Reprinted with the author's permission from 4RG: For Our Grandchildren.
Early in May, 2013
North America was abuzz about whether the Dow would stay above 1500.
Lost in the buzz was a crucial climate announcement: For the first
time in a million years carbon dioxide concentrations in the
atmosphere passed 400 parts per million. A month later, the
International Energy Agency (IEA) reported that global greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions had reached a record high in 2012. Graphs below from IEA report
There was more bad
news in June when the World Meteorological Organization announced
that the world was warmer in the first decade of the 21st
century than any other period on record. Much of the increased heat
is being absorbed by the oceans at present, sparing us temporarily
from catastrophic heating of the earth’s surface and atmosphere.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_stick_graph |
Rising GHG levels
since the beginning of the Industrial Age two hundred years ago
closely track the increase in global temperatures. The connection
between ghg concentrations and temperature increases was popularized
in the “hockey stick” graph – developed by Professor Michael
Mann – in Al Gore’s film, An
Inconvenient Truth. Initially ridiculed
by the denial industry, Mann’s conclusions, based on the earlier
work of Joseph Fourier and Svante Arrhenius, linking ghg levels and
temperature are now widely accepted.
The planet is
heating up – no dispute. Global warming is primarily due to the
accumulation of ghgs in the atmosphere which are overwhelmingly
anthropogenic in nature – no debate. At least seventy percent of
these emissions are created by burning fossil fuels and the remainder
is largely generated by agriculture, deforestation and waste dumps.
Professor James Powell, Director of the National Physical Science Consortium, scoured
the web for articles on global warming and climate change published
in peer-reviewed journals between 1991 and 2012. Among almost 14,000
articles, he found only 24 (0.17%) that rejected the theory of
human-induced warming. Furthermore, the citation record of this
scattering of articles was minimal, more proof that they are largely
ignored by the scientific community. Powell concludes that global
warming is now the ruling paradigm of climate science.
The whiplash weather
that we are increasingly experiencing – floods and fires in Calgary
and Colorado, torrents in Toronto and killer tornadoes in the US
Midwest – is a direct result of a warming planet. These weather
blitzes are not Acts of God in the jargon of the insurance industry;
they are Acts of Man. God and Gaia do not act out of revenge, they
react in self-defence against abuse.
Extreme weather
feeds off climate change and in a vicious cycle, it in turn amplifies
disruptive climate patterns. “Global climate disruption” in the
words of White House science advisor, John Holdren, will not be a
stable linear progression: we will be bombarded and strafed with
random weather eruptions occurring around the globe. We, through our
lifestyles, now control the planet’s thermostat which is shaping
the weather and altering our climate.
Many believe that we
can always reverse climate change by simply reducing the output of
our GHG emissions. Sadly, it is not so simple because carbon dioxide
can last hundreds of years in the atmosphere before dissipating.
Therefore, present levels of the gas have locked in temperature
increases and the collateral climate damage is probably irreversible
for centuries.
Most countries
agreed at Copenhagen in 2009 that global temperature increases must
be limited to two degrees C above the pre-industrial level of the
late 18th century to avert major climate turmoil. At present we are inching up
to a one degree increase and because of carbon dioxide already in the
atmosphere, we cannot escape another one degree rise.
We are on track then
for a two degree increase in global temperatures in the next few
decades – it is unstoppable. At two degrees the planet will
experience severe climate destabilization but a four degree rise
could be catastrophic. If, as the IEA – hardly a left-wing
organization – suggests, we are headed for a six degree increase in
average temperatures across the planet by 2100, it is probably game
over for the human species.
Anthony Leiserowitz,
Director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, in an
interview with Bill Moyers recently related increases in our body
temperatures to global warming. If your temperature rises one degree,
you feel a bit off colour; at two degrees you are feeling sick and
will likely book off work. At three degrees you are seriously ill and
when your body temperature rises by four to five degrees you are
slipping into a coma. At six degrees above normal, you are probably
brain-dead.
No wonder climate
scientists are concerned about the health of the planet. But
individuals around the world seem strangely unconcerned. Why do so
many of us bask in denial, comfortably sitting in a pot like a frog
as the water heats up, gradually boiling us to death, while we are
blissfully unaware of the unfolding crisis. And who really cares
about the tadpoles?
Fossil fuels are the
climate curse. Despite the predictions, they are not running out. Oil
and gas fracking, coal reserves, methane hydrates in the oceans and
tar sands bitumen will ensure that we will cook the planet long
before we exhaust these toxic resources. The uncontrollable feedbacks
resulting from global warming, such as the release of methane from
the thawing Arctic permafrost, will intensify the rapid heating of
the earth and exacerbate climate change.
We
have no choice but to leave most of the remaining fossil reserves in
the ground – to continue to burn them irresponsibly will destroy
the planet. We freed the carbon genie from deep below by extracting
and squandering oil and coal to satisfy our craving for cheap and
easily available energy. It is impossible now to stuff the genie back
in the bottle by capturing carbon dioxide and pumping it underground.
The
fifth report of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) was issued at the end of September. It is without a doubt the
most comprehensive climate document ever published. The IPCC “Report”
actually comprises a series of separate reports that will appear at
intervals over the next year. They have been prepared by hundreds of
top scientists who studied and synthesized almost ten thousand
climate articles and research reports. The first of the IPCC’s
individual reports, Summary for Policymakers, has confirmed
that the carbon genie is loose and running out of control.
According
to the IPCC document, atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide
and other ghgs are at their highest level in almost one million
years. For the first time, the IPCC has specified the future levels
of ghg emissions that will permit the planet to stay within the 2
degree C ceiling agreed at Copenhagen. This so-called “carbon
budget” will require that most reserves of coal, oil and gas must
stay underground to ensure that the planet remains habitable. Eighty
percent of Canada’s fossil energy reserves will have to remain
buried as part of our commitment to the global 2 degree C carbon
budget.
The
IPCC Summary declares with a 95 percent chance of
probability that greenhouse gases
are almost entirely anthropogenic and largely generated by fossil
fuels. Furthermore, the Report states that global warming is
primarily caused by carbon dioxide and other ghgs and, with a
remarkable degree of certainty and clarity, concludes that the
warming trend is now “unequivocal.” Michael Mann’s “hockey
stick” is firmly established in the climatology canon.
The overriding
question facing us is whether we have the self-discipline to curb our
addiction to fossil energy or whether we expect the government to
regulate our appetites. “Government action” on climate change is
a cruel oxymoron. Governments are aware that although we profess in
public opinion polls to be concerned about global warming, Canadians
do not support proactive policies to protect nature if there is a
financial cost attached. But government inaction is largely our
fault. As George Monbiot wrote in the
Guardian 31 Dec 2012, “Governments
care only as much as their citizens force them to care. Nothing
changes unless we change.”
In an article
entitled “Mortal Hazard” in The
Walrus April, 2013, Bryne Purchase of
Queen’s University argues that both public and private institutions
in our culture are not designed for taking precautionary and
preemptive action on potentially dangerous problems. Decisions are
usually made with short-term gains in mind – winning elections for
governments and profits for corporations – while the longer term
costs and risks are passed on to future generations.
Governments are
reluctant to slow economic growth – no matter how environmentally
destructive it is – for fear of alienating voters at election time.
Instead, the electorate is baited with promises and benefits, such as
lower taxes while “the tough choices are punted into the future”
in Professor Purchase’s words. Only in the face of a major disaster
can we expect decisive government action . . . and then it will be
too late to avert climate chaos.
While it is clear
that our government does not have the courage to act decisively on
environmental issues, it is unacceptable that they would ally
themselves with the fossil fuel industry – “a reckless, rogue
industry” in the words of Bill McKibben. Sending servile
politicians and diplomats south to the US to peddle pipelines
carrying toxic tar is both immoral and suicidal. Tanker trains
exploding in the night, fuel pipelines rupturing, underground bitumen
blowouts and undersea oil eruptions – when do we muster the courage
to stand up and yell: Stop the madness!
On the international
scene, many democratic governments refuse to take a stand and honour
their Copenhagen pledges to reduce ghg emissions because of negative
domestic voter reaction. And authoritarian governments, often
petro-states, will not act for reasons of self-interest. Canada –
both a democracy and a petro-state – won’t even come close to
meeting its commitment by 2020 (says the Pembina Institute) because of voter reaction, narrow
national self-interest and lack of government leadership. The
prospects for change from below are equally bleak because, as the
ever perceptive Monbiot puts it: No society in the history of
civilization has ever rioted for austerity.
Canada’s official
response to the IPCC Report was announced by Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq. She ignored the Report’s conclusions, which had
been approved by our Government in Stockholm, and instead she
launched an attack on the Liberals for inaction on global warming
when they were in power. She also criticized the NDP for proposing a
carbon tax which most economists agree is the most effective way to
reduce fossil fuel generated GHGs. The Minister incorrectly claimed
credit for a reduction in coal use but the drop is actually due to
Ontario’s efforts to phase out coal fired electricity generation.
Within two weeks of
the release of the IPCC Report, the Government introduced a new
session of Parliament with a Speech from the Throne. It was a classic
example of Bryne Purchase’s argument that governments are focused
primarily on winning elections. The text of the speech is devoted
almost entirely to vote-getting strategies, such as low taxes, jobs,
defending consumers, down-sizing government, punishing criminals and
economic growth. The expansion of growth – environmentally
destructive in itself – will be fuelled and bankrolled by
increasing oil and natural gas production, both major sources of the
ghgs that are suffocating the planet.
The only
environmental initiative in the Speech is a lame reference to the
polluter pay principle which is not new but which the Government has
never enforced. How is it possible “to secure the future for our
children’s generation” without Parliament addressing the biggest
threat to their future – climate change – and the dominant cause:
fossil fuels? The Throne Speech is a blatant betrayal of our
children’s future and the future of all succeeding generations.
The Speech concludes
with an appeal to “Divine Providence” to guide the deliberations
of our parliamentarians. Surely if we are appealing for divine
inspiration and guidance, we should move beyond encouraging
destructive materialism and sectional self-interest. If we invoke the
divine, then we need uplifting rhetoric that will buoy our spirits
and raise our hopes. We need communication that focuses on the
reverence and veneration of nature and language that promotes the
protection and the preservation of the planet. We need emphasis on
the moral imperatives – the sacred, the spiritual and the secular –
that will unite and inspire us.
Perhaps we should
turn instead to Pete Seeger’s memorable anti-war lament, Where
have all the flowers gone? for
inspiration to fortify ourselves for the struggle against the fossil
forces – and the fossilized values – that are waging war on
Mother Earth. The haunting climax of Seeger’s song must be our
wake-up call: When
will we ever learn,
When will we ever
learn?
source: UK Guardian |
source: Monde Diplomatique |
Further reading:
See our previous posts on climate change tagged CC; German Environment Ministry, Adaptation for Climate Change for Peace and Stability (Oct 2013) with case studies from S. America, central Asia and Bangladesh; New Economics Foundation, Other Worlds are Possible (2009) with 28 case studies; possible interfaith-NGO alliance in The new Jubilee convergence (Oct 2013); and a compilation from many sources, What can we do? – a checklist of positive earthcare goals (2012).
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