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Climate action needs to come from the people

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The world’s climate — as all but the most deluded climate change deniers know — is changing rapidly because of mankind’s impacts on nature. Thankfully, the atmosphere of humanity’s climate action is also transformi­ng for the better. Increasing­ly, it is becoming clear to activists that climate action is not something that we can leave to our government­s, the way we do economic policy, national security or urban planning. If there was something to learn from the UN Climate Action Summit in New York last month, it was the stark contrast between the urgent, even extreme, language of one set of speakers and the moderate, guarded, bureaucrat­ic rhetoric of the other.

Sure, even I found Greta Thunberg’s “how dare you?” speech to be over the top. But I’ll grant that perhaps such situations require a little linguistic shock and awe to jolt the people in power out of their complacenc­y.

When the world’s great powers got together two days after the climate summit, it was back to more of the same. They announced steps that were later described by the UN as “potentiall­y far-reaching,” but that were read by most knowledgea­ble observers as “too little, too late.” This is especially true as, 30 years after the climate change crisis was identified as the greatest challenge facing the world, the stark truth is that global carbon emissions are still rising year by year, as we burn ever more coal, consume ever larger amounts of goods, and cut down ever greater expanses of forest.

Young people around the world instinctiv­ely know what the rest of us are now realizing: Nation states will never be able to produce cohesive action on climate change. The world order can deliver many things, but it is not set up for a problem as amorphous and all-encompassi­ng as climate change.

The internatio­nal world order is based on each country trying to advance its own interests (and indirectly those of its people). Paradoxica­lly, “national interest” becomes paramount even when solving a problem of world-changing implicatio­ns. No nation state wants to give up its national interest as a voluntary sacrifice for a larger good, which means that the great powers in the world system are also the slowest to accept restraints on their practices. Further, nation states themselves are ruled by government­s constitute­d by political parties with their gaze on short-term targets like the next election cycle. This makes them reluctant to take on the political risks attendant on belling the cat on climate change: More expensive energy prices domestical­ly, for example, or an economic slowdown as a consequenc­e of scaling back the carbon economy or imposing tougher environmen­tal laws on industry.

Further, the developed world and the developing world find themselves antagonist­s in the climate change realm. Which side should make the sacrifices to rein in the carbon economy: The economies responsibl­e for most of the emissions historical­ly or the emerging economies generating the most greenhouse­s gases today? These negotiatio­ns could go on for decades, but by then it will be too late. Thankfully, more and more people are realizing that the time to act is now — and they are coming together in meaningful ways. Last month, more than 7 million people all over the world agitated on the streets and squares of their neighborho­ods in the Global Climate Action strikes. Last week, the climate action pressure group Extinction Rebellion launched its second fortnight of protests in London to galvanize humanity and pressure government­s to take swifter action on climate change. A changing climate affects everybody everywhere. Human beings need to look past their nationalit­ies and regional interests and find a way of thinking globally and acting locally if they want to win this fight. In the 20th century, political strategist­s found a new language of nationalis­m, rights and freedom to win independen­ce for the people of their countries — who at the time were imperial subjects — the world over.

The challenge of political strategist­s of our time is to find a similar language for climate action that cuts through the rhetoric of government­s and corporatio­ns and generates transnatio­nal coalitions of individual­s who share the same goals and can advocate for them in their communitie­s.

In time, such groups will be able to pressure government­s and internatio­nal institutio­ns with the force of real numbers, and also evolve a new template for democracy at the national level. In terms of climate action,

2019 has brought very little that is new from government­s, but much from the people.

 ??  ?? CHANDRAHAS CHOUDHURY
CHANDRAHAS CHOUDHURY

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