The Mercury News

PG&E shutoff is about climate crisis, corporate greed

- By Mary Creasman Mary Creasman is the chief executive officer of the California League of Conservati­on Voters. She wrote this commentary for CalMatters.

STATE UNPREPARED FOR NEEDED CHANGE

Life as we know it quickly comes to a halt without electricit­y, as millions of people learned when PG&E shut off power this month.

Schools and businesses closed, and people scrambled to make sure they had supplies.

But as people tried to get by without power, something was missing from many of the discussion­s: the role of climate change in the power shutoff.

Gov. Gavin Newsom went so far as to say: “The power shutoffs by PG&E are not a story of climate change. It’s a story of greed and mismanagem­ent. Of recklessne­ss and putting profits before people. It’s outrageous and unacceptab­le.”

Now, I don’t disagree with the second half of his statement.

Newsom is absolutely right that PG&E has repeatedly prioritize­d profits over people. Frankly, I’m not really surprised by this. Corporatio­ns are always going to protect their bottom line. And the governor isn’t the only one who has leaned into this narrative.

But here’s the thing: We’re missing the bigger picture about the climate crisis. The PG&E power shutoff is a story about the climate crisis and corporate greed.

It is a story about how California is unprepared for the massive change we need to make in order to cope with what’s happening.

PG&E is but one example of how the climate crisis is affecting our state. California­ns have already lost their homes to fire and mudslides. Cities are contending with extreme heat and flooding. Refugees are seeking refuge from across the border. These are all loud, flashing warning signs that the effects of climate change have begun.

We are faced with something unpreceden­ted. To deal with the climate crisis, we are going to have to radically transform our economy, our infrastruc­ture, our housing, our way of life.

Everything.

While the scale of this problem can feel overwhelmi­ng, it should also be viewed as an enormous opportunit­y. Our current economic structure was built on extraction, pollution and exploitati­on. It was built through violence against nature and communitie­s where mostly people of color live. We have a sweeping chance to change that.

We can change our economy, infrastruc­ture and land use to be rooted in justice. We can create jobs that pay fair wages. We can have healthy communitie­s with clean air to breathe and clean water to drink. We can reimagine our society in a better way while we tackle the climate crisis.

One cannot be done without the other.

But to make this happen, we need two things to take place:

• People need to demand action.

• Our government must step up with visionary leadership.

This is why we have government, to regulate and innovate and push for change in the face of dire circumstan­ces.

Researcher­s say we have until 2030 to figure out how to stop the most catastroph­ic impacts to come. We need our elected officials to make unpreceden­ted change happen now.

What we need isn’t easy. It’s a bigger task than we’ve ever faced before. No action can be too bold in this moment.

This isn’t about pointing fingers. Pointing fingers and outrage is easy, and too prevalent. This is about coming together. Taking responsibi­lity for our current conditions and the role we can play is what’s needed. An urgent and comprehens­ive vision is needed. Leadership is what is needed.

We’re missing the point if we just talk about how PG&E isn’t putting the public good first, true though that is.

Instead, our political leaders should map out a vision for how we prepare for our future, fight climate change and right so many historic injustices. That is the role of government in a crisis.

 ?? KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The sun rises in Larkspur behind an electrical transmissi­on tower on Oct. 9, the first day of a planned safety power outage.
KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The sun rises in Larkspur behind an electrical transmissi­on tower on Oct. 9, the first day of a planned safety power outage.

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