The Anti-Climate Summit
While drafting the so-called Bali Roadmap during the UN Conference on climate change last December, delegates faced a painful choice. They could specifically mention the necessity of reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 25-40% by 2020 and face the possibility of a U.S. walkout from the negotiations. Or they could drop all mention of targets to keep Washington in the negotiations -- and risk of the United States fatally obstructing the process of coming up with a tough regime of mandatory emissions cuts that would have to be in place by the UN's climate meeting in Copenhagen in December 2009.
The delegates went with the latter and appeased Washington by not mentioning any targets. After the declaration on climate issued by the G8 summit a few days ago in Hokkaido, Japan, it is clear that the delegates in Bali made a strategic mistake. The G8's endorsement of a 50% reduction in emissions by 2050, which they have presented as a major step forward, is actually, as the South African government put it, a "regression from what is required to make a meaningful contribution to meeting the challenges of climate change."
In fact, "regression" is too polite. The G8 position is a giant step backward. It may have effectively undermined the prospects for an effective global climate strategy for the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol that is expected to be finalized at the crucial UN meeting in Copenhagen in December 2009.
Deconstructing the G8 Position
Given the massive confusion that the G8 climate communique has created globally, it is worthwhile to deconstruct the position in detail.
The 25-40% reduction from 1990 emission levels by 2020 that could have been adopted in Bali grew out of a developing consensus. Based on the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), this consensus holds that preventing global mean temperature from rising above the critical threshold of 2 degrees centigrade in the 21st century will require radical cuts in greenhouse gas emissions of 80-90% by 2050. The 25-40% reductions were an intermediate target on the path to achieving this goal. The G8 "commitment" of about half this final target is grossly inadequate.
Several other considerations highlight the dangers of the Washington-driven formula First, the G8 proposes a global cut, not one that would be undertaken only by the industrialized or "Annex One" countries. As such, big polluters like the United States can actually free-ride on the rest of the world.
Second, the cut has no clear baseline. When making the announcement, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda initially said the cut was from 1990 levels. Then he had to take back that statement and subsequently mentioned the higher levels of 2000 as the baseline.
Third, this declaration of intent is not binding, and the G8 have given no indication that they want to bring their "pledge" fully under the UN climate negotiations framework that would bind its signatories. Indeed, the G8 announcement reinforces the G8 as a site for climate action that rivals the UN process and effectively subverts it. Not surprisingly, the G8 declaration emerged as part of a parallel process known as the "Major Economies Meeting." The Major Economies Meeting is a U.S. initiative to wrest decision-making on climate from the UN framework and process.
Anti-Climate United Front
The G8 climate communiqué demonstrates that not only Washington but the other powerful economies of the world are opposed to effective climate action. And without the rich country governments committing themselves to obligatory radical cuts in carbon dioxide levels, it will be impossible to convince China, India, and other rapidly industrializing economies to agree to subject themselves to a mandatory regime in the near future.
With Washington's posture so retrograde, the policies of other developed country governments appear in a more positive light. But this is an illusion. While Washington has been the most visible obstacle to achieving effective action on climate, the obstructionist role of the other advanced industrial countries has not been insignificant. Japan and Canada, for instance, have retreated from their previous support for a regime of mandatory reductions and saved Washington from total isolation in the negotiations.
The European Union, while it continues to support a mandatory regime, does not appear to be willing to support the cuts of up to 80-90% by 2050 that are necessary to prevent irreversible large-scale climate change. In terms of its approach to reducing carbon emissions, the EU, like the United States, has increasingly given a central role to the corporate-friendly market approach of carbon trading. On the critical issue of providing the South with assistance for technology and adaptation, the EU, again like United States, prefers to channel the relatively little money it has so far been willing to commit not through institutional mechanisms set up under UN auspices but through those established by the World Bank, such as the Bank's Climate Investment Funds. The reason is simple: the North controls the World Bank.
Most importantly, like the United States and Japan, the European governments continue to hang on to the position that economic growth can be "decoupled" from energy use. In other words, they think they can maintain current European consumption levels and only have to achieve the more efficient use of energy and replace oil with other energy sources. Thus, the EU has preferred to lull Europeans with panaceas. Brussels has championed biofuels, though its enthusiasm has been dampened somewhat by the increasingly evident negative impact of biofuels on global agricultural production. It has also increasingly come out in support of hard energy alternatives, such as mega-dams and carbon sequestration and storage technology, and has also reopened the discussion on nuclear energy.
A Painless Transition?
The focus on techno-fixes is not limited to the political and economic elites of the North but is shared by key members of its intellectual elite. I'm not talking about people like the Danish climate skeptic Bjorn Lomborg but influential opinion-makers like Jeffrey Sachs, who has attempted to transform himself from the author of economic shock therapy in Eastern Europe to a progressive partisan of the struggles to end poverty and to fight global warming. In his latest book Common Wealth, Sachs' message is that technology can make the transition to a clean Green world a relatively painless one, with no major lifestyle change in the North and no change in the high-growth development paradigm in the South. "Rather than focusing, as some environmentalists do, on reducing the income and consumption of the rich world," he asserts, "we should focus much more on raising the...sustainability of the world's technologies."
For Sachs, the key technology is carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) "which will allow the world to continue to use low cost fossil fuels such as coal in a manner that does not wreck the climate." With what can only be described as childlike techno-enthusiasm, Sachs says, "air capture would allow humanity to reverse a previous rise of CO2 by capturing and sequestering more carbon dioxide than is being emitted in any period! Put differently, the best that can be achieved at a power plant is to stop new emissions. With air capture, we could put into reverse what we've done up to this point." That this technology is at least 20 years away from being a practical technology and comes with unknown risks does not enter Sachs' sci-fi scenario.
Capitalism and the Climate Crisis
Herman Daly, the renowned environmentalist, calls this attitude -- that environmental action stops when it begins to impinge on the economy -- "growthmania." Growthmania, however, goes beyond being a psychological fix. It is a cultivated ideological predisposition that serves as a protective shield for global capitalism. Capitalism is an expansive mode of production, and it can only reproduce itself by continually transforming living nature into dead commodities. This is essentially what growth is all about. This is why ever-increasing consumption is so central to the engine of profitability that drives capitalism.
The G8 -- the directorate of global capitalism -- is trying hard to avoid just such radical controls on growth, consumption, profits, and the market that a viable strategy to stave off the looming climate catastrophe will necessitate. Voluntary cuts, technofixes, and carbon trading are desperate efforts to prevent the inevitable. Just like the U.S. economy during World War II, it will take planned economies with severely regulated markets and profits, strictly controlled consumption, and equitably shared sacrifice to win the war against climate change.
A columnist for Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org), Walden Bello is also senior analyst at the Bangkok-based research and advocacy institute Focus on the Global South and professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines.
Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies
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31 Comments so far
Show AllThomas More Said: "Now, now….capitalism isn't evil, no more than communism or socialism. Its people that are evil. I know you really love America."
Hahaha. Agreed, that the principal cause of evil is people themselves, but alas, the nature of the capitalist system demands perpetual growth and places a higher value on profits over the good of society, protection of the environment and sustainability of the planet. Yes, capitalism has been the cause of many technological advancements, but I would also say that 'necessity is the mother of all invention'. Even IF there wasn't profits to be made, progress would still happen as we're always looking for ways to make our lives easier.
Personally, I believe that Capitalism and Economics are one of the stupidest things that we've done to ourselves... man-made 'systems' that have caused much death and destruction over the years.
BTW, accusing me of 'loving America' is one of the funniest things I've heard you say on here Thomas. In fact, not only do I not 'love America', I HATE the term 'America' in general. It's like you're referring to the country of the United States as a person. "America thinks xyz... America loves xyz... what does America think? America voted and the next American Idol is...." blech.
Anyways Thomas, this is just something we'll have to agree to disagree on.
well, we have a "war on terror", why not a "war on climate change"...they both rate the same in lack of success in winning, lol
Doesn't this all sound just a little to convenient.
That is the "solutions" I'm reading here are to insist that the government tax and control us more.
Do you really believe that this additional power in the hands of government will not be abused ?
I believe we all need to live our lives as simple as possible and be good stewards of the planet while we visit,but to think that the GOVERNMENT won't use this to rob the people (not the industries) and send them off to FEMA camps for littering you must not have been paying attention to current events or past ones for that matter.
By all means advance clean technology .I've been researching solar and wind power for my home for years ,but I'm not to keen on allowing the enviro-police to monitor how many time I take a shower a week or where my thermostat is set (as is being pushed in the EU)
We need REAL solutions.
That's not the governments area.Their area is repression and sucking the live blood out of the people.
Didn't say we couldn't or shouldn't change....jusrt that you can't force people.
Aside from which, you have to be very careful about edicts....Corn for biofuel, the 2 gallon toliet, 55 MPH speed limit. Knee jerk solutions that cost far more than they saved.
"if we don't change we will pay a price. This is a fact, it is unavoidable."
we agree.
"Won't fly in a free country."
Then that "free" country will destroy the environment. The laws of nature don't negotiate, if we don't change we will pay a price. This is a fact, it is unavoidable.
"Only forced conservation laws and massive consumption taxes, along with renewable energy and drastic lifestyle changes, would work."
Won't fly in a free country.
Massive taxes on mcmansions and other inefficient uses of energy would help slow down the coming disasters. Even drastic lifestyle changes might work. The average American consumer could never come close to the type of lifestyle adjustment(energy use cut by half or much more) needed to give the planet a chance. Only forced conservation laws and massive consumption taxes, along with renewable energy and drastic lifestyle changes, would work.
It appears that more than worker organizations are involved, so we'll have to see how that affects the situation.
Here's what I was talking about regarding Egypt. I don't know tons about the situation yet and it appears that more than just worker organizations are involved so who knows how that will effect the situation, but it might be something to keep an eye on:
http://www.merip.org/mero/mero050907.html
The longest and strongest wave of worker protest since the end of World War II is rolling through Egypt. In March, the liberal daily al-Masri al-Yawm estimated that no fewer than 222 sit-in strikes, work stoppages, hunger strikes and demonstrations had occurred during 2006. In the first five months of 2007, the paper has reported a new labor action nearly every day. The citizen group Egyptian Workers and Trade Union Watch documented 56 incidents during the month of April, and another 15 during the first week of May alone.[1]
From their center of gravity in the textile sector, the strikes have spread to mobilize makers of building materials, Cairo subway workers, garbage collectors, bakers, food processing workers and many others. Like almost all strikes in Egypt in the last 40 years, the latest work stoppages are "illegal" -- unauthorized by the state-sponsored General Federation of Trade Unions and its subsidiary bodies in factories and other workplaces. But unlike upsurges of working-class collective action in the 1980s and 1990s, which were confined to state-owned industries, the wave that began in late 2004 has also pushed along employees in the private sector.
well I think good old Walden Bello has done us all a big favor by finally noticing what the problem is. Global capitalism by its very nature must keep producing and selling more more more, and that "need" will doom our planet. It is finite. It can get used up. Capital greed can do it. Unless we can find a different way to live. everybody start thinking real hard. Such a lovely planet. Let's keep it.
http://www.navdanya.org/index.htm
Cummon! Y'all just ain't wishin' hard enough. We saved Tinkerbell by wishin' hard, all together, and by god we can save the capitalist addiction to limitless growth (until there's nothin' but a cinder left?). I suggest maybe we throw in some really good heel-clickin', too, just to make real sure it works. The last piece of this sure-fire strategy is to keep on just as we always have & no peeking!
Siouxrose said:
"EZE: I have begun, haven't you? We can role model as a start… I remember an anecdotal story about a capitalist come to Puerto Rico and spent an afternoon convincing a guy perfectly happy with his peaceful life, that if he worked hard he could retire one day."
I began in the sixties and have stayed low on the food chain since.
My long ago memories of Puerto Rico were just as you describe them. I recently visited there to witness the American Dream they sold the guy.
The island itself still pushes green plants through cracks in the cement but is under siege from sheer human numbers, too many cars, growing poverty and squalor. It is like many other places today, a microcosm of unfettered capitalism, obsolete representative government and lack of birth control.
"The world is moving to the right and the right is successfully reframing the debate to move the center to the right."
BS. The world without exception is moving to, and has pretty much always been on, the left. The GOVERNMENTS of the world (who are more and more out of line with public opinion) are moving to the right, and that is a result of economics and the power investors have over democratic governments more than anything. The gap between the two is a failure of liberal democracy and representative government. Look at world opinion on the issues, the world has for years been on the "left". Look at the referendum votes on the EU constitution in Ireland, France and in the Netherlands. Every country that was given the right to vote on those economic polices said no. Britain was going to have a referendum and trashed it, they were afraid of what the results would be and the House of Commons will now decide the matter, again because the will of the people is too scary. Latin America has moved left, they have actual functioning democracies there so the governments have largely followed. Freaking El Salvador is poised to elect a left of center candidate. EL freaking Salvador! In Peru Garcia won by talking against "neo-liberalism" and has been calling out the military to squash democracy ever since. Public opinion in the US has for decades been to the left of both political parties, both groups of elites simply ignore the public's opinions. Hell, EGYPT is seeing an upsurge in labor organizing and resistance. The world is in no way moving to the left, unless the "world" is elites alone.
Goose2 July 15th, 2008 6:48 pm
Glad somone is aware that we don't have an Empire and we don't colonize anywhere.
But I think its moving left of center, not right.
Things do change though. People forget that most of the neocons were McGovernites back in the early seventies.
Labels have me so confused right now I don't know up from down.
>>I think we need to do a much better job of controlling our idiots in charge.<<
On the money Thomas More. The US is not an empire by a long shot. We have a lot to answer for, but we are not the cause of problems in the world. We aren't a colonizing force either and haven't been for some 60 years.
Making our leaders think more before they act would be good, but remember that despite all the polls and hand-wringing, about 50% of this country voted for the right and that split fundamentally has not changed although it will for this one election. The world is moving to the right and the right is successfully reframing the debate to move the center to the right. What was left 100 years ago is FAR left today and what was right a century ago is the center now.
We are not moving forward in most areas.
Grant July 15th, 2008 4:56 pm
If we had the military Empire you speak of, why would we close a base and withdraw from a country by request?
An Empire occupies territory and controls populations. We do not. Influence them, yes...but control, no. And we have never looted a conqured nation. The opposite as it happens. So Empire I believe is a term we can't use for America. We could have had one if we wanted it, we turned it down.
"I didn't say ALL the problems were attributed to the West."
Thank God!
Seriously, I see your point and can safely say we aren't angels. But we aren't the devil in my opinion either.
Frankly I'd be perfectly happy to withdraw from allmost all our bases, doze them flat and bring our military home.
You wouldn't believe the howl of protest we'd get and from some of the biggest foreign complainers I'd bet.
I think we need to do a much better job of controlling our idiots in charge.
Pax
EZE: I have begun, haven't you? We can role model as a start... I remember an anecdotal story about a capitalist come to Puerto Rico and spent an afternoon convincing a guy perfectly happy with his peaceful life, that if he worked hard he could retire one day.
The advertising world wants people to think they need MORE of something not even necessary, which Dr. Seuss did a fabulous parody on in THE LORAX.
RT DRURY & GRANT, good analyses.
Gee, but how can we live without Publix, CVS Pharmacy, the mall, our SUV's, FOX news, etc., etc.?
Our lifestyles are not negotiable.
How can we go back to planting seeds and growing food, to bathing in rainwater instead of chlorinated tap water, to living with wild creaturs, to having to watch sunsets instead of tv, to having to walk through the woods instead of driving on the freeway, to riding bicycles and horses instead of driving on the freeway, to visiting neighbors instead of playing video games, etc and etc.?
"The US doesn't have an empire and our miliyary bases don't count as an Empire of course"
Where did you get THIS silly idea? We have a military base empire (which does form a large part of the empire, what would you think if a few hundred, sometimes a couple thousand, Chinese Red troops were in your neighborhood, polluted your ecosystem, created noise pollution, raped local women like US service men do about once a month for 60 years in Japan)? The US has a financial empire, an economic empire that forces countries to adopt polices that they don't want and are against the democratic wishes of the people within the country that leads to economic domination (including monopolizing resources in this countries for our use) by the US. We also have the most active and the largest military in the world, which is used with the CIA and organizations like the NED to undermine country's democracies. How in the world does this not all add up to empire? If it doesn't it is matter of semantics and nothing more.
I didn't say ALL the problems were attributed to the West. However, the West gets in the way of economic development outside the West, it undermines democracies who try to implement policies that the citizens in those countries want if they happen to be in opposition to investors in the West, it attacks economically and militarily anyone who threatens its interests, it blocks any international agreements it doesn't like (even if 99% of the world wants policies enacted), it forces economic policies on countries that destroy environments, ruin social connection and increase poverty and it pays off local elites to go along with the whole setup. It isn't entirely the West's fault, some experiments have failed in the poorer countries on their own, but most can be attributed to the West.
It was an anti-climatic summit.
Godtharb, Greenland, is currently at 63 degrees Fahrenheit and sunny.
elmysterio, the USA is always on the wrong side of every issue because the USA is usually the primary cause or else enthusiastic enabler of every issue, due to its myopic pursuit of profit. When profit is your sole pursuit, then all of these social and environmental issues become a monkey on your back and you have to relentlessly fight them.
sg July 15th, 2008 1:23 pm
You just have to be convinced that "man" can do something about it — ya know, alter its course.
Excellent point. I stand corrected. I just hear everyone say man causes it but there so far is no conclusive proof. As you rightly point out, what difference does it make. The point is....can we do something about it and what would that be. Your "in other words!"
Thanks for pointing out the flaw in my consideration of the problem.
elmysterio July 15th, 2008 1:59 pm
Now, now....capitalism isn't evil, no more than communism or socialism. Its people that are evil. I know you really love America.
"Well Thomas, a good start would be everyone taking personal accountability for their carbon footprint and adjusting their lifestyle accordingly."
That is the best idea going. Individuals can have the greatest impact. excellent point.
Grant July 15th, 2008 2:00 pm
"We aren't willing in the West to deal with this. We are a cancer to the world. Imperialism, colonialism, environmental destruction, greed, violence"
I frankly don't know where the silly idea that all the worlds ills are caused by the West, but of course its not true. Imperalism...where darn it. The US doesn't have an empire and our miliyary bases don't count as an Empire of course.. Colonialism....once again, whos doing the colonizing? Greed...well, you've got me there, we've got some very greedy rats we need to flush, violence? We can't hold a candle to the folks in Africa, the middle East and Asia.
Your overall point is good though. And high energy prices would constrain the relationship you are speaking about. I think.
huntz July 15th, 2008 2:12 pm
Reasonable thoughts. I'm keeping my 2001 Tahoe which lessens my carbon footprint by a bunch. We thought about buying something else last year, but the numbers told me if I replaced it with a Prius, it would take almost 5 years or more to be even. So I kept it.
Bechtel and Halliburton are getting the no-bid contracts to levee Manhattan Island and 1000 miles of coastline. YOU, taxslave, pay pay pay.
If you are debating as to whether or not to have children... the human race has already reached its quota-and then some. As important as you feel having offspring is, remember that it is the world that feeds people, not parents.
We must all stop creating things. Be they babies or books,we must learn to appreciate what is already here before we produce more. Take Oprah for example, she helps millions of people, granted, the problem is she creates more problems than she will ever correct. ex. Promoting the book "The Secret", (which, by the way, costs money - go figure) which is supposed to open locked doors to your desires. Unless you desire to live in poverty, you are going to want more "stuff", and this "stuff" is going to pollute an already polluted planet. You catch my drift?
Stop making new things...please.
Global warming is just one part of an overall issue, that of the connection between our economic system and the environment. Orthodox economics, which is the engine of policy, enlightens the "leaders" in government and economists, ignores the environment all together. It ignores it in prices, in national indices and in theory. Herman Daly has talked about this a lot. Look at an Econ 101 book. There is a circular relationship shown between production & producers on the one hand and consumption and consumers on the other. There is no relationship between the economic system and the larger system that feeds it and is used as a sink for waste, the environment. That is taken as a given. Consumption and pollution can grow forever, in theory. We aren't willing in the West to deal with this. We are a cancer to the world. Imperialism, colonialism, environmental destruction, greed, violence, we lead on all fronts and I see no evidence that people can be reasoned with on any front.
Thomas More said: "First everyone will have to be convinced that it is caused by man. If we did anything it would take a consensus."
Well Thomas, a good start would be everyone taking personal accountability for their carbon footprint and adjusting their lifestyle accordingly. There's never going to be a consensus that includes the United States, due to their evil form of capitalism and greedy nature. Profits before anything else remember.
Seems as though that whenever there's a serious issue that needs to be addressed by the international community, the United States is more often than not on the WRONG side of the issue by being obstructive, and sabotages any meaningful solutions.
In other words, the key question isn't whether "man caused" it. The important question is: can we influence the outcome?
>First everyone will have to be convinced that it is caused >by man.
I disagree Thomas, on logical grounds. You don't have to be convinced it is caused by man to want to do something to stave off the grave consequences of global warming. You just have to be convinced that "man" can do something about it -- ya know, alter its course. For the sake of argument, let's say the warming is "natural." But, according to best climate scientists around, while its true that global temps have been higher before, human beings weren't around then. And for good reason, we couldn't survive in those conditions. Other life will undoubtedly continue but unless you're some kind of nihilist, such conditions are not an option. I don't see the debate over whose/what caused it to have any real bearing on the matter. I'd love to hear why you think so.
"First everyone will have to be convinced that it is caused by man. If we did anything it would take a consensus."
It has nothing to do with convincing, I see no logical way that we AREN'T the cause of most of the warming. CO2 is a warming agent and massive amounts have been emitted since the industrial revolution. CO2 has been proven to be in very high amounts in the atmosphere and there are indirect effects, like methane emissions, that haven't even begun yet. It has to do with being open to being convinced. Most of these elites care about power and wealth, they want to retain power and the people in the industrialized countries have fully bought into consumerist culture. So radically changing the economic system to take these environmental issues into account not only takes power and wealth away from them, the needed changes would be pretty severe and would require people in power asking those bellow them to sacrifice and change, which could result in them losing even more power. The problem is, as usual, us. We have what amounts to nihilistic materialism. We'd rather have our little fuking gadgets, products and big cars than have a habitable planet in a couple hundred years. We have the only habitable planet we know of at this time in the universe, a beautiful green and blue world that has taken billions of years to evolve and we've managed to put it in danger in a matter of a few hundred years. We might have advanced intelligence, we also have what amounts to advanced stupidity, and most of it willful.
First everyone will have to be convinced that it is caused by man. If we did anything it would take a consensus.