Written by Nafeez Ahmed and first published at Vice.com
A
harrowing scenario analysis of how human civilization might collapse in coming
decades due to climate change has been endorsed by a former Australian defence
chief and senior royal navy commander.
The
analysis, published by the Breakthrough National Centre for Climate
Restoration, a think-tank in Melbourne, Australia, describes climate change
as “a near- to mid-term existential threat to human civilization” and sets out
a plausible scenario of where business-as-usual could lead over the next 30
years.
The
paper argues that the potentially “extremely serious outcomes” of
climate-related security threats are often far more probable than
conventionally assumed, but almost impossible to quantify because they “fall
outside the human experience of the last thousand years.”
On
our current trajectory, the report warns, “planetary and human systems [are]
reaching a ‘point of no return’ by mid-century, in which the prospect of a
largely uninhabitable Earth leads to the breakdown of nations and the
international order.”
The
only way to avoid the risks of this scenario is what the report describes as
“akin in scale to the World War II emergency mobilization”—but this time
focused on rapidly building out a zero-emissions industrial system to set in
train the restoration of a safe climate.
The
scenario warns that our current trajectory will likely lock in at least 3
degrees Celsius (C) of global heating, which in turn could trigger further
amplifying feedbacks unleashing further warming. This would drive the
accelerating collapse of key ecosystems “including coral reef systems, the
Amazon rainforest and in the Arctic.”
The
results would be devastating. Some one billion people would be forced to
attempt to relocate from unlivable conditions, and two billion would face
scarcity of water supplies. Agriculture would collapse in the sub-tropics, and
food production would suffer dramatically worldwide. The internal cohesion of
nation-states like the US and China would unravel.
“Even
for 2°C of warming, more than a billion people may need to be relocated and in
high-end scenarios, the scale of destruction is beyond our capacity to model
with a high likelihood of human civilization coming to an end,” the report
notes.
The
new policy briefing is written by David Spratt, Breakthrough’s research
director and Ian Dunlop, a former senior executive of Royal Dutch Shell who
previously chaired the Australian Coal Association.
In
the briefing’s foreword, retired Admiral Chris Barrie—Chief of the Australian
Defence Force from 1998 to 2002 and former Deputy Chief of the Australian
Navy—commends the paper for laying “bare the unvarnished truth about the
desperate situation humans, and our planet, are in, painting a disturbing picture
of the real possibility that human life on Earth may be on the way to
extinction, in the most horrible way.”
Barrie
now works for the Climate Change Institute at Australian National University,
Canberra.
Spratt
told Motherboard that a key reason the risks are not understood is that “much
knowledge produced for policymakers is too conservative. Because the risks are
now existential, a new approach to climate and security risk assessment is
required using scenario analysis.”
Last
October, Motherboard
reported on scientific evidence that the UN’s summary report for government
policymakers on climate change—whose findings were widely recognized as
“devastating”—were in fact too optimistic.
While
the Breakthrough scenario sets out some of the more ‘high end’ risk
possibilities, it is often not possible to meaningfully quantify their
probabilities. As a result, the authors emphasize that conventional risk
approaches tend to downplay worst-case scenarios despite their plausibility.
Spratt
and Dunlop’s 2050 scenario illustrates how easy it could be to end up in an
accelerating runaway climate scenario which would lead to a largely
uninhabitable planet within just a few decades.
“A
high-end 2050 scenario finds a world in social breakdown and outright chaos,”
said Spratt. “But a short window of opportunity exists for an emergency, global
mobilization of resources, in which the logistical and planning experiences of
the national security sector could play a valuable role.”
Global mobilisation of the popular masses for a generalised socialist revolution, transferring the wealth and resources of the planet out of the hands of the multi-billionaire elite and planning for a livable future, seems to me to be a far superior idea to the notion suggested above that existing security/state agencies could step in and implement the necessary and urgently-required policies to deal with the climate/ecological crisis.
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