Alarmists and deniers need to climb out of their parallel trenches,
engage with the developing world and work together to end the crisis
Original link: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/mar/12/climate-change-reclaim-debate-political-extremes?CMP=share_btn_tw
Illustration by Eva Bee
Climate change
is real, caused almost entirely by humans, and presents a potentially
existential threat to human civilisation. Solving climate change does
not mean rolling back capitalism, suspending the free market or stopping
economic growth.
With those two rather innocuous statements, I have just alienated
most people on either side of the climate debate. Today, climate change
is no longer just a scientific or an energy problem. Instead, one’s
position on global warming has become a badge of political identity in a
debate riven by ideological and tribal conflicts. This bodes ill for
humanity’s chances of addressing the threat before it is too late.
The nature of the scientific consensus, which on the face of
it should be pretty straightforward, has become one of the most bitterly
contested issues. Each storm, heatwave and temperature rise – or fall –
is fought over, not for what it is but for what it represents. An east
coast blizzard apparently represents a victory for the naysayers, as
exemplified by climate denier Jim Inhofe’s absurd brandishing of a snowball on the floor of the US Senate. Arctic ice melting is a success for the “alarmists”, while Antarctic ice growing is a boon for the “deniers”.
This isn’t science; it is politics. The science – as articulated by the IPPC
– says the warming of the climate system is “unequivocal”, that the
last 30 years were probably the warmest for the last 1,500 years, and
that it is “extremely likely that human influence has been the dominant
cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century”.
Moreover, if current emissions trends continue, warming of 4C or even
6C becomes a possibility this century. No exaggeration is needed to
illustrate the gravity of the threat – warming of this magnitude would
destabilise major ice sheets, lead to catastrophic shifts in weather
patterns, and cause havoc with ecosystems and human societies. The
planet’s temperature, along with CO2 levels, would be higher than for
tens of millions of years.
We should all be able to agree on this. But we can’t, because this
scientific narrative seems to have been captured by one, rather extreme,
end of the political spectrum.
The Guardian’s climate campaign is, in principle, very welcome. But
it risks reinforcing this polarisation by leading with two extensive
extracts from Naomi Klein’s latest book,
This Changes Everything: Climate vs Capitalism. Lefties will lap it up;
others will see it as evidence that science has been appropriated as
cover for an ideological project.
For Klein, whose career has always focused on fighting capitalism,
climate change merely means we must renew that fight. It doesn’t seem to
strike her as odd or fortuitous that this new “crisis”, which she
admits she’s only lately discovered, should “change everything” for
everyone else but merely reinforce her own decades-old ideological
position. Her analysis of the problem is the same as for all the rest of
today’s challenges – that it is the fault of multinational
corporations, “market fundamentalism” and the “elites”, who in her view
control the media and democratic politics.
Depressingly, all this confirms what social psychologists have long
insisted: that most people accept only scientific “facts” that are
compatible with or which reinforce their political identities and
worldviews. The environmental left leapt on climate science because it
seemed to confirm deeply held notions of the planet being fragile, and
modern civilisation being in essence destructive. Moreover, climate
science at last seemed to herald the global doom that the eco-Malthusian
left had always hoped for.
Reacting against this rather miserabilist and dystopian worldview,
the political right has increasingly adopted an outright denialist
position – attacking the science in a covert war against the political
ideology it has been co-opted to serve. The reason half of Americans
doubt the science on climate change isn’t because they are stupid or
misled by the fossil fuels lobby, but because the global warming issue
has now become as much as part of America’s culture wars as abortion or
creationism.
And let’s not presume that the environmental movement, or the left,
has a monopoly on Enlightenment values. Most of those fighting the good
climate fight on the basis of scientific consensus fall over themselves
to deny an equivalently strong consensus on the safety of nuclear power
and GM crops.
Witness the recent “no consensus” statement pushed by the greens on GM crops,
which exactly parallel “no consensus” statements pushed by the right on
the climate. Stuck in their political trenches, neither side sees the
irony – or the damage they are doing to science overall.
All of this makes climate change much harder to deal with than it
would otherwise be. In insisting that tackling carbon emissions must be
subordinated into a wider agenda of social revolution and the
dismantling of corporate capitalism, Klein isn’t making climate
mitigation easier: she is making it politically toxic. In rejecting “too
easy” solutions such as nuclear power and advanced renewables
technologies (the dreaded “technofix”), the left puts its cards on the
table – and confirms what the right has always suspected: that climate
mitigation is not a primary but at best a secondary goal.
This is also a debate conducted in a western bubble. No one in India
doubts that the emergence from poverty of hundreds of millions of people
in south Asia will require the production of prodigious amounts more
energy – far more than could ever be compensated for by any remotely
plausible “energy austerity” path taken by the west. Don’t forget: rich
OECD countries have already peaked their CO2 emissions, so pretty much
all the future growth will come from Asia, Africa and South America.
Forget the political myths: here’s the hard reality. The emergence
from poverty of the developing world is non-negotiable. Humanity will
therefore double or triple energy consumption overall by 2050. Our
challenge is to develop and deploy the technology to deliver this energy
in as low-carbon a way as possible, probably using some combination of
efficiency, renewables, next-generation nuclear and carbon capture. We
need to pour vastly more resources into R&D, and put a significant
international price on carbon.
But to make any of this happen we will need to recapture the climate
debate from the political extremes. We must then work to come up with
inclusive proposals that can form the basis of a social consensus that
must last decades if it is to have any meaningful effect on the climate
change crisis that faces us.