The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

the Petroleum Papers: Inside Far-Right Conspiracy to Cover Up Climate Change
the Petroleum Papers: Inside Far-Right Conspiracy to Cover Up Climate Change

the Petroleum Papers: Inside Far-Right Conspiracy to Cover Up Climate Change in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $19.99
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: Audiobook

Get it at Barnes and Noble
A
WASHINGTON POST
BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
"An essential read."—
The Washington Post
"Essential… This book belongs on the shelf next to
Merchants of Doubt
,
Dark Money
, and
Kochland
."
—Roy Scranton, author of
Learning to Die in the Anthropocene
"The petroleum industry is guilty of a Big Tobacco–style public cover-up, according to this vivid exposé."

Publishers Weekly
STARRED Review
Burning fossil fuels will cause catastrophic global warming: this is what top American oil executives were told by scientists in 1959. But they ignored that warning. Instead, they developed one of the biggest, most polluting oil sources in the world—the oil sands in Alberta, Canada. As investigative journalist Geoff Dembicki reveals in this explosive book, the decades-long conspiracy to keep the oil sands flowing into the U.S. would turn out to be one of the biggest reasons for the world’s failure to stop the climate crisis.
In
The Petroleum Papers
, Dembicki draws from confidential oil industry documents to uncover for the first time how companies like Exxon, Koch Industries, and Shell built a global right-wing echo chamber to protect oil sands profits—a misinformation campaign that continues to this day. He also tells the high-stakes stories of people fighting back: a Seattle lawyer who brought down Big Tobacco and is now going after Big Oil, a Filipina activist whose family drowned in a climate disaster, and a former Exxon engineer pushed out for asking hard questions.
With experts now warning we have less than a decade to get global emissions under control,
provides a step-by-step account of how we got to this precipice—and the politicians and companies who deserve our blame.
Published in Partnership with the David Suzuki Institute
Powered by Adeptmind