In 2008, when the global financial bubble burst, governments
around the world took just 15 days to decide to use trillions of dollars of
public funds to save private banks and avoid what threatened to become a
collapse of the financial system. The climate crisis has the potential to be
immeasurably worse than any financial crash, yet still there is
procrastination—despite the abundance of scientific evidence and of viable,
creative and appealing solutions. As the U.N. Conference of the Parties (COP20)
talks enter their final days in Lima, Peru there seems to be very little in
terms of moving the talks closer to the kind of agreement experts say are
necessary to adequately tackle the crisis of human-caused global warming. So
far only one paragraph of a 60 page statement has been agreed. Unlike tobacco
control talks where tobacco lobbyists are banned, the UN climate talks allow
the fossil fuel industry free reign in their halls. At the UN climate talks, a
group called the International Emissions Trading Association (IETA) was been
passing around a booklet of side events they are hosting an event hosted by the
Global CCS (carbon capture and sequestration) Institute that features speakers
from Shell and the World Coal Association. The title: "Why Divest from
Fossil Fuels When a Future with Low Emission Fossil Energy Use is Already a
Reality?" The title couldn't be more convoluted. First, low emission
fossil fuels are an oxymoron. Second, even if they did exist, they're certainly
not a reality today: carbon emissions are increasing each year and are directly
tied to fossil fuel use.
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65 percent of all anthropogenic CO2 emitted since 1751 from
fossil fuels and cement are caused by just 90 entities. Nearly one-third of all
global industrial CO2 since that time is from carbon fuels produced by the top
twenty fossil fuel companies, which include Chevron, ExxonMobil and BP. "The
delegates at the climate conference are dealing with emissions
country-by-country," stated Richard Heede, the principal researcher who
runs CAI. "Looking at emission through the lens of the relatively few
companies that are actually producing the fuels paints a different, and
complementary picture."
"Even if emissions plummeted today, climate change
impacts will continue to mount," stated Angela Anderson, Director of Union
of Concerned Scientists' Climate and Energy Program.
Both Dr James Lovelock (top UK climate scientist, Fellow of
the prestigious Royal Society, famous for his Gaia Hypothesis and atmospheric
research) and Professor Kevin Anderson ( Deputy Director, Tyndall Centre for
Climate Change Research, University of Manchester, UK) have recently estimated
that only about 0.5 billion people will survive this century due to
unaddressed, man-made global warming.
The Scotsman reported on Professor Anderson’s estimates of
“only half a billion surviving”: "Current Met Office projections reveal
that the lack of action in the intervening 17 years – in which emissions of
climate changing gases such as carbon dioxide have soared – has set the world
on a path towards potential 4C rises as early as 2060, and 6C rises by the end
of the century. Anderson, who advises the government on climate change, said
the consequences were 'terrifying'. 'For humanity it's a matter of life or
death,' he said. 'We will not make all human beings extinct as a few people
with the right sort of resources may put themselves in the right parts of the
world and survive. But I think it's extremely unlikely that we wouldn't have
mass death at 4C. If you have got a population of nine billion by 2050 and you
hit 4C, 5C or 6C, you might have half a billion people surviving'."
“If we can keep civilization alive through this century
perhaps there is a chance that our descendants will one day serve Gaia and
assist her in the fine-tuned self-regulation of the climate and composition of
our planet. We have enjoyed 12,000 years of climate peace since the last shift
from a glacial age to an interglacial one. Before long, we may face planet-wide
devastation worse even than unrestricted nuclear war between superpowers. The
climate war could kill nearly all of us and leave the few survivors living a
Stone Age existence.” James Lovelock said in the Guardian
Already 16 million people (about 9.5 million of them under-5
year old infants) die avoidably every year due to deprivation and deprivation-exacerbated
disease – and man-made global warming is already clearly worsening this global
avoidable mortality holocaust. However 10 billion avoidable deaths due to
global warming this century yields an average annual avoidable death rate of 100
million per year. Noting that the world population is expected to reach 9.5
billion by 2050 (UN Population Division), these estimates translate to a
climate genocide involving deaths of 10 billion people this century
Naomi Klein summarizes the seriousness of our predicament
and the need for rapid and radical change to our economic system: “Indeed
emissions are rising so rapidly that unless something radical changes within
our economic structure, 2 degrees now looks like a utopian dream… Can we pull
it off? All I know is that nothing is inevitable”
Politicians who recognize the problem but who refuse to take
requisite urgent action are effectively culpable as change deniers. Naomi Klein
describes how multi-billionaires and major GHG polluters have backed climate
action schemes that avoid the clear imperative of cessation of GHG pollution.
Thus Richard Branson backed biofuel (that contrary to industry propaganda
carries a huge Carbon Debt), Warren Buffett made green noises but remains a
major polluter, and Michael Bloomberg has backed a coal-to-gas transition (that
is disastrously counterproductive). An insidious aspect explored by her is Big
Money funding Big Green with a consequent “softening” of the Green agenda. A
serious trend is Big Money (e.g. Bill Gates) and Big Polluter (e.g. Richard
Branson) backing of “carbon sucking machines” as alternatives to the obvious
imperative of cessation of GHG pollution.
“The ‘market-based’ climate solutions favored by so many
large foundations and adopted by many greens have provided an invaluable
service to the fossil fuel sector as a whole”. resulting in dangerous and
counterproductive policies such as support for the disastrous coal-to-gas
transition that locks in GHG pollution for decades (yet because methane can have
a GWP 105 times greater than that of CO2, depending on the rate of gas leakage,
gas burning can be dirtier GHG-wise than coal burning) and support for
fraudulent :market-based” cap-and-trade emissions trading scheme (ETS)
approaches (that have been empirically unsuccessful, are accordingly
counterproductive, invite gross market manipulation, and are utterly fraudulent
in that they involve particular governments selling licence to pollute the one
common atmosphere and ocean of all nations.
Environmentalist campaigns must not be “Not in My Back-Yard”
but as the French anti-fracking activist say, “Ni ici, ni ailleurs” – neither
here, nor elsewhere. The environmentalist movement “must be the catalyst to
actually build the world that will keep us all safe. The stakes are simply too
high, and the time too short, to settle for anything less”, according to Klein.
The relentless destruction of Brazil’s Amazon rainforest
will endanger the global climate unless it can be stopped and restored, says a
new report entitled The Future Climate of Amazonia, by Dr Antonio Donato Nobre, a researcher at
Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE). Approximately 20% of
Brazil’s Amazon forest has been clear cut, while forest degradation has
disturbed the remaining forest to varying degrees—directly affecting an additional
20% or so of the original area. The total deforested area is greater than the
size of two Germanys or two Japans. It is equal to 184 million football
fields—which means that, over the last 40 years, the equivalent of 12,635
football fields have been deforested per day.
Multi-national corporations from Europe are destroying the
environment and causing climate chaos in Latin America with destructive mining
practices. A new report details how multi-national corporations are destroying
the environment and causing serious climate damage in Latin America brings
attention to an important area not being discussed at the UN COP 20 climate
negotiations being held in Peru. “Multinational corporations are relentlessly
expanding their operations into ever more vulnerable and remote regions of the
world,” says the report, written by three public interest groups: The Democracy
Centre of San Francisco, the Corporate Europe Observatory of Brussels, and the
Transnational Institute of Amsterdam. Accused in the report are Repsol, the
Spanish fossil fuels giant; the Swiss-based mining and resources conglomerate
Glencore-Xstata; and Enel-Endesa, an Italian consortium. “In the case of
Repsol, the Spanish fossil fuels giant, we see how the relentless pursuit of
new gas and oil reserves in Peru takes direct aim at the region’s indigenous
territories and forests, leaving social destruction and in its wake,” says the
report. “Another Peruvian case is that of Glencore-Xstata. Political
manipulation has allowed the Swiss-based mining and resources conglomerate to
expand its copper mining operations in the region. Scarce water resources,
already stretched by climate change, are being contaminated with impunity.” In
Colombia, the Italian-based consortium Enel-Endesa is attempting to portray a
massive hydroelectric dam as a ‘clean energy’ project via its Latin American
subsidiary Emgesa. But rather than benefitting local people, the electricity is
destined for dirty industry at discount prices.
What is not being considered in the COP 20 talks is that
most developing world governments are not capable of forcing corporations to be
more respectful of the environment and climate. Moreover, back in Europe,
corporations are not held accountable for what they do in developing countries.
With profits down at many Northern corporations since the 2011 recession, they are
“invading” every country in Latin America. The report explains that powerful,
wealthy multi-national corporations manage to overcome resistance to their
damaging environmental practices by infiltrating a country’s political process,
making promises that are never met, or by simply ignoring local opposition. Spanish
corporations have become so well known for their numerous and ambitious
development projects in Latin America that they are often called the “Corporate
Conquistadors”, a referenced to the way the Spanish conquered much of Latin
America centuries ago in search of gold, silver and cheap labor. Repsol – one
of the largest of the many Spanish companies – is criticized for extracting
natural gas from the middle of Peru’s delicate rainforest, using dozens of drilling
platforms, hundreds of kilometres of pipelines, and the construction of a recovery
plant, and roads, etc. The report says that Repsol will be expanding
further “at the cost of devastation of
indigenous communities and their cultures, as well as the destruction of
forests, biodiversity and water resources …”
“Due to global warming, our people are suffering a constant
variation of the climate,” said Klaus Quicque Bolivar, who lives in the
Peruvian Amazon. “There is an excess of heat. The rivers are warming up; there
are less agricultural production and natural reproduction of fishes. Some
animal species are disappearing and the cycle of wild fruits are varying.” While
the indigenous community had its say during a brief session, delegates from the
multi-national corporate sector are getting much more attention and have been
busy lobbying national government delegates at the conference to adopt
industry-friendly solutions to fight climate change. If the outcome of this UN
climate conference is anything like others held in recent years, the
recommendations of the indigenous community will receive only token
acknowledgement in the final communique – an outcome that is sure to remind
them of what it’s like to fight powerful corporations back in their own
countries.
Germany’s plan to phase out nuclear energy and switch to
renewables by 2022 is unrealistic as the country is doomed to remain dependent
on fossil fuels like oil and gas for the next 70 years, energy expert Matthias
Dornfeldt, a research fellow at Center for Caspian Studies in Berlin, covering
geopolitical issues and energy security, told RT. Renewables can’t replace
fossil fuels overnight because there’s not enough infrastructure, said
Dornfeldt in an interview with RT. He believes the 21st century will be the
century of gas, as the 20th century was the century of oil. “We are going to be
dependent on oil as well as on gas, as I see, for the next 50, 60, 70 years”,
he said, adding there is “a huge impact of fossil fuels on the national economy
in Germany.” His comments echo a study by the Federal Institute for Geosciences
and Natural Resources (BGR) that said Germany would remain dependent on fossil
fuels for decades. Oil, natural gas, coal and lignite account for 80 percent of
German energy consumption. Germany’s game plan to switch to renewables known as
Energiewende, and the recently approved National Action Plan for Energy
Efficiency looking very unrealistic, the report added. Even oil production in
Germany, which is small compared with the big international producers,
contributes more to power generation than all of domestic solar energy put
together.
As the world warms, growing hunger and insecurity, the Canadian
prime minister has disavowed his longstanding commitments to the international
community, Canadians and future generations to meet his greenhouse-gas
reduction targets. According to Stephen
Harper, it would be “crazy” to regulate the oil and gas industry now, the
fastest-growing source of emissions, after promising regulations for all these
years he’s been in power. They say we couldn’t regulate them then because the
economy was fragile and oil was profitable; we can’t regulate them now because
the economy is fragile and oil is not profitable. This crazy energy economics
fuels climate chaos and economic fragility. Under Harper’s reign, Canadians are
world leaders in subsidizing this toxic industry, to the tune of about $34
billion a year, according to a 2013 International Monetary Fund report titled
Energy Subsidy Reform: Lessons and Implications.
Many have simply lost faith in global climate negotiations
summits such as COP 20. The process has not delivered the climate action we
need. But the Socialist Party has repeatedly warned that the short-term
requirements of capital accumulation over-rides peoples’ and the planet’s needs.
Only a fool would argue that the action proposed by polluters themselves will be
enough to halt global warming, much less begin to reverse it. Environmentalists
usually argue renewables are the most economical solution but we witness how
they are no longer economically viable as the era of low-cost oil returns.
This system is responsible for upward of half of all
greenhouse-gas emissions after considering deforestation, animal factory farms,
fossil-fuel-dependent industrial monocultures, etc. At the same time, our
ability to grow food is significantly threatened by climate change. Our
money-driven agro-economic system is presently incapable of feeding the world,
leaving billions hungry and malnourished and the basic ecology unaccounted for.
Alternatively, ‘agro-ecological’ food-production methods have the potential to
sequester mass amounts of carbon in the soil, grow local economies and
regenerate biologically diverse ecosystems. Reforest underused farmland by
integrating perennial poly-cultures — crops growing better together. By growing
healthy food and biodiversity, we can capture carbon. Socialists are slowly but surely achieving a consensus — the idea that big changes are needed to cool us humans
down before we overheat our planet . It
is no longer enough to protect our planet from a potential three or four degree
Celsius rise in global temperatures - with all the disastrous consequences that
would have for us, our children, and our ecosystems. We need socialism. Or we face possible extinction as a species.
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