She played a crucial role in fixing the ozone hole, and has thoughts on climate change.
By Cara Buckley, The New York Times, July 18, 2024
It’s been an especially intense week, with election-related stress and political divisiveness only increasing. So, it seemed like a good time to hear from someone who has demonstrated how people can come together to fix huge problems and who has also played a crucial role in helping remediate a global threat.
In the 1980s, the groundbreaking atmospheric chemist Susan Solomon pioneered our understanding that the then-gaping hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica was caused by industrial chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs. A damaged ozone layer increases ultraviolet radiation on Earth, harming humans, ecosystems, plants and animals. Dr. Solomon’s work underpins the Montreal Protocol, which banned 99 percent of ozone-depleting substances. Ratified by every country on the planet, the agreement is reversing the harms done to the ozone layer and is considered one of the most successful environmental treaties in history.
In her latest book, “Solvable: How We Healed the Earth, and How We Can Do it Again,” which was published last month, Dr. Solomon, who teaches at M.I.T., argues that we can learn from past environmental fights. Public awareness and consumer pressure can influence lawmakers, she says, and lead to positive change.
Here are excerpts from our interview, edited and condensed for clarity.
Why this book and why now?
People need to have some hope. We imagine that we never solve anything, that we have all these horrific problems and they’re just getting worse and worse and worse. I’m not going to say we don’t have any problems. We do. But it’s really important to go back and look at how much we succeeded in the past and what are the common threads of those successes.
The chemical companies’ pushback to reining in CFCs is arguably minimal compared to resistance from oil and gas companies to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. And the ozone issue didn’t have quite the same fervent political and polarized dissent from the public around it. Are these apples and apples comparisons?
No doubt, climate change is probably the heaviest lift we’ve ever attempted, just because energy is so embedded in the economy. Countries that use more fossil fuel energy are generally richer. There’s almost a linear relationship between how much you emit and how rich you are.
The key thing is how much technologies have changed. It follows from public opinion. It follows from the extent to which the public is actually demanding it. Sixty percent of the American public believes the climate is changing and that it’s caused mainly by human activities, according to current polls. I would argue the paralysis hasn’t been as bad as people think it has been. And with CFCs, the companies actually did resist quite a bit.
I recognize that there were ozone wars. But it was a smaller market and they could shift to other chemicals. This seems bigger and a bit scarier.
I think the smog issue was a better analog. In 1970, when the Clean Air Act was passed, the auto industry was one of the most profitable industries in the United States. They did not want to change. They pushed back like crazy. But there was a massive amount of popular will. There was therefore bipartisan support. Ultimately, it happened because of popular support and clever technology forcing policies that could flow from that support.
The Supreme Court recently threw out the Chevron deference, which will almost certainly weaken or eliminate limits on water and air pollution, toxic chemical regulations, and policies that tackle climate change. So, how do we square that with the idea of hope for the planet?
I am scared about Chevron and was pretty appalled by that decision. It remains to be seen how much it’s really going to affect things, because if it moves forward the way the worst projections are suggesting, it will completely paralyze the courts. And that’s not viable, either.
At that point, I think Congress will have to go back and create a new law that will modify some form of Chevron. So to me, the only question is, how long is that going to take? My gut feeling is it won’t be very long. It depends on your definition of long.
I think fortunately, in a way, the globalization of economies is going to continue to put pressure on America to meet standards in other parts of the world.
Despite an increase in renewable energy, the world is not decreasing overall fossil fuel use. We’re just using ever more energy, including now with A.I. And countries very understandably want to have this lovely developed world existence. Could it be that humans are just insatiable for energy?
When it comes to building a power plant today, in almost any country in the world, solar and wind are cheaper than fossil fuels. There’s no reason to be building more fossil fuel powered power plants except that that’s what the utilities know how to do.
The real need is in the developing countries. Those are the countries where they have to be building a lot more power plants and other things in order to develop. That’s where the development needs to occur in a clean manner. If that doesn’t happen, we are in deep trouble.
You said in the book that without the right governmental structure, it’s hard to get things done. We’re looking at the prospect of a second Trump presidency, and he pulled the U.S., historically the largest emitter of greenhouse gasses, out of the Paris accord. Do you think the technological and economic genies are out of the bottle in terms of embracing green energy, or do you think that a second Trump term could do permanent or semi-permanent damage?
How do you stop the growth of renewable power plants if they’re cheaper than fossil fuels? I’m not saying we should be sanguine. I am saying sound the alarm. Get going. Do what you need to do. Form groups. Help to create the popular will that’s going to propel this issue to where it needs to be. Sure, he may very well pull us out of the Paris Agreement again. He did it before. Did that really slow things down all that much?
The Paris Agreement is written in a clever way. It actually takes about four years after you say you’re going to pull out before you can actually do all the things that you have to do to pull out. Biden put us right back in. So we were out for like, two or three months. I’m not saying that that will have no effect. Whether or not we have a little bit of a hiatus for four years, yes, that would hurt, and climate policy would definitely be slowed down. But it’s not going to be the end of the world.
Your book is called “Solvable.” We have the data scientist Hannah Ritchie, who wrote “Not the End of the World.” We have the marine biologist, Ayana Elizabeth Johnson, whose books include “All We Can Save.” And we have the climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe highlighting solutions. I don’t want to be gender essentialist, but do you think there’s something there? When I think of the scariest books about climate change, they tend to have been written by men, to be frank.
I think women are actually pretty good problem solvers. So in all of those cases, they’re thinking about how this thing can actually end up being solved. But as a scientist, I have to say we’re dealing with a small number of statistics here.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/18/climate/susan-solomon-q-and-a.html