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Clandestines Re-loaded: Leaving This Stage of History
1. The Quiet Apocalypse of Rising Tides
Climate change is everywhere, and the somewhat momentous report released February 3 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) confirms that climate change is man-made, and unstoppable. The 21-page report, described as conservative by the IPCC itself, says man-made emissions of greenhouse gases are to blame for heat waves, floods and heavy rains, droughts and stronger storms (particularly in the Atlantic Ocean), melting ice-caps and raising sea-levels.
Climate change is even penetrating
the fears of the righteously paranoid
psyches of the scientists and nuclear
physicists of the preeminent Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists. Their “Doomsday Clock” has been ticking away to
midnight – the figurative end of civilization – for 61 years of nuclear holocaust
watching. They have moved the clock
two minutes closer to midnight – now
standing at a perilous five minutes to
midnight – not only because of the increase in likelihood of nuclear war with
the recent events around North Korea
and Iran, but also citing “the potential
for catastrophic damage from human-
made technologies.” In what represents
a decisive paradigm shift for the Atomic
Scientists, Kennette Benedict, director
of the bulletin said, “The dangers posed
by climate change are nearly as dire as
those posed by nuclear weapons”.
Climate change was a top priority at the recent conference of world business leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos, as well as the conference of NGO operatives at the World Social Forum in Nairobi. Meanwhile, the European Commission urged its members to adopt an unprecedented common energy policy, aimed at cutting greenhouse gases by 20 percent by 2020. It calls for a “post-industrial revolution” based on a dramatic shift to an internally produced low-carbon energy economy.
Climate change has finally arrived at the White House. President Bush’s State of the Union address, January 27, marked a milestone for his administration in terms of actually recognizing that we may indeed have a man-made problem after all. He acknowledged climate change as “a serious challenge” and the need for reduction in fossil fuel consumption. Rather than announcing a mandatory cap on emissions along the lines of the globally accepted Kyoto Protocol, Bush instead meekly recommend- ed an added emphasis on renewable or non-carbon energy sources — ethanol, wind, solar and nuclear power. As the worlds leading producer of greenhouse gases, these are hardly the momentous steps needed by the US to put a break on runaway global warming.
What is to be done in the face of the looming catastrophe? The predominant global platform to deal with fundamental issues that affect all of humanity is the United Nations. The new UN boss Ban Ki-Moon has been asked to convene an emergency international summit. “Climate change,” responded Moon, “is one of the most important and urgent agendas that the international community has to address before 2012.” An emergency global conference organized by the UN seems imminently urgent, and Nairobi has been suggested as a host.
But wasn’t there an emergency climate change conference in Nairobi just a couple of months ago? Wasn’t the much heralded 12th UN Conference on Climate Change and 2nd Meeting of the Parties of the Kyoto Protocol held there in November 2006? Of course it was; and its abysmal failure to produce agreements between nations and to begin building capacity for dealing with climate-induced problems has been brushed under the carpet.
To understand how limited the UN structure is in dealing with the urgency of the matter and how these grand global meetings are manipulated and side-tracked by powerful business and economic interests, it’s worth returning to Nairobi in November to have a closer look at the workings of the UN.
2. Journey into the Heart of UN Darkness Nairobi, Kenya, November 15, 2006.
Climate change is everywhere, especially in 3rd world metropolises like Nairobi. Stuck in a massive traffic jam from the airport to the city center, I ask the taxi driver if people here know much about climate change and global warming. The driver nearly ploughs into a passing family of four on a bicycle as he was laughing so mirthfully.
“Droughts, floods, famines, the rain comes heavy or don’t come at all,” he says. “Yes, of course we know all about global warning!”
He goes on to explain how the Brit- ish colonizers had chosen the site of Nairobi as the capital because it was cool and mosquito free.
“This is no longer the fact,” explains the taxi man. “Now Nairobi is warm and we are plagued by mosquitoes.”
This bustling city is like a blueprint for all major population centers in the not too distant future – a place overburdened by massive migration from the countryside, chronic insecurity, and an infrastructure woefully inadequate to deal with basic matters of water, drainage, transport, and communication. Nairobi hosts one of the world’s largest slums – Kuresoi, population over one million living in dire poverty. The living conditions contrasts obscenely with the lush, UN enclosure occupying most of the posh district of Gigiri. The wealthy enclave hosts numerous embassies, government minister residencies, NGO headquarters and a massive shopping mall, all heavily patrolled by armed guards and state of the art security features. The walled oasis of the privileged elites exists uneasily amidst a desert of the multitudes depravity, like a global Baghdad Green Zone.
This 12th session of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) conference also serves as the second meeting of the parties to the Kyoto Protocol. The 1997 Protocol is a legally binding set of targets for cutting carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for developed nations to an average of 95 percent of individual countries’ 1990 levels. Baby steps perhaps, but still too great a leap for the USA. 186 countries have signed the Kyoto Protocol but still the US baulks. The US produces a quarter of global greenhouse gases but has only 4 percent of the world’s population. The whole of Africa, in contrast, emits just 3.5 percent.
The keystone document for this particular conference is the Stern Report. Where once global warming was seen as an ecological and environmental issue, the report focuses on the economics of climate change. The study led by World Bank Economist Sir Nicholas Stern, with its dizzying array of figures and calculations, leads inexorably to the conclusion that the battle against climate change makes good economic sense. The financial cost of action, it warns sternly, will be much less than the cost of inaction.
With all the verve of Michael Moore, I door-stepped one of the official US delegates rushing along the corridor. He is an immaculately presented young man with the appearance of a Navy Seal and the arrogant attitude of a cantankerous frat boy. As the largest single contributor to the greenhouse effect and global warming, I asked him, was there any sign of change in the US position on restricting carbon emissions or signing up to the Kyoto Protocol, with the other 186 nations?
“There are no signs of change in that policy soon,” the delegate answered somewhat mechanically and definitely disinterested. “The US won’t sign the Kyoto Protocol.”
“Even in light of the Stern Report which suggests the world economy will shrink by 20 percent, isn’t there a clear economic imperative to tackle the problem,” I insisted somewhat earnestly, “and...”
He stopped me in my tracks, looked me up and down for my credentials to ascertain who I was or to what organization I belonged. Unaccredited, a gatecrasher of sorts, I lack my badge.
“Who the heck are you?” he quipped somewhat amusingly, “some kind of Irish Borat?”
Over at Plenary Room 2, the conference was in full swing before a great assembly of dignitaries and functionaries fanned out in a great swathe of seated rows. The speaker’s voice boomed over the PA and their image was projected on two huge video screens on the flanking walls like a U2 concert. The delegates glanced at their lap-tops, whispered on their cellphones, sipped bottled water, and occasionally listened in on the simultaneous translation earphones. Sure enough, the gripping words of His Eminence Nurlan A. Iskakov, Minister of Environment Protection of Kazakhstan went unappreciated. When the senior US representative, Paula Dobriansky, Undersecretary of Democracy and Global Affairs took the stage, a hush finally descended, cellphones were downed and the whole auditorium paid rapt attention.
“The most effective strategies on climate change,” said Under Secretary Dobriansky, a hardcore Bush-ite and neocon, “are those that are integrated with economic growth, with energy security, and reducing air pollution.”
In her oblique obfuscation, she is spelling out US refusal to agree on mandatory emissions limits, thereby wrecking any concerted global attempt to move forward at this conference. Dubriansky’s supercilious presentation talks up US aid to Africa and, by omission, reiterates the Bush administrations mantra that unfettered US led capitalist globalization hand-in-hand with war in the Middle East to secure oil supplies are the priorities.
Global warming, or “air pollution” as the unctuous Under Secretary refers to it, is a sideshow attraction to the main event – capitalist expansion. Business as usual then on the United Nations world stage: US economic interests come first and the UN is held hostage to the world’s sole superpower. Taking lead from US intransigence, other heavyweight capitalist globalizers (and emerging major contributors to the greenhouse effect) China and India steadfastly refuse to cap their emissions citing their own economic interests. Joining the refusenik fest, Russia also begins to drag its feet.
“The conference has let Africa and the rest of the developing world down,” said Oxfam. Maybe the conference has let down Oxfam and the other NGOs speaking on behalf of Africans, but meanwhile some with a more critical understanding of what the conference can actually achieve were getting on with some practical direct action.
“We should not wait until Mombassa is under water,” said Kenyan Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai, at a conference side event. “We know the problems. The problem that we have is what to do. What will make the difference is not the negotiations, but what we do when we go home.”
Known locally as “the tree lady” due to her propensity to encourage Africans to plant trees, she is part of a movement whose aim is to plant our way out of the crisis. Trees perform as carbon sinks, inhaling CO2 and hence offsetting CO2 emissions: to re-forest Africa with a billion trees appropriate to regional diversity is the target of the Green Belt Movement.
3. Towards a Globalized New Orleans, or the End of Capitalism.
One could despair, and indeed many in the global north speculate upon the wisdom of having (more) kids considering the nefarious world they may well inherit. Meanwhile, people in the south – in places like drought-ridden northern Kenya – have the more pressing issue of wondering how they will feed their living kids.
It seems a hopeless situation. Two thousand of the world’s eminent scientists and experts confirm that climate variability is a product of human activity, and that nevertheless we might have a short window of opportunity – say 15 years – to do something about it, but there isn’t the political will to act amongst the powers that be. Not just the United States, China, and Russia, but even European “champions” of the cause refuse to set an example. While his government will say in the strongest terms it is “an imperative” to take action to prevent further climate damage, Prime Minister Tony Blair will still baulk at personal sacrifices. “I think these things are a bit impractical actually to expect people to do that,” said Blair in response to the suggestion that cutting back on flights might be a positive step. For him, science will save the planet. “All the evidence is that if you use the science and the technology constructively, your economy can grow, people can have a good time, but do so more responsibly.”
A conclusion shared by President Bush. “Leaving behind the debate whether global warming is caused by natural or man-made causes,” said Bush chillingly to the New York Times in an article that ran May 25 of last year, “we are going to focus solely in the technologies which can resolve the problem”.
The front-runner is ethanol. But replacing fossil fuels – an intensely compact source of fuel – with crop derived bio-ethanol requires felling vast tracks of forest to make way for plantations, thereby creating even more ecological damage.
Meanwhile, entering into the twilight zone of capitalist solutions to capitalist problems, we find the resurrection of the old technological boogeyman: nuclear energy, or the new bio-technical Frankenstein: genetically modified biofuel crops. Both these solutions may be low-carbon, but the potential ecological cost of the energy succeeds in merely pushing the climate change problem upriver a while.
Another solution involves juggling carbon around. With capitalism’s love of the market we now have complicated emissions trading schemes for “cost-effective” reductions in carbon emissions (selling them on) and, more bizarrely, carbon drops – including the notions of storing emissions under the sea bed or down disused mine shafts.
Capitalism’s last technological card and one that is proving a current growth business is geo-engineering - the intentional manipulation of the climate. Taking inspiration from the CIA’s (unsuccessful) attempts to provoke intense rains over Vietnam to wash out the rebels’ crops, to the Chinese Olympic committee’s promise to secure sunny days for the 2008 Olympics via technical measures, the geo-engineering industry is having a field day in the era of climate variability. From attempts to fertilize the ocean in order to lower the water temperature, to filling the sky with sulphate nano-particles to intercept sun-rays, geo-engineer scientists are busy interfering with and intervening upon the climate, undeterred by potential disequilibrium disasters or mass contamination.
Beyond technological meddling, dealing with the problem of climate change – ecologically, politically, economically, and socially – needs a lot more than the Kyoto Protocol, developing alternative energies, or holding another emergency Climate Change Conference. It is necessary to consider the root of the problem. A global economy based on the colossal demand for highly concentrated and rapidly depleting fossil fuel deposits is ecologically unsustainable. Do we need to change fuel or change the structure of consumption? But under the present model – global capitalism – is change possible, or even desirable?
“Capitalism has always relied on infinite expansionism in a finite planet,” explains Alex Troochi of the Anarchist Green Apple Collective. “Something has to give and at the moment, it’s the planet that’s giving as capitalism plunders ahead.”
Capitalism relies on ever- expanding markets and inputs to continue to make profits based on the extraction of natural resources and transforming them into dead capital. This ceaseless addiction to growth-for-growth sake leads inexorably to ecotastrophe. Capitalism is now being forced to consider other strategies. But the magic technological or scientific bullet to save the day remains illusive.
Hope lies beyond the pale; it requires a fundamental shift in thinking, a revolutionary paradigm shift away from the cloistered confines of the imagination of the United States government, the European Union or the United Nations assembly. In the long term, the human world will have to evolve some kind of post-capitalist society to survive.
The doomsday clock ticks away at a perilous five minutes to twelve. Meanwhile, it’s still early morning on the revolutionary clock. Despite the alarm ringing, the revolutionary protagonist, although stirring, has yet to awake. Once again the prophetic words of Buenaventura Durruti, the famous anarchist of the 1936 Spanish Revolution, come around to both haunt and inspire us:
“We are not in the least afraid of ruins... The bourgeoisie might blast and ruin its own world before it leaves the stage of history. We carry a new world here, in our hearts. That world is growing this minute.”
From Fault Lines #20
Climate change was a top priority at the recent conference of world business leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos, as well as the conference of NGO operatives at the World Social Forum in Nairobi. Meanwhile, the European Commission urged its members to adopt an unprecedented common energy policy, aimed at cutting greenhouse gases by 20 percent by 2020. It calls for a “post-industrial revolution” based on a dramatic shift to an internally produced low-carbon energy economy.
Climate change has finally arrived at the White House. President Bush’s State of the Union address, January 27, marked a milestone for his administration in terms of actually recognizing that we may indeed have a man-made problem after all. He acknowledged climate change as “a serious challenge” and the need for reduction in fossil fuel consumption. Rather than announcing a mandatory cap on emissions along the lines of the globally accepted Kyoto Protocol, Bush instead meekly recommend- ed an added emphasis on renewable or non-carbon energy sources — ethanol, wind, solar and nuclear power. As the worlds leading producer of greenhouse gases, these are hardly the momentous steps needed by the US to put a break on runaway global warming.
What is to be done in the face of the looming catastrophe? The predominant global platform to deal with fundamental issues that affect all of humanity is the United Nations. The new UN boss Ban Ki-Moon has been asked to convene an emergency international summit. “Climate change,” responded Moon, “is one of the most important and urgent agendas that the international community has to address before 2012.” An emergency global conference organized by the UN seems imminently urgent, and Nairobi has been suggested as a host.
But wasn’t there an emergency climate change conference in Nairobi just a couple of months ago? Wasn’t the much heralded 12th UN Conference on Climate Change and 2nd Meeting of the Parties of the Kyoto Protocol held there in November 2006? Of course it was; and its abysmal failure to produce agreements between nations and to begin building capacity for dealing with climate-induced problems has been brushed under the carpet.
To understand how limited the UN structure is in dealing with the urgency of the matter and how these grand global meetings are manipulated and side-tracked by powerful business and economic interests, it’s worth returning to Nairobi in November to have a closer look at the workings of the UN.
2. Journey into the Heart of UN Darkness Nairobi, Kenya, November 15, 2006.
Climate change is everywhere, especially in 3rd world metropolises like Nairobi. Stuck in a massive traffic jam from the airport to the city center, I ask the taxi driver if people here know much about climate change and global warming. The driver nearly ploughs into a passing family of four on a bicycle as he was laughing so mirthfully.
“Droughts, floods, famines, the rain comes heavy or don’t come at all,” he says. “Yes, of course we know all about global warning!”
He goes on to explain how the Brit- ish colonizers had chosen the site of Nairobi as the capital because it was cool and mosquito free.
“This is no longer the fact,” explains the taxi man. “Now Nairobi is warm and we are plagued by mosquitoes.”
This bustling city is like a blueprint for all major population centers in the not too distant future – a place overburdened by massive migration from the countryside, chronic insecurity, and an infrastructure woefully inadequate to deal with basic matters of water, drainage, transport, and communication. Nairobi hosts one of the world’s largest slums – Kuresoi, population over one million living in dire poverty. The living conditions contrasts obscenely with the lush, UN enclosure occupying most of the posh district of Gigiri. The wealthy enclave hosts numerous embassies, government minister residencies, NGO headquarters and a massive shopping mall, all heavily patrolled by armed guards and state of the art security features. The walled oasis of the privileged elites exists uneasily amidst a desert of the multitudes depravity, like a global Baghdad Green Zone.
This 12th session of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) conference also serves as the second meeting of the parties to the Kyoto Protocol. The 1997 Protocol is a legally binding set of targets for cutting carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for developed nations to an average of 95 percent of individual countries’ 1990 levels. Baby steps perhaps, but still too great a leap for the USA. 186 countries have signed the Kyoto Protocol but still the US baulks. The US produces a quarter of global greenhouse gases but has only 4 percent of the world’s population. The whole of Africa, in contrast, emits just 3.5 percent.
The keystone document for this particular conference is the Stern Report. Where once global warming was seen as an ecological and environmental issue, the report focuses on the economics of climate change. The study led by World Bank Economist Sir Nicholas Stern, with its dizzying array of figures and calculations, leads inexorably to the conclusion that the battle against climate change makes good economic sense. The financial cost of action, it warns sternly, will be much less than the cost of inaction.
With all the verve of Michael Moore, I door-stepped one of the official US delegates rushing along the corridor. He is an immaculately presented young man with the appearance of a Navy Seal and the arrogant attitude of a cantankerous frat boy. As the largest single contributor to the greenhouse effect and global warming, I asked him, was there any sign of change in the US position on restricting carbon emissions or signing up to the Kyoto Protocol, with the other 186 nations?
“There are no signs of change in that policy soon,” the delegate answered somewhat mechanically and definitely disinterested. “The US won’t sign the Kyoto Protocol.”
“Even in light of the Stern Report which suggests the world economy will shrink by 20 percent, isn’t there a clear economic imperative to tackle the problem,” I insisted somewhat earnestly, “and...”
He stopped me in my tracks, looked me up and down for my credentials to ascertain who I was or to what organization I belonged. Unaccredited, a gatecrasher of sorts, I lack my badge.
“Who the heck are you?” he quipped somewhat amusingly, “some kind of Irish Borat?”
Over at Plenary Room 2, the conference was in full swing before a great assembly of dignitaries and functionaries fanned out in a great swathe of seated rows. The speaker’s voice boomed over the PA and their image was projected on two huge video screens on the flanking walls like a U2 concert. The delegates glanced at their lap-tops, whispered on their cellphones, sipped bottled water, and occasionally listened in on the simultaneous translation earphones. Sure enough, the gripping words of His Eminence Nurlan A. Iskakov, Minister of Environment Protection of Kazakhstan went unappreciated. When the senior US representative, Paula Dobriansky, Undersecretary of Democracy and Global Affairs took the stage, a hush finally descended, cellphones were downed and the whole auditorium paid rapt attention.
“The most effective strategies on climate change,” said Under Secretary Dobriansky, a hardcore Bush-ite and neocon, “are those that are integrated with economic growth, with energy security, and reducing air pollution.”
In her oblique obfuscation, she is spelling out US refusal to agree on mandatory emissions limits, thereby wrecking any concerted global attempt to move forward at this conference. Dubriansky’s supercilious presentation talks up US aid to Africa and, by omission, reiterates the Bush administrations mantra that unfettered US led capitalist globalization hand-in-hand with war in the Middle East to secure oil supplies are the priorities.
Global warming, or “air pollution” as the unctuous Under Secretary refers to it, is a sideshow attraction to the main event – capitalist expansion. Business as usual then on the United Nations world stage: US economic interests come first and the UN is held hostage to the world’s sole superpower. Taking lead from US intransigence, other heavyweight capitalist globalizers (and emerging major contributors to the greenhouse effect) China and India steadfastly refuse to cap their emissions citing their own economic interests. Joining the refusenik fest, Russia also begins to drag its feet.
“The conference has let Africa and the rest of the developing world down,” said Oxfam. Maybe the conference has let down Oxfam and the other NGOs speaking on behalf of Africans, but meanwhile some with a more critical understanding of what the conference can actually achieve were getting on with some practical direct action.
“We should not wait until Mombassa is under water,” said Kenyan Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai, at a conference side event. “We know the problems. The problem that we have is what to do. What will make the difference is not the negotiations, but what we do when we go home.”
Known locally as “the tree lady” due to her propensity to encourage Africans to plant trees, she is part of a movement whose aim is to plant our way out of the crisis. Trees perform as carbon sinks, inhaling CO2 and hence offsetting CO2 emissions: to re-forest Africa with a billion trees appropriate to regional diversity is the target of the Green Belt Movement.
3. Towards a Globalized New Orleans, or the End of Capitalism.
One could despair, and indeed many in the global north speculate upon the wisdom of having (more) kids considering the nefarious world they may well inherit. Meanwhile, people in the south – in places like drought-ridden northern Kenya – have the more pressing issue of wondering how they will feed their living kids.
It seems a hopeless situation. Two thousand of the world’s eminent scientists and experts confirm that climate variability is a product of human activity, and that nevertheless we might have a short window of opportunity – say 15 years – to do something about it, but there isn’t the political will to act amongst the powers that be. Not just the United States, China, and Russia, but even European “champions” of the cause refuse to set an example. While his government will say in the strongest terms it is “an imperative” to take action to prevent further climate damage, Prime Minister Tony Blair will still baulk at personal sacrifices. “I think these things are a bit impractical actually to expect people to do that,” said Blair in response to the suggestion that cutting back on flights might be a positive step. For him, science will save the planet. “All the evidence is that if you use the science and the technology constructively, your economy can grow, people can have a good time, but do so more responsibly.”
A conclusion shared by President Bush. “Leaving behind the debate whether global warming is caused by natural or man-made causes,” said Bush chillingly to the New York Times in an article that ran May 25 of last year, “we are going to focus solely in the technologies which can resolve the problem”.
The front-runner is ethanol. But replacing fossil fuels – an intensely compact source of fuel – with crop derived bio-ethanol requires felling vast tracks of forest to make way for plantations, thereby creating even more ecological damage.
Meanwhile, entering into the twilight zone of capitalist solutions to capitalist problems, we find the resurrection of the old technological boogeyman: nuclear energy, or the new bio-technical Frankenstein: genetically modified biofuel crops. Both these solutions may be low-carbon, but the potential ecological cost of the energy succeeds in merely pushing the climate change problem upriver a while.
Another solution involves juggling carbon around. With capitalism’s love of the market we now have complicated emissions trading schemes for “cost-effective” reductions in carbon emissions (selling them on) and, more bizarrely, carbon drops – including the notions of storing emissions under the sea bed or down disused mine shafts.
Capitalism’s last technological card and one that is proving a current growth business is geo-engineering - the intentional manipulation of the climate. Taking inspiration from the CIA’s (unsuccessful) attempts to provoke intense rains over Vietnam to wash out the rebels’ crops, to the Chinese Olympic committee’s promise to secure sunny days for the 2008 Olympics via technical measures, the geo-engineering industry is having a field day in the era of climate variability. From attempts to fertilize the ocean in order to lower the water temperature, to filling the sky with sulphate nano-particles to intercept sun-rays, geo-engineer scientists are busy interfering with and intervening upon the climate, undeterred by potential disequilibrium disasters or mass contamination.
Beyond technological meddling, dealing with the problem of climate change – ecologically, politically, economically, and socially – needs a lot more than the Kyoto Protocol, developing alternative energies, or holding another emergency Climate Change Conference. It is necessary to consider the root of the problem. A global economy based on the colossal demand for highly concentrated and rapidly depleting fossil fuel deposits is ecologically unsustainable. Do we need to change fuel or change the structure of consumption? But under the present model – global capitalism – is change possible, or even desirable?
“Capitalism has always relied on infinite expansionism in a finite planet,” explains Alex Troochi of the Anarchist Green Apple Collective. “Something has to give and at the moment, it’s the planet that’s giving as capitalism plunders ahead.”
Capitalism relies on ever- expanding markets and inputs to continue to make profits based on the extraction of natural resources and transforming them into dead capital. This ceaseless addiction to growth-for-growth sake leads inexorably to ecotastrophe. Capitalism is now being forced to consider other strategies. But the magic technological or scientific bullet to save the day remains illusive.
Hope lies beyond the pale; it requires a fundamental shift in thinking, a revolutionary paradigm shift away from the cloistered confines of the imagination of the United States government, the European Union or the United Nations assembly. In the long term, the human world will have to evolve some kind of post-capitalist society to survive.
The doomsday clock ticks away at a perilous five minutes to twelve. Meanwhile, it’s still early morning on the revolutionary clock. Despite the alarm ringing, the revolutionary protagonist, although stirring, has yet to awake. Once again the prophetic words of Buenaventura Durruti, the famous anarchist of the 1936 Spanish Revolution, come around to both haunt and inspire us:
“We are not in the least afraid of ruins... The bourgeoisie might blast and ruin its own world before it leaves the stage of history. We carry a new world here, in our hearts. That world is growing this minute.”
From Fault Lines #20
For more information:
http://indybay.org/faultlines
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(Hide Comments)
It is unlikely that mankind will significantly cut their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the short term.
A growing and developing population is likely to increase their GHG emissions (expected to double by mid-century), not so severely cut them so fast as to avoid runaway global warming.
Nature now soaks up about half of mankind's CO2 emissions, but that is expected to reduce 30% by 2030. Furthermore, as the world heats up, carbon sinks will become carbon emitters.
In other words, whatever reasonable cuts we can expect mankind to make in their GHG emissions, they will be overwhelmed by nature.
In particular is melting methane hydrate. Incredibly, hydrate contains twice the carbon of all fossil fuel, and whereas fossil fuel needs to be burned to emit GHG, hydrate needs only to melt.
Briefly, carbon in the soil is "eaten" by microbes, and in the absence of oxygen the microbes emit methane (CH4). Some of that methane gets trapped in ice called hydrate.
There is about 400 billion tons of methane trapped in permafrost hydrate (20% of the land on earth is permafrost). 50% of the surface permafrost is expected to melt by 2050, and over 90% by 2100.
A release of less than 30 billion tons of methane would be like doubling the CO2 in the air.
Worse, there is an estimated 10,000 billion tons of methane hydrate under the ocean. Substantial quantities of this has melted before with catastrophic results (55 million years ago-the PETM ushered in the Age of Mammals, and 250 million years ago-the "Great Dying" killed most life on earth).
In other words, the carbon cycle has been upset before (possibly by volcanic eruptions), causing a chain reaction. Mankind's GHG emissions are over 30 times stronger a trigger than past severe runaway global warming events. This means the chain reaction will happen sooner, unfold faster, and therefore be much, much more severe.
And some suggest adaptation?
To summarize, the mitigation strategy of human GHG emission cuts is implausible, because soon runaway global warming makes them too little, too late. Furthermore, past runaway global warming events make adaptation implausible, because the climate change is too severe.
Therefore, the only solution is to remove the CO2 from the air after it has been emitted. Nature already does this but we are overwhelming her ability to cope.
I suggest improving nature's ability to absorb CO2 with genetic engineering (perhaps seeding a genetically modified organism into the ocean).
A growing and developing population is likely to increase their GHG emissions (expected to double by mid-century), not so severely cut them so fast as to avoid runaway global warming.
Nature now soaks up about half of mankind's CO2 emissions, but that is expected to reduce 30% by 2030. Furthermore, as the world heats up, carbon sinks will become carbon emitters.
In other words, whatever reasonable cuts we can expect mankind to make in their GHG emissions, they will be overwhelmed by nature.
In particular is melting methane hydrate. Incredibly, hydrate contains twice the carbon of all fossil fuel, and whereas fossil fuel needs to be burned to emit GHG, hydrate needs only to melt.
Briefly, carbon in the soil is "eaten" by microbes, and in the absence of oxygen the microbes emit methane (CH4). Some of that methane gets trapped in ice called hydrate.
There is about 400 billion tons of methane trapped in permafrost hydrate (20% of the land on earth is permafrost). 50% of the surface permafrost is expected to melt by 2050, and over 90% by 2100.
A release of less than 30 billion tons of methane would be like doubling the CO2 in the air.
Worse, there is an estimated 10,000 billion tons of methane hydrate under the ocean. Substantial quantities of this has melted before with catastrophic results (55 million years ago-the PETM ushered in the Age of Mammals, and 250 million years ago-the "Great Dying" killed most life on earth).
In other words, the carbon cycle has been upset before (possibly by volcanic eruptions), causing a chain reaction. Mankind's GHG emissions are over 30 times stronger a trigger than past severe runaway global warming events. This means the chain reaction will happen sooner, unfold faster, and therefore be much, much more severe.
And some suggest adaptation?
To summarize, the mitigation strategy of human GHG emission cuts is implausible, because soon runaway global warming makes them too little, too late. Furthermore, past runaway global warming events make adaptation implausible, because the climate change is too severe.
Therefore, the only solution is to remove the CO2 from the air after it has been emitted. Nature already does this but we are overwhelming her ability to cope.
I suggest improving nature's ability to absorb CO2 with genetic engineering (perhaps seeding a genetically modified organism into the ocean).
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