OEL Newsletter Article (Number 3)
Issue 71 of OEL Newsletter
featured an article 'Can Politicians Solve Climate Change? Here is one individual's reaction (in Issue
72, Spring 2008). You may wish to read and carefully consider it, you may share
or disagree with the writer’s opinion on this important ecological matter.
Politicians
Cannot Solve Climate Change (Even if They Tried)
Dr. Stephen Wozniak
In newsletter 71 it was suggested that politicians might be able to solve climate change. Politicians can surely solve any problem so long as they do not run up against an immutable law of science. However, first they have to recognise there is a problem. Second, the general population has to allow them to formulate and then to implement effective policies. Climate science may also play a part. James Lovelock has suggested that many Earth subsystems are already in 'positive feedback' and moving the Earth towards a hotter stable state, similar to that at the start of the Eocene, fifty‑five million years ago. If he is right, then nothing that politicians can do may now make much difference.
Pretence and Denial
Climate change has become a game of political pretence. 'Green-growth' has been championed by David Cameron. It promises continued economic prosperity, business opportunities (green tourism!) and saving the world. A few politicians may already realise that if they presented realistic policy options based on a proper understanding of the issues they would be laughed out of office. Modest energy savings can be achieved using technology, carbon capture and carbon trading. Deep cuts will require lifestyle changes.
The populace feign support for environmental ideals but
tolerate implementation just so long as their own indulgences are not much
compromised. A few pop‑stars and politicians buy costly status‑symbol
(feel-good) environmental gimmicks such as solar panels or small wind turbines.
These are far removed from cost effectiveness in most situations and a poor use
of capital and resources.
A recent survey of young people showed that virtually
none were prepared voluntarily to make any sacrifice in their material comforts
to help the environment. The UK market
for ringtones for mobile phones is £240 million annually. Most of this
is spent by young people. The UK market for illegal drugs is estimated at £5000
million annually ‑ rather more than the budgets of environmental
charities.
No Meaningful Changes
In 1998, I gave the Offwell lecture. I took as my twin
themes how little had really changed since the days of 'Silent Spring' and how
much money there was sloshing around the world that could be used to help save
it. It was an auspicious choice for a datum point ‑ Rachel Carson was
recently voted the World's top Eco‑hero (Newsletter 71 page 7). Fast‑forward
ten years and much has surely changed: we now have a vast popular awareness of
'climate change'. But has use of fossil fuel decreased? Has world population
growth slowed? Has the popular appetite for air travel and faster land
transport diminished? Has there been any decrease in the rate of species
extinction? All the indicators remain pointing firmly in the wrong direction.
If no‑one really wants to destroy Life on Earth as we know it, we need to ask why all major government policies are geared to doing broadly this. I will ignore the minor sums of money devoted to ‘environmental' projects. Whilst 'environmentalists' have no doubt made a substantial impact on raising awareness they have arguably made little impact on the total sum of world environmental degradation. Forests burn, airports expand, people breed.
No doubt, things are not as bad now as they might have
been without the 'Greens'. Extinction of some of the more photogenic species is
being postponed. Environmentalists have made valiant efforts and many believe
they are making a difference. However, the sums of money at their disposal
remain trivial. This merely reflects political and business priorities ‑as
I made clear in my lecture.
Earth at the Edge
'Climate change' as it is currently understood is
probably due to a natural warming period (Rachel Carson referred to this in her
books) coinciding with a sudden man‑made rise in carbon dioxide levels.
This has occurred during an interglacial ‑ the worst possible time to
heat the Earth artificially!
The sun is now hotter than when the Earth was young.
To maintain conditions fit for life on the early Earth required no complex 'air‑conditioning'
systems. Today, they are essential and yet may soon fail. Life in both the
oceans and in the tropical forests as we know them has evolved to play a large
role in Earth cooling. Both systems may be 'switched off by man‑made
global warming of only a few degrees. Keeping the polar regions white and
reflecting may also be critical. Mankind may warm the Earth by (say) three
degrees. Nature may rapidly add another three or maybe five. Such a process
would be unstoppable.
Life has survived many Ice Ages. Ecosystems have been
renewed ‑ but over tens or hundreds of thousands of years. But many
systems have now become stressed and degraded before the onset of a climate
shock. There is probably nothing that can now be done by politicians or anyone
else to fortify these systems better to withstand even modest climate change.
And humankind is utterly reliant upon them.
Perpetual Growth ‑ Escapism for Politicians
There are twin drivers for what has happened to the
Earth ‑ perennial greed and rampant population growth. These continue to
be manifest in the various major economic policies that are applauded by
politicians. Lovelock has referred to humans as a plague. He is right in that
we have outgrown our natural place in the order of things. The demands of a
huge population have in effect 'mortgaged the future'. Current economic systems
are inherently unable to survive substantial lessening of 'economic growth'.
The ecological economist Herman Daly has for years warned that continued growth
may in fact make us poorer: he includes the costs of degrading the Earth. His
reward has been to remain a voice in the wilderness.
The problem with growth economics (as with all pyramid
selling) is that you need ever more players and wealth to prevent the system
collapsing. Pensions are a good example ‑ few schemes across the world
are 'fully funded'. This jargon means that sufficient money has been paid in by
the people now drawing a pension to fund their own pensions until they die.
Most schemes rely heavily on contributions from younger workers to pay for
those now in old age. With an expanding population and a buoyant economy, the
system works.
Pension time‑bombs are ticking. Politicians in
Italy, Russia and elsewhere are exhorting women to have more babies ‑ and
offering rewards for fecundity. Are these the politicians to whom we must look
to address climate change?
Politicians cannot do anything that would risk
economic collapse; they cannot conceive of lowering world population (even
gradually) for that would expose still further the fragility of world
economics. They cannot do much (even if they had the will) to limit growth in
the use of fossil fuel energy within the next 20 or 30 years because China and
India will continue their headlong dash to growth regardless of any
consequences. But even if they did try, it is already probably too late.
Normality or
Isolated Conflux?
The collective memory in contemporary western society
is short. Life has been very comfortable for the most privileged 10 or 20% of
the world's population for the last two generations ‑ a mere 50 years. We
think it is normal to have social welfare, security, peace, plentiful and
varied food, health care, leisure time, warm houses, cars, air travel,
electronic gadgets, long lives and bountiful pensions.
Our current 'quality of life' is probably merely an
aberration ‑ the result of a chance conflux of abundant and easily
exploited resources, a benign and stable world climate and (crucially) the
rapid development of science. This has enabled exploitation of the riches of the
Earth without (so far) much retribution from Nature. Yet if we burn even a
fraction of remaining fossil fuel reserves the Earth's climate may change
markedly. Ecosystems and human societies would collapse. Billions would die.
So what difference would it make if politicians did
now genuinely strive to reduce energy use, to limit population growth and to
bring an end to the era of conspicuous over‑consumption and wanton waste?
Short of revolution or total systems collapse, these are all processes that
have time‑constants measured in decades ‑ so changes could take two
generations to have significant effect.
Can Anyone Make
a Difference Now?
To help answer this question, let us assume that if we
continue 'business as usual' the world as we know it may end in 100 years.
There is no need to speculate on which of several globally significant and
impending calamities would impact most severely, or on which might occur first.
Consider reductions in energy use that realistically
could be achieved in the West, severe programs to reduce human breeding, all
the hardship of recession and failed pensions schemes, and mass unemployment as
people no longer spent their days manufacturing useless throwaway items. The
totality of all this painful sacrifice might delay the projected end of the
world by a month or maybe even by a year. 1 am here speculating that because of
the positive feedback mechanisms that may now be operating, a 1% reduction in
our 'impact' on the Earth may have far less than a 1% restorative effect.
Even if we stopped using fossil fuel energy completely
(an absurd suggestion since billions of people would die within weeks) the
Earth might continue to warm. Once released into the air, C02 has a residence
time of decades. Worse still, if we stopped flying, the sudden decrease in high
altitude sulphur emissions might cause a noticeable increase in warming within
a year. The cooling effect of high
altitude sulphur is short‑lived and may be masking the full warming
effect of carbon emissions.
So when the
reality of our impotence dawns, would any politician dare order genuinely
painful and real sacrifices for no certain benefit? Would the millions of
'super‑rich' give up their yachts, mansions, supercars and hugely
destructive lifestyles? Would politicians sacrifice their pensions and live
modestly? Would ordinary consumers even stop eating meat and coveting luxury?
Would most of them even bother to wear winter clothes indoors in wintertime?
Here is a school
project. Walk into your nearest council offices, luxury department store or car
showroom on a cold February day. Measure the temperature. Count the men in
macho short sleeves and the women in skimpy skirts! Lifestyle changes to help
Life on Earth survive have yet to begin.
Politicians
profess control of the world, yet they have none. They merely muddle through,
taking undue credit for the myriad and remarkable achievements of science
within the era of chance conflux, an era that may soon draw to a close.
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