How
many fake promises and how much false hope are we going to be fed
before we realise the truth and start understanding the facts? The
climate is changing and it is changing the world we know and love.
Our land, homes and food are at risk. With nearly a billion people
already living in poverty, it is also the single biggest threat to
the fight against hunger. Sea levels are rising, glaciers are
melting, forests are burning, hurricanes are ruining islands and
coastal cities and deserts are expanding as the climate crisis wreaks
havoc around the world.If the environmental crisis is to be solved,
this system must go. What is required is political action - political
action aimed at replacing this system by a new and different one. If
we continue to abuse the land by taking without giving back, the
situation will become chronic and irreversible.
So
what stands in the way? Why isn't this done? Big Business and
agri-industrial corporations portray themselves as part of the
solution to the climate crisis. But there is no way to reconcile
what's needed to heal our planet with their commitment to profits and
growth. Five years ago business took an
initiative on deforestation. The New
York Declaration on Forests,
championed by the world's largest buyer of palm oil, Unilever, was
supposed to put a major dent in tropical deforestation. Instead,
rates of tree cover loss have soared.
Global
financial firms have been buying up vast swathes of Cerrado lands and
converting them to mega-farms. Another initiative, Global Alliance
for Climate Smart Agriculture, the handiwork
of Yara,
the world's top nitrogen fertiliser producer and one of the planet's
worst emitters of greenhouse gases. It was the fertiliser industry's
PR response to the growing movement for a real climate solution based
on fertiliser-free agroecological farming. The trick worked, for a
while. Global production of nitrogen fertiliser rose
steadily
over the next few years. But the most recent IPCC report pointed to
nitrogen fertilisers as one of the most dangerous and underestimated
contributors to the climate crisis, and new
research
is showing that the industry has vastly underestimated its own
emissions. Climate activists are targeting Yara because of its
multi-million euro lobbying efforts to green-wash industrial
agriculture, which they say is one of the main drivers of the climate
breakdown. The top 20 meat and dairy companies emit more greenhouse
gases than Germany, Europe’s biggest climate polluter. But none of
these companies have credible action plans to reduce their emissions
and only 4 of the top 35 companies are even reporting their
emissions! Instead of taking meaningful action to cut back on
production, several companies have been making a lot of noise about
their minor investments in plant-based alternatives. People are not
being fooled. The IPCC now says food supply chains drives up to 37%
of global human-made GHG emissions.
The
world will need to shift to more sustainable food systems which make
more efficient use of land, water and other inputs and sharply reduce
their use of fossil fuels, leading to a drastic cut of agricultural
green-house gas emissions, greater conservation of biodiversity, and
a reduction of waste.
Under
the present economic system, production is not geared to meeting
human needs but rather to the accumulation of monetary wealth out of
profits. As a result, not only are basic needs far from satisfied but
much of what is produced is pure waste from this point of view—for
example all the resources involved in commerce and finance, the mere
buying and selling of things and those poured into armaments. The
whole system of production, from the methods employed to the choice
of what to produce, is distorted by the imperative drive to pursue
economic growth for its own sake and to give priority to seeking
profits to fuel this growth without consideration for the longer term
factors that ecology teaches are vitally important. The result is an
economic system governed by blind economic laws which oblige
decision-makers, regardless of their personal sentiments, to plunder,
pillage and pollute
.
“Business-as-usual”
is not an option. Power must be taken away from corporations and put
back into the hands of the people and communities. Climate scientists
must come to realise that the time has come to talk about people,
not figures, graphs and statistics. Climate change will not be until
the question of who controls our future is resolved. The world will
continue to wait for meaningful action by those in power. Our ruling
class are in fact unable to alter their way of doing things even when
they want to. Some say the corporations will invest in the
future (alternative energy) meanwhile others say corporations will
hold on to the past (fossil fuels.) It is ending capitalism and its
over-riding priority of making profits which is in fact our only hope
and our only solution. The outcome of so many conferences and summits
reveals how the planet is subordinate to institutions of profit.
Non-binding pledges simply are not strong enough to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions at the rate demanded. Profit is in fact the biggest
stumbling block. Global warming is a world problem requiring a world
solution. This is not going to happen under capitalism. Something may
well be attempted, but it will be too little, too late. Anything
short of revolution and the abolition of capitalism is minimising the
issue and downplaying its severity. Anything short of a radical
change of the worldwide economic and political structures that
re-entrenches the corporate and state control of the economy is a
waste of time which dooms civilisation. The only framework within
which the problem can be solved is where the Earth’s resources have
become the common heritage of all. Then there will be no capitalist
vested interests standing in the way nor any market forces working
against a solution.
A
choice has to be made. It is no longer a matter of ‘socialism or
capitalism’. The choice now is between world socialism and
civilisation collapse. There is no middle ground. Regardless of a
possible environmental apocalypse, capitalism reigns where profits
trumps the common good and its business as usual.
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