Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Wednesday, 24 December 2014
Let's leave behind the age of fossil fuel. Welcome to Year One of the climate revolution
Tiny towns standing up to Big Oil. Gigantic marches taking on the
future. Technology that works. We started to save ourselves in 2014, but
we must make 2015 worth remembering – before it’s too late
The People’s Climate March in September was something. Were we insane to worry about celebrities and political scandals and anything else? Photograph: Jason DeCrow/AP
It was the most thrilling bureaucratic document I’ve ever seen for
just one reason: it was dated the 21st day of the month of Thermidor in
the Year Six. Written in sepia ink on heavy paper, it recorded an
ordinary land auction in France in what we would call the late summer of
1798. But the extraordinary date signaled that it was created when the
French Revolution was still the overarching reality of everyday life and
such fundamentals as the distribution of power and the nature of
government had been reborn in astonishing ways. The new calendar that
renamed 1792 as Year One had, after all, been created to start society
all over again.
In that little junk shop on a quiet street in San Francisco, I held a
relic from one of the great upheavals of the last millennium. It made
me think of a remarkable statement the great feminist fantasy writer
Ursula K Le Guin had made only a few weeks earlier. In the course of a speech she gave while accepting a book award, she noted:
We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine
right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human
beings.
That document I held was written only a few years after the French
had gotten over the idea that the divine right of kings was an
inescapable reality. The revolutionaries had executed their king for his
crimes and were then trying out other forms of government. It’s popular
to say that the experiment failed, but that’s too narrow an
interpretation. France never again regressed to an absolutist monarchy
and its experiments inspired other liberatory movements around the world
(while terrifying monarchs and aristocrats everywhere).
Americans are skilled at that combination of complacency and despair
that assumes things cannot change and that we, the people, do not have
the power to change them. Yet you have to be abysmally ignorant of
history, as well as of current events, not to see that our country and
our world have always been changing, are in the midst of great and
terrible changes, and are occasionally changed through the power of the
popular will and idealistic movements. As it happens, the planet’s
changing climate now demands that we summon up the energy to leave
behind the Age of Fossil Fuel – and maybe with it some portion of the
Age of Capitalism as well.
A little revolution in a Big Oil town, a fracking ban in the Big Apple
To use Le Guin’s language, physics is inevitable: if you put more
carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the planet warms, and as the planet
warms, various kinds of chaos and ruin are let loose. Politics, on the
other hand, is not inevitable. For example, not so many years ago it
would have seemed inevitable that Chevron, currently the third biggest
corporation in the country, would run the refinery town of Richmond, California, as its own private fiefdom.
You could say that the divine right of Chevron seemed like a given.
Except that people in Richmond refused to accept it, and so this town of
107,000 mostly poor non-white people pushed back.
In recent years, a group of progressives won election
to the city council and the mayor’s seat, despite huge expenditures by
Chevron, the corporation that also brought you gigantic oil spills
onshore in Ecuador and offshore in Brazil, massive contamination from
half a century of oil extraction in Nigeria, and Canadian tar-sands
bitumen sent by rail to the Richmond refinery. Mayor Gayle McLaughin and
her cohorts organized a little revolution in a town that had mostly
been famous for its crime rate and for Chevron’s toxic refinery
emissions, which periodically create emergencies,
sometimes requiring everyone to take shelter (and pretend that they are
not being poisoned indoors), sometimes said – by Chevron – to be
harmless, as with last Thursday’s flames that lit up the sky, visible as far away as Oakland.
As McLaughin put it of her era as mayor:
We’ve accomplished so much, including breathing better air, reducing
the pollution, and building a cleaner environment and cleaner jobs, and
reducing our crime rate. Our homicide number is the lowest in 33 years
and we became a leading city in the Bay Area for solar installed per
capita. We’re a sanctuary city. And we’re defending our homeowners to
prevent foreclosures and evictions. And we also got Chevron to pay $114m extra dollars in taxes.
For this November’s election, the second-largest oil company on Earth
officially spent $3.1m to defeat McLaughin and other progressive
candidates and install a mayor and council more to its liking. That sum
worked out to about $180 per Richmond voter,
but my brother David, who’s long been connected to Richmond politics,
points out that, if you look at all the other ways the company spends to
influence local politics, it might be roughly ten times that.
Nonetheless, Chevron lost. None of its candidates were elected and
all the grassroots progressives it fought with billboards, mailers,
television ads, websites and everything else a lavishly funded smear
campaign can come up with, won.
If a small coalition like that can win locally against a corporation that had revenues of $228.9bn
in 2013, imagine what a large global coalition could do against the
fossil-fuel giants. It wasn’t easy in Richmond and it won’t be easy on
the largest scale either, but it’s not impossible. The Richmond
progressives won by imagining that the status quo was not inevitable, no
less an eternal way of life. They showed up to do the work to dent that
inevitability. The billionaires and fossil fuel corporations are
intensely engaged in politics all the time, everywhere, and they count
on us to stay on the sidelines. If you look at their response to various
movements, you can see that they fear the moment we wake up, show up
and exercise our power to counter theirs.
That power operated on a larger scale last week, when local activists
and public health professionals applied sufficient pressure to get New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to sign legislation banning fracking statewide.
Until the news broke on last week, the outcome had seemed uncertain.
It’s a landmark, a watershed decision: a state has decided that its
considerable reserves of fossil fuel will not be extracted for the
foreseeable future, that other things
– the health of its people, the purity of its water – matter more. And
once again, the power of citizens turned out to be greater than that of
industry.
Just a few days before the huge victory in New York, the nations of the world ended their most recent talks in Lima, Peru, about a global climate treaty – and they actually reached a tentative deal,
one that for the first time asks all nations, not just the developed
ones, to reduce emissions. The agreement has to get better – to do more,
demand more of every nation – by the global climate summit in Paris in December of 2015.
It’s hard to see how we’ll get there from here, but easy to see that
activists and citizens will have to push their nations hard. We need to
end the age of fossil fuels the way the French ended the age of absolute
monarchy. As New York state and the town of Richmond just demonstrated,
what is possible has been changing rapidly.
In the shadow of terrible news from scientists, new technology that works – and a new kind of activism
New technologies are only solutions if they’re implemented and the old, carbon-emitting ones are phased out or shut down.Photograph: Andy Katz/Andy Katz/Demotix/Corbis
If you look at innovations in renewable energy technologies – and
this may be an era in which engineers are our unsung heroes – the future
seems tremendously exciting. Not long ago, the climate movement was
only hoping against hope that technology could help save us from the
depredations of climate change. Now, as one of the six great banners
carried in the 400,000-strong September climate march in New York City
proclaimed, “We have the solutions.” Wind, solar and other technologies
are spreading rapidly with better designs, lower costs and many
extraordinary improvements that are undoubtedly but a taste of what’s
still to come.
In parts of the United States and the world, clean energy is actually becomingcheaper
than fossil fuels. The price of oil has suddenly plunged, scrambling
the situation for a while, but with one positive side benefit: it’s
pushed some of the filthier carbon-intensive, cutting-edge energy extraction schemes below the cost-effective point for now.
The costs of clean energy technology have themselves been dropping significantly enough that sober financial advisers
like the head of the Bank of England are beginning to suggest that
fossil fuels and centralized conventional power plants may prove to be bad investments. They are also talking about “the carbon bubble”
(a sign that the divestment movement has worked in calling attention to
the practical as well as the moral problems of the industry). So the
technology front is encouraging.
That’s the carrot for action; there’s also a stick.
If you look at the climate reports by the scientists – and scientists
are another set of heroes for our time – the news only keeps getting
scarier. You probably already know the highlights: chaotic weather,
regular records set for warmth on land and at sea (and 2014 heading for
an all-time heat high), 355 months in a row of above-average temperatures, more ice melting faster, more ocean acidification, the “sixth extinction”, the spread of tropical diseases, drops in food productivity with consequent famines.
So many people don’t understand what we’re up against, because they
don’t think about the Earth and its systems much or they don’t grasp the
delicate, intricate reciprocities and counterbalances that keep it all
running as well as it has since the last ice age ended and an abundant,
calm planet emerged. For most of us, none of that is real or vivid or
visceral or even visible.
For a great many scientists whose fields have something to do with climate, it is. In many cases they’re scared, as well as sad
and unnerved, and they’re clear about the urgency of taking action to
limit how disastrously climate change impacts our species and the
systems we depend upon.
Some non-scientists already assume that it’s too late to do anything,
which – as premature despair always does – excuses us for doing
nothing. Insiders, however, are generally convinced that what we do now
matters tremendously, because the difference between the best- and
worst-case scenarios is vast, and the future is not yet written.
After that huge climate march, I asked Jamie Henn, a cofounder of and communications director for 350.org,
how he viewed this moment and he replied, “Everything’s coming together
while everything’s falling apart,” a perfect summary of the way
heartening news about alternative energy and the growth of climate
activism exists in the shadow of those terrible scientific reports. This
brings us to our third group of heroes, who fall into the one climate
category that doesn’t require special qualifications: activists.
New technologies are only solutions if they’re implemented and the
old, carbon-emitting ones are phased out or shut down. It’s clear enough
that the great majority of fossil fuel reserves must be kept just where
they are – in the ground – as we move away from the Age of Petroleum. That became all too obvious thanks to a relatively recent calculation
made by scientists and publicized and pushed by activists (and maybe
made conceivable by engineers designing replacement systems). The goal
of all this: to keep the warming of the planet to 2°C (3.5°F), a target
established years ago that alarmed scientists are now questioning, given the harm that nearly 1°C of warming is already doing.
Dismantling the fossil-fuel economy would undoubtedly have the side
effect of breaking some of the warping power that oil has had in global
and national politics. Of course, those wielding that power will not
yield it without a ferocious battle – the very battle the climate
movement is already engaged in on many fronts, from the divestment
movement to the fight against fracking to the endeavor to stop the Keystone XL pipeline
and others like it from delivering the products of the Alberta tar
sands to the successful movement to shut down coal-fired power plants in
the US and prevent others from being built.
From Texas to Keystone and another tunnel in Canada, this movement is bigger – and better – than it looks
Small-town Nebraska, alongside the
would-be XL pipeline, has been one of many leading areas of activism
leading the fight against Keystone development.Photograph: Nati Harnik/AP
If everyone who’s passionate about climate change, who gets that
we’re living in a moment in which the fate of the Earth and of humanity
is actually being decided, found their place in the movement, amazing
things could happen. What’s happening now is already remarkable enough,
just not yet adequate to the crisis.
The divestment movement
that arose a couple of years ago to get institutions to unload their
stocks in fossil fuel corporations started modestly. It is now active on
hundreds of college campuses and at other institutions around the
world. While the intransigence or love of inertia of bureaucracies
is a remarkable force, there have been notable victories. In late
September, for instance, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund – made fat upon
the wealth of John D Rockefeller’s founding role in the rise of the
petroleum industry – pledged to divest its $860m in assets from fossil fuels.
It is just one of more than 800 institutions, including church
denominations, universities, cities, pension funds and foundations from
Scotland to New Zealand to Seattle, that have already committed to doing
so.
The Keystone pipeline could have been up and running years ago,
delivering the dirtiest energy from Alberta, Canada, to the US Gulf
Coast with little fanfare, had activists not taken it on.
It has become a profoundly public, hotly debated issue, the subject of
demonstrations at dozens of presidential appearances in recent years –
and in the course of this ruckus, a great many people (including me)
were clued in to the existence of the giant suppurating sore of sludge,
bitumen and poison lakes that is the Alberta tar sands.
Canadian activists have done a similarly effective job of blocking
other pipelines to keep this landlocked stuff from reaching any coast
for export. One upshot of this: quite a lot of the stuff is now being
put on trains (with disastrous results
when they crash and, in the longer term, no less disastrous outcomes
when they don’t). This exceptionally dirty crude oil leaves behind
extremely high levels of toxins in the mining as well as the refining process.
As the Wall Street Journal recently reported:
The Keystone XL pipeline was touted as a model for energy
independence and a source of jobs when TransCanada Corp. announced plans
to build the 1,700-mile pipeline six years ago. But the crude-oil
pipeline’s political and regulatory snarls since then have emboldened
resistance to at least 10 other pipeline projects across North America.
As a result, six oil and natural-gas pipeline projects in North America
costing a proposed $15 billion or more and stretching more than 3,400
miles have been delayed, a tally by the Wall Street Journal shows. At
least four other projects with a total investment of $25 billion and
more than 5,100 miles in length are facing opposition but haven’t been
delayed yet.
The climate movement has proved to be bigger and more effective than
it looks, because most people don’t see a single movement. If they look
hard, what they usually see is a wildly diverse mix of groups facing
global issues on the one hand and a host of local ones on the other.
Domestically, that can mean Denton, Texas, banning fracking in the November election or the shutting down of coal-powered plants across the country, or the movement gearing up in California for an immense anti-fracking demonstration on 7 February.
It can mean people working on college divestment campaigns or
rewriting state laws to address climate change by implementing
efficiency and clean energy. It can mean the British Columbian activists
who, for now, have prevented a tunnel from being drilled for a
tar-sands pipeline to the Pacific Coast thanks to a months-long
encampment, civil disobedience and many arrests at Burnaby Mountain near
Vancouver. One of the arrested wrote in the Vancouver Observer:
[S]itting in that jail cell, I felt a weight lift from my shoulders.
One that I was only partially aware that I have been carrying for years
now. I am ashamed by Canada’s withdrawal from the Kyoto Treaty and our
increasingly contemptible position on climate change. If these are the
values of our society then I want to be an outlaw in that society.
This is the biggest of pictures, so find your role
Earlier this month, hundreds of
Peruvian children formed the image of a tree on the beach to send a
message to the world. It’s a startPhotograph: Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty Images
Just before that September climate march in New York, I began to
contemplate how human beings a century from now will view those of us
who lived in the era when climate change was recognized, and yet there
was so much more that we could have done. They may feel utter contempt
for us. They may regard us as the crew who squandered their inheritance,
like drunkards gambling away a family fortune that, in this case, is
everyone’s everywhere and everything. I’m talking, of course, about the
natural world itself when it was in good working order. They will see us
as people who fiddled while everything burned.
They will think we were insane to worry about celebrities and
fleeting political scandals and whether we had nice bodies. They will
think the newspapers should have had a gigantic black box above the fold
of the front page every day saying “Here are some stories about other
things, BUT CLIMATE IS STILL THE BIGGEST STORY OF ALL.”
They will think that we should have thrown our bodies in front of the
engines of destruction everywhere, raised our voices to the heavens,
halted everything until the devastation stopped. They will bless and
praise the few and curse the many.
There have been heroic climate activists in nearly every country on
the planet, and some remarkable things have already been achieved. The
movement has grown in size, power, and sophistication, but it’s still
nowhere near commensurate with what needs to be done. In the lead-up to
the UN-sponsored conference to create a global climate treaty in Paris
next December, this coming year will likely be decisive.
So this is the time to find your place in a growing movement, if you
haven’t yet – as it is for climate organizers to do better at reaching
out and offering everyone a part in the transformation, whether it’s the
housebound person who writes letters or the 20-year-old who’s ready for
direct action in remote places. This is the biggest of pictures, so
there’s a role for everyone, and it should be everyone’s most important
work right now, even though so many other important matters press on all
of us. (As the Philippines’s charismatic former climate negotiator Yeb
Sano notes, “Climate change impinges on almost all human rights. Human
rights are at the core of this issue.”)
Many people believe that personal acts in private life are what
matters in this crisis. They are good things, but not the key thing.
It’s great to bicycle rather than drive, eat plants
instead of animals, and put solar panels on your roof, but such
gestures can also offer a false sense that you’re not part of the
problem.
You are not just a consumer. You are a citizen of this Earth and your
responsibility is not private but public, not individual but social. If
you are a resident of a country that is a major carbon emitter, as is
nearly everyone in the English-speaking world, you are part of the
system, and nothing less than systemic change will save us.
The race is on. From an ecological standpoint, the scientists advise
us that we still have a little bit of time in which it might be
possible, by a swift, decisive move away from fossil fuels, to limit the
damage we’re setting up for those who live in the future. From a
political standpoint, we have a year until the Paris climate summit, at
which, after endless foot-shuffling and evading and blocking and
stalling and sighing, we could finally, decades in, get a meaningful
climate deal between the world’s nations.
We actually have a chance, a friend who was at the Lima preliminary
round earlier this month told me, if we all continue to push our
governments ferociously. The real pressure for change globally comes
more from within nations than from nations pressuring one another. Here
in the United States, long the world’s biggest carbon-emitter (until
China outstripped us, partly by becoming the manufacturer of a
significant percentage of our products), we have a particular
responsibility to push hard. Pressure works. The president is clearly
feeling it, and it’s reflected in the recent US-China agreement on curtailing emissions – far from perfect or adequate, but a huge step forward.
How will we get to where we need to be? No one knows, but we do know
that we must keep moving in the direction of reduced carbon emissions, a
transformed energy economy, an escape from the tyranny of fossil fuel,
and a vision of a world in which everything is connected. The story of
this coming year is ours to write and it could be a story of Year One in
the climate revolution, of the watershed when popular resistance
changed the fundamentals as much as the people of France changed their
world (and ours) more than 200 ago.
Two hundred years hence, may someone somewhere hold in their hands a
document from 2021, in wonder, because it was written during Year Six of
the climate revolution, when all the old inevitabilities were finally
being swept aside, when we seized hold of possibility and made it ours.
“Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings,” says
Ursula K Le Guin. And she’s right, even if it’s the hardest work we
could ever do.
Now, everything depends on it.
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