Current:Home > FinanceHow 90 Big Companies Helped Fuel Climate Change: Study Breaks It Down -TradeWisdom
How 90 Big Companies Helped Fuel Climate Change: Study Breaks It Down
View
Date:2025-04-17 23:04:30
Can millimeters of sea level rise or increments of warming on the globe’s thermometer be attributed to specific energy companies? A new study attempts to do that, and says that more than a quarter of sea level rise and about half the warming from 1880 to 2010 can be traced back to just 90 corporations.
The study comes as energy companies confront lawsuits and shareholder resolutions seeking to account for their contributions to climate change.
The new paper, published last week in the journal Climatic Change, builds on earlier research finding that nearly two-thirds of historical greenhouse gas emissions came from the products and operations of just 90 companies—mostly fossil fuel producers, plus a few cement companies.
The researchers from the Union of Concerned Scientists and two universities took the reasoning another step and calculated how much of the actual change in the climate can be tied to those extra emissions.
Using models, they calculated that the greenhouse gas emissions of these 90 companies accounted for around 42 to 50 percent of the global temperature increase and about 26 to 32 percent of global sea level rise over the course of industrial history, from 1880 to 2010. Since 1980, a time when global warming was first getting wide attention, their emissions have accounted for around 28 to 35 percent of rising temperatures and around 11 to 14 percent of rising seas.
While some of the companies are huge—Chevron, Saudi Aramco, ExxonMobil, Gazprom—even the biggest of them weren’t blamed for more than about 1 or 2 percent of the rising tides or temperatures.
The next step, one of the authors suggested, would be to calculate the damages from those changes—and decide if the companies should help pay for them.
“We know climate impacts are worsening and they’re becoming more costly. The question is who’s responsible and who should pay the costs,” said Brenda Ekwurzel, the lead author of the paper and director of climate science at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “In the United States, taxpayers are footing the bill entirely. So maybe with numbers like this you can put in the mix the producers.”
In July, three local governments in California sued a group of oil and gas companies, arguing that executives knew for decades that the “greenhouse gas pollution from their fossil fuel products had a significant impact on the Earth’s climate and sea levels.”
The state attorneys general of New York and Massachusetts, meanwhile, are investigating whether Exxon misled investors about its risks from climate change.
Exxon and Chevron did not respond to requests for comment for this article. The American Petroleum Institute declined to comment.
Ekwurzel said the paper is only a first step for trying to sort out who is responsible for what as the costs of climate change grow. “We can calculate these numbers, and we don’t expect them to directly equal responsibility,” she said. “That’s really for juries, policymakers, civil society conversation going forward.”
Generally, state efforts to cap greenhouse gas emissions, such as California’s cap-and-trade system, hold companies accountable only for their direct emissions. But just because it’s fossil fuel consumers like power plants and drivers who ultimately burn the coal, oil and gas that emit greenhouse gases, that doesn’t let the producers off the hook, she added.
“A common complaint is, what about utilities, what about car-driving,” Ekwurzel said. “The thing is, is it the activities or is it how we’ve chosen to power those activities? We know there are other ways to move through space or to turn on the lights that don’t rely as much on fossil fuels.”
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Paris Hilton Says She and Britney Spears Created the Selfie 17 Years Ago With Iconic Throwback Photos
- Lightning left wing Cole Koepke wearing neck guard following the death of Adam Johnson
- Taylor Swift fan dies at Rio concert amid complaints about excessive heat
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- New York City’s ban on police chokeholds, diaphragm compression upheld by state’s high court
- Appeals court to consider Trump's bid to pause gag order in special counsel's election interference case
- Mississippi man killed by police SUV receives funeral months after first burial in paupers’ cemetery
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Jury acquits Catholic priest in Tennessee who was charged with sexual battery
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Hiker found dead on trail in Grand Canyon, second such fatality in 2 months
- US auto safety regulators reviewing some Hyundai, Kia recalls
- Julianna Margulies: My non-Jewish friends, your silence on antisemitism is loud
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Napoleon's bicorne hat sold at auction for a history-making price
- Tom Schwartz's Winter House Romance With Katie Flood Takes a Hilariously Twisted Turn
- GOP presidential hopefuls use Trump's COVID record to court vaccine skeptics
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Close friends can help you live longer but they can spread some bad habits too
Olympian Tara Lipinski Reflects on Isolating Journey With Pregnancy Loss, IVF Before Welcoming Daughter
Zach Wilson 'tackled' by Robert Saleh before being benched by Jets head coach
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
The messy human drama behind OpenAI
Where is Thanksgiving most expensive? Residents in these US cities expect to pay more
Senate panel subpoenas CEOs of Discord, Snap and X to testify about children’s safety online
Like
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Biden plans to deploy immigration officers to Panama to help screen and deport U.S.-bound migrants, officials say
- A cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe is suspected of killing more than 150 and is leaving many terrified