Written by Isabella Pojuner and first published at The Beaver
The
environmental crisis is huge – the biggest crisis humanity will see. It’s
bigger than both World Wars and the Cold War combined. And it will cause the
biggest changes to our political and economic systems. The UN Secretary-General
Guterres has announced at COP24 that “We face a direct existential threat. If
we do not change course by 2020, we risk runaway climate change.” That is a
loaded statement, but he’s being realistic: the time we have to revolutionise
our political systems in the way they approach environmental issues,
specifically consumerism, distribution of environmental protections and new
energy solutions, declines by the day. This year increased global fossil carbon
dioxide emissions, expected to be between 1.8%–3.7%,
will exceed the rate of 1.6% in 2017.
Capitalism is
responsible for the accelerating of development of production that makes the
majority of societies prosper today. Without it, our world would be
unrecognisable. But it would be a world without intensive carbon pollution, a
reliance on unsustainable energy, and millions of preventable deaths annually.
It would be a world where we haven’t waited 50 years (and realistically, more)
to halt destructive consumption patterns. With it still dominating our
political, economic and social systems, our consumptive trajectory will almost
certainly surpass the resources our Earth can provide. The biodiversity within
our ecosystem will be horrifyingly affected. We are literally at the beginning
of the first extinction event within the lifetime of the human race.
This
shouldn’t be a political issue: it should be bipartisan, with all political
actors moving towards action. But it is political, it does divide, and the
first barrier to finding an effective solution is politics. With political
debates and systems around the world edging towards either end of the
traditional political framework, we’re not in a place to unite around one
issue. We’re focusing on short-term political issues at best, and at worst, on
fabricated debates. Most political systems are geared toward making short-term
decisions and policies.
But the
ultimate long-term issue is the environment we reside in, depend on, and are
inextricably connected to – no matter how convincing you find Elon Musk’s
galactic fantasy. The environment is massively complex, and understanding it is
enormously challenging. However disproportionate their media presence may be,
out there exist actual experts in climate science, outnumbering climate
‘sceptics’ or deniers dramatically. 97%
of them agree that anthropogenically caused climate change has begun and
will have drastic effects on the biosphere (all life on earth) and atmosphere,
and requires political action and economic reform. Climate deniers are backed
by dark money, not peer-reviewed research. Dark money is simply special
interests with an stake in profiting from further consumption of finite, highly
damaging natural resources.
Ecosocialism
is one way of changing our economic system to prioritise the environment. In
turn, it means the prioritisation of life on Earth; not the super-rich, not
consumption rights, not the ideology that humans must rule land and resources
for profit.
But we are
heading towards fascism, and even ecofascism. The thoroughly disproven theory
that population control is the solution to the crisis is Western-centred and
shifts blame upon the Global South, the least responsible; but is still
supported by arguably the most famous and well-loved environmentalist of our
time:David Attenborough. How can we rationally deal with such an immense issue,
especially in the age of populism, when the characters we admire just aren’t
doing the majority of humans justice?
In the last
couple of weeks, the ‘liberal’ President Obama asked the
public to attribute America’s status as the world’s biggest oil producer to
his work – in the same breath as stating his pride for the 2015 Paris
Agreement. It is absurd and contradictory to simultaneously advocate for oil
extraction, whose only justification is capital, and advocate for international
climate action. We are at a tipping point. But he did. No US President has done
nearly enough required for the environment, and yet our ‘best’ hope has
miserably failed.
Fossil fuel
companies such as Exxon-Mobil have been proved aware
of the effects of their corporate strategy for decades. We’re talking 40
years. They literally built higher platforms for oil extraction to avoid damage
from sea level rise. They’ve been profiting despite their deliberate
destruction of our planet, they will continue to do so without regulation:
which has failed under capitalism. The former CEO of Exxon-Mobil, Rex
Tillerson, was made Secretary of State in the Trump administration. And yet the
costs to governments of their own making will last for at least hundreds of
years, far beyond a few presidential terms. A system which has allowed this,
which continues to, and will not adequately punish these people, is not our
optimal economic system. Even if ecosocialism isn’t, it is on every level,
ideologically and practically, the most effective solution.
The
Kardashians were financially able to hire
private firefighters to protect their property during the recent California
wildfires. With the number
of global billionaires only increasing, and no signs of the wealth gap
growth rate slowing down or reversing, we must assume that privatisation of
essential natural disaster defences will be our future.
The key
solution to the environmental crisis is not just a shift in consumer psychology
or ending climate apathy. For instance, 94% of the French population
believe anthropogenic effects have at least partially caused the Crisis and 74% believe it will
have “bad” consequences, but there were still riots against the carbon tax.
Why? Because while taxes on the French people have been increasing, public services
have been deteriorating. The solution to the crisis is not attacking working
people, pressured by class-imposed shame and economic stresses. It is, as the
yellow jackets say themselves, a consensual shift in the economic system.
In times of
crisis, we choose decay or progress. Our societies will unequivocally not look
the same in 20 years time. Let’s plot the future, since climate models will not
suffice for the political changes necessary. Our political systems are not
edging towards neoliberalism, compassionate conservatism or centrism: it is
Bolsanaro in Brazil, or Ocasio-Cortez’s progressive movement and
Green New Deal in the US. Ecosocialism is the only ideology that would
ensure equal distribution of protections, alongside a drastic but necessary
shift in our economy that could actually alleviate climatic damage.
There are no
true market solutions to ecological collapse. The market has been instrumental
in its development. The solution is economic change, a re-prioritisation, and
if that does not occur, the default is still the Crisis, mismanaged by fascist
ideology. I invite anyone to respond on how it is ‘logical’ that capitalism
will get us out of the mess it began.
Ocasio-Cortez,
despite her perceived political necessity to continue with green capitalist
tropes, said: “This is going to be the Great Society, the moonshot”. Our hope
that we can adapt, thrive and overcome should even surpass that. Take a breath.
Search
Google Images for Earthrise: the first photograph of the Earth ever taken,
on the 24th of December 1968. 50 years ago. If we did that, we can do this.
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