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
◦
Solar Energy Research Institute dismantled
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
1,000,000 sign Sierra Club petition against Watt
◦
Watt & Burford resign amid scandals, 1983
◦
Congress renews, expands regulations
Radicalization
Rise of
the radicals
◦
Greenpeace, 1971
◦
Sea Shepherds, 1977
◦
Earth First!, 1980
◦
Dave Foreman: ecotage
◦
Rainforest Action Network, 1985
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 ideas of the 1980s and
1990s
James
Lovelock’s “Gaia hypothesis,” 1979
◦
Life, oceans, air, soil: a self-regulating system for optimum
environment for life
New ideas of the 1980s and
1990s
Arne
Naess, “Deep Ecology,” 1973 (in US, 1985)
◦
Anthropocentrism vs. biocentrism
New ideas of the 1980s and
1990s
E. O.
Wilson, Biodiversity, 1986
◦
The trouble with “islands”
New ideas of the 1980s and
1990s
UN
Brundtland Report, 1987
◦
“Sustainable development”
New ideas of the 1980s
1967
“Lynn White thesis”
◦
Christianity caused the ecological crisis
Development
of “ecotheology”
◦
Pope Francis, Laudato Si’: On Care For Our Common Home, 2015
Environmental concerns of the
late 20th and early 21st centuries
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
Global Warming
1896:
Svante Arrhenius: theory of global warming
1950s-80s:
Data accumulates
◦
Roger Revelle & 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
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
Ocean decline
Overfishing
◦
Factory ships, bottom trawlers, deep-see trawling, ghost nets
◦
Bycatch of birds, fish, and sea mammals
◦
Finning sharks
Marine debris, plastic waste, and pollution
◦
Entangled whales, dolphins, and turtles
◦
Huge patches of floating plastic
◦
Microplastics
Acidification and warming oceans
The “Anthropocene,” 2000
Humans a
factor on geologic time scale
The
“Sixth Extinction”
◦
Humans & Pleistocene extinctions
◦
Post-Columbian extinctions
◦
Contemporary crises
◦
Amphibian disappearance
◦
Mass bat deaths
◦
Pollinator decline
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, 2015
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