The response from the
liberal “vote for Hillary” crowd – in this case Naomi Klein.
#TheWrongSortofGreen
WILL
TRUMP’S SLOW- MO
WALKAWAY, WORLD IN FLAMES BEHIND HIM, FINALLY
PROVOKE CONSEQUENCES FOR PLANETARY ARSON?
Naomi
Klein
1 June, 2017
NOW
THAT IT SEEMS virtually certain that Donald Trump will withdraw the
United States from the Paris climate accord, and the climate movement
is quite rightly mobilizing in the face of this latest dystopian
lurch, it’s time to get real about something: Pretty much
everything that is weak, disappointing, and inadequate about that
deal is the result of U.S. lobbying since 2009.
The
fact that the agreement only commits governments to keeping warming
below an increase of 2 degrees, rather than a much safer firm target
of 1.5 degrees, was lobbied for and won by the United States.
The
fact that the agreement left it to individual nations to determine
how much they were willing to do to reach that temperature target,
allowing them to come to Paris with commitments that collectively put
us on a disastrous course toward more than 3 degrees of warming, was
lobbied for and won by the United States.
The
fact that the agreement treats even these inadequate commitments as
non-binding, which means governments apparently do not have anything
to fear if they ignore their commitments, is something else that was
lobbied for and won by the United States.
The
fact that the agreement specifically prohibits poor countries from
seeking damages for the costs of climate disasters was lobbied for
and won by the United States.
The
fact that it is an “agreement” or an “accord” and not a
treaty — the very thing that makes it possible for Trump to stage
his action-movie slow-mo walk away, world in flames behind him —
was lobbied for and won by the United States.
I
could go on. And on. Often the U.S. had help in this backroom
bullying from such illustrious petro-states as Saudi Arabia. When
aggressively lobbying to weaken the Paris accord, U.S. negotiators
usually argued that anything stronger would be blocked by the
Republican-controlled House and Senate. And that was probably true.
But some of the weakening — particularly those measures focused on
equity between rich and poor nations — was pursued mainly out of
habit, because looking after U.S. corporate interests is what the
United States does in international negotiations.
Whatever
the reasons, the end result was an agreement that has a decent
temperature target, and an excruciatingly weak and half-assed plan
for reaching it. Which is why, when it was first unveiled, James
Hansen, arguably the most respected climate scientist in the world,
called the agreement “a fraud really, a fake,” because “there
is no action, just promises.”
WASHINGTON,
DC - MAY 24: U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz (D-HI) (R) speaks as (L- 2nd R)
Sen. Edward Markey (D-MA), Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Sen. Tom
Carper (D-DE) listen during a news conference at the Capitol May 24,
2017 in Washington, DC. Senate Democrats held a news conference to
urge President Donald Trump to not withdraw from Paris Climate
Agreement. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz,
right, speaks as Sens. Edward Markey, Maria Cantwell, and Tom Carper
listen during a news conference to urge President Donald Trump not to
withdraw from the Paris climate accord at the Capitol, May 24, 2017,
in Washington. Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images
But
weak is not the same as useless. The power of the Paris Agreement was
always in what social movements resolved to do with it. Having a
clear commitment to keep warming below 2 degrees Celsius, while
pursuing “efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 C,”
means there is no room left in the global carbon budget to develop
new fossil fuel reserves.
That
simple fact, even without legal enforcement behind it, has been a
potent tool in the hands of movements against new oil pipelines,
fracking fields, and coal mines, as well as in the hands of some very
brave young people taking the U.S. government to court for failing to
protect their right to a safe future. And in many countries,
including the U.S. until quite recently, the fact that governments at
least paid lip service to that temperature target left them
vulnerable to that kind of moral and popular pressure. As author and
350.org co-founder Bill McKibben said on the day the Paris deal was
unveiled, world leaders set a “1.5 C goal — and we’re damn well
going to hold them to it.”
In
many countries, that strategy continues regardless of Trump. A few
weeks ago, for instance, a delegation from low-lying Pacific Island
nations traveled to the Alberta tar sands to demand that Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau stop expanding production of that
carbon-intensive fuel source, arguing that his failure to do so
violates the spirit of the fine words and pledges he had made in
Paris.
And
this was always the task for the global climate justice movement when
it came to Paris: to try to hold governments to the strong spirit,
rather than the weak letter, of the agreement. The trouble is that as
soon as Trump moved into the White House, it was perfectly clear that
Washington was no longer susceptible to that kind of pressure. Which
makes some of the histrionics in the face of the news that Trump
seems to be officially withdrawing a bit baffling. However the Paris
Agreement decision went, we all already knew that significant U.S.
backsliding on climate was in the cards under Trump. We knew it as
soon as he appointed Rex Tillerson to head the State Department and
Scott Pruitt to head the EPA. We had it confirmed when he signed his
Keystone XL and Dakota Access Pipeline executive orders in his first
week on the job.
For
months we have been hearing about the supposed power struggles
between those who wanted to stay in the agreement (Ivanka, Tillerson)
and those who favored leaving (Pruitt, chief strategist Steve Bannon,
Trump himself). But the very fact that Tillerson could have been the
voice of the “stay” camp should have exposed the absurdity of
this whole charade.
It
was oil companies like the one Tillerson worked at for 41 years whose
relentless lobbying helped ensure that the commitments made in Paris
lack any meaningful enforcement mechanisms. That’s why one month
after the agreement was negotiated, Exxon Mobil, with Tillerson still
at the helm, came out with a report stating that “we expect oil,
natural gas, and coal to continue to meet about 80 percent of global
demand” between now and 2040. It was a bald expression of hubris by
the purveyors of business as usual. Exxon knows full well that if we
want a decent chance of keeping warming below 1.5-2 degrees, the
stated goal of the Paris Agreement, the global economy needs to be
virtually fossil-free by mid-century. But Exxon could offer those
assurances to its investors — and claim it supported the agreement
— because it knew that the Paris accord had no binding force.
It’s
the same reason why the Tillerson faction of the Trump administration
thought it could reconcile staying in Paris while simultaneously
dismantling the centerpiece of the United States’ commitment under
the agreement, the Clean Power Plan. Tillerson, better than almost
anyone on the planet, knows how legally weak the agreement is. As CEO
of Exxon, he helped make sure of that.
So
as we try to make sense of this latest drama, make no mistake: The
Trump administration was never divided between those who wanted to
shred the Paris Agreement and those who wanted to respect it. It was
divided between those who wanted to shred it and those who wanted to
stay in it but completely ignore it. The difference is one of optics;
the same amount of carbon gets spewed either way.
Some
say that’s not the point — that the real risk in the U.S.
withdrawing is that it will encourage everyone else to lower their
ambition, and soon everyone will be breaking up with Paris. Perhaps,
but not necessarily. Just as Trump’s health care disaster is
encouraging states to consider single payer more seriously than they
have in decades, Trump’s climate arson is so far only fuelling
climate ambition in states like California and New York. Rather than
throwing in the towel, coalitions like New York Renews, which is
pushing hard for the state to transition entirely to renewable energy
by 2050, are getting stronger and bolder by the day.
Outside
the U.S., the signs aren’t bad either. The transition to renewable
energy is already proceeding so rapidly in Germany and China, and
prices are dropping so sharply, that forces far larger than Trump are
propelling the shift now. Of course it’s still possible that
Trump’s withdrawal will provoke global backsliding. But it’s also
possible that the opposite will happen — that other countries,
under pressure from their populations who are enraged by Trump’s
actions on pretty much every level, will become more ambitious if the
U.S. officially goes rogue. They might even decide to toughen the
agreement without U.S. negotiators slowing them down at every turn.
And
there is another call that is increasingly being heard from social
movements around the world — for economic sanctions in the face of
Trump’s climate vandalism. Because here’s a crazy idea: Whether
or not it’s written into the Paris Agreement, when you unilaterally
decide to burn the world, there should be a price to pay. And that
should be true whether you are the United States government, or Exxon
Mobil — or some Frankenstein merger of the two.
A
year ago, the suggestion that the U.S. should face tangible
punishment for putting the rest of the rest of humanity at risk was
laughed off in establishment circles: Surely no one would put their
trade relationships in danger for anything so frivolous as a liveable
planet. But just this week, Martin Wolf, writing in the Financial
Times, declared, “If the U.S. withdrew from the Paris accord, the
rest of the world must consider sanctions.”
We’re
likely a long way from major U.S. trading partners taking that kind
of a step, but governments are not the only ones that can impose
economic penalties for lethal and immoral behavior. Movements can do
so directly, in the form of boycotts and divestment campaigns
targeting governments and corporations, on the South African model.
And not just fossil fuel corporations, but Trump’s branded empire
as well. Moral suasion doesn’t work on Trump. Economic pressure
just might.
It’s
time for some people’s sanctions.
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