US must use influence over climate change
IN his address to the United Nations General Assembly, US President Donald Trump made no mention of climate change, while emphasising individual liberty and national sovereignty.
However, the principle of equal liberty calls on us to maximize our own freedom without interfering with the freedom of others.
Human-induced climate change is causing sea level rise by warming oceans and melting land ice.
Consider that 20 million Bangladeshis are farming on land that is within a metre of high tide.
Their freedoms should be meaningful as well.
And how might President Trump’s view of climate change be different if he was the head of a small island nation, whose survival is threatened by climate change, even though it has contributed very little to global carbon dioxide emissions?
What about the sovereignty of Fiji and the Marshall Islands?
Although liberty is a fundamental right, the flip side of every right is a responsibility.
Indian scientist Vandana Shiva points out that the “separation of rights and responsibilities is the beginning of any destructive enterprise”.
America has a unique ability to lead and influence our world, and the United States should embrace that role with respect to climate action.
TERRY HANSEN By email