Juan Cole on Bill Gates, Hurricane Melissa and the pro-billionaire high-tech sector.

Eyewall of Melissa photographed by U.S. Air Force 53rd WRS “Hurricane Hunters” on Oct. 27. (Lt. Col. Mark Withee/U.S. Air Force/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain)
By Juan Cole
TomDispatch.com
In late October, Hurricane Melissa (that should have been called “Godzilla”) battered western Jamaica with 185-mile-an-hour winds.
It tossed the roofs of buildings about like splintering javelins, demolished municipal buildings and hospitals, snapped telephone poles like matchsticks, flattened crops, and dumped torrential floodwaters everywhere, leaving $8 billion in damage.
That Category 5 storm’s unprecedented ferocity was driven by an overheated Caribbean Sea, produced by 275 years of industrial civilization that has spewed obscene amounts of heat-trapping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere annually.
The same week that U.N. officials spoke of an “apocalypse” in Jamaica, American billionaire Bill Gates expressed a certain unease about officials and scientists concerned with climate change who, he thought, were being hysterical. He urged them to chill the hell out.
It was an arrogant and manipulative oracle, uttered with all the privilege of the world’s 19th richest man. A symbol of monopoly capitalism, his individual net worth rivals the annual gross domestic product of the Dominican Republic.
And when he responded to Hurricane Melissa, he did so (not surprisingly, I suppose) in the narrow sectional interests of the world’s wealthiest class in Silicon Valley.
‘My House Is a Rubbish Heap’
Gates rejects the view that climate change “will decimate civilization,” insisting instead that it “will not lead to humanity’s demise.” Of course, no one in the scientific community had argued that climate change would actually wipe out humankind, so he is indeed (and all too conveniently) attacking a straw man.
That he resorted to a description of such fallacious relevance shows how intent he is on engaging in a bad-faith argument. And that, in turn, raises the question of his motivation. After all, the possible decimation of civilization, as did indeed occur in parts of Jamaica recently, is quite different from the full-scale extinction of the human species, and it certainly raises questions of equity.
The nearly half a million Jamaicans who will be without electricity for weeks and who may face severe food shortages because of crop damage will, of course, not be enjoying much in the way of “civilization”
Hurricane Melissa left dozens dead and widespread destruction across Cuba, Jamaica and Haiti on Wednesday
Wealthiest 0.1% of US who burn carbon at 4,000 times the rate of world’s poorest 10% are fueling the climate crisis causing death and destruction https://t.co/vhMNZpY0Lp pic.twitter.com/zPoDOeLkTW— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) October 30, 2025
In the wake of Melissa, as Sherlette Wheelan of that island’s Westmoreland Parish said, “My house is like a rubbish heap, completely gone. If it wasn’t for the shelter manager, I don’t know what I would’ve done. She found space for me and others, even though her own roof was gone.”
And imagine this: the hurricanes of the future world we’re now creating by burning such quantities of fossil fuels, in which temperatures could rise by a disastrous 3 degrees Celsius, are likely to be so gargantuan as to make our present behemoths look sickly. Melissa was already a third more powerful than it would have been without climate breakdown. Heat up the Caribbean Sea even more, and the power of storm winds won’t increase on a gentle slope but exponentially.
Scientists are already suggesting that we need a new Category 6 classification for such hurricanes, since our present 5 categories are inadequate, given their increasing power. Remember, at present, with Melissas already appearing, we have only experienced a global 1.3 degrees Celsius increase in temperature over the preindustrial norm. At issue is the quality of life and the degree of civilization that will be possible in a world where the temperature increase could be at least double that.
Demand for Data Centers Cannot Be Met Sustainably

Bill Gates at the U.N. climate conference, COP28, in Dubai, Dec. 5, 2023. (U.K. Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office/Flickr/By Ben Dance / Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY 2.0)
A decade ago, many of the companies in Silicon Valley seemed willing to take on the role of climate champions. Microsoft, where Gates made his career, pledged to be carbon negative by 2030. Jeff Bezos’s Amazon has already put more than 30,000 electric vehicles on the road and has pledged to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2040.
In general, you would think that Silicon Valley would be pro-science and hence willing to combat the use of fossil fuels and so the worsening of climate change. After all, the industry depends on basic scientific research, much of it produced by government-funded scientists.
As it turns out, though, the high-tech sector that has produced so many billionaires is instead simply pro-billionaire. This year, we were treated to the spectacle of future trillionaire Elon Musk, while still working with Donald Trump, firing 10 percent to 15 percent of all government scientists under the rubric of “the Department of Government Efficiency,” an act that, in the long run, could also help destroy American scientific and technological superiority.
Climate scientists were especially targeted. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency is now so understaffed that the carnage of Hurricane Melissa had to be monitored by volunteers.
The high-tech world’s abrupt turn to a rabid anti-science stance is likely the result of the emergence of large language models (also known as “artificial intelligence” or AI) and a consequent new romance with the burning of fossil fuels.
This development made Nvidia, which produces the graphics-processing units that run much of AI, the first $5 trillion company. That AI has not yet proven able to increase productivity or produce any measurable added value has not stopped the hype around it from driving the biggest securities bubble since the late 1990s.
The AI phenomenon may functionally print money for tech billionaires, at least for the time being, but it comes with a gargantuan environmental cost. Its data centers are water and energy hogs and are poised to use ever more fossil fuels and so increase global carbon emissions significantly.
MIT researchers estimate that “by 2026, the electricity consumption of data centers is expected to approach 1,050 terawatt-hours,” rivaling that of the energy consumption of whole countries like Japan or Russia.
By 2030, it’s estimated that at least a tenth of electricity demand is likely to be driven by new data centers. MIT’s Noman Bashir concludes ominously,
“The demand for new data centers cannot be met in a sustainable way. The pace at which companies are building new data centers means the bulk of the electricity to power them must come from fossil fuel-based power plants.”
Bashir’s analysis provides us with the smoking gun for solving the mystery of why the high-tech sector is now trying to kill climate science. Suddenly, Silicon Valley has a monetary reason for wanting to slow down the global movement to reduce the use of fossil fuels (no matter the cost of heating this planet to the boiling point), allying it with Big Oil in that regard.
Scientists Michael E. Mann and Peter Hotez have analyzed this sort of billionaire-driven anti-intellectualism in their seminal new book Science Under Siege.
Turbocharging the Climate

Elon Musk with President Donald Trump with and a Tesla on the South Lawn, March 11. (White House/Molly Riley/Public Domain)
One of Bill Gates’s half-truths is that there is good news about our climate progress and so no grounds for doomsaying. It certainly is true that we now have the levers to limit climate damage. That, however, doesn’t change our need to jolt the world aggressively with those very levers.
The United Nations has recently concluded that we are indeed on a path to limit (if, under the circumstances, that’s even an adequate word for it) global heating to 2.8 degrees Celsius over the preindustrial average, if the countries of the world were to continue with their current policies, which reflect, however modestly, the global consensus that grew out of the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change.
Before that milestone, the world was marching toward an increase of 3.5º Celsius or more in the average surface temperature of the globe by 2100. The reduction in that projection, achieved over a decade, certainly represents genuine progress and should be celebrated, but the one thing it should not be used for (as Gates indeed does) is as an excuse for now slacking off.
The world’s peoples could shave another significant half a degree off that number if they simply met their Paris Agreement Nationally Determined Contributions, or NDCs.
But even were they indeed to be faithful to their promises, we’re being taken inexorably toward at least a 2.3º Celsius global heat increase and, to put that in perspective, climate scientists worry that anything above 1.5º Celsius could ensure that the world’s climate will become devastatingly more chaotic.
Imagine repeated Hurricane Melissa, far more turbocharged and striking not just islands in the Caribbean but, say, the U.S. Atlantic coast.
Just as we can’t afford to give in to a sense of doom, we can’t afford to be Pollyannas either. The news already isn’t good and we in the United States in the age of Donald Trump are now facing ever stronger headwinds against climate action.
His Republican Party has, of course, enacted wide-ranging pro-carbon policies that will take effect next year and will also take pressure off China and the European Union to accelerate their paths to end the use of fossil fuels. Nor is it likely that the U.N. projections have truly reckoned with the coming proliferation of dirty data centers globally.
Worse yet, even before that hits, the world hasn’t found a way to get on a trajectory that is likely to truly decrease carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions substantially. In fact, the International Energy Agency has reported that “total energy-related CO2 emissions increased by 0.8 percent in 2024, hitting an all-time high of 37.8 Gt [gigatons] CO2.”
In other words, we’re still putting more CO2 into the atmosphere in each succeeding year. It’s only the rate of increase that has slowed somewhat.
And that’s not the end of the bad news either. The 2.8-degree Celsius (5-degree Fahrenheit) increase toward which we’re still headed poses tremendous dangers. The numbers may not sound that dauntingly large, but remember, we’re talking about a global average of surface temperatures.
If the average temperature goes up 5º F, that increase could translate into double-digit rises in places like Miami, Florida, and Basra, Iraq. And scientists now believe that, if cities with humidity levels of 80 percent experience a temperature of 122º F., that combination could be fatal to us humans.

Officials with the Ministry of Health of Jamaica and Pan American Health Organization assess the damage on public health infrastructure after Hurricane Melissa, Oct. 29, 2025.
(PAHO/Flickr/CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Scientists have a formula for combining humidity and temperature, yielding what they call a “wet bulb” temperature. We cool off by sweating and letting the moisture evaporate from our skins, but that kind of heat and humidity would prevent such a cooling process from kicking in, which could mean that we humans would essentially be cooked to death.
And the danger won’t only be in places like the Gulf of Mexico and similar regions. As NASA warns, “Within 50 years, Midwestern states like Arkansas, Missouri, and Iowa will likely hit the critical wet-bulb temperature limit.”
In short, significant parts of this planet could be turned into what might be thought of as the Hot Tub of Death.
And with that comes, of course, the possibility of now almost inconceivable mega-storms, droughts, wildfires, and sea-level rise. It’s already projected that, by 2050, only 25 years from now, 200 million people annually will need humanitarian assistance to deal with an increasingly raging climate.
That would be a billion people every decade.
Davy Jones’ Locker
In a sense, we’ve lucked out so far because until now so much carbon dioxide has been absorbed by the oceans and other carbon sinks on this planet. On the old, cold Earth of preindustrial times, half of the carbon dioxide produced went into the oceans or was absorbed on land by rainforests, chemical weathering, or rock formations.
But the absorptive capacity of the oceans is now decreasing, which means that, if humanity continues to burn staggering quantities of fossil fuels and emit staggering amounts of CO2, we’ll overtax the capacity of the planet’s major carbon sink and ever more new carbon dioxide could then stay in the atmosphere, heating the globe for thousands of years.
The oceans absorb carbon dioxide in more than one way. Carbon dioxide mixes with cold sea water to form carbonic acid, which then splits into hydrogen and bicarbonate ions and the bicarbonate tends to stay in the water. More hydrogen, however, makes the oceans more acidic, which is not good for the marine life on which so many of us depend for food.
Some carbon is also used up by phytoplankton for photosynthesis, turning it into organic matter that is then eaten by other sea creatures and which also ultimately sinks to the ocean floor. But note that the oceans simply can’t take in infinite amounts of carbon dioxide.
And if the increasing acidity of the ocean or its rising surface heat kill off a lot of phytoplankton, then their role in absorbing carbon will decline and ever more CO2 will stay in the atmosphere.
Some 90 percent of global heating is still absorbed by the world’s oceans, the surfaces of which are experiencing rapidly rising temperatures — and the hotter their surfaces get, the less carbon they can bury in Davy Jones’ locker because the water beneath them is growing ever more alkaline.
The Blue Screen of Death
Billionaire Bill Gates carps that a “doomsday outlook” is causing climate activists to “focus too much on near-term emissions goals.” Well, he’s wrong. The focus on near-term emissions goals comes from science. Gates doesn’t even mention the phrase “carbon budget” in his blog entry, which is telling.
After all, we are definitely in a race against time — and there’s no certainty that we’ll win. There is only so much carbon dioxide we can put into the atmosphere if we want to keep the increase in temperature under 1.5º C. And more than that is likely to cause weird, unexpected, and distinctly unpleasant changes in the world’s climate system.
Unfortunately, as of 2025, we can only put 130 billion more tons of CO2 into the atmosphere and still meet that goal. At our current rate of emissions, we would use up that budget in — can you believe it? — just three years. What if we want to hold the line at 1.7º C? That budget would be exceeded in only nine years. So, the urgency climate activists feel in limiting short-term emissions derives from a knowledge that we’re rapidly depleting our carbon budget.
Most estimates are that, at current rates of emissions, we’ll use up the carbon budget for limiting warming to 2º C by 2050. Moreover, we will start losing a friend we had in that endeavor. The Earth’s biggest carbon sink, the oceans, will gradually cease being able to take up CO2 in the same quantities.
If cutting our use of fossil fuels means slowing (or even stopping) the rollout of AI data centers, inconveniencing Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and the rest of the crew, well, too bad. AI has its uses, but we clearly don’t need so much more of it desperately enough to thoroughly wreck our planet.
For a couple of decades, when I used a computer with Bill Gates’s Microsoft operating system, I would occasionally lose a day’s work because it abruptly crashed (through no fault of my own). We used to call that malfunction “the blue screen of death.”
We don’t need the same thing to happen to the planet’s climate. As climate scientist Michael E. Mann has pointed out, once you’ve crashed this planet, unlike a computer, you won’t be able to reboot it.
Juan Cole, a TomDispatch regular, is the Richard P. Mitchell collegiate professor of history at the University of Michigan. He is the author of The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam: A New Translation From the Persian and Muhammad: Prophet of Peace Amid the Clash of Empires. His latest book is Peace Movements in Islam. His award-winning blog is Informed Comment. He is also a non-resident Fellow of the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies in Doha and of Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN).
This article is from TomDispatch.com.
The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.
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to Riva Enteen You are absolutely correct. Countries which put the dollars and comforts of the megarich plunderers ahead of their population will suffer horrible devastation. Been true for decades if not centuries.
My sympathies and I hope you are safe.
Rafi. Yes indeed. One of the great curses devastating the world is the Milton F’ing Freidman “Chicago School” philosophy of lawlessness. Read up on what really happened in Chile.
As for wonderful Jaques Cousteau – yes he warned us many many years ago: It’s the pollution dammit!!! Why people avoid this truth I do not understand. The Baltic is toxic with horribly deformed fishlife. Much of the Middle East is polluted with depleted uranium, white phosphorus, poisoned wells, on and on. Europe wants to legalize a known carcinogenic glyphosate which has already poisoned how many thousands in USA, Brazil, etc etc. Costa Rica’s water is so polluted with toxic chemicals that it is undrinkable. (DO NOT buy produce from Costa Rica!). There is a Texas sized island of plastic floating around in the Pacific Ocean comprising plastic Coke bottles which have made Warren Buffett very rich, and for which he pays Nothing and does Nothing. On and on.
In closing: CO2 is plant food. No CO2 equals no oxygen which equals no life. Lamentably people like Juan Cole babble on about CO2 with not a word about the pollution which is killing the world, and not a word about
how to clean up, much less plan for a safe future for human beings, not just rich psychopaths. One almost wonders who is paying these CO2 mouthpieces to ignore and avoid the pollution. The megarich have no intention of paying one cent to cleanup. Did you ever hear Buffett announce a plan to clean up his plastic pollution? Has Gates announced a fund to eliminate glyphosate, clean the land, and compensate the injured? After all he has made billions on Monsanto/Bayer.
OK end of rant. Peace.
As a resident of Jamaica, I think Cole misses the point. Aside from many natural factors impacting climate, such as sun spots and underwater volcanoes (hxxps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHSoxioQtwZcqdt3LK6d66tMreI4gqIC-), the entrenched problem is how capitalism deals with disasters. Socialist Cuba prepares for hurricanes, safely and respectfully evacuates masses of people, and helps them rebuild afterwards. In Jamaica, there was minimal prep, with some shelters opened, and the aftermath is a disaster. A month after Melissa, people still don’t have enough water, food or medicine. There will be a massive homeless problem, which the government is barely acknowledging, so has no solutions for (other than a few thousand container homes). Under socialist PM Michael Manley, the Jamaican military helped people build solid homes, not as hurricane relief, but as a function of government. Unfortunately, Manley was too close to Fidel Castro, so Kissinger arranged his electoral defeat. Jamaicans who remember Manley said of course he would help build homes after Melissa, because he cared about the people. That is the lesson from Melissa. The climate questions seems quite secondary.
There’s another factor–economic beliefs. The dominant philosophy now is from the Chicago School of Economics as founded by Milton Friedman. The same who was an advisor to Pinochet because “democracy interferes with Market efficiency.” There is little, if any, empirical evidence to support its ideas; therefore its predictions have been spectacularly wrong. So much for its claim to be scientific. It’s really no more than a deep hatred of Keynesianism and the New Deal.
There are Chi School analyses of climate change. Like the rest of its arguments, it simply starts with its own assumptions. So it uses a model based on a slow arithmetic rise. Therefore the costs of amelioration are much too costly and far too disruptive to the econ system locally and globally. In contrast, extensive empirical data from all over the world are showing a rapid and logarithmic rising curve.
The Austrian school is a related econ philosophy. It’s closest to the libertarian beliefs of the techies. Deeply suspicious of any government interference, including regulations, which are defined as limits on freedom. Basically a more articulate version of Ayn Rand’s novels–those turgid fantasies of the self-made powerful individualist not weighed down by emotions. Or by the mewling cries of the masses who are no more than a useless drag on their productive betters.
‘Gates rejects the view that climate change “will decimate civilization,” insisting instead that it “will not lead to humanity’s demise.” Of course, no one in the scientific community had argued that climate change would actually wipe out humankind, so he is indeed (and all too conveniently) attacking a straw man.’
Deep ecologists have argued this since Arne Næss coined the term, and that if man continues its course and piling endless bodies onto an already sinking ship, it will lead to the collapse of the biosphere and the death of all life.
As one of his foremost disciples, Pentti Linkola — who was Finland’s foremost naturalist and environmental activist, and by far the most controversial, yet who did more than any other starting an organisation to buy forests to protect them from private corporations, and who lived by example as a fisherman as he grew up with very little technology — once wrote privately in a letter, illustrative of this community’s views (of which he was certainly a part, if not the broader “scientific community” as a dropout who preferred to do real work to help the environment) when not tempered for public expectations: “What to do, when a ship carrying a hundred passengers suddenly capsizes and only one lifeboat? When the lifeboat is full, those who hate life will try to load it with more people and sink the lot. Those who love and respect life will take the ship’s axe and sever the extra hands that cling to the sides of the boat.”
I cannot take seriously anyone who anoints themselves representative of the entire “scientific community” and then only selectively tells facts and misrepresents the truth, all to suit their particular ideological agenda. As I once read Robert Parry quoted as saying on CN (may be a paraphrase, from memory): “I don’t care what the truth is. I care *what* the truth is.”
And whether or not the biosphere faces imminent collapse like deep ecologists claim — the public misunderstands “imminent” because they are not thinking on the timespan of scientists and not of the public whose attention spans have been observed to be lower than goldfish, but some estimates are as soon as by next century — it is certainly true this is not an uncommon view among such fields of scientists (e.g ecologists), particularly those who are also naturalists; and among environmentalists as well who may not be scientists, but their influence arguably more significant.
Among the environmental movement’s greatest issues, in my opinion, are such refusals to reckon with apparently conflicting information and truths, and genuine uncertainties and disagreements even among scientists; to engage in critical thinking. Instead, there is this attempt to rely on appeals to authority and thinking of human beings in the way Orwell derides in his “Notes on Nationalism” essay, of thinking of humans as like masses of insects; such use of “the scientific community” as if it is some eusocial insect colony is a perfect example of what Orwell meant.
I take heed of what Jacques Cousteau said before his death 28 years ago. He said that due to the state of the oceans (pollution) planet earth had 50, 100, 150 years left before its/ours demise.
In support of Valerie’s mention of Jacques (and Philippe!) Cousteau, whom I believe is the very first person to capture humanity’s attention of the fragility of the one Ocean, I quote two of my favorite scientists, when it comes to humanity’s responsibility, and our constant ‘want’ of more “data” as an excuse to deny/delay the obvious, because of our fear to confront it, which only exacerbates the planet’s demise:
“The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the level of thinking that created them.”—Albert Einstein
“The absence of evidence is not evidence of its absence.”—Carl Sagan
Highly recommend Roy Scranton’s recent book, “Impasse”. It asks that the world finally become courageously honest enough to replace the rose-colored-glasses of saccharin optimism for more realistic negativism, in order to be able to finally confront what humanity has created: A catastrophe in the making, here and now!! A future based on lazy-thinking and “hope” will not save us!
—————————————————————DE-POPULATE!——————————————————————-
Great quotes Sean. And to think that in 1948 there were only two and half billion people on the planet.
Thank you, Juan, for justified anger, and exposing Gates for his timely, dangerously disingenuous BS. Came just as COP30 commenced in support of more fossil fuel production in Amazon alone, where 10 mile swath of forest was decimated for expressway, in order that lobbyists could get there faster in order to expedite planetary destruction!
Reminder that the phytoplankton you mentioned, which are already highly compromised, produce roughly 50%(!!) of the oxygen the planet breathes to survive. Can we not even appreciate how dependent we are on the immense ‘gift’ this tiny organism creates for us?!
No mention of coral reefs and marine life, although their home is (ab)used by a multitude of human indignities, not just carbon. Sonar, radioactive/chemical/plastic/poisonous human waste of all kinds, which include the ubiquitous Forever Chemicals, now known to reside in all global habitats, whether the air, soil, water, animal, plant. From the depths of the Mariana Trench, to the heights of the Himalaya!
Humans are a ‘sick’ virus. The earth is telling us it needs to be rid of the ‘cancer’ in order to return to health and homeostasis.
Bill Gates – great pretender of mega brain and “service”. When all is boiled down to his essence –
It’s the dollar that really and truly matters as long as it is in his hands. Some brilliant person must conceive a way to knock these members of the Fraternity of Super Rich from their perch entitling them to call the shots determining the citizenry’s (our) future.
Is there any question that their acts consistently run counter to the good, true and beautiful for all on earth?
Jamaica needs WATER NOW! All water usage requirements for Data Centers in GA are under non-disclosure agreements.
~One Love for Jamaica Relief Mission~
hxxps://www.gofundme.com/f/one-love-for-jamaica-relief-mission
For several decades the fossil fuel companies have employed the same marketing agencies used by the tobacco companies — to sow doubt and thus to maintain their own profits, regardless of the harm to others. Fossil fuels, tobacco, insurance, weapons, etc. — big companies do not pay for their externalized costs. That’s in the nature of capitalism. I wish that more climate activists would think and talk about that.