The next United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26), delayed by the Covid 19 pandemic, will take place in Glasgow, Scotland, next year from 1 to 12 November 2021. It is the first time that the UK has hosted the conference, which will likely open against a backdrop of grim evidence that the planet’s ecology is under serious threat. Currently, the facts detail the scale of the looming disaster:
· A
global temperature increase of 0.85C against a 1951-1980 baseline, whilst being
on course for global warming of an expected 4.1°C – 4.8°C above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century.
·
Atmospheric
CO2 at 412.75 parts per million, when CO2 needs to kept to no more 350 ppm to
avoid drastically rising temperatures.
·
The
Greenland ice mass reduced by -4040 Giga Tonnes since 1992.
·
Arctic
ice cover reduced by 2 million square metres since 1979.
·
A
rise in sea levels of +69.21 mm since 1992.
Figures above supplied
by The
Guardian.
·
90% of the global population breathes air
exceeding World Health Organisation exposure targets.
·
There
are now close
to 500 dead marine zones covering more than 245,000 km² globally,
equivalent to the surface of the United Kingdom, caused by various pollutants.
·
The
average abundance of native species in most major land-based habitats has fallen
by at least 20%, since 1900.
These
statistics point to ecocatastrophe and possibly extinction for humanity and all other
species on the planet. And all of this after 25 previous world conferences on
these matters, so the chances of anything positive being agreed appear to be
slim in the extreme, even with the stakes being so high.
The much heralded
COP21 held in Paris in 2015, which was meant reduce CO2 emissions and so keep
global temperatures below 2C, was largely a fraud. The Trump administration in
the US has now pulled out of the agreement, but even if the US had remained
committed to the actions agreed in Paris, it would have had little effect on
rising emissions.
Some of the
pledges included non-existent (on any large scale) technological fixes, like
carbon sequestration, which are entirely meaningless.
A report written
by climate scientists in 2019, “The Truth
Behind the Paris Agreement Climate Pledges,” concluded:
“Countries need
to double and triple their 2030 reduction commitments to be aligned with the
Paris target,” said Sir Robert Watson, former chair of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change and co-author of the report that closely examined the
184 voluntary pledges under the Paris Agreement.
The report’s
analysis of the 184 pledges found that almost 75 percent were
insufficient. In fact, the world’s first and fourth biggest emitters, China and
India, will have higher emissions in 2030. The US is the second largest and
its pledge was too low. Russia, the fifth largest emitter, hasn’t even bothered
to make a pledge. The European Union is likely to exceed its pledges, but not
by the margin required for it to be effective.
Given the seriousness
of the situation, why is there such reluctance to take the necessary mitigating
actions from the worst offenders? And secondly, why do environmental
campaigners, especially the large NGOs put so much effort into these useless conferences?
The industrial
capitalist states and their corporations that produce most CO2 emissions in
their production processes, make a lot money out of the status quo. These
processes require huge energy inputs, which mostly comes from burning fossil
fuels, as it is the cheapest and most reliable source of this energy.
Fossil fuel produced
energy can be produced close to where it is needed too, reducing transmission losses,
unlike renewable sources, which in the main need to be produced further away
from the point of use, and will lose power on the way, even if enough could be
produced for the system’s ever expanding needs. The imperative to grow, or die is inherent to the capitalist system.
As for the
environmental campaigners, they really can’t see the wood for the trees, if you will forgive the pun, when it
comes to inadequate pledges on emissions reduction, and buy into false techno solutions
and ‘market based’ solutions like carbon trading, which have failed wherever
they have been tried. The 100% clean energy movement led by the US based Sierra
Club with a $80 million donation by billionaire capitalist Michael Bloomberg,
has created a renewable front for natural gas.
In the UK, the prime minister, Boris Johnson last week announced a plan to power all UK homes from off-shore wind farms by 2030. It is not clear whether this means replacing natural gas for heating, as well as current electrical demand, but it seems a tall order if it does. Not to mention, other buildings, transport, industry and farming power supplies. At the same time, his government has made fracking licences easier to obtain by businesses that extract shale gas.
All demand for power will grow
as it does inevitably under a system that requires ever expanding markets to
survive. All those new gadgets and those to come, need energy to operate them,
as well that used to produce them.
The problem to
a large extent is that people just can’t imagine a world run other than by
capitalism. This is what Joel Kovel, the ecosocialist writer refers to as the ‘force-field’
of the system, and so all attempted solutions to climate change and other
ecological ills, have to fit with capitalism. Which in turn means they will not
be effective, and tend to be piecemeal or green washing fantasies.
Perhaps another recent announcement by the UK government reveals that the ruling classes are only too well aware of this. Government tells English schools not to use anti-capitalist material for teaching leaves me with the impression that they don’t want the young, who are most likely to have ecological concerns, to join up the dots and reveal the truth about how the world is run. Censorship never works, especially in these days of the world wide web. These dots will be joined, or we will have no future worth living.
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