A tradition for the Scottish Hogmanay is to bring a lump of coal when first-footing to signify that the house will keep warm, bring
comfort and be safe for coming New Year. Sadly like many of the old ways, modern
times no longer give the symbolism any positive meaning.
Experts warn coal use is growing unsustainably and coal
prices are likely to stay low over the next five years, according to the
International Energy Agency. Coal will likely overtake oil as the dominant energy
source by 2017, and without a major shift away from coal, average global
temperatures could rise by 6 degrees Celsius by 2050, leading to devastating
climate change. It forecasts rising demand for the cheap fuel from India and
other Asian countries, with global coal use on an upwards march to hit a record
9 billion tonnes by 2019. Burning coal emits soot, mercury, sulphur dioxide and
nitrous oxides – pollutants that are associated with lung and heart disease
that threatens to cause needless deaths and rampant greenhouse gas emissions
unless the international community backs low carbon development, experts
warned. Coal-fired power plants account for just 40% of global electricity
production, but they are responsible for more than 70% of its emissions. “We
have heard many pledges and policies aimed at mitigating climate change, but
over the next five years they will mostly fail to arrest the growth in coal
demand,” said IEA chief Maria van der Hoeven. He stressed that despite its
“undeniable” contribution to energy access, coal use was “simply unsustainable”
in its current form.
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China is set to remain the world’s biggest coal consumer,
with demand unlikely to peak this decade. Its neighbours will follow, with
India overtaking the US to second place in the consumption table. “India wants
everyone to have electricity, and coal is the cheapest form of electricity,”
Chandra Bhushan, deputy director of the Centre for Science and Environment in
Delhi, explained. That comes at a cost to the climate. Coal plants emit
roughly twice the carbon dioxide of gas-fired plants for the same electricity
output.
Efforts to keep global warming below the 2 degrees Celsius
warming threshold will very likely fail and one of the reasons is that worldwide
coal consumption continues to rise. In the entire text of the recent Lima
climate change statement there is only one mention of “fossil fuels” –
regarding a proposal to phase out “fossil fuel subsidies” – and there are only
general mentions of “reductions in high-carbon investments.” No mention at all
is made of the need to limit extractive industries. There is no reference at
all in the text to the need to change our current patterns of production and
consumption. There is no proposal for a strong compliance mechanism for climate
change mitigation commitments. What happens if a big polluter fails to cut
emissions on time and damages a vulnerable country is not considered in the
text. No mention is made of a mechanism to demand and sanction governments and
corporations for their inaction. All the options in the text consider only
processes of review or assessment. Since 1999, the EU’s top 10 countries have
spent €78bn (£62bn) in fossil fuel subsidies, according to Climate Action
Network and CIDSE, an alliance of Catholic charities. The five biggest fossil
fuel subsidisers were Germany (€47.5bn), the UK (€12.8bn), France (€7.6bn),
Spain (€5.8bn) and Poland (€4.2bn).
Governments and the UN are increasingly controlled by
corporate interests, which are undermining crucial climate policies and
promoting mechanisms “that will allow them to profit from the climate crisis,
while expanding the extraction of dirty energy”, argues a report by Friends of
the Earth International, the Transnational Institute (TNI) and the Corporate
Europe Observatory. The report also accuses Anglo American, which has
investments in Brazil, Chile and Peru, of “spinning a web of influence” to
ensure the longest possible future for coal production, a major source of
greenhouse gases. Anglo American is a member of trade associations and lobby
groups, including Euromines, the International Council on Mining and Metals,
the International Energy Agency Clean Coal Centre, the UN Global Compact, the
World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the International
Chamber of Commerce, which enjoy privileged access to governments and advocate
market-based mechanisms and geo-engineering technology. The World Health Organisation
set a global precedent against corporate lobbyists when it took action to
ensure the tobacco industry had no role in public health policymaking.
“Businesses are not
short of a voice. But it is not their solutions that will take us out of this mess,
it is people’s solutions. And people’s solutions are what need to be seen.” said
Corporate Europe Observatory campaigner Pascoe Sabido.
Physics is inevitable: if you put more carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere, the planet warms, and as the planet warms, various kinds of
chaos and ruin are let loose. Politics, on the other hand, is not inevitable. We
need to end the age of fossil fuels. We have the solutions in wind, solar, tidal
and other technologies but these are only solutions if they're implemented and
the old carbon-emitting ones are phased out or shut down. Many people don't
understand what we're up against, because they don't think about the planet and
its eco-systems a lot or they don't grasp the delicate, intricate interactions that
keep it all running. If everyone understood that we're living in a moment in
which the fate of the Earth and of humanity is actually being decided amazing
things could happen. Much is happening right now, it is just that they are not adequate
in dealing with the ever mounting crises. Some remarkable things have already
been achieved and the environmentalist movement has grown in size, power, and
sophistication, but it's still nowhere near commensurate with what needs to be
done. Many people believe that personal acts in private life are what matters
in this crisis but these are in no way the key thing. You are a citizen of this
Earth and your responsibility is not private but public, not individual but
social. You are part of the system, and nothing less than systemic change will
save us. How will we get to where we need to be? No one knows for sure but it
requires ending capitalism and that is for certain. Any economic system can be
resisted and changed by human beings. Now, everything depends on doing that.
Marx
frequently compared capitalism to a vampire -- a dead thing that parasitically
thrives on the blood of the living. To-day, entire genetic lines, DNA the
quintessential building block of life itself is being patented and traded on
Wall St. Capitalism, a beast so carnivorous that it is devouring its own host:
this marvel of a planet along with all life systems upon it.
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