Climate chaos reigns amidst the COVID pandemic
It’s been five years since the Paris Climate Agreement was signed, defining the entirely voluntary, unenforceable plan to avert global climate chaos. “We are still not going in the right direction,” United Nations Secretary- General Antonio Guterres said this week, addressing a forum marking the anniversary, held virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. “Paris promised to limit temperature rise to as close to 1.5 degrees [Celsius] as possible,” he continued, “but the commitments made in Paris were far from enough to get there, and even those commitments are not being met ... I call on all leaders worldwide to declare a state of climate emergency.”
World leaders, though, are primarily focused on a different state of emergency. With over 1.6 million people worldwide dead from COVID-19 and over 74 million cases reported, the suffering and economic devastation that the pandemic has caused, disproportionately to poor people and people of color, is inestimable. With President Donald Trump still at the helm, largely ignoring the crisis, the United States is faring worse than any other nation, with more than 300,000 deaths so far. Daily deaths are now topping 3,600, shattering global records.
Both catastrophes, of the pandemic and the climate, need to be dealt with immediately. A coalition of over 380 groups under the banner “Build Back Fossil Free” is demanding urgent action from President- elect Joe Biden as soon as he takes office. Kassie Siegel from the Center for Biological Diversity said: “Our house is ablaze with a fire fanned by Trump for four years. There’s no time to lose. Biden must take bold action the moment he steps into the Oval Office, without punting to a dysfunctional Congress.” The group is demanding a flurry of executive actions to overturn Trump’s regulatory rollbacks, as well as a green recovery.
Biden has announced several nominations to positions central to pursuing his climate strategy. Former Secretary of State John Kerry has been named Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, handling climate diplomacy, with a seat on the National Security Council, and former Environmental Protection Administrator Gina McCarthy will be the White House Climate Coordinator, charged with enacting domestic climate policies. Assisting McCarthy will be climate policy expert and Obama White House alum Ali Zaidi.
Biden has also nominated Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and former Democratic presidential candidate, as Secretary of Transportation, responsible for regulating the most polluting sector of our economy. Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, considered a strong advocate for renewable energy, has been nominated to head the Energy Department, and career environmental attorney Brenda Mallory will head the Council on Environmental Quality, which has a major role confronting environmental racism.
“This is a big victory for our movement,” Varshini Prakash, executive director of the Sunrise Movement, which mobilizes youth climate action, said in a statement. “However, the true measure of Biden’s commitment to tackling the climate crisis through an all- government, all- society mobilization is whether they’ll be given the tools, power and resources to be effective and push boldly ... towards 100% clean energy that raises the bar on environmental justice, job quality, wages and benefits for workers.”
Human- caused climate disruption is impacting the planet on an unprecedented scale, with one catastrophe after another, from extreme drought and wildfires, backto-back hurricanes and typhoons, habitat loss and extinctions, all leaving death and destruction in their wake. Global heating also drives the emergence and spread of infectious diseases, virtually guaranteeing more pandemics like the one we’re in now. These twin crises demand a global, collective coordinated response, with equitable, free distribution of coronavirus vaccines and therapeutics, and a vigorous, just green recovery.
Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 1,400 stations. She is the coauthor, with Denis Moynihan and David Goodman, of the New York Times best-seller “Democracy Now!: 20 Years Covering the Movements Changing America.”