Pessimism
about climate change does not justify inaction
Roughly
400,000 people die from effects of climate change every year. Even
small acts can shrink that number
10
November, 2014
“Even
if the United States deals with its carbon emission problem, the
Chinese won’t. So what’s the point?”
“You
can’t condemn the entire global South to abandon energy
development, and you can’t provide enough with solar and wind. So
what’s the point?”
“Besides,
the whole enterprise of trying to achieve a future sufficiently
carbon-free to deal with the most important problems is politically
hopeless.”
These
challenges are sometimes spoken, sometimes not, but they commonly and
powerfully weaken efforts to deal with the climate crisis. Despite
the well-funded bluster of disingenuous or, at best, delusional
skeptics and deniers, a majority of Americans believe the climate is
changing in worrying ways, and many (PDF) also believe that these
changes pose a threat to current and future generations. But this
belief has not yet translated into action at a scale adequate to the
problem we face.
One
reason for this is that once we recognize the magnitude of the effort
that will be required to avert disaster, we all too often discover
our vested interest in pessimism. After all, if the situation is
hopeless, why act? But it’s time to challenge the structure of
feeling that mires us in pessimism and inaction.
We
appear to be on a trajectory well past the 2 degree Celsius rise in
average global temperature long considered by scientists the maximum
allowable to sustain life on Earth as we’ve known it. As Naomi
Klein documents in her new book, “This Changes Everything,” many
experts — from climate change scientists to the World Bank to the
International Energy Agency — are warning of temperature increases
of 4 or more degrees. Changes of this magnitude will likely result in
widespread flooding, collapsing water systems, decreases in
agricultural production, increases in disease, massive migrations and
social strife.
“Only
mass social movements can save us now,” Klein writes. I agree. We
must build a truly broad movement — one that encompasses those who
aren’t already convinced of the need to act — and alongside it a
new politics capable of reasserting the power of democracy at all
levels. Such a movement and politics must not only confront
slow-to-act authorities with appropriate civil disobedience but also
build the new economic institutions that will be necessary to a world
weaning itself off its addiction to carbon and to growth.
But
faced with such a tall order, many still ask (or secretly feel), Why
bother? Or, more specifically, is it really possible to make more
than a small nick in the dire warming trends?
The
simple response to the reasonable doubts offered by friendly
questioners — and to the reasonable (often unspoken) doubts of even
committed activists — is this: Doing almost anything significant
can help save human lives. This is an obvious point, perhaps, but one
that too often is lost in the big debates about trends.
Climate
change is a life or death issue now, one in which even partial
solutions matter.
Already,
roughly 400,000 (PDF) people die from the effects of climate change
every year. On our current path, we are likely to lose up to an
estimated 500,000 lives per year over the coming decades. That is
more each year than the 420,000 the United States lost in all of
World War II. Most of these deaths will be due to diminished food
production, increased disease, heat waves, loss of employment, fires,
floods and storms. Almost any serious slowing down of the global
temperature increases will lower this figure. It will save lives,
whether or not others join in, whether or not the biggest challenges
are met.
In
other words, this is a life or death issue now, one in which even
partial solutions matter.
A
study (PDF) released recently by researchers at Harvard, Syracuse and
Boston universities estimates that reducing U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions by roughly 25 percent could save up to 3,500 American lives
per year by 2020, or an average of nine lives per day, and prevent up
to 1,000 hospitalizations annually.
This
also means that no matter the gargantuan nature of the overall task,
what one person does, alone or in concert with others, may matter.
This remains true whether or not China acts, the developing world
chooses a low carbon future or our overall energy needs can be
effectively sourced from renewables.
More
sophisticated justifications for pessimism and resignation may be
offered, of course. There is, after all, no easy linear relationship
between the number of lives at risk and the amount of CO2 in the
atmosphere. Climate is a complex and chaotic system in which hitting
tipping points may trigger positive feedback loops that compound the
effects of emissions beyond anything we can control. Modeling such a
complex system is an intractably difficult problem: We know that
there are tipping points waiting for us as the temperature climbs,
but we cannot say with any certainty where they are.
But
this very uncertainty also strips away the alibi of those who believe
that it’s not worth acting if there’s a chance we might fail or
only partially succeed in slowing the warming of the planet. If we
are unable to say with precision where the supposed point of no
return lies, then there is little excuse for giving up.
This
basic argument — that every action we can take to reduce emissions
is of vital moral importance — may or may not coincide with
arguments about the importance of adaptation and of erecting the
physical and social structures that will save lives as climate
changes begin to take hold. Either way, the bottom line is simple.
Next
time you talk to your neighbor, colleagues or even fellow activists
about climate, listen closely to the doubts — both expressed and
unexpressed — that hold them back from acting with full confidence.
They are reasonable doubts. But building a mass movement means we
need everybody — even those who do not believe that global warming
can be stopped. So listen to their doubts and remind them that
whatever can be done is likely to help. The cost of inaction is
measured in human lives.
Gar
Alperovitz is a professor of political economy at the University
of Maryland and a founder of the Democracy Collaborative. He is the
author of “What Then Must We Do?: Straight Talk about the Next
American Revolution.”
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