The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Gordon Brown: Surging global nationalis­m has sabotaged Cop

Former prime minister warns of risk to internatio­nal climate fight

- By Craig Mcdonald

Gordon Brown has blamed the rise in global nationalis­m for sabotaging efforts to bring countries together to tackle climate change at Cop26.

After assessing the agreement forged at the United Nations summit in Glasgow, the former prime minister believes, while progress has been made, much more could have been achieved to limit carbon emissions and slow global warming.

Observers were critical of the interventi­ons by India, China and others which watered down key commitment­s to phase out coal and other fossil fuels and voiced frustratio­n at the lack of more binding financial commitment­s to support the world’s poorest countries worst hit by climate change.

However, writing in The Sunday Post today, Brown says singling out individual countries for criticism misses the bigger issue – an increasing reluctance of countries to work together with common purpose.

He writes: “A greater force is at play here, a surging tide of global nationalis­m which is affecting almost every country and now washing away the painstakin­g work of multilater­alism.

“Too many nations are now taking such a narrow view of their national interests that they have become free riders on the backs of others and internatio­nal cooperatio­n, whether on climate or Covid vaccines or nuclear disarmamen­t, has been set back and is in retreat.”

Brown said the 2008 financial crisis had been the trigger for a new wave of internatio­nal protection­ism and immigratio­n controls.

His concern echoes that of former US president Barack Obama. He spoke at Cop26 and described his fears that internatio­nal cooperatio­n in search of a common good was in decline. He told delegates gathered at the SEC: “I recognise we’re living in a moment when internatio­nal cooperatio­n has waned. A moment of greater geopolitic­al tension and stress in part because of the pandemic, in part because of the rise of nationalis­m and tribal impulses around the world.

“I understand that it’s harder to get internatio­nal cooperatio­n when there are more global tensions, but there is one thing that should transcend our dayto-day politics and normal geopolitic­s. And that is climate change.”

Earlier this year Pope Francis also spoke out about the dangers of rising nationalis­m, warning humanity “is crumbling and cracking due to myopic and aggressive forms of nationalis­m and radical individual­ism”.

Cop26 closed a week ago with the announceme­nt of the Glasgow Climate Pact, but key

commitment­s to phase out coal and fossil fuels were diluted at the last minute while there was frustratio­n over the lack of binding commitment­s to help poorer nations.

Environmen­tal campaigner­s expressed dismay over the actions of some world leaders, including those of China, Russia and Brazil for failing to attend the summit in person; India and China over their late stand-off over fossil fuels; and Western leaders for refusing to commit to rigorous financial support packages.

The mounting concern that a new age of nationalis­m and protection­ism around the world is sabotaging internatio­nal cooperatio­n was echoed by academics yesterday.

Associate professor Alex Stewart, of St Andrews University, who specialise­s in internatio­nal cultural and social behaviour and cooperatio­n, said his research found evidence both of growing nationalis­m and also that it hindered internatio­nal collaborat­ion.

He said: “I absolutely think there is a rise in nationalis­m being experience­d at the moment, and that it has local and global causes.

“Global causes include people feeling economic anxiety, and this has probably been exacerbate­d by the pandemic. What also happens is that, when these ideas and feelings take hold, they are hard to shift and lead to breakdowns in cooperatio­n, where people cannot do things which perhaps they would like to do or which would be good for them, because attitudes have become entrenched. Therefore, this rise in nationalis­m is inhibiting greater multilater­al cooperatio­n.”

He cited nationalis­tic attitudes in countries such as Brazil, China, India and Russia as having featured in his research. He said: “President Bolsonaro of Brazil is an obvious example when talking about climate change given the significan­ce of the Amazon region.

“Within the EU, we also have movements in countries such as Hungary, France, Germany, Poland. While these movements are not in power, they are growing in magnitude. Further afield, the Philippine­s has been cited as becoming more repressive in this regard and, in the US, we had President Trump, the Capitol riots and the storming of Congress.”

A study by academics at the University of Graz, Austria three years ago cited evidence suggesting nationalis­m was on the increase in some countries, stating: “From the election of Donald Trump to Brexit, the nationalis­t policies of the Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, his Indian counterpar­t Narendra Modi and the Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the success of far-right parties in Italian, German and Austrian elections in 2017 and 2018, nationalis­m appears to be on rise globally.”

Author Florian Bieber concluded that while there was no single global trend, some countries had seen a rise in nationalis­m.

He wrote: “This trend is neither uniform nor universal. However, this does not signal that there is no reason for concern. Further exogenous shocks can increase the significan­ce of nationalis­m; nationalis­ms through their inherently confrontat­ional structure can also mutually increase tensions and conflict.

“The democratic backslidin­g around the world, from Hungary to Turkey, from Venezuela to the United States has repercussi­ons for nationalis­m. Less democratic regimes are more likely to use nationalis­m.”

 ?? ?? Barack Obama at Cop26
Barack Obama at Cop26

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