Source: Is It True That ‘100 Companies are Responsible for 71% of Carbon Emissions’?
The first point is that if you look at the actual list in the report, Exxon and Shell are the only private companies to even make it into the top ten; the rest are all government entities. China (Coal) is by far the biggest emitter of them all at 14.32%; fully 18.1% is just Chinese, Russian and Indian coal, so it’s incorrect for anyone to say “just 100 companies.” We are dealing with national governments and the entities that they own.
But the more important point that the Guardian article ignored is that it is broken down into Scope 1 and Scope 3 emissions. From the report:
Scope 1 emissions arise from the self-consumption of fuel, flaring, and venting or fugitive releases of methane.
Scope 3 emissions account for 90% of total company emissions and result from the downstream combustion of coal, oil, and gas for energy purposes. A small fraction of fossil fuel production is used in non-energy applications which sequester carbon. [like plastics]
In other words, for gasoline, Scope 1 is the entity extracting and refining the gas and shipping it to the pumps, and Scope 3 is us buying the gas, putting it in our cars, and turning it into CO2.
Of that 70.6% of emissions attributed to these hundred entities, over 90% is actually emitted by us. It’s going into heating our houses and moving our cars and making the steel and aluminum for our buildings and cars and F35 fighters and concrete for our roads and bridges and parking garages. Those entities may all by happy and rich because we are doing this and no doubt are encouraging it, but who is ultimately responsible for the consumption of what they are producing?
What Are These Companies Selling Anyway?
The economist and physicist Robert Ayers wrote:
The essential truth missing from economic education today is that energy is the stuff of the universe, that all matter is also a form of energy, and that the economic system is essentially a system for extracting, processing and transforming energy as resources into energy embodied in products and services.
We don’t buy energy, we buy what it does and what it makes. Our economies depend on us buying stuff and services, so our governments and corporations ensure that we keep buying more because our jobs all depend on it. There is a reason that the American government promotes gas-guzzling SUVs and pickup trucks; they have more metal and use more gas which moves more dollars, they transform more energy into more product.
But we can make our own choices about what kind of energy we use, and what kind of stuff, and how much stuff.
It’s Consumption That Drives Markets, Not Production
If you look again at the list of 100 entities, it includes American companies like Murray Coal (now bankrupt) and Peabody Energy (circling the drain) – done in because there is no market for their product. According to an analyst quoted in NS Energy Business,
The industry continues to be battered by rapid structural decline driven by low gas prices, the low and falling cost of building wind and solar power generation and sweeping initiatives by utilities and corporations to cut emissions.
In other words, if we don’t buy what they are selling, they go out of business.
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