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Saturday, 14 October 2017
A story of hope: the Guardian launches phase II of its climate change campaign
With crucial climate talks on the horizon, Keep it in the ground
turns its focus to hope for the future – the power to change and the
solar revolution. Join us and help make that change happen
Get all Keep it in the ground stories by selecting ‘Follow series’ in the Guardian app and sign up via email to get involved
The next phase of our campaign will champion solar power and its potential to transform the global energy supply.
Photograph: Tom Payne/Alamy
A year ago, more than 300,000 people took to the streets in New York to demand action from their leaders on climate change.
Nearly the same number took part in similar events in 161 countries
across the globe. For 24 hours, the sun did not set on the largest
climate protest in history.
These grassroots activists are part of a powerful global movement for change that has continued to grow as crucial UN climate talks in Paris in December have drawn nearer, bolstered by interventions from other important global voices – Pope Francis, Graça Machel, Desmond Tutu and Mary Robinson, to name a few. The pope last week repeated his message of climate justice and change to world leaders at the UN.
Crucially, that change is now beginning to take hold, with clean
energy on the march and the low-carbon economy becoming a reality on the
ground, rather than just a PowerPoint aspiration.
It is against this backdrop that the Guardian is launching the next stage of its climate change campaign as our team of environment correspondents around the world champion a rare commodity in the climate change debate – hope.
There is hope in the many voices who are now calling for action from their leaders.
There is hope in the rapidly falling cost of renewable energy that is starting to transform our dirty energy system.
There is hope in the pledge by G7 countries to phase out coal power.
There is hope in the communities and innovators around the world who
are getting on with the job rather than waiting for the politicians.
In short, the world is beginning to get to grips with the biggest
problem it faces, but has arrived at a crossroads. Powerful forces are
still at work against a meaningful agreement in Paris. So those who
believe that climate change needs urgent solutions cannot let up the
pressure.
More of that later. First a recap.
Six months ago, the Guardian took a stand on climate change with an
editorial push and campaign. The intention was to highlight the
uncomfortable fact that a large proportion of the oil, coal and gas
reserves that states and companies already hold have to stay untapped in
order to avoid dangerous climate change.
It is estimated that the world can afford to burn between one-fifth and one-third of proven reserves
before there is a reasonable chance of tipping the planet over the 2C
danger threshold of warming. Uncomfortable is putting it mildly. As our
reporting has sought to demonstrate, the implications of this analysis
are huge for our economies, the stability of our financial system and
the way we live our everyday lives.
The project has also sought new and better ways to cover the biggest
and most important issue of the age – one that affects so much else that
the Guardian’s journalists around the world report on every day.
Extreme weather, food and water shortages, conflict, migration, energy
bills, technology and many other issues are influenced by the steady
march of climate change.
Aside from making a big investment in investigative journalism and reportage from locations as diverse as the Arctic, China, Brazil, Australia and South Africa, the Guardian also launched a campaign in partnership with the NGO 350.org to persuade the world’s two largest health charities – the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust – to move their investments out of fossil fuel-producing companies. The Guardian’s own commercial board took the decision to divest its £800m fund from coal, oil and gas.
There was always a broader context, however – the Paris climate
talks. In December, governments will attempt to thrash out a deal that
many hope will chart a course to transforming the world’s dirty energy
system and so keep at bay the worst consequences of climate change. Keep
it in the ground phase one began to turn up the heat on politicians in
advance of those talks by highlighting the stratospheric growth of the
fossil fuel divestment movement.
In 43 countries, more than 400 organisations with a collective worth of $2.6tn – including Stanford University, the Church of England, the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund and the Australian city with the largest coal port
on the planet – have made commitments to move their investments out of
fossil fuels. This is civil society putting serious money where its
mouth is – something those involved in the talks have noticed.
With just over two months to go until the talks it is right that we
shift the focus of the campaign. We will continue to highlight the
message that the majority of fossil fuels must be kept under the ground
and to make the divestment case to the Wellcome Trust and Gates
Foundation. But it is time for a new direction.
Naturally, the journalistic focus now moves to the talks themselves.
Which countries are the heroes and which the villains? Will the deal be
fair to the poorest nations? Most importantly, can the agreement save
the world? Despite a relentless diplomatic push by the French hosts to
make the talks a success, an ambitious agreement is far from certain.
Notwithstanding the importance of the UN process, focusing solely on
Paris would be to tell only part of the story. One of the most
significant features of the Keep it in the ground campaign so far has
been the response from Guardian readers. More than 226,000 of you have
signed up as supporters from more than 170 countries – and you have been
central to what we and 350.org have done. You bombarded us with ideas
for stories to cover. Hundreds of you wrote well-informed and often moving letters to the Wellcome Trust board requesting divestment. Many of you took part in a video appeal direct to Bill Gates. And numerous others in his home town of Seattle have joined the cause with their own campaign. Nearly 1,000 health professionals – including the editors of the British Medical Journal and the Lancet – signed a letter urging health organisations to “do no harm” and divest their assets on grounds of medical ethics. Thank you for your support so far.
So when deciding where Keep it in the ground should go next it made
sense for us to ask this global movement where they wanted us to shift
the focus. Naturally, there was a range of ideas but one clear message
kept coming through time and again. It can be summed up in one word –
hope.
Supporters told us they wanted to hear more about the positive
climate stories – the new technologies that are capturing the sun’s
energy even more efficiently; the rapid drops in the price of renewable
energy; the currently off-grid communities in Africa that are developing
clean power; the smart technology helping homeowners to use less
energy.
Another message that came through was a desire to hear about the
other side of the divestment coin. If you take your money out of the
problem, where should you put it to be part of the solution? We’ve heard
about “divest”, now what about “invest”?
Children touch a solar panel at their school. Photograph: Alamy
Above all, you told us that even though the Gates Foundation and
Wellcome Trust have not yet chosen to move their investments, the
Guardian must not give up on the climate issue. With global warming so
high on the world agenda, it would be wrong to abandon the momentum that
Keep it in the ground has created.
So a major strand of our climate coverage up to Paris and beyond will
be about climate change as a story of hope. That doesn’t mean wilfully
ignoring the gravity of the situation we face. Far from it. The Guardian
will continue to report on the science of climate change, visit the
places around the globe that will experience the worst impacts and
uncover bad corporate behaviour and misinformation where it happens. But
we will also make a point of bringing positive stories to the fore. In
particular, the next phase of Keep it in the ground will champion the
amazing growth of solar power and its potential to transform the global
energy supply. Since the disappointing outcome at the Copenhagen climate
summit in 2009, the cost of solar panels has dropped by about 70% and
continues to fall, meaning that solar is now as cheap or cheaper than
fossil fuels in some countries.
In Queensland, Australia, last year, wholesale energy prices went negative during the day
for the first time because of the expansion of solar installations to
more than 350,000 rooftops across the state. There was so much power on
the grid its price crashed. In the US, solar is the fastest-growing source of power
with residential rooftop installations up 70% year on year. And
politicians there have woken up. Last month, President Obama announced
measures to encourage more take-up by home owners. He was speaking in a
Las Vegas casino that has 20 acres of solar panels on its roof. Hillary Clinton has made solar a big part of her pitch for the presidency with a pledge for half a billion panels across the country.
Republicans too – even those who don’t regard climate change as a
problem – are seeing the potential of solar to give households energy
independence and security. “Rooftop solar makes it harder for terrorists to render a devastating blow to our power grid,” says Debbie Dooley, who was one of 22 organisers of the first nationwide Tea Party protest in 2009.
Around the world, far-sighted countries are helping investors to put
serious money into solar. A few months ago, a deal was signed in
conflict-riven Burundi for a solar field that will provide 15% of that country’s energy-generating capacity. Tanzania has a plan to give a million homes access to solar energy by the end of 2017. Bangladesh aims to expand solar power to every home by 2021. Morocco plans to build five big new solar plants by 2020 at a cost of $9bn (£6bn) and become a major energy exporter to Europe. Technology improvements can and will help drive this transition by
making clean energy cheaper, but we are no longer waiting for some
mythical breakthrough invention to solve climate change. Many of the
tools already exist.
With so much momentum behind clean energy around the world, it is all the more jarring that the British government is going in the opposite direction.
With the opposition distracted, the Conservatives have moved to
systematically remove support for renewable energy. The government is consulting on subsidy changes
that will make it essentially uneconomic for people to install solar
panels on their roofs. The Australian government too has acted as a
brake on solar energy when we need an accelerator.
A 10MW solar power station in Delingha, in China’s
Qinghai province, is the first phase of a solar-thermal plant with a
total capacity of 50MW. Photograph: Zhang Hongxiang/Corbis
In the coming weeks and months, the Guardian will increase its
reporting all of these developments and more. We will look in detail at
the potential for solar power and the obstacles it faces. And campaign
supporters will continue to play a crucial role. The Guardian will ask
readers what you want to see covered and we’ll bring you closer to the
experts who can help answer your questions. We will be at the Global Climate March in Paris on 29 November and will give information on what individuals around the world can do to get behind the climate movement.
So whether you are already a supporter of Keep it in the ground or
whether you are seeing the Guardian’s campaign for the first time,
please sign up to find out more. By doing so, you will receive regular
updates on our coverage and the progress of the campaign, as well as an
opportunity to participate and influence the direction we take.
This is the most exciting and hopeful time for anyone interested in
solving the biggest problem that humanity faces. As Pope Francis put it
in his encyclical on the environment in June:
“All is not lost. Human beings, while capable of the worst, are also
capable of rising above themselves, choosing again what is good, and
making a new start … to embark on new paths to authentic freedom.”
That new start is already rising from the dirty energy system we
inherited from the 19th and 20th centuries but for now it is just that –
a start. It is only with unrelenting pressure from below that world
leaders will continue with enough purpose on the right path.
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