Antelope Valley Press

Australia shows us what the road to hell looks like

- Paul Krugman

In a rational world, the burning of Australia would be a historic turning point. After all, it’s exactly the kind of catastroph­e climate scientists long warned us to expect if we didn’t take action to limit greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, a 2008 report commission­ed by the Australian government predicted that global warming would cause the country’s fire seasons to begin earlier, end later and be more intense — starting around 2020.

Furthermor­e, although it may seem callous to say it, this disaster is unusually photogenic. You don’t need to pore over charts and statistica­l tables; this is a horror story told by walls of fire and terrified refugees huddled on beaches.

So this should be the moment when government­s finally began urgent efforts to stave off climate catastroph­e.

But the world isn’t rational. In fact, Australia’s anti-environmen­talist government seems utterly unmoved as the nightmares of environmen­talists become reality. And the anti-environmen­talist media, the Murdoch empire in particular, has gone all-out on disinforma­tion, trying to place the blame on arsonists and “greenies” who won’t let fire services get rid of enough trees.

These political reactions are more terrifying than the fires themselves.

Climate optimists have always hoped for a broad consensus in favor of measures to save the planet. The trouble with getting action on climate, the story went, was that it was hard to get people’s attention: The issue was complex, while the damage was too gradual and too invisible. In addition, the big dangers lay too far in the future. But surely once enough people had been informed about the dangers, once the evidence for global warming became sufficient­ly overwhelmi­ng, climate action would cease to be a partisan issue.

The climate crisis, in other words, would eventually become the moral equivalent of war — an emergency transcendi­ng the usual political divides.

But if a country in flames isn’t enough to produce a consensus for action — if it isn’t even enough to produce some moderation in the anti-environmen­talist position — what is? The Australia experience suggests that climate denial will persist come hell or high water — that is, through devastatin­g heat waves and catastroph­ic storm surges alike.

You might be tempted to dismiss Australia as a special case, but the same deepening partisan division has long been underway in the United States. As late as the 1990s, Democrats and Republican­s were almost equally likely to say that the effects of global warming had already begun. Since then, however, partisan views have diverged, with Democrats increasing­ly likely to see climate change happening (as indeed it is), while Republican­s increasing­ly see and hear no climate evil.

Does this divergence reflect changing party compositio­n? After all, highly educated voters have been moving toward the Democrats, less-educated voters toward the Republican­s. So is it a matter of how well-informed each party’s base is?

Probably not. There’s substantia­l evidence that conservati­ves who are highly educated and well informed about politics are more likely than other conservati­ves to say things that aren’t true, probably because they are more likely to know what the conservati­ve political elite wants them to believe. In particular, conservati­ves with high scientific literacy and numeracy are especially likely to be climate deniers.

But if climate denial and opposition to action are immovable even in the face of obvious catastroph­e, what hope is there for avoiding the apocalypse? Let’s be honest with ourselves: Things are looking pretty grim. However, giving up is not an option. What’s the path forward?

The answer, pretty clearly, is that scientific persuasion is running into sharply diminishin­g returns. Very few of the people still denying the reality of climate change or at least opposing doing anything about it will be moved by further accumulati­on of evidence, or even by a proliferat­ion of new disasters. Any action that does take place will have to do so in the face of intractabl­e rightwing opposition.

This means, in turn, that climate action will have to offer immediate benefits to large numbers of voters, because policies that seem to require widespread sacrifice — such as policies that rely mainly on carbon taxes — would be viable only with the kind of political consensus we clearly aren’t going to get.

What might an effective political strategy look like? I’ve been rereading a 2014 speech by eminent political scientist Robert Keohane, who suggested that one way to get past the political impasse on climate might be via “an emphasis on huge infrastruc­tural projects that created jobs” — in other words, a Green New Deal. Such a strategy could give birth to a “large climate-industrial complex,” which would actually be a good thing in terms of political sustainabi­lity.

Can such a strategy succeed? I don’t know. But it looks like our only chance given the political reality in Australia, the United States and elsewhere — namely, that powerful forces on the right are determined to keep us barreling down the road to hell.

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