This
important Ecosocialist Manifesto, published by the Green Left emerges
out of Australia in preparation for the forthcoming conference, Ecosocialism
2020: From rebellion to revolution, supported by the Socialist Alliance. It
will be open for further discussion and development through a series of
Ecosocialism conferences in several cities across Australia in late October.
We are in the
midst of a climate emergency and there is no way out without radically changing
the way society is organized. If humanity does not free itself from the
capitalist drive for ever greater profits and ever-expanding economic growth,
rising global temperatures alone will make the planet uninhabitable for humans
and millions of other living species.
We urgently
need to find a collective road to a new way of living that is based on human
solidarity and ecological sustainability.
1. The
Emergency is Now
Catastrophic
fires, extreme weather events, rising sea levels and the shocking collapse of
biodiversity are a reality after just 1°C of global warming. At current rates
of greenhouse gas global emissions we are heading for 2–3°C rise.
Despite
numerous warnings from the world’s leading scientists, none of the global
climate summits have produced the targets, let alone actions, needed to address
the climate emergency.
The governments
of a number of rich countries – including the United States and Australia – are
defending the profit greed of the giant fossil fuel companies. They are also
stubbornly resisting calls for binding and effective greenhouse gas emission
cuts and for the richest countries to pay the climate debt owed to the rest of
the world that they have ruthlessly exploited and oppressed for generations.
The climate
emergency is just part of the historic clash between the capitalist system and
nature.
Corporate greed
has destroyed entire ecosystems and poisoned land and seas with toxic waste.
Land clearing, driven by capitalist agribusiness, has robbed the planet of the
forest cover needed to absorb carbon dioxide and provide a home for many
species. It has also unleashed deadly new pandemics, such as COVID-19.
The climate
emergency and the COVID-19 pandemic are symptoms of the dangerous rift that
capitalism has created with nature and which it continues to exacerbate.
But the
COVID-19 pandemic also shows us that the privileged ruling elites and the
majority they exploit and oppress cannot carry on in the old way.
The huge death
toll from COVID-19 in the US, the world’s richest and most powerful country,
demonstrates that even the most privileged will not be spared the impact of the
existential crisis that capitalism has created.
2. We Need
to Move Beyond Capitalism to Ecosocialism
Just 100 fossil
fuel corporations account for 71% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Leading
climate activist Greta Thunberg has pointed out that the capitalist class has
already contracted out a lot more than the world’s carbon budget, which the
Paris Agreement said is needed to keep global warming to 1.5°C.
Attempts by the
climate summits to find capitalist-friendly solutions to the climate emergency
have not worked. “Market solutions,” such as carbon trading, have failed even
in the few capitalist states where they have been implemented. Any “greening”
of capitalism, that such market solutions may have encouraged, is too little
and too late.
To pull back
from catastrophic climate change requires emergency action to democratize the
economy. To do this, critical industries such as energy, transport,
agribusiness and the financial institutions that invest in them need to be
brought under social control – now.
This will be
necessary to move rapidly to 100% renewable energy and to reduce net carbon
emissions to as close to zero as possible.
This all points
to the urgent need to replace capitalism with an ecosocialist society, that could
address gross injustices and repair capital’s rift with nature.
The corporate
rich, that now rule the world, stole much of their starting capital directly or
indirectly through colonial plunder. They destroyed numerous societies around
the globe, many of whom were organized for thousands of years around Indigenous
social values of egalitarianism, cooperation and co-existence with nature.
An ecosocialist
future would require a return to such principles, with the benefit of
technological advances used for social good.
Under
capitalism, almost every technological advance is used to deepen the
exploitation of the majority and nature, or to build dangerous weapons of mass
destruction and suppression.
An ecosocialist
society would liberate human creativity through translating productivity gains
into a radically shorter working week. This is also necessary to free the
majority of the population – now exploited to the point of exhaustion or
discarded as surplus labour – to exercise direct democratic control of society.
An ecosocialist
society will need to be based on grassroots direct democracy that allows
communities to have real control over their destinies.
3.
Capitalism’s Violent Defense of Power and Privilege
The giant
corporations are using all their power and privilege to defend their narrow
interests – even as it becomes increasingly clear that humanity cannot carry on
as before.
They buy off
governments or remove any that challenge their interests. They promote and fund
climate denialist, racist, misogynist and nakedly fascist movements.
They have
already plunged entire nations into permanent war to protect their right to
plunder and exploit the world. Now, they are even supporting violent right-wing
forces in the US threatening civil war.
They are
prepared to use the disproportionate military power of the US and its rich
country allies to preserve a grossly unequal capitalist global division of
labour and a presumed “right” to continue passing the costs of the ecological
crisis on to the poorest countries.
They are
resisting calls for reparations to be paid to those countries they have
plundered and poisoned. They are blocking calls for rich countries to adopt
sharper and deeper cuts to greenhouse gas emissions and for renewable
technologies to be shared across the globe.
4. Building
a Movement for Ecosocialist Revolution
A new mass
movement for ecosocialist revolution needs to be built from the radicalizing
climate emergency movement and other progressive mass movements, such as the
Black Lives Matter Movement, that are challenging the capitalist system in the
face of rising fascist movements, racism, sexism and attacks on civil
liberties.
In all these
movements, we hear calls to end capitalism and build a new future based on the
collective and ecologically sustainable traditions that capitalism has tried
its best to wipe out over the last 400 years.
Ecosocialists
seek to unite and amplify those voices for real change.
History teaches
us that people’s political consciousness can develop rapidly in the process of
sustained collective struggle and that such movements act as schools of direct
democracy. They can also give birth to new institutions of popular democracy.
Therefore, it
is of critical importance to build mass movements around programs of immediate
and transitional measures that the climate emergency demands.
The radical
green new deal programs, championed by former British Labour leader Jeremy
Corbyn, the US Green Party and US Democratic Senator Bernie Sanders, are
examples for such a program.
But the system
change potential of any such transitional program can only be realized by an
independent mass movement that goes beyond the limits of electoral campaigns.
The deepening
crisis that we are confronting today makes it clear that time is of the
essence.
The time to stop capitalism from destroying our common future is running out. The need to build this mass movement for change means we urgently need to build ecosocialist organizations and global networks that can unite their impact.
I'm getting a bit fed up of the glib platitudes expressed in this piece. "This will be necessary to move rapidly to 100% renewable energy..." - in what scenario can renewables get anywhere close to supplying the energy we use now, let alone in the future? There were at least two reasons that wind energy was replaced by coal in the 19th century: energy density and reliability. Fossil fuels have to go, right now, but without a drastic cut in our energy use in the wealthy societies such as the UK, we'll see mass blackouts for the poor who don't have their own diesel generators, solar panels and hugely expensive Tesla Powerwalls. Socialism is about ownership and it has little to say about economic growth.
ReplyDelete"The radical green new deal programs" are anything but radical. They're little more than transferring industrial capitalism into new areas of production and consumption. Ownership of production by the workers is fine, let's go for it, but don't expect it to make any more than a tiny dent in greenhouse gas emissions and general pollution levels.
We need to be exploring how we end economic growth without causing mass suffering. That's one of the most important and overlooked problems of our time.
Yes, I agree broadly with what you say, but it is essential that we move quickly in the right direction, and short of a revolution, we have move in stages. We have to take people with us, otherwise we will be accused of wanting to go back to living caves. If you don't like the content here, then you are welcome to set out your own thinking in a blog post.
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