A recent Bloomberg article, titled “Exxon Says Reaching Net Zero Global Emissions by 2050 ‘Highly Unlikely’,” describes a regulatory filing Exxon Mobil Corporation made indicating that there would be significant risk associated with phasing out oil and gas production and use.
Exxon and Glass Lewis, the advisor they referenced, are right. Getting rid of oil and gas in pursuit of Net-Zero emissions by 2050 would seriously impact the people’s standards of living globally. [emphasis, links added]
According to Bloomberg, Exxon said “The International Energy Agency’s (IEA’s) Net Zero Emissions scenario, which models a phaseout of most fossil fuels by 2050, has little bearing in reality[.]”
They go on to say that it is “highly unlikely that society would accept the degradation in the global standard of living required to permanently achieve a scenario like the IEA NZE.”
Exxon’s representatives are correct. Multiple polls have shown that although majorities claim to claim to support “climate action,” once they see the actual price tag, they are far less enthusiastic.
For example, a United Nations poll conducted in 2016 had climate change concerns coming in dead last.
Californians provide a good case study. As covered by Climate Realism, here, although California residents have often been celebrated for their climate bona fides, when polled on support of a climate tax, their support fizzles.
A California county board polled the public, looking for support for a tax increase of 0.25 percent to use for climate goals, and the poll failed to generate the two-thirds support they needed to pass the tax.
Europeans, who are generally happier with government climate initiatives, also don’t support those plans once they begin to directly impact their way of life.
A recent YouGov poll of several thousand Europeans across different countries found that most Europeans claimed to be worried about climate change. However, when the poll asked how much they were willing to sacrifice, support quickly waned.
Most did not support limiting meat or dairy intake, paying more for electricity or energy-efficient appliances, limiting how many children they have, or limiting or banning vehicles powered by internal combustion engines.
Since fossil fuel use is the backbone of all these parts of life, it makes sense to say that it is “highly unlikely” that a phaseout of fossil fuels will be supported once the masses realize what impact on the day-to-day it would have.
Restricting or eliminating the use of fossil fuels will undoubtedly lead to higher food prices because every step of large-scale food production relies on them and byproducts from refining them.
Fertilizers and pesticides are made as a byproduct of natural gas production, and plastics and other specialized materials are made from the byproducts of oil and gas refining.
Large tractors run on diesel fuel; the steel necessary for heavy farm equipment is made using coal; transportation fuels get food from farm to table, the list goes on forever, and that’s just the agricultural industry.
As Climate Realism has extensively covered here, here, and here, for example, the food supply is already being threatened by efforts to ban the use of fossil fuels in agriculture.
Fossil fuels are even used in the mining, refining, manufacturing, transportation, and construction of renewable electric power sources like wind turbines, solar panels, batteries, and electric vehicles.
Exxon knows this and should be encouraged to keep making these facts known. If voters were aware of the true costs of net zero, the alarmist media and politicians may have a harder time forcing it on the public.
Read more at Climate Realism
I can understand why large companies like ExxonMobil have been quite on the net zero madness. The looney zealots attack and that’s really bad, no matter what your business is.
We recently heard from the CEO of Chevron and now Exxon is speaking up and that needs to continue. The average person has no idea what companies like these contribute to our lives – every day. In fact, there will not be a room in our homes where products from the oil industry are needed to make something. EG: All the foam in our furniture and mattresses. Or, the lubricants and fuels for our cars. Who wants to walk everywhere?
BTW – BEV’s will never replace ICE vehicles. NEVER..
Why? Because all the mining in the world cannot produce enough of the materials needed to make car batteries. It’s that simple. And I haven’t mentioned the escalating cost here.
Well done ExxonMoibl. Let’s hear more from you regarding what you make for our lives to be so good.
Why are dissenting politicos not speaking out to the public, victims of costly fraud?