For the very small number of Australians that read this blog
Call
to Action: Reclaim the Climate Movement
by
Kari McGregor, co-founder of the Australian grassroots non-profit,
Sustainability
Showcase,
where she manages various degrowth-oriented projects. Kari is also
editor of SHIFT magazine, an independent advertising-free magazine
that provides a platform for voices of the degrowth movement and deep
ecology. A committed downshifter herself, Kari devotes much of her
time to volunteering for the movement, and is a passionate
environmental activist.
I’m
sure you’ve heard that everyone – or, at least, everyone who
cares – will be marching for the climate this weekend. If you’re
not marching, then you’re not doing anything at all, or so we’re
told.
False
dichotomies aside though, I won’t be marching this weekend. I’ll
be taking action instead. I agree with Chris
Hedges:
the march is nothing more that street theatre. It won’t lead to any
policy changes; it won’t wave a magic wand over corporate ecocide;
and it sure as hell won’t get middle-class white folk to give up
their privilege and downshift. It will be a colourful (well, mainly
blue t-shirts) climate-themed street parade, complete with
back-slapping and high-fiving over how amazing the climate movement
is for managing to get so many people outside on a weekend for a
stroll around a city.
Where
the climate movement has got us so far
Here
in Australia we’ve watched the situation go from bad to worse in
the year since we elected the worst of all possible governments to
power. To say Australia lacks the political will to address ‘the
greatest moral and social challenge of our time’ is to state the
obvious. Instead of being shocked, perhaps our response should be
disgust, followed by action.
We
should be disgusted by the scrapping
of the Climate Commission,
the repeal
of the carbon tax
and mining
tax,
and the removal
of funding
for the Environmental Defender’s Offices. The irony of these
backward steps, taken while greenhouse gas emissions are increasing
faster
than at any point in the last three decades, should not be lost on
anyone with a finger on the pulse.
For
all our polite letter-writing campaigns and clicktivist petitions,
for all our colourfully theatrical street rallies, these policy
backslides are evidence that this government doesn’t give a damn
what ‘we the people’ think, or want. They’re not intimidated –
they know there’s no ‘or else’ clause in any of those letters
or petitions. They know the rallying troops will never threaten
direct action, or show up on their doorsteps to demand action.
Approvals
for mega-mining projects in Queenland’s Galilee Basin – including
the largest coal mine in Australia, Indian company Adani’s
Carmichael mine
– and for dredging
and dumping on the Great Barrier Reef
are a poignant reminder that we are ‘in the coal business’. So
much so, in fact, that Queensland’s newly passed Mineral
and Resources bill
prohibits anyone not ‘directly affected’ from objecting to
carbon-intensive mining proposals while also prohibiting all
objections to so-called low-impact mining, effectively exempting some
90% of operations. Concerned citizens have effectively been
legislated out of the conversation in an appalling attack on
democracy.
One
can criticize the incumbent government for many things, but not for
failing to cover all bases. A return
to witch-hunts
against environmental NGOs looms large on the horizon, with a number
of organizations facing legal and financial ruin by the very
government whose policy gaps they are working so hard to close.
Recommendations to strip environmental NGOs of their ability
to receive tax-deductible donations
and the proposed
repeal of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profit Commission
(ACNC)
are effectively moves to de-claw the climate movement, and ensure
that business as usual proceeds without so much as a hiccup.
So
what can a climate movement with no backbone achieve?
Time
to reclaim the movement
Historically,
gaps in policy have been met with strong civil society action. It’s
time we rose to our historic moment, as Naomi Klein urges. ‘We the
people’ need to reclaim the climate movement.
While
mainstream climate activists emphasize market-dependent initiatives
such as divestment from fossil fuels, getting behind renewable
energy, and putting in place carbon-pricing mechanisms, there are a
handful of voices from the margins promoting alternative strategies,
including the controversial and challenging measures of economic
degrowth, and direct action. A few pariahs are even urging
preparation for the tough times ahead.
But
these alternative voices are weak, drowned out by the mainstream
mantras of ‘we’ve got to put a price on carbon’, ‘move your
money!’, and ‘100% renewable for the win!’ What the climate
needs right now is for transitioners, degrowthers, permaculturists,
and other resilience-oriented folk to stop watching from the
sidelines as the movement is declawed at best, and at worst, co-opted
by spurious sales reps for greenwashed industry.
So
this weekend I won’t be marching for the climate. And I won’t be
sitting around doing nothing either. I’ll be at the sixth annual
Australian Climate
Action Summit
held this year in Queensland, our Sunshine State. And I’ll be
delivering some inconvenient truths. My presentation on degrowth is
my offering as an apostate from the churches of economic growth and
techno-optimism. The climate movement needs to hear this – that the
pursuit of perpetual growth is what got us into this mess, and that
tech-fixes won’t get us out of it. We are going to have to make
major changes to our way of life.
A
call to action for Australians to engage with opportunities and
solutions, the Summit is also an invitation to debate which tactics
will actually work to reduce our collective carbon footprint. Most
transitioners, degrowthers and permies are just as guilty of
groupthink and huddling together with like-minds, in my view, as the
mainstream climate movement is. If we never emerge from our silos
then what do we really stand to achieve? Preaching to the choir is a
reassuring experience, well within the comfort zone, but it’s not
going to get those inconvenient truths across to the movement in the
tiny window of time we have available. We have to transcend comfort
zones and network with unlike minds if we are to have a shot at
making a real difference. And the more people we can work with, the
better chance we’ll all have.
I’m
not alone in this view, thankfully.
Challenges
and controversy
The
climate movement’s pet projects receive plenty of scrutiny and
critique from climate deniers and right-wing political pundits, but
these are not the only folk who have questions, or challenges. The
movement is not without its controversy, and the Summit is an
excellent opportunity to law a few cards on the table and get talking
about tactics that will really slash emissions.
Consumer
actions such as ethical investment and divestment from the fossil
fuel industry are presented as simple, empowering moves that anyone
can make. Money talks – and those who have the most are heard above
all others, thanks to their well-paid lobbyists – so it makes sense
to put your money where your mouth is. But divestment as a tactic is
not
without its critics,
and questions need to be asked regarding how far it will get us, and
how quickly it will get us there.
The
market forces of supply and demand hold sway, revealing two
inconvenient truths: fossil fuel supply must be disrupted, and demand
must be reduced or eliminated. The extent to which divestment can
disrupt supply hinges upon how much money can be pulled out of the
industry, while failure to impact demand renders divestment moot. An
industry that is still profitable is vulnerable to share buy-outs at
fire-sale prices by unscrupulous investors who stand to make a
killing. The divestment debate is clearly one that needs to be teased
out, and Sustainability
Showcase’s
David Zwolski will do just that at the Summit.
The
push for 100% renewable energy is a major aspect of the climate
movement, touted as not only essential, but also entirely possible to
achieve within
a mere decade.
Renewable energy lobby group Beyond
Zero Emissions
has achieved rock star status in the Australian climate movement with
bold claims that 100% renewable energy is achievable, affordable, and
can launch Australia to the status of renewable energy superpower.
Too good to be true? Perhaps.
The
climate movement is not without its renewable energy skeptics,
although they are generally considered apostates in the church of
fossil-free energy. The skeptics have a point though. Renewable
energy delivers low
returns
on energy invested, is dependent on fossil fuels for its
implementation, and brings a series of environmental
hazards
of its own. Replacing one environmental disaster with another is an
approach that would have many old-school environmental activists
spinning in their graves. Radical environmental group Generation
Alpha’s
Ben Pennings may make himself less than popular at this year’s
Climate Action Summit by calling into question the ecological
viability of aiming for 100% renewable energy in lieu of slashing our
energy requirements. He won’t be alone in doing so.
Non-violent
direct action is a controversial last resort in our most civilized of
civil societies, but let’s not beat about the bush. Wins were
inarguably achieved by the Suffragettes, the American Civil Rights
movement, and Gandhi’s Indian independence movement, thanks to the
willingness of a few brave activists to go a step beyond begging the
powers that be to instigate change. Make no mistake: the suffragettes
would not have won votes for women had they not taken direct action;
they had no recourse through the electoral system. The Civil Rights
movement would have achieved little if they’d waited for
sympathetic white folks to recognize the rights of African-Americans.
India would still be under the rule of the Raj had Gandhi opted for
simply imploring the colonial overlords to play nice.
Now
that we have been stripped of our policy safety-nets and the right to
even object to carbon-intensive mining projects, imploring
politicians and polluters to maintain a safe climate threshold seems
less than adequate. Generation
Alpha’s
call for extensive non-violent direct action tactics regarding
Queensland’s Galilee basin could well come in handy.
Business
as usual is not an option
With
the recent vindication
of the 1970’s Limits
to Growth study
an even more inconvenient truth than climate change looms large. It’s
not news to transitioners and degrowthers that we are set to hit hard
limits in the not-too-distant future, relegating perpetual growth to
the realm of fantasy. Apostates from the church of economic growth,
Sustainability
Showcase
will explain, in no uncertain terms, that it is precisely our pursuit
of infinite growth on this finite planet that is the cause of our
climate change predicament. Mother Nature does not negotiate, so it
is we who will have to change our ways.
Reaching
limits to growth poses a double-edged sword, however – one that can
effectively slash our emissions, but also one that poses immense
challenges for our economic future, and one that starkly defines
techno-fixes as mere wishful thinking. This tough news will be
inconvenient indeed for pro-growth true believers and
techno-optimists. But one must ask: if we so readily accept what
science tells us about climate change, then why is it so hard for us
to accept what science tells us about limits to growth, the carrying
capacity of our finite planet, and the ability of our biosphere to
absorb all that we shock it with?
This
year’s Summit features controversial commentary and solutions
worthy of consideration, from the fringes not usually present at such
events. Sustainable Population Australia’s Dr.
Jane O’Sullivan
will provide a critique of population overshoot and what can be done
to address it. Peak oil and finance analyst Nicole
Foss
will provide a reality check on financing the future, pouring cold
water on claims that we can innovate our way out of the mess we’re
in. And Doing It Ourselves’ Theo
Kitchener
will invite attendees to consider climate action through the lens of
a potential economic collapse. One inconvenient truth resonates loud
and clear: business as usual is not an option.
Wherever
you stand on the controversies of climate action, for the sake of our
future, don’t let the movement move without you. As with politics,
the decisions are made by the folks who show up, so stand up and be
counted if you want to see meaningful action on climate change.
Details
of the Climate Action Summit are as follows:
Dates:
Saturday 20th
& Sunday 21st
September (all weekend)
Venue:
QUT Gardens Point campus, corner of George and Alice Streets,
Brisbane CBD
Further
information about the Summit can be found at
www.climatesummit.org.au,
and the full program can be viewed here.
And in Aotearoa/NZ
Join The People’s Climate March, Sunday 21 Sept: Auckland and Nelson
Whatever
the outcome of Saturday’s General Election, urgent action
will still be needed to halt and reverse the growth in greenhouse gas
emissions and sharply reduce the risk of runaway climate change.
As
part of a global Day of Action on climate change organised by Avaaz,
there will be a People’s Climate March on Sunday 21 September in
Auckland and in Nelson. Coal Action Network Aotearoa’s Jeanette
Fitzsimons will be among the speakers at the Auckland event. If you
can join either of these marches, we encourage you to do so –
because the challenge of climate change has to be faced by all of us,
including the incoming Government.
People’s Climate March Auckland
All
climate change concerned citizens are invited to meet at Britomart
onSunday 21st September at 1pm to march up Queen Street to Aotea
Square where there will be inspiring speakers and performers
until 4pm including Lucy Lawless, Jeanette Fitzsimons,
Laura O’Connell-Rapira, Steve Abel, musician SDJ and DJ Isaac
Aesili to name a few!
The
march is supported by Avaaz, a 38 million member strong global online
civic movement that promotes activism on many pressing issues
including climate change. Auckland’s March is the FIRST of a
huge, million people strong global movement of similar marches
happening in more than 88 countries around world on the same day.
From the photos and footage of these marches, Avaaz will create a
presentation to show the UN
Climate Change Summit delegates during a 15 minute time slot
at the Summit in New York City. The Auckland People’s Climate March
will also make it clear to Aotearoa’s own leaders
how deeply we care climate change and the impacts of climate change
on our Earth.
Please
join ‘The People’ on Sunday 21st September to lend your
voice to help ‘close the gap between the world we have and the
world most people, everywhere, want’ (Avaaz, 2014). Updates via
Twitter @climatemarchAKLand
please join the Facebook Event here People’s
Climate March Auckland. To change everything, it takes everybody.
Please
also sign the Global Avaaz Climate Petition that will also be
presented to the UN Climate Summitdelegates
CONTACT
US:
Our Facebook Event : People’s Climate March Auckland
Our Twitter: @climatemarchAKL
Our Facebook Event : People’s Climate March Auckland
Our Twitter: @climatemarchAKL
People’s Climate March Nelson
Hit
the Nelson streets with us, as we work with Avaaz.org in
this Historic Global Event – People’s Climate March! Fun filled
family afternoon. Face paint, music and dance.
Buxton
– Montgomery – Wakatu Car Parks from 12.30pm,
filtering over to Millers Acre Car Park by 1.30pm,…
leaving to begin our march to the Cathedral Steps by 2pm
filtering over to Millers Acre Car Park by 1.30pm,…
leaving to begin our march to the Cathedral Steps by 2pm
We
are feeding the event with a bit of symbolic drama… by turning up
at the registration points, adults dressed in dark clothing and
children in bold bright colours. This makes us a part of our
children’s backdrop, making it far easier for them to be seen and
potentially heard, as this is their climate longer than it will be
ours – hopefully.
In
the car parks the registration areas will be recognisable by a couple
of tall flags with a couple of people standing around looking for…
people looking for them. Here we will have the option to be painted
with a green heart, the worldwide People’s Climate March (PCM) logo
Once
you have registered you will be directed towards Millers Acre Car
Park, the starting point for this wonderful family event.
Contact
Name: Sara CooperContact
Phone: 0276633094
Contact Email: climate.march@illumin8.net.nzFacebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/328622517304997/
Contact Email: climate.march@illumin8.net.nzFacebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/328622517304997/
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