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This Crisis Demands a Reappraisal of Who We Are and What Progress Means
Outdated figures have been hiding the full extent of climate change. But I am still advocating action, and not despair
When you warn people about the dangers of climate change, they call you a saint. When you explain what needs to be done to stop it, they call you a communist. Let me show you why.
There is now a broad scientific consensus that we need to prevent temperatures from rising by more than 2C above their pre-industrial level. Beyond that point, the Greenland ice sheet could go into irreversible meltdown, some ecosystems collapse, billions suffer from water stress, and droughts start to threaten global food supplies.
The government proposes to cut the UK's carbon emissions by 60% by 2050. This target is based on a report published in 2000. That report was based on an assessment published in 1995, which drew on scientific papers published a few years earlier. The UK's policy, in other words, is based on papers some 15 years old. Our target, which is one of the toughest on earth, bears no relation to current science.
Over the past fortnight, both Gordon Brown and his adviser, Sir Nicholas Stern, have proposed raising the cut to 80%. Where did this figure come from? The last G8 summit adopted the aim of a global cut of 50% by 2050, which means that 80% would be roughly the UK's fair share. But the G8's target isn't based on current science either.
In the new summary published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), you will find a table that links different cuts to likely temperatures. It suggests that to prevent global warming from eventually exceeding 2C, by 2050 the world will need to cut its emissions to roughly 15% of the volume in 2000.
I looked up the global figures for carbon dioxide production in 2000 and divided it by the current population. This gives a baseline figure of 3.58 tonnes of CO2 per person. An 85% cut means that (if the population remains constant) the global output per head should be reduced to 0.537 tonnes by 2050. The UK currently produces 9.6 tonnes per head and the US 23.6 tonnes. Reducing these figures to 0.537 means a 94.4% cut in the UK and a 97.7% cut in the US. But the world population will rise in the same period. If we assume a population of 9 billion, the cuts rise to 95.9% in the UK and 98.3% in the US.
The IPCC figures might also be out of date. In a footnote beneath the table, the panel admits that "emission reductions...might be underestimated due to missing carbon cycle feedbacks". What this means is that the impact of the biosphere's response to global warming has not been fully considered. As seawater warms, for example, it releases carbon dioxide. As soil bacteria heat up, they respire more, generating more CO2. As temperatures rise, tropical forests die back, releasing the carbon they contain. These are examples of positive feedbacks. A recent paper (all the references are on my website) estimates that feedbacks account for about 18% of global warming. They are likely to intensify.
A paper in Geophysical Research Letters finds that even with a 90% global cut by 2050, the 2C threshold "is eventually broken". To stabilise temperatures at 1.5C above the pre-industrial level requires a global cut of 100%. The diplomats who started talks in Bali yesterday should be discussing the complete decarbonisation of the global economy.
It is not impossible. In a previous article I showed how by switching the whole economy over to the use of electricity and by deploying the latest thinking on regional supergrids, grid balancing and energy storage, you could run almost the entire energy system on renewable power. The major exception is flying (don't expect to see battery-powered jetliners), which suggests that we should be closing rather than opening runways.
This could account for around 90% of the necessary cut. Total decarbonisation demands that we go further. Preventing 2C of warming means stripping carbon dioxide from the air. The necessary technology already exists: the challenge is making it efficient and cheap. Last year Joshuah Stolaroff, who has written a PhD on the subject, sent me some provisional costings, of £256-£458 per tonne of carbon. This makes the capture of CO2 from the air roughly three times as expensive as the British government's costings for building wind turbines, twice as expensive as nuclear power, slightly cheaper than tidal power and eight times cheaper than rooftop solar panels in the UK. But I suspect his figures are too low, as they suggest this method is cheaper than catching CO2 from purpose-built power stations, which cannot be true.
The Kyoto protocol, whose replacement the Bali meeting will discuss, has failed. Since it was signed, there has been an acceleration in global emissions: the rate of CO2 production exceeds the IPCC's worst case and is now growing faster than at any time since the beginning of the industrial revolution. It's not just the Chinese. A paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (the US institute's journal), finds that "no region is decarbonising its energy supply". Even the age-old trend of declining energy intensity as economies mature has gone into reverse. In the UK there is a stupefying gulf between the government's climate policy and the facts it is creating on the ground. How will we achieve even a 60% cut if we build new coal plants, new roads and a third runway at Heathrow?
Underlying the immediate problem is a much greater one. In a lecture to the Royal Academy of Engineering in May, Professor Rod Smith of Imperial College explained that a growth rate of 3% means economic activity doubles in 23 years. At 10% it takes just seven years. This we knew. But Smith takes it further. With a series of equations he shows that "each successive doubling period consumes as much resource as all the previous doubling periods combined". In other words, if our economy grows at 3% between now and 2040, we will consume in that period economic resources equivalent to all those we have consumed since humans first stood on two legs. Then, between 2040 and 2063, we must double our total consumption again. Reading that paper I realised for the first time what we are up against.
But I am not advocating despair. We must confront a challenge that is as great and as pressing as the rise of the Axis powers. Had we thrown up our hands then, as many people are tempted to do today, you would be reading this paper in German. Though the war often seemed impossible to win, when the political will was mobilised strange and implausible things began to happen. The US economy was spun round on a dime in 1942 as civilian manufacturing was switched to military production. The state took on greater powers than it had exercised before. Impossible policies suddenly became achievable.
The real issues in Bali are not technical or economic. The crisis we face demands a profound philosophical discussion, a reappraisal of who we are and what progress means. Debating these matters makes us neither saints nor communists; it shows only that we have understood the science.
George Monbiot is the author of the best selling books The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a new world order and Captive State: the corporate takeover of Britain. He writes a weekly column for the Guardian newspaper.
© 2007 The Guardian
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19 Comments so far
Show AllThe challenge with decarbonizing the economy is that our food production systems have been boosted by adding energy, primarily from fossil fuels. Eventually we'll have to bring the human population down. I suppose we could use electricity to power boats, tractors, etc. but we'd have to drop all carbon based fuel sources - including biogas and wood burning, they can't reduce atmospheric CO2 even if they don't significantly add to it.
For all that, it's not impossible. Both nuclear power and hydroelectricity are large scale non-carbon emitting power sources. (Not that they don't have other problems, but we can only solve those problems with a non-collapsed civilization.) Plus, there's a huge amount of small, local power generating opportunities - the bottleneck is energy storage, and even this has some solutions, though the "market" doesn't seem to promote them. A shift to locally produced food will help, especially if the locally produced meats are only fed locally produced fodder - that will bring the prices up to a sustainable level, and without the backlash that would come if we were forced into a vegetarian diet by government control.
But will these changes happen? No, I should ask how they will happen. The alternative is way worse.
Craig
CLASS ACT: Classy posting!
There are also unforseen variables. About 150 years ago Krakatoa exploded and the debris darkened the atmosphere, which led to a global cooling. Nature MIGHT decide to help us? There is an important astrological configuration in mid-December that I seem to be picking up on right now. From the astrological standpoint, a clear case of correspondence can be made between Saturn and the basic tone/meaning of the Old Testament. Saturn's cheerful antithesis Jupiter, resonates with the New Testament, particularly beliefs in abundance (as sign of God's favor) and the power of faith. Jupiter has a 12 year orbit and is coming to the end of its passage through its own sign of dominion, Sagittarius. It will be "meeting" with Pluto, the ruler of Scorpio, sign of death and rebirth, endings that facilitate new beginnings, etc. These two won't connect again in Sagittarius for 248 years, if that.
Sagittarius, the sign where we celebrate Thanksgiving, truly does bring forth the realization of abundance. I was thinking that if we all really stood in our sacredness, and recognized the enormity of our blessings, the whole buying disease could stop. If enough people TRULY went into a place inside that honored the many blessings already at work in our lives, perhaps this would create some critical mass, infuse more Light into the human equation which is so marked by competition, depravity, and war.
My second point is that if we stand back from our current human drama and its myriad dilemmas, the 2000 election set right at the dawn of a new milennia stands out as a myth of its own, a cautionary tale. What were the odds that OIL men would be given the keys to the cabinet and laws of our land to hold back mankind's progress? Al Gore may be imperfect, but he HAS a soul, and has at least SOME interest in the welfare of his children and the longevitiy of this planet. The tragic decision on the part of the Supreme Court to put not only incompetent but patently sociopathic dangerous power-hungry neanderthals into power to further the interests of empire for oil at a time when everything in Nature was protesting this egregious choice, well, this paradigm that is against nature and all things living, IS the anti-Christ.
Maybe the gods will wake up Krakatoa so we mortals can buy time?
as my favorite philosopher pogo possum once said, regarding a spate of "natural" disasters, "i do like a planet with some fight in her."
Monbiot's article is clear and sensible. What is at stake is the future of humanity and ALL the generations of tomorrow. Articles like this—realistic articles—give me hope that we can grasp the magnitude and meaning of the problem and rise to the occasion. The truth is that the postive feedback loops to which he refers are not yet fully documented by the scientists, and are likely more in number and worse in severity than we know. The one negative feedback loop is the big one: if the Earth has a temperature to rid itself of human civilization, the Earth will cycle back to a cooler period (if it doesn't runaway completely) and rebuild the diversity minus the human civilizational infestation. But the return to a cooler situation and a return of biodiversity will likely take millions of years, as it did in prior extinction events. To avert this ultimate insult to the meaning of our presence on this planet, we must rise up and solve The Crisis. My only criticism is this article is the narrowness of his definition of the scope of The Crisis. It includes at least two dozen factors other than warming via greenhouse gasses. He eludes to one other factor—population. And another one as positive feedback loops in ecosystems such as forests, soils and oceans. There are many others such as ecosystem collapse; fresh water scarcity; ocean levels rising; forced migrations; military expenditures that take away from sustainability investments; loss of biodiversity; pollution with toxic chemicals such as heavy metals, and many more. There are three good sources for a fuller representation of The Crisis: Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update by Dennis Meadows; the GEO-4 report from UNEP; and the late chaper in Collapse by Jared Diamond which discusses about a dozen key, converging problems.
Solar tracking glass mirrors can collect more than 80% of available sunlight to make solar steam.
The value, depending on climate, is equivalent to one-half to one barrel of oil per year (for at least 25 years) per square meter of mirror. The cost is about $100 per square meter. Not bad, $100 for 25 barrels of oil equivalent heat.
This heat can be used for industry or stored in the ground with 90% recovery one year later and distributed to homes via district heating... known in Sweden as seasonal-heat-storage.
Further, 35% of that concentrated sunlight can be converted to electricity with high-intensity photovoltaic cells at a cost less than coal power.
The despair of global warming should be limited to the old fossils making money from burning fossil fuels. Burning dead carbon is obsolete.
EARTHIAN -- Well said, thank you.
I am currently (re-)reading the famous book "small is beautiful" by economist E.F Schumacher. Although the book was published 34 years ago it´s main theme is still of crucial importance today and our economic system is still based on the false assumptions Schumacher rightly criticized, most important of all the absurd idea of unlimited economic growth as the prerequisite for global prosperity and peace.
Just look at the world today: a sick society based on ruthless competition, the fight for natural resources and energy, rise of political and religious extremism, increased militarization and surveillance of citizens, destruction of the environment - how can this system lead to peace and happiness?
Our politicians have worshipped on the altar of "The Market" for too long. We ignore the rules of nature (ecology) and obey the (man-made) "rules of the market" instead. Schumacher: "The market is the institutionalisation of individualism and non-responsibility."
This "freedom from responsibility" (where neither the seller nor the buyer cares about the environmental / social damage a product may have caused)leads of course to great problems in the long run and "climate change" is one, we can no longer ignore.
As Monbiot has realized, this is not about simply reducing CO2 emissions, it is about changing the central dogma of economic policy, about calling into question what progress really means and who decides? Have Science and technology become only servants of a blind economic faith and instruments to dominate markets and control vital goods?
Who needs and profits from patented GMOs? Who really needs space exploration? Can we afford to spend zillions on spaceships and futuristic weapons when people are still dying from malnutrition and lack of medical infrastructure?
We listen to the announcement of the latest Nobel laureates in the natural sciences but how many of us really know and understand what they are researching and for what purpose?
Who decides the goal of the research? Who analyses the risks and benefits (if any) to society - BEFORE the application of a dangerous technology (e.g. biotechnology? THE MARKET?
The necessary economic and political paradigm change is immense and I cannot share George Monbiot´s optimism about achieving a timely solution for the "climate change" problem. I tend to agree with Schumacher´s assessment:
" The economics of giantism, centralism and automation is a left-over of 19th century thinking and it is totally incapable of solving and of the real problems of today. An entirely new system of thought is needed, a system based on attention to people, an d not primarily attention to goods (including money)."
"If human vices such as greed and envy are systematically cultivated, the inevitable result is nothing less than a collapse of intelligence". "
If things continue as they are, I do not see how the earth's population could come anywhere near the current projections. Shortages of food and water, extreme weather events, pollution, and infectious diseases will reduce it to a level that the earth can sustain. It won't be pretty, but it will reduce the harm to the planet.
Human decision making reflects the conflict between the virtual world of social concepts and values as against the real world of thermodynamic flux. If democratic decision making fails to correspond to reality, its decisions cannot be sustained and the democratic system dooms itself over the long term.
Capitalist theory claims to generate profits from surplus labor, a claim which cannot correspond to reality because it would violate the second law of thermodynamics. Profits must therefore come from victims, uncompensated or undercompensated participants in the production transaction. Profits do not necessarily indicate the efficiency of production, but they do necessarily reflect the efficiency of victimization.
In order for victimization to be sustained, democratic enfranchisement must be diminished for the victims. The greatest victimization falls upon those with the least access to democracy: the animal kingdom (outside the human species). Access to democracy requires knowledge, to make decisions that will correspond to reality, registration through a social system, and physical availability. Impoverished victims have reduced access to knowledge, both from educational opportunity and from media products; impoverished victims are less likely to meet registration requirements; and impoverished victims also have less physical access to the ballot than other pariticipants in democracy. On all counts the impoverished have reduced prospects for improving their status through democratic channels.
In selecting candidates for the slate of a particular ballot within a democratic republic, funding has an active role. In selecting candidates from the slate of a particular ballot, the voters have only a passive role. Insofar as a group is victimized, its access to funds is proportionally diminished and with that its prospects for exerting an active influence upon the slate of any particular ballot. The virtual social contract arranged by a democratic republic is therefore under explicit economic duress. The individuals bound by the social contract are under a social duress and, insofar as such individuals are victimized, also under economic duress. The only method available to a democratic republic to respond to economic duress is through regulation.
Regulation without punishment is, however, an exercise in futility. Inadequate punishment will tempt cynical evaluatuions where infraction of law creates potential for profits greater than potential for fines. Because society cannot restore life, capital punishment of persons is morally reprehensible. Capital punishment of capital is, by contrast, entirely justifiable because society can restore capital. Revocation of charter and seizure of assets should be standard responses to the heinous crimes and recidivist behavior of capital.
Capitalist theory claims to respond to society through the forum of a marketplace where a law of "supply and demand" is said to apply. Because supply requires funding, it exerts an active role in the menu of products and services available. In selecting from the menu of products and services, demand has only a passive role. Insofar as a group is victimized, its access to funds is proportionally diminished. Victims can neither actively supply the market nor passively generate significant demand within the market, and accordingly its prospects for having its needs met by the marketplace are diminished.
Enchancing its already active role in the market, capital creates and engages a service to stimulate demand: public relations. This industry generates rationalizations to convince demand to meet its needs from the menu of products supplied. This industry is likewise engaged to promulgate rationalizations aimed at convincing voters to meet their needs from the slate of candidates on the ballot. The effectiveness of public relations constitutes a branch of knowledge which is said to bypass individual rationality through emotional appeal, based on physiological brain response. Reason and logic are not, however, synonomous terms. Logic is a strictly mathematical set of operations requiring for validity the exact correspondence of formal terms and definitions. Reason is a less formal, more adaptive system responding to a dynamic world. Although more influenced by emotion, reason may in the long term succeed in isolating more terms, definitions and operations that are valid for rules of logic. Rationalization may therefore have a feedback effect upon the content of knowledge itself for reasons that may be strictly logical or loosely reasonable, not least because public relations phrases find their way into vernacular language. Engaging the public relations industry requires funding, however, and insofar as a group is victimized its access to the industry is limited and victims therefore find few venues to promote media products or candidates that can improve their status.
The emergent effect of this virtual world network of society-individual, supply-demand, regulation-liberty, rationalization-knowledge, candidate-voter is to continually degrade the status of the victim of capital, making victimization ever more efficient, effective, and thorough. For a given society, distant victimization is preferable to local for reasons of self-legitimization through appearances: esthetic, moral, and political. Thermodynamic costs of capital are therefore systematically externalized, by custom and by law, beyond the boundaries of the organization, the community, and the nation – but they cannot be externalized beyond the planet. While global wealth surges as capital, victimization will inevitably spread in its wake. Global starvation, war, poverty, disease, and unrest will necessarily flourish and underlying that the real world exhaustion of the capacity of the ecosystem of Earth to contain the burgeoning thermodynamic tsunami.
Basically, this is yet another call for some sort of mass enlightenment, a paradigm shift by billions of humans who can't even get themselves to stop gorging on crap food as the still rising obesity levels attest.
The still hopeful are like children of alcoholics - maybe this time the drunk will listen and go sober. Then said drunk crashes the car - maybe this time. Then said drunk passes out with a lit cig and burns the house down - maybe this time.
Finally, the alcohol kills the drunk. "If only he would have listened to reason."
We humans are drunks with a death wish who have ignored nearly 40 years of warnings. Does anyone really believe we'll all suddenly wake up tomorrow and be like: "Oh, sh*t! The Earth is melting. Let's radically change our way of life ASAP!"
Nice. The gap is huge between what we would wish the human world could do, and what will happen as we follow traditional instincts and behavior. The doubling of the economy as of now I would see as an impossibility. Limits of food and oil production have been reached. The financial system is in a state of hyperinflation by debt. The ecosystem and agricultural productivity is degrading. That alone will not stop us over-breeding, but it is a start.
The comments by earthian and ClassAct are excellent, and Monbiot validates my recently stated appraisal that Business as Usual--BAU--must stop today; yet, it won't, so we must plan accordingly.
I must confess that my extended family is very much aware that BAU must stop today, but they do nothing to further that; indeed, the help it continue. I suppose those of us capable of making behavioral changes that allow us to create lifeboats for ourselves might survive what is to come. Personally, I refer to myself as building an Ark, and yes, my efforts are laughed at by those ignorant of the situation. But there are a few who understand the nature of our dilemma and represent a growing cadre willing to be laughed at to save themselves and their families. Yes, the story of Noah is myth; but the vision of safely floating away upon the rising floodwaters while fending off those previous laughers trying desperately to board and save themselves from drowning and the wailing of the doomed is quite frightful. Yes, it's depressing, and rightfully so.
Thanks Nspire.
Take Adel's remarks (Thanks Adel!!!) about solar energy for heat and electricity. Then add the pneumatic motors for cars which are powered by compressed air. We have the making of a sustainable revolution that is non-carbon-based IF we can get a new progressive regime here in the USA to subsidize sustainable practices and phase out Earth-harming practices. (Think Kucinich/Sheehan/Franken.) The references to the pneumatic motors (air cars) are below. Check 'em out:
Search for "air car" on YouTube.com and look at the nine-minute movie.
And go to www.theaircar.com
Pneumatic motors run on compressed air to run pistons or rotors AND their byproduct (once the air is compressed with electricity from renewable sources such as what Abel described) is just cold air.
Why don't we stop fooling ourselves. The game is over, over, over. (Simon & Garfunkel)
When George Monbiot says "When you explain what needs to be done, they call you a communist.", he is more right than he realizes. There is no way a capitalist "democracy" like ours is going to be able to regulate capitalism so as to be able to survive this crisis. As long as the capitalists control the money, they control everything else with it. Only a democratic socialism, and an authoritarian one at that, is going to be able to create a sustainable society. If the capitalists continue in power, and they will as long as they have their money and resources (laws and elections are ineffective to control them), the best we will end up with is a fascist/warlord society with a massive dieoff of most of the world's population.
The good thing is that everyone isn't crazy (as the preceding comments demonstrate). Undoubtedly, capitalism is the major problem and in my opinion, solar energy is the way to go. It's easy to get depressed, yet I do have hope. Just five years ago, it was difficult to have this conversation because the network of progressive websites didn't exist. Many of the ideas that were virtually unknown back then have made it into the popular culture as the result of people such as the ones who make comments on Commondreams. Good Job!
I do what I can on the political side, but I'm convinced that most people will only take action when these things that we've been warning about (Global Warming, etc.) come to fruition. I hope it is not too late by then. I try to remember that as successful as we have been, we're still a political minority. Our message is still rarely heard by the general population whereas people are bombarded night and day, from kindergarten to old age, by the corporatist message on TV. Yet, a growing number of people know that there is something very wrong with the way that the "leadership" runs things. In a strange way, Bush and company have been great for the progressive/social democratic movement by his/their complete idiocy and incompetence. When people see that the country is being run by a bunch if clowns they start to look for alternatives. B.S. and propaganda only go so far regardless of how much corporations control the airwaves.
It looks like the Democrats are going to achieve much stronger majorities in the House and Senate, and they'll probably win the presidency. Will things get any better? Probably. At least then we will have a chance to get our message heard on a mass basis.
As for me, I've been working on my solar system. That's my goal-to make a practical system that can handle high current loads (such as air conditioning) with a reasonably sized and affordable solar collector. I think that people are becoming interested in reducing carbon dioxide levels, but I know that most people where I live are very interested in virtually eliminating their sky-high power bills. I'm doing what I can.
elegant solution - reverse autosprawl
http://www.freepublictransit.org
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Siouxrose wrote: Maybe the gods will wake up Krakatoa so we mortals can buy time?
Actually, Siouxrose, the volcano that was left there (they call it Son of Krakatoa, I forget the actual name), did start erupting recently. Perhaps your prayers will be answered!
Terra Preta- please google this phrase: Terra Preta.
In the Amazon lies the key to removing all that excess carbon from the atmosphere and feeding the worlds population on the depleted soils left after corporate agriculture has been done with it. A fertilizer that anybody can make, lasts for thousands of years and pulls more carbon from the atmosphere each year it exists.
Terra Preta is the name for dark soils ceated by Amazon indians prior to the arrival of the Spanish. By adding charcoal, faeces, yard waste and kitchen waste to the soil the best soil in the world is formed. The charcoal can be very low grade made from leaves, twigs, manure, stalks woody biomass and grass. Powdered and added to the soil it boosts productivity of some poor soils by 400%.
The best part is that the charcoal is carbon removed from the air that supports a reef of soil fungi that binds an equal amount of atmospheric carbon. Like a coral reef the Terra Preta "grows" once established increasing in it's capacity to support life.
Make a Terra Preta test plot in your backyard and be amazed at the growth of your plants. Be a seed for your area and help save the planet.