From NZ journalist, Lisa Stewart
IS
SCHOOL STRIKE FOR CLIMATE A GOVERNMENT PROPAGANDA EXERCISE?
11
March, 2019
With
the 2018 Report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
warning we have less than twelve years to effectively tackle climate
change, why is School Strike for Climate NZ supporting the disastrous
government plan for carbon neutrality by 2050 - about thirty years
too late?
WHILE
I STILL applaud the students who will be striking for more action on
climate change, I'm disappointed and alarmed to learn that the School
Strike For Climate NZ organisers are actually demanding so little
from this Labour-led government and its coalition partner, the Green
Party. Indeed its list of demands are suspiciously government
friendly.
One
of its central demands is that the government pass 'an ambitious and
effective Zero Carbon Act that gives New Zealand a coherent long term
plan to get to carbon neutrality by 2050.' But isn't that the
Labour-led government's plan anyway? How is this, in any way, a
demand?
School
Strike for Climate NZ comments on its website that the 2018 report of
the Inter Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says that
''global mean temperature rise greater than 1.5 degrees celsius will
cause widespread suffering and mass migration, irreversible damage to
the natural world, and massive damage to the world economy. '
True
enough. But what they omit to say is that the IPCC reports also warns
that we have then less than twelve years to effectively tackle
climate change otherwise the planet will go beyond the 1.5 degrees
celsius of warming. Indeed some commentators think that the IPCC are
being optimistic. David Wallace-Wells, the author of The
Uninhabitable Earth, says that the IPPC's 'worst case scenario is
actually, a best case."
He
comments: "What has been called a genocidal level of warming is
already our inevitable future. The question is how much worse than
that it will get … We are on track for four degrees of warming,
more than twice as much as most scientists believe is possible to
endure without inflicting climate suffering on hundreds of millions
or threatening at least parts of
the social and political infrastructure we call, grandly,
‘civilization’.”
Faced
with an imminent threat to planetary civilisation you would naturally
think that School Strike For Climate would be demanding more than the
timid and disastrous climate change policies that the Labour-led
government is pursuing.
In
fact none of so -called demands of School Strike for Climate are
particularly demanding. Indeed the government can justifiably argue
that it is addressing every single one of them. The total list of
demands are:
1.Passing
an ambitious and effective Zero Carbon Act that gives New Zealand a
coherent long term plan to get to carbon neutrality by 2050.
2.Keeping
the effect of global warming and its consequences for all living
things on this planet in mind when making decisions for the future.
3.The
paths to reaching our emission targets being fast tracked, well
planned and transparent so the New Zealand public is aware that
progress is being made and can hold the Government to account;
4.Ceasing
all exploration and extraction of more fossil fuels immediately. We
already have more in our reserves than we can afford to burn to avoid
catastrophic climate change. We need to invest in renewable energy
alternatives now.
5.Regulating
emissions from agriculture, which account for almost half of our
emissions, and for which there is currently no plan.
This
is far from being a demand for 'system change not climate change'. In
fact you could go as far as saying that the student strike on Friday
is shaping up to be little more than support for the Labour-led's
government's present policies. It would be interesting to know how
these five demands were arrived at and who was involved.
Rachel
Stewart writes a regular column for the NZ Herald and she has written
extensively on climate change. In a tweet she observes that the
striking students are being manipulated: 'This is the dead hand of
liberalism and green capitalism trying to stifle a youth rebellion
like those overseas which are clearly heading for 'system change'.
The youth will catch up fast when they realise they have been
played.'
While
School Strike for Climate might highlight the crisis of climate
change the very fact that it is so government friendly means it is
unlikely to move the debate from where we are now and, frankly,
change nothing. I doubt the Minister for Climate Change would be
quite so keen to appear in photos with students who are demanding
'system change not climate change'.
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