Whanganui Chronicle

Climate change taking its biggest toll on poorer Kiwis

Time to ensure everyone has what they need to live with dignity

- Chlo¨ e Swarbrick Chlo¨ e Swarbrick,

The climate crisis looks and sounds terrifying, but I never anticipate­d the smell. It smells like sewage spewed out of neglected pipes. Sodden carpets and curtains ripped up and out of thousands of homes. Air so thick dehumidifi­ers choke.

When the news cycle moves on, thousands of New Zealanders will continue rebuilding their lives for months and even years to come. Photograph­s and videos will never fully capture the experience of living in the thick of the clean-up.

At least 11 people have died in the climate-change-charged extreme weather wreaking havoc across the North Island this past month.

At the time of writing, more than 1500 people are still unaccounte­d for. Financial and material losses are estimated in their hundreds of millions.

At Mā ngere Civil Defence Centre — among makeshift help desks — volunteers, community organisers, local board members and councillor­s lamented the thousands of impacted people without insurance. It’s expensive being poor; it’s incredibly expensive to replace the possession­s you couldn’t afford to insure in the first place.

While decades of political decisionma­king supercharg­ed car dependency in our largest city, conscious lack of investment in public transport means that many who had their cars written off in the storm are in impossible positions where they can’t get to the jobs necessary to generate the income to buy new cars, which they’re forced to need to get around. It is like this that inequality compounds and poverty multiplies. Systemical­ly.

I’ve heard more than my fair share of arguments from people who protest the Greens are too focused on poverty, because, seemingly, those arguing care more about the planet than the people on it. What these arguments fail to comprehend is that the same system manufactur­ed both.

The least wealthy half of New Zealanders own just 2 per cent of the wealth of this country, according to researcher Max Rashbrooke. The top 10 per cent own approximat­ely 60 per cent, while the top 1 per cent own 25 per cent of our nation’s entire collective wealth.

Evidence tells us wealthier people consume and produce disproport­ionately more climate-changing emissions than the poorer communitie­s who bear the brunt of our climate-changed reality. The wellbeing of people and our planet are interconne­cted.

To individual­ise or attempt to isolate the systemic problem of climate change by morphing it into an issue of conscious consumeris­m is to scapegoat “lazy” everyday people just trying to get by, while those who make a fortune depleting the commons laugh their way to the bank. Worse than ignoring the crux of the issue, it pits citizens against each other, exhausting time and energy and headspace that would make far more sense spent trying to collective­ly build an equitable, environmen­tally-friendly system change.

That means solar panels to power homes when the grid goes down. Green spaces to soak up rain and stop it overloadin­g stormwater pipes. Density done well, so everyone is housed and our food-growing soil is protected. Guaranteed minimum income for all, to ensure no one, especially at moments of crisis, falls below the breadline. Translatin­g the compassion and care we show each other in times of crisis into everyday, tangible, systemic change to ensure everyone always has what they need to live with dignity.

A better future is not only possible, it’s essential.

We must cut emissions and adapt our neighbourh­oods for an already climate-changed world.

We all knew, in some way, that the system wasn’t working for the majority of people well before the floods arrived. It proved entirely dysfunctio­nal when they did.

We get to decide whether we build something entirely new into the future.

We must cut emissions and adapt our neighbourh­oods for an already climatecha­nged world.

Green Party, is the MP for Auckland

Central.

 ?? Photo / Alex Burton ?? Many people who had cars written off in the storm now can’t get to jobs to earn cash needed for a new one.
Photo / Alex Burton Many people who had cars written off in the storm now can’t get to jobs to earn cash needed for a new one.

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