is the main reason for climate delay

Refusing to vilify an industry for the harm it’s knowingly causing may make you feel reasonable, like the adult in the room.

But when you begin to truly digest everything Big Oil has done—and continues to do—to delay time-sensitive solutions to the crisis it has caused, you begin to realize that reasonableness only makes you a sucker.

The oil and gas industry is the primary reason we haven’t done much to stop climate change over the last 50 years. 

Why vilify the oil and gas industry? Because It Deserves to Be . . .

These are, again, just a fraction of examples that I put together in about 45 minutes.

Instead, the industry collectively mobilized to deny climate science and delay climate action—and today, it uses that delay to argue that it’s too late for a wholesale shift away from fossil fuels. It’s a masterful exercise in emotional manipulation and blame-shifting, and it’s worked on the richest man on Earth. But it doesn’t have to work on you.

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