Statehouse Headliners: McKibben influence strong on 2019 Legislature

By Guy Page

Never underestimate the influence of climate change author and activist Bill McKibben on the Vermont Legislature.

Case in point: Wednesday May 8, Sen. Jane Kitchel, D-Caledonia, was expressing her concern to the rest of the Senate Democratic Caucus about the fast-growing number of Vermont children in foster care. The reasons are uncertain — other states with worse opioid addiction crises aren’t seeing the same growth. A UVM-led  study will be completed in November. But here’s the reality: there are a lot more children in foster care than there used to be, and the state must pay for their care.

Senate.gov

Environmental activist Bill McKibben

Sen. Alison Clarkson, D-Windsor, acknowledged the seriousness of the financial problem and added, “every line in our budget reflects our values. Bill McKibben’s speech [in Montpelier the night before] reinforces it. I would not give up on our existential threat.” Clearly Sen. Clarkson meant the threat of climate change, the main topic of McKibben’s talk at the Sierra Club-sponsored gathering at the Unitarian Church on Main Street.

Since the late 1980’s, the Ripton journalist, Middlebury College teacher, and founder of 350.org has been warning the world about climate change. Our Legislature has listened in rapt attention. Both houses of the Legislature gave the author of the global-warming classic “The End of Nature” lengthy, memorable standing ovations both before and after his January, 2013 special address at the Statehouse.

McKibben’s core message hasn’t changed, if his new book “Falter” is any guide: government must act now to prevent global environmental disaster later. The illustrations he uses are updated – he calls Pres. Trump a Koch-brother crony and blames the 2018 California forest fires on climate change – but as always he concludes that only aggressively mobilized government (he hopefully cites the Green New Deal) can stop the “creepy jungle” of neo-liberal, laissez-faire capitalism in which the fossil fuel industry thrives.

Clearly, many legislators agree. A House committee is rewriting Act 250 with an eye to reducing carbon emissions. H.439, the weatherization-through-fuel taxation bill, is a climate change bill, supporters said during House floor debate. (Update: the Senate has folded this bill into S.63, which would pay for increased weatherization through Efficiency Vermont fund balances, not an increased fuel tax.) Clarkson’s S.173, mitigation of climate change, and a companion bill in the House would give Agency of Natural Resources broad authority to evaluate virtually every decision of state government for its climate change impact. S66 would ban most new construction of natural gas pipelines and some other fossil fuel infrastructure. All of these bills could move forward, this year or next. And as Clarkson notes, the proposed budget does indeed reflect climate change values, including more funding for rail travel and EV charging stations.

McKibben’s critics fall mostly into two camps. One disputes the severity or even reality of climate change. The other concedes the problem but believes high-tech industry offers better longterm solutions than government preference for low-intensity energy generation. The latter wonder why McKibben continues to insist that what he calls the “miracle” of solar power — and maybe wind and hydro, but mostly solar, solar, solar — is the sole answer to the 21st century’s carbon-free energy needs.

As pro-nuclear climate change activist Michael Shellenberger notes, mid-20th century supporters of solar and wind power like German philosopher Martin Heidegger never thought renewables would make enough juice to power a first-world industrial economy. The looming collapse of Germany’s renewable power revolution is proving these predictions true, Shellenberger says. Meanwhile, he observes the obvious: people in developed First World economies like the warmth, mobility, food, healthy living and comfort that cheap power provides. People in the surging economies of India and China remember pre-industrial poverty and famine. They have had a taste of the Good Life and want more. Few people in any of these countries want to go backward.

There are ways to reduce carbon and continue to enjoy both affluence and freedom. Vermont has responsible, economically-sound climate change solutions beyond the McKibben paradigm. Our utilities can buy more hydro power from Canada. Our Legislature can encourage New England’s remaining nuclear power plants to stay open (Gov. Scott already has). We can sell carbon sequestration credits to California to ensure our carbon-eating forests are both economically and environmentally stable. We can acknowledge that New England cut its electricity-related carbon emissions in half this century when it chose natural gas over coal and oil.

In “Falter,” McKibben calls for a national mobilization of money and self-sacrifice similar to how our parents and grandparents fought World War II. A note of caution: Germany lost that war. By emulating them in the coming War to end all Climate Wars, we could lose, too.

Statehouse Headliners is intended primarily to educate, not advocate. It is e-mailed to an ever-growing list of interested Vermonters, public officials and media. Guy Page is affiliated with the Vermont Energy Partnership; the Vermont Alliance for Ethical Healthcare; and Physicians, Families and Friends for a Better Vermont.

Images courtesy of Michael Bielawski/TNR and Senate.gov

5 thoughts on “Statehouse Headliners: McKibben influence strong on 2019 Legislature

  1. There is no doubt about climate change and it must be addressed. Vermont first needs to survive to have any future influence. The foolish restrictions on natural gas and the funding of sham organizations such as Efficiency Vermont are examples of how our legislators have been misled. Our state is failing; business can be much more profitable elsewhere, other states don’t tax affluent retirees’ social security- they earned it and have just as much right to it as everyone else, hard working people are sick of paying for those unwilling to work and can keep much more of what they earn by moving out of Vermont. Socialism does not work. Wake up before it is too late.

  2. What a huckster. And it’s astonishing how those fool in the legislature consider him some kind of environmental guru. Please pass the kool-aid.

    • He is getting very rich with all of his book sales to those who think he is some kind of a guru about the climate. Did he encourage some of those kids that threw pink cards on the floor of the house this week? Some were from 350.org, which he started several years ago, with his scare tactics.

  3. “Never underestimate the influence of climate change”

    Sorry McFibbing but the climate always has and always will change no matter what you do or
    how much you make others spend. The correct statement should be
    Never underestimate the stupidity/gullibility of a large chunk of the public.

    “The looming collapse of Germany’s renewable power revolution is proving these predictions true,”
    What say you McFibbin???

  4. “ban most new construction of natural gas pipelines” when use of natural gas is arguably the greatest factor in our greenhouse gas reduction? The 2018 California fires resulted from the failure to manage forest lands and clear or burn combustible deadfall during fire safe periods. That idiocy was not caused by climate, it was caused by an ignorant religious ideology run rampant in California – epitomized by budgeting the improbable high speed rail over reservoir construction and flood control infrastructure maintenance. Wildfires, droughts, earthquakes, mud slides and floods are endemic to California and Trump’s not responsible. California weather comes from the Pacific Ocean over which he has zero influence.

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