Catastrophic
Climate Change: A Conversation with Andrew Harvey and Carolyn Baker
What Does It Mean To “Do Something” About Climate Change? By Carolyn Baker
13
April, 2014
There
is a great difference between being still and doing nothing.
~Chinese
proverb~
When
I speak about catastrophic climate change and the likelihood of
near-term human extinction, I am often accused to “giving up” or
choosing to “do nothing” about climate change. Even more charged
for some is the notion of “living in hospice” which I argue is
now the unequivocal predicament of our species. The typical rebuttal
goes something like, “Instead of contemplating our navels or
rolling over and preparing for death, we have to do
something about climate change!”
Thus,
I feel compelled to genuinely ask: What does it mean to actually “do
something”?
First,
I want to clarify that when I speak of preparing for near-term
extinction by surrendering to the severity of our predicament or
adopting a hospice attitude, I do not mean that we put on our
favorite pair of pajamas, ingest a large dose of Ambien, draw the
shades, lie down and set the electric blanket on “womb,” and then
proceed to play dead and become comatose as we approach our demise.
In fact, there is far too much we can do, both
externally and internally to succumb to such meaningless sloth.
Each
of us, whether we contemplate near-term extinction or not can
consciously reduce our personal carbon footprint. We can drastically
curtail our consumption and waste; we can grow our own food and eat
local, organic food. Some individuals choose not to have cars or
travel by air. Some people choose not to have children; some choose
to unplug from empire as much as humanly possible.
And yes, we can
become climate activists—we can march in protests against the
Keystone XL pipeline, we can join the Great
March For Climate Action,
we can write letters, and as a last resort, move to an area of the
planet, such as the Southern Hemisphere, where it appears that the
impacts of global climate change may not be as severe as in other
regions–maybe. We owe these actions to ourselves, to other humans,
and to the plethora of other species that are going and will go
extinct. As my friend and colleague, Francis Weller, notes,
this is a time to develop really good manners toward other species
and make their demise as easy for them as possible. In summary, there
is much within our power as individuals that we can do to lessen
greenhouse gas emissions and lower the impact of catastrophic climate
change.
However,
the tragic reality of our personal efforts, as noble or as fervent as
they may be, is that they are not enough to prevent near-term human
extinction. Why?
In
the first place, the impacts of catastrophic climate change are
routinely minimized by the scientific community as Guy
McPherson points
out:
Mainstream scientists minimize the message at every turn. As we’ve known for years, scientists almost invariably underplay climate impacts. And in some cases, scientists are aggressively muzzled by their governments. I’m not implying conspiracy among scientists. Science selects for conservatism. Academia selects for extreme conservatism. These folks are loathe to risk drawing undue attention to themselves by pointing out there might be a threat to civilization. Never mind the near-term threat to our entire species (they couldn’t care less about other species). If the truth is dire, they can find another, not-so-dire version. The concept is supported by an article in the February 2013 issue of Global Environmental Change pointing out that climate-change scientists routinely underestimate impacts “by erring on the side of least drama.” Almost everybody reading these words has a vested interest in not wanting to think about climate change, which helps explain why the climate-change deniers have won.
What
is more, despite the efforts of
some nations to “do something” about climate change, the harsh,
cold (no pun intended) reality is that it is too little too late.
Halldor Thorgeirsson, Senior Director of the UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change remarked in
September, 2013, stated, “We are failing as an international
community. We are not on track.” Now realizing the dire state of
warming due to inaction on climate change, the latest report of the
Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change (IPCC) asserts that
“Global warming is irreversible without massive geoengineering of
the atmosphere’s chemistry.” Of course, we already know that
there is probably nothing that geo-engineering cannot make worse—for
example the radical altering of rainfall
patterns and
the assertion by Live
Science that
“Current schemes to minimize the havoc caused by global warming by
purposefully manipulating Earth’s climate are likely to either be
relatively useless or actually make things worse, researchers say in
a new study.”
And earlier this month, Skeptical Science published
an article entitled, “Alarming
New Study Makes Today’s Climate Change More Comparable To Earth’s
Worst Mass Extinction.”Moreover,
according to the National Academy of Sciences “A
Four-Degree Rise Will End Vegetation ‘Carbon Sink’ Research
Suggests.”
For
those who “don’t like” Guy McPherson’s analysis, Dr. Michael
Mann of Pennsylvania State University earlier this month penned an
article in Scientific American “Earth
Will Cross The Climate Danger Threshold By 2036” in
which he stated in protest of the voices who assert that global
warming has ‘paused,’:
To my wonder, I found that for an ECS (equilibrium climate sensitivity) of three degrees C, our planet would cross the dangerous warming threshold of two degrees C in 2036, only 22 years from now. When I considered the lower ECS value of 2.5 degrees C, the world would cross the threshold in 2046, just 10 years later. So even if we accept a lower ECS value, it hardly signals the end of global warming or even a pause. Instead it simply buys us a little bit of time—potentially valuable time—to prevent our planet from crossing the threshold.
Yes,
Michael Mann is hoping that we can still “do something” about
catastrophic climate change, but his assertion more closely aligns
with Guy McPherson’s projection that even if we “do something”
about climate change there are likely to be few habitable places on
the planet by 2030 at the earliest and 2050 at the latest.
Less
widely discussed in the mainstream climate conversation is the
ghastly rate of Arctic melting and the resulting release of methane
into the atmosphere. In the video Arctic
Death Spiral And The Methane Time Bomb, David
Wasdell, Director of the Apollo-Gaia Project explains the absolute
runaway nature of Arctic melting. Self-reinforcing
feedback loops,
he asserts, have taken over, and it is now becoming increasingly
obvious that the Arctic will be mostly ice-free by the end of 2015.
Other presenters in this video further clarify that we are
approximately fifty years ahead of the worst case scenario in terms
of Arctic melting. Dr. Peter Wadhams of the University Of Cambridge
states that the effect of an ice-free Arctic on the world is enormous
because it goes far beyond the Arctic itself in terms of the methane
that is released as the ice retreats. Due
to self-reinforcing feedback loops, once the melting process
generates more CO2 than humans do, it will not matter what humans do
to reverse the melting.In Arctic
Methane: Why Sea Ice Matters,
Dr. Natalia Shakhova notes that Arctic permafrost is losing its
ability to seal in the methane, and even more troubling is the
increase in seismic activity in the Arctic which creates additional
pathways for methane to be released.
“Doing
something” implies that developing nations of the world and the
fossil fuel industry will come together and: 1) Agree that climate
change is actually happening; 2) Understand that the situation is so
dire that humanity’s living arrangements must be radically altered;
3) Sacrifice their economic security and industrial profits to
significantly reduce carbon emissions; 4) Agree to the reality of
climate change and the altering of their living arrangements in time
to prevent another 2 degree C rise in temperature.
I
dare say that the same people who believe this is going to happen
would vehemently protest a belief in Santa Claus, but nevertheless,
they cling to this chimera.
Meanwhile,
Dr. Tim Garrett, Professor of Atmospheric Sciences at the University
of Utah tells
us that
“rising carbon dioxide emissions – the major cause of global
warming – cannot be stabilized unless the world’s economy
collapses or society builds the equivalent of one new nuclear power
plant each day.”
Collapse
of industrial civilization? Lovely idea; I’ve been applauding it
for years. However, there’s just one small fly in the ointment. The
collapse of industrial civilization means no food in grocery stores,
no fuel at the gas station, and the
breakdown of electrical power grids. According to Physics
Forums,
here’s what happens when a nuclear power plant loses electricity:
Nuclear power plants as well as power plants in general are not self-sufficient in terms of electricity. If a nuclear power plant loses outside electrical power, the plant must then be powered with emergency diesel generators which typically have about 10-12 hours worth of fuel, and then emergency batteries. When the batteries lose power, and they still haven’t gotten electricity going back to the plant, the cooling systems for the reactors won’t work because of no electricity, and then the reactors will overheat and melt. Inevitably resulting in a total meltdown.
There
are more than 400 nuclear power plants around the world. The collapse
of industrial civilization, attractive notion that it may be,
necessarily means a host of Fukushimas around the planet which in
itself would be an extinction event.
On
myriad levels, humanity is in territory it has never before
navigated. Of this, blogger Robert Scribbler writes:
The last time the world saw such a measure of comparable atmospheric greenhouse gas heat forcing was during the Miocene around 15-20 million years ago. At that time, global temperatures were 3-4 C warmer, the Antarctic ice sheet was even further diminished, and sea levels were 80-120 higher than today. This combined forcing is enough to result in a state of current climate emergency. In just a few years, according to the recent work of climate scientist Michael Mann, we will likely lock in a 2 C short term warming this century and a probable 4 C warming long-term. If the current, high-velocity pace of emission continues, we will likely hit 2 C warming by 2036, setting off extraordinary and severe global changes over a very short period.
My
question to climate “doers” is: What do you genuinely,
realistically believe can be “done” on the real, external,
national and international scene to reverse or end catastrophic
climate change? At this point in the progression of catastrophic
climate change, it is rapidly becoming impossible to keep up with the
self-reinforcing feedback loops related to the release of greenhouse
gases. These, of course, are the mechanisms within the progression of
global warming that accelerate its severity, and humans have created
at least 30 of those in our lifetime–and counting.
I
am a two-time survivor of cancer. The first time a doctor gave me a
diagnosis, I really didn’t like him. The second time, I liked the
doctor even less. And yes, I got second opinions both times. Then I
had four doctors I didn’t like.
It
seems to me that we can yammer incessantly about how we don’t
“like” the deliverers of bad news, or we can critically think
their information. We can also consider that some situations
like Stage Four cancer, Ebola, and cobra bites are terminal. And
rather than responding like the heroic, hopeful, “there must be
something we can do” puppets of empire, we might pause to consider
that life frequently presents us with existential dilemmas about
which there is nothing we can “do” except open to what the
dilemma might want us to learn, feel, and experience— and to the
relationships it might want us to deepen, evaluate, treasure, or
eliminate from our lives. To this end, I wrote “Preparing
For Near-Term Extinction” in
2013 and recently published Zhiwa Woodbury’s wonderful
article “Planetary
Hospice: Rebirthing Planet Earth” on
my website. They encapsulate what I am doing and intend to do about
catastrophic climate change.
I’ve
admitted myself to hospice, and I’m doing
something about catastrophic climate change. I support those who join
the Great March For Climate Action, but I will not be marching, nor
will I write letters or sign petitions with the hope that omnicidal
politicians and corporate profiteers will notice. What I will do is
commit to a life of service, a life of creating extraordinary moments
of beauty and love; I will immerse myself in nature, art, poetry,
music, and really good stories. I will practice good manners with all
beings; I will nourish my body with nutritious food and restorative
movement. I will make every attempt to practice gratitude as often as
humanly possible in one day, and I will give from the depths of my
soul all of the love I can muster–to the earth and to every living
being.
"As my friend and colleague, Francis Weller, notes, this is a time to develop really good manners toward other species and make their demise as easy for them as possible."
ReplyDeleteThis is a quite ridiculous and human-centric statement. Other species do not care about our "good manners", only we do, nor will it matter to them (at all), nor is there any possible means to "make their demise as easy for them as possible" (unless we kill ourselves and let them live).
This is the problem Baker has always had - completely ungrounded in reality.
More stupid advice - "And yes, we can become climate activists—we can march in protests against the Keystone XL pipeline, we can join the Great March For Climate Action, we can write letters".
Seriously? As if any of this has EVER worked. Why do people keep advocating such utter nonsense? Because they are ungrounded in reality and cannot think outside of the standard prescribed "response" to catastrophic failure.
Unfortunately, this is the best people aspire to - "march in a protest". Such idiocy is certain to do nothing at all and save nothing at all. We have decades of ample proof of this fact - will we EVER learn?
I've always said "we lack the try". The try is what is missing. Protesting is not trying no matter what your being told. Marching is not trying. These are one of the weakest and useless "attempts" possible to correct the wrongs within civilization - but it's also the "safest" and easiest to do and is what is always advised, virtually guaranteeing total failure. It never, ever works.
Humanity continues to support the "omicidal" movement against life and habitability by virtue of their daily participation.
STOP PARTICIPATING. WITHDRAW. This is the barest minimum required of every human.
There is much more "to do" - stop endless breeding, tear down every institution and enterprise that is encouraging biocide (which is virtually all of them) and learn to be self-sufficient from local resources (only). This has ALWAYS been the true message that so many have refused to accept. Anything less virtually guarantees extinction.
I am no longer stunned at the weak responses continuing to be advocated, I'm just saddened that reality never seems to hit home. They say they speak the truth - but they do not. It's as if people HAVE given up, because to truly try "is just too hard and too risky".
Well, fuck that. FUCK THAT. I'm sick to death of the so-called speakers in this movement that continue to FAIL and hand out what means FAILURE as "advice". Frankly, they don't know what the fuck they are talking about and never have. This is why I never listen to these fools. They want everyone to stop trying. The best they offer is pathetic advice. They're too afraid to come out and say what needs to be said.
The FUTURE HASN'T HAPPENED YET. Now is NOT the time to quit.