And
just think - Bill McKibben peddles hopium, ignores the methane
emergency and lulls people to sleep with a promise of a “return to
350ppm” (if we join the organsiation), gets his funding from
Rockefeller.
The
IPCC is stern on climate change – but it still underestimates the
situation
UN
body’s warning on carbon emissions is hard to ignore, but breaking
the power of the fossil fuel industry won’t be easy
2
November, 2014
At
this point, the scientists who run the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change must feel like it’s time to trade their satellites,
their carefully calibrated thermometers and spectrometers, their
finely tuned computer models – all of them for a thesaurus. Surely,
somewhere, there must be words that will prompt the world’s leaders
to act.
This
week, with the release of their new synthesis report, they are trying
the words “severe, widespread, and irreversible” to describe the
effects of climate change – which for scientists, conservative by
nature, falls just short of announcing that climate change will
produce a zombie apocalypse plus random beheadings plus Ebola. It’s
hard to imagine how they will up the language in time for the next
big global confab in Paris.
But
even with all that, this new document – actually a synthesis of
three big working group reports released over the last year –
almost certainly underestimates the actual severity of the situation.
As the Washington Post pointed out this week, past reports have
always tried to err on the side of understatement; it’s a
particular problem with sea level rise, since the current IPCC
document does not even include the finding in May that the great
Antarctic ice sheets have begun to melt. (The studies were published
after the IPCC’s cutoff date.)
But
when you get right down to it, who cares? The scientists have done
their job; no sentient person, including Republican Senate
candidates, can any longer believe in their heart of hearts that
there’s not a problem here. The scientific method has triumphed:
over a quarter of a century, researchers have reached astonishing
consensus on a basic problem in chemistry and physics.
And
the engineers have done just as well. The price of a solar panel has
dropped by more than 90% over the last 25 years, and continues to
plummet. In the few places they have actually been deployed at scale,
the results are astonishing: there were days this summer when Germany
generated 75% of its power from the wind and the sun.
That,
of course, is not because Germany is so richly endowed with sunlight
(it’s a rare person who books a North Sea beach holiday). It’s
because the Germans have produced a remarkable quantity of political
will, and put it to good use.
As
opposed to the rest of the world, where the fossil fuel industry has
produced an enormous amount of fear in the political class, and kept
things from changing. Their vast piles of money have so far weighed
more in the political balance than the vast piles of data accumulated
by the scientists. In fact, the IPCC can calculate the size of the
gap with great exactness. To get on the right track, they estimate,
the world would have to cut fossil fuel investments annually between
now and 2029, and use the money instead to push the pace of
renewables.
That
is a hard task, but not an impossible one. Indeed, the people’s
movement symbolised by September’s mammoth climate march in New
York, has begun to make an impact in dollars and cents. A new report
this week shows that by delaying the Keystone pipeline in North
America protesters have prevented at least $17bn (£10.6bn) in new
investments in the tar sands of Canada – investments that would
have produced carbon equivalent to 735 coal-fired power plants.
That’s pretty good work.
Our
political leaders could do much more, of course. If they put a
serious price on carbon, we would move quickly out of the fossil fuel
age and into the renewable future. But that won’t happen until we
break the power of the fossil fuel industry. That’s why it’s very
good news that divestment campaigners have been winning victories on
one continent after another, as universities from Stanford to Sydney
to Glasgow start selling their fossil fuel stocks in protest – hey,
even the Rockefeller Brothers fund, heir to the greatest oil fortune
ever, have joined in the fight.
Breaking
the power of the fossil fuel industry won’t be easy, especially
since it has to happen fast. It has to happen, in fact, before the
carbon we’ve unleashed into the atmosphere breaks the planet. I’m
not certain we’ll win this fight – but, thanks to the IPCC, no
one will ever be able to say they weren’t warned.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.