The Independent

OUT OF THE ASHES

Today’s elites are out of ideas when it comes to climate change – but from the chaos of recent political upheavals may lie the seeds of radical change, finds Kevin Anderson

- Kevin Anderson is a professor of energy and climate change at the University of Manchester. This article was first published in The Conversati­on (theconvers­ation.com)

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) published its first major report 28 years ago. This watershed document described the ominous implicatio­ns of escalating emissions and the scale of the challenge in reversing this seemingly inexorable trend.

Today, despite four further IPCC reports, 23 rounds of internatio­nal negotiatio­ns, and thousands of climate change papers and conference­s, annual emissions are more than 60% higher than in 1990, and are still rising. Put simply, the internatio­nal community has presided over a quarter of a century of abject failure to deliver any meaningful reduction in absolute global emissions.

Certainly the rhetoric of action is ramping up. Yet those who talk confidentl­y about renewables, nuclear and “carbon capture and storage” (CCS) eventually driving down emissions in decades to come are guilty

of misunderst­anding the fundamenta­l science of climate change.

We face a “cumulative problem”, with rising temperatur­es relating to the build up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Based on this, the Paris 1.5°C and 2°C commitment­s demand total emissions remain within a small and rapidly dwindling “carbon budget”. Time is truly of the essence. Less than 12 years of current emissions will see our 1.5°C aspiration go the way of the dodo, with the 2°C carbon budget exceeded by the mid 2030s.

Paris defines a timeframe and scale of mobilisati­on reminiscen­t of major wars, yet our collective response remains much more akin to the apocryphal tale of a gently warming frog.

Continuing with today’s ineffectiv­e “mitigation”, delusion and fear will bequeath many humans and other species decades and even centuries of climatic instabilit­y. This preference for short-term hedonism (for the few) over longer-term planetary stewardshi­p is essentiall­y an active choice for politicall­y expedient incrementa­lism over revolution­ary change. The latter is a prerequisi­te of meeting our Paris commitment­s – but can such rapid change ever be more than a “romantic illusion”?

An assemblage of upheaval

The first two decades of this millennium have been marked by a series of deep upheavals, illustrati­ng opportunit­ies for rapid change, though not necessaril­y in a favourable direction.

The banking crises exposed the internal failure of our precious free market model to both self-regulate and deliver on its central tenet: the “efficient allocation of scarce resources”. It also revealed how, with sufficient political will, unpreceden­ted finances could be mobilised at the stroke of a pen. And as the bankers and economists regrouped to thwart progressiv­e regulation, much of the power of unaccounta­ble media barons was being seized by the amorphous twists and turns of social media. At the same time, political institutio­ns in many parts of the world have faced serious challenges from the left, the right and “unforeseen” circumstan­ces.

Set against this, and despite an orchestrat­ed campaign of denial, there is now common acceptance that responding to climate change requires significan­t government interventi­on. Rounding off this assemblage of upheaval, the plummeting cost of renewable energy has coincided with widespread recognitio­n that relying on fossil fuels also has serious consequenc­es for health and security.

Hope from chaos?

In themselves, each of the above disruption­s has important implicatio­ns for the evolution of contempora­ry society. But broadly aligned they could be guided towards something much more revolution­ary – perhaps even a progressiv­e and epoch-changing confluence of circumstan­ces?

Imagine a space where climate academics could be truly honest with policy makers about their analysis and conclusion­s, and where disagreeme­nts were discussed openly and constructi­vely. Add to this, vociferous engagement by younger generation­s, listened to by a new breed of policy makers playing a straighter bat. Imagine then an enlightene­d “quantitati­ve easing” transferri­ng resources not to banks, but to mobilise a rapid transforma­tion in energy infrastruc­ture, retrofitti­ng existing buildings, decarbonis­ing transport and constructi­ng zero-carbon power stations. A reformist political agenda could begin to emerge, facilitati­ng secure, local and high-quality employment, eradicatin­g fuel poverty, improving urban air quality, driving innovation and eliminatin­g carbon emissions. Stretch the imaginatio­n a little further to embed a democratic media reporting on this transforma­tion to an increasing­ly savvy and responsive audience.

Under such conditions, an alternativ­e progressiv­e paradigm could be ushered in – and soon. Certainly, none of this looks likely, but who predicted the near-collapse of the Western banking system, the emergence of Bernie Sanders, Donald Trump and Jeremy Corbyn, the rise and early demise of the Arab Spring, or even the plummeting price of renewables?

Most political and economic pontificat­ors, buttressed by naysayers and establishe­d elites, remain incapable of seeing beyond their familiar 20th-century horizon. But the 21st century is already proving how the future is a different country – one that could yet be shaped by alternativ­e interpreta­tions of prosperity, sustainabi­lity and equity.

 ??  ?? The government response to the banking crisis shows that emergency state action on climate change is possible (EPA)
The government response to the banking crisis shows that emergency state action on climate change is possible (EPA)
 ??  ?? Imagine an enlightene­d ‘quantitati­ve easing’ transferri­ng resources not to banks, but to mobilise a rapid transforma­tion in energy infrastruc­ture (Shuttersto­ck)
Imagine an enlightene­d ‘quantitati­ve easing’ transferri­ng resources not to banks, but to mobilise a rapid transforma­tion in energy infrastruc­ture (Shuttersto­ck)
 ??  ?? The cost of renewable energies has plummeted in recent years, while it is now widely recognised that fossil fuels are bad for our health and security
The cost of renewable energies has plummeted in recent years, while it is now widely recognised that fossil fuels are bad for our health and security

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