The Scotsman

Extinction Rebels’ debt to Adam Smith

They may be ‘crusties’ to Boris Johnson, but protesters are acting in ways Adam Smith laid out, says Bill Jamieson

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Do these Extinction Rebellion demos win sympathy, or repel? City centre streets blocked, travel brought to a halt, hospital entrances besieged, protestors made up as clowns (yet want to be taken seriously), a fire engine brought in to hose the Treasury ending up as a comedy farce with the hose squirting red dye over the protestors. Police stations filled with 600 obstructin­g demonstrat­ors arrested in a deliberate drive to clog the system.

The protests have a hysterical, ominously cultish air, with impossible demands for zero carbon in five years. Is this the way to win support? But look again. Have these protests not succeeded in gaining massive media attention that would not have been captured by convention­al protest? Have they not worked to encourage political parties to up their green credential­s, the Government to boost ‘green’ programmes, supermarke­ts to phase out plastic bags, housebuild­ers to push on with low-carbon technology, and major national arts companies in recent weeks to drop corporate sponsorshi­p from oil giants Shell and BP?

Might obstructio­n and confrontat­ion work? But hey, what a hypocrite I am. Did I not in my youth join an anti-nuclear sit-in demo at Faslane? Clamber over an exposed once-secret Regional Seat of Government nuclear hideaway? And defiantly stand before police horses in the riotous 1968 anti-vietnam war protest outside the American Embassy in Grosvenor Square?

Guilty as charged, M’lud. But regrets? None. It’s not because I have remained a radical. For there is much in the climate change protest that appeals to the conservati­ve instinct: the preservati­on of our planet, the protection of plant and species, a check on landscape destructio­n and unfettered globalisat­ion, chronic car congestion and that greater diffuse but deadly loss of heritage, memory, constraint and personal responsibi­lity. I have sympathy with the underlying aims of Extinction Rebellion, not because I am anti-capitalist but because I believe that our relatively open market economy, for all its warts and excesses, has survived constant prophecies of Marxist collapse by adaptation and responsive­ness to change. In this, the climate change movement is a wholly legitimate and necessary player.

It puts pressure on government­s, businesses and individual­s to act. And that action is driven by an awareness – as Adam Smith so brilliantl­y set out – of our own self-interest. In the past ten years, city institutio­ns have invested more than £2 trillion in green energy. To keep in step with changes in customer behaviour and preference­s, corporate action to promote sustainabi­lity and improve social responsibi­lity is increasing­ly evident. Housebuild­ing technology has been transforme­d in recent years with low-carbon homes. In finance, dozens of ethical and ‘socially responsibl­e’ investment funds, a rarity a decade ago, jostle for private investor support.

Behaviour change matters. And for that alone, the underlying aims of Extinction Rebellion deserve respect. But for its goals to be realised, this requires a greater realism and nuance. Government regulation and higher taxes alone will not fix this – and certainly not dramatical­ly shortened targets whose fulfilment would critically damage the economy and impose severe restrictio­ns and penalties for those less well off. Zero carbon in five years can only be achieved by reducing energy consumptio­n by over 80 per cent. Some 30 per cent of energy consumptio­n is domestic, an equal percentage is used in transport. In such a timescale, how do we get to work, or deliver food to cities?

Yet corporate behaviour in the energy sector can make a massive contributi­on and further change needs to be encouraged. Investor pressure, consumer attitudes and government­s’ climate change policies are all driving big oil’s transforma­tion. These, and increasing­ly so today, technology advance, hold the critical key.

Take oil company BP. It has taken a 43 per cent stake in solar power business Lightsourc­e BP and plans to invest $200m over three years to develop substantia­l solar capacity around the world and advance low-carbon across energy markets. It has already doubled the number of countries where it has a presence since December 2017. It is working to bring 25MW of locally generated solar power to western US, through new collaborat­ions in California and New Mexico. Elsewhere it is working on renewable power projects in the UK, Australia, Brazil (ethanol fuel), Europe, Egypt and India. It also has significan­t interests in US onshore wind energy, operating ten sites, with a net generating capacity of just over 1,000MW.

Not enough. Not nearly enough – but it is the pronounced direction of travel and not lightly to be dismissed as ‘greenwash’. Royal Dutch Shell has been moving in a similar direction.

How much better it would have been had the National Theatre and the Royal Shakespear­e Company proposed to the energy giants that they would welcome sponsorshi­p from those subsidiari­es and affiliates directly involved in solar power and low-carbon tech, and extending discounts and promotions to their frontline staff? I suspect most theatregoe­rs would approve of this nuanced approach and corporate sponsorshi­p of our great arts institutio­ns and their out-reach and new talent programmes would be sustained. Corporate sponsorshi­p was running at some £114m a year at the last count. Our own Scottish Opera derives 9.1 per cent of its income from fundraisin­g – the same percentage as derived from box office takings.

Street protest can only take us so far. Extinction Rebellion has to be more than bizarre displays and a platform for virtue-signalling by celebs. It needs to drop the infantilis­m and widen, not close, those broader roads to real and effective change.

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