The
War on the Planet
by
KIRKPATRICK SALE
6
January, 2014
Some
recent evidence in the contest between capitalism and the earth:
In
October, the U.S. officially edged past Russia as the world’s
largest producer of oil and gas, an achievement largely due to the
great increase in natural gas production through hydraulic fracturing
of shale (fracking). Inasmuch as the process puts into the ground
(and groundwater) 40 gallons of up to 600 chemicals in every well, no
one doubts that it is one of the dirtiest and most polluting
industries ever created.
Capitalism
1, Earth 0.
In
December, the New England shrimp fishery was officially shut down for
at least a year, maybe three, to allow a restoration of vastly
depleted shrimp stocks, now at historic lows due to overfishing and
warmer waters. Shrimpers made $10 million two years ago, just $1.2
million this year, and it is uncertain if or when the stocks will
come back.
Capitalism
2, Earth 0.
According
to a UN report in December , climate-change gasses in the atmospthere
set a record high in 2012. The U.N. World Meteorological Organization
said warming gasses increased 32 per cent 1990 to 2012, with Co2,
industrialization’s chief byproduct, accounting for 80 per cent of
that.
Capitalism
3, Earth 0.
Polar
bear populations are shrinking everywhere in the Arctic, a September
2013 report found, as sea ice shrank to the lowest extent since
records began in 1979. The shrinking ice means an increase in open
water (in some places an area the size of Texas), thus limiting
bears’ access to seals, their prime source of food.
Capitalism
4, Earth 0.
In
August, President Rafael Correra of Ecuador abandoned a plan hatched
in 2007 to save the Yasuni National Park in the Amazon from
underground oil drilling through an international agreement to supply
the country $3.6 billion over 13 years, half the cash value of the
potential oil. After six years, only $13 million had been pledged,
one-half of one per cent of the agreed sum.
Capitalism
5, Earth 0.
And
so it goes. Don’t doubt that I could fill up another dozen pages
this way, picking only the most glaring examples of humankind’s
failure to protect and preserve the only known habitat on which it is
known to be able to survive. And I have not mentioned the extinction
of species, the destruction of ecosystems, the pollution of waters
and soils, the elimination of forests, the spread of deserts, and the
alteration of climate. The Ecosystem Millennium Assessment in 2005
put it simply: “Human activity is putting such a strain on the
natural functions of Earth that the ability of the planet’s
ecosystems to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for
granted.”
And
let us understand that ”human activity” is essentially
state-supported industrial capitalism and its offshoots and
imitators, as practiced now on a global scale and at a never-ending
pace, with technology of unprecedented power and destructiveness.
Things
can’t be different—that must be understood. The way things are is
the bargain we made as a society when we decided on a system
dependent on unlimited growth (not to mention on all the seven deadly
sins but sloth) and as much exploitation of natural resources for
human betterment as fast and as extensively as possible. (“Exploit,”
after all, in the language of this system, is a positive word, as so
is “growth.”) It has in a sense upheld its end of the bargain,
for it has produced an abundance of things (“goods” doesn’t
quite seem the right word) and processes that have benefited a great
many people over a great many years, never mind their inequitable
distribution and impact. Yes, overpopulation, overproduction, and
overconsumption have wrought a terrible price, but after all that’s
what capitalism has always been based upon, and in the short term
many prosper and a few grow very rich.
(I
am reminded of a story told by Friederich Engels when he visited
early industrial England and made some comment on the river of
Manchester, “a coal-black, foul-smelling stream, full of debris and
refuse,” and remarked to a leading manufacturer that he had never
seen so ill-built and filthy a city: “The man listened quietly to
the end, and said at the corner where we parted; ‘And yet there is
a great deal of money made here; good morning, sir.’”)
Obviously
I can’t say when the contest will end, though I have to say 2020
doesn’t seem like such a far-fetched date. I can only describe for
you the nature of the contest, and who is winning.
Kirkpatrick
Sale is the author of After
Eden: The Evolution of Human Domination and
eleven other books. This essay is adapted from Sale’s recent
book: Emancipation
Hell: the Tragedy Wrought by the Emancipation Proclamation.
He is the director of the Middlebury Institute.
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