Environmentalism
on the Defensive

Earth, Wind, and Fire

Ronald Reagan

   Career in radio, movies, TV

   Move to politics: twice California governor

   1980 election: Reagan, Carter, & John Anderson

   Return to certainties & pride

   Actor-President: appearance vs. reality

   Government is the problem

    Cut taxes for upper incomes, deregulation

 

 

Ronald Reagan vs.
“environmental extremists”

   End of bipartisan environmentalism

   44-member Council on Environmental Quality fired

   Business & right-wing think tanks in charge

     OMB gets veto over new regulations

     Citizen participation limited or avoided

   Energy policy: cheap oil

   Foreign nations take lead in alternative energy

Secretary of Interior James Watt

   Pentecostal

    Rise of conservative evangelical anti-environmentalism

   Commercial development of Western public lands

    Excludes environmental organizations, 1981

    Halt to any further parks or wilderness

    States, Congress block offshore oil development

    Congress blocks oil leases in wildlife refuges

    Court blocks strip mining & coal lease changes

   Fired 1983 for offensive remarks

Weakening the EPA

  EPA administrator Anne Gorsuch Burford, 1982

    Demands for cost-benefit analyses

      Opposition to “burdensome” regulations

    Proposed budget 1/4 of Carter’s

    Dismantled enforcement division

    Plans to weaken clean air standards

    Resigned in scandal and under investigation, 1983

Backlash and radicalization

  1,000,000 sign Sierra Club petition against Watt

    Watt & Burford resign amid scandals, 1983

    Congress renews, expands regulations

  Rise of the radicals

    Greenpeace, 1971

    Sea Shepherds, 1977

    Earth First!, 1980

      Dave Foreman: ecotage

    Rainforest Action Network, 1985

New ideas of the 1980s and 1990s

   James Lovelock’s “Gaia hypothesis,” 1979

     Life, oceans, air, soil = system for optimum environment for life

   Arne Naess, “Deep Ecology,” 1973 (in the US, 1985)

     Anthropocentrism vs. biocentrism

   E. O. Wilson, Biodiversity, 1986

     The trouble with “islands”

   UN Brundtland Report, 1987

     “Sustainable development”

   From 1967 “Lynn White thesis” to 1990s “ecotheology”

     Pope Francis, Laudato Si’: On Care For Our Common Home, 2015

Environmental Justice Movement

   Warren County protests, 1984

     Rev. Benjamin Chavis and the UCC Report, 1987

      “Environmental racism”

   Spreads across the country

   “Chemical Corridor” or “Cancer Alley”?

     Louisiana’s petrochemical industry

New issues

  Agriculture

    From family farm to agribusiness

      Changing government policies: “Get big or get out”

    Loss of farmland: urban sprawl

    Compaction & erosion

    Excess fertilizer and the Gulf’s “Dead Zone”

    Bioengineering (GMO’s) & exotic aliens

International Victories for the Air

  Acid rain: an international problem

    Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution, 1979

    Clean Air Act, 1990: Cap and trade

  1974: CFCs and the stratospheric ozone layer

    1985: discovery of Antarctic ozone hole

    1987: Montreal Protocol

The fading of environmentalism?

  Decline of outdoor recreation

    Decline in hunting, fishing, visits to National Parks

    “Nature deficit disorder”

      Youth of the 1980s: first generation raised mainly indoors

      Fearful parents keep kids from unstructured outdoor play

      Lure of video and electronics

Corporate opposition gets better

  “Merchants of doubt”

    A few scientists against all government regulation

      Funded by corporations & libertarian groups

      Heritage Foundation, Competitive Enterprise Institute, Marshall Institute, Heartland Institute

    Attack dangers of smoking, secondhand smoke, ozone, acid rain, pesticides (Rachel Carson), global warming

      Tactics: discredit the science (“junk science”), disseminate false information, spread confusion, and promote doubt

    Major funders: Koch brothers, Exxon

      #ExxonKnew, 2016

Global Warming

   1896: Svante Arrhenius: greenhouse theory

   1950s-80s: Data accumulates

     Roger Revelle’s Mauna Loa CO2 measurements

   Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 1988

   1992 Rio Earth Summit calls for voluntary action

   1997 Kyoto Protocols: stronger reductions

   Worse than expected: heat, extreme weather, sea rise, polar ice cap, glaciers, ocean acidification, coral bleaching

   2015 Paris Climate Change Conference

     Real commitments for the first time: 2°C goal

 

The “Anthropocene”

   Humans a factor on geologic time scale

   Global warming faster than any time in earth history

   The “Sixth Extinction”

     Humans & Pleistocene extinctions

     Post-Columbian extinctions

     Contemporary crises

      Amphibian disappearance

      Mass bat deaths

      Oceans in crisis: warming, overfishing, pollution

      Pollinator decline

 

 

1990s: Marking time

  George H.W. Bush, 1989–93, “environmental President”

    1992 Rio Earth Summit: U.S. obstruction

  Bill Clinton, 1993–2001

    VP Al Gore’s campaign book, Earth in the Balance, 1992

    Little leadership on environmental issues

    1997 Kyoto Earth Summit: no leadership; Republican Congress

 

Another right turn

  George W. Bush & Dick Cheney, 2001-2009

    Former oil company executives

      Secrecy and exclusion of environmental groups

      Silencing of scientists, reluctance to regulate, leadership vacuum

    Rejects Kyoto, 2001

    Boycotts Johannesburg Earth Summit, 2002

    “Clear Skies” and “Healthy Forests” initiatives

    Focus on hydrogen exclusively

    Energy Policy Act of 2005

      Subsidizes nuclear & oil, exempts fracking from Clean Water Act

Progress on other fronts

   Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth, 2006

       2 Academy Awards; 2007 Nobel Peace Prize (with IPCC)

   Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007

      Fuel economy, hybrids, biofuels, lightbulbs (leaves oil subsidies)

   Mainstreaming of organic food

      Whole Foods and other organic grocery stores

      Industrial organic: Cascadian Farms, Earthbound Farm

   Spread of renewable energy (solar and wind power)

   Development of batteries and electric cars (Tesla)