Sure it is, they all want what you got and are only low emitters because they can't afford it. This is reality.
No, it isn't.
This is reality:
A lot of us are worried about how our everyday actions affect the planet.
With a cursory internet search, we find all sorts of ways to reduce our impact.
Recycle, go vegan, switch out a light bulb, or drive an electric car.
If you can afford it.
Companies do it too.
They build LEED-certified buildings, install solar panels on the roof,
or enroll in carbon offset programs.
-Powered by wind and solar.
-While lowering the carbon emissions intensity.
-We aim to be net zero across all. For generations to come.
Let's call this the "Do Anything" approach.
The idea that if everyone takes these small steps anywhere at any time, it'll add up to healthier environments.
Here's the problem:
These small changes don't add up to stop climate change or biodiversity loss, air pollution, or any of the environmental crises we face.
If anything, the "Do Anything" approach distracts us from the bigger changes that we actually need to make.
The average person in the US emits about 16 tons of carbon per year, mostly through driving, household energy use, and food consumption.
Compared to the total global emissions, which are about 36 billion tons of carbon a year, our individual contribution is barely a fraction of a fraction of a percent.
Now, not everyone emits equally.
The richest 1% of the global population accounts for more than twice the combined emissions of the poorest 50%.
-The wealthiest folks emit way above the average while people with lower incomes emit less.
You can make big changes in your life like installing solar panels to go off the grid but that's still a tiny, tiny percent of reduced global emissions. And let's not forget, the vast majority of us don't really have other options other than to drive a gas-guzzling car to work or buy food grown with chemicals and shipped from far away.
-The food system is responsible for 20% to 30% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
There's a reason small individual lifestyle changes don't have an impact:
A single person going about their day has little control over the high-emission systems they rely on. These are complex systems, which include where our energy comes from, the options available for getting to work, agriculture and land use, industrial operations, transportation of goods, and construction.
-Our individual footprint is actually quite small compared to the structure of society and the decisions that, for example, fossil fuel companies make, which have 10,000 times more impact than us as individuals.
If the changes we need to make are so big, then why do we default to the "Do Anything" approach?
-Food can be grown close to home, reducing the family's carbon footprint.
-If everyone carpooled just one day a week, we could reduce our carbon footprint.
-[crosstalk] reduce your dietary carbon footprint and--
-Reduce your carbon footprint.
-Turn off those unused lights.
Why do we place so much attention on small individual and convenient actions anywhere at any time to combat climate change and reduce our impact on environments?
For one, it's easier. It doesn't require us to challenge our energy infrastructure where our reliance on fossil fuels accounts for two-thirds of carbon emissions, or to question how our economy works by encouraging endless pollution to maximize profits.
-Excellent intends to increase oil production in Texas and New Mexico.
-Chevron will be doing that as the year goes on. We need to drive up supplies.
For the wealthiest among us who use the most energy and also benefit the most from the economy, saying, "I'll just build an energy-efficient house," allows them to care about the climate crisis, but they don't have to question how they benefit from polluting processes to generate wealth and how they invest their money.
Same goes for companies.
With the "Do Anything" approach, the largest polluters get to claim they've contributed to climate initiatives while maintaining business as usual.
For example, from 2008 to 2018, Exxon invested $250 million to develop technologies that use algae to generate clean biofuels.
-That could one day power planes, propel ships, and fuel trucks.[/]
That's doing something. But meanwhile, during the same period, they actually spent about $100 million a day to find and develop new sources of oil and natural gas.
They spent about $42 million annually to lobby against climate initiatives.
-Did we aggressively fight against some of the science? Yes. We were looking out for our investments. We were looking out for our shareholders. There's nothing illegal about that.
And with several other fossil fuel giants, they spent $175 million annually to market themselves as climate heroes:
-It's one of the ways ExxonMobil is advancing climate solutions.
The "Do Anything" approach favors the politically convenient changes that keep the economy working the same way it always has.
Does "Every Little Thing" REALLY Stop Climate Change? (PBS Terra on YouTube, April 4, 2024)
The richest 1% of the global population accounts for more than twice the combined emissions of the poorest 50%.
And yet your fantasy scenario blames poor people for what they might do if they weren't poor, which they obviously are, thus arguing against both putting and end to global warming and putting an end to poverty, as if poor people were somehow responsible for both the lies and the CO2 emissions of ExonMobil.
But you can imagine that they somehow be if poverty was abolished because human nature is somehow responsible for the decisions made by companies like Exxon.