Now that Barack Obama has kicked the Keystone project down the road, anti-pipeline activists are rejoicing. “This is what it means to change the conversation,” said Naomi Klein. “This is an amazing victory for our movement,” crowed Bill McKibben and his 350.org team.
In fact, the decision to re-review the pipeline route is an amazing victory for political expediency. By ensuring that nothing will happen until after the 2012 election, Mr. Obama buys himself a reprieve with the environmentalists. But nothing else will change. The U.S. will not consume a litre less of oil if Keystone is never built. It will simply buy the oil from somewhere else. Nor will this decision threaten the long-term future of the oil (oops, tar) sands. If the U.S. doesn’t buy our oil, the Chinese will.
Most of the anti-Keystone activists don’t want a better pipeline route. What they really want is no pipeline at all. Their goal is to replace dirty oil with clean renewables. But they face a double whammy – make that a triple whammy – of bad news. The first is economic. Renewables are simply too expensive, and fossil fuels are too cheap. Forget solar power – the world is in the middle of an old-fashioned coal rush. As climate delegates jet around the world to their endless conferences, coal use has expanded to supply nearly 30 per cent
The second piece of bad news is that the world’s recoverable oil and gas reserves have exploded. Forget Peak Oil – we won’t be there any time soon. From Israel to the high Arctic, we keep finding more and more fossil fuel. And rapid progress in technology means we can get at it. We can drill deeper beneath the ocean floor than anyone ever dreamed. There may be 25 billion barrels
The third piece of bad news is green boondoggles, on a scale so vast that clean energy could be discredited forever. Solyndra,
Abundant fossil fuel, energy security within reach, green boondoggles on a massive scale – that’s the news Naomi Klein hopes you won’t hear. Because it’s all very, very bad for the conversation.
