Crisis rhetoric has to be matched with crisis action

Blog Post | Blog of Christine Milne
Tuesday 8th December 2009, 11:37am

This piece first appeared on the official "Climate Thinkers" blog

As the Copenhagen Conference swiftly approaches, government leaders from around the world are working hard to convince their constituents that they understand we face a climate crisis. However, to date, the scale of their commitments utterly fails to match the scale of their rhetoric.

What a contrast with the global financial crisis where the crisis rhetoric from world leaders was matched by effective, immediate and cooperative crisis action.

Unless and until the crisis rhetoric of climate change is matched with crisis action, it is doubtful that a meaningful agreement can be reached at this conference.

Around the world, governments like Kevin Rudd's are explicitly linking the extreme weather events we've seen - heat waves, bushfires, drought and floods - to climate change and using that link to pressure their political opponents to accept the limited action they are willing to take. Attacking climate sceptics for holding back action has also become a favoured mechanism for claiming the moral high ground in the climate debate. This claim to be guided by the science while espousing weak and scientifically unsupportable targets, this climate hypocrisy, is more dangerous than true climate scepticism because it is more insidious.

It is deeply troubling that the communiqués from recent G8 and G20 meetings fall into exactly this category of spin over substance. These statements have adopted the climate science as their raison d'etre, but jettisoned that science in coming to their conclusions. At L'Aquila, for example, the leaders of the world's largest economies committed to keeping warming to less than 2C above pre-industrial levels by aiming to stabilise carbon concentrations at 450 ppm, which was to be achieved by halving global emissions by 2050. This is scientifically flawed at each of its three levels.

Firstly, many scientists, together with many developing country leaders, now warn that 2C warming will not be safe and we should do everything we can to limit warming to far less than that. Secondly, the average of all scenarios modelled in the IPCC process gave us the scientific conclusion that at 450 ppm we have only a 50% chance of constraining warming to 2C. Since we are trending at the upper end of IPCC scenarios, we can conclude that a 450 ppm trajectory gives us a less than 50% likelihood of staying below the 2C threshold. Thirdly, 21st century carbon budgets developed by leading scientists show that halving global emissions by 2050 has no chance of putting the planet onto a 450 ppm trajectory.

It would be a tragedy if the Copenhagen Conference made the same mistake. If world leaders are serious about taking the advice of climate scientists, they must lift their ambition to the 350 ppm stabilisation that science says is necessary for a safe climate outcome, and lift the ambition of their emissions reduction targets concomitantly. For developed nations this will mean cuts in the order of 40% below 1990 levels by 2020, heading towards zero emissions well before mid-century.

The thing about science is that you cannot pick and choose the bits which are and are not convenient. You cannot negotiate with the laws of physics and chemistry. President Kennedy, when aiming for the moon in 1961, could not simply dismiss the effects of gravity to make the job easier. Nor could he aim to put a man on the moon and leave his return to a later date when it was more politically expedient. Kennedy's scientists and technologists had to work as hard and fast as possible to succeed in doing what was necessary to meet the challenge, and to use the laws of nature to help rather than hinder their task.

One of the many problems we face in driving political ambition is that some scientists who privately warn that we must make very deep cuts very fast, in public allow themselves to become what they call "pragmatic". They temper their advice because they fear that honest advice will be seen as politically impossible and will thus be ignored or ridiculed. I say to those scientists, have courage. If you do not, there is no chance at all that the necessary targets will be adopted. You will become part of the problem not part of the solution.

As a global community we need to take heart from the response to the global financial crisis. If there is the political will, anything is possible. The world turned on a sixpence, dramatically and rapidly changing policy and finding trillions of dollars in a matter of weeks.

It is not knowledge we lack, nor technology nor the capacity to address global warming. It is the political will. If we fall into the trap of pragmatically assuming we cannot build the necessary political will, we are doomed.

If we - the scientists, the politicians and the community - reject false solutions like the CPRS and demand the same level of crisis action in response to the climate crisis that was taken in response to the financial crisis, we will solve it. We will gladly sign up to multi-billion dollar financing commitments, we will reach a fair and strong agreement to protect biodiversity and forest carbon stores, we will embrace the challenge of deep and steep cuts in emissions and move swiftly to the zero carbon economy of the future.

The climate solution is within our grasp, but we must have the honesty and courage to grasp it.

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Comments

Governments have a lot of selling to do.

A well written piece.

The biggest issue I see is that the majority of world leaders (apart from a some in Africa and a few in other parts of the world) are elected leaders, who know that any action must not add large cost increases to the electorates, else they will be looking for new jobs after their next elections.

I suspect that Mr Rudd was quite relieved that the CPRS did not get through in the form proposed, as all the results of the polls / surveys I have seen (and I am sure the Governments polling would have been the same), point out that the general community (i.e. Mr and Mrs Average in the swinging electorates) considered climate change was real, but that the Government has to look at reducing emissions without adding large costs to them. This will be very trickey to work out, as business pointed out to the Government that any additional costs they occur, will be passed directly to the community.

Having said the above, I have noticed that the Federal Government is now stressing to the electorate, that the Government will ensure that the vast majority of the electorate will be compensated for any cost increases. Infact they have offered in some cases, to cover a 120% of any cost increases, which, to me is a catch 22 position.
a. The Government needs to protect the electorate against cost increases or face eviction at the next election
b. How do you encourage the reduction in energy usage (and therefore emissions), if you are going to compensate the majority of Australians when their consumption patterns do not change and they use the same amount of energy (everybody will still have to use their cars (Australians buy around 800k+ new cars every year for our roads), fridges, heaters, washing machines, lighting (home, business, security, traffic) computers, aircons, freezers etc, etc, etc).

Glad I am not in Government, as I see the whole issue as a no win situation, especially if the Government commits to some sort of penalty system for not meeting targets, and cannot pass that cost onto the community for fear of being evicted at the next election (they would probably have to borrow the money under the counter from the Middle East or China, and have our grand children pay for it 20 years down the track).

Anyway, it will be interesting to see what comes out of Copenhagen, but I suspect that their will be a lot of uncommitted promises from countries, of reduction figures they will attempt to sell to their electorates.

by Grant on Tuesday 8th December 2009 at 12:34pm

Capitalism

The action on climate change by the labor government shows that they don't believe in capitalism as the ideal world order. In fact the U.S. government bailing out of private entities shows the same thing. I guess capitalism isn't all it was cracked up to be!

by Richard on Tuesday 8th December 2009 at 2:17pm

Any Alternate Suggestion

Capitalism may not be the ideal, but many countries have tried alternatives, one alternative for around 75 years, which have also proven to be no good.

Germany and Italy in the 30ś tried alternatives and also came to grief.

China has a been trying an alternative for the past 50 odd years, and even this country is now allowing a semi state controlled capitalism (ie. privately owned businesses).

The problem with most alternatives is that, they do not provide incentives for the general population to strive to improve them selves, their country, or their lives, resulting in a generally stagnant country.

Yep, capitalism is not the ideal under pinning for a democracy, but until something else that is proven comes along, we are stuck with it. Possibly the only alternative would be a benevolent dictator, but candidates seem to be few and far between these days (often bumped off by the military after screwing up.

by Grant on Wednesday 9th December 2009 at 10:17am

I never said capitalism wasn't the ideal.

You missed the point entirely. When I was educated it was taught that capitalism was the answer for the world and better than any other regime. Especially against its foe communism which ultimately fell. But the way of most recent it would seem socialist action is being taken to support capitalist venture. The government wants to give private business in coal billions of dollars to stay afloat in a world that is changing, rather than let the economy adapt to the changes quite naturally under free capitalism. So as I said, it would seem that those in power no longer believe in capitalism and thus it's not all it's cracked up to be. AND THE ALTERNATIVE would be implied that the government are now socialists!

by Richard on Wednesday 9th December 2009 at 1:53pm

Pain and Democracy don't mix

Christine, world leaders have reacted in precisely the same manner to the GFC and to climate change. In both cases they have pursued the path which minimises short term political pain.

In the case of the GFC there was action, there was global action, there was decisive action, and this action did nothing to fix the underlying cause of the GFC. Economies that were reliant upon unsustainable consumption fueled by cheap debt from abroad got stimulated by more cheap money from abroad (directed into consumption of course). Corporations that were "too big to fail" were bailed out or protected, and many emerged bigger and more dominant than they were going into this mess. This was not effective action, this was a short term fix so that governments had a chance of being reelected. This was action that delayed most of the political pain (debt and unsustainable consumption) to a later date, and it was action that increased the size of the problem rather than decreased it.

Governments are taking the same approach with climate change. Its all about minimising political pain now, because they want to get reelected. If the cost and pain is greater later on because of inaction now, then so be it, it will be some later government that wears the cost and not the current one.

The real shame in all of this is that a deep recession was what the world needed. There is no better time than a recession for great nation building exercises like replacing the existing energy infrastructure with renewable alternatives. Our governments blew the opportunity.

As I see it, humanity currently faces two main problems, 1. population, and 2. democracy. If we don't limit the human population and if governments can't impose unpopular measures, when needed, then the planet is screwed - with or without climate change.

by Zoltar on Sunday 13th December 2009 at 1:15am

Pain and Democracy Don't Mix

Yep you are probably partially correct.

Democratic Governments are beholding on not passing pain to the electorate, but there are very few alternatives that have been proven to be workable.

Eastern block countries tried an alternative for around 75 years, but found that they had a major problem of not providing any incentive for people to better them selves. so everything stagnated eventually.

Even China has had to move with the times with State overseen Capitalism, so people have an incentive to improve their lives and themselves (and therefore the country). China now has the difficult situation of having to have policies that move toward meeting its populations expectations, and if that means providing energy for the masses in any way possible, so be it. From a Western point of view, which country is ever going to stop imports from China, if they continue to build hundreds of coal fired power stations during the next few decades. In fact Australia will not even be able to stop supplying coal to China as I believe that China is buying up coal mines to ensure continuity of supply.

As for passing the pain to future Governments, they will also be in the same boat as the current Governments. The only difference maybe in the decades to come, technology advances will reduce dramtically any pain the electorate will experience.

There is another alternative. If you are not happy with the current political system, you could move to Nth Korea, where the Government says, stuff the people, stuff the economy, and stuff the rest of the world. The only draw back is that you may starve to death.

by Grant on Monday 14th December 2009 at 3:13pm

I guess thism could equal

I guess thism could equal war!

by Essay Writer on Saturday 10th July 2010 at 9:41pm

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