The
fires ravaging massive areas of the Amazon, the vital rainforest is
nearing a “tipping point” in which a third of its ecosystem could
be irreversibly decimated, experts have warned.
Professor
Thomas Lovejoy of George Mason University, who has studied the Amazon
since 1965, told The
Independent
there are signs it is on course for further extensive deforestation
which will soon stretch beyond human control.
His
colleague Carlos Nobre indicates further razing could break
the Amazon’s hydrological cycle, whereby it
generates half its own rainfall. If a critical amount of trees
are felled, the ecosystem will degrade to the point of being unable
to support the rainforest.
Such
devastation could spell catastrophe for the planet due to the
implications for climate change. Not only would it result in the
eradication of species, many of which are yet to be studied, but
would also unleash vast amounts of stored carbon.
Professor
Lovejoy said things have since become much worse.
“When
we were first worried about it, the amount of deforestation was
small,” he said. “But
then these other things started to interact – the impact of
deforestation and the effects of climate change became apparent, and
the extent of the use of fire [for clearing land] became apparent.
“The
reason we believe the tipping point is so close is because we’re
seeing historic droughts in 2005, 2010, and 2016. And satellite
images in the north central Amazon also show forests remote from
everything are beginning to convert into grassland. That’s yet
another symptom. These are not little droughts – boats cannot get
up some of the river’s tributaries, because they’re so dry.”
Professor Lovejoy said such a conversion from rainforest to savannah
and scrubland would be the wider effect if a tipping point is
reached. “You’d have extensive parts of the southern and eastern
Amazon and parts of the central converting to savannah, and maybe to
even drier conditions.”
Professor
Lovejoy said losing swathes of the Amazon would result in a huge loss
in the planet’s biodiversity.
“People
don’t really grasp that the biodiversity in one part of the Amazon
is very different to that in other parts,” he said. “So if you
have regional loss, you’ve having actual total loss of that
biodiversity. It’s the largest terrestrial repository of
biodiversity on the planet, so all that will impact the future of
Brazil, the economy, for the future of the world, vanishes.
He
added: “We tend to live in the delusion we don’t depend on
the biology of the planet, but we do. Agriculture, forestry,
medicine, all of that has a major biological base. Scientists are
revealing new potential all the time. But you can’t do that if the
species isn’t there to study. It’s like book burning on a very
grand scale. The standing
forest is absorbing carbon on an annual basis, but its even greater
importance is in the total amount of carbon stored in the forest
itself. Tropical rainforests store more carbon per unit area than
basically any other kind of habitat. So it’s folly in the end.”
Today,
humanity faces the unprecedented threat of an ever worsening series
of catastrophes, caused by the interlocked economic and environmental
crises brought about by our current economic system, driven by the
crude imperative to accumulate capital. The Socialist Party
recognises the inherent instability and brutality of capitalism and
that the ecological balance that makes all life possible is now being
menaced by its continued existence. Capitalism has always been
ecologically damaging, but now, in our lifetimes, the destructive
assaults upon the planet have accelerated. Ecological devastation,
resulting from the insatiable need to increase profits, is not an
accidental feature of capitalism: it is built into the system’s DNA
and cannot be reformed away by regulatory legislation. Capitalism is
totally incompatible with the healthy maintenance of our ecosystem
through its ruthless exploitation of ever-scarcer natural resources,
its pollution of the environment, the growing loss of biological and
agricultural diversity.
The
Socialist Party does not believe that any form of ‘business as
usual’ is an option. It will be necessary to radically reorganise
industry and transport. What is required are dramatic changes in the
ways in which we generate the energy we use, the ways we build, heat
and cool our homes, the ways in which we travel and the ways in which
we produce our food.
Study
the statements of the experts and scientific community and it becomes
obvious that a lot of faith is put into international agreements in
order to build a fairer world, but something that is particularly
naive considering how nations and global organisations were created
to serve the interests of capitalists this still remains the case.
Most conferences and summits producing protocols aimed at controlling
climate change are hamstrung by the pressures of the governments and
corporations who must appease the requirements of capitalist
economics. Yet these are the vehicles which many in the
environmentalist movement think will save the world. It is a damning
indictment of many of those who boast a Dr. before their name.
There
is no such thing as overpopulation yet alarmists still regard
population growth as the main contributor to the climate crisis and
they persist to insist on rationing, family planning, and other
constrictive, totalitarian measures. "Overpopulation" is
indeed the result of resource scarcity - and while sometimes such
scarcity is the result of variables outside our control, in most
occasions, it is the result of avoidable pitfalls such as our
exploitative and acquisitive social system. When international
environmentalist bodies begin demanding that the people pay the price
for the “burdens” of "overpopulation," it is a
condemnation of their own incompetence and inability to understand
the basic causes of the poverty and inequality facing the society.
They fail to recognise that they require to struggle against the
capitalist system.
The
alternative to socialism is literally destruction. As socialists we
are aware of how very far down the road to making the planet
uninhabitable for humans capitalism is, and how many humans have
already suffered and are already suffering from the damage the profit
system has done to our planet. We possibly have one more generation
before it is too late. There won’t be any socialists, there won’t
be any socialism, when nobody can breathe. Climate change is real and
it’s as urgent as it gets that we make radical changes if we want a
future on this planet.
The
environmental crisis tends to manifest itself either in the form of
local outrages (polluted rivers) or vast global problems (CO2
emissions), and it's not surprising that eco-activists are
overwhelmingly tugged in one direction or another. The former leads
towards a case-by-case guerilla warfare against specific
environmental damage. The latter involves an engagement with various
organisations that “hold” the power to do “something" —
government departments, international bodies and NGOs, even
increasingly, the “greener” corporations, themselves. Yet all the
time it means people are distracted away from a revolutionary
perspective. What is at stake in the political discussion will focus
will be subordinated the overall interests of capitalism. Once this
is truly grasped by environmentalists then they have no choice but to
seriously measure their present ideas against the concepts of
socialist politics.
The
slogan "Think globally, act locally" has the direct
implication that each and every local initiative in recycling,
economising on water and energy use and cutting waste can, summed
together, make a critical difference. Decades of thinking globally
and acting locally, while yielding a host of small victories, has not
been able to reverse any major trend in environmental degradation.
That's because it offers no pathway from the local to the global, no
feasible strategy for making local action begin to count globally.
This is all the more true because the local is hardly ever purely
local, but linked to national and international webs of production,
trade and investment shaped by the national and international
division of labour. The "local" is forged by an
increasingly global capitalism, which protects its interests through
national and international state and semi-state bodies.
The
concerned environmentalist has a choice between socialism or
capitalism. We cannot reform capitalism but we can replace it. The
future of our planet depends on building a socialist movement
powerful enough to displace capitalism and creating a livable
environment for us all.
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