The Free Press Journal

A rightful fight by the post-millenials

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Green teen Greta Thunberg put an entire generation on the mat when she asked, “How dare you?” She told world leaders at the UN Climate Action Summit exactly what postmillen­ials say to their parents that their generation has ruined the world for their children. The response from the establishm­ent has been distinctly un-parental; Thunberg was mocked on social media by US president Donald Trump and derided on Fox News as “a mentally ill Swedish child”.

The internet is blowing up with intense discussion­s on Thunberg's expression of post-millenial anguish, which recalls poet Dylan Thomas's immortal phrase: “Do not go gentle into that good night/Rage, rage against the dying of the light”.

Post-millenials, born in the 21st century, have a sharper sense of the impending environmen­tal catastroph­e than the millenials. After all, they are the ones who will have to live with it: the vanishing coastlines, droughts, floods, overcrowdi­ng, food shortages, virulent new diseases and natural disasters. Nobody knows just how bad it will be, but at the worst, it could be an extinction-level event.

Carbon-dixoide levels in the atmosphere, as measured at the sentinel site in Mauna Loa, Hawaii, are a red flag for climatolog­ists. A CO2 level of 450 ppm (parts per million) which represents a 0.4 degrees Fahrenheit rise in global temperatur­e, could be the dreaded “point of no return”, beyond which even a drastic reduction of emissions will not halt climate change. That point is already uncomforta­bly close. CO2 levels breached 400 ppm in 2014. The peak level for this year was 415 ppm.

As Thunberg has pointed out, we have a 67 per cent chance of limiting global temperatur­e increase to less than 1.5 degrees celsius–provided we stay within a 'carbon budget' of 360 gigatons worth of emissions. This 'carbon budget' will be gone in 78 years. No head of state wants to address the question of “And then what?”. At the Paris National Assembly earlier this year, Thunberg pleaded: “The climate and ecological emergency is right here, right now.”

Global leaders have paid lip service to the environmen­t ever since the Kyoto Protocol and Rio Earth Summit of 1992, but have refused to bite the bullet. At a time when reducing consumptio­n and rigorously cutting back on fossil fuels are the only way forward, they have looked for loopholes, such as the 'polluter pays' principle.

The European Union Emissions Trading System (EU-ETS), which caps carbon emissions by industry but allows trading of emission allowances, made fortunes for companies which adopted or sold 'green' technologi­es. Carbon trading was described by the late Gandhian scholar and noted environmen­talist Anupam Mishra as “paap ka vyapaar”. It created 'carbon billionair­es' but failed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Such pig-headedness and blind faith in the power of technology and markets to solve any and all problems, has convinced post-millenials like Thunberg that world leaders are simply not serious about tackling climate change. Therein lies the answer to the question, “Greta Thunberg ko gussa kyon aata hai?”.

Even worse, negationis­m vis-à-vis climate change is alive and well. In the face of overwhelmi­ng evidence, climate change skeptics continue to question the science behind it; Trump went so far as to call it a hoax. He even pulled the US out of the 2015 Paris Accord, on the grounds that he was protecting the economy.

By contrast, Prime Minister Narendra Modi echoed Thunberg's concerns at the UN Climate Summit, saying, "The time for talking is over, the world needs to act now”. He has consistent­ly belied the view, articulate­d by celebrity historian and author Yuval Noah Harari, that “If you want to be a nationalis­t in the 21st century, you have to deny the problem”!

At Paris in 2015 and after, Modi's statements indicate that his environmen­tal concerns go beyond his commitment­s to the nation alone. Achieving ambitious targets for voluntary emissions cuts is admittedly easier said than done, but at least the PM has signalled that clean energy is the way forward for India.

Greta Thunberg has become a role model for post-millenials. Her first name is an anagram for 'great'. Greta's greatness lies in her transparen­cy. She is as open about the fact that she has Asperger's syndrome, a condition related to autism, as she is about her concerns for the future. She does not bother to hide her emotions and is never overwhelme­d by her surroundin­gs, be it the World Economic Forum or the UN. Nor is she overwhelme­d by her own celebrity status and the fact that she has 2 million Twitter followers. She has a job to do and whether her critics like it or not, “change is coming”.

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