Chronicles 350.org's 'Do the Math' bus tour as it launched the fossil…
The Oil Machine
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- Transcript
Oil has been an invisible machine at the core of our economy and society. It now faces an uncertain future as activists and investors demand change. Is this the end of oil?
THE OIL MACHINE draws on the voices of young activists, oil company executives, economists and pension fund managers to explore the vital questions that affect all our lives. We have five to ten years to control our oil addiction, and yet the licensing of new oil fields such as the Cambo oil field off Shetland is seen to be in direct contradiction to the Government’s alignment with the Paris Climate Agreement and hosting of COP26. This documentary looks at how the drama of global climate action is playing out in the fight over North Sea oil. Oil companies are convinced that they can continue to keep drilling while keeping to Net Zero ambitions through adopting new technologies, such as Carbon Capture. But climate scientists are deeply sceptical of the Net Zero concept and the time it would take for these technologies to be effective.
The film reveals the hidden infrastructure of oil from the offshore rigs and the buried pipelines to its flow through the stock markets of London. As the North Sea industry struggles to meet the need to cut carbon emissions, oil workers see their livelihoods under threat, and investors seek to protect their assets. Meanwhile a younger generation of climate activists are catalysed by the signs of impending chaos, and the very real threat of global sea level rises. THE OIL MACHINE explores the complexities of transitioning away from oil and gas as a society and considers how quickly can we do it?
The film brings together a fascinating array of voices including: Holly Gillibrand (dubbed “Scotland’s Greta”), Kevin Anderson (Professor of Energy & Climate Change, Manchester University), Emeka Emembolu (Senior VP of BP North Sea), Jake Molloy (Regional Organiser, RMT Union), James Marriott (co-author of Crude Britannia), Mikaela Loach (Edinburgh medical student), Sir David King (former UK Govt. Chief Scientific Advisor), Deirdre Michie (CEO of Oil & Gas UK), Steve Waygood (Chief Responsible Investor at Aviva Investors), Tessa Khan (climate lawyer from Uplift), Ann Pettifor (economist & author), and others.
"A brilliant forensic analysis...Reveals not just the wealth created and the environmental costs, but how radically oil shaped the British economy, the deep collusion between politics and oil firms, and the challenges and vulnerabilities of the entire fossil capitalist system. Crucially, the film offers up a magnificent panorama of different voices -- financiers, high school students, and activists -- who reveal the tensions, conflicts and raw power of the entire global oil and gas system, and the radical urgency of escaping our addiction to fossil fuels." Michael Watts, Professor Emeritus of Geography, University of California-Berkeley, Author, The Curse of the Black Gold
"The sheer depth of explanation - from the role played by financial markets, to the real efficacy of certain techniques like carbon capture, to who really owns North Sea oil...made for a calm, informative, eye-opening experience." David Pollock, The Courier
"This is a rich, visually-arresting narrative of the social and ecological trauma of North Sea oil. It provides us with an invaluable counter-history of the post-war UK life, one shaped by the political and economic drive for energy riches, whatever its consequences for communities, the climate, and future generations. The Oil Machine is essential viewing for anyone who cares about climate change and to putting an end to our oil obsession." Imre Szeman, Founding Director, Institute for Environment, Conservation and Sustainability, Professor of Human Geography, University of Toronto Scarborough, Author, On Petrocultures: Globalization, Culture, and Energy
"Captivating...This film reveals the often hidden connections between the government, oil and gas producers, private and public investors and shareholders, and ordinary residents -- mutually codependent but also invariably and simultaneously benefitting from and being harmed by the continued, climate-wrecking extraction, refining, and burning of crude oil. The head-in-the-sand mentality of the interviewed oil and gas executives, bankers and petroleum engineers is more than matched by the persuasive conviction of kids and young activists that see nothing short of a redesign of our techno-economic system as the answer to this defining problem of our time." Tanja Srebotnjak, Director, Zilkha Center for Environmental Initiatives, Williams College
"We are indeed living within 'the oil machine,' not only through our use of oil and gas for fuels, but our increasing reliance on oil-based products... Clearly this cannot continue, and the only real choice is between making an alternative design or continuing on the present pathway of systemic collapse." Chris Rhodes, Post Carbon Institute, Resilience
"The Oil Machine reveals in stunning imagery and trenchant commentary just how dangerous and irrational our collective addiction to oil is. This film is a valuable teaching tool to prepare the next generation of climate advocates and community activists for the battle to secure their future. There are many alternatives to an oil-soaked economy but only one livable planet." Patrick Parenteau, Professor of Law Emeritus, Senior Fellow for Climate Policy, Vermont Law and Graduate School
"From its eerie opening sequence of undulating North Sea kelp fields to its symphonic final climax, The Oil Machine never lets you rest. It unbalances the viewer who might have thought they knew the nature of offshore oil drilling and its consequences. Davie's film, with the eye of the auteur, takes us on a stunning cinematography journey through the uncanny aesthetics of oil and its operations." Robert Johnson, Professor of History, National University, Author, Carbon Nation: Fossil Fuels in the Making of American Culture
"When you think 'petrostate,' you may think Saudi Arabia or Russia. You probably won't think of how North Sea oil has been shaping the British state since the days of Thatcher - until you watch The Oil Machine. The film also reminds us that oil is in our cars, our clothes, and our toys. The modern world is fossil fuels all the way down." Noah Gordon, Acting Co-director of Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
"While protestors take ever more extreme actions and the government blithely ignores its own climate advisors to issue more drilling licenses, it's well worth reviewing the story of how we got here. The Oil Machine tells that story, of why we need to just stop oil, and why it's proving so hard to do." Jeremy Williams, The Earthbound Report
"Thanks to its sheer pertinence, The Oil Machine is essential viewing for everyone from young students to governmental policymakers...It's mesmerizing in its delivery, making you rigid with worry and then alert with proactivity...Emma Davie's film is a call for drastic action regarding climate change." Calum Russell, Far Out Magazine
"The experts in the film are powerful people we like to respect; bankers, lawyers, and even representatives from the oil companies themselves. I find their words unsettling. Apparently, oil has become such an intricate part of our daily lives that we can no longer imagine how we could possibly get out of it, and yet, we are heading for a grand disaster if we don't rethink our strategy." Margareta Hruza, Modern Times Review
"Excellent...An urgent watch." Upcoming On Screen
"In perhaps the most clever twist, investment bankers, BP representatives, and even the CEO of Oil and Gas UK are offered a sort of 'right of reply', an act which makes their patronizing waffle and corporate double-speak painfully transparent...Rather than focus on the well-known consequences of inaction, director Emma Davie takes a keener approach with The Oil Machine, asking who and what is standing in the way of necessary action." Alasdair MacRae, UK Film Review
"The Oil Machine tackles a massive and pressing issue through various perspectives and really paints the whole picture." Abundant Art
"Right from the start its clear the film's mission is to explore the multitude of ways in which oil has seeped into our everyday lives, to such an extent that many of us longer even see it." Jonathan Atkinson, Carbon Co-op
"A beautiful piece of work, hypnotic and mesmerizing and incredibly emotional - I learned so much from watching this." Janice Forsyth, BBC Radio Scotland
"Timely...The varying perspectives from industry, activists, young people, journalists, economists, and scientists demonstrate the precipice this planet is on for sustainable life. I lead a nonprofit environmental law firm in Alaska where it is crystal clear that this power and money can't be, and never have been, worth the impact to local and marginalized communities, and the health of people and the planet." Victoria Clark, Executive Director, Trustees for Alaska
"The Oil Machine illustrates the industrial and emotional vastness of petroleum across a web of supporters, objectors, and consumers. Through its visually compelling narrative, we learn of oil's immense footprint alongside its intergenerational significance: from popular toys and common household products to our climate-altered futures. This sweeping documentary balances an intellectual portrait of oil, including its natural origins and industrial scale of extraction, with an emotional depiction of the early excitement of discovery and offshore work. In the process of revealing the institutional and cultural threads that have enabled this machine to expand - despite climate change, we are asked to deliberate on whether the consequences of a changed climate are more frightening to us than the demise of a globally integrated industry." Patricia Widener, Professor of Sociology, Florida Atlantic University, Author, Toxic and Intoxicating Oil and Oil Injustice
"Stunning in its visuals, sweeping - and fair - in its coverage of this energy system's longstanding presence and hold over the people, The Oil Machine is at once highly educational for its appraisal of petroleum's many perspectives, lived experiences, and entanglements, and convicting for the way it highlights the existential crisis that carbon-fueled humanity now faces. In brilliant fashion, and with urgency and care, this must-see film shows how we got to our moment of dire reckoning with crude and the climate, and what needs to happen in order for us to realize - before time expires - a way of being beyond oil." Darren Dochuk, Professor of History, University of Notre Dame, Author, Anointed With Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America
"A valuable resource on the historical background as well as the environmental ramifications of oil drilling...A timely reminder for viewers to not only recognize the omnipresence of oil-based products but to also advocate for meaningful systemic changes." Phuong Le, The Guardian
Citation
Main credits
Davie, Emma (film director)
Henrici, Sonja (film producer)
Other credits
Director of photography, Julian Schwanitz; editors, Martin Kayser Landwehr, Emma Davie; music, Alexandra Hamilton-Ayres.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
00:00:24.000 --> 00:00:25.800
[Girl] This is made of oil.
00:00:25.840 --> 00:00:27.120
[Girl 2] This is made of oil.
00:00:27.160 --> 00:00:28.400
[Girl] This is made of oil.
00:00:28.440 --> 00:00:30.480
[Girl 2] This is made of oil.
00:00:30.520 --> 00:00:32.720
- [Girl] This is made of oil.
- [Girl 2] This is made of oil.
00:00:32.760 --> 00:00:34.480
[Girl] This is made of oil.
00:00:34.520 --> 00:00:36.080
[Girl 2] This is also made of oil.
00:00:42.400 --> 00:00:45.000
[Muffled, reverberant bubbling]
00:01:01.880 --> 00:01:05.680
[Boy] 200 million years ago,
there was land here and not sea.
00:01:22.200 --> 00:01:23.920
200 million years ago,
00:01:23.960 --> 00:01:27.720
a layer of plants and animals
were squashed under rocks.
00:01:27.760 --> 00:01:30.200
[Rustling]
00:01:30.240 --> 00:01:32.800
[Boy] These have now become oil.
00:01:32.840 --> 00:01:34.840
[Music]
00:01:49.920 --> 00:01:54.320
[Man] You know, humans have been on
the planet for, what, 200-300,000 years?
00:01:54.360 --> 00:01:57.920
Modern humans for 10,000 years.
00:01:57.960 --> 00:02:02.600
Industrial revolution
only started in the 1850s onwards,
00:02:02.640 --> 00:02:05.320
and actually,
the fossil fuel-driven society
00:02:05.360 --> 00:02:08.880
has probably really only been
100 years at most.
00:02:12.640 --> 00:02:14.640
[Music continues]
00:02:16.920 --> 00:02:19.720
[Man] It's a...just a blip
in the history of humankind.
00:02:19.760 --> 00:02:22.040
[Water sloshes, muffled]
00:02:26.400 --> 00:02:28.320
[Man] But that blip
in the history of humankind,
00:02:28.360 --> 00:02:31.960
we've completely locked ourselves in
and completely normalised
00:02:32.000 --> 00:02:34.800
the huge uses of both energy
and particularly fossil fuels.
00:02:37.400 --> 00:02:39.960
That period is going to have impacts
00:02:40.000 --> 00:02:42.480
for centuries and millennia to come.
00:02:42.520 --> 00:02:44.520
[Music continues]
00:02:53.680 --> 00:02:58.160
[Holly] It can feel like you're up against
something that's so massive,
00:02:58.200 --> 00:03:00.080
that's got the support of governments
00:03:00.120 --> 00:03:02.200
and people who are
so much more powerful than you...
00:03:03.960 --> 00:03:05.920
..that it's quite difficult sometimes
00:03:05.960 --> 00:03:08.440
to know what to do to change that.
00:03:10.080 --> 00:03:13.400 line:20%
I think that's basically
what eco-anxiety is.
00:03:13.440 --> 00:03:15.880 line:20%
- [Music subsides]
- Being constantly worried...
00:03:15.920 --> 00:03:18.560 line:20%
about whether or not
you're going to have a future.
00:03:21.200 --> 00:03:23.960
[Wind howls intensely]
00:03:29.600 --> 00:03:31.600
[Soft music]
00:03:37.480 --> 00:03:39.480
[Music subsides]
00:03:42.880 --> 00:03:45.920
[Kevin] Somewhere between
ten and 20 billion barrels of oil
00:03:45.960 --> 00:03:47.960
are still available in the North Sea.
00:03:50.200 --> 00:03:52.720
If all of that was found and combusted,
00:03:52.760 --> 00:03:55.200 line:20%
so that's going to be somewhere,
very approximately,
00:03:55.240 --> 00:03:58.160 line:20%
between say, four and ten
billion tons of carbon dioxide.
00:03:58.200 --> 00:04:00.720 line:20%
That is a huge amount of carbon dioxide,
00:04:00.760 --> 00:04:03.960
just from, remember,
the North Sea, the UK's North Sea.
00:04:04.000 --> 00:04:07.000
[Wind howls intensely;
Soft music]
00:04:21.200 --> 00:04:24.200
[Music subsides]
00:04:30.000 --> 00:04:33.000
[Wind howls]
00:04:42.200 --> 00:04:47.040
[James] Britain has been defined
by the North Sea.
00:04:49.920 --> 00:04:52.920
[Wind subsides]
00:04:54.720 --> 00:04:59.000
[James] In the beginning,
companies from all around the world
00:04:59.040 --> 00:05:04.000
came and invested huge sums
in the search for oil and gas.
00:05:04.040 --> 00:05:06.760
[Mechanical whirring, clanging]
00:05:06.800 --> 00:05:08.880
[Faint, indistinct conversation]
00:05:08.920 --> 00:05:11.640
[Harsh whirring]
00:05:11.680 --> 00:05:13.400
[Sharp mechanical hiss]
00:05:13.440 --> 00:05:15.840
[Indistinct walkie-talkie chatter]
00:05:15.880 --> 00:05:17.360
[Clanging]
00:05:17.400 --> 00:05:19.440
[Music continues]
00:05:20.920 --> 00:05:24.200 line:20%
Nobody thought that
there would be any oil in the North Sea.
00:05:24.240 --> 00:05:27.600 line:20%
That was just way beyond
the bounds of possibility.
00:05:27.640 --> 00:05:29.880
[Music]
00:05:40.080 --> 00:05:44.160
[Ship's horn blares]
00:05:44.200 --> 00:05:48.200
[James] In fact, even two or three days
before BP found oil,
00:05:48.240 --> 00:05:50.920
the head of BP
said it was an impossibility.
00:05:50.960 --> 00:05:53.000
[Music continues]
00:05:54.800 --> 00:05:56.800
[Music continues]
00:06:05.720 --> 00:06:07.720
[Music deepens]
00:06:09.840 --> 00:06:13.320
[James] And then in October 1970,
00:06:13.360 --> 00:06:18.680
they found oil in, really,
a massive field, in the Forties Field.
00:06:18.720 --> 00:06:22.040
110 miles off
to the north-east of Aberdeen.
00:06:22.080 --> 00:06:25.160
[Man, archive recording] Liquid gold,
call it what you like.
00:06:25.200 --> 00:06:29.360
Britain now has oil,
billions and billions of barrels of it,
00:06:29.400 --> 00:06:32.080
and it's been quietly lapping
at the doorstep all the time.
00:06:35.960 --> 00:06:38.240
[Helicopter blades whir]
00:06:39.520 --> 00:06:42.640
[Kevin] I was designing
and constructing offshore oil platforms
00:06:42.680 --> 00:06:44.680
with a team of other engineers.
00:06:48.520 --> 00:06:50.840
When you're flying into a rig...
00:06:55.080 --> 00:06:57.840
..and you look down
at these oil platforms,
00:06:57.880 --> 00:06:59.440
sometimes it just made me think,
00:06:59.480 --> 00:07:02.080
"This is amazing
that we've managed to do this."
00:07:05.120 --> 00:07:08.560
We're drilling thousands of metres
beneath the seabed
00:07:08.600 --> 00:07:10.640
in a really hostile part of the world.
00:07:10.680 --> 00:07:12.760
[Whirring continues]
00:07:12.800 --> 00:07:16.240
[Soft metallic clanging]
00:07:16.280 --> 00:07:19.680
[Kevin] It was a bit like
the Apollo project of the time.
00:07:19.720 --> 00:07:22.480
[Deep mechanical thrumming]
00:07:27.080 --> 00:07:30.520
[Muffled, reverberant hum]
00:07:40.160 --> 00:07:42.280
[Buzzing]
00:07:52.360 --> 00:07:55.720
[Man, archive recording] North Sea
platforms need saturation divers.
00:07:55.760 --> 00:07:58.160
They're men who have to live
for 30 days at a time
00:07:58.200 --> 00:08:01.360
at seabed pressure at 400 or 500 feet.
00:08:07.240 --> 00:08:09.800
[Hum continues]
00:08:12.240 --> 00:08:15.240
- [Archive Man 2] Diver back in the bell.
- [Soft clink]
00:08:15.280 --> 00:08:17.840
[Wind rushes fiercely]
00:08:20.000 --> 00:08:22.640
[Jake] It was like an adventure at first.
00:08:23.720 --> 00:08:27.040
You get out there,
and just the sheer scale of it,
00:08:27.080 --> 00:08:29.440
you know, the enormity of...
00:08:30.600 --> 00:08:34.960
..this island
in the middle of the North Sea
00:08:35.000 --> 00:08:36.520
with just nothing.
00:08:36.560 --> 00:08:38.560
[Wind softens]
00:08:45.320 --> 00:08:49.360 line:20%
I think there was this idea
that we were in this new industry,
00:08:49.400 --> 00:08:53.840 line:20%
we were developing something
which had never been done before,
00:08:53.880 --> 00:08:56.800
and everything you did...
00:08:56.840 --> 00:08:59.960
would benefit the country,
benefit the nation.
00:09:00.000 --> 00:09:02.720
We were the pioneers, if you like.
00:09:02.760 --> 00:09:05.200
[Music - "Venus in Tweeds"
by Shooglenifty]
00:09:05.240 --> 00:09:07.120
[Jake] You know, you were
breaking new ground every time,
00:09:07.160 --> 00:09:09.120
and new wells coming in.
00:09:09.160 --> 00:09:12.080
[Music continues;
Faint, indistinct chatter]
00:09:17.320 --> 00:09:19.720
[Music continues]
00:09:24.000 --> 00:09:26.560
[Jake] There was this idea that...
00:09:26.600 --> 00:09:30.240
you had to make the most of it as well
because it wasn't going to last long.
00:09:31.680 --> 00:09:33.680
[Music continues]
00:09:38.560 --> 00:09:39.840 line:20%
And suddenly,
00:09:39.880 --> 00:09:43.640 line:20%
crofters and fishermen's
sons and grandsons
00:09:43.680 --> 00:09:46.760 line:20%
are finding stable, well-paid jobs.
00:09:46.800 --> 00:09:50.120
[Music continues]
00:09:50.160 --> 00:09:55.760
[Ewan] It means things like
foreign holidays and car-ownership,
00:09:55.800 --> 00:09:58.960
and forms of consumption
that are, themselves, oil-related.
00:09:59.000 --> 00:10:01.000
[Music continues]
00:10:16.600 --> 00:10:20.160
[Ewan] There was a perception
that Britain's or Scotland's oil
00:10:20.200 --> 00:10:24.760
was being exploited for private gain.
00:10:24.800 --> 00:10:26.800
[Music continues]
00:10:28.120 --> 00:10:30.440
[Music subsides]
00:10:30.480 --> 00:10:34.360
[Ewan] 1974, there were
two general elections.
00:10:34.400 --> 00:10:36.560
The SNP stood on a platform of saying,
00:10:36.600 --> 00:10:40.040
"This is your chance,
perhaps your last chance,
00:10:40.080 --> 00:10:44.040
"to claim ownership...of these resources."
00:10:45.400 --> 00:10:47.600
By some estimates,
it could have made Scotland
00:10:47.640 --> 00:10:52.080
one of the richest economies
in Europe or the world.
00:10:52.120 --> 00:10:53.760
[Muffled clanging]
00:10:53.800 --> 00:10:55.800
There's a time coming...
00:10:55.840 --> 00:10:59.880
[Ewan] And the argument was,
if Scotland didn't achieve independence,
00:10:59.920 --> 00:11:04.480
then the UK government
was going to extract this oil
00:11:04.520 --> 00:11:09.160
as quickly as possible
under pretty favourable terms
00:11:09.200 --> 00:11:10.720
for the multinationals.
00:11:10.760 --> 00:11:13.760
[Water laps calmly]
00:11:15.720 --> 00:11:19.520
[Jake] At the time,
I think we owned about 60% or 70% of BP.
00:11:20.760 --> 00:11:23.200
We also created
the British National Oil Corporation,
00:11:23.240 --> 00:11:28.280
but the whole Thatcher ideology of,
"Let the markets run it,
00:11:28.320 --> 00:11:30.760
"and give it over to the markets,"
saw all of that sold.
00:11:30.800 --> 00:11:32.240
[Muffled clanging]
00:11:32.280 --> 00:11:34.680
[Jake] Compare that
to virtually any country in the world,
00:11:34.720 --> 00:11:36.280
apart from the States, I think,
00:11:36.320 --> 00:11:39.920
who've all got
nationalized corporations of some kind.
00:11:39.960 --> 00:11:42.920
But obviously, the standout one is Norway.
00:11:42.960 --> 00:11:46.920
I say that because
it's a comparative size to Scotland...
00:11:46.960 --> 00:11:49.040
and it's probably
the richest country in the world.
00:11:59.080 --> 00:12:04.720
[James] The government set about
dividing up the sea into blocks...
00:12:06.360 --> 00:12:08.960
..and selling off the national sea
00:12:09.000 --> 00:12:13.200
to international companies
such as BP and Shell and ExxonMobil,
00:12:13.240 --> 00:12:15.760
which is based in the US,
00:12:15.800 --> 00:12:18.640
and selling off to them
the rights of drilling
00:12:18.680 --> 00:12:21.360
in the North Sea for oil and gas.
00:12:21.400 --> 00:12:24.640
[Music - "Music for Pieces of Wood"
by Steve Reich]
00:12:28.000 --> 00:12:31.080
[Deirdre] So, companies,
they'll bid for certain blocks,
00:12:31.120 --> 00:12:34.200
and then the licenses
are awarded by the government,
00:12:34.240 --> 00:12:38.160
and sometimes they'll be certain
commitments with those licenses.
00:12:38.200 --> 00:12:42.000
So, you have to do X number of wells
by a certain point,
00:12:42.040 --> 00:12:46.120 line:20%
and then, you know,
thereafter, you have to come up with...
00:12:46.160 --> 00:12:48.600 line:20%
development plans
of how you're going to actually...
00:12:48.640 --> 00:12:51.320
what you're going to do with the licenses.
00:12:51.360 --> 00:12:54.720
So, you know, it's a fairly...
fairly straightforward process.
00:12:54.760 --> 00:12:56.760
[Music continues]
00:12:57.920 --> 00:13:00.600
[Deirdre] I think, you know,
people absolutely are very concerned
00:13:00.640 --> 00:13:03.440
about climate change,
as we are as a sector.
00:13:03.480 --> 00:13:05.880
But if we kind of knee-jerk
one way or the other,
00:13:05.920 --> 00:13:09.320
I think what'll happen
is we will see people losing their jobs.
00:13:09.360 --> 00:13:11.800
We will see communities being left behind.
00:13:11.840 --> 00:13:15.720
And that's not what we think
we should be working towards as a sector,
00:13:15.760 --> 00:13:18.800
and that's certainly not,
you know, our aim with our...
00:13:18.840 --> 00:13:22.480
with the road map that we put in place,
and now with the North Sea Transition Deal
00:13:22.520 --> 00:13:24.320
that we've negotiated with the Government.
00:13:24.360 --> 00:13:26.240
[Music continues]
00:13:26.280 --> 00:13:27.680
[James] In 2021,
00:13:27.720 --> 00:13:32.600
the Government and the oil industry
set up the North Sea Transition Deal,
00:13:32.640 --> 00:13:36.520
which was basically driven
by two fundamental pressures -
00:13:36.560 --> 00:13:41.440
falling oil prices and rising
public concern about the climate.
00:13:41.480 --> 00:13:43.480
[Music continues]
00:13:46.040 --> 00:13:48.360
[Holly] "'As part of the UK's shift
towards green energy
00:13:48.400 --> 00:13:51.040 line:20%
"'through our landmark
North Sea Transition Deal,
00:13:51.080 --> 00:13:53.960 line:20%
"'we are backing the decarbonization
of the oil and gas sector
00:13:54.000 --> 00:13:57.400 line:20%
"'to support high value jobs and safeguard
the skills necessary to develop
00:13:57.440 --> 00:14:01.000
"'new low-carbon industries
across the country,' said a spokesperson."
00:14:01.040 --> 00:14:02.520
[Music stops]
00:14:02.560 --> 00:14:06.440
I mean, that doesn't really
make sense because...
00:14:06.480 --> 00:14:09.440
Yeah, I mean, they're talking about
decarbonizing the oil and gas sector.
00:14:09.480 --> 00:14:12.160
It's like, you can't
decarbonize oil and gas.
00:14:12.200 --> 00:14:14.040
It just... Yeah, I don't know.
00:14:14.080 --> 00:14:17.320
They're saying a lot of fancy words
that really don't mean anything.
00:14:17.360 --> 00:14:20.840
[Music - "Music for Pieces of Wood"
by Steve Reich]
00:14:28.800 --> 00:14:31.000
[Tessa] In 2015,
00:14:31.040 --> 00:14:34.000 line:20%
Parliament basically passed
an amendment to the Petroleum Act
00:14:34.040 --> 00:14:36.680 line:20%
that means that the government has a duty
00:14:36.720 --> 00:14:40.760 line:20%
to maximise economic recovery
of offshore oil and gas resources.
00:14:40.800 --> 00:14:42.920
I'm not paraphrasing, that's what the...
00:14:42.960 --> 00:14:44.720
that's what the statute says.
00:14:44.760 --> 00:14:46.800
[Music continues]
00:14:50.000 --> 00:14:54.080
[Tessa] The UK's former Chancellor,
Philip Hammond, in 2017,
00:14:54.120 --> 00:14:57.840
he said in a speech,
"We are working with industry
00:14:57.880 --> 00:15:01.600
"to extract every drop of oil and gas
that it is economic to extract."
00:15:01.640 --> 00:15:03.640
[Music continues]
00:15:07.800 --> 00:15:12.480
We say between 10 to 20 billion
barrels of oil are still out there...
00:15:12.520 --> 00:15:16.320
- for us to get after, and...
- [Music subsides]
00:15:16.360 --> 00:15:18.920
And even that, you know...
00:15:18.960 --> 00:15:22.960
Yeah, so...which represents
a massive opportunity for us.
00:15:23.000 --> 00:15:25.800
[Music - "We Disappear" by Jon Hopkins]
00:15:28.000 --> 00:15:31.120
Effectively, we're living
inside an oil machine.
00:15:31.160 --> 00:15:33.200
[Music continues]
00:15:44.320 --> 00:15:48.480
[Ewan] One of the foundations
of cultures that have developed around oil
00:15:48.520 --> 00:15:53.040
is the assumption
the energy will be easy to access
00:15:53.080 --> 00:15:55.280
and freely available and cheap.
00:15:55.320 --> 00:15:57.320
[Music continues]
00:16:09.320 --> 00:16:11.720
[Music continues]
00:16:16.760 --> 00:16:20.560 line:20%
BP was very involved
in helping to build...
00:16:20.600 --> 00:16:24.080 line:20%
significant parts
of what we have in the North Sea today.
00:16:24.120 --> 00:16:28.360
The Forties Field
was one of the most significant fields.
00:16:28.400 --> 00:16:33.760
We used to operate around 22 different
fields, platforms, a few years ago.
00:16:33.800 --> 00:16:35.560
Now we operate about six.
00:16:35.600 --> 00:16:37.600
[Music continues]
00:16:50.280 --> 00:16:53.160 line:20%
We are comfortably the largest producer...
00:16:54.480 --> 00:16:55.880 line:20%
..in the North Sea.
00:16:55.920 --> 00:16:59.360
We had a number of licenses
but a relatively small company.
00:16:59.400 --> 00:17:02.640
We then did
a transformative deal with Shell,
00:17:02.680 --> 00:17:05.240
bought a big chunk of their UK business,
00:17:05.280 --> 00:17:10.440
and immediately transformed
ourselves into a very material operator.
00:17:10.480 --> 00:17:12.520
[Music continues]
00:17:19.880 --> 00:17:25.000
[Phil] And at the moment, we are
the most active driller in the North Sea,
00:17:25.040 --> 00:17:29.120
producing 1.6, 1.7 million barrels a day.
00:17:31.640 --> 00:17:33.640
[Music continues]
00:17:40.240 --> 00:17:44.520
[James] We go through about a million
and a half barrels of oil a day in the UK.
00:17:44.560 --> 00:17:46.560
[Music continues]
00:17:52.760 --> 00:17:55.840
[James] If we just take
one part of the North Sea,
00:17:55.880 --> 00:17:58.000
- the Forties pipeline system...
- [Music subsides]
00:17:58.040 --> 00:18:00.000
..it's arguably
one of the largest machines
00:18:00.040 --> 00:18:03.080
in Western Europe, or possibly the world.
00:18:03.120 --> 00:18:05.760
And that machine constitutes
all the platforms...
00:18:07.440 --> 00:18:10.480
..and all the oil wells
and all the pipeline system.
00:18:10.520 --> 00:18:17.040
It drains oil from right over
on the edge of the UK sea limit,
00:18:17.080 --> 00:18:20.200
or from the Brae field,
or the Montrose Field,
00:18:20.240 --> 00:18:23.520
through the Forties pipeline system...
00:18:26.280 --> 00:18:31.520
..until it lands on the shore
just north of Aberdeen.
00:18:31.560 --> 00:18:34.520
[Wind rushes softly]
00:18:34.560 --> 00:18:37.480
[Music - "The Gate" by Klaus Wiese]
00:18:42.920 --> 00:18:46.200
[James] And that is one continuous system
00:18:46.240 --> 00:18:49.240
running all the way across the seabed,
00:18:51.080 --> 00:18:54.200
under the fields and forests and rivers,
00:18:55.800 --> 00:18:59.120
one piece of clockwork.
00:18:59.160 --> 00:19:02.280
One big machine.
00:19:02.320 --> 00:19:04.360
And in fact, we're living with that
00:19:04.400 --> 00:19:09.880
constantly running 24 hours a day,
365 days a year.
00:19:09.920 --> 00:19:11.840
[Music continues]
00:19:30.120 --> 00:19:33.320
[James] Until finally,
it gets to the west of Edinburgh...
00:19:34.760 --> 00:19:37.160
..where it comes to Grangemouth refinery
00:19:37.200 --> 00:19:42.160
and it also goes to an oil terminal
at a place called Hound Point.
00:19:42.200 --> 00:19:45.200
[Music - "We Disappear" by Jon Hopkins]
00:19:52.280 --> 00:19:54.400
[James] At Grangemouth, it's refined,
00:19:54.440 --> 00:19:59.800
and it's turned into
a whole plethora of different products.
00:19:59.840 --> 00:20:03.360
So - petrol, aviation fuel,
00:20:03.400 --> 00:20:07.240
diesel, and even tarmac,
it's turned into there.
00:20:07.280 --> 00:20:09.280
[Music continues]
00:20:22.880 --> 00:20:24.480
[Ewan] And, you know, in some ways,
00:20:24.520 --> 00:20:26.800
it's a massively impressive
feat of engineering
00:20:26.840 --> 00:20:29.560
that oil is extracted in the North Sea...
00:20:32.760 --> 00:20:37.240
..and then transported by pipeline
into the middle of Scotland,
00:20:37.280 --> 00:20:41.680
and then distributed across
much of Scotland and the north of England.
00:20:41.720 --> 00:20:43.880
Erm...
00:20:43.920 --> 00:20:45.920
But that comes at a cost.
00:20:45.960 --> 00:20:47.960
[Atmospheric music]
00:21:03.960 --> 00:21:06.480
[Mikaela] I really wanted
to get involved with the issues
00:21:06.520 --> 00:21:08.240
that are happening right around me,
00:21:08.280 --> 00:21:11.040
'cause it's important that we are
involved in the things that happen
00:21:11.080 --> 00:21:14.280
right around us, as well as the stuff
that's going on globally,
00:21:14.320 --> 00:21:16.680
'cause it's all really connected.
00:21:21.920 --> 00:21:24.760
As a medic, I care so deeply about health,
00:21:24.800 --> 00:21:26.640 line:20%
and I think that from this lens of health,
00:21:26.680 --> 00:21:30.000 line:20%
we can actually achieve a climate just,
or a better world for all of us,
00:21:30.040 --> 00:21:33.120 line:20%
because when we realise
that health, well, that...
00:21:33.160 --> 00:21:35.400
the fossil fuel industry
is impacting health in different ways
00:21:35.440 --> 00:21:37.280
and pollution in the air
is impacting health
00:21:37.320 --> 00:21:41.520
and therefore, if we stop this polluting,
we also increase health.
00:21:41.560 --> 00:21:44.880
I have lived experience
of this plant here.
00:21:44.920 --> 00:21:47.120
This plant stole my oxygen...
00:21:47.160 --> 00:21:48.920
[Sustained hiss]
00:21:48.960 --> 00:21:52.840
[Speaker] ..and it made me suffocate,
suffocate so much...
00:21:52.880 --> 00:21:56.000
[Speaker's voice fades, hiss continues]
00:21:56.040 --> 00:21:58.640
"The Mossmorran Natural
Gas Liquids (NGL) plant
00:21:58.680 --> 00:22:02.400
"is part of the northern North Sea Brent
oil and gas field system,
00:22:02.440 --> 00:22:06.040
"and it is located on the outskirts
of Cowdenbeath, Scotland."
00:22:06.080 --> 00:22:09.640
[Mechanical rumbling, hissing]
00:22:09.680 --> 00:22:12.360
[Mikaela] There's so much flaring
from this gas plant
00:22:12.400 --> 00:22:15.280
that it means that local people,
like, can't sleep well
00:22:15.320 --> 00:22:17.320
because of how bright it is.
00:22:18.480 --> 00:22:20.920
The fact that the impact of Mossmorran
and what's happening there
00:22:20.960 --> 00:22:23.160
and the impact
of the North Sea oil and gas industry
00:22:23.200 --> 00:22:24.920
on our health and on our communities
00:22:24.960 --> 00:22:28.880
only serves to allow these things
to continue and to continue to cause harm.
00:22:28.920 --> 00:22:32.640
So, I think that that's why
we need to draw these connections.
00:22:32.680 --> 00:22:34.280
[Muffled, shifting hum]
00:22:34.320 --> 00:22:37.320
[Hum continues;
Percussive house music]
00:22:37.360 --> 00:22:40.400
[Music continues;
Indistinct chatter]
00:22:45.120 --> 00:22:47.520
[Music continues]
00:22:47.560 --> 00:22:49.600
[Mikaela] There's a new
oil and gas project
00:22:49.640 --> 00:22:52.720
which is set to be licensed
in the Cambo Field,
00:22:52.760 --> 00:22:55.760
which is in the North Sea, it's one
of the biggest North Sea oil fields
00:22:55.800 --> 00:22:58.040
that's ever been found.
00:22:58.080 --> 00:23:01.680
So, we're here to point out the hypocrisy
of approving this new field
00:23:01.720 --> 00:23:04.640
just after the IEA have said
that we cannot approve
00:23:04.680 --> 00:23:06.760
and we cannot invest in new oil and gas.
00:23:06.800 --> 00:23:09.880
[Protestors, chanting]
No new oil - keep the carbon in the soil...
00:23:09.920 --> 00:23:13.960
[Mikaela] The International Energy Agency,
they are very conservative usually,
00:23:14.000 --> 00:23:18.200
so the fact that they're saying,
"No new oil and gas" is a very big deal.
00:23:18.240 --> 00:23:22.640
A lot of this new climate policy
that's being put in,
00:23:22.680 --> 00:23:24.960
it feels very performative
because a lot of the actions
00:23:25.000 --> 00:23:27.680
that are happening are still protecting
the oil and gas industry.
00:23:33.040 --> 00:23:36.400
It does come into question how much
we are, like, living in a democracy.
00:23:36.440 --> 00:23:38.840
[Music]
00:23:38.880 --> 00:23:41.680
[Mikaela] How much our politicians
are actually representing us
00:23:41.720 --> 00:23:44.120
or how much they are
representing big business.
00:23:49.560 --> 00:23:51.560
[Music continues]
00:23:57.520 --> 00:24:00.600
[Deirdre] The government came out
and said, "Yes, licensing will continue,
00:24:00.640 --> 00:24:05.720
"because we do need oil and gas activity
to continue in the basin
00:24:05.760 --> 00:24:10.040
"if we are to satisfy the demand
that we know is going to continue."
00:24:10.080 --> 00:24:13.000
So, you know, better
to have it with your home-grown...
00:24:14.480 --> 00:24:17.800
..sector on your doorstep,
supporting the jobs,
00:24:17.840 --> 00:24:19.560
not offshoring your emissions,
00:24:19.600 --> 00:24:22.520
not having to import
the gap that would emerge
00:24:22.560 --> 00:24:24.800
if you didn't continue to produce.
00:24:24.840 --> 00:24:26.880
[Indistinct chatter]
00:24:28.880 --> 00:24:31.840
[Deirdre] What they wanted to make sure
was that as they go forward,
00:24:31.880 --> 00:24:35.000
and that for every licensing round
that does come up,
00:24:35.040 --> 00:24:38.400
that it is still in line
with the Paris commitments
00:24:38.440 --> 00:24:41.080
and their net zero targets of 2050.
00:24:47.680 --> 00:24:51.960
We can point to £350 billion
in taxes paid for production,
00:24:52.000 --> 00:24:56.760
and that doesn't even take into account
the associated supply chain taxes
00:24:56.800 --> 00:24:59.480
that are generated, and the jobs
that are generated off that.
00:24:59.520 --> 00:25:02.920
[Music - "We Disappear" by Jon Hopkins]
00:25:02.960 --> 00:25:04.720
[James] By the mid-1980s,
00:25:04.760 --> 00:25:08.160
the British Exchequer was receiving
00:25:08.200 --> 00:25:13.240
a huge amount of cash
from revenue from the North Sea.
00:25:15.320 --> 00:25:18.440
Which, of course, was used to pay,
for everything -
00:25:18.480 --> 00:25:21.360
roads, schools, and so on.
00:25:21.400 --> 00:25:23.440
[Music continues]
00:25:25.120 --> 00:25:28.080
[James] In London,
the global finance centre for oil
00:25:28.120 --> 00:25:31.680
had begun to be developed since the '50s.
00:25:31.720 --> 00:25:35.480
This flourished on the back
of the UK North Sea oil as well.
00:25:35.520 --> 00:25:40.200
It became an engine,
driving forward the UK finance sector.
00:25:40.240 --> 00:25:42.280
[Music continues]
00:25:48.280 --> 00:25:53.120
[James] And that cash flowed
into the pension system as well.
00:25:53.160 --> 00:25:57.760
Increasingly, UK pensions became linked
to shares in BP and Shell.
00:25:57.800 --> 00:25:59.560
Indeed, by the 2000s,
00:25:59.600 --> 00:26:05.200
about 30% of any major portfolio
of a pension fund
00:26:05.240 --> 00:26:08.040
was in these two companies combined.
00:26:08.080 --> 00:26:10.080
[Music continues]
00:26:20.000 --> 00:26:22.760
It's not just about the jobs
in the industry,
00:26:22.800 --> 00:26:25.000
it's the spin-off of that wealth.
00:26:25.040 --> 00:26:26.960
[Music continues]
00:26:27.000 --> 00:26:29.720
[Phil] People need to shop,
people go out, people eat,
00:26:29.760 --> 00:26:34.320
people spend money, people buy things.
That's how the cascade works.
00:26:34.360 --> 00:26:36.360
[Music continues]
00:26:47.640 --> 00:26:50.600
[Steve] The market -
let's say the London Stock Exchange -
00:26:50.640 --> 00:26:53.440
the markets are considered
to be amoral because they are,
00:26:53.480 --> 00:26:55.080
they're not a person.
00:26:55.120 --> 00:26:59.640
The market is a collection of thousands
of activities happening, and...
00:26:59.680 --> 00:27:02.760 line:20%
by individual investors making
decisions on behalf of other people.
00:27:02.800 --> 00:27:06.280 line:20%
It's considered amoral
because it's a machine.
00:27:06.320 --> 00:27:08.600 line:20%
- [Music subsides]
- It's not an individual.
00:27:08.640 --> 00:27:10.720
Amoral is different to immoral, remember.
00:27:10.760 --> 00:27:12.800
[Traffic hums]
00:27:15.360 --> 00:27:17.600
[Steve] If you're an investor, return
on equity is the thing that matters.
00:27:17.640 --> 00:27:20.520
It tells you how profitable a business is.
00:27:20.560 --> 00:27:22.680
A return on equity
for the fossil fuel sector -
00:27:22.720 --> 00:27:25.120
20 years ago, double digits.
00:27:25.160 --> 00:27:28.760
Absolutely, 100% the norm.
00:27:28.800 --> 00:27:35.000
Today, return on equity
is struggling to get to 5% and 6%.
00:27:35.040 --> 00:27:39.440
Some of the fossil fuel firms,
they're in what's called a secular decline
00:27:39.480 --> 00:27:40.800
arguably already.
00:27:40.840 --> 00:27:42.640 line:20%
North Sea oil is a commodity,
00:27:42.680 --> 00:27:48.200 line:20%
it's an asset against which an enormous
amount of debt has been leveraged.
00:27:48.240 --> 00:27:52.160
And the question is,
does the asset maintain its value?
00:27:52.200 --> 00:27:54.840
Does oil maintain its price?
00:27:54.880 --> 00:27:59.600
And that really matters,
because if it fails to maintain its value,
00:27:59.640 --> 00:28:03.880
then the debt leveraged against that asset
is going to become un-payable.
00:28:03.920 --> 00:28:05.960
[Indistinct chatter]
00:28:08.480 --> 00:28:12.280
[Steve] Conversely,
the return on equity for offshore wind...
00:28:13.440 --> 00:28:15.440
..is about 11%.
00:28:17.200 --> 00:28:19.280
Onshore wind, about 10%,
00:28:19.320 --> 00:28:22.040
and onshore solar about 9%.
00:28:24.520 --> 00:28:27.640
So, you're already generating
more return on equity
00:28:27.680 --> 00:28:31.160
from putting your capital into
the renewable energy space.
00:28:31.200 --> 00:28:34.640
[Music - "Music for Pieces of Wood"
by Steve Reich]
00:28:34.680 --> 00:28:36.760
[Steve] The question is,
can it take as much capital
00:28:36.800 --> 00:28:38.880
as is currently in the fossil fuel sector?
00:28:41.440 --> 00:28:44.720
Those who own investments in North Sea oil
00:28:44.760 --> 00:28:50.280
have to believe that it will continue
and maintain its value as an asset.
00:28:50.320 --> 00:28:52.000
- [Music continues]
- And the question is,
00:28:52.040 --> 00:28:55.440
when does the value of the asset fall?
00:28:57.840 --> 00:29:01.080
[Music continues;
Electronic beeping]
00:29:03.960 --> 00:29:06.800
[Ann] And when the price of oil falls...
00:29:06.840 --> 00:29:09.120
then oil becomes a "stranded asset".
00:29:11.640 --> 00:29:13.640
[Music continues]
00:29:17.000 --> 00:29:19.760
[Ann] We have to reimagine the economy.
00:29:19.800 --> 00:29:22.520
The way we've constructed it right now
00:29:22.560 --> 00:29:26.880
means that it's incredibly unstable,
and prone to crashes.
00:29:26.920 --> 00:29:28.960
[Music continues]
00:29:31.680 --> 00:29:33.680
[Music continues]
00:29:40.240 --> 00:29:42.080
[Music continues]
00:29:42.120 --> 00:29:45.920
[Steve] If you look
at the London Stock Exchange,
00:29:45.960 --> 00:29:48.440
and you look at
the implied temperature change
00:29:48.480 --> 00:29:49.920
of all the companies
that are listed there,
00:29:49.960 --> 00:29:52.120
particularly the oil and gas companies,
00:29:52.160 --> 00:29:56.800
we have three and a half degrees of change
embedded in the London Stock Exchange.
00:29:56.840 --> 00:29:59.200
[Ambient street noise]
00:30:00.400 --> 00:30:02.520
[Steve] It's one of the worst
exchanges in the world,
00:30:02.560 --> 00:30:05.560
because it's where many of the world's
largest oil and gas companies list.
00:30:06.680 --> 00:30:10.640
Which means that people's pension,
savings and investments in the UK
00:30:10.680 --> 00:30:15.320
are actually invested in financing
a future that no-one wants to see,
00:30:15.360 --> 00:30:16.840
but no-one really realises.
00:30:16.880 --> 00:30:20.000
[Indistinct chatter;
Reverse indicator beeps]
00:30:24.880 --> 00:30:27.000
[Steve] People tend
to be ignorant about money
00:30:27.040 --> 00:30:28.840
because finance is quite complicated.
00:30:28.880 --> 00:30:32.840
And because it's been functioning,
by and large, reasonably well for so long,
00:30:32.880 --> 00:30:35.120
there's been this paternalistic culture
00:30:35.160 --> 00:30:38.480
that's enabled people to just, "It's okay,
don't worry, it's all working."
00:30:38.520 --> 00:30:40.760
Whereas actually, it's not.
00:30:40.800 --> 00:30:43.800
We need to now, rapidly,
00:30:43.840 --> 00:30:47.480
raise our collective understanding
of banking, insurance and investment -
00:30:47.520 --> 00:30:51.840
particularly investment - and particularly
where you own companies
00:30:51.880 --> 00:30:56.240
that are undermining the future
that we wish to bequeath to our children.
00:31:00.680 --> 00:31:03.480
[Laid-back jazz music]
00:31:15.720 --> 00:31:19.880
[Steve] Angel Gurría, when he was
the secretary general of the OECD,
00:31:19.920 --> 00:31:22.560
talked about carbon entanglement.
00:31:24.440 --> 00:31:31.120
What he meant was when you had ministers
from the Environmental Department...
00:31:31.160 --> 00:31:36.760
coming to UN meetings,
and pledging to stop certain activity -
00:31:36.800 --> 00:31:38.840
let's say drilling...
00:31:42.360 --> 00:31:44.080
..and then they would return home
00:31:44.120 --> 00:31:47.200
to find that
the Chancellor of their Exchequer
00:31:47.240 --> 00:31:50.320
wasn't prepared to stop that...
00:31:53.200 --> 00:31:56.880
..because the amount of revenue
that the Exchequer received
00:31:56.920 --> 00:32:00.520
through the tax that was charged
on the fossil fuel when it was sold...
00:32:02.760 --> 00:32:05.520
..that that level of entanglement
of economic activity
00:32:05.560 --> 00:32:08.680
meant that we couldn't simply stop
the thing that needed to stop...
00:32:11.640 --> 00:32:14.520
..because in stopping that...
00:32:14.560 --> 00:32:16.800
all other things would stop, too.
00:32:16.840 --> 00:32:18.840
[Music continues]
00:32:22.840 --> 00:32:25.320
[Music concludes, resonates]
00:32:25.360 --> 00:32:27.840
[Water laps gently]
00:32:30.960 --> 00:32:32.600 line:20%
I think...
00:32:32.640 --> 00:32:38.160 line:20%
that my predictions beyond 2050
00:32:38.200 --> 00:32:39.880
are difficult to make.
00:32:43.920 --> 00:32:46.720
[Faint, reverberant hum]
00:32:46.760 --> 00:32:49.400
[David] And the reason I say this
is because I don't believe
00:32:49.440 --> 00:32:54.080
the global economy
will be functioning the way it is today
00:32:54.120 --> 00:32:56.840
unless we make big, big changes
00:32:56.880 --> 00:32:59.960
over the next five to ten years
00:33:00.000 --> 00:33:03.840
to manage the disaster
that's just around the corner.
00:33:03.880 --> 00:33:05.880
[Hum continues]
00:33:08.800 --> 00:33:14.240
A series of crises that will
begin unfolding...after mid-century
00:33:14.280 --> 00:33:17.040
is going to mean
the end of the global economy.
00:33:17.080 --> 00:33:19.120
[Hum continues]
00:33:22.640 --> 00:33:26.320
I believe that
what we do over the next five years -
00:33:26.360 --> 00:33:30.080
and the "we" in that sentence
refers to humanity -
00:33:30.120 --> 00:33:33.960
will determine the future of humanity
for the next millennium.
00:33:36.160 --> 00:33:38.480
[Hum continues; birds]
00:33:40.240 --> 00:33:42.160
[Car approaches]
00:33:48.720 --> 00:33:51.600
[Holly] I think people
will look back on this era of oil
00:33:51.640 --> 00:33:54.720
and just think
about how ridiculous it was.
00:33:56.320 --> 00:33:58.800
How could you know
about such a massive issue
00:33:58.840 --> 00:34:01.680
and still worry more about profit?
00:34:01.720 --> 00:34:03.720
It feels a bit surreal, in a way.
00:34:22.360 --> 00:34:25.280
[Kevin] The whole issue of climate change
became quite relevant,
00:34:25.320 --> 00:34:27.160
and there was
a lot of discussions around that
00:34:27.200 --> 00:34:29.200
in the late '80s and the early '90s.
00:34:29.240 --> 00:34:30.920
And it wasn't something
I knew a lot about,
00:34:30.960 --> 00:34:32.520
so I decided to go back to university
00:34:32.560 --> 00:34:35.080
to try to find something out
about climate change.
00:34:35.120 --> 00:34:38.120
And so, I decided, in the end,
to leave the oil industry.
00:34:45.960 --> 00:34:49.120
When we burn oil and gas,
or indeed any fossil fuel,
00:34:49.160 --> 00:34:52.840
it's made up of two principal elements.
One's carbon, and one's hydrogen.
00:34:52.880 --> 00:34:56.120
[Ambient street noise;
Wind rushes softly]
00:34:56.160 --> 00:34:59.680
[Kevin] That carbon combusts
with the oxygen in the atmosphere.
00:35:06.360 --> 00:35:08.400
[Pigeon coos]
00:35:08.440 --> 00:35:13.280
[Kevin] And now, 'cause we're burning
all of this fossil fuel so rapidly -
00:35:13.320 --> 00:35:17.040
remember, these are fossil fuels
that were laid down by trees
00:35:17.080 --> 00:35:20.120
and by all the plants
over millions of years.
00:35:20.160 --> 00:35:22.520
[Vehicles pass]
00:35:22.560 --> 00:35:25.400
[Kevin] We're taking them all
out of the ground, and almost overnight,
00:35:25.440 --> 00:35:28.040
releasing all of that carbon
back out into the atmosphere
00:35:28.080 --> 00:35:31.880
as carbon dioxide through the combustion
in our car engines and our power stations.
00:35:33.400 --> 00:35:35.400
[Traffic hums]
00:35:41.840 --> 00:35:44.440
[Wind rushes softly]
00:35:55.160 --> 00:35:58.880
[Ann] So, very, very deliberately,
as part of market ideology,
00:35:58.920 --> 00:36:03.680
is the idea that we can't allow
democracies or governments or states
00:36:03.720 --> 00:36:09.880
to regulate or to manage the production
and the extraction of finite assets.
00:36:09.920 --> 00:36:13.520
This has to be left to something
called "the invisible hand".
00:36:20.000 --> 00:36:22.000
[Foreboding music]
00:36:34.160 --> 00:36:37.000
[Ann] And if the invisible hand decides
00:36:37.040 --> 00:36:39.080
that in a world of climate breakdown
00:36:39.120 --> 00:36:42.240
it's necessary
to churn out more fossil fuels,
00:36:42.280 --> 00:36:47.720
then the invisible hand will actually
disadvantage the public and Governments,
00:36:47.760 --> 00:36:50.280
and indeed, that is what is happening now.
00:36:51.880 --> 00:36:53.880
[Music continues]
00:37:02.080 --> 00:37:04.080
[Music continues]
00:37:13.160 --> 00:37:17.120
[James] Once the crude gets
to a refinery like Grangemouth...
00:37:21.000 --> 00:37:25.480
..it's made into lots of things
like petrol, aviation fuel and tarmac.
00:37:25.520 --> 00:37:29.320
It's also made into
this substance called naphtha,
00:37:29.360 --> 00:37:31.760
which is the sort of...
00:37:31.800 --> 00:37:35.640
the basis that you would use
to make plastics.
00:37:35.680 --> 00:37:37.680
[Music continues]
00:37:40.400 --> 00:37:42.400
[Music continues]
00:37:44.280 --> 00:37:47.880
[James] You'd then put it
into a petrochemical plant,
00:37:47.920 --> 00:37:51.520
and you'd make other stuff out of it,
such as ethylene.
00:37:51.560 --> 00:37:54.760
And then that ethylene is made
into other stuff, such as PVC.
00:37:57.840 --> 00:38:00.680
And that is plastic as we know it.
00:38:00.720 --> 00:38:02.520
[Music continues]
00:38:10.800 --> 00:38:13.520
[James] When you burn a gallon of petrol,
00:38:13.560 --> 00:38:15.560
it goes into the atmosphere
pretty quickly.
00:38:15.600 --> 00:38:17.440
When you turned it into a plastic toy,
00:38:17.480 --> 00:38:19.400
and that's used for a bit
and then thrown away,
00:38:19.440 --> 00:38:23.080
it stays in a landfill
for many hundreds of years.
00:38:24.640 --> 00:38:27.400
Possibly thousands of years.
00:38:27.440 --> 00:38:30.280
[Music continues]
00:38:30.320 --> 00:38:32.640
[Music builds]
00:38:36.520 --> 00:38:38.760
[James] And then there are
tiny bits of plastic,
00:38:38.800 --> 00:38:42.080
microplastics, which are in everything.
00:38:42.120 --> 00:38:45.400
The water from the tap,
in rivers and in seas,
00:38:45.440 --> 00:38:48.600
and even in our human tissues and organs,
00:38:48.640 --> 00:38:51.360
and in the tissues of other animals.
00:38:54.520 --> 00:38:56.960
And all those bits of plastic,
00:38:57.000 --> 00:39:00.880
at some point, came out of an oil well.
00:39:00.920 --> 00:39:02.920
[Music continues]
00:39:09.120 --> 00:39:11.120
[James] And it wasn't till recently -
00:39:11.160 --> 00:39:14.720
plastics weren't really being used
until the '60s in any major way.
00:39:14.760 --> 00:39:16.760
[Music softens]
00:39:31.720 --> 00:39:34.040
[Music continues;
Indistinct chatter]
00:39:34.080 --> 00:39:36.080
[Music concludes]
00:39:38.720 --> 00:39:41.160
Since signing the Paris Agreement in 2016,
00:39:41.200 --> 00:39:44.960
the UK government has given
£4 billion of public money
00:39:45.000 --> 00:39:46.920
to North Sea oil and gas companies.
00:39:46.960 --> 00:39:50.200
That is a huge amount of money
that should be being used for public good,
00:39:50.240 --> 00:39:54.280
and is instead propping up
these big, polluting, harmful companies.
00:39:55.640 --> 00:39:59.720
I heard about a case that was happening,
that was taking the UK government to court
00:39:59.760 --> 00:40:02.120
around these subsidies
and around the new policy
00:40:02.160 --> 00:40:04.400
that had been created
by the Oil and Gas Authority...
00:40:05.640 --> 00:40:10.040
..which basically allows for
the promotion of oil and gas production.
00:40:11.840 --> 00:40:14.600
I feel like I got to a point
where I was so desperate about,
00:40:14.640 --> 00:40:16.520
"What should I do? What can I do?"
00:40:17.800 --> 00:40:19.160
[Noisy traffic]
00:40:19.200 --> 00:40:21.160
[Mikaela] I'm taking
the UK government to court
00:40:21.200 --> 00:40:24.480
to pull the plug on public payments
for big polluters.
00:40:25.720 --> 00:40:29.440
[Emeka] The world is moving away from...
00:40:29.480 --> 00:40:32.120
from an oil and gas economy
to a lower carbon economy.
00:40:32.160 --> 00:40:35.360
So, we at BP, intend to be
part of that transition.
00:40:35.400 --> 00:40:36.920
So, I think if we...
00:40:36.960 --> 00:40:41.440
if we didn't make the move,
we wouldn't exist.
00:40:41.480 --> 00:40:46.040
We will be taking carbon emissions
from heavy industry
00:40:46.080 --> 00:40:48.040
that is based in the Teesside area
00:40:48.080 --> 00:40:51.920
and sequestering that
in reservoirs offshore.
00:40:51.960 --> 00:40:55.680
We'll be using the same
very similar expertise to what we've used
00:40:55.720 --> 00:40:59.880
with our oil and gas production
to capture that material and inject it.
00:41:02.520 --> 00:41:04.800
Yeah, the oil industry
has traditionally been full of people
00:41:04.840 --> 00:41:06.680
who love solving problems.
00:41:06.720 --> 00:41:08.800
[Music - "Venus in Tweeds"
by Shooglenifty]
00:41:08.840 --> 00:41:10.280
[Phil] That's why people become engineers,
00:41:10.320 --> 00:41:12.080
'cause they want to build big things
and do stuff.
00:41:12.120 --> 00:41:14.320
And that doesn't matter
whether you're a woman or a man,
00:41:14.360 --> 00:41:17.400
it's that challenge in your mind
that you love.
00:41:17.440 --> 00:41:20.120
And this is another challenge.
00:41:20.160 --> 00:41:22.000
[Music continues]
00:41:24.360 --> 00:41:27.960
In 20 years' time,
I would love, in the UK,
00:41:28.000 --> 00:41:30.040
that we're still producing
at the same level...
00:41:30.080 --> 00:41:33.080
the same level of hydrocarbons
that we're producing now
00:41:33.120 --> 00:41:35.760
- but with a net zero footprint.
- [Music subsides]
00:41:35.800 --> 00:41:38.760 line:20%
So, we often hear this language,
now, particularly, of "net zero."
00:41:38.800 --> 00:41:42.200 line:20%
So, what really is it?
We need to sort of understand what it is.
00:41:42.240 --> 00:41:44.400
And actually, from a purely scientific
point of view,
00:41:44.440 --> 00:41:46.480
it makes some sort of sense.
00:41:46.520 --> 00:41:48.760
The idea is that we have to get to a point
00:41:48.800 --> 00:41:50.920
where the emissions
we put into the atmosphere
00:41:50.960 --> 00:41:54.000
are balanced by those
that are removed from the atmosphere.
00:41:54.040 --> 00:41:57.440
So, what we put out
is balanced by what is taken back in.
00:41:57.480 --> 00:41:59.480
And we then give it, so, like, a year.
00:41:59.520 --> 00:42:02.160
So, at some point in the future,
always a long way away.
00:42:02.200 --> 00:42:04.520
So, something like 2050.
00:42:04.560 --> 00:42:07.080
In 2050, we'll have this net zero,
00:42:07.120 --> 00:42:09.840
where we'll have found a way
to balance our emissions,
00:42:09.880 --> 00:42:11.640
which are still quite significant then,
00:42:11.680 --> 00:42:15.240
with sinks that absorb the carbon dioxide
back into the atmosphere.
00:42:15.280 --> 00:42:19.200
[Plane engine hums overhead]
00:42:19.240 --> 00:42:22.280
We are setting up a carbon capture business,
00:42:22.320 --> 00:42:26.720
which may ultimately
take some of the CO2 that we produce
00:42:26.760 --> 00:42:28.560
from the hydrogen process,
00:42:28.600 --> 00:42:30.960
and then we will store that carbon
00:42:31.000 --> 00:42:34.480
in underground reservoirs,
depleted gas fields,
00:42:34.520 --> 00:42:36.640
where we've produced
the hydrocarbons from there.
00:42:36.680 --> 00:42:39.480
We know the history,
we know the structure.
00:42:39.520 --> 00:42:43.920
Actually, the UK could be in a really
robust position for carbon capture,
00:42:43.960 --> 00:42:46.840
with the spin-offs for, potentially,
supply chain benefits,
00:42:46.880 --> 00:42:50.200
exporting some of those skills
to other countries.
00:42:50.240 --> 00:42:52.560
We have very few working examples
00:42:52.600 --> 00:42:56.400
of carbon capture storage
on power stations.
00:42:56.440 --> 00:43:00.360
I've got colleagues that have been
working on this for 20 years.
00:43:00.400 --> 00:43:02.400
[Wind rushes]
00:43:15.280 --> 00:43:20.720
There is currently no operational
carbon capture and storage, CCS, capacity
00:43:20.760 --> 00:43:22.600
in the UK or Europe.
00:43:22.640 --> 00:43:26.120
All estimates are that there won't be
in the next decade,
00:43:26.160 --> 00:43:28.440
and the next decade really matters.
00:43:28.480 --> 00:43:33.280
So, it's absolutely no excuse to continue
expanding oil and gas infrastructure
00:43:33.320 --> 00:43:37.040
on the assumption that we can bring down
those emissions using that technology
00:43:37.080 --> 00:43:39.680
in the next few years.
It's just...it's not going to happen.
00:43:39.720 --> 00:43:43.840
We will maintain some level of oil
and gas production over time,
00:43:43.880 --> 00:43:46.480
but we're hugely ramping up
our investments
00:43:46.520 --> 00:43:49.480
in non-oil and gas forms
of energy as well.
00:43:51.600 --> 00:43:56.160
We're about to get into
a ScotWind leasing process that,
00:43:56.200 --> 00:44:00.480
the process itself, to actually
acquire the leases, takes time.
00:44:00.520 --> 00:44:03.800
From the point at which
wind leases are acquired
00:44:03.840 --> 00:44:06.280
to when wind farms are installed,
00:44:06.320 --> 00:44:08.720
it's only a period of about ten years.
00:44:09.880 --> 00:44:14.360
We will do everything we can to compress
that period and make it faster,
00:44:14.400 --> 00:44:19.800
but it's almost just, the realities
of what happens is...
00:44:19.840 --> 00:44:24.000
What we're talking about is changing
the infrastructure of the world.
00:44:24.040 --> 00:44:25.360
That takes time.
00:44:25.400 --> 00:44:27.440
[Wind rushes]
00:44:30.200 --> 00:44:32.960
[Percussive house music]
00:44:40.680 --> 00:44:42.920
For decades,
00:44:42.960 --> 00:44:46.160
the world has been built on
a hydrocarbon-based infrastructure.
00:44:46.200 --> 00:44:48.160
[Music continues]
00:44:48.200 --> 00:44:50.840
[Emeka] Maybe a good analogy
would be, it's almost like
00:44:50.880 --> 00:44:53.880
replacing all the veins in the human body.
00:44:53.920 --> 00:44:55.920
[Music continues]
00:45:06.120 --> 00:45:09.840
I guess we have an addiction
to oil and gas in...
00:45:09.880 --> 00:45:11.080
in our society.
00:45:11.120 --> 00:45:15.440
And that's why we need to work
thoughtfully as to how we move forward.
00:45:17.160 --> 00:45:19.120
Just to stop it
for the sake of stopping it
00:45:19.160 --> 00:45:22.200
isn't going to stop the demand
that's associated with it.
00:45:22.240 --> 00:45:24.440
[Music continues]
00:45:24.480 --> 00:45:30.080
[Jake] Everything we use
has an oil base, virtually, in it.
00:45:30.120 --> 00:45:31.880
[Music continues]
00:45:35.760 --> 00:45:39.920
[Jake] You know, from your shoes,
to the tyres on the electric car,
00:45:39.960 --> 00:45:45.720
the iPhone. I think the iPhone's got about
six litres of oil used in its manufacture.
00:45:45.760 --> 00:45:50.120
Your waterproof jacket,
which we all need here in Scotland,
00:45:50.160 --> 00:45:53.600
there's hydrocarbon in it!
You know, you're going to need it.
00:45:53.640 --> 00:45:56.720
So, having a go at...
00:45:56.760 --> 00:45:59.680
- North Sea oil and gas production...
- [Music subsides]
00:45:59.720 --> 00:46:01.320
..in its...
00:46:01.360 --> 00:46:03.240
in itself, I think, is unfair.
00:46:03.280 --> 00:46:06.480
[Holly] People in the oil industry,
and just people in general,
00:46:06.520 --> 00:46:11.400
have a go at environmentalists for,
you know, using phones and buying shoes.
00:46:11.440 --> 00:46:12.880
If people think you're a hypocrite,
00:46:12.920 --> 00:46:15.480
they're not going to listen
to what you have to say.
00:46:15.520 --> 00:46:18.520
And, I mean, that is exactly
what the fossil fuel industry wants.
00:46:18.560 --> 00:46:22.760
It takes the pressure off of them
and onto everyday people
00:46:22.800 --> 00:46:26.120
whose individual actions in the grand
scheme of things is tiny
00:46:26.160 --> 00:46:31.920
compared to the actions
of massive fossil fuel corporations.
00:46:31.960 --> 00:46:35.080
We need to start talking about this
as a systemic problem
00:46:35.120 --> 00:46:36.960
and not as an individual problem.
00:46:37.000 --> 00:46:40.360
[Wind rushes softly]
00:46:40.400 --> 00:46:43.680
[Mikaela] There's no real consumer choice
around the fact that we live
00:46:43.720 --> 00:46:46.920
in an energy infrastructure that means
we have to use oil and gas currently
00:46:46.960 --> 00:46:50.000
because other alternatives
are not being promoted.
00:46:52.840 --> 00:46:56.600
[Music - "Music for Pieces of Wood"
by Steve Reich]
00:46:56.640 --> 00:46:59.880
- [Girl] This is not made of oil.
- [Girl 2] This is not made of oil.
00:46:59.920 --> 00:47:01.560
[Girl 3] This is not made of oil.
00:47:01.600 --> 00:47:03.280
[Girl 2] This is not made of oil.
00:47:03.320 --> 00:47:06.880
- [Girl 3] This is not made of oil.
- [Girl] This is not made of oil.
00:47:06.920 --> 00:47:10.760
I think we've been hearing
that the oil and gas company
00:47:10.800 --> 00:47:15.120
is the answer to our future
energy needs for decades.
00:47:15.160 --> 00:47:19.480
And the fact is that their investment
in renewable energy
00:47:19.520 --> 00:47:24.520
is a vanishingly small proportion
of their overall investment.
00:47:24.560 --> 00:47:27.160
The Oil and Gas Authority,
if you open up their website,
00:47:27.200 --> 00:47:29.640
or indeed, go to their Twitter account,
that's what they say.
00:47:29.680 --> 00:47:32.800
"We're there to maximise oil
and gas production
00:47:32.840 --> 00:47:34.880
"and to help the government
meet its net zero."
00:47:34.920 --> 00:47:37.320
That demonstrates to me,
absolutely clearly,
00:47:37.360 --> 00:47:41.400
how net zero is basically a front for
00:47:41.440 --> 00:47:44.160
an incrementally green-washed
business as usual.
00:47:44.200 --> 00:47:46.040
It delays any real action.
00:47:46.080 --> 00:47:50.080
It relies on technologies that are...
either highly speculative
00:47:50.120 --> 00:47:52.720
or in only very small pilot schemes
at the moment
00:47:52.760 --> 00:47:54.960
to remove carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere -
00:47:55.000 --> 00:47:58.440
hundreds of billions of tonnes
of carbon dioxide, not small quantities -
00:47:58.480 --> 00:48:01.160
out in the future. And when I say,
"We're going to remove it,"
00:48:01.200 --> 00:48:03.800
not us - our children
and our children's children.
00:48:03.840 --> 00:48:05.880
[Birdsong]
00:48:13.840 --> 00:48:16.680
[Birds squawks in distance]
00:48:16.720 --> 00:48:18.680
[Holly] There are
several parts of Fort William
00:48:18.720 --> 00:48:20.760
that are threatened with flooding,
00:48:20.800 --> 00:48:22.400
and this will include the main roads
00:48:22.440 --> 00:48:25.960
and the main rail lines
between Fort William and Glasgow.
00:48:27.760 --> 00:48:31.640
That means that there's going to be
a transport problem in the future,
00:48:31.680 --> 00:48:35.280
and food supplies
might cut out at some points.
00:48:41.040 --> 00:48:43.040
[Birdsong continues]
00:48:44.880 --> 00:48:47.800
[Girl] In 50 years' time,
if nothing changes,
00:48:47.840 --> 00:48:50.880
the water levels could rise to 40cm.
00:48:52.440 --> 00:48:54.560 line:20%
Already this winter,
00:48:54.600 --> 00:48:59.840 line:20%
it flooded right up to where I'm sitting,
and the road had to be closed.
00:49:02.040 --> 00:49:04.800
The road up to the high school
could be closed.
00:49:04.840 --> 00:49:07.600
How could the children get to school?
00:49:23.400 --> 00:49:25.120
[Waves crash]
00:49:25.160 --> 00:49:29.280
[Toby] Well, in 50 years' time,
I'm worried that there won't be
00:49:29.320 --> 00:49:32.440
the same type of wildlife
as there is right now
00:49:32.480 --> 00:49:34.280
because of climate change.
00:49:34.320 --> 00:49:39.040
Ullapool's, like, a fishing village.
So, then if the smaller fish die out,
00:49:39.080 --> 00:49:41.520
then the bigger fish
won't have anything to eat.
00:49:41.560 --> 00:49:45.200
And this is kind of, like,
the same as puffins.
00:49:45.240 --> 00:49:47.680
They live around
the coastal areas of Scotland.
00:49:49.480 --> 00:49:51.360
They could be affected by climate change
00:49:51.400 --> 00:49:54.720
if the temperature rises
and the sea levels rise,
00:49:54.760 --> 00:49:57.240
'cause then that would
make the fish swim away
00:49:57.280 --> 00:50:00.440
to places that are cooler, further north.
00:50:00.480 --> 00:50:05.480
Puffins will die of starvation
if they don't sort something out soon.
00:50:07.000 --> 00:50:08.960
[Waves lap gently]
00:50:10.320 --> 00:50:12.320
[Bird calls in distance]
00:50:14.320 --> 00:50:16.280
[Melancholy music]
00:50:16.320 --> 00:50:18.680
[Music continues]
00:50:18.720 --> 00:50:21.240
[Rachael] This bridge
could be completely underwater.
00:50:22.520 --> 00:50:26.200
The SEC behind this,
where they're holding COP26,
00:50:26.240 --> 00:50:28.000
that's going to be completely destroyed.
00:50:29.240 --> 00:50:32.200 line:20%
There are so many things
happening in the world right now that...
00:50:33.920 --> 00:50:36.480 line:20%
..I'm honestly not sure I could face
00:50:36.520 --> 00:50:38.600
bringing even, like,
a child into the world.
00:50:38.640 --> 00:50:40.680
[Music continues]
00:50:44.520 --> 00:50:46.920
[Rachael] If we don't make the change now,
we never will.
00:50:49.440 --> 00:50:52.800
It's actually so much closer than a lot
of us are actually willing to believe.
00:50:54.320 --> 00:50:56.920
And that's...quite terrifying.
00:50:56.960 --> 00:50:58.960
[Music continues]
00:51:04.520 --> 00:51:06.520
[Music subsides]
00:51:06.560 --> 00:51:08.400
[Holly] Adults have made
their life choices.
00:51:08.440 --> 00:51:10.360
They've got their career
and they've, you know,
00:51:10.400 --> 00:51:13.000
sometimes they have a family,
they have a house.
00:51:13.040 --> 00:51:16.320
And it's not going to impact
00:51:16.360 --> 00:51:18.320
their lives in the same way
it will impact us
00:51:18.360 --> 00:51:22.320
because, you know, what career
am I going to have based off of this,
00:51:22.360 --> 00:51:24.000
and where am I going to live?
00:51:24.040 --> 00:51:25.760
[Traffic hums]
00:51:25.800 --> 00:51:29.320
[Holly] And what food
am I going to be able to eat?
00:51:32.040 --> 00:51:34.840
[Bus rattles, hums]
00:51:34.880 --> 00:51:37.120
[Birds squawk in distance]
00:51:37.160 --> 00:51:39.200
[Squawking continues]
00:51:42.040 --> 00:51:44.840
[Dylan] We're going to have several metres
of sea level rise already locked in.
00:51:44.880 --> 00:51:48.920
And since Edinburgh is on the coast,
that poses a pretty severe threat
00:51:48.960 --> 00:51:51.120
to lots of areas around here.
00:51:51.160 --> 00:51:53.040
[Rabi] Everything would be underwater.
00:51:53.080 --> 00:51:55.320
The Ocean Terminal mall,
00:51:55.360 --> 00:51:58.880
the pub at the end of the road
over there, everything.
00:51:58.920 --> 00:52:01.400
[Dylan] It's not even
that far in the future.
00:52:01.440 --> 00:52:04.480
Like, I'll maybe just be
starting retirement.
00:52:04.520 --> 00:52:07.400
Even if we feel like
it's in the distant future,
00:52:07.440 --> 00:52:10.520
areas I go all the time will not be...
00:52:10.560 --> 00:52:12.600
they won't even exist anymore.
00:52:12.640 --> 00:52:15.960
[Engine revs, seagulls squawk in distance]
00:52:18.000 --> 00:52:21.040
[Music - "The Gate" by Klaus Wiese]
00:52:25.480 --> 00:52:27.640
[Protestors, chanting]
ExxonMobil, BP, Shell,
00:52:27.680 --> 00:52:30.240
take your oil and go to hell.
00:52:30.280 --> 00:52:32.680
ExxonMobil, BP, Shell,
00:52:32.720 --> 00:52:35.040
take your oil and go to hell.
00:52:35.080 --> 00:52:37.280
ExxonMobil, BP, Shell,
00:52:37.320 --> 00:52:40.280
- take your oil...
- [Chanting fades, music continues]
00:52:42.120 --> 00:52:44.880
[David] The things
that I am most worried about
00:52:44.920 --> 00:52:51.440
is the future for children aged 15,
children aged 3, 4, 5.
00:52:51.480 --> 00:52:53.480
[Music continues]
00:52:58.880 --> 00:53:03.120
[David] They will presumably expect
to be alive by the end of the century...
00:53:04.680 --> 00:53:06.560
..and at the moment,
00:53:06.600 --> 00:53:10.840
that is really not looking like
the sort of place you'd like to live in.
00:53:10.880 --> 00:53:12.880
[Music continues]
00:53:17.800 --> 00:53:21.320
[David] So, what we are
seeing is a major disturbance
00:53:21.360 --> 00:53:23.000
in the global weather system,
00:53:23.040 --> 00:53:27.880
but much more serious
is what is happening to that ice.
00:53:27.920 --> 00:53:32.120
On Greenland, as the ice melts,
it enters the ocean,
00:53:32.160 --> 00:53:35.880
and there's enough ice there
that when it's all melted,
00:53:35.920 --> 00:53:43.480
sea levels globally will rise
by an average of 7.5 metres, 24 feet.
00:53:43.520 --> 00:53:48.080
And we will not recognise the world
when that has happened.
00:53:48.120 --> 00:53:50.120
[Music continues]
00:53:53.880 --> 00:53:58.360
And quite frankly,
I believe this is already happening
00:53:58.400 --> 00:54:05.000
towards that final level
of 24-feet sea level rise.
00:54:05.040 --> 00:54:07.080
[Music continues]
00:54:16.000 --> 00:54:17.960
[Music subsides]
00:54:18.000 --> 00:54:21.400
The Paris Agreement says that
one and a half degrees should be our aim.
00:54:21.440 --> 00:54:26.560
And the fact that we're heading much more
rapidly towards three and half degrees
00:54:26.600 --> 00:54:30.040
should be of grave concern for everybody.
00:54:31.120 --> 00:54:33.480
[Indistinct clamouring]
00:54:37.440 --> 00:54:38.920
[Metallic clang]
00:54:38.960 --> 00:54:40.920
[Music]
00:54:40.960 --> 00:54:44.280
My family is still mostly in Bangladesh,
00:54:44.320 --> 00:54:48.120
and I see it as, I guess,
00:54:48.160 --> 00:54:51.560
in my case, a very personal example
00:54:51.600 --> 00:54:56.880
of the deep injustice
at the heart of the climate crisis.
00:54:56.920 --> 00:54:58.960
[Music continues]
00:55:02.800 --> 00:55:08.640
[Tessa] As a country, it's done so little
historically to contribute to...
00:55:08.680 --> 00:55:11.320
the amount of carbon
that's in the atmosphere, and...
00:55:11.360 --> 00:55:13.600
it's done so little
to cause the climate crisis.
00:55:13.640 --> 00:55:16.880
And yet, people there will be
bearing the impact,
00:55:16.920 --> 00:55:21.480
already are overwhelmingly
living with the impacts
00:55:21.520 --> 00:55:23.720
that we're currently experiencing
of climate change.
00:55:23.760 --> 00:55:25.800
[Music continues]
00:55:31.640 --> 00:55:35.080
Half a metre sea level rise by 2050.
00:55:35.120 --> 00:55:36.480
We will see...
00:55:36.520 --> 00:55:40.560
Everyone knows, Bangladesh -
two thirds of the country underwater.
00:55:40.600 --> 00:55:42.400
[Music continues]
00:55:42.440 --> 00:55:45.280
[Concerned chatter]
00:55:45.320 --> 00:55:47.520
[Tessa] It's expected
that tens of millions...
00:55:47.560 --> 00:55:53.840
I think one estimate is that
30 million people will have to emigrate...
00:55:53.880 --> 00:55:57.720
as a result
of the impacts of climate change.
00:55:57.760 --> 00:56:03.040
Vietnam. 90% of the country underwater,
sea water, at least once a year,
00:56:03.080 --> 00:56:05.160
by 2050, in 30 years' time.
00:56:05.200 --> 00:56:07.200
[Music continues]
00:56:09.760 --> 00:56:11.520
[David] The Mekong Delta region
00:56:11.560 --> 00:56:15.560
is the biggest series
of rice paddy fields in the world.
00:56:15.600 --> 00:56:17.760
By the time we get to mid-century,
00:56:17.800 --> 00:56:20.040
rice production will collapse.
00:56:21.440 --> 00:56:25.920
At three and a half degrees,
roughly 74% of the world's population
00:56:25.960 --> 00:56:28.240
cannot live where they do today,
00:56:28.280 --> 00:56:31.000
because the midday summer air temperature
00:56:31.040 --> 00:56:35.000
will be too hot for the body
to be able to function.
00:56:35.040 --> 00:56:37.200
The body and organs
will start to collapse.
00:56:37.240 --> 00:56:40.320
[Music continues]
00:56:40.360 --> 00:56:43.280
We are looking, by mid-century,
00:56:43.320 --> 00:56:49.160
possibly at 100 million climate refugees
from that part of the world,
00:56:49.200 --> 00:56:52.200
possibly 200, 300 million.
00:56:52.240 --> 00:56:54.800
And that will be happening
around the world.
00:56:54.840 --> 00:56:56.880
[Music continues]
00:57:03.760 --> 00:57:09.200
We have to de-fossilize
the global economy as quickly as we can.
00:57:10.960 --> 00:57:12.960
[Muffled clanging]
00:57:15.200 --> 00:57:17.520
[Sombre music]
00:57:17.560 --> 00:57:20.240
[Mechanical thrumming, rattling]
00:57:39.800 --> 00:57:41.800
[Music continues]
00:57:44.360 --> 00:57:46.640
[Intense whirring]
00:58:05.560 --> 00:58:07.560
[Music continues]
00:58:31.520 --> 00:58:33.520
[Reverse indicator beeps]
00:58:39.640 --> 00:58:41.640
[Music continues]
00:59:04.040 --> 00:59:06.040
[Music continues]
00:59:23.240 --> 00:59:25.240
[Music continues]
00:59:44.680 --> 00:59:46.680
[Music continues]
00:59:53.120 --> 00:59:57.280
[Music continues;
Indistinct chanting, clamouring]
01:00:07.120 --> 01:00:10.480
[Kevin] In my view, there are
many reasons to be deeply critical
01:00:10.520 --> 01:00:12.560
of the whole COP process.
01:00:13.760 --> 01:00:18.480
And the most dangerous voice there
was that from the fossil fuel industry.
01:00:18.520 --> 01:00:23.280
And remember, that industry
is not always a private sector voice,
01:00:23.320 --> 01:00:26.080
it's often the voice of the governments.
01:00:26.120 --> 01:00:27.720
[Music continues]
01:00:27.760 --> 01:00:29.800
[Clamouring continues]
01:00:32.520 --> 01:00:36.240
[Kevin] A lot of the oil companies
are owned by the governments,
01:00:36.280 --> 01:00:38.720
so the governments
themselves are, in effect,
01:00:38.760 --> 01:00:41.040
the oil companies
in many parts of the world.
01:00:46.480 --> 01:00:51.040
So, whilst tens of thousands,
hundreds of thousands of protesters
01:00:51.080 --> 01:00:55.560
and civil society activists,
or wider society is kept at arm's reach...
01:01:00.680 --> 01:01:05.120
...the fossil fuel lobbyists
are right in there with the negotiators,
01:01:05.160 --> 01:01:07.400
before COP and during COP.
01:01:07.440 --> 01:01:09.960
They're in the governments.
They're part of the governments.
01:01:10.000 --> 01:01:12.720
They're part of the DNA of the COP.
01:01:12.760 --> 01:01:14.680
[Music continues]
01:01:14.720 --> 01:01:17.040
[Kevin] And then we stand back saying,
01:01:17.080 --> 01:01:20.000
"Oh, look, there's hardly anything
about the fossil fuel industry
01:01:20.040 --> 01:01:21.680
"and how we have to rapidly phase it out
01:01:21.720 --> 01:01:23.880
"within the agreements
that come out of these COPs."
01:01:23.920 --> 01:01:26.400
And Glasgow, again, was just the same.
01:01:26.440 --> 01:01:28.440
[Music continues]
01:01:31.920 --> 01:01:35.000
[Kevin] They're in and out
of the ministries far more...
01:01:35.040 --> 01:01:37.800
I think there's some evidence to suggest
nine or ten times more often
01:01:37.840 --> 01:01:40.120
than you get people from the renewables
coming in there.
01:01:40.160 --> 01:01:42.720
And they've been doing this, again,
for decade after decade.
01:01:42.760 --> 01:01:44.760
[Music continues]
01:02:08.120 --> 01:02:10.120
[Music subsides]
01:02:10.160 --> 01:02:14.560
The fact is that if we were
about to be hit by a meteorite,
01:02:14.600 --> 01:02:18.120
if the country was about
to be hit by a meteorite,
01:02:18.160 --> 01:02:21.040
the government
would do everything possible
01:02:21.080 --> 01:02:23.200
to prevent that happening, immediately.
01:02:23.240 --> 01:02:28.520
It wouldn't say, "Oh, let's wait for
the private sector to come up with a plan
01:02:28.560 --> 01:02:34.120
"and a managed transition
before the moment of impact," right?
01:02:34.160 --> 01:02:36.280
We can't afford to do that.
01:02:36.320 --> 01:02:39.600
The urgency of the climate crisis
01:02:39.640 --> 01:02:43.440
is not entirely unlike
the threat we would face
01:02:43.480 --> 01:02:45.640
if we were to be hit by a meteorite.
01:02:45.680 --> 01:02:49.520
And therefore,
we cannot rely on self-serving,
01:02:49.560 --> 01:02:55.320
capital gains-making shareholders
in oil companies for that transition.
01:02:55.360 --> 01:02:57.400
[Eerie music]
01:03:17.680 --> 01:03:19.760
[Music continues]
01:03:22.800 --> 01:03:25.600
[Throbbing, sinister music]
01:03:43.880 --> 01:03:45.880
[Music continues]
01:04:03.960 --> 01:04:06.800
[Deirdre] We need
to decommission properly.
01:04:06.840 --> 01:04:09.600
You know, there are
certain obligations that we're under.
01:04:09.640 --> 01:04:11.880
And as a sector,
we want to make sure that,
01:04:11.920 --> 01:04:14.600
you know, we do tidy up after ourselves.
01:04:14.640 --> 01:04:18.200
So, we decommission,
we do it safely, we do it efficiently,
01:04:18.240 --> 01:04:23.080
we do it cost effectively, and we do it
with an environmental head on.
01:04:23.120 --> 01:04:25.800
[Mechanical thrumming, rattling]
01:04:28.880 --> 01:04:33.320
[Deirdre] The industry is liable for all
the costs associated with decommissioning.
01:04:38.160 --> 01:04:43.760
The way that the tax regime works
in this country for oil and gas companies
01:04:43.800 --> 01:04:47.040
is that they can claim costs
01:04:47.080 --> 01:04:50.120
that they incur
from decommissioning oil and gas assets,
01:04:50.160 --> 01:04:52.600
which is another way of saying
01:04:52.640 --> 01:04:55.280
"cleaning up
the mess that they've created."
01:04:55.320 --> 01:04:59.000
You know, it's disassembling rigs,
making sure that there isn't
01:04:59.040 --> 01:05:01.480
a whole load of toxic sludge left behind.
01:05:01.520 --> 01:05:05.280
The sort of clean up
that all polluting industries have to do
01:05:05.320 --> 01:05:08.440
when they exit from that industry.
01:05:08.480 --> 01:05:13.280
But if you're an oil and gas company,
the UK taxpayer pays
01:05:13.320 --> 01:05:17.120
about 50% of the costs of decommissioning.
01:05:17.160 --> 01:05:19.400
[Soft mechanical hum]
01:05:20.520 --> 01:05:22.520
[Rattling]
01:05:25.080 --> 01:05:29.640
[Tessa] All companies in the sector
benefit from that tax regime.
01:05:29.680 --> 01:05:33.040
And it means that whether they're
a British company or a foreign company,
01:05:33.080 --> 01:05:38.000
they are not making a contribution
to the British economy
01:05:38.040 --> 01:05:42.720
in terms of the money
that they contribute to the public purse,
01:05:42.760 --> 01:05:46.240
and they are benefiting
from taxpayer dollars.
01:05:46.280 --> 01:05:48.920
[Throbbing, sinister music]
01:05:56.040 --> 01:05:59.600
[Tessa] The UK's Office
of National Accounts
01:05:59.640 --> 01:06:03.600
has estimated that,
over the next few decades,
01:06:03.640 --> 01:06:08.960
we are on the hook
for £18 billion in decommissioning costs.
01:06:09.000 --> 01:06:11.640
[Intense whirring, crackling]
01:06:11.680 --> 01:06:15.360
[Tessa] It's the kind of arrangement
that no other industry benefits from.
01:06:22.680 --> 01:06:24.960
[Whirring, crackling continue]
01:06:26.520 --> 01:06:29.880
[Jake] We need to transition, we need
to get the manufacturing side onshore.
01:06:31.920 --> 01:06:34.760
For decommissioning oil and gas,
we could recycle the steel,
01:06:34.800 --> 01:06:37.960
and we could build jackets for turbines.
01:06:38.000 --> 01:06:40.520
We could...build the turbines.
01:06:40.560 --> 01:06:42.880
[Wind turbines whir]
01:06:45.400 --> 01:06:47.880
[Whirring continues]
01:06:49.880 --> 01:06:53.160
[Jake] Right now,
the future of North Sea oil...
01:06:53.200 --> 01:06:55.800
is in the hands of the investment houses.
01:06:57.800 --> 01:07:02.680
As the oil and gas depletes in the UK now,
01:07:02.720 --> 01:07:05.880
the majors aren't
making enough quick enough.
01:07:05.920 --> 01:07:09.960
And as their assets get older,
they've got to spend more money on them,
01:07:10.000 --> 01:07:12.000
and they don't want
to be doing that either.
01:07:15.160 --> 01:07:17.680
So, what we've got now are...
01:07:17.720 --> 01:07:20.640
investment houses
looking to make a quick buck.
01:07:22.160 --> 01:07:25.280
As we move forward
with the whole climate debate,
01:07:25.320 --> 01:07:29.600
you're going to see
these investment houses
01:07:29.640 --> 01:07:34.760
being exposed and attacked
for continuing to invest in oil and gas.
01:07:34.800 --> 01:07:37.200
[Gloomy music]
01:07:41.160 --> 01:07:43.440
[Jake] These investment houses...
01:07:43.480 --> 01:07:45.320
are going to think twice,
01:07:45.360 --> 01:07:48.320
and a lot of them
are just going to pull the plug.
01:07:48.360 --> 01:07:50.040
And if they pull the plug...
01:07:51.360 --> 01:07:53.600
..that ends operations here.
01:07:53.640 --> 01:07:57.400
[Seagulls caw in distance]
01:07:57.440 --> 01:07:59.720
[Jake] That...shuts it down.
01:07:59.760 --> 01:08:01.920
[Music continues]
01:08:06.080 --> 01:08:08.240
[Jake] Oil and gas workers,
now, are very worried
01:08:08.280 --> 01:08:10.440
about what the future holds for them.
01:08:14.480 --> 01:08:18.600
Technology, the ability, the core skills,
01:08:18.640 --> 01:08:21.040
the infrastructure, the...
01:08:21.080 --> 01:08:23.840
the supply chain companies,
they're all here.
01:08:23.880 --> 01:08:27.960
They can all deliver...on...
01:08:28.000 --> 01:08:29.720
what we need to do
in the renewable sector,
01:08:29.760 --> 01:08:33.440
whether it's carbon capture,
whether it's hydrogen production.
01:08:35.440 --> 01:08:37.800
We can do it all...
01:08:37.840 --> 01:08:39.320
given the chance.
01:08:39.360 --> 01:08:41.360
[Music continues]
01:08:43.480 --> 01:08:46.440
[Music continues, seagulls]
01:08:46.480 --> 01:08:49.800
[James] You see, the big oil companies,
they're now beginning to sell up...
01:08:49.840 --> 01:08:52.320
- [Ship's horn blares]
- ..and move away.
01:08:53.600 --> 01:08:57.800
And in their place come
a whole range of much smaller companies.
01:08:57.840 --> 01:08:59.760
So, those are private equity companies
01:08:59.800 --> 01:09:05.520
who are owned by private individuals
based in, say, for example,
01:09:05.560 --> 01:09:09.680
- Switzerland or the USA or Russia.
- [Percussive music]
01:09:09.720 --> 01:09:15.000
And there's... And also,
state-owned companies such as Malaysia,
01:09:15.040 --> 01:09:19.520
Abu Dhabi, but also China and Iran.
01:09:19.560 --> 01:09:22.520
Well, the Chinese National
Offshore Oil Company
01:09:22.560 --> 01:09:25.960
has three major oil fields
in the North Sea.
01:09:26.000 --> 01:09:29.200
Telford, Golden Eagle and Buzzard.
01:09:29.240 --> 01:09:33.600
Buzzard is the highest producing oil field
in the UK North Sea.
01:09:33.640 --> 01:09:38.040
So, China has an increasingly
important role to play
01:09:38.080 --> 01:09:40.560
in the future of this area.
01:09:40.600 --> 01:09:44.920
And that's an important thing
when we think about, how much control
01:09:44.960 --> 01:09:50.600
do we, as British citizens,
have over the future of the North Sea?
01:09:51.960 --> 01:09:53.840
If, say, for example, people in Scotland
01:09:53.880 --> 01:09:59.960
say, "We don't want that oil exploited
because of climate change," or whatever,
01:10:00.000 --> 01:10:04.200
then the UK would have to compensate
01:10:04.240 --> 01:10:08.640
the Chinese National Oil Company
and, effectively, the Chinese state
01:10:08.680 --> 01:10:11.080
for tearing up the contract
that it's made with them.
01:10:11.120 --> 01:10:12.920
[Music continues]
01:10:12.960 --> 01:10:14.840
[James] Which means that it is
01:10:14.880 --> 01:10:18.840
more and more removed
from government control
01:10:18.880 --> 01:10:21.800
and democratic control
and public scrutiny.
01:10:21.840 --> 01:10:24.560
[Music continues]
01:10:26.760 --> 01:10:29.720
[Music subsides;
Eerie, reverberant hum]
01:10:36.040 --> 01:10:39.960
[James] About two thirds
of the oil that we produce
01:10:40.000 --> 01:10:43.320
is being exported to countries such as...
01:10:43.360 --> 01:10:46.400
China and the US,
01:10:46.440 --> 01:10:50.240
and not used to be refined here
on the UK mainland...
01:10:51.720 --> 01:10:56.760
..which undermines the argument that this
is important for UK energy security.
01:11:08.880 --> 01:11:11.320
[Dylan] I think we'll look back
on this era as the good old days
01:11:11.360 --> 01:11:15.120
before everything goes insane
and we can't even stop it anymore.
01:11:15.160 --> 01:11:18.480
And I think there's going to be a lot
of resentment from future generations,
01:11:18.520 --> 01:11:21.320
'cause we really are at the last point
where we can change things.
01:11:21.360 --> 01:11:23.840
And if we don't,
I don't think the future generations
01:11:23.880 --> 01:11:26.040
are ever really going to be able
to forgive us.
01:11:26.080 --> 01:11:28.280
Yeah, they're going to blame us,
01:11:28.320 --> 01:11:30.760
and we're not even
the ones in control here.
01:11:30.800 --> 01:11:33.200
[Traffic hums]
01:11:34.720 --> 01:11:37.320
[Seagulls caw in distance]
01:11:39.440 --> 01:11:41.480
We have been consistently wrong
01:11:41.520 --> 01:11:45.200
about the scale at which renewables
have become competitive.
01:11:45.240 --> 01:11:48.680
The price of solar has dropped by 80%
in the last decade.
01:11:48.720 --> 01:11:51.200
Nobody, including the world's
leading energy forecasters,
01:11:51.240 --> 01:11:53.440
saw that coming.
01:11:53.480 --> 01:11:56.520
[Wind rushes softly]
01:11:56.560 --> 01:12:01.120
[Tessa] So, to continue to lock in
our dependency on oil and gas
01:12:01.160 --> 01:12:04.960
because we think that in 30 years' time
we might still need it,
01:12:05.000 --> 01:12:07.000
is a huge mistake.
01:12:07.040 --> 01:12:09.040
[Soft music]
01:12:28.800 --> 01:12:30.800
[Music continues]
01:12:35.120 --> 01:12:39.640
[Kevin] Compared with digging deep
beneath the North Sea to produce this,
01:12:39.680 --> 01:12:42.360
you know, quite challenging material...
01:12:42.400 --> 01:12:45.240
[Music continues]
01:12:45.280 --> 01:12:50.200
[Kevin] ..to then pipe it, day after day,
year after year, decade after decade,
01:12:50.240 --> 01:12:53.160
to huge refineries
that then convert this black goo
01:12:53.200 --> 01:12:55.760
into all sorts of amazing products,
one way or another.
01:12:55.800 --> 01:12:58.360
That we've managed to do that
is incredible.
01:12:58.400 --> 01:13:00.520
[Music continues]
01:13:03.000 --> 01:13:06.960
[Kevin] And then you look at the renewable
industry now that's developing.
01:13:07.000 --> 01:13:09.000
It looks so much simpler
01:13:09.040 --> 01:13:11.960
than this oil industry
that we've completely normalised.
01:13:13.120 --> 01:13:15.640
And I look at the skills
that we have offshore,
01:13:15.680 --> 01:13:19.240
that degree of, sort of, you know,
engineering understanding and so forth.
01:13:19.280 --> 01:13:22.480
You think, "If we applied
that to the renewables,
01:13:22.520 --> 01:13:24.560
"we could deliver a renewable renaissance,
01:13:24.600 --> 01:13:29.600
"or a new renewal conversion
from fossil fuels
01:13:29.640 --> 01:13:33.400
"far more quickly than we ever built
the fossil fuel industry."
01:13:33.440 --> 01:13:35.480
[Music continues]
01:13:49.640 --> 01:13:51.640
[Music continues]
01:14:06.400 --> 01:14:08.400
[Music subsides]
01:14:13.600 --> 01:14:15.800
[Steve] We need
every institution of finance,
01:14:15.840 --> 01:14:19.480
be they insurers
or fund managers or banks,
01:14:19.520 --> 01:14:21.840
the OECD, the World Bank, the IMF,
01:14:21.880 --> 01:14:23.560
we all need to work collectively
01:14:23.600 --> 01:14:26.840
to make sure that we rebase
global economic growth
01:14:26.880 --> 01:14:29.480
so that it's no longer
powered by fossil fuels.
01:14:29.520 --> 01:14:31.520
[Traffic hums]
01:14:34.560 --> 01:14:39.200
[Steve] If we don't deliver that,
then civilisation itself is at risk.
01:14:40.920 --> 01:14:43.440
I know that sounds hyperbolic,
but it is a fact.
01:14:43.480 --> 01:14:45.120
[Plane engine roars]
01:14:57.440 --> 01:15:00.560
[Steve] Oil was discovered in 1859.
01:15:00.600 --> 01:15:06.600
At that time, there were about
800 whaling vessels in the world.
01:15:06.640 --> 01:15:11.200
And that was how we powered
light in cities - whale oil.
01:15:13.240 --> 01:15:15.880
[Gloomy music]
01:15:15.920 --> 01:15:21.880
[Steve] About ten years later,
half of that whaling fleet was worthless
01:15:21.920 --> 01:15:24.040
because nobody needed the whales anymore.
01:15:24.080 --> 01:15:25.520
It's going to take a lot longer,
01:15:25.560 --> 01:15:32.240
But the rigs of today can be equated
to the whaling vessels of 150 years ago.
01:15:32.280 --> 01:15:34.280
[Music continues]
01:15:43.520 --> 01:15:45.560
[Kevin] This period
of burning fossil fuels,
01:15:45.600 --> 01:15:49.520
of really taking what has been
millions and millions of years
01:15:49.560 --> 01:15:53.480
of laying down the carbon
through natural processes
01:15:53.520 --> 01:15:56.800
and suddenly releasing it
virtually overnight,
01:15:56.840 --> 01:15:59.240
that's a very short timeframe.
01:15:59.280 --> 01:16:03.200
So, to assume that we can't live
as humans without fossil fuels
01:16:03.240 --> 01:16:06.160
completely misunderstands
that we have done so in the past...
01:16:08.920 --> 01:16:11.080
..and that we will have to in the future.
01:16:11.120 --> 01:16:13.120
[Music continues]
01:16:19.880 --> 01:16:21.880
[Music continues]
01:16:26.640 --> 01:16:32.760
[James] We're embedded
in the physical realm of the oil machine,
01:16:32.800 --> 01:16:36.600
but we're also embedded
in the emotional world of that.
01:16:36.640 --> 01:16:38.640
[music]
01:16:42.800 --> 01:16:45.640
[James] Makes the way we think
and that makes the way we feel.
01:16:45.680 --> 01:16:47.280
[Music continues]
01:17:02.000 --> 01:17:05.280
[James] The difficulties
of getting out of oil...
01:17:05.320 --> 01:17:10.760
is that it feels like
life is going to be more...deprived.
01:17:12.640 --> 01:17:14.880
And we're frightened of that.
01:17:14.920 --> 01:17:16.920
[Music continues]
01:17:34.000 --> 01:17:36.000
[Music continues]
01:17:38.040 --> 01:17:42.920
[James] Our desires are often made
possible by a level of energy consumption.
01:17:45.560 --> 01:17:47.560
[Music continues]
01:17:57.520 --> 01:17:59.520
[Music continues]
01:18:02.320 --> 01:18:05.520
[Reflective music]
01:18:09.880 --> 01:18:12.360
[James] We've been in a phase of oil.
01:18:14.960 --> 01:18:16.880
We have to go beyond it.
01:18:23.400 --> 01:18:26.000
We have to find a way
out the other side of it.
01:18:30.480 --> 01:18:33.640
That will lead us
to learning new ways of being.
01:18:33.680 --> 01:18:35.680
[Music continues]
01:18:48.000 --> 01:18:50.960
[Muffled, reverberant bubbling]
01:18:52.440 --> 01:18:54.440
[Music subsides]
01:18:59.600 --> 01:19:01.600
[Bubbling continues]
01:19:52.600 --> 01:19:54.800
[Bubbling subsides]
01:21:09.960 --> 01:21:12.960
Descriptive subtitles by Matchbox Cinesub
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 81 minutes
Date: 2023
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 10-12, College, Adults
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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