Greenpeace campaigners have boarded an oil rig in the north of Scotland as it was being towed out to sea and are staging a protest on board. The protesters are calling for BP to end the drilling for new oil wells and say they are prepared to stay onboard the rig for days.
Jo, a Greenpeace activist from Scotland who is aboard the rig, said: “Warm words flow from BP on their commitment to tackling climate change, yet this rig – and the 30m barrels it seeks to drill – are a sure sign that BP are committed to business as usual, fuelling a climate emergency that threatens millions of lives and the future of the living world. We can’t let that happen – that’s why we’re here today.The government may be bent on draining the North Sea of every last drop of oil, but this clearly contradicts their climate commitments. The perverse idea we must maximise our oil and gas reserves cannot continue.
“That means the government must seriously reform the Oil and Gas Authority and instead invest heavily in the crucial work of helping oil communities like those in Scotland move from fossil fuels to the industries that will power our low carbon future.”
The
human species faces a grave threat. During the last hundred years
more irreversible damage has been done to the natural environment by
human action than in any previous period in recorded history. Rarely
a day goes by when our attention is not drawn to the various issues
of environmental degradation and how the increase in human activity
is impacting on large areas of the natural environment globally.
Among these are increased carbon emissions, global warming and
climate change. Humans are not destroying the planet, merely
hastening its change and their own demise if they destroy and poison
the environment that supports human and other animal species. The
planet will continue to survive in one form or another. We live in a
world, run entirely on capitalist principles. Simply put, everything
has to turn a profit at each stage of the line, otherwise it is
worthless, expendable. Raw materials, production, packaging,
transportation, marketing, point of sale, with labour at every step,
all need their profit in order for a transaction to be viable.
Businesses talk comfortingly about self-regulation, greening their
corporate image and spending money on advertising campaigns in
placing the onus squarely on the consumer’s shoulders. They are the
ones initially who, in great numbers, will bear the brunt of the
effects of global warming. Corporations have no interest in nil
returns, only in repeat business. And loyalty is as long-lived as
profit, corporate allegiance to which will trump allegiance to any
flag.
The
motive for production under capitalism is making a profit. In order
for goods to be manufactured or services to be provided, they must
result in a reasonable amount of profit, otherwise they won’t be
produced. A fair conclusion which comes as no surprise to anyone who
understands the basic economics of capitalism is the premise that, if
capitalism continues on its present course of destroying natural
resources by continuing to ignore the real “costs” of the
negative effects on the natural environmental and human health, in
the long-term it will lose out big time. But capitalism is not a
rational system when you consider that the capitalist class have
their own agenda which is totally blind to the creation of a common
interest. The only interest the capitalist class have is to obtain
profits through the quickest and easiest way possible so that the
accumulation of capital continues. A fundamental contradiction of
capitalism is that although the capitalist have a common interest —
as a class — to cooperate to keep the system going, by necessity
they also have to compete within the market. If they don’t compete
they go under or are at best taken over by other capitalists. This
built-in rivalry between the sections of the capitalist class always
results in casualties in some form or another. At one end we have the
everyday casualties of lay-offs and redundancies. Whilst at the other
end from time to time inter-capitalist rivalry erupts into a full
scale war – with extensive human casualties, refugees, communities
being destroyed – and extensive damage to the environment and the
destruction of wealth on a tremendous scale.
If
market forces essentially cause and create environmental damage by
literally encouraging an irrational human impact, how can you
realistically expect those self-same forces to solve it? This
conundrum will almost certainly intensify if globalisation picks up
pace and the competition gets even tougher for the possession of
scarce resources, especially energy and water. But the conundrum does
not end there since the system of capitalism is also dependent on
economic growth and the accumulation of capital on a larger and
larger global scale. When confronted by barriers
of environmental legislation which are designed to diminish the rate
of expected profits and the accumulation of capital, the capitalists
will do what they have always done in their search for short-term
profits: finding or creating loopholes, moving the goalposts,
corrupting officials, trying to bribe the local population with empty
promises, or shifting the whole concern to an area or region where a
more favourable reception is expected and profits maintained.
Socialists
conclude that in a class-divided society where the means of living
are used to serve the interests of the owners of private property any
talk of finding a ‘common interest’, so that there is a change of
course of market forces and consequently a greening of capitalism, is
a fool’s errand. We have, therefore, consistently argued that,
where classes exist, there are class divisions in the production and
distribution of wealth with the subsequent inequality manifesting
itself in a class struggle between two classes with diametrically
opposed interests. Arising out of this
analysis we recognise the need for a majority of the workers to
actively engage in a political struggle to bring about a
revolutionary change in the social relationships — from private
property ownership to a system of common ownership, a society of free
access where wage slavery has been abolished, money is obsolete,
hierarchical structures pointless, class laws transformed into social
rules, and production is geared to satisfying human needs. Only when
we are living in such a society will we be in a position to minimise
any environmental damage caused by human activity. Once we have reach
this stage in human development and social evolution — where our
interaction with the natural environment not only enhances our
understanding of ourselves but also converges with a social
recognition that we are as much dependent on nature as is nature
dependent on us — so we will be able to start to tackle a rational
clean up of the environmental damage which capitalism will have left
in its wake.
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