Capitalist
states, by their nature, protect their own interests — not collective ones. Is
there still hope?
Salon https://www.salon.com/2019/10/19/dont-count-on-capitalism-to-defeat-climate-change/
October 19, 2019
The bad news just keeps
coming. Again and again, science-based
studies uncover increasing evidence that the planet is headed toward
unfathomable disaster.
In the last year alone, we have seen publication of the US
National Climate Assessment’s Fourth NationalClimate report,
the UN Global Sustainable Development report (“The
Future is Now”), the US NationalOceanic and Atmospheric Administration report, the World Meteorological
Association report onAccelerating Climate Change, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports on Climate Change and
Land and Ocean and Cryosphere, the Science Advisory Group to the UN
Climate Action Summit’s report “United in Science,” to
say nothing of countless articles in science journals warning that catastrophe
lies ahead.
As “United in Science" put
it, current efforts need to be “roughly
tripled to be aligned with the 2o C goal and increased fivefold to align with the 1.5o
C goal” adopted by the 2016 Paris Agreement (emphasis added).”
Hence we are confronted by the
damage already resulting from climate
change: more intense and frequent extreme weather events like hurricanes,
floods, droughts, forest fires, and heat waves; rising sea levels that threaten
the homes, lives and livelihoods of millions of people; and melting ice caps
and permafrost, among others.
The consensus among science-based reports is that the path ahead is far worse: widespread food
and water scarcity, increased exposure to diseases and allergic illnesses,
economic decline, and damage to the “infrastructure, ecosystems, and social
systems that provide essential benefits to communities.”
As Noam Chomsky put
it, “To describe these challenges as ‘extremely severe’ would be an error. The
phrase does not capture the enormity of the kinds of challenges that lie
ahead.”
We can observe three kinds of
responses to the crisis of climate change.
First, activism on a global scale is clearly on the rise, commonly led
by young people who will bear the greatest burden of climate change.
Millions participated the global Climate Strike on
September 20. 530 groups from around the
world signed on to the Lofoten
Declaration calling
for rapid phasing out of fossil fuels.
One of the signers, the
Extinction Rebellion, has mobilized two weeks of dramatic direct action and
civil disobedience in cities from New York and Philadelphia to London, Paris,
Berlin, Madrid, Amsterdam, Toronto and Sydney: from traffic blockades to
rallies, marches, and street theatre to throwing red paint on Wall Street’s bull
statue. Some 200 young mothers marched
from Westminster to 10 Downing Street where they engaged in a Nurse-In, nursing
the babies they seek to protect from climate disaster.
Second, most nations of the
world, many states and localities within the United States, even some
corporations and the US military, now recognize that the world faces a profound
challenge. Several governments have
taken preliminary steps toward altering their emissions, and even more have
pledged to do so.
In contrast to the energy of the
Climate Strike and the warnings of the UN Science Advisory Group warning, the
UN Climate Action Summit produced only modest pledges from a minority of
nations.
These steps remain woefully
inadequate if the world is to avoid a cataclysmic outcome.
Why this relative inaction in the
face of global catastrophe? The vast
majority of greenhouse gas emissions are produced by the world’s developed capitalist economies, with China and the US
leading the way. By contrast, people in
nations that have the least impact on
climate change are most vulnerable to
the worst of its effects.
This climate injustice is only
one manifestation of the inequalities and injustices built into the capitalist
powers’ imperial exploitation of the “under-developed” world. In the late Immanuel Wallerstein’s framework,
the core capitalist powers compete with
each other for dominance in exploiting the resources of the underdeveloped periphery nations.
Consequently, each of the
capitalist powers is loathe to weaken its
competitive position vis à vis the other capitalist economies. In a capitalist world, each economic unit
must act to protect what it deems its own interests. The only counterweight comes from the public
sector.
Yet in a capitalist world, each
public authority — local, state or national government — is constrained by the
fear that pushing public interests too far will cause capital flight, thereby
undermining its viability. And, of
course, corporations and the wealthy dominate the shaping of public policy —
nowhere more than in the US.
This is the way capitalism works,
which suggests how profound and systemic the changes will have to be if the
world is to avoid catastrophe.
Lastly, however, the Trump
administration and its fossil fuel allies have thumbed their noses at the world
by brazenly accelerating the race to
destruction.
Among his flagrant attempts to
flout the international scientific consensus, Trump has pledged to withdraw the
US from the Paris Agreement; he promoted fossil fuel interests at the 2017
climate talks, he campaigned to end the “war on coal,” and subsequently his
administration has moved to relax environmental coal plant emissions while
weakening the federal government’s ability to set national standards. The administration removed restrictions on
the leakage of methane from the nation’s oil and gas wells; it has taken steps
to encourage coastal and Arctic oil drilling and exploration; and Trump
announced he was revoking California’s authority under the Clean Air Act to
enforce automobile emissions standard tougher than those of the federal
government.
But itself, climate change has
caused 150,000 deaths each
year, a number that is likely to double in a decade, and it has contributed to
5 million human illnesses every year.
Left unchecked, climate change casualties could climb into the millions. Those political actors and fossil fuel
producers who resist the fundamental changes that are necessary become guilty
of producing these deaths — in short,
guilty of crimes against humanity.
The world cannot wait for the capitalist states to
enact adequate constraints on greenhouse gas emissions. Instead, the Climate Strike and Extinction
Rebellion are the beginning of a global uprising of increasing numbers of an
increasingly well informed public. The
confrontation with the powerful polluters will only grow; it will not
diminish. Ultimately, the test will be the
global uprising becomes coordinated force for systemic change that can no longer
be dismissed by the powers that be.
# # #
Ted Morgan is
emeritus professor of political science at Lehigh University and the author,
most recently, of “What Really Happened to the 1960s: How Mass Media Culture Failed
American Democracy.” He can
be contacted at epm2@lehigh.edu.
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