Big-oil executives met for closed-door meetings at last week's Davos economic forum in Geneva and for the first time, environmental risks occupied their top five long-term concerns ("Climate concerns have big-oil CEOs talking," Jan. 23). "The executives debated a document produced by the World Economic Forum on 'neutralizing emissions at the pump,' a reference to the gasoline and diesel sold to customers," the article said.
Why, after four decades of hiding their industry's impact on our climate, would oil executives want to recognize the issue publicly? This next comment may help clarify: "There's an urgent need to shift the industry's target from oil production to emissions from end users, said one person."
We began understanding in the 1980s that burning fossil fuels would dangerously warm the planet. In response, the fossil fuel industry began spending billions to refute the data and manipulate political leaders to cast doubt on the science.
Thankfully, scientists have finally turned the tide against the misinformation campaign. The fossil fuel industry sees the information tide turning and recognizes its potential culpability with these catastrophes. Their lawyers would like nothing better than to shift blame to consumers.
Lawsuits took a significant and well-deserved toll on unscrupulous cigarette makers. If we don't allow big oil to shift the blame to consumers, the forthcoming lawsuits against them will deservedly dwarf the tobacco industry penalties.
Mark Andersen, Wayzata
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The Enbridge Line 3 expansion is a threat to our health ("Modern energy will be 'both/and,' " Readers Write, Jan. 21). That is why Health Professionals for a Healthy Climate recognizes that the only pathway forward is for the Public Utilities Commission to reject the pipeline expansion and close the existing pipeline. (HPHC is a nonpartisan organization of Minnesota nurses, physicians, public health, mental health and other allied health care professionals and students dedicated to the best possible health of our patients and our communities.)
The World Health Organization says that the No. 1 threat to human health is climate change — air pollution, water contamination, heat, flooding, drought and infectious disease that are a result of fossil fuels. Humanity is at a critical juncture and the consideration of Line 3 expansion is a line in the sand that society dare not cross. The crisis only accelerates as we postpone action that should have been taken years ago.
If approved, Line 3 will produce up to 193 million tons of CO2 a year. U.S. emissions are 5.27 billion tons of CO2. That's 3.7% of U.S. emissions.