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nuclear, wind, and others. Add to this problem is the recent hysteria created based on the premise that oil consumption is the reason behind global warming. This in itself has created opportunities with many sectors engaged in carbon sequestration.

Bar graph illustrating the public perception toward energy sources with solar having 97%, wind having 93%, hydroelectric having 91%, natural gas with 80%, coal having 48%, and nuclear having 38%.

      Figure 2.8 Public perception toward energy sources (Ipsos, 2011).

      Even though petroleum continues to be the world’s most diverse, efficient, and abundant energy source, due to “grim climate concerns”, global initiatives are pointing toward a “go green” mantra. When it comes to defining ‘green’, numerous schemes are being presented as ‘green’ even though all it means is the source of energy is not carbon. In fact the ‘left’, often emboldened with ‘scientific evidence’, blames Carbon for everything, forgetting that carbon is the most essential component of plants. The ‘right’, on the other hand, deny climate change altogether, stating that it is all part of the natural cycle and there is nothing unusual about the current surge in CO2 in the atmosphere. Both sides ignore the real science behind the process. The left refuses to recognize the fact that artificial chemicals added during the refining process make the petroleum inherently toxic and in absence of these chemicals petroleum itself is 100% sustainable. The right, on the hand, does not recognize the science of artificial chemicals that are inherently toxic and does not see the need for any change in the modus operandi. More importantly, both sides see no need for a change in fundamental economic outlook.

Stacked bar graph illustrating energy outlook for 2040 as compared to 2016 under various scenarios, with vertical bars for “2016,” “ET,” “ICE ban,” “Less gas,” “RE push,” “FT,” and “EFT.”

      Figure 2.9 Energy outlook for 2040 as compared to 2016 under various scenarios (Renewables includes wind, solar, geothermal, biomass, and biofuels: from BP Report, 2018).

      Recently, US President Donald Trump showed his desire to exit the Paris Accord. Epstein (2017) points out that there are at least two principled ways to defend Trump’s decision to exit the Paris accord. The first is the weak scientific case that links global warming and other planetary maladies to increases in carbon dioxide levels. There are simply too many other forces that can account for shifts in temperature and the various environmental calamities that befall the world. Second, the economic impulses underlying the Paris Accords entail a massive financial commitment, including huge government subsidies for wind and solar energy, which have yet to prove themselves viable. In his speeches, President Trump did not state these two points, nor did he challenge his opponents to explain how the recent greening of the planet, for example, could possibly presage the grim future of rising seas and expanded deserts routinely foretold by climate activists (Yirka, 2017). In absence of such an approach, the general perception of the public has been that President Trump wants to simply bully the rest of the world, prompting critiques use vulgar languages to depict him as a classic bully.7

      However, it is curious that the endless criticisms of the President all start from the bogus assumption that a well-nigh universal consensus has settled on the science of global warming. To refute that fundamental assumption, it is essential to look at the individual critiques raised by prominent scientists and to respond to them point by point, so that a genuine dialogue can begin. More importantly, no scientist has pointed the figure to processing and refining as the root cause of global warming and certainly none has even contemplated pointing fingers at so-called renewable energy solutions that are more toxic to the environment than petroleum systems. Instead of asking for a logical answer, the President has disarmed his allies. For instance, through UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, he has all but conceded that climate change is “real”. Instead of starting with the social case against the substantive provisions of the Paris Accords, Trump justified his decision by invoking his highly nationalistic view of international arrangements. He said the United States was once again getting ripped off by a lousy treaty that, in his words, would force American “taxpayers to absorb the cost in terms of lost jobs, lower wages, shuttered factories, and vastly diminished economic production.” He then insisted that his first duty is to the citizens of Pittsburgh, not of Paris—giving the impression that there are only provincial arguments that support his decision. In this process, the debate becomes a choice between US hegemony and holistic approach, as if USA is on a collision course with true sustainability.

      The

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