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Naomi Klein’s Inconvenient Climate Conclusions
Naomi Klein, the author of a string of provocative and popular books including “The Shock Doctrine,” recently took on global warming policy and campaigns in “Capitalism vs. the Climate,” a much-discussed cover story for The Nation that has been mentioned by readers here more than once in the last few weeks.
Author and activist Naomi Klein. (Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times) The piece begins with Klein’s conclusion, reached after she spent time at a conclave on climate sponsored by the libertarian Heartland Institute, that passionate corporate and conservative foes of curbs on greenhouse gases are right in asserting that a meaningful response to global warming would be a fatal blow to free markets and capitalism.
She challenges the environmental left to embrace this reality instead of implying that modest changes in lifestyle and shopping habits and the like can decarbonize human endeavors on a crowding planet.
Please dive in. The piece is particularly relevant this week given the continued standoffs and disconnect between stated goals and behavior at the climate treaty talks in Durban, South Africa. Whether you embrace or dispute her conclusions, the article is a worthy and substantive provocation. I disagree with her in pretty profound ways, yet some of her points echo my assertion awhile back that greenhouse-driven climate change is “not the story of our time” but a symptom of much deeper issues. I contacted Klein, who kindly spent quite a bit of time engaging in an e-conversation about her argument. Here’s our chat:
Q.First, I was happy to see you dive into the belly of the many-headed beast challenging the need for greenhouse-gas cuts (as was clear from your piece, you recognize that there’s no single species called “deniers”). There are lots of slings and arrows awaiting anyone exploring this terrain, as was the case with the Heartland meeting in 2008. What prompted you to do an in-depth look at global warming stances and the issues underlying this “crisis”?
A.I got interested after attending the UN climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009. Like a lot of people who watched that train wreck up close, I came away wanting to understand the massive gap between the euphoric expectations of the environmental movement and the real political outcomes. When I got home, I was stunned by a new Harris poll that showed that the percentage of Americans who believed in anthropogenic climate change had plummeted from 71 per cent to 51 per cent in just two years. So here we were thinking that the world was on the verge of some kind of climate breakthrough while a large segment of the U.S. population was rejecting the science altogether. I wanted to understand how that could have happened.
I had a bit of an “a-ha” moment reading this paper by the excellent Australian political scientist Clive Hamilton, in which he argues that a great many American conservatives have come to see climate science as a threat to their core ideological identity. Then I read Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, which explains that many of the key scientists behind the denier movement hold a similar point of view – they are old-school Cold Warriors who came to see fighting environmentalism as a battle to protect “freedom” and the American way of life.
But as I read all this, I found myself thinking that from within the hard-right worldview, these responses were entirely rational. If you really do believe that freedom means governments getting out of the way of corporations and that any regulation leads us down Hayek’s road to serfdom, then climate science is going to be kryptonite to you. After all, the reality that humans are causing the climate to warm, with potentially catastrophic results, really does demand radical government intervention in the market, as well as collective action on an unprecedented scale. So you can understand why many conservatives see climate change as a threat to their identity. Too often the liberal climate movement runs away from the deep political and economic implications of climate science, which is why I wrote the piece. I think we need to admit that climate change really does demand a profound interrogation of the ideology that currently governs our economy. And that’s not bad news, since our current economic model is failing millions of people on multiple fronts.
Q.Your examination of liberals’ views appropriately reveals the unwillingness – at least of “mainstream” liberals? – to acknowledge the full scope of what would need to happen on a world heading toward 9 billion people seeking decent lives. Certainly others — e.g., Growthbusters and the Post Carbon Institute — have not.
But you also seem to presume that the only strategy that can work is “radical government intervention,” when there are other approaches that have gained some traction — including no-brainers like strengthening standards and incentives for energy efficiency and conservation (which surveys show have very wide support, including among Republicans outside the obstructionist fringe, see p.5 here) while reviving long-eroded basic research and development in basic energy-related sciences. (Even George Will has warned the new Republican power brokers against neglecting science.)
A.I agree that some market incentives and R&D investments are part of the solution, and I say so in the piece. But do I think they can get us to 80 per cent emissions reduction by mid-century? No. Not everything is win-win, some very powerful players are going to have to lose if we ever decide to get serious about climate change, which is why the denial movement is so well funded. A recent example is the fight against the Keystone XL pipeline, which I have been a part of. We all know that real solutions lie in shifting to renewable energy. But in the meantime we also need to ask our governments to say ‘no’ to the dirtiest extraction projects on the planet – projects that, if fully realized, would make catastrophic climate change far more likely. And since the eighties, our governments have gotten really bad at saying no to corporations, in large part thanks to the triumph of the no-intervention (except when we need a bailout) “free-market” ideology represented by the Heartland Institute.
Investment in public infrastructure is another form of government intervention in the market – not just R&D but building public transit systems and smart grids, and shoring up levees and sea walls and the like. There is no question that robust public infrastructure is key to both reducing emissions and preparing for the heavy weather that we cannot avoid. Yet for the right-wing think tanks that sponsor the Heartland conferences (not to mention the modern-day Republican party), this is ideological heresy. Their whole reason for being is to shrink the public sphere in the name of low taxes and the benefits of privatization. What I’m arguing is that the idea that we can win the climate fight without engaging in ideological battle over these core questions about the role of government has always been a fantasy. Trying to dodge this fight is a big part of why we lose, and we need to get over it. It’s no coincidence that the countries with the most enlightened climate policies are also, overwhelmingly, the most social democratic.
And by the way, it’s not just that most of the big green groups avoid the growth question (with notable exceptions, as you point out). It’s that the solutions that groups like EDF (Environmental Defense Fund) have pushed are very often consumption based: buy these light bulbs, drive a hybrid, etc… And often these changes make sense. But the not-so subtle impact of putting so much emphasis on individual shopping habits has been to reinforce both consumerism and individualism. Tom Crompton and Tim Kasser have written some wonderful stuff on this. In this report, for example, Crompton argues that environmentalists need to do more to challenge the individualistic worldview in their campaign work.
This is particularly salient in light of the social science I reference in my article, particularly the research coming out of Yale’s Cultural Cognition Project, which has found that the major determinant of whether a person rejects the scientific consensus on climate change is whether they have a strongly “hierarchical” or “individualistic” worldview. One set of stats that didn’t make it into my piece: 78 per cent of subjects who display an “egalitarian” and “communitarian” worldview believe that most scientists agree climate change is happening (which is true) – compared with only 19 per cent of those with a “hierarchical” and “individualist” worldview.
For me, it follows from this that part of being an effective environmentalist is trying to win more people over to a worldview in line with the laws of physics and chemistry, rather than offering shopping advice and touting “market-based solutions.” Put another way: if we know that aggressive regulation and rebuilding the public sphere through collective action are integral to meeting this challenge, then we have a responsibility to say so, and to defend the worldview behind those policies.
Q.You note that China, to which much of the world has ceded its manufacturing, is unabashed about its thirst for coal and other resources. But when that reality is combined with China’s (and India’s) prime imperative of sustaining growth, and with projections showing that nearly all of the growth in emissions of CO2 in the next couple of decades is coming in fast-emerging developing countries, it’s hard to see your prescription having any impact where it matters — in the atmosphere.
A.I’m not sure why you think my prescriptions wouldn’t have an impact. A big part of what I’m arguing for is a major rethink of so-called free trade. China and India’s massive spike in emissions are intimately linked to their governments’ frenetic embrace of this export model of development, which always sacrificed environmental and labor standards in the name of rapid economic growth. (Arundhati Roy’s latest collection, “Broken Republic,” is indispensible for understanding how much resistance there is to this model within India.) If we in the Global North slow down trade by re-localizing our economies in sensible ways, that kind of meteoric rise in emissions slows down too.
Of course the need for a higher standard of living is painfully real in China and India, which is why another piece of the puzzle that I touch on in the piece is “climate debt,” something I’ve been writing about for several years now. Basically the argument is that we who live in the industrialized countries that emitted most of the carbon that created the climate crisis have to acknowledge our historical responsibility, first by leading the way on emission reductions, then by offering assistance to countries that did little or nothing to cause the crisis but are suffering the worst effects. That assistance can take many forms, from debt forgiveness to technology transfers, to direct economic support (perhaps through a tax on financial transactions). This assistance will provide opportunities for poor countries to meet their development goals in ways less ecologically costly than extraction-based exports.
Once again, the right understands this reality very well, which is why the Heartland crowd likes to claim that climate change is a socialist conspiracy to redistribute wealth. It’s not a conspiracy, but it’s absolutely the case that climate change raises very troubling questions about the true costs of the wealth that has accumulated in the Global North. It’s also the case that climate talks will remain virtually deadlocked until our governments deal with this thorny issue of historical responsibility. Again and again, this is the issue over which the talks stall.
Q.Back in 2007, I conceived and spearheaded our “climate divide” package documenting how rich emitters were already insulating themselves from climate risk through wealth and technology, so I’m very cognizant of that issue.
But in 2009, as I reported more and more on the inherent threat of climate extremes in some of the world’s poorest places (sub-Saharan Africa, particularly) I became concerned that the uncertain impact of greenhouse-driven warming paled beside other drivers of risk (persistent poverty, doubling populations, and the existing pattern of super-drought). [These factors] would completely dominate, or at least obscure, a greenhouse contribution for decades to come.
As a result, Somalia is emblematic of what could be coming, but in no way is the human devastation there evidence of greenhouse-driven disruption.
Even if real, new adaptation money ever shows up, this guarantees intense competition for it among nations with differing levels of confidence in the source of their climate-related injuries, as described here and here.
Thoughts?
A.There is no doubt that climate assistance can be highly divisive, especially if countries are fighting over scraps. But in a way, I think you’ve just made the argument for why climate change forces us to have a deeper discussion about failed paradigms. The countries that are most vulnerable are those that have been laboratories for neo-liberal economics and Cold War (or “War on Terror”) dirty wars, leaving behind non-existent public infrastructure and lots of angry guys with guns (as Christian Parenti shows so well in his new book, “Tropic of Chaos”). This is precisely why I argue that climate change isn’t an issue, it’s “a message,” telling us that we need radically new ways of thinking about progress and power. Otherwise we are just dealing with the symptoms.
Q.On us leading the way, it’s fine to think this would result in others de-carbonizing, and I’m all for the moral imperative of the established emitters leading the way, but a lot of discussions with folks in (or deeply analyzing) developing countries over the years provide me with little confidence that the Alphonse-Gaston stasis would be broken by us stepping first.
A.I’m slightly more optimistic. China and India have already invested heavily in emission reducing technologies, despite the fact that they are not required to do so under Kyoto. In fact China has been doing so much, the U.S. has challenged its renewable energy policies at the WTO (another argument for why “free trade” is a menace to climate action). I’m convinced that if the U.S. had come to Copenhagen with science-based emission targets, it would have been a game changer. Partly because when the U.S. refuses to accept its historical responsibility, it strengthens the hand of developing country politicians who want to cloak polluting, destructive and often corrupt development practices in anti-imperialist rhetoric.
But it’s also the case that these governments are under intense popular pressure within their own countries to adopt less ecologically damaging policies. (This will be very clear during the upcoming summit in Durban, a city with a highly mobilized and militant movement against environmental racism. See: groundwork.org.za.) China’s environmental movements are also formidable, as are India’s, though they often express themselves as battles against mining or mega-dams. If developing country governments are no longer able to play the anti-imperialist card to defend dirty development, these movements will be much better positioned to win significant environmental victories.
A great recent example is Bolivia: Evo Morales’s government has championed the idea of “climate debt” at the UN, but at home Morales has been pursuing development projects that don’t match his rhetoric of environmental concern. Over the past few months, Morales has faced an internal uprising, led by indigenous groups, and was forced to make significant concessions. So part of what we need to be thinking about is: what policies are most likely to empower environmental defenders in the Global South? And one of them is for us to stop being such easy villains. When it comes to politics, I guess I don’t believe in any kind of stasis, as this autumn’s “Occupy Wall Street” explosion attests…
Q.[This question was posed yesterday, considering Klein's argument along with similar prescriptions from David Roberts of Grist and Joe Romm at the Center for American Progress (read Romm's capping thought in the linked post).] One question that’s bubbled up for me is whether your (and David Roberts’ and Joe Romm’s) push for a drastic approach could be seen as simply a looking-glass version of “shock doctrine”?
A.I think we’re all trying to avoid the really big shocks that would likely come with the temperature increases we are locking in, and that we aren’t calling for targets that are more drastic than those many countries have already agreed to in principle, then betrayed with their actions (certainly that’s the case with my own country’s actions — Canada).
Shock Doctrine, as I define it, is a purely opportunistic, anti-democratic tactic, designed not to solve problems but to exploit them. We are trying to solve the problems, at their root. Moreover, I would argue that Obama won an electoral mandate in 2008 for serious climate action, and simply lacked the courage and commitment to follow through with the leadership necessary to turn his promises into policy. He can blame Congress, but we know he has never led, so we don’t know what real leadership would have produced.
Any notion that Roberts, Klein or Romm will come up with a communication approach or political innovation or “Occupy”-style campaign that could produce the pace of change they seek where it matters (think, again, of India, China and regions with no energy choices outside of firewood, dung or kerosene) is as doubtful to me as my notions of fostering a culture of innovation, care and connectedness may be to them.
And we’re all almost certainly wrong in one way or another in any case, given how both nature and technological leaps continue to surprise the best planners and analysts. I also don’t share former Scientific American editor John Rennie’s confidence that politicians, led by public conern, will someday set their agendas based on the “objective facts” on climate risk.
This is how Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain described the climate policy challenge in 2005 and, if anything, his statement is more germane now given prospects for prolonged international financial ills: “The blunt truth about the politics of climate change is that no country will want to sacrifice its economy in order to meet this challenge.”
In a situation like this, as I wrote in a reaction to Rennie, I see powerful logic in taking steps on energy and resource conservation that are no brainers, while building the capacity for people to be adaptive, alert, innovative, caring and connected and thus capable of sustaining the human adventure with a mix of resilience and inventiveness as signals shift.
Here’s a closing thought.
In her piece, Klein, spends a lot of time focused on the valuable body of social science research I’ve also explored here showing the normal nature of the wide range in human perceptions of global warming (and other kinds of risks saddled with complexity and uncertainty).
Getting comfortable with that reality means getting comfortable with differing views, and with a picture of the path forward that is utterly human — meaning variegated, imperfect, the result of pushing, nudging and pulling, of activism and resistance, invention and inertia, argument and, hopefully occasionally, common purpose.



67 Comments so far
Show AllOnce upon a time, there were few enough humans that Earth could source our needs and sink our wastes without more than local trouble. That time is past. Either we recognise that we're on the edge of extinction, and pull back as fast as we can move, or we go over.
I agree, although it is quite long I felt the read was well worth it, as is everything I've come across authored by her.
Andy Revkin's intellectual dishonesty is on display in the concluding paragraphs of this piece. "Typical times elitist temporizing" is right. Revkin earns a living by taking great pains to avoid saying anything at all. It can be painful for a reader to try to make sense of someone who has no intention of making sense.
Joe Romm and John Rennie (to whom Revkin alludes) are among those who have taken him to task lately for his duplicity. See:
I have had great respect for Naomi Klein's work in the past, but increasingly, she seems to have lost her ability to see clearly.
We need to "ask our governments"???
Should we send the government a valentine's day message?
The government is tying us down to a privatized lab table and gradually administering "shocks" to us to manipulate our behavior towards more and more aggressive and inhumane actions and here we are being told that we need to try to work with them.
Why won't she see that our governments are arms of corporate power?
In a democracy, the people are the government, but we are now merely human resources for the machine of capitalist domination to use and discard.
We are told that Obama "lacked the courage and commitment" after she repeatedly tries to focus the negativity on "the republicans," "the right", "the neo-liberals", as if Obama is not a neo-liberal whore.
Why is Naomi Klein trying to save the image of the democrats?
A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
"Cathy Mason"
You miss my point.
Obama in NOT a "nonentity" and the democrats are NOT merely "mute". This is exactly where Naomi Klein and many, many others are horrifically mistaken.
Obama has deliberately sabotaged efforts to turn things around. If you and Ms. Klein want to ignore blatant facts, that is your right, but it is a right which is already costing us all dearly.
It is long past time to stop pretending that a corporate-owned party will work for the people.
The so-called failure of the democrats is no accident. They and the republicans are on the same team and if you insist on supporting their fraudulence then there isn't any way to reason with you.
I really hate to say this, but I will not be surprised if Naomi Klein starts writing for "The Nation."
Back in October, David Walsh made the same point about analysts like Klein who condemn "capitalism" and "the system" and "neoliberalism" but are confoundingly silent on the matter of the corrupt Democrats. Check out his article "American liberalism attempts to corral Occupy Wall Street movement for Democrats":
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/oct2011/occu-o14.shtml
as a species, there are solutions to our crises....we must look beyond fossil fuels.
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Wes Jackson: The Next 50 Years on the American Land Chautauqua Institution
http://fora.tv/2008/08/15/Wes_Jackson_The_Next_50_Years_on_the_American_...
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...peace....
What leads you to believe that the businesses doing the conversion from raw resource (sun, wind, nuke, FFs, muscle, etc) into consumable energy wouldn't choose the most profitable for them? They certainly haven't done anything else so far.
Such an idea might possibly work if a company's failure to get it right meant execution of the officers and directors. That might provide sufficient incentive, but I can't think of anything else that would.
That is it,,, exactly... The key to what is needed now is far more drastic measures taken to reduce Co2 emmissions than the richest countrie's leaders and most in the field of science are talking about... and not just TALK about it.
Most people do not honestly realize,, just how very close we are to a (*runaway*) global warming... Whe runaway GW begins, it will absolutly insure there will be nothing at all we will then be able to do to reverse what human activity has accomplished during the past 200+ years from burning fossil fuels, especially coal.
We do not have until the "end of the century" before runaway GW begins... We do not have another ten or fifteen years to reverse our use of burning coal... We have to act NOW,,, and it has to be a very dramatic reduction of Co2 emmissions, starting with the worst, burning coal to produce electrical power.
Will that type of action be taken... NO... But we are all going to be very sorry that it will not be, because runaway GW will begin within the next ten to fifteen years... Maybe sooner.... We'll see. .
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The number of humans on this planet as of now should prove the insanity of allowing it to get to '9 billion people seeking decent lives'. The current population right now can in no way obtain a decent life as it is with the current extant ideologies, Nature assures that with climate change, earthquakes, volcanos, floods and a whole host of other calamities. And it doesn't help one damn bit when the psychopathic class are allowed to RULE the world. As Naomi Klein said about her 'shock doctrine' book, these psychopaths are all looking to reap huge rewards from any disaster from famine, as the british empire has done, to 'once in every 500 years storms that pop out of the sky. And if you say if 'we had' done something about the polluting that causes these 500 year storms, that would just be wishful thinking, past history and most likely unavoidable now anyway.
I have said it before many times that until humans with their intelligence don't get a grip on what the idea of too many people means and actually does something about it, don't expect anything to be different as the way the elite are RULING everything now, especially on climate change. Besides, this climate is always changing and it just so happens that in this current dynamic state of change, there has never been 7,000,000,000 people to affect what should be just a plain shift from a glacial period from about 20,000years ago to what will be the next glacial period.
Humans will most likely make it to 9,000,000,000 people but that will only mean the same proportion as the 7,000,000,000 doing without will be more numerous with 9,000,000,000 people. One important feature of this are the sinks or where the garbage goes will continue to get bigger and more deleterious to the people with the poisons that are in those sinks. http://limitstogrowth.net/
A really important and valuable dissection of the issues by Naomi.
This quote struck me as the core of the whole thing: "Not everything is win-win, some very powerful players are going to have to lose if we ever decide to get serious about climate change, which is why the denial movement is so well funded."
I agree. There's often a Pollyannish tendency among the environmental troops to cheerfully chirp that "change will be a good thing for all of us, and we can all be winners". I guess if you're TNC or Sierra Club or WWF you can't afford to alienate potential donors and allies with the hard truth: that some powerful (and not-so-powerful) players in fact are going to have to lose, and lose big.
The end of cheap, polluting coal power, for example, will make life more difficult for people who, well, depend upon cheap, polluting coal power to make their lives more comfortable. That is many hundreds of millions of people around the globe, including many in places like China and India and Brazil who only recently got their first taste of living a more comfortable, "middle class" existence. Is it surprising more people are finding it convenient to reject climate science??
Upton Sinclair: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his livelihood depends upon his not understanding it.”
I'd have no slightest problem sentencing the politicians to spend the rest of their lives doing supervised manual labor insulating houses, tilling fields, and planting trees. None whatever.
The worst crime of such a cult is to destroy honest discussion. It's good to see an honest, knowledgeable discussion.
"climate change isn’t an issue, it’s “a message,” telling us that we need radically new ways of thinking about progress and power. Otherwise we are just dealing with the symptoms."
Pure Naomi - grand slam!
A war-time like effort, rationing, sacrifice and focus - essential to victory and life.
The present global system of power and privilege will never willingly go along with this, for the reasons articulated in this article by Naomi Klein.
And the possibility of "radically new ways of thinking about progress and power"?
Well - necessity has a way about it - and nature does bat last.
Manysummits
=========What's especially hideous is that when I was born, only 71 years ago, climate change still wasn't quite an issue, and solving it would have merely been an expense, not the pan-extinction-threatening problem it is today. How much longer before our havering lets it grow to the point where it's no longer solvable at all no matter how much we're willing to sacrifice?
The Clovis spearpoint - and the end of the Mammoth, the North American megafauna, the rise of the Maya, Aztec and Incas - and on and on.
No use crying over spilt milk - who wants elephants in North America anyway?
Manysummits
========"In the rocky future we have already made inevitable, an unshakable belief in the equal rights of all people, and a capacity for deep compassion, will be the only things standing between humanity and barbarism. Climate change, by putting us on a firm deadline, can serve as the catalyst for precisely this profound social and ecological transformation."
- Naomi Klein, "Capitalism vs the Climate" http://www.thenation.com/article/164497/capitalism-vs-climate
-----------------------Dynamite article - thank you Naomi!!!!!!!!
Manysummits
========"We can hardly bring ourselves to hear that we must actually learn to be happy with less stuff."
Yeah, I've been preaching this line too. Silly me, I coulda saved my breath. We won't have any choice soon and we'll all have to live on less...if we're lucky.
"Not every aspect of our world view based on more, more, more, more...."
Nothing other than a cancer lives by the credo of more, more, more. Stupid cancers. They usually wind up killing their host.
"...think, again, of India, China and regions with no energy choices outside of firewood, dung or kerosene"
What typical USAn racism-tinged insular ignorance! China is a world R&D leader in:
Wind energy technologies
Solar energy technologies
Electric vehicle components - notably low-cost LiFePO4 batteries for EVs. China is the sole source for for lithium cells for experimenters and small manufacturers - thanks to a a certain Canadian/US corporation and their "intellectual property"
High-speed rail - inlcuding maglevs and oxygen-enriched coach cabins for routes over the high Tibetan Plateau.
But no, to Revkin, the Chinese are just some kind of savages squatting around a "dung" fire.
George Lakoff - that UCal at Berkeley-framing-guy, must positively hate Naomi Klein.
But he really likes this Revkin guy.
Even the so-called left and the so-called "progressives" seem to have a hard time wrapping their heads around this simple concept of "common but differentiated responsibilities" and keep blathering on about China and India, whereas the simple fact remains that if the US had ratified and met its obligations under the Kyoto Protocol, the world might have seen a much better and more reassuring outcome at Copenhagen in 2009 - the original deadline to find a successor treaty for the next phase. And Andrew Revkin seems to be doing the same chant of China and India, without realizing why the non-participation of the US is the biggest problem here.
Revkin, by publishing this exchange with Naomi Klein, only ends up looking silly, ignorant, pretentious, dishonest and completely insincere about any progress on taking action on climate change. But I have a feeling that his views may still find some takers elsewhere.
I don't agree with Revkin's opinions, but I have no problems with Naomi Klein's words on the subject.
In fact I read Revlin as one of those over-educated idiots who are well versed in using "buzz" words and say nothing sensible or meaningful and sometimes he actually spit out some stupid statements.
The "no-brainers" that Revkin talks about were "no-brainers" several decades ago. If adopted today, they must be done with an explicit objective of limiting the total GHG emissions in a country to be under a certain limit. And this upper limit needs to be progressively lowered for each country, in the years ahead, every year, so that the TOTAL emissions on a GLOBAL basis are reduced aggressively, so as to achieve an atmospheric CO2 concentration that is considered safe.
On their own, Revkin's "no-brainers" may or may not achieve the necessary reduction in emissions at the required rate. That is why a legally binding international treaty is needed. And when a country signs and ratifies such a treaty, implementing and enforcing it would necessarily require “radical government intervention.” In the implementation of such a treaty, a government is free to use any of these "no-brainers" as well as a more promising "fee and dividend" system as proposed by James Hansen.
>>Revkin: "(Even George Will has warned the new Republican power brokers against neglecting science.)"<<
If you don't want to neglect science, then you're going to have to do what science is telling you to do, in a short enough time period, also as per science. Open ended "no-brainers" are not good enough if you want to respect and heed the warnings from science. As simple as that!
And would those who know html please include in every thread at least once the visible html-char-entity version, as I've done above ( <br> to save you having to look them up), as a convenience for others to copy-paste. As far as I know -I haven't experimented extensively- copying will always capture the displayed chars, not the underlying char-entities, so that when pasted they'll be interpretable.