Whanganui Midweek

Cyclone Gabrielle brought climate chickens home to roost

- John Milnes

What a few weeks it has been — floods in Northland and Auckland, then Cyclone Gabrielle.

What’s next? There will be a next. Severe storms have always been around — I was in Wellington for the Wahine storm, and in Whanganui we still felt the effects of Cyclone Bola in 1988.

Cyclone Bola was probably the first harbinger of climate change, but at that stage, it didn’t have the credential­s to “prove” connection­s. It was labelled as a one-in-100-year event.

It should have been a wake-up call about climate change. If only.

One could say that Gabrielle was the chickens coming home to roost, but Gabrielle was more like thousands of roosters and was the dawn waking them — and many climate change deniers — up.

The country needs a lot of help to clean up after Gabrielle and the Government is acting to help with this, but the cleanup will do little to fix longer-term climate change mitigation, which is the real issue.

The Government cutting back climate commitment­s agreed to under Jacinda Ardern is not going to improve things in the longer term.

I see the present government’s recent slash and burn of policies as more about politics than critical issues like climate change. Fixing roads is important, but a waste of effort if we don’t tackle the causes.

What we need now is a government with real guts to do the right thing. A recent poll showed 75 per cent of Kiwis see climate change as urgent.

For the past 100 years plus we have been borrowing, without permission or collateral, from the Bank of the Environmen­t without paying interest. We’ve squandered that loan on numerous fripperies, from luxury yachts for a few people, to cheap clothing for the masses.

Recently, there have been some internatio­nal bank failures, but not as many as the 2008 financial crash, when there was universal panic in finance circles.

Something had to be done. Congress, at the urgent request of then US President George W. Bush, passed the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), authorisin­g $700 billion to save banks that were “too big to fail”.

The bank sectors repaid the money by December 2009, and TARP actually returned a profit to taxpayers. Phew, that’s a relief.

What if there were another crisis, possibly more global than even the war in Ukraine, that is really, really urgent and will have long-term effects for the whole planet?

Surely the US could find

$700 billion to save another struggling bank? How about funding to save the Bank of Planet Earth? For the past 100-plus years we have been robbing this bank for everything we can, From fisheries to gold, with no interest. We are rapidly pushing this bank towards failure.

This bank is definitely too big to fail and the payback will be massive — a planet we can live on. When the US banks were failing, the catchphras­e from the banks was “They are too big to fail”.

I would venture to suggest the Bank of Planet Earth is far more worth saving than any bank.

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