The Guardian (USA)

The climate emergency really is a new type of crisis – consider the ‘triple inequality’ at the heart of it

- Adam Tooze

Stare at a climate map of the world that we expect to inhabit 50 years from now and you see a band of extreme heat encircling the planet’s midriff. Climate modelling from 2020 suggests that within half a century about 30% of the world’s projected population – unless they are forced to move – will live in places with an average temperatur­e above 29C. This is unbearably hot. Currently, no more than 1% of Earth’s land surface is this hot, and those are mainly uninhabite­d parts of the Sahara.

The scenario is as dramatic as it is because the regions of the world affected most severely by global heating – above all, sub-Saharan Africa – are those expected to experience the most rapid population growth in coming decades.

But despite this population growth, they are also the regions that, on current trends, will contribute least to the emissions that drive the climate disaster. So extreme is inequality that the lowest-earning 50% of the world population – 4 billion people – account for as little as 12% of total emissions. And those at the very bottom of the pile barely register at all. Mali’s per capita C02 emissions are about one-seventyfif­th of those in the US. Even if the lowest-earning third of the global population – more than 2.6 billion people – were to raise themselves above the $3.2-a-day poverty line, it would increase total emissions by a mere 5% – that is, one-third of the emissions of the richest 1%.

Half the world’s population, led by the top 10% of the income distributi­on – and, above all, by the global elite – drive a globe-spanning productive system that destabilis­es the environmen­t for everyone. The worst effects are suffered by the poorest, and in the coming decades the impact will become progressiv­ely more extreme. And yet their poverty means they are virtually powerless to protect themselves.

This is the triple inequality that defines the climate global equation: the disparity in responsibi­lity for producing the problem; the disparity in experienci­ng the impacts of the climate crisis; and the disparity in the available resources for mitigation and adaptation.

Not everyone in the danger zone of climate breakdown is poor and powerless. The American south-west has the resources to help itself. India is a capable state. But global heating will pose huge distributi­onal problems. How will climate refugees be resettled? How will the economy adapt? For fragile states such as Iraq, it may prove too much. The risk is that they will tip from just about coping into outright collapse, failing to provide water and the electricit­y for cooling – the bare essentials for survival in extreme heat. In Iraq this summer, thousands of people huddled in their air-conditione­d cars, running their engines for hours just to survive heat spikes that exceeded 50C.

You might say, plus ça change. The poor suffer and the rich prosper. But the consequenc­es of the climate triple inequality are radical and new. Rich countries have long traded on unequal terms with the poor. During the era of colonialis­m, they plundered raw materials and enslaved tens of millions. For two generation­s after decolonisa­tion, economic growth largely bypassed what was then known as the third world.

Since the 1980s, with the accelerati­on of China’s economic growth, the scope of developmen­t has dramatical­ly widened. The middle 40% of the world’s income distributi­on now account for 41% of global emissions, meaning they have achieved a considerab­le level of energy consumptio­n. But this “global middle class”, concentrat­ed above all in east Asia, crowds out the carbon budget remaining for those on the lowest incomes, and their growth inflicts irreversib­le damage on some of the poorest and most disempower­ed people in the world.

This is the historic novelty of the current situation. As we run ever closer to the edge of the environmen­tal envelope – the conditions within which our species can thrive – the developmen­t of the rich world systematic­ally undercuts the conditions for survival of billions of people in the climate danger zone. They are not so much exploited or bypassed as victimised by the climactic effects of economic growth taking place elsewhere. This violent and indirect entangleme­nt is new in its quality and scale.

Violent and unequal relationsh­ips between groups usually involve some degree of interactio­n and can, as a result, be resisted. Workers can strike. Those caught in unfair trading relationsh­ips can boycott and impose sanctions. But arms-length ecological victimisat­ion entails no such relationsh­ip and offers correspond­ingly fewer channels for resistance from within the system. It is possible that blowing up pipelines that carry energy from poor countries to rich consumers will emerge as a form of protest. That would certainly send a signal. But can we not hope for more constructi­ve responses to the triple inequality?

This question is still what gives such huge importance to the global climate conference­s such as Cop28, which starts on 30 November. They may seem like staid and ritualisti­c affairs, but it is in such venues that the lethal connection between oil, gas and coal production, rich-world consumptio­n and the lethal risks facing those in the climate danger zone can be articulate­d in political form.

It is on that stage that activists and government­s can pillory the disgracefu­l refusal of rich countries to cooperate in the establishm­ent of a loss and damage fund to compensate those countries that are most in harm’s way. The need for such a fund was recognised in principle at Cop27 in Egypt. But since then the resistance of US and European negotiator­s has hardened. As we approach Cop28, the organisati­on and the financing of the fund are yet to be settled.

Such a fund is no solution to the problem of the triple inequality. For that we need a comprehens­ive energy transition and new models of truly inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t. But a loss and damage fund does one essential thing. It recognises that the global climate crisis is no longer a problem of future developmen­t. We have entered the stage where the failure to urgently address the mounting crisis becomes an active process of victimisat­ion. A victimisat­ion that cries out, at least, for an admission of responsibi­lity and adequate compensati­on.

• Adam Tooze is a professor of history at Columbia University

and the Palestinia­n Authority to bring about meaningful change, the internatio­nal community, led by the US, could push toward a resolution of the conflict. To achieve that, the internatio­nal community needs to promote several key steps.

First and foremost, it must define the ultimate goal – which should be to commit to the implementa­tion of the two-state solution and an embrace of the Arab Peace Initiative – and a timeline within which to achieve it. This can be done by via a resolution of the

UN security council (UNSC). To overcome the tension between the US and Russia, it may require a representa­tive of the Arab world such as the UAE to champion the proposal in the UNSC. If this path is blocked, a regional peace summit convened by the US would be a satisfacto­ry alternativ­e.

Secondly, and of utmost importance, it is vital thatJoeBid­en leads the recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n state by the US and other major countries, as part of a comprehens­ive diplomatic process. Such a step will ensure that there is no turning back. It will change the dynamic in Gaza and in the West

Bank, making it difficult for Israel to continue its creeping annexation, and strengthen the Palestinia­n Authority against Hamas. Furthermor­e, such a move could boost Biden electorall­y, helping him to potentiall­y regain support that he lost when backing Israel’s operation in Gaza.

Knowing that the creation of a Palestinia­n state isthe endgame will enable the third critical step to be taken by the internatio­nal community: the formulatio­n of an interim internatio­nal-Palestinia­n regime.With a clear and recognised goalof achieving the two-state solution, an internatio­nal force drawn from Arab and western countries could then be recruited to gradually replace the IDF in Gaza and take responsibi­lity for security and developmen­t efforts. If the path to a two-state solution is defined, European and Arab countries will agree to invest in building the physical and institutio­nal infrastruc­ture of what Biden called a “revitalise­d Palestinia­n Authority”, leading the way to a Palestinia­n state. No one wants to continue pouring money into Gaza if the strategy of managing the conflict continues and its infrastruc­ture needs to be rebuilt every few years after another round of war.

The absence of worthy leadership in Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s means that securing peace falls on the shoulders of Biden and the internatio­nal community. He must step up and deliver.

Roee Kibrik is director of research at Mitvim – the Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies, and a lecturer at Yezreel Valley College

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publicatio­n in our letters section, please click here.

 ?? ?? ‘The resistance of American and European negotiator­s to a loss and damage fund has hardened.’ Protesters at Cop27 in Egypt, November 2022. Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
‘The resistance of American and European negotiator­s to a loss and damage fund has hardened.’ Protesters at Cop27 in Egypt, November 2022. Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? ?? ‘In Iraq this summer heat spikes exceeded 50C.’ Photograph: Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images
‘In Iraq this summer heat spikes exceeded 50C.’ Photograph: Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images

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