From
Australia's Clive Hamilton
The
Delusion of the “Good Anthropocene”: Reply to Andrew Revkin
17
June, 2014
Andrew
Revkin
Dot
Earth blog
New
York Times
Dear
Andy
Thanks
for sending the link
to your talk on “Charting Paths to a ‘Good’ Anthropocene”.
Since you ask for responses let me express my view bluntly. In short,
I think those who argue for the “good Anthropocene” are
unscientific and live in a fantasy world of their own construction.
If
we listen to what Earth system scientists, including climate
scientists, are telling us, the warming of the Earth due to human
causes is a slowly unfolding catastrophe. We already have 2.4°C of
warming locked in and, even under the most optimistic mitigation
scenarios, it will be very hard to avoid 4°C by the end of this
century. According to those best placed to make projections, a world
4°C warmer would be a very different kind of planet, one
unsympathetic to most forms of life, including human life. Apart from
climatic change, other manifestations of human impact in the
Anthropocene, from interference in the nitrogen cycle to plastics in
the oceans, only add to the grim outlook.
The
advocates of the “good Anthropocene” do not attempt to repudiate
the mass of scientific evidence; instead they choose to reframe it.
As you declare so disarmingly in your talk: “You can look at it and
go ‘Oh my God’, or you can look at it and go ‘Wow, what an
amazing time to be alive!’ I kind of choose the latter overall.”
You are, of course, entitled to put on any kind of glasses you
choose, including rose-coloured ones; but that does not change what
you are looking at.
So
it would make no difference if I took the time to document again what
you and your fellow “eco-pragmatists” are looking at (the World
Bank report is a pretty good overview). Unlike deniers who feel
compelled to attack the science, advocates of the good Anthropocene
just seem to glide over it.
You
believe that “with work … we can have a successful journey this
century. … We are going to do OK.” Personally, when I think about
those toiling, vulnerable masses who are going to suffer the worst
consequences of a warming world, I find it offensive to hear a
comfortable, white American say “We are going to do OK”. I’m
sorry if this seems harsh, but unless the IPCC has it completely
wrong, much of the world’s population is not included in your “we”.
The
eco-pragmatists who embrace the new geological epoch – Michael
Schellenberger, Ted Nordhaus, Peter Kareiva, Erle Ellis, Emma Marris,
Stewart Brand, Mark Lynas – express an unbounded faith in
technology and human ingenuity, and view the natural world as
ultimately conformable to human manipulation and resilient enough to
bounce back from whatever humans throw at it.
For
them the Anthropocene is not proof of humankind’s short-sightedness
or rapacity, let alone the product of a power structure defended
vigorously by fossil energy interests. There are no planetary
boundaries that limit continued growth in human population and
economic advance. Humans can adapt and prosper in a hotter world
because history proves our flexibility. In this view, as we enter the
Anthropocene the only barrier to a grand new era for humanity is
self-doubt and the “pessimism” of gloomy scientists. Like you,
Ellis, Kareiva and the Breakthrough crowd see the new epoch as “an
amazing opportunity”, humanity’s transition to a higher level of
planetary significance.
It
is not surprising that the eco-pragmatists attract support from
conservatives who have doggedly resisted all measures to cut
greenhouse gas emissions, defended the interests of fossil fuel
corporations, and in some cases worked hard to trash climate science.
These are the same people now drawn to geoengineering, especially
solar radiation management, as a substitute for reducing emissions.
For them, resorting to geoengineering justifies and entrenches the
prevailing system, which is their over-riding goal.
So
the “good Anthropocene” is a story about the world that could
have been written by the powerful interests that have got us into
this mess and who are fighting so effectively to prevent us from
getting out of it. In the long term this kind of thinking will prove
more insidious than climate science denial.
If,
against all the evidence, the eco-pragmatists choose to say “What
an amazing time to be alive” we can understand the choice as a kind
of coping strategy. Those who cope this way acknowledge and accept
the facts about global warming up to a point, but they blunt the
emotional meaning of the facts. But it is a maladaptive coping
strategy, one that provides a balm for feelings of anxiety, fear and
helplessness, yet impedes the appropriate action.
Many
among the general public cope with global warming by
“de-problematising” the threat using inner narratives such as
“Humans have solved these sorts of problems before” and
“Technology will always provide a solution”. The eco-pragmatists
provide an intellectual justification for this kind of wishful
thinking. Tacking “good” onto “Anthropocene” may be an
effective emotional reframing, but it is without scientific
foundation.
It
has been shown that humans can benefit from what psychologist Shelley
Taylor calls “benign fictions”, unrealistic stories about
ourselves and the world that lead us to predict what we would prefer
to see, rather than what is objectively most likely to happen. Yet
these healthy illusions that can spur us on against the odds can
become dangerous delusions when they continue to be held despite
evidence from the outside world telling us we must change course.
In
the end, grasping at delusions like “the good Anthropocene” is a
failure of courage, courage to face the facts. The power of positive
thinking can’t turn malignant tumours into benign growths, and it
can’t turn planetary overreach into endless lifestyle improvements.
Declaring oneself to be an optimist is often used as a means of
gaining the moral upper hand: “Things may look bad but, O ye of
little faith, be bold and cheerful like me.”
Things
are bad, and if we carry on as we are things will be very bad. It is
the possibility of preventing bad turning into very bad that
motivates many of us to work harder than ever. But pretending that
bad can be turned into good with a large dose of positive thinking
is, even more so than denying things are bad, a sure-fire way of
ending up in a situation that is very bad indeed.
Clive
17
June 2014
Very well put.
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