Thursday, August 12, 2004
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This recent article is reposted from The Nation.
... As we move into the hottest time of year here in California, it is a time
for reflection.
Boiling Point
Ross Gelbspan
Climate change is not just another issue. It is the overriding threat
facing human civilization in the twenty-first century, and so far our
institutions are doing dangerously little to address it. Americans in
particular are still in denial, thanks largely to the efforts of the
fossil-fuel industry and its allies in the Bush Administration. But the
nation's biggest environmental organizations and opposition politicians
have also displayed a disturbing lack of leadership on this crucial
challenge.
They are by no means the only roadblocks to meaningful action on
climate change. In addition to the Bush Administration and the
fossil-fuel lobby, the failure of the press to cover the climate crisis
has left the United States ten years behind the rest of the world in
addressing this issue. Given this background, the failure of
environmentalists to fill the informational and political vacuum is
especially distressing.
Over the past decade, the arguments against the reality of climate
change by the carbon lobby have been as inconsistent as the weather
itself. During the early years of the 1990s, the fossil-fuel lobby
insisted that global warming was not happening. In the face of
incontrovertible findings by the scientific community, the industry
then conceded that climate change is happening but is so
inconsequential as to be negligible. When new findings indicated that
the warming is indeed significant, the spokesmen for the coal and oil
industries then put forth the argument that global warming is good for
us.
But the central argument that big coal and big oil have spent
millions of dollars to amplify over the past decade is that the warming
is a natural phenomenon on which human beings have little or no impact.
That argument has been repeatedly discredited by the world's leading
climate scientists. Under the auspices of the United Nations, more than
2,000 scientists from 100 countries have participated over the past
fifteen years in what is most likely the largest, most rigorously
peer-reviewed scientific collaboration in history. In 1995 the
UN-sponsored panel found a "discernible human influence" on the
planet's warming climate. The scientists subsequently concluded that to
stabilize our climate requires humanity to cut its use of coal and oil
by 70 percent in a very short time.
The Kyoto Protocol, by contrast, calls for industrial countries to
cut aggregate emissions by just 5.2 percent by 2012. That is a woefully
inadequate response; as British Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted in
2002, "Even if we deliver on Kyoto, it will at best mean a reduction of
one percent in global emissions.... In truth, Kyoto is not radical
enough."
Nevertheless, the current low goals of the Protocol are championed
by many Americans who should know better, including leading Democrats
like John Kerry and virtually every national environmental
organization. Confronted by the steel wall of resistance of the
fossil-fuel lobby and their political allies, most climate activists
and sympathetic politicians have retreated into approaches that are
dismally inadequate to the magnitude of the challenge.
Around the country, advocates are working to get people to drive
less, turn down their thermostats and reduce their energy use.
Unfortunately, while many environmental problems are susceptible to
lifestyle changes, climate change is not one of them.
Several of the country's leading national environmental groups are
promoting limits for future atmospheric carbon levels that are the best
they think they can negotiate. But while those limits may be
politically realistic, they would likely be environmentally
catastrophic. Most advocates, moreover, are relying on goals and
mechanisms that were proposed about a decade ago, before the true
urgency of the climate crisis became apparent. In 2000, researchers at
the Hadley Center, Britain's main climate research institute, found
that the climate will change 50 percent more quickly than was
previously assumed. Their projections show that many of the world's
forests will begin to turn from sinks (vegetation that absorbs carbon
dioxide) to sources (which release it)--dying off and emitting
carbon--by about 2050. In 1998 a team of researchers reported in the
journal Nature
that unless the world is getting half its energy from noncarbon sources
by 2018, we will see an inevitable doubling--and possible tripling--of
atmospheric carbon levels later in this century.
Virtually all the approaches by activists in the United States,
moreover, are domestic in nature. They ignore both the world's
developing countries and, equally important from the standpoint of
national security, the oil-producing nations of the Middle East.
Ultimately, even if the United States, Europe, Canada, Australia and
Japan were to cut emissions dramatically, those cuts would be
overwhelmed by the coming increase of carbon from India, China, Mexico,
Nigeria and all the other developing countries struggling to stay ahead
of poverty.
Many alternative approaches rely on market-based solutions because
their proponents believe that, in an age of market fundamentalism, no
other approach can gain political traction. Unfortunately, nature's
laws are not about supply and demand; they are about limits, thresholds
and surprises. The progress of the Dow does not seem to influence the
increasing rate of melting of the Greenland ice sheet; the collapse of
the ecosystems of the North Sea will not be arrested by an upswing in
consumer confidence.
Many groups justify the minimalist goals of making people more
energy efficient as the first phase in building a political base for
more aggressive action. In the past, that pattern has been successful
in developing various movements. In the case of climate change,
however, nature's timetable is very different from that of political
organizers. Unfortunately, the signals from the planet tell us we do
not have the luxury of waiting another generation to allow for the
orderly maturation of a movement.
Finally, the environmental establishment insists on casting the
climate crisis as an environmental problem. But climate change is no
longer the exclusive franchise of the environmental movement. Any
successful movement must include horizontal alliances with groups
involved in international relief and development, campaign finance
reform, public health, corporate accountability, labor, human rights
and environmental justice. The real dimensions of climate change
directly affect the agendas of a wide spectrum of activist
organizations.
The environmental movement has proved it cannot accomplish large-scale
change by itself. Despite occasional spasms of cooperation, the major
environmental groups have been unwilling to join together around a
unified climate agenda, pool resources and mobilize a united campaign
on the climate. Even as the major funders of climate and
energy-oriented groups hold summit meetings in search of a common
vision, they shy away from the most obvious of imperatives: using their
combined influence and outreach to focus attention--and demand
action--on the climate crisis. As the major national groups insist on
promoting exclusive agendas and protecting carefully defined turfs (in
the process, squandering both talent and donor dollars on internecine
fighting), the climate movement is spinning its wheels.
Take the critical issue of climate stabilization--the level at which
the world agrees to cap the buildup of carbon concentrations in the
atmosphere. The major national environmental groups focusing on
climate--groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Union
of Concerned Scientists and the WWF (World Wildlife Fund)--have agreed
to accept what they see as a politically feasible target of 450 parts
per million of carbon dioxide. While the 450 goal may be politically
realistic, it would likely be environmentally catastrophic. With carbon
levels having risen by only 90 parts per million (from their
pre-industrial level of 280 ppm to more than 370 ppm today), glaciers
are now melting into puddles, sea levels are rising, violent weather is
increasing and the timing of the seasons has changed--all from a
1-degree Fahrenheit rise in the past century. Carbon concentrations of
450 ppm will most likely result in a deeply fractured and chaotic
world.
The major national environmental groups, moreover, are
trapped in a Beltway mentality that measures progress in small,
incremental victories. They are operating in a Washington environment
that is at best indifferent and at worst actively antagonistic. And too
often these organizations are at the mercy of fickle funders whose
agendas range from protecting wetlands to keeping disposable diapers
out of landfills.
The fossil-fuel lobby has hijacked America's energy and climate
policies. One appropriate response might involve environmental leaders'
forging a coalition of corporate and financial institutions of
equivalent force and influence to counteract the carbon industry's
stranglehold on Congress and the White House.
The vast majority of climate groups shun confrontation and work instead
to get people to reduce their personal energy footprints. That can
certainly help spread awareness of the issue. But by persuading
concerned citizens to cut back on their personal energy use, these
groups are promoting the implicit message that climate change can be
solved by individual resolve. It cannot. Moreover, this message blames
the victim: People are made to feel guilty if they own a gas guzzler or
live in a poorly insulated home. In fact, people should be outraged
that the government does not require automakers to sell cars that run
on clean fuels, that building codes do not reduce heating and cooling
energy requirements by 70 percent and that government energy policies
do not mandate decentralized, home-based or regional sources of clean
electricity.
What many groups offer their followers instead is the consolation of a
personal sense of righteousness that comes from living one's life a bit
more frugally. That feeling of righteousness, coincidentally, is
largely reserved for wealthier people who can afford to exercise some
control over their housing and transportation expenditures. Many poorer
people--who cannot afford to trade in their 1990 gas guzzlers for shiny
new Toyota Priuses--are deprived of the chance to enjoy the same sense
of righteousness, illusory though it may be.
Given the lock on Congress and the White House by the carbon lobby,
there is no way the US government will pursue a rapid global energy
transition without a massive uprising of popular will.
Environmentalists should therefore be forging alliances with other
activists who focus on international development, campaign finance
reform, corporate accountability, public health, labor, environmental
justice and human rights--not to mention with communities of faith--to
mobilize a broad, inclusive constituency around the issue.
The tragedy underlying the failure of the environmental community
lies in the fact that so many talented, dedicated and underpaid people
are putting their lives on the line in ways that will make little
difference to the climate crisis. They are outspoken in their despair
about what is happening to the planet. They are candid about their
acceptance of a self-defeating political realism that requires
relentless accommodation. What is missing is an expression of the rage
they all feel.
The United States did not withdraw from Vietnam because a few
individuals moved to Canada or Sweden to avoid military service or
because the leaders of the antiwar movement negotiated a reduction of
the bombing runs over Vietnam. The United States left Vietnam because a
sustained uprising of popular will forced one President of the United
States to drop his plans for re-election and pressured his successor to
scramble until he had achieved something he could call "peace with
honor."
These comparisons to the climate movement may be seen as too harsh
until one considers the most fundamental fact about the climate crisis:
Activists compromise. Nature does not.
Copyright 2004 The Nation
The Heat is Online.