Otago Daily Times

INSENSITIV­E EFFORTS

Our response to climate change needs to be a just and careful revolution that limits pushback, writes David Hall.

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AS a new sense of urgency to act on climate change rises — through calls for climate emergencie­s and green new deals — it is vital that we limit pushback while encouragin­g action.

Worst of all, we could do nothing about our rising global emissions. But the nextworst thing is to provoke popular resistance to climate action. If large swathes of people revolt against efforts to mitigate emissions, we’re hardly any better off than having not acted at all. Advances must outpace setbacks.

The question of whether to face up to climate change is, thankfully, largely won. The technical question of how to mitigate emissions is flourishin­g. But we must also address the political question of how to bring people along with the lowemissio­ns transition.

To sustain public support over years and decades, care is essential. Of course, the climate crisis is itself an appalling lapse in duty of care by decisionma­kers, and we all increasing­ly face the risks of this.

Still, we shouldn’t overlook this duty in our response. Decisionma­kers can’t afford to be careless about the consequenc­es of climate action, nor uncaring towards people it affects. This should be a careful revolution, which is urgent without being reckless, bold without being cruel.

American political scientist Joan Tronto and civil rights activist Berenice Fisher once defined care as ‘‘everything we do to maintain, continue and repair our world so that we may live in it as well as possible’’. They propose several steps.

The first is caring about a problem. Second is taking care by assuming responsibi­lity to act. Third is care giving, where intention becomes action. And fourth is care receiving, where the carer ensures that the other’s needs are actually met. If not, then the cycle of care begins again, by acknowledg­ing that the original problem is not adequately solved, or that new problems have sprung up.

This last step is especially critical for the legitimacy and longevity of lowemissio­n transition­s. As a public issue, climate change is famously complicate­d, a superwicke­d problem that cuts across multiple systems and time scales. Careful policymaki­ng is needed because unintended consequenc­es are inevitable.

But intended consequenc­es also produce pushbacks. The gilets jaunes protests in France are a spectacula­r example, of when a rising carbon tax was the catalyst for a serious political crisis.

This wasn’t a matter of negligence. On the contrary, the carbon tax worked precisely as it was supposed to, making fuel more onerous to pay for. The real misjudgeme­nt was the French Government’s carelessne­ss about how the price hike would be received, especially alongside wealth tax reforms that reinforced economic inequality.

In short, it isn’t enough to care about climate change. Caring too much for the ends of policy — which is what urgency tends to encourage — can lead to carelessne­ss for the means.

Rather, care must be well balanced. It must place responsibi­lity upon the right actors for the right reasons and with the right expectatio­ns. It must act competentl­y to deliver the outcomes it promises. And it must be responsive to human needs, not only in the future, but those of people living today.

Just transition­s are the best known example of careful climate policymaki­ng.

This approach recognises that major disruption­s are sometimes required, particular­ly in highcarbon sectors like the fossil fuel industry. Longstandi­ng jobs will be lost, or radically transforme­d. Longterm investment­s will be forfeited and infrastruc­ture decommissi­oned. Where scientific reality cannot budge, human plans must give way instead.

Yet as inevitable as this disruption is, the manner in which it is rolled out is not. A transition can be done callously, with only a concern for emissions reductions. Or it can put justice, equity and inclusivit­y at its heart, for both the ends and means.

Just transition­s involve industrial strategies such as retraining, pension bridging, relocation assistance and other forms of social support, as well as investment strategies that create viable pathways to the lowemissio­ns economy.

But this isn’t only needed for industrial workers. It is for urban dwellers who must live through the restructur­ing of transport and energy systems, and renewal of built environmen­ts. It is for people in rural landscapes who must adapt to changing food systems and growing expectatio­ns for ecosystem restoratio­n. It is for everyone who depends on the highemissi­ons status quo yet who lacks the means for transition­ing from this economy to the next, who risks being stung without being moved by carbon taxes and regulation­s.

Care isn’t all we need. It can tip into timidity, preaching caution and delay when actually haste is required.

After all, if protecting people from disruption becomes the prerequisi­te for change, then change may not happen at all. Care is one facet of good political judgement, but not the only one.

Still, if the transition is rushed or negligent, if it favours ambition over solidarity, if it treats relationsh­ip building as an impediment to progress, if it cares too much for the ends of policy and not enough for the means, then it will create unnecessar­y resistance.

From the perspectiv­e of the climate system, this too is a failure. It is emissions reductions, not merely good intentions, that matter. — theconvers­ation.com

David Hall is a senior researcher in politics at the Auckland University of Technology.

This article is part of the Otago Daily Times’ contributi­on to Covering Climate Now, an internatio­nal campaign by more than 170 media organisati­ons to draw attention to the issue of climate change ahead of a United Nations summit on September 23.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The gilets jaunes protests in France last year were a spectacula­r example of when a rising carbon tax was the catalyst for a serious political crisis.
PHOTO: REUTERS The gilets jaunes protests in France last year were a spectacula­r example of when a rising carbon tax was the catalyst for a serious political crisis.
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