With
world leaders gathering in New York for a UN Climate Action Summit,
people will demand urgent measures to stop
environmental catastrophe. Carbon emissions climbed a record high
last year, despite a warning from the U.N.-backed Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change that output of the greenhouse
gases must be reduced over the next 12 years to stabilise the
climate. Global warming caused by heat-trapping greenhouse gases from
burning fossil fuels has already led to droughts and heatwaves,
melting glaciers, rising sea levels and floods
Attempts
to halt the massive output of greenhouse gases in the hope of halting
global warming have resulted in negligible success, mainly due to
capitalism’s higher priority—profit. Judging by capitalism’s
lack of response to human need in the face of other vast human
tragedies that could easily have been solved without the restraints
of the profit system, it seems highly unlikely that flooding or the
other consequences of warming would be dealt with in anything other
way than as a panic effort at providing vastly inadequate aid after
the event. Human and environmental needs come a poor second whenever
the needs of capital dictate. The history of sincere but failed
attempts to correct a system which cannot meet needs leads to the
conclusion that a new social system should be tried.
Co-ordinated
global action is what is needed, but the capitalist system hampers
this. Capitalism is a world system under which capitalist enterprises
and states compete against each other to secure markets and sources
of raw materials. It is driven by an economic imperative that imposes
itself on those organising production to use the cheapest available
methods so as to survive in the struggle to make and accumulate
profits. ‘Growth’ of production is built-in to it. Under
capitalism, the best that can be achieved is some non-binding
inter-governmental agreement that would disadvantage nobody
commercially. Clearly, this is pretty minimalist, a consensus at the
lowest level. Climate change is just one of a vast range of problems
which capitalism is hopelessly ill-equipped to deal with.
If
we were living in a rationally-organised world, a global response
would be organised as a matter of course regards global warming. If
it solutions were generally agreed among the scientific community,
then steps would be taken, and any problems encountered would only
be technical, not political or economic, as there would be no vested
interests manoeuvring and lobbying to prevent or delay what needed to
be done from being done.
But
of course we are not living in a rationally-organised world. We are
living under capitalism where there are vested interests galore –
of the states into which the world is artificially divided, of the
capitalist corporations seeking to make a profit by supplying some
market or other. Certainly, the United Nations exists but it is only
the arena in which these vested interests compete with one another
for positions of advantage, as is plainly evident, rather than
cooperate and collaborate.
The
human cost of such climatic fluctuations is considerable. If
capitalism continues, this would bring other problems which would be
more acute the more the limit is exceeded and which capitalism would
be equally incapable of coping with, in particular the population
displacement and migration due to rising sea levels and worsened
agricultural conditions in many parts of the world. Co-ordinated
global action would also be required to deal with this, but once
again capitalism’s division into competing capitalist states will
impede this. Protesters should direct their efforts to getting rid of
capitalism and replacing it with a system where the Earth’s natural
and industrial resources will have become the common heritage of all
humanity. This will end the current economic imperative to seek and
accumulate profits and instead will provide the framework for
co-ordinated global action to deal not only with global warming but
other current problems such as world poverty and constant war
somewhere in the world. Those genuinely concerned about the threat of
climate change should think the matter through and campaign not for
capitalist governments and corporations to change their spots but for
the end of capitalism.
Odds
are that whatever is promoted at the New York Climate Summit, there
will be much jockeying and positioning, many fine words plenty of ifs
and buts and ultimately another abject failure – just like all the times before.
What else can we expect from a predatory social system interested
only in making money by the blind pursuit of growth? Come 2020 and
the COP 26 in Glasgow, the King Canutes of capitalism will still be
trying to hold back the (heat)waves with empty gestures.
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