Written by Michael
Löwy and first published at New Politics
A review of Karl
Marx’s Ecosocialism. Capitalism, Nature, and the Unfinished Critique of
Political Economy by Kohei Saito and Red-Green Revolution: The Politics and
Technology of Ecosocialism by Victor Wallis.
There is a
growing body of ecomarxist and ecosocialist literature in the English-speaking
world, which signals the beginning of a significant turn in radical thinking.
Some Marxist journals, such as Capitalism, Nature and Socialism, Monthly Review
and Socialism and Democracy have been playing an important role in this
process, which is becoming increasingly influential. The two books discussed
here—very different in style content and purpose—are part of this “Red and
Green” upsurge.
Kohei Saito
is a young Japanese Marxist scholar and his book is a very valuable
contribution to the reassessment of the Marxian heritage, from an ecosocialist
perspective. It justifiedly polemicises with those authors (mainly but not
exclusively German) that denounce Marx as “Promethean,” productivist, and
partisan of the industrial domination of nature. But Saito also criticises, in
the introduction, what he defines as “first stage ecosocialists,” who believe
that Marx’s 19th Century discussions on ecology are of little importance today:
this would include, among others, Alain Lipiez, Daniel Tanuro, Joel Kovel
and…myself.
This seems to me a bit of an artificial construction… Lipietz calls
to “abandon the Marxist paradigm,” the three others consider themselves to be
Marxists, and whatever their criticism of (some of) Marx views on nature, do
not consider his views as “of little importance.” Since this issue is
mentioned, but not really discussed in the book, let us move on….
One of the
great qualities of this work is that it does not treat Marx’s work as a
systematic body of writing, defined, from the beginning to the end, by a strong
ecological commitment (according to some), or a strong unecological tendency
(according to others). As Saito very persuasively argues, there are elements of
continuity in Marx’s reflection on nature, but also some very significant
changes, and re-orientations.
Among the
continuities, one of the most important is the issue of the capitalist
“separation” of humans from earth, i.e., from nature. Marx believed that in
pre-capitalist societies there existed a form of unity between the producers
and the land, and he saw as one of the key tasks of socialism to re-establish
the original unity between humans and nature, destroyed by capitalism, but on a
higher level (negation of the negation).
This explains Marx’s interest in
pre-capitalist communities, both in his ecological discussion (for instance of
Carl Fraas) or in his anthropological research (Franz Maurer): both authors
were perceived as “unconscious socialists.” And, of course, in his last
important document, the letter to Vera Zassoulitsch (1881), Marx claims that
thanks to the suppression of capitalism, modern societies could return to a
higher form of an “archaic” type of collective ownership and production. This
is a very interesting insight of Saito, and very relevant today, when
indigenous communities in the Americas, from Canada to Patagonia, are in the
front line of the resistance to capitalist destruction of the environment.
However, the
main contribution of Saito is to show the movement, the evolution of Marx
reflections on nature, in a process of learning, rethinking and reshaping his
thoughts. Before Capital (1867) one can find in Marx writings a rather
uncritical assessment of capitalist “progress”- an attitude often described by
the vague mythological term of “Prometheanism.”
This is obvious in the
Communist Manifesto, which celebrates capitalist “subjection of nature’s forces
to man”and the “clearing of whole continents for cultivation”; but it also
applies to the London Notebooks (1851), the Economic Manuscripts of 1861-63,
and other writings from those years. Curiously, Saito seems to exclude the
Grundrisse (1857-58) from his criticism, which is not justified, considering
how much Marx admires, in this manuscript, “the great civilizing mission of
capitalism,” in relation to nature and to the pre-capitalist communities,
prisioners of their localism and their “idolatry of nature”!
The change
comes in 1865-66, when Marx discovers, by reading the writings of the
agricultural chemist Justus Von Liebig, the problems of soil exhaustion, and
the metabolic rift between human societies and the natural environment. This
will lead, in Capital vol. 1 (1867)—but also in the two other, unfinished
volumes—to a much more critical assessment of the destructive nature of
capitalist “progress,” particularly in agriculture.
After 1868, by reading
another German scientist, Carl Fraas, Marx will discover also other important
ecological issues, such as deforestation and local climate change. According to
Saito, if Marx had been able to complete volumes 2 and 3 of Capital, he would
have more strongly emphasised the ecological crisis, which also means, at least
implicitly, than in their present unfinished state, there is no strong enough
emphasis on those issues.
This leads me
to my main disagreement with Saito: in several passages of the book he asserts
that for Marx “the environmental unsustainability of capitalism is the
contradiction of the system” (p.142, emphasis by Saito); or that in his late
years he came to see the metabolic rifts as “the most serious problem of
capitalism”; or that the conflict with natural limits is, for Marx, “the main
contradiction of the capitalist mode of production.”
I wonder
where Saito found, in Marx’s writings, published books, manuscripts or
notebooks, any such statements…they are not to be found, and for a good reason:
the unsustainability of the capitalist system was not a decisive issue in the
19th Century, as it has become today: or better, since 1945, when the planet
entered a new geological era, the Anthropocene.
Moreover, I believe that the
metabolic rift, or the conflict with natural limits is not “a problem of
capitalism” or a “contradiction of the system”: it is much more than that! It
is a contradiction between the system and “the eternal natural conditions”
(Marx), and therefore with the natural conditions of human life on the planet.
In fact, as Paul Burkett (quoted by Saito) argues, capital can continue to
accumulate under any natural conditions, however degraded, so long as there is
not a complete extinction of human life: human civilisation can disappear
before capital accumulation becomes impossible.
Saito
concludes his book with a sober assessment which seems to me a very apt summary
of the issue: Capital remains an unfinished project. Marx did not answer all
questions nor predict today’s world. But his critique of capitalism provides an
extremely helpful theoretical foundation for the understanding of the current
ecological crisis.
Victor Wallis
agrees with the ecosocialists such as John Bellamy Foster and Paul Burkett who
emphasize the ecological dimension of Marx. But he also acknowledges that there
are illusions in the “technological neutrality” of the capitalist productive
forces in some of his writings.
In any case,
the object of his outstanding book is not Marx as such, but the Marxist
perspective of a Red-Green Revolution. Being a collection of essays, the
chapters do not follow a precise order, but one can easily detect the main
lines of the argument.
The starting
point is the understanding that capitalism, driven by the need to “grow” and
expand at any cost, is inherently destructive of the environment. Moreover,
through ecological devastation and climate change—the result of fossil-fuel
emissions of CO2 gases—the capitalist system undermines the conditions of life
itself on the planet. “Green capitalism” is an oxymoron, a contradiction in
terms: it offers only false solutions, based on corporate interests and a blind
faith in the “market,” such as “biofuels,” the trade in “emission rights,” etc.
A typical exemple of “green capitalism”: the monitoring of global environmental
measures has been entrusted, by the ruling class, to the World Bank, which
invested 15 times more on fossil-fuel projects than on renewables.…
Radical
measures are the only realistic alternative: a revolution is needed to overcome
the environmental threat to our collective survival. The aim is an ecosocialist
society, without class domination and with life in balance with the rest of
nature. Of course there are risks involved in any revolutionary enterprise, but
the risk of keeping things as they are is much greater…Long term species
survival is contingent upon a nearly 90 percent reduction in the burning of
fossil fuels. This requires to a sharp break with capitalist priorities:
accumulation, profit-making, commodification, “growth.”
A key component of the
ecosocialist project is conscious democratic planning, reorganizing production
and consumption around the real popular needs, and putting and end to the waste
inherent to capitalism with its artificial “needs” induced by the advertising
industry, and its formidable military expenditures. Democratic planning is the
opposite of the Soviet model of top-down directives: the identification of
planning with Stalin is a dangerous relic of Cold War demagogy, which could
obstruct ecological conversion.
Ecosocialism
requires also some key technological choices, for instance privileging
renewable energies (wind, solar, etc.) against fossil-fuels. But there is no
purely technical solution: energy use must be reduced, by sharply reducing
wasteful consumption.
Victor Wallis
insists, and this is one of the most valuable insights of his book, that
ecosocialism, as a long-term objective, is not contradictory with short-range
measures, urgent and immediate ecological steps: they can, in fact, reinforce
and inspire each other. Similarly, to oppose local ecological communities to
the global political struggle is pointless and counterproductive: both are
necessary and provide mutual support.
Which are the
forces that will lead this struggle for social and ecological change? In one of
the essays, Wallis insist on the centrality of the working-class—in spite of
the present anti-ecological position of most union leaders (in order to
“protect jobs”). Is the working-class the “implicit embodiment of ecological
sanity” (unlike its present leaders)? Is it the only force capable to bring
together all constituencies opposed to capitalism? I’m not so sure, but I think
Wallis is right to emphasise that class oppression concerns the vast majority
of the population—and therefore a radical change cannot take place without its
support.
But there are
also other social forces engaged in the process of resistance to the capitalist
onslaught on the environment: for instance, the indigenous communities.
This is
another very important contribution of this book: to show that indigenous
communities—direct victims of the capitalist plunder, a global assault on their
livelihoods—have become the vanguard of the ecosocialist movement. In their
actions, such as the Standing Rock resistence to the XXL Pipeline, and in their
reflections—such as their Declaration at the World Social Forum of Belem in
2009—“they express, more completely than any other group, the common survival
interest of humanity.” Of course, the urban population of modern cities cannot
live like the indigenous, but they have much to learn from them.
Ecological
struggles offer a unifying theme around which various oppressed constituencies
could come together. And there are signs of hope in the United States, in the
vast upsurge of resistance against a particularly toxic racist, mysoginist and
anti-ecological power elite, and in the growing interest, among young people
and African Americans, in socialism. But a political revolutionary force, able
to unify all constituencies and movements against the system is still lacking.
Michael Löwy of France is a prolific
author of books on Marxist theory, including on ecosocialism. His most recent
book available in English is Redemption and Utopia: Jewish Libertarian Thought
in Central Europe.