After the Catastrophe in Copenhagen, It's Up To Us
Every coal train should be ringed with people refusing to let it pass
Buried deep in our subconscious, there still lays the belief that our political leaders are collective Daddies and Mummies who will - in the last instance - guarantee our safety. Sure, they might screw us over when it comes to hospital waiting lists, or public transport, or taxing the rich, but when it comes to resisting a raw existential threat, they will keep us from harm. Last week in Copenhagen, the conviction was disproved. Every leader there had been told by their scientists - plainly, bluntly, and for years - that there is a bare minimum we must all do now if we are going to prevent a catastrophe. And they all refused to do it.
To understand the gravity of what just happened, you need to know a few facts about global warming that, at first, sound odd. The world's climate scientists have shown that man-made global warming must not exceed 2C. When you hear this, a natural reaction is - that's not much; how bad can it be if we overshoot? If I go out for a picnic and the temperature rises or falls by 2C, I don't much notice. But this is the wrong analogy. If your body temperature rises by 2C, you become feverish and feeble. If it doesn't go back down again, you die. The climate isn't like a picnic; it's more like your body.
Two degrees is bad: 2C means we lose much of the world's low-lying land, from the island-states of the South Pacific to much of Bangladesh to swathes of Florida. But at every step up to and including 2C, if we reduce our emissions, we can stabilise the climate at this new higher level. If we go beyond 2C, though, the situation changes. The earth's natural processes begin to break down - and cause more warming. There are massive amounts of warming gases stored in the Siberian permafrost; at 2C, they melt and are released into the atmosphere. The world's humid rainforests store huge amounts of warming gases in their trees. Beyond C, they lose their humidity and begin to burn down - releasing them too into the atmosphere.
These are called "tipping points". Because of them, the world gets warmer and warmer beyond 2C. They stand at the climate's Point of No Return, beyond which there lies only warming. We are only 6C away from the last ice age; we are setting ourselves on course to go that far in the opposite direction.
So what do we need to do to stay this side of 2C? There is a very broad, rock-solid scientific consensus that we need a cut of 40 per cent in the most polluting countries' emissions by 2020 if we are going to have even a 50-50 chance of doing so. Then, by 2050 we need an 80 per cent cut from everyone. The fact we are only aiming for a 50 per cent goal of avoiding calamity is a sign of how far we have already made a terrible compromise with fossil fuels - but our leaders are refusing to aim even for those odds.
There was plenty of disgrace to go around in Copenhagen. The world's worst per capita warmer is the US, yet its President turned up offering a pathetic 4 per cent cut by 2020 - and once you factor in all the loopholes his negotiators demanded, he was actually demanding the right to a significant increase in US emissions. He caved to the oil and gas lobbies who virtually own the Senate. It was - apart from anything else - a terrible betrayal of his own country's national security. In 2004, a leaked Pentagon report warned that unchecked global warming would ensure "disruption and conflict will be endemic ... [and] once again, warfare would define human life."
Similarly, the Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao behaved appallingly. His country is the single largest overall emitter of gases, albeit with a far larger population, and much more need for development. Yet he vetoed the 80 per cent target by 2050, and refused to allow other countries to carry out basic checks to ensure China was carrying out the smaller cuts they were committed to. Again, he is betraying his own people: most of China's population depend on rivers that flow down from the Himalayan glaciers, yet they are rapidly disappearing. His name will be cursed in the Chinese history books.
The European Union was hardly better. They sat inert, refusing to make any larger offer to get the ball rolling. Only President Lula da Silva of Brazil came out boldly with an ahead-of-the-curve offer - but his heroism was met with awkward silence and avoided glances from the other leaders.
So here's the situation. There is no deal. The world's leaders refused to agree to limit our emissions of warming gases. The most they could agree was to officially "note" the scientific evidence about 2C - with no roadmap to keep us this side of it. You get a sense of how valuable this "noting" is when you look at the things the conference also "noted": the hard work of the airport security staff, and the quality of the catering in the Bella Centre. It seems impossible, but our leaders really did give the stability of our climate the same status as their praise for Danish sandwiches.
I am normally somebody who supports incremental change. Most progress happens by inches. But with this problem, we can't wait patiently knowing we'll prevail in the next generation. The tipping points will make that too late. You can't defuse a ticking bomb slowly year after year. You either defuse it fast, or it blows up in your face.
Our leaders were given the scientific facts, and they have responded by trying to haggle with the facts about the atmosphere. Imagine a 50-a-day smoker who goes to his doctor and is told he must stop immediately or he will develop lung cancer. He says: "I'll tell you what, doc - I'll cut down to 40-a-day, I'll eat a salad every lunchtime, and I'll slap on a few nicotine patches. How does that sound?" That's the official response to global warming.
Where does this leave us all? At least we know now: scientific evidence and rationality are not going to be enough to persuade our leaders. The Good Daddy isn't in charge. Nobody is going to sort this out - unless we, the populations of the warming-gas countries, make them. Politicians respond to the pressure put on them, and every single politician at Copenhagen knew they would get more flak at home - from their corporate paymasters and their petrol-hungry populations - for signing a deal than for walking away.
There is only one way to change that dynamic: a mass movement of ordinary democratic citizens. They have made the impossible happen before. Our economies used to be built on slave labour, just as surely as they are built on fossil fuels today. It seemed permanent and unchangeable, and its critics were regarded as deranged - until ordinary citizens refused to tolerate it any more, and they organised to demand its abolition.
The time for changing your light-bulbs and hoping for the best is over. It is time to take collective action. For some people, that will mean joining Greenpeace or Friends of the Earth or the Campaign Against Climate Change and helping them pile on the pressure. But those who can go further - by taking non-violent direct action - should do so. Every coal train should be ringed with people refusing to let it pass. Every new runway should be blockaded. The cost of trashing the climate needs to be raised.
It works. Look at Britain. Three years ago, eight new coal power stations were being planned, and the third runway at Heathrow was all but inevitable. A few thousand heroic young people took direct action against them. Now all the new coal power stations have been cancelled, and the third runway is dead in the water. Here in the fifth largest economy in the world, they have stopped coal and airport expansion. Politicians felt the heat. That was done by a few thousand people. Imagine what tens or hundreds of thousands could do.
There need to be parallel movements to this in every country on earth (and a much bigger one in Britain). Copenhagen had one value, and one value alone. It has shown us that if we don't act in our own self-defence now, nobody else will.
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
25 Comments so far
Show AllUSns should t'row Unka 'Bomb de coal over de fence at the Casa Blanca buck stop!
Johann Hari sez:
"Buried deep in our subconscious, there still lays the belief that our political leaders are collective Daddies and Mummies who will - in the last instance - guarantee our safety. [...] Last week in Copenhagen, the conviction was disproved."
As for me, I would state the matter this way:
At the very surface of my consciousness, there has been lying, for years and years, the belief that our political leaders are monsters who will - in the first instance - guarantee the safety of the elite interests they serve. [...] Last week in Copenhagen, the conviction was yet again verified.
This is an equally apt interpretation of what Hari wrote at the beginning.
Yet, there seems to remain a vocal clot of people who keep writing paeans to the next great leader (usually, Nader) - their collective Daddy who will come and fix everything for them, kiss it, and make it better.
Screw that! I'm not that stupid (anymore). I mean, I used to be, but I opened my eyes, grew up, and realized that power doesn't give itself up - it fights to the end. If we don't fight and struggle and learn and change, we are dead! And we will deserve it and our stupidity will finally end.
Johann,
I would watch yourself. This talk may still be legal in England, but in the US it could be construed as terrorism. There are millions of people on the Homeland Security Low Level Terrorist List. You could be next.
While applauding your sense of urgency I believe that we need to be smarter than to block trains and planes. Besides, that would just give them an excuse to ramp up security.
Greenpeace is a good way to go, look at the recent creative protest actions, and some of it's leaders. I just think that getting more kids arrested and giving them records is not the best way to go.
Whatever happened to the Yippy! mentality? Now there was a group of activists who knew how to play the media. My observations are that the new crop of activists take themselves too seriously to be creative.
We need to be media savvy. We need to connect and do large scale coordinated events that get mainstream media attention while putting pressure on our representatives.
I am so tired of just hearing from angry, spoiled, hipster slacktavists who just want to be cool and get some street cred.
Are we going to leave it up to the inner city and poor to get stuff done? This is the age of the internet people, your comings and goings are recorded. You can't front. Giving up meat or Walmart will not be enough to gain respect. You can always join in the fun, just don't expect to get by on bs.
For instance, I would be proud to say that I am highkarate at CD but I don't know if I am talking to trolls or brats here but either way they would get a major smack down, maybe just verbally, if they were to reveal their handles.
Anyway, if we are to believe Johann and everyone else, it is crunchtime. Let's go then.
jasondylan
http://theyesmen.org/
block coal trains? isn't that coal bound for power plants?
the need for electricity is the issue, not the damage created supplying it...
we need to turn everything off, not yell at the coal miner...
we need to stop mining coal, yes, but we need to think all the way through...the electricity is the issue...
and the ownership of property...
interesting how nothing specific is ever said about how 'warming' (how hot does it need to be to be called 'heating'?) will affect anything other than sealevel and land area, as if all living things will simply need to crowd together a bit inland and say, 'wow...hot today, eh?', then go on with their lives, unaffected...that wouldn't be my guess...the intricate web of life will suffer under such...to what degree, the only question...
also, warming is treated as the only looming issue, as if chemical imbalances aren't real, current, and vitally important, also...no matter the temperature, life requires a variety of viable biological material to perpetuate...we are destroying such material with clocklike regularity...
the only way to stop the end of the world is to turn off all of our industrial and electrical equipment, clean up this huge mess we've created, and plant everything...
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...get planting now, so we'll have stuff then...
We don't need more electricity. Do your homework and think about what we really need. It's much less than we currently use. We didn't demand more electricity. They OVER-supplied us, and made us into consumption gluttons. Yes, this means that 90% of the economics conventional wisdom taught in USan economics schools is a terrible lie. The great taboo in this society is the compromises we make for the agenda of economic growth and imperial adventurism.
We don't need more electricity, but the economic growth and imperial adventurism monster needs us to need more. You can hear the voice in your ear: "More more more. Would you PLEASE sell your house and move into another one, at least once every two years, so some extra bucks may be churned through this economy? Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country."
We don't need more electricity. We need LESS electricity. What do you have in your fridge? Leftovers? Stop producing leftovers. You should prepare fresh daily. Fruit, tubers? Pull them out of there and put them on the dining room table. Meat, dairy, eggs? Stop buying them. What's in the freezer? You don't need a freezer. Sell the fridge, or donate it. If it's old, take it apart and recycle the components. Replace it with a very small fridge. You only need it for fresh leafy greens and the occasional ripe fruit. About 2 cu ft per person. Make a four inch thick cover for it, for added insulation. Your fridge should use no more than 15 watts per person, continuous. The average today in the USA is probably 200 watts per person. And the monster wants to increase it.
I agree that we need to use vastly less electricity...the suggestions you've included here are very helpful...thank you!
The illusion of "ethical," or even responsible, pragmatic political leadership was, unfortunately, bolstered worldwide by Barack Obama's election in 2008. Obama is probably the brightest US president in a long time, he's a good speaker, he & his family are photogenic, and of course, he's black. Unfortunately, he would never have gotten as far as the US Senate without being a creature of the same corporate system that supported his predecessors in the Oval Office. Mr. Obama was vetted by the oil and automobile industries, by the big Wall Street investment houses and the defense industries before he'd even become a serious contender in the primaries. To think otherwise is, at this point, not just naive - it's delusional. In a sense, his election was catastrophic -- a moral soporific for "liberals" in the US & a sugared palcebo for "leftish" citizens of other countries particularly here in the EU, where he's been viewed as some kind of saviour by many people.
But we're not talking about "left" or "right" anymore. We're talking about salvaging some kind of recognizablt human future. Johann Hari is quite right - the children's hour is over & we have to start making adult decisions, taking adult responsibilites & accepting the incoveniences, risks & consequences that those decisions may require.
Johann is right on the mark.
We have asked nicely and tactfully for more than a decade and now the only thing left to do is civil disobedient direct action to stop business as usual and to enact consequences for inaction and corruption perpetrated by our so called leaders.
Here is a start for you all who can't get arrested
Support the 27 people arrested for blocking a logging road to clearcut logging in Oregon's Elliott State Forest.
Send a check and specify for the "Elliott 27 Fines".
Civil Liberties Defense Center
259 E 5th Ave
Suite 300A
Eugene, OR 97401
An acre of ancient forest in the PNW can contain up 1000 tons of carbon.
Folks in Cascadia with civil disobedient direct action stopped about 500 acres of logging of old growth forests this year.
Also, 26 people were arrested for blocking access to the Chevron Corporate Headquarters in California on November 30 or thereof. They may need financial help as well.
I am sure there were many actions like this across the U.S. this last year especially in attempts to stop mountain top coal mining. Seek out and support these folks so the burden of legal costs and fines do not destroy thoughts of future civil disobedience.
Go to Rising Tide or Earth First! websites to find actions and groups nearest you.
If not you.... then who will?
Thanks for these great sites and ideas for supporting our local activists.
"The world's humid rainforests store huge amounts of warming gases in their trees. Beyond C, they lose their humidity and begin to burn down - releasing them too into the atmosphere."
We are burning down the rainforests (75 million acres per year) to keep up with our demand for beef.
Cattle-grazing is the number 1 factor in the destruction of the rainforest.
The average american car produces 3 kilograms of carbon per day.
Clearing and burning rainforests to produce 1 hamburger creates 75 kilograms of carbon.
I am all for non-violent disobediance, however, can we not do both obstructing production (including factory farms) in addition to reducing our demand that is creating the oversupply?
The Un Chair on Climate Change, Dr. Rajendra Pachauri has stated that "in terms of immediacy of action...reducing meat consumption clearly is the most attractive opportunity (to reduce climate change)."
If we truly want to reduce our contribution to polluted air, water and land, should we not weigh all of the contributing factors?
40% more climate change than all transport combined is emitted from factory farms.
Can we stop being so narcissistic and emotional and recognize that our cheeseburger habit is adversely affecting all life on this planet, including our own self-absorbed lives'?
Sue,
How many people on here do you think are eating cheeseburgers? No matter how right we are, we are not going to gain much ground until we get media attention.
No matter what our cause, getting our info to the people who need it most in way that will have the most positive affect is the way to go. Without doing this we are just phony activists who just enjoy our pet projects. Pun intended.
Again, I applaud your awareness but I believe you are preaching to the choir. Let's shut down McDonalds, like they do in France. The farmers who did some serious activism years ago are now famous activists.
Let's get our minds and asses in gear and do more than type facts over and over.
jasondylan
jasondylan,
Unfortunately, McDonald's was not shut down in France. One construction site for a McDonald's in the town of Millau was taken apart in 1999 by a group of militant farmers belonging to the Conféderation Paysanne. The action was part of an ongoing campaign against the industrialsation of farming (in particular the introduction of GM crops) and the promotion of junk food ("le malbouffe" in French) by the corporate-media complex in France. The action was a symbolic one -- I'm afraid to say that there are more McDonald's than ever in France, and over a period of a few years Starbucks franchises have metastisized all over Paris, causing a number of cafés to either close down or change their décor and menus to look more "Starbucks-like."
Only one of the militants involved in the McDonald's action in '99 became a "famous activist," the group's spokesman, José Bové. I remember a few years after the Millau action seeing him on French TV as a celebrity contestant on a game-show. His heart is in the right place, and he puts his money where his mouth is, although some activists feel that he opens it without thinking a bit too often. He is currently a "Green" deputy in the European Parliament, a legislative body which, it must be pointed out, had no impact of any sort on what was decided (or not decided) at Copenhagen.
You mentioned the Yippies & yes, in the days when mass media, particularly visual mass media was relatively young, they came up with some interesting, funny ways of turning it to their adavntage. But you'd do well to look at the post-Yippee career of Jerry Rubin. Trying to play the media is always, especially now, a risky business. You might end up as a celebrity contestant on a game show. Or a congressman. It seems that all the reccomendations people are making - consuming less &/or more conscientiously, vegetarianism, civil disobedience - are necessary. And, somehow trying to rebuild some sense of social cohesion, some meaning greater than each individual's desires (probably what Ivan Illych called "convivilaity") that can give us strength and motivate people who've been trained (bred) for passivity & comfort. How? Don't know. Any ideas?
Valmy,
Of course I realize McDonalds was not shut down and I am very aware of Mr Bove.
Great reply though, at least some people on here have the guts to get into a real discussion of activism.
Of course the Yippies were not altogether successful, but they were activist rock stars who drew large crowds. No one before or since has had as much impact.
It is apples and oranges. Playing the media now is much different. We have the internet, we have local media, we have cell phones for petes sake. I can sit here and rant about ideas all day but the activist class on CD and elsewhere is only interested in themselves.
I don't want to look up the post Yippie career of Rubin. I want to learn from what they did and others and connect with people and make change. I thought learning what to do would be the hard part but it is getting past the apathy and self-importance of other so called progressives that is the real challenge.
If you are really interested I would say you could find me on my blog. I would say the time for discussing the dragon's scales are over. Now is time to take down the dragon. Who is with me? CD is as good as any place to build consensus or at least to connect with others.
We are standing on the shoulders of giants farting.
jasondylan
So what IS the real problem. Meat? Logging old growth? Electrical equipment? Consumer mentality? You name it?
I have come to the conclusion that the best course of action is to unplug, powerdown...turn your heat way down, stop buying new clothes, grow as much of your own food as you can and get together with your neighbors to start a community garden, cut out about 80% of what you think you need, and just buy what you really do need and buy it locally if you can.
The sad fact is, the developing countries have been watching us live like royalty for decades and now they want some of that action...you would too. There's no way they are going to say, oh geez- maybe we shouldn't buy a car and all that cool crap we couldn't afford before, because now we know about climate change. AND, there is no way any activitists are going to shut down the Chinese coal plant building spree.
Our only hope is to foster and hasten the collapse of the global economy and cut off money that will be used to build coal plants and manufacture guns, STOP BUYING STUFF. If enough of us quit giving the energy industry and weapons manufacturers our money, they'd starve to death.
Blue,
You have more in common with the poor and middle class in India than you do with your own countries upper classes.
A small percentage of progressives making significant cuts in pollution is not going to cut it.Whatever you dont take from the grid, a corporation will. We all know the US leads, but make no mistake about it, the poor and middle class around the world just want justice and peace.
We are all being played by the elites. They are 10 steps ahead. Global Warming is only now being acknowledged because they can make money from it.
We have to take back the media and the commons. Progressives have the ability and now the responsibility to elevate the dialogue in the country, then the masses will follow.
The problem is that progressives are spoiled and have too much to lose. The poor and pockets of the working classes will probably end up fighting this beast while the progressives sit by their computers.
Am I wrong? Why?
jasondylan
I'm with you, Kate. It's what I advocate.
Here are a couple of places we can all start (I have):
http://noimpactproject.org/
http://www.simpleliving.net/main/
We are the last line of defense against corporate totalitarian global warming, and every other line has been breached. It truly is up to us.
It now clear that structure and function of democratic government as old as 2 thousand years is unable to keep its footing where the national population exceeds 200M ( my numbers ) people.
In the international realm, these governments are unable to keep their word which they thought they could keep by signing treaties. This can be seen in how national governments are foot faulting on international treaties like NPT, Human Rights, Climate Pollution, Arms control , trade etc.
This is in fact what this article is surmising after looking at failure to achieve climate pollution targets required by all habitants of this earth at COP15.
Hence, question arises, how should government be organized to support proper representation of its population.
Is parliamentary system more effective at serving in countries with large population? India has parliamentary system, it not altogether effective.
Is the call for small government , crying out for government that is in service of smaller set of population?
Is it a role of governments to look after multi-national corporations? or is it role of WTO to look after multi-national corporations?
Yes, where applicable, the stick approach may be used in some cases to achieve climate justice. Offering the carrot would ultimately be a better approach.
One must understand wherein the real problem lies...
The enemy isn't "electricity". Electricity is the juice which makes modern life worth living. How many of you would be willing to give up your computers or your HD TVs? It's consumption in our homes produces heat as a by-product--bad during the summer, but good during the winter, but otherwise is non-polluting where it is consumed.
Yes, many of us would survive well enough using a lot less of it. On the other hand, there are those who could benefit immensely from only a small amount of it...like enough to pump water to a village from a well located 3 km away from it.
What is actually needed is not to eliminate electricity, but to develop a means of producing electricity from renewables in a decentralized fashion that is much cheaper than building complexes to mine, transport and ultimately burn coal at power plants to produce electricity. Here it is:
http://vortexengine.ca/Publications/India_Article.pdf
AVE_fan says:
"The enemy isn't "electricity". Electricity is the juice which makes modern life worth living. How many of you would be willing to give up your computers or your HD TVs?"
where did you get your computer and hdtv, or any other product that runs on electricity? where will they go when you're done with them? where did you get the money to pay for them, or the house in whch you use them? where were they manufactured, by whom, and under what conditions? what toxins were used or created in their manufacture? how do you see yourself as immune to those very toxins?
the modern human lifestyle only exists because it has been ripped out of the living planet...please address the electrical world, in toto, and not just the piece you prefer...
Despite your desires, it simply isn't possible to go back to the "hunter-gatherer" lifestyle or continue with current agricultural practices or even transition to permaculture without some form of abundant energy, even though it may be nominally less than the quantities we now use.
Will abundant, inexpensive, non-polluting, decentralized electricity production solve all the problems--of course not, but it could certainly buy us a lot of time we wouldn't otherwise have. Of course, if you're already seventy years old, without descendants, it's possible you don't even care.
By the way, if correctly applied, the technology is also capable of reversing desertification by supplying rainfall and cloud cover. One place where this could be readily accomplished would be to install a dozen or so of the devices on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, and...let the rains begin.
http://vortexengine.ca
I don't consider the electricity question to be one of desire...I consider it to be one of environmental health, counter to maintaining a viable, sustainable ecosystem, with natural variety...and to not being watched, abused, influenced, incarcerated, or killed...
in my opinion, electricity, from generation through use, and all points in between, has a great deal to do with both the ongoing, global damage of the environment and the ever-increasing watching and abusing and influencing and incarcerating and killing...
the benefits are strictly human, and questionable in content, value and fairness...
the really interesting question behind all matters, anymore, is how long human opinion remains relevant...nature is not political, gravity does not compromise...
Having an abundant, cheap, and non-polluting means of producing electricity that can be produced anywhere in say, 50 MW bites, has EVERYTHING to do with having the capacity to undo some of the mistakes of the past while providing a "prosperous and gentle way down", in terms of population and consumption.
You seem to be confusing "electricity" production and use with the "fuels" needed to produce it or the dams which must be built to provide the necessary head of water. Procurement and burning (usually) of the above has been the real source of damage, not the end product.
I do agree that long distance transmission lines are and will have a negative impact on the environment, but these are not necessary with the right type of renewable energy technology that can produce electricity where people live.
See http://vortexengine.ca
Virtually all electronic materials can be recycled inexpensively--all it takes is the political will to do so. It's not the fault of the "electricity" that they're not being recycled.
Not enough people are convinced global warming is really happening, or if it is, that it can get very, very bad. Many people feel vaguely guilty that their driving a large SUV "might be contributing to Tuvalu drowning in 70 years; gee, maybe I should trade in for a Crossover vehicle".
In the next 10 years, the Arctic will be ice free in the summer for the first time in recorded history. It will also hit a few "hottest years in recorded history". This will convince many more people that the scientists are not in on some elaborate "hoax" like the wingnut echo chamber is trying to convince them. Yes, it is just a delaying tactic, but the warming is inexorable - eventually reality will steamroll over the wingnuts excuses, then it is time for step 2.
Global warming is NOT just going to flood a few low lying lands, and make a few hurricanes stronger. The tipping points are crucial, and the fragility of the global agriculture system with respect to climate must be made clear. When 2 billion people run out of fresh water (South and Southeast Asia, as the Himalaya glaciers melt away to nothing) and rainfall/drought patterns shift such that countries with large agriculture operations now have the wrong weather (USA, China), and countries without the infrastructure get new weather that enables them to become agriculture producers (Canada, Siberia), the turmoil will lead to widespread famine. Climate refugees, starvation, resource wars (e.g. over dwindling rivers) are going to devastate the second half of the 21st century.
There's not much time to wake people up, but they clearly were not yet convinced there is an Emergency upon us. And most Americans feel, in their bones, that if the sh!t hits the fan, American military and economic power will shield us, and it will be 100's of millions of Africans, Indians, Vietnamese, etc. who will die.
This will not be the case.
After the climate changes of the next 10 years or so wake up 90% of the people to the Cause, the Effects will have to be spelled out. The best the world can really hope for is a planetary "oh sh!t" moment after 2020, when they decide to take climate change as seriously as an Enemy Country. The later we start, the more drastic the measures will have to be.