Yesterday, on Nature Bats Last (right at the end of the segement), Cory Morningstar of Wrong Kind of Green and co-presenter for NBL on PRN introduced Prof. Clive Spash who talks about the goal of the Paris Agreement being the monetisation of nature.
In my mind this gives another understanding of Agenda 21 (or its successor) as a way of squeezing economic advantage out of the fictitious process that has little to do with "battling climate change".
If all goes according to plan Prof. Spash will be a guest on NBL.
Go to the 8'30" point in the video below
Go to the 8'30" point in the video below
This
Changes Nothing: The Paris Agreement to Ignore Reality
Clive
L. Spash
Abstract
At
the 21st session of the Conference of the Parties to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change held in Paris, France,
30 November to 11 December 2015, an Agreement was reached by the
international community including 195 countries.
The Agreement has
been hailed, by participants and the media, as a major turning point
for policy in the struggle to address human-induced climate change.
The following is a short critical commentary in which I briefly
explain why the Paris Agreement changes nothing.
I highlight how the
Agreement has been reached by removing almost all substantive issues
concerning the causes of human-induced climate change and offers no
firm plans of action. Instead of substantive cuts in greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions, as soon as possible, the intentions of the parties
promise escalation of damages and treat worst-case scenarios as an
acceptable 50:50 chance.
The Paris Agreement signifies commitment to
sustained industrial growth, risk management over disaster
prevention, and future inventions and technology as saviour. The
primary commitment of the international community is to maintain the
current social and economic system.
The result is denial that
tackling GHG emissions is incompatible with sustained economic
growth. The reality is that Nation States and international
corporations are engaged in an unremitting and ongoing expansion of
fossil fuel energy exploration, extraction and combustion, and the
construction of related infrastructure for production and
consumption.
The targets and promises of the Paris Agreement bear no
relationship to biophysical or social and economic reality
The
Lies They Tell. The Pitiful State of Environmentalism & its
Neoliberalization
The
"New Economy" is Not Inclusive
"The
route for real change is not via those who are already totally vested
in the growth economy and have gained power through it. Rather look
for power amongst those who are disenfranchised by the capital
accumulating system. Give them voice. Look to organisations that care
for them and if they do not exist, create them. Remember that the
vast majority are disenfranchised by the current economic system."
Professor
Clive L. Spash holds the Chair of Public Policy & Governance at
WU in Vienna and is Editor-in-Chief of Environmental Values.
He has conducted research on climate change economics and policy for over 25 years and his work in the area includes the book Greenhouse economics: Value and ethics as well as numerous articles.
His critique of carbon trading was the subject of attempted censorship while he was a senior civil servant at the CSIRO in Australia. More information can be found at www.clivespash.org
He has conducted research on climate change economics and policy for over 25 years and his work in the area includes the book Greenhouse economics: Value and ethics as well as numerous articles.
His critique of carbon trading was the subject of attempted censorship while he was a senior civil servant at the CSIRO in Australia. More information can be found at www.clivespash.org
COMMENTARY:
GREENWASH! NOW IN NEW IMPROVED FORMULA [ECONOMIC VALUATION &
PAYMENT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES]
December
3, 2015
by
Clive Spash
+++
October,
2016
Comment
on Jutta Kill’s “Economic
Valuation and Payment for Environmental Services”
This
report is an excellent overview of the pitiful state of
environmentalism and its neoliberalisation. The issues raised
are important and should be taken seriously. However, I would
like to suggest a few areas in which the argument could benefit from
some further reflection.
In
opening the paper the introduction emphasises the idea of a
“paradigmatic change” (p.2) in terms of what is happening with
economic valuation of the environment. There is no further
definition of this concept or its relevance, and I think this
suggestion of substantive novelty is in fact misleading. The
ongoing push for incorporating aspects of the social and
environmental world into an financial and economic one has been
ongoing for at least 200 years. Some seventy years ago, Karl
Polanyi (1944), who is mentioned (p.16), identified the creation of
the fictitious commodity as being a necessary part of the
industrialisation starting in the early 1800s. He also
recognised the extension of this from labour and land to the
environment. The more recent push of the economics profession,
for extensive valuation allied to financial regulatory instruments,
goes back to the 1960s. The role of economic valuation in its
modern form had already been successful promoted politically under
the Reagan administration, which in 1981 institutionalised the use of
cost-benefit analysis for evaluating proposed environmental
legislation (Presidential Executive Order 12291). What is new
is only the extent to which economic valuation of the environment,
and fictitious commodity creation, have since been pushed, and the
readiness of various actors to keep pushing ever further.
For
the financiers, bankers and corporate capitalists the drive is the
necessity of finding new means of exploitation to capture surplus
value, as the old ones become exhausted and/or regulated (hence the
need to also roll back regulation as Jutta Kill rightly notes as part
of the valuation/market instrument game). However, what about
the environmentalists? Why do the big environmental
non-governmental organisations, such as the Nature Conservancy, back
this? Why do so many ecologists back Natural capital,
ecosystems services valuation and biodiversity offsets? Some
notably examples are the likes of Gretchen Daily, systems ecologist
Bob Costanza (who many now think is an economist!), and the Nature
Conservancy’s chief scientist Peter Kareiva. What about
ecological economist Herman Daly who advocates Natural Capital and
tradable permits markets, another financial instrument of
exploitation? (For a critique of emissions trading see Spash,
2010.) One answer is that all the aforementioned are from the
USA and all apparently support the existing corporate model of market
capitalism, including prices as efficient means of resource
allocation. Of course they demand some side constraints on the
existing systems, but they do not advocate any systemic change or
conduct any analysis of the political economy. Their politics
appears to be classic American liberal and, despite the
contradictions, their economics maintains core tenets of orthodox
belief (e.g. prices allocate resources and do so efficiently).
Yet,
there is, in addition to this American camp, another group, of what I
term new environmental pragmatists (Spash, 2013), that is more
broadly based and geographically widespread. These are the ones
Jutta Kill rightly recognises as advocating instrumental valuation of
species, such as bees. They are often also ecologists, but not
necessarily in favour of the American way of life or its inherent
political liberalism. Their concern is to be pragmatic because
the desire for material wealth and financial affluence now seems to
dominate all systems of political economy, and so they believe the
expression of value must be as instrumental to those ends.
Their training in an instrumental natural science may be in part to
blame, but their political and economic naivety also plays a key role
in their belief that they can win the numbers game in a battle with
bankers, financiers and big corporations. Still, once again, I
would emphasise that core aspects of this monetary valuation game,
for ‘saving’ the environment, are quite old in content. In
the period from 1880 to 1920 over 1000 studies calculated the
monetary value of services provided by birds as a means to show their
value and aid their conservation, but the new insecticides made the
birds’ services (and the valuation exercises) redundant. The
positive “externalities” of birds had evaporated due to
technological innovation.
In
the report, the term “externalities” is used repeatedly and
highlighted as a key aspect of the economic approach. This is a
highly problematic concept (as the report notes), but also one that
is totally misleading as to the issues involved. There is
nothing about pushing costs on to others that is external to the
modern economic system of capital accumulation (whether based in
Europe, USA, China, Russia, India, Brazil, Australia or anywhere
else). Indeed this is an essential aspect of how the modern
economy operates and maximises the surplus that accrues to the
minority. The powerless, women, poor and the environment are
there to be exploited as an internal operation of the political and
economic system. There are no errors or need for systems
correction. This is why Karl W. Kapp (1950) called such
activities cost shifting exercises, not externalities. In our
critiques, improving the accuracy and meaningfulness of terminology
and conceptualisation would help. So let’s stop using the
neoclassical economists’ term “externalities” for something
that is internal to the capital accumulating economic system.
Indeed
in other places this accuracy of conceptualisation is exactly what is
argued for, e.g. with respect to the need to stop calling Nature
“capital” and ecosystems functions “goods and services”.
Jutta Kill correctly identifies the capture of the environmental
movement by corporate interests and how this has been matched by the
conversion of language and concepts in key areas of the natural
sciences informing that movement. Thus ecology and conservation
biology have lost their own scientific terminology (Spash and
Aslaksen, 2015).
Along
the way I would like to note the importance of the point about the
impossibility of ever “internalising externalities”. As the
Laws of Thermodynamics make clear, the materials and energy that we
put into our economic systems will come out the other side as waste
in equal amounts (but different form). In short all our
production and consumption of energy and materials creates problems
for the model of perfect resource pricing so beloved by economic
textbooks and neoliberal politics. If we take the economists at
their word, then they must admit that all the prices in the economy
are wrong and need to be changed, i.e., price ‘correction’ to
account for “externalities” would result in full scale
technocratic economic intervention, or what used to be called a
planned economy.
The
links between offsetting pollution and biodiversity loss through
markets, or market like mechanisms, also needs to be linked to the
model of development that is now prevalent. That is a model of
resource extractivism come hell or high water. The backing for
the extractivist regime, that maintains the resource supply chains
for the consumerist society, is the military. Fear is a key
tool of control now widely deployed in our supposed democracies of
the West. Ours is a world of military intervention and
domination in which violent destruction of the ‘other’ is totally
legitimised daily in the news, media and entertainment. Nature
is no different, if it gets in the way, just wipe it out and explain
to those who benefit the necessity of this for maintaining the
political and economic system. As long as the imperial mode of
living (Brand and Wissen, 2013) is enjoyed by enough key people, in
the right power structure and sections of the segmented society,
nothing needs to change.
After
having made these provisos, I would like to note that the report hits
many nails squarely on the head. Not least of these is the
fallacious concept of Green Growth and its associated Green Economy.
In the end, selling monetary valuation as saving the planet goes
along with the current advocacy of economic growth as the solution to
human induced climate change (Spash, 2014). Both are clearly
just, a new improved formulae of that good old favourite corporate
product, Greenwash.
References
Cited
Brand, U., Wissen, M., 2013. Crisis and continuity of capitalist society-nature relationships: The imperial mode of living and the limits to environmental governance. Review of International Political Economy 20, 687-711.
Kapp, K.W., 1950. The Social Costs of Private Enterprise. Shocken, New York.
Polanyi, K., 1944. The Great Transformation, 1st edition ed. Rinehart & Company Inc., New York/Toronto.
Spash, C.L., 2010. The brave new world of carbon trading. New Political Economy 15, 169-195.
Spash, C.L., 2013. The shallow or the deep ecological economics movement? Ecological Economics 93, 351-362.
Spash, C.L., 2014. Better Growth, Helping the Paris COP-out?: Fallacies and Omissions of the New Climate Economy Report. Institute for Environment and Regional Development, Vienna.
Spash, C.L., Aslaksen, I., 2015. Re-establishing an ecological discourse in the policy debate over how to value ecosystems and biodiversity. Journal of Environmental Management 159, 245-253.
[Professor
Clive L. Spash holds the Chair of Public Policy & Governance at
WU in Vienna and is Editor-in-Chief of Environmental Values. He has
conducted research on climate change economics and policy for over 25
years and his work in the area includes the book Greenhouse
economics: Value and ethics as well as numerous articles. His
critique of carbon trading was the subject of attempted censorship
while he was a senior civil servant at the CSIRO in Australia. More
information can be found at www.clivespash.org.]
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.