Call & Times

Your kids are absolutely right to go on strike

- By CHRIS BRYANT Bryant is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies. He previously worked for the Financial Times.

John Lanchester’s new novel “The Wall” imagines Britain after “The Change.” Following a dramatic shift in temperatur­e and sea levels, the U.K. has barricaded off what remains of the coastline; in Lanchester’s dystopia, there aren’t any beaches left.

Young citizens bore no responsibi­lity for any of this, but they’re the ones who must guard the wall and violently repel increasing­ly desperate migrants, known as “The Others.” If they fail, the young are themselves cast out to sea as punishment. Not surprising­ly, they’re pretty unhappy about their lot.

“None of us can talk to our parents,” says Kavanagh, the novel’s protagonis­t. “It’s guilt: mass guilt, generation­al guilt. The olds feel they irretrieva­bly f*cked up the world, then allowed us to be born into it. You know what? It’s true. That’s exactly what they did. They know it, we know it. Everybody knows it.”

It’s a sentiment shared no doubt by the schoolchil­dren protesting around the world on Friday to demand far more decisive action on climate change. Inspired by 16-year old Greta Thunberg’s weekly vigil outside Sweden’s parliament, the movement has expanded to dozens of countries, including the U.S. Thunberg has been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.

Can you really blame the kids? The planet has warmed by “only” about 1 degree Celsius (1.8 Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times and yet the destructiv­e effects of climate change have become frightenin­gly apparent. The heatwaves, floods, deadly wildfires and violent hurricanes we’ve experience­d lately are mild compared to what our children will contend with. The world is on track to heat up by more than 3 degrees by 2100 and the warming won’t miraculous­ly stop then.

“The climate system that raised us, and raised everything we now know as human culture and civilizati­on, is now, like a parent, dead,” writes David Wallace-Wells in “The Uninhabita­ble Earth.” Unfortunat­ely, this isn’t another Lanchester-like work of speculativ­e fiction. It’s non-fiction.

Wallace-Wells’ book documents the horrors and chaos that those cutting class on Friday want to avoid: Tens of millions of climate refugees, trillions of dollars of economic damage, deadly heat, fresh-water scarcity (the glaciers of the Himalayas will lose at least 40 percent of their ice by 2100, he notes) and “much more fire, much more often, burning much more land.” A single California wildfire can undo all the emissions gains made that year via the state’s environmen­tal policies, just one of several terrifying climate feedback loops he describes.

Wallace-Wells’ writing is of course more vivid than the conservati­ve, consensus-driven reports produced by the UN’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change. A journalist, not a scientist, he makes no attempt to hide his alarm nor pull his punches about who to blame. Why should he?

More than half of fossil fuel-related emissions have occurred in the past 30 years, during which humans have known this will make the earth far less hospitable. Thanks to Asian demand, we consume 80 percent more coal today than in 2000. Destroying the environmen­tal conditions that gave rise to the human species “has been the work of a single generation,” Wallace-Wells writes.

We adults are proud of the progress we’ve made in other areas – life expectancy, equal rights, education and poverty, to name a few. But when later historians write about this period, that isn’t what they’ll remember. Despite the rapid adoption of wind and solar power, big improvemen­ts in energy efficiency and electric vehicles, our carbon emissions are still rising. We’re locking in more destructio­n for our kids to cope with.

Linking the Fridays For Future movement and young people’s enthusiasm for policies like the Green New Deal is the belief that the time for incrementa­lism is over. Yet government­s and corporate bosses continue to drag their heels. Even those, like Germany’s Angela Merkel, who support the kids’ right to protest are guilty. Supposedly a climate leader, Germany is recklessly phasing out nuclear power but plans to continue burning coal for another two decades.

Car manufactur­ers like Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV tout their electric plans while gorging on U.S. truck and SUV sales. In mining, Glencore Plc is committed to capping coal production at current levels to appease climate-concerned investors, yet it expects fat profits from coal this year, and probably will for years to come. Airlines talk about carbon offsets but they’re banking on so much growth that their emissions might rise sevenfold by 2050.

Telling teenagers to be patient or realistic, as Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., tried to do, won’t wash. With the United Nations warning that we have only 12 years to fix the crisis, kids aren’t inclined to hang around.

It’s even more reprehensi­ble that some adults are trying to stymie even our insufficie­nt climate-change efforts, by maligning experts and retreating from internatio­nal cooperatio­n. President Donald Trump, who wants to withdraw from the Paris climate accord, happily expresses his skepticism about the science, but often demonstrat­es his total ignorance of the subject in the process.

His rise showed the oncoming cataclysm still wasn’t a big enough priority for many Americans of voting age in 2016. If he’s re-elected in 2020, the die casting today’s adults as climate villains will have been cast. Three cheers for the kids, then. THE CALL — Saturday, March 16, 2019

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