It’s not just the megarich: increased spending power leads us all to inflict environmental damage. It’s time for a radical plan
It is not quite true that behind every great fortune lies a great crime.
Musicians and novelists, for example, can become extremely rich by
giving other people pleasure. But it does appear to be universally true
that in front of every great fortune lies a great crime. Immense wealth
translates automatically into immense environmental impacts, regardless
of the intentions of those who possess it. The very wealthy, almost as a
matter of definition, are committing ecocide.
A few weeks ago, I received a letter from a worker at a British
private airport. “I see things that really shouldn’t be happening in
2019,” he wrote. Every day he sees Global 7000 jets, Gulfstream G650s
and even Boeing 737s take off from the airport carrying a single
passenger, mostly flying to Russia and the US. The private Boeing 737s,
built to take 174 passengers, are filled at the airport with around
25,000 litres of fuel. That’s as much fossil energy as a small African
town might use in a year.Where are these single passengers going? Perhaps to visit one of their superhomes, constructed and run at vast environmental cost, or to take a trip on their superyacht, which might burn 500 litres of diesel an hour just ticking over, and which is built and furnished with rare materials extracted at the expense of beautiful places.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised to learn that when Google convened a meeting of the rich and famous at the Verdura resort in Sicily in July to discuss climate breakdown, its delegates arrived in 114 private jets and a fleet of megayachts, and drove around the island in supercars. Even when they mean well, the ultrarich cannot help trashing the living world.
But this requires structural change, which involves political intervention as well as technological innovation: anathema to Silicon Valley billionaires. It demands an acknowledgement that money is not a magic wand that makes all the bad stuff go away.
A meaningful strike in defence of the living world is, in part, a strike against the desire to raise our incomes and accumulate wealth: a desire shaped, more than we are probably aware, by dominant social and economic narratives. I see myself as striking in support of a radical and disturbing concept: enough. Individually and collectively, it is time to decide what “enough” looks like, and how to know when we’ve achieved it.
There’s a name for this approach, coined by the Belgian philosopher Ingrid Robeyns: limitarianism. Robeyns argues that there should be an upper limit to the amount of income and wealth a person can amass. Just as we recognise a poverty line, below which no one should fall, we should recognise a riches line, above which no one should rise. This call for a levelling down is perhaps the most blasphemous idea in contemporary discourse.
But her arguments are sound. Surplus money allows some people to exercise inordinate power over others: in the workplace; in politics; and above all in the capture, use and destruction of the planet’s natural wealth. If everyone is to flourish, we cannot afford the rich. Nor can we afford our own aspirations, which the culture of wealth maximisation encourages.
The grim truth is that the rich are able to live as they do only because others are poor: there is neither the physical nor ecological space for everyone to pursue private luxury. Instead we should strive for private sufficiency, public luxury. Life on Earth depends on moderation.
• This article was amended on September 19 to remove an inaccurate reference to the world’s most expensive superyacht.
• George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist
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