7
reasons America will fail on climate change
Ezra
Klein
5
June, 2014
I
touched on this in my conversation
with Ta-Nehisi Coates, but I'm a climate pessimist. I don't believe
the United States — or the world — will do nearly enough, nearly
fast enough, to hold the rise in temperatures to safe levels. I think
we're fucked. Or, at the least, I think our grandchildren are fucked.
“Stand
back and watch the world burn”
If
you were going to weaponize an issue to take advantage of the weak
points in the American political system — to highlight all the
blind spots, dysfunctions, and irrationalities — you would create
climate change. And then you would stand back and watch the world
burn.
In
the early 1990s, scientists converged
on 2°C as the level of warming the world could (probably) safely
endure. "We said that, at the very least, it would be better not
to depart from the conditions under which our species developed,"
Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, one of the scientists who helped devise
the 2°C limit, told my colleague Brad Plumer. "Otherwise we'd
be pushing the whole climate system outside the range we've adapted
to."
There's
disagreement as to whether that actually is a safe level of warming.
"Two degrees is actually too much for ecosystems," wrote
George Mason University's Thomas Lovejoy in the New York Times. "A
2-degree world will be one without coral reefs (on which millions
of human beings depend for their well-being)."
“We're
on track for 4°C of warming — which is nearly the temperature
difference between the world now and the Ice Age. ”millions
of human beings depend for their well-being)."
Either
way, we've waited so long to begin cutting emissions that two degrees
looks flatly impossible. We're on track for 4°C of warming — which
is nearly the temperature difference between the world now and the
Ice Age. That's a nightmare for the planet. The World Bank tried to
model it and realized that they had no idea what would happen — or
whether humans could manage. There's "no certainty that
adaptation to a 4°C world is possible," they concluded.
In
April 2014, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said
that to stay below the 2°C limit, global greenhouse-gas emissions
would have to fall between 1.3 percent and 3.1 percent each year, on
average, between 2010 and 2050. And because the US is such an
aggressive emitter, the adjustment would have to be sharper here.
It
gets worse. The world isn't going to sharply cut emissions this year.
It isn't going to sharply cut them next year. And every year we wait
the adjustment gets more violent — and more impossible.
"Ten
years ago, it was possible to model a path to 2°C without all these
heroic assumptions," says Peter Frumhoff of the Union of
Concerned Scientists, told
Plumer. "But because we've dallied for so long, that's no longer
true."
This
is the awful math of climate change now: the question isn't whether
we'll fail. It's how badly we'll fail. It increasingly looks like
success is holding warming to 3°C rather than 4°C or worse. That is
to say, we are redefining success as a milder strain of failure.
2) The people most affected by climate change don't get a vote
This
map from Standard & Poor's lays out the shocking unfairness of
climate change: The US, which has historically been the leading
source of carbon dioxide emissions (though China passed us in 2006),
is one of the countries least affected by global warming.
As
my colleague Matt Yglesias explained,
"very few of us are subsistence farmers. Relatively few of us
live in river deltas, flood plains, or small islands. We are rich
enough to be able to feasibly undertake massive engineering projects
to safeguard our at-risk population centers. And the country is
sufficiently large and sparsely populated that people can move around
in response to climate shocks."
But
globally speaking, almost all Americans live incredibly
carbon-intensive lifestyles. We drive in big cars and live in big
homes and fly on big planes and eat lots of meat. We buy lots of
stuff and go lots of places and produce lots of waste and use lots of
fuel. In 2010,
Americans emitted about 17.6 tons of carbon dioxide per person.
India, by contrast, emitted about 1.7 tons of carbon dioxide per
person. Yet India is bright red on that map of carbon vulnerability
while the US is deep, calming green.
Carbon
emissions disproportionately benefit the US and disproportionately
harm countries that are not the US. Yglesias put it well: "Our
political system is reasonably well-designed to handle local threats
to local interests.… But the reality of the climate change problem
is much scarier than that — it's a global threat to worldwide
interests, and the people with the most at stake don't get a vote."
3) We're bad at sacrificing now to benefit later
Climate
change is already causing problems around the world (these nine
maps
show how it's already affecting the United States). But this is the
drizzle before the storm.
As
you can see on the Congressional Budget Office's chart of projected
temperature increases, climate change doesn't steadily ratchet up the
pain.
Temperatures don't rise by 0.2°C in this decade, and then
0.2°C in the next decade, and then 0.2°C in the decade after that,
and so on. Instead, temperatures rise slowly at first and then begin
accelerating as the earth's natural defenses get overwhelmed or
cooked. The structure of the problem doesn't mesh well with the
strengths of the American political system. Major policy changes
tends to happen in American politics when the pain of inaction dwarfs
the pain of action
at that moment.
Health-care reform, for instance, was meant to address the pain the
uninsured were facing. The bank bailouts and the stimulus were aimed
at a financial meltdown happening that second. The Medicare
Prescription Drug Benefit passed because seniors were crying out for
prescription drug coverage. Tax cuts are so popular because having
more money now is way more appealing than having less money now.
“The
American political system is not good at trading sacrifice now to
prevent crises later”
Global
warming isn't like that. The pain of doing something serious about
the problem is upfront. But the worst effects of global warming won't
be visible, even in America, for a long time to come. The true crisis
is abstract while the sacrifice required to prevent it is tangible.
The American political system is not good at trading sacrifice now to
prevent crises later.
4) The effects of global warming are not easily reversible
In
May, the journals Science
and Geophysical
Research Letters
reported that a major section of West Antarctica's ice sheet was
melting into the ocean. "Together, the papers concluded that six
large West Antarctic glaciers appear to be in a state of irreversible
decline," reported
Brad Plumer.
"These
glaciers will eventually melt entirely and take parts of the ice
sheet with them, leading to an additional 4 to 13 feet of sea-level
rise." Their total collapse will likely take centuries, but the
more rapidly we warm the planet, the more quickly they'll drip into
the ocean.
“Climate
change has a "game over" quality to it”
“
” The
American political system is designed to move slowly. The Founders
feared haste, and so they made it, except in the rarest
circumstances, impossible. As Sven Steinmo and Jon Watts wrote in
their seminal essay "It's
the Institutions, Stupid,"
"the game of politics in America is institutionally rigged
against those who would use government — for good or evil. James
Madison's system of checks and balances, the very size and diversity
of the nation, the Progressive reforms which undermined strong and
programmatic political parties and the many generations of
congressional reforms have all worked to fragment political power in
America."
But
most issues can wait. American presidents tried and failed for 80
years to create a national health system. The uninsured paid dearly
for their failure, as did the wallets of American workers. But that
failure didn't make it impossible to cover the uninsured in 2014.
Similarly, America doesn't always pay down its debts in a timely
fashion. That can lead to higher interest rates and even inflation.
But the problem is solvable whenever the country decides to solve it.
For most issues, failure in the past doesn't undermine success in the
future.
Climate
change isn't like that. Once the West Antarctica glaciers slip into
the ocean they're gone. Once the carbon and the methane is released
into the atmosphere we have no way to recapture it. Once the oceans
rise and the permafrost melts we have no way to turn back the clock.
As tremendous as our mastery of nature often appears, we are
outmatched on the geologic scale.
If climate change were an issue like health-care reform or the budget deficit I wouldn't be a pessimist. My skepticism that we will act with sufficient force soon doesn't translate into a belief that the world won't want to act with force later. But climate change has a "game over" quality to it. Once we've filled the atmosphere with 800 or 1,000 parts per millions of carbon dioxide the consequences are out of our control.
5) The Republican Party has gone off the rails on climate change
In
1989, Newt Gingrich was one of 25 Republican co-sponsors of the
Global Warming Prevention Act,
which said "the Earth's atmosphere is being changed at an
unprecedented rate by pollutants resulting from human activities,
inefficient and wasteful fossil fuel use, and the effects of rapid
population growth in many regions."
Top
Republicans continued to fret over climate change in the 1990s and
the 2000s. Sen. John McCain, for instance, introduced the first
cap-and-trade bill into the US Senate. In Days
of Fire,
his history of George W. Bush's presidency, Peter Baker records
Bush's mounting alarm towards the end of his presidency:
[Bush]
found the science increasingly persuasive and believed more needed to
be done. The end of his presidency loomed, and he did not want to be
known as the president who stood by while a crisis gathered. Now he
bristled not at the Hollywood types but at the notion that he did not
care. In the past eighteen months, he had cited the danger of climate
change in his State of the Union address for the first time, convened
a conference of major world polluters to start working on an
international accord to follow Kyoto, and signed legislation cutting
gasoline consumption and, by extension, greenhouse gases. He even
invited his old rival Al Gore for a forty-minute talk about global
warming.
In
2008, the McCain/Palin ticket ran on a platform that included a
robust cap-and-trade plan. Asked at the vice-presidential debate
whether she believed in capping carbon emissions, Palin's answer left
no room for ambiguity. "I do," she said.
She
didn't. For her first major statement after the election, Palin wrote
an op-ed
in the Washington Post to "make clear what is foremost on my
mind and where my focus will be: I am deeply concerned about
President Obama's cap-and-trade energy plan, and I believe it is an
enormous threat to our economy."
“It
was Palin's position, not John McCain's, that captured the Republican
Party”
It
was Palin's position, not John McCain's, that captured the Republican
Party. In 2010, Rep. Bob Inglis lost a primary challenge to a Tea
Party candidate largely because he believed in global warming.
"Saying that to the conservative base was rather dangerous,"
he says. "I knew it at the time. But now I really see how
dangerous it was and maybe how perceptive in terms of political
acumen people like Gingrich and McCain were. I think if Newt were on
the phone with us, he'd say 'how did it work out for you, Bob?'"
There
are political stances that minority parties take that are relatively
easy to unwind when they regain power. Democrats always criticized
Bush's "tax cuts for the rich," leaving themselves ample
room to craft more progressive tax rebates. Republicans have hewed to
"repeal-and-replace" as their response to Obamacare, making
it clear that they want to pass a health reform of their own.
But
the GOP hasn't simply opposed Obama's bills. They've abandoned their
own legislation and even begun questioning the very fact of climate
change. "I think it's an inexact science," McCain said in
2010, "and there has been more and more questioning about some
of the conclusions that were reached concerning climate change."
They've left themselves little room to enact sensible policies when
they regain power. The chilling effect of the GOP's increasingly
radical position is clear: when some of the right's smartest policy
thinkers came together to pen a governing agenda for reform
conservatism, they didn't
mention
global warming at all.
6) The international cooperation required is unprecedented, and maybe impossible
In
2006, China passed the United States as the world's leading emitter
of carbon dioxide. And their emissions aren't projected to peak until
2030. They talk about capping carbon emissions, but as Plumer writes,
there's little reason to be optimistic. "So far, when China has
had to choose between economic growth and cutting its emissions, it
usually chooses growth."
At the same time, the hope is that India will continue to develop and Indonesia will continue to develop and Brazil will continue to develop and Sub-Saharan Africa will see growth surge. All that development is carbon intensive, at least using current technologies. If all goes well for the world's poor it's going to go very badly for the planet.
This
is climate change's ugliest tradeoff: it pits our most fundamental
economic goal against our core environmental imperative. In the
modern world, better lives are more carbon-intensive lives. As people
get richer they want to eat meat and drive cars and live in bigger
homes and travel to wonderful places. They know that America powered
its growth with cheap fossil fuels and they don't find it very
credible when we warn them against doing the same — particularly
when we're not radically upending our lives and our economy to
transition to renewable fuels.
In
a dangerous but brilliant essay,
Chris Hayes builds on work
by Bill McKibben to put numbers to what we're asking countries and
companies to do. The basic estimate is that we can safely burn about
565 gigatons of carbon by midcentury. But experts think there's about
2,700 gigatons of carbon in proven fossil fuel reserves — and much
more might yet be discovered. Consider what that means:
The
work of the climate movement is to find a way to force the powers
that be, from the government of Saudi Arabia to the board and
shareholders of ExxonMobil, to leave 80 percent of the carbon they
have claims on in the ground. That stuff you own, that property
you're counting on and pricing into your stocks? You can't have it.
Given
the fluctuations of fuel prices, it's a bit tricky to put an exact
price tag on how much money all that unexcavated carbon would be
worth, but one financial analyst puts the price at somewhere in the
ballpark of $20 trillion. So in order to preserve a roughly habitable
planet, we somehow need to convince or coerce the world's most
profitable corporations and the nations that partner with them to
walk away from $20 trillion of wealth.
The
nearest thing to an economic analogue in American history, Hayes
argues, is abolitionism. But this isn't just about America. This
carbon is locked underground in China and Uzbekistan and Iran and
Russia and Nigeria and Venezuela. It's owned by energy companies, in
some cases, but it's owned by nations in others. The kind of
international cooperation (and, perhaps, international
redistribution) required to pass, implement and verify viable carbon
caps is completely unprecedented, at least outside of wartime.
7) Geoengineering is nuts
"We
don't know who struck first, us or them, but we know that it was us
that scorched the sky," says Morpheus. "At the time, they
were dependent on solar power and it was believed that they would be
unable to survive without an energy source as abundant as the sun."
I
think of that speech from The Matrix
every time I hear people talk about blasting sulfates into the
atmosphere to combat the consequences of global warming. It is easy
to imagine a future in which the effects of climate change are
considered the horrifying prelude to whatever insane thing we tried
to do to reverse climate change.
And
forget the technical leaps. Imagine the geopolitics. Who gets to
decide how much sulfate to blast into the atmosphere? Who stops
Kiribati from just going it alone because their island is in danger
of being wiped
out?
What if Russia decides they like the new climate, and the
agricultural possibilities it unlocks, better?
Not
to be a killjoy, but it's hard to believe that the consequences of
the huge, unpredictable changes to the global climate can be safely
reversed by further efforts to make huge, unpredictable changes to
the climate.
So what now?
Pessimism
isn't popular in Washington — or anywhere else. I don't think I've
ever met a politician who didn't say they were a "congenital
optimist." And everyone knows that depression doesn't go viral
on Facebook. Every time I've turned pessimistic copy into an editor
I've been asked to add a section on what could be done.
“I
could make up a more optimistic story. I just don't believe it.”
I
could add that section here, too. I could make up a more optimistic
story. I just don't believe it (though — and I mean this seriously
— I would be deeply grateful to anyone who could convince me of
it). The world is failing to do nearly enough on climate change
nearly fast enough. That isn't to take away from the incredible work
of the activists trying to push politicians further and faster, or to
deny the possibility that a once-in-a-generation storm will upend the
politics or a tremendous technological breakthrough will render the
problem moot. Pessimism shouldn't be considered fatalism. And
impossible fights have been won before.
Perhaps
more to the point, climate change isn't binary. There's not a single
state of success and a single state of failure. Warming the world by
2.5 degrees Celsius is a whole lot better than warming it by three
degrees Celsius. Warming the world by three degrees Celsius is vastly
less catastrophic than warming it by four degrees Celsius. There are
manageable failures and there are unmanageable failures. We're
currently on track for an unmanageable failure. I think it's possible
that we can slowly, painfully pull ourselves towards a manageable
failure, but I'm not willing to call that optimism.
On
climate change, the truth has gone from inconvenient to awful. Right
now we're failing our future. And we will be judged harshly for it.
Q&A:
We're
going to open the comments on this post from 2-3pm ET and Brad Plumer
and I will be for an hour to answer your questions and discuss the
issue. Maybe someone can convince me the outlook is brighter than I
think. I hope so.
Q&A
done: Thanks
folks! Though, sadly, I'm still a pessimist.
There's NO WAY business as usual, ie C emissions, will keep going past 2020....... so to say it will by 2050 and cause 2C temp rise for certain is silly.....
ReplyDeletehttp://damnthematrix.wordpress.com/2012/10/16/are-we-on-the-cusp-of-global-collapse/
Limits to growth scenarios show population beginning to collapse by 2025, and even the IEA is now saying the shale boom is already over......
http://damnthematrix.wordpress.com/2014/06/07/iea-says-the-partys-over/