Climate Letter #492

Part III of the Inside Climate News revelations about Exxon’s climate research.  (See the earlier parts and comments in the last few Climate Letters.)   There is much more substance to add to this incredible story.  (Actually the whole story, which includes the turnaround and coverup phase, is still progressing.)

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This post has a video of statements made by Exxon’s CEO in 2012, talking about a problem he admits is real but also one we can easily adapt to and need not worry about.  The world is full of poor people who desperately need cheap and abundant energy, a much bigger problem that fossil fuels must help to satisfy.
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How things look, and future solutions, according to Greenpeace.  Greenpeace has created an image of perhaps overly aggressive activism that can turn off people who are by nature more conservative.  By contrast, their annual written statements of policy, while ambitious, have proven to be thoroughly accurate as well as realistically restrained.  Here is a brief introduction to their latest:
This link will take you to the full report.  It includes separate links to the executive summary and to just the key messages for 2015.
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Conservatives around the globe disagree on the fundamentals of climate change.  One group goes well beyond the other eight prominent groups that were tested.  “The U.S. Republican Party is an anomaly in denying anthropogenic climate change, Sondre Batstrand of the University of Bergen writes in the journal Politics and Policy.”  Australian conservatives, along with US Republicans, express the strongest opposition to regulation and carbon taxes.
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Improved prospect for making biofuel from algae.  From Michigan State University, a report of success in tinkering with molecular machinery that opens many opportunities.  Cheaper and cleaner biofuel should be one of them.
Carl

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