A personal view of Australian and International Politics

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.

Saturday, 7 March 2020

Why don’t we treat the climate crisis with the same urgency as coronavirus?

Extract from The Guardian

Opinion
Climate change

Owen Jones
No Cobra meetings, no sombre speeches from No 10, yet the consequences of runaway global heating are catastrophic
Thu 5 Mar 2020 22.52 AEDT Last modified on Fri 6 Mar 2020 01.44 AEDT

A home in Mozambique destroyed by cyclone Idai.
A home in Mozambique destroyed by cyclone Idai. Photograph: Zohra Bensemra/Reuters

It is a global emergency that has already killed on a mass scale and threatens to send millions more to early graves. As its effects spread, it could destabilise entire economies and overwhelm poorer countries lacking resources and infrastructure. But this is the climate crisis, not the coronavirus. Governments are not assembling emergency national plans and you’re not getting push notifications transmitted to your phone breathlessly alerting you to dramatic twists and developments from South Korea to Italy.
More than 3,000 people have succumbed to coronavirus yet, according to the World Health Organization, air pollution alone – just one aspect of our central planetary crisis – kills seven million people every year. There have been no Cobra meetings for the climate crisis, no sombre prime ministerial statements detailing the emergency action being taken to reassure the public. In time, we’ll overcome any coronavirus pandemic. With the climate crisis, we are already out of time, and are now left mitigating the inevitably disastrous consequences hurtling towards us.
While coronavirus is understandably treated as an imminent danger, the climate crisis is still presented as an abstraction whose consequences are decades away. Unlike an illness, it is harder to visualise how climate breakdown will affect us each as individuals. Perhaps when unprecedented wildfires engulfed parts of the Arctic last summer there could have been an urgent conversation about how the climate crisis was fuelling extreme weather, yet there wasn’t. In 2018, more than 60 million people suffered the consequences of extreme weather and climate change, including more than 1,600 who perished in Europe, Japan and the US because of heatwaves and wildfires. Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe were devastated by cyclone Idai, while hurricanes Florence and Michael inflicted $24bn (£18.7bn) worth of damage on the US economy, according to the World Meteorological Organization.


Residents of Bangkok, Thailand, wear masks to protect themselves against pollution.
Residents of Bangkok, Thailand, wear masks to protect themselves against pollution. Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA

As the recent Yorkshire floods illustrate, extreme weather – with its terrible human and economic costs – is ever more a fact of British life. Antarctic ice is melting more than six times faster than it was four decades ago and Greenland’s ice sheet four times faster than previously thought. According to the UN, we have 10 years to prevent a 1.5C rise above pre-industrial temperature but, whatever happens, we will suffer.
Pandemics and the climate crisis may go hand in hand, too: research suggests that changing weather patterns may drive species to higher altitudes, potentially putting them in contact with diseases for which they have little immunity. “It’s strange when people see the climate crisis as being in the future, compared to coronavirus, which we’re facing now,” says Friends of the Earth’s co-executive director, Miriam Turner. “It might be something that feels far away when sitting in an office in central London, but the emergency footing of the climate crisis is being felt by hundreds of millions already.”
Imagine, then, that we felt the same sense of emergency about the climate crisis as we do about coronavirus. What action would we take? As the New Economic Foundation’s Alfie Stirling points out, a strict demarcation between the two crises in unwise. After all, coronavirus may trigger a global slowdown: the economic measures in response to this should be linked to solving the climate crisis. “What tends to happen in a recession is policy-makers panic about what the low-lying fruits are; it’s all supply chains and sticking plasters,” he tells me. During the 2008 crash, for example, there was an immediate cut in VAT and interest rates, but investment spending wasn’t hiked fast enough, and was then slashed in the name of austerity. According to NEF research, if the coalition government had funded additional zero-carbon infrastructure, it would not only have boosted the economy but could have reduced residential emissions by 30%. This time round, there’s little room to cut already low interest rates or boost quantitative easing; green fiscal policy must be the priority.

What would be mentioned in that solemn prime ministerial speech on the steps of No 10, broadcast live across TV networks? All homes and businesses would be insulated, creating jobs, cutting fuel poverty and reducing emissions. Electric car charging points would be installed across the country. Britain currently lacks the skills to transform the nation’s infrastructure, for example replacing fuel pumps, says Stirling: an emergency training programme to train the workforce would be announced.
A frequent flyer levy for regular, overwhelmingly affluent air passengers would be introduced. As Turner says, all government policies will now be seen through the prism of coronavirus. A similar climate lens should be applied, and permanently.
This would only be the start. Friends of the Earth calls for free bus travel for the under-30s, combined with urgent investment in the bus network. Renewable energy would be doubled, again producing new jobs, clean energy, and reducing deadly air pollution. The government would end all investments of taxpayers’ money in fossil fuel infrastructure and launch a new tree-planting programme to double the size of forests in Britain, one of Europe’s least densely forested nations.
There is a key difference between coronavirus and climate crisis, of course, and it is shame. “We didn’t know coronavirus was coming,” says Stirling. “We’ve known the climate crisis was on the cards for 30 or 40 years.” And yet – despite being inadequately prepared because of an underfunded, under-resourced NHS – the government can swiftly announce an emergency pandemic plan.
Coronavirus poses many challenges and threats, but few opportunities. A judicious response to global heating would provide affordable transport, well-insulated homes, skilled green jobs and clean air. Urgent action to prevent a pandemic is of course necessary and pressing. But the climate crisis represents a far graver and deadlier existential threat, and yet the same sense of urgency is absent. Coronavirus shows it can be done – but it needs determination and willpower, which, when it comes to the future of our planet, are desperately lacking.

• Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist
Posted by The Worker at 6:28:00 am
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

About Me

My photo
The Worker
I was inspired to start this when I discovered old editions of "The Worker". "The Worker" was first published in March 1890, it was the Journal of the Associated Workers of Queensland. It was a Political Newspaper for the Labour Movement. The first Editor was William "Billy" Lane who strongly supported the iconic Shearers' Strike in 1891. He planted the seed of New Unionism in Queensland with the motto “that men should organise for the good they can do and not the benefits they hope to obtain,” he also started a Socialist colony in Paraguay. Because of the right-wing bias in some sections of the Australian media, I feel compelled to counter their negative and one-sided version of events. The disgraceful conduct of the Murdoch owned Newspapers in the 2013 Federal Election towards the Labor Party shows how unrepresentative some of the Australian media has become.
View my complete profile

Translate

Search This Blog

Popular Posts

  • Centrelink fiasco: when can the government release your personal information?
    Extract from  The Guardian Information about a welfare recipient is considered protected but there are exceptions to t...
  • Why Palestinian peace activists receive threats.
     Extract from  Eureka Street Home Vol 36 ...
  • analysisUkraine's new offensives against Russia will aim to retake territory, inspire hope and reignite Western attention on the war.
    Extract from  ABC News Analysis By Mick Ryan Posted  1 hours ago Soon it will be the Ukrainians' turn to resume offensive operations ag...
  • Coalition began writing landmark environment bill before receiving review it had ordered.
    Extract from  The Guardian Environmental investigations Environment Review of EPBC Act was delivered to government 11 days after process of ...
  • Stunning images of 'galactic fireworks' hold the secrets of how stars form.
    Extract from  ABC News Science ABC Science By science reporter Gemma Conroy Posted  9 hours ago The beautiful colours in this image allow a...
  • Angus Taylor attacks Beetaloo Basin activists and says Australia right to expand fossil fuels.
    Extract from  The Guardian Angus Taylor Taylor says Australia has ‘kept our foot on the accelerator’ when it comes to supply of oil and gas ...
  • ‘No one wants to be right about this’: climate scientists’ horror and exasperation as global predictions play out.
    Extract from  The Guardian Scorched earth … wildfire smoke fills the sky in Quebec on 18 July as nearly 900 wildfires burn across Canada ...
  • Annastacia Palaszczuk wins government in Queensland, making history.
    Extract from  ABC News By Kate McKenna and Lily Nothling Posted Yesterday at 5:35am , updated Yesterday at 1:52pm Annastacia Palaszczuk cla...
  • 'Totally appropriate': Trump shows no remorse over role in Capitol attack.
    Extract from  The Guardian Donald Trump President speaks to reporters for first time since rampage De...
  • Pluto flyby photos thrill New Horizons scientists after nine-year Nasa mission
    Extract from  The Guardian NASA spacecraft makes history as the first spacecraft to reach distant dwarf planet, the last unexp...

Favourite Links

  • Australian Council of Trade Unions
  • Australian Labor Party
  • Queensland Council of Unions
  • ALP Queensland
  • Whitlam Institute
  • Chifley Research Centre
  • John Curtin Prime Ministerial Library
  • The Australia Institute
  • Tim Flannery ~ Australian Climate Council
  • Dr. James E. Hansen explains Climate Change
  • David Suzuki Foundation
  • The Environment Time capsule
  • Solar Citizen
  • Cape Grim Greenhouse Gas Data
  • The Jane Goodall Institute Australia
  • RenewEconomy
  • Basic income Earth Network
  • Skeptical Science
  • Lucinda's Song and Dance

Blog Archive

  • ►  2026 (182)
    • ►  February (67)
    • ►  January (115)
  • ►  2025 (1158)
    • ►  December (120)
    • ►  November (104)
    • ►  October (111)
    • ►  September (150)
    • ►  August (125)
    • ►  July (106)
    • ►  June (101)
    • ►  May (78)
    • ►  April (66)
    • ►  March (77)
    • ►  February (59)
    • ►  January (61)
  • ►  2024 (921)
    • ►  December (60)
    • ►  November (69)
    • ►  October (79)
    • ►  September (64)
    • ►  August (45)
    • ►  July (74)
    • ►  June (72)
    • ►  May (80)
    • ►  April (68)
    • ►  March (110)
    • ►  February (101)
    • ►  January (99)
  • ►  2023 (877)
    • ►  December (101)
    • ►  November (82)
    • ►  October (70)
    • ►  September (91)
    • ►  August (56)
    • ►  July (90)
    • ►  June (55)
    • ►  May (60)
    • ►  April (55)
    • ►  March (84)
    • ►  February (72)
    • ►  January (61)
  • ►  2022 (1195)
    • ►  December (84)
    • ►  November (107)
    • ►  October (45)
    • ►  September (83)
    • ►  August (129)
    • ►  July (137)
    • ►  June (84)
    • ►  May (82)
    • ►  April (87)
    • ►  March (116)
    • ►  February (135)
    • ►  January (106)
  • ►  2021 (2138)
    • ►  December (101)
    • ►  November (286)
    • ►  October (236)
    • ►  September (150)
    • ►  August (116)
    • ►  July (168)
    • ►  June (171)
    • ►  May (161)
    • ►  April (138)
    • ►  March (220)
    • ►  February (221)
    • ►  January (170)
  • ▼  2020 (1868)
    • ►  December (145)
    • ►  November (156)
    • ►  October (98)
    • ►  September (152)
    • ►  August (145)
    • ►  July (164)
    • ►  June (146)
    • ►  May (158)
    • ►  April (99)
    • ▼  March (150)
      • 'Probably the worst year in a century': the enviro...
      • 'The animals aren't pleased': UK zoos under corona...
      • Trump lashes out at critics as Fauci warns New Orl...
      • Coronavirus two-person rule: what we know about th...
      • From tight purse strings to massive fiscal firepow...
      • THE WORKER - News summary week ending September 18...
      • 'If I get corona, I get corona': the Americans who...
      • How does coronavirus compare to Spanish flu? COVID...
      • One day we will tell stories of the virus, a time ...
      • Coronavirus panic-buying no issue for Victorian fa...
      • Coronavirus has shown Australian travellers have t...
      • The battle over how to fight coronavirus has a fau...
      • Jair Bolsonaro claims Brazilians 'never catch anyt...
      • Trump's narcissism has taken a new twist. And now ...
      • Dangerous cures and viral hoaxes: common coronavir...
      • Five practical tips for physical distancing while ...
      • After the coronavirus, Australia and the world can...
      • 'Coronavirus wants to kill you': patient issues pl...
      • Indonesia’s hidden coronavirus cases threaten to o...
      • Australia is scared and confused about coronavirus...
      • How ventilators work and why they are so important...
      • I fled the coronavirus in New York for Sydney. I w...
      • Queensland miners fear Fifo workers could pose a t...
      • Covid-19 is nature's wake-up call to complacent ci...
      • We face a pandemic of mental health disorders. Tho...
      • The Australian welfare system has always been need...
      • It's not working: Scott Morrison's late-night coro...
      • Coronavirus: 'Nature is sending us a message’, say...
      • Great Barrier Reef suffers third mass coral bleach...
      • Can losing your sense of smell be a symptom of cor...
      • Data shows coronavirus can only be controlled if 8...
      • Delay is deadly: what Covid-19 tells us about tack...
      • Stuart Robert’s incompetence on MyGov should accel...
      • Covid-19: how long can it survive outside the body?
      • Coronavirus has made us all learn to work from hom...
      • Regulate your breathing – and four other ways to s...
      • Hope in the time of coronavirus lies in rebuilding...
      • Electric cars produce less CO2 than petrol vehicle...
      • Our politicians scramble for hope as Australia, on...
      • 'I feel expendable': Australian teachers sound ala...
      • The beautiful south: our wild, vulnerable world, s...
      • 'Think about the best-case scenario': how to manag...
      • As Australia goes off the coronavirus cliff, the q...
      • Marx Bros Day at the Racers
      • Abbott and Costello "Who's on first"
      • Funny Pink Panther clips
      • 'The forest is everything': indigenous tribes in I...
      • A tale for our times: laughter is still the best m...
      • The secret of calm: how to de-stress if you have o...
      • Go to ground amid coronavirus: how to grow a livin...
      • What is coronavirus – and what is the mortality rate?
      • Can a face mask protect me from coronavirus? Covid...
      • The coronavirus story is unfathomably large. We mu...
      • Coronavirus: the Guardian's promise to our readers
      • Remember Josh Frydenberg scoffing at a 'wellbeing ...
      • Overload in a time of coronavirus
      • Coalition relaxes job-seeking obligations but refu...
      • Coronavirus: the science of how Covid-19 affects t...
      • Coles and Woolworths urged to expand services to p...
      • Don't panic, Australia. The coronavirus doesn't me...
      • Greenland's melting ice raised global sea level by...
      • Adani executive Lucas Dow talks up bigger coal min...
      • Study: global banks 'failing miserably' on climate...
      • Welfare recipients on cashless debit card will hav...
      • How to survive isolation with your roommates, your...
      • Australia's economic victims of coronavirus, just ...
      • Keep it clean: The surprising 130-year history of ...
      • Scott Morrison had a tough message to deliver – ou...
      • Coronavirus outbreak leads to calls for housing ev...
      • Australian jobseekers fear having payments cut off...
      • Coronavirus is causing panic buying, but what does...
      • Think coronavirus only kills the old? Think again.
      • As coronavirus spreads, what you need to know abou...
      • Coronavirus infection prevention — what is social ...
      • Dr Norman Swan recommends 'severe' shutdowns
      • Think the world is ending? Grab a shovel, not a sh...
      • Zali Steggall launches ad campaign to rally suppor...
      • Patriotism could be the unlikely answer to solving...
      • Soap saves lives: adverts in the Guardian after th...
      • The sick joke of Donald Trump's presidency isn't f...
      • Can coronavirus be the crisis to shake us out of o...
      • Coronavirus has forced politicians out of their id...
      • Leading infection control expert says Australia mu...
      • Covid-19: what happens once someone is infected? S...
      • The science of soap – here’s how it kills the coro...
      • Morrison's coronavirus stimulus package shows sobe...
      • The sports rorts questions Scott Morrison doesn't ...
      • People without secure housing 'particularly vulner...
      • Coronavirus: what happens to people's lungs when t...
      • Polar ice caps melting six times faster than in 1990s
      • Christian Porter doesn’t understand insecure work ...
      • Ecosystems the size of Amazon 'can collapse within...
      • Climate emergency: global action is ‘way off track...
      • Scientists warn of 'critical gaps' in Australia's ...
      • Australian government won't 'jump to a solution' t...
      • Australian government stimulus package promises fi...
      • Coronavirus response ‘a shambles’: Australian doct...
      • Indian Ocean system that drives extreme weather in...
      • Sport Australia defies Senate on questions over sp...
      • Karl Kruszelnicki's 2020s vision: we need a new wa...
    • ►  February (190)
    • ►  January (265)
  • ►  2019 (1888)
    • ►  December (207)
    • ►  November (216)
    • ►  October (202)
    • ►  September (193)
    • ►  August (151)
    • ►  July (151)
    • ►  June (87)
    • ►  May (120)
    • ►  April (166)
    • ►  March (156)
    • ►  February (122)
    • ►  January (117)
  • ►  2018 (1793)
    • ►  December (207)
    • ►  November (193)
    • ►  October (212)
    • ►  September (195)
    • ►  August (162)
    • ►  July (189)
    • ►  June (175)
    • ►  May (139)
    • ►  April (33)
    • ►  March (126)
    • ►  February (94)
    • ►  January (68)
  • ►  2017 (2094)
    • ►  December (70)
    • ►  November (97)
    • ►  October (109)
    • ►  September (123)
    • ►  August (161)
    • ►  July (217)
    • ►  June (201)
    • ►  May (223)
    • ►  April (170)
    • ►  March (243)
    • ►  February (302)
    • ►  January (178)
  • ►  2016 (1016)
    • ►  December (165)
    • ►  November (163)
    • ►  October (103)
    • ►  September (109)
    • ►  August (66)
    • ►  July (44)
    • ►  June (57)
    • ►  May (68)
    • ►  April (61)
    • ►  March (74)
    • ►  February (50)
    • ►  January (56)
  • ►  2015 (874)
    • ►  December (72)
    • ►  November (69)
    • ►  October (73)
    • ►  September (109)
    • ►  August (71)
    • ►  July (104)
    • ►  June (102)
    • ►  May (80)
    • ►  April (44)
    • ►  March (51)
    • ►  February (32)
    • ►  January (67)
  • ►  2014 (1022)
    • ►  December (65)
    • ►  November (88)
    • ►  October (104)
    • ►  September (90)
    • ►  August (73)
    • ►  July (60)
    • ►  June (87)
    • ►  May (120)
    • ►  April (77)
    • ►  March (128)
    • ►  February (67)
    • ►  January (63)
  • ►  2013 (730)
    • ►  December (50)
    • ►  November (70)
    • ►  October (51)
    • ►  September (48)
    • ►  August (52)
    • ►  July (83)
    • ►  June (116)
    • ►  May (91)
    • ►  April (44)
    • ►  March (36)
    • ►  February (45)
    • ►  January (44)
  • ►  2012 (137)
    • ►  December (20)
    • ►  November (32)
    • ►  October (43)
    • ►  September (24)
    • ►  August (18)
Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.