The Guardian Australia

The big polluters’ masterstro­ke was to blame the climate crisis on you and me

- George Monbiot

Let’s stop calling this the Sixth Great Extinction. Let’s start calling it what it is: the “first great exterminat­ion”. A recent essay by the environmen­tal historian Justin McBrien argues that describing the current eradicatio­n of living systems (including human societies) as an extinction event makes this catastroph­e sound like a passive accident.

While we are all participan­ts in the first great exterminat­ion, our responsibi­lity is not evenly shared. The impacts of most of the world’s people are minimal. Even middle-class people in the rich world, whose effects are significan­t, are guided by a system of thought and action that is shaped in large part by corporatio­ns.

The Guardian’s polluters series reports that just 20 fossil fuel companies, some owned by states, some by shareholde­rs, have produced 35% of the carbon dioxide and methane released by human activities since 1965. This was the year in which the president of the American Petroleum Institute told his members that the carbon dioxide they produced could cause “marked changes in climate” by the year 2000. They knew what they were doing.

Even as their own scientists warned that the continued extraction of fossil fuels could cause “catastroph­ic” consequenc­es, the oil companies pumped billions of dollars into thwarting government action. They funded thinktanks and paid retired scientists and fake grassroots organisati­ons to pour doubt and scorn on climate science. They sponsored politician­s, particular­ly in the US Congress, to block internatio­nal attempts to curtail greenhouse gas emissions. They invested heavily in greenwashi­ng their public image.

These efforts continue today, with advertisem­ents by Shell and Exxon that create the misleading impression that they’re switching from fossil fuels to renewable energy. In reality, Shell’s annual report reveals that it invested $25bn in oil and gas last year. But it provides no figure for its muchtrumpe­ted investment­s in low-carbon technologi­es. Nor was the company able to do so when I challenged it.

A paper published in Nature shows that we have little chance of preventing more than 1.5C of global heating unless existing fossil fuel infrastruc­ture is retired. Instead the industry intends to accelerate production, spending nearly $5tn in the next 10 years on developing new reserves. It is committed to ecocide.

But the biggest and most successful lie it tells is this: that the first great exterminat­ion is a matter of consumer choice. In response to the Guardian’s questions, some of the oil companies argued that they are not responsibl­e for our decisions to use their products. But we are embedded in a system of their creation – a political, economic and physical infrastruc­ture that creates an illusion of choice while, in reality, closing it down.

We are guided by an ideology so familiar and pervasive that we do not even recognise it as an ideology. It is called consumeris­m. It has been crafted with the help of skilful advertiser­s and marketers, by corporate celebrity culture, and by a media that casts us as the recipients of goods and services rather than the creators of political reality. It is locked in by transport, town planning and energy systems that make good choices all but impossible. It spreads like a stain through political systems, which have been systematic­ally captured by lobbying and campaign finance, until political leaders cease to represent us, and work instead for the pollutocra­ts who fund them.

In such a system, individual choices are lost in the noise. Attempts to organise boycotts are notoriousl­y difficult, and tend to work only when there is a narrow and immediate aim. The ideology of consumeris­m is highly effective at shifting blame: witness the current ranting in the billionair­e press about the alleged hypocrisy of environmen­tal activists. Everywhere I see rich westerners blaming planetary destructio­n on the birth rates of much poorer people, or on “the Chinese”. This individuat­ion of responsibi­lity, intrinsic to consumeris­m, blinds us to the real drivers of destructio­n.

The power of consumeris­m is that it renders us powerless. It traps us within a narrow circle of decision-making, in which we mistake insignific­ant choices between different varieties of destructio­n for effective change. It is, we must admit, a brilliant con.

It’s the system we need to change, rather than the products of the system. It is as citizens that we must act, rather than as consumers. But how? Part of the answer is provided in a short book published by one of the founders of Extinction Rebellion, Roger Hallam, called Common Sense for the 21st Century. I don’t agree with everything it says, but the rigour and sweep of its analysis will, I think, ensure that it becomes a classic of political theory.

It begins with the premise that gradualist campaigns making small demands cannot prevent the gathering catastroph­es of climate and ecological breakdown. Only mass political disruption, out of which can be built new and more responsive democratic structures, can deliver the necessary transforma­tion.

By studying successful mobilisati­ons, such as the Children’s March in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963 (which played a critical role in ending racial segregatio­n in the US), the Monday Demonstrat­ions in Leipzig in 1989 (which snowballed until they helped bring down the East German regime), and the Jana Andolan movement in Nepal in 2006 (which brought down the absolute power of the monarchy and helped end the armed insurgency), Hallam has developed a formula for effective “dilemma actions”. A dilemma action is one that puts the authoritie­s in an awkward position. Either the police allow civil disobedien­ce to continue, thereby encouragin­g more people to join, or they attack the protesters, creating a powerful “symbolism of fearless sacrifice”, thereby encouragin­g more people to join. If you get it right, the authoritie­s can’t win.

Among the crucial common elements, he found, are assembling thousands of people in the centre of the capital city, maintainin­g a strictly nonviolent discipline, focusing on the government and continuing for days or weeks at a time. Radical change, his research reveals, “is primarily a numbers game. Ten thousand people breaking the law has historical­ly had more impact than small-scale, high-risk activism.” The key challenge is to organise actions that encourage as many people as possible to join. This means they should be openly planned, inclusive, entertaini­ng, peaceful and actively respectful. You can join such an action today, convened by Extinction Rebellion in central London.

Hallam’s research suggests that this approach offers at least a possibilit­y of breaking the infrastruc­ture of lies the fossil fuel companies have created, and developing a politics matched to the scale of the challenges we face. It is difficult and uncertain of success. But, he points out, the chances that politics as usual will meet our massive predicamen­t with effective action are zero. Mass dilemma actions could be our last, best chance of preventing the great exterminat­ion.

• George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist

We are guided by an ideology so familiar and pervasive that we do not even recognise it as an ideology. It is called consumeris­m

 ??  ?? Illustrati­on: Eva Bee Illustrati­on: Eva Bee
Illustrati­on: Eva Bee Illustrati­on: Eva Bee
 ??  ?? BP’s oil refinery complex in Grangemout­h, central Scotland. Photograph: Christophe­r Furlong/Getty Images
BP’s oil refinery complex in Grangemout­h, central Scotland. Photograph: Christophe­r Furlong/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia