In Louisiana, natural gas—a planet-heating fossil fuel—is now, by law, considered “green energy” that can compete with solar and wind projects for clean energy funding. The law, signed by Republican Governor Jeff Landry last month, comes on the heels of similar bills passed in Ohio, Tennessee, and Indiana. What the bills have in common—besides an “updated definition” of a fossil fuel as a clean energy source—is language seemingly plucked straight from a right-wing think tank backed by oil and gas billionaire and activist Charles Koch.
Louisiana’s law was based on a template created by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a conservative organization that brings legislators and corporate lobbyists together to draft bills “dedicated to the principles of limited government, free markets and federalism.” The law maintains that Louisiana, in order to minimize its reliance on “foreign adversary nations” for energy, must ensure that natural gas and nuclear power are eligible for “all state programs that fund ‘green energy’ or ‘clean energy’ initiatives.”
Louisiana state Rep. Jacob Landry first introduced a near-identical bill to the model posted on ALEC’s website and to the other bills that have passed in Ohio, Tennessee, and Indiana. (The Washington Post reported in 2023 that ALEC was involved in Ohio’s bill; ALEC denies involvement.) Landry, who represents a small district in the southern part of the state, is the recipient of significant fossil fuel-industry funding—and he co-owns two oil and gas consulting firms himself. During his campaign for the state Legislature, Landry received donations from at least 15 fossil-fuel-affiliated companies and PACs, including ExxonMobil (which has also funded ALEC) and Phillips 66. Those donations alone totaled over $20,000.
I had to deal with this shit in my environmental studies class in uni. Apparently the forestry industry has been promoting their own brand of propaganda that says burning wood, the most greenhouse-gas-producing fuel on the planet, is environmentally friendly because it is “renewable”.
Great, we’ll all be dead from global warming but at least in theory the trees that burned down from the wildfires could have reabsorbed that carbon over a couple centuries.
Burning wood is sustainable and if there weren’t 8 billion people on the planet that need temperature regulation it would have little impact on the environment. It’s always about scale.
Literally anything is sustainable by this argument, what are you even talking about?
I think that is precisely the point they were making.
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No matter how I read it, it sounds like you’re saying “it’s sustainable under the right circumstances” and I just don’t see how that’s useful to even acknowledge.
Burning wood is green iff the wood was harvested from trees planted for this purpose and all equipment used in the process from planting to harvesting to processing is entirely running on renewable energy.
Seems like it’d be easier to just use solar power and heat pumps for heating
Nah, the particulates emissions and VOCs from burning wood is still very bad at scale. “Green” doesn’t really mean anything, I think by definition, since Big Oil was watered it down so much. Similar to the word woke, socialism, etc.
I feel like the bigger issue is all the CO2 emitted from burning literal carbon. Using fossil fuels is just burning trees with extra steps (millennia of burial and compression).
The difference is that the carbon in the wood is in the short carbon cycle while the fossil fuels were sequestered. Carbon wise it doesn’t matter if the tree burns or rots (ok rotting does keep some of it in life and soil, but burning leaves some as char).
See I think that’s the forestry industry propaganda that’s somehow made its way into environmentalist circles.
The differences you cite are irrelevant in the fight against global warming, where burning wood is the absolute worst. The carbon cycle doesn’t matter in the context of how much CO2 are we putting in the atmosphere now, today. It takes too long to matter.
Yeah, we do it in the UK too. “Biomass” is just impatient coal.
It’s at least true that biofuels made from fast-growing crops like soy or sugar cane are carbon neutral (if you assume the farm equipment also runs on biofuel and no other petroleum-derived inputs are used) because they’re part of the short-term carbon cycle, right?
If so — if the cut-off for “renewable” is definitely longer than a year, definitely shorter than millions of years, and apparently also shorter than hundreds of years — then I’d like to know where scientists (not industry shills) have decided it actually lies. Would the forest industry’s position be valid in the context of e.g. a slash pine tree farm?
Honestly, I’m inclined to see a very strong distinction between burning wood and burning fossil methane, as long as you’re not talking about chopping down an old-growth forest or something like that. (And as long as the methane you’re comparing to isn’t from a short-term cycle source like landfill gas, for that matter.)
We can grow and burn the soy or the sugar cane or the trees faster than they can sequester it back into the ground.
That doesn’t make any sense. Where’s the carbon the next year’s crop needs to grow coming from, if not from re-absorbing that released from burning the previous year’s crop?
I’m not talking about trying to make it carbon-negative, just carbon-neutral. Plant->sky->plant-sky->plant->sky etc.
The soil.
They don’t get all their carbon from the air.
Yes, buut forestry industries (at least in the US) are pretty sustainable, from what I’ve seen.
In other words, at least there’s a nugget of truth under the lie.
They won’t be when they all burn before they can be harvested due to global warming-induced forest fires.