The Sunday Guardian

Time for Greta Thunberg to have grown-up conversati­ons

Ignoring per capita emissions brings racism, eugenics of blaming population size, socio-economic aspiration­s of developing nations for environmen­tal degradatio­n.

- SURANYA AIYAR

Swedish 16-year-old Greta Thunberg and a number of other teenagers are suing Turkey, Argentina, Brazil, Germany and France for inaction on climate change, but not the United States whose per capita emissions are the highest in the world. They are not even suing Sweden, whose per capita emissions are double those of Brazil’s.

The per capita emissions of different countries make abundantly clear the relative contributi­on to pollution in the world. At the top of the list is the US, whose per capita emissions are more than double of even most other developed nations, including Germany and France. Per capita emissions from other developed nations everywhere (except in comparison with China) are more than three times those of developing nations in Asia. And per capita emissions of developing countries in Africa are a mere fraction of those of any other country in the world. If you compare, say a New Yorker, to some village woman in the hinterland­s of Brazil or Turkey, the gap in per capita emissions will be even wider than what the comparison of national average shows. It is said that you would need seven planets to cope with emissions if everyone were to live as Swedes do.

In this context it makes no sense to single out any developing nation on environmen­tal issues. This is the reason why developing countries and their compassion­ate allies throughout the developed world fought for years to place poverty and per capita emissions at the centre of the environmen­tal discussion. If you do not look at per capita emissions, then you hide the real cause of emissions—lifestyle (“consumptio­n” in ecojargon) and environmen­tally damaging (“unsustaina­ble”) patterns of production.

If you ignore per capita emissions you also bring back all the racism and eugenics of the pre-1970s of blaming population size and the socio-economic aspiration­s of developing nations for environmen­tal degradatio­n.

Any discussion on pollution, developmen­t and population carries within it the seeds of racist and eugenicist ideologies. Asking questions at a national or global level about what is the optimal population size relative to the Earth’s finite resources; or how to socially engineer a certain outcome inevitably brings us dangerousl­y close to making distinctio­ns between people or asking for trade-offs that are morally repugnant and undemocrat­ic. From Nazi concentrat­ion camps; to forced adoptions of aboriginal children; to the sterilisat­ion camps of India’s Emergency, history is replete with examples of terrible state sponsored pogroms that were justified on grounds of things like public health, giving children a better future and population control. This does not mean that we should not talk about the environmen­t. But we should know that concern for the environmen­t comes from a family of thought that has a mad gene and we should be ever vigilant against ideas that might carry that gene.

For experience­d hands in the environmen­tal debate this is a well-trodden ground. People around the world have worked long and hard over the last 50 years to develop a framework for talking about these issues that avoids the pitfalls of racism, eugenics and oppressive state action. This is why the member states of the United Nations have always insisted that environmen­t, developmen­t and population will not be looked at in isolation, but in the broader framework of poverty, individual health, economic developmen­t and civil liberties. This has been the agreed approach in the United Nations since the 1970s. Those interested in the developmen­t of these ideas may read up on the UN’S Bucharest Conference of 1974, the Cairo Programme of Action of 1994 and the Millennium Developmen­t Goals of 2000. These principles are not merely historical, but have been reiterated recently in the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals of 2015. Most importantl­y, on the issue of curbing environmen­tal degradatio­n, the explicit and agreed principle in all these agreements is that developed countries will take the lead in doing so. Developed countries have also undertaken transferri­ng clean technologi­es and environmen­tal solutions to developing nations.

These principles are also embedded in the UN Climate Convention of 1992 and the Paris Climate Agreement of 2016. Climate change activists speak about “consensus”. This is the world’s consensus on the environmen­t. It is a consensus for a holistic and fair response to the twin concerns of pollution and progress. It is a good consensus; probably the only one feasible in a world that is both finite and unequal.

Yet it looks as though Greta Thunberg and, more importantl­y, the people behind her are seeking to sweep aside this consensus by suing developing countries, and relative pygmies in per capita emissions, like Argentina, Turkey and Brazil, for the environmen­t. The excuse for not suing the United States of America, which has openly rejected climate change environmen­talism as contrary to the American way, is that it is not a party to the UN Convention for the Rights of the Child. In that case, why did Thunberg’s handlers not plan a suit under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change to which the US is a party (it has only so far exited the Paris Agreement and not the wider Climate Convention)?

This is where the real motives and understand­ing of those behind Greta Thunberg become rather suspicious. While carbon footprints and climate change have caught the world’s imaginatio­n, both emissions and climate change are not the cause but only the (claimed) result of environmen­tally unsustaina­ble production and consumptio­n. However, the climate agreements do not address sustainabl­e production or consumptio­n in any substantia­l manner. Sustainabl­e production and consumptio­n have been taken out of the UN climate discussion­s and put into the relatively unglamorou­s and unremarked “Framework of Programmes on Sustainabl­e Consumptio­n and Production”. The Paris Agreement declares a grand vision of bringing “global average temperatur­e to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels” but has no prescripti­ons on what specific actions are needed to do this. The Paris Agreement basically stops at asking government­s to make voluntary undertakin­gs on the amount of emissions reductions they propose to achieve. Without specific action on production and consumptio­n this is, ironically for a climate agreement, all hot air.

On the other hand, all that the “Framework for Sustainabl­e Consumptio­n and Production” seems to have produced are long papers on the proper indices for measuring sustainabi­lity. In simple terms, this means that countries have not even committed to deciding the parameters for whether their production and consumptio­n are sustainabl­e or not, while at the same time talking big on cutting carbon emissions! How do they propose to cut emissions when they have not been able to decide what things they are doing are putting the carbon dioxide in the environmen­t and by how much? The only proposals so far from the sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production framework discussion­s are fluff like product labelling, eco-tourism and eco-friendly building constructi­on.

All this shows just how serious developed countries really are about making changes to protect the environmen­t and it is here that eco-activism should be directing its attention, rather than suing developing countries like Turkey, Brazil and Argentina. Suing these countries makes no sense by any measure of environmen­tal concern. Not only are their per capita emissions relatively low, they have agreed on the principles of environmen­tally conscienti­ous behaviour much earlier in the cycle of their developmen­t than any nation in the developed world. According to the UN’S National Inventory of Greenhouse Emissions, Turkey has cut its greenhouse emissions more than any developed country.

The focus of serious environmen­talists should be the per capita carbon footprint and getting some concrete results in the discussion­s on sustainabl­e production and consumptio­n. Given the gross disparitie­s between the per head carbon impact of people in developed versus developing countries, it is an arrogant disregard of the facts for any Swede to sue countries like Turkey, Brazil and Argentina on the question of the environmen­t. What makes it even more deplorable is the use by a pampered and indulged Swedish teenager of the UN Convention for the Rights of the Child for this purpose. This document was meant to help feed, clothe and provide shelter to impoverish­ed and vulnerable children. The UN Commission on the Rights of the Child deals not with “fairy tales” of economic growth, but with children in living nightmares blasted out of their homes by war, devastated by famine and teenagers trafficked from conditions of stark poverty into prostituti­on and hard labour. I am all for older teenagers being more serious and responsibl­e than teenagers from prosperous nations generally seem to be. This is better than “discoverin­g yourself” on marijuana by touring Goa and Manali on your “year off” in a country with endemic and rising unemployme­nt. But grown-up issues need grown-up attention. Is Greta Thunberg ready to have a grown-up conversati­on?

Suranya Aiyar is a New Delhibased lawyer and mother. She runs the website www.saveyourch­ildren.in, critiquing the role of government­s and NGOS in child policy.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Swedish environmen­tal activist Greta Thunberg speaks during the Climate Action Summit at United Nations HQ in the Manhattan borough of New York, New York, US on Monday.
REUTERS Swedish environmen­tal activist Greta Thunberg speaks during the Climate Action Summit at United Nations HQ in the Manhattan borough of New York, New York, US on Monday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India