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A New War on the Planet?

By John Bellamy Foster
From the June 8, 2007 issue | Posted in International | Email this article

RadicalGraphics
RadicalGraphics
“The goal is clearly to save the climate — but only if capitalism can be fully preserved at the same time.”

By John Bellamy Foster

During the last year the global warming debate has reached a turning point.
Due to the media hype surrounding Al Gore’s film An Inconvenient Truth, followed by a new assessment by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the climate skeptics have suffered a major defeat. Suddenly the media and the public are awakening to what the scientific consensus has been saying for two decades on human-induced climate change and the dangers it poses to the future of life on earth. Proposed solutions to global warming are popping up everywhere, from the current biofuels panacea to geoengineering solutions such as pumping sulfur particles into the stratosphere to shade the earth from the sun to claims that a market in carbon dioxide emissions is the invisible hand that will save the world. “Let’s quit the debate about whether greenhouse gases are caused by mankind or by natural causes,” President Bush said in a hastily organized retreat. “Let’s just focus on technologies that deal with the issue.”

It is characteristic of the magic-bullet solutions that now pervade the media that they promise to defend our current way of life while remaining virtually cost free. Despite the fact that economists have long insisted that there is no such thing as a free lunch, we are now being told on every side — even by Gore — that where global warming is concerned there is a free lunch after all. We can have our cars, our industrial waste, our endlessly expanding commodity economy and climate stability too. Even the IPCC, in its policy proposals, tells us that climate change can be stopped on the cheap — if only the magic of technology and markets is applied.

The goal is clearly to save the planet — but only if capitalism can be fully preserved at the same time.

Hence, the most prominent proposals are shaped by the fact that they are designed to fit within the capitalist box. There can be no disruption of existing class or power relations. All proposed solutions must be compatible with the treadmill of production.

Even progressive thinkers such as George Monbiot in his new book Heat: How to Stop the Planet Burning have gotten into the act. Monbiot pointedly tells us that the rich countries can solve the global warming problem without becoming “Third World” states or shaking up “middle-class” life —or indeed interfering with the distribution of riches at all. Politics is carefully excluded from his analysis, which instead focuses on such things as more buses, better insulated homes, virtual work, virtual shopping and improved cement. Corporations, we are led to believe, are part of the solution, not part of the problem. Less progressive, more technocratic thinkers look for substitutes for hydrocarbons, such as biofuels or even nuclear power, or they talk of floating white plastic islands in the oceans (a geoengineering solution to replace the lost reflectivity due to melting ice).

The dominant answers to global warming thus amount to what might be thought of as a new declaration of war on nature. If nature has “struck back” at capitalism’s degradation of the environment in the form of climate change, the answer is to unleash a more powerful array of technological and market innovations so that the system can continue to expand as before.

As Hannah Arendt, one of the leading political philosophers of the 20th century, explained:

“Under modern [capitalist] conditions not destruction but conservation spells ruin.” Hence, capitalism, faced by natural obstacles, sees no alternative to a new assault on nature, employing new, high-tech armaments.

The ecological irrationality of this response is evident in the tendency to dissociate global warming from the global environmental crisis as a whole, which includes such problems as species extinction, destruction of the oceans, tropical deforestation, desertification, toxic wastes, etc.

It is then possible, from this narrow perspective, to promote biofuels as a partial solution to global warming — without acknowledging that this will accelerate world hunger. Or it is thought pragmatic to dump iron filings in the ocean (the so-called Geritol solution to global warming) in order to grow phytoplankton and increase the carbon absorbing capacity of the ocean — without connecting this at all to the current oceanic catastrophe. The fact that the biosphere is one interconnected whole is downplayed in favor of mere economic expediency.

What all of this suggests is that a real solution to the planetary environmental crisis cannot be accomplished simply through new technologies or through turning nature into a market. It is necessary to go to the root of the problem by addressing the social relations of production.

We must recognize that today’s ecological problems are related to a system of global inequality that demands ecological destruction as a necessary condition of its existence. New social and democratic solutions need to be developed and rooted in human community and sustainability, embodying principles of conservation that are essential to life. But this means stepping outside the capitalist box and making peace with the planet — and with other human beings.

John Bellamy Foster is a professor of sociology at the University of Oregon in Eugene, and editor of Monthly Review. He is the author of numerous books, including Ecology Against Capitalism.

Art: Radicalgraphics.org

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7 Responses to “A New War on the Planet?”

Guardian Story Says:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/g8/story/0,,2097889,00.html

Environmentalists dismiss G8 climate deal

Mark Tran
Thursday June 7, 2007

Guardian Unlimited
Environmental groups today dismissed a declaration from the world’s leading industrial powers on climate change as not worth the paper it was written on.

Activists were particularly disappointed at the lack of targets in the surprise agreement at the G8 summit in Germany.

“George Bush’s final gift to Blair falls short of what was needed to protect the climate. An agreement without targets is barely worth the paper it’s written on,” said the director of Greenpeace UK, John Sauven.

“This document acknowledges the seriousness of the situation then ducks reality by offering weasel words like ’seriously considering’, as if this was an after dinner discussion rather than the most important issue facing the world.”

In their declaration the G8 agreed to launch a comprehensive negotiation on climate change under UN auspices. It will start at the UN climate conference in Bali in December and negotiations will end by 2009. Until now, George Bush has resisted efforts, notably from Tony Blair, to bring the US into the UN process.

“In setting a global goal for emissions reductions in the process we have agreed today involving all major emitters, we will consider seriously the decisions made by the European Union, Canada and Japan which include at least a halving of global emissions by 2050,” the G8 said in the declaration.

Collectively the G8 countries, which make up 13% of the world’s population, are responsible for around 43% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, claimed victory in Europe’s battle to secure a deal on climate change when she said that her fellow leaders had agreed to make “substantial” cuts in greenhouse gases.

But environmentalists were unimpressed.

“This puts us at the lowest end of what is needed to curb climate change,” said George Gelber, head of policy at Cafod, the Catholic development agency. “They’ve not mentioned the key target of limiting the increase in average temperature to 2% and we believe - based on our interpretation of the science - that reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by the year 2050 is not enough.”

Friends of the Earth also criticised today’s G8 agreement as inadequate.

“We have already seen many empty promises by G8 leaders over the past years but there has not been much real action,” said Yuri Onodera of Friends of the Earth, “so we urge G8 leaders to act now and cut their greenhouse gas emissions drastically and immediately.”

Keith Allott, head of WWF-UK’s climate change programme, praised Ms Merkel for pushing hard for as robust an agreement as possible, but said Mr Blair had made only limited headway with Mr Bush.

“Tony Blair has staked his legacy on securing a tough emissions reduction goal and encouraging George Bush back into the UN process. He has made progress only on the second point - and even here, the proof of the pudding will come later.”

UK sources said the agreement was “better than expected” given the strong misgivings expressed by the US about the G8 setting specific targets for cuts in greenhouse gases.

G. R. L. Cowan, boron combustion fan Says:

Bellamy considers a number of irrationalities — biofuels, fortifying oceans with iron, improving the upper atmosphere with sulphate aerosols — to be the work of capitalism. I disagree.

Capitalism’s need for good government does not require that government to tax one particular activity much more than others, so that persons on public payrolls become, in effect, rentiers on that activity. But publically funded people, including, perhaps, the professor himself, are fossil fuel rentiers.

It is on their behalf, and for the pennies they fling, that bizarre remedies for fossil fuels’ environmental effects are proposed, and ineffective substitutes are proposed, and nuclear energy is denigrated.

S. Jennifer Gray Charnoe Says:

My husband, Zee Charnoe, has the technologies and the understanding of consciousness,
realizing the need for sociological change.
Please visit our website. It is a work in progress, funded by a friend, with numerous photo albums in the ‘Gallery’ and documents on consciousness and the intermittent reality in ‘Downloads’. There is also a free book, ANACLYSM, under ‘downloads’ under ‘books’,
(minus the cover and illustrations).
Thank you,
S. Jennifer Gray Charnoe

ike Says:

You have to look into the scientific details behind all these varying claims, or you will end up doing more harm than good, despite the best of intentions.

Over and over, we see attacks against biofuels based on the corrupt and unfair structure of international trade - and these are usually accompanied by claims that ‘biofuels will starve the developing world’.

Well, the developing world is already starving, thanks to the trade deals engineered by the IMF, World Bank and so on. The developing world is prevented from having access to desperately needed medicines thanks to the pharmaceutical corporations and TRIPS agreements that prevent drugs from being produced.

This is not the fault of a molecule of biofuel - it’s the fault of the ongoing human desires for wealth, power and luxurious lifestyles, complete with servants and slaves.

It’s like any other technology - metals, for example. You can make bombs and tanks, or you can make solar water heaters and farming implements.

The fact is, solving these problems will require cooperation between scientists, engineers, lawyers, civil servants, and every other person who hasn’t been corrupted by greed and the desire for wealth and power. The approproate technology must be matched with appropriate social structures.

This will take a lot of very hard work - and if you’re not willing to put your nose to the grindstone, at least get out of the way of people who are trying to make a difference.

Vispi Jokhi Says:

This is kite flying or day dreaming. While technology will have a role the wheel of “progress” will have to be turned partially back. Solar energy, wind power, organic farming, biodegradable plastic packings, eco-friendly construction materials and use of LED’s and CFL’s are the likely solutions. Simple living and high thinking is the way forward.

Vag Shantharam Shenai Says:

16.7.07 Once NATURE phenomenon is deeply understood, a perfect theory is possible. This then gets converted into technology. Today, INDIA has demonstrated the ability to convert ALL pollution into RESOURCES, thus QUICKLY reverse ALL the damage of GLOBAL WARMING. Today, its possible to serve ALL human needs as NATURE planned, while also serving quite some greed of man too :) The energy from the SUN is simply huge and through ECOLOGY, can power ALL human activity very easily. Heaven on Earth is now possible. VAG SHANTHARAM SHENAI (INDIA) www.wastetohealth.com

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