The Guardian (USA)

The US supreme court just made yet another devastatin­g decision for humanity

- Peter Kalmus

The US supreme court’s overturnin­g of Roe v Wade was a direct attack on women. It will result in countless deaths, especially among vulnerable women, and it set civil liberties in the United States back by half a century. Now, the court has made yet another devastatin­g decision for humanity.

In a 6-3 decision, the openly partisan and undemocrat­ic court ruled in favor of a lawsuit brought by fossil-fuelproduc­ing states against the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA). The decision strips power from regulatory agencies and advances the Republican goal to end government oversight. In particular, it eliminates one of the only remaining avenues for systemic federal climate action: using the Clean Air Act to phase out fossil fuel power plants. As a result, it may now be mathematic­ally impossible through available avenues for the US to achieve its goal of halving greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, which is anyway feeling dangerousl­y unambitiou­s in light of recent climate disasters.

In an era of crises, global heating increasing­ly stands out as the single greatest emergency humanity faces. Global heating is driving extreme heat, drought and flooding in the US and around the world. It’s driving wildfire and ecosystem collapse, and may already be contributi­ng to famine and warfare. Crucially, this is all worsening day by day, and it will continue to worsen until we end the fossil fuel industry.

The scientific consensus is that global carbon dioxide emissions must peak now (ie, between 2020 and 2025), and no new fossil fuel infrastruc­ture can be built, if we are to preserve a twothirds chance of keeping mean global heating below 2C. In my opinion, our current level of mean global heating of 1.3C is already obviously unsafe; 1.5C, which we are on track to reach in the early 2030s, would be catastroph­ic; and 2C, which we are on track to reach midcentury, could make global civilizati­on as we know it impossible.

These are the stakes of this supreme court decision, which adds another layer on to already daunting strata of blocks to climate action. More than a quarter of members of Congress are still hard climate deniers. These 139 Republican members (more than half of the Republican total, including Mitch McConnell) have accepted $61m so far in direct contributi­ons from the fossil fuel industry, not including “indirect” support. Many other members of Congress also accept fossil fuel money, including Democrats; indeed, the politician who takes the most is Joe Manchin, and four of the top 10 are also Democrats.

In the White House, we have a president who has recently put fossil fuel expansion and lower gas prices at the top of his agenda, who barely mentioned climate in his first State of the Union address, who approved far more new drilling permits during his first year than Trump, and who has deep ties to the fossil fuel industry. Internatio­nally, we have annual meetings which have failed us for 26 years, perhaps because they have been deeply compromise­d by the fossil fuel industry. Conflict of interest, lobbying, bribery … whatever you choose to call it, it amounts to the already rich further enriching themselves at enormous cost to humanity and the rest of life on Earth, and it extends all the way to the justices themselves. This is the intersecti­on of a social system designed to concentrat­e wealth like a gravitatio­nal singularit­y (we call it “capitalism”) and fossil fuel power. For example, billionair­e Charles Koch, who runs the world’s largest privately held fossil fuel corporatio­n, not only directly pushed for this decision, he campaigned to install the three new Republican justices in the first place. Rupert Murdoch has spent decades creating a worldwide climate denial media empire that includes Fox News. And fossil fuel executives have colluded for decades to prevent climate actionwith full knowledge of the consequenc­es.

Without a livable planet, nothing else matters. As the Earth’s capacity to support life continues to degrade, millions, eventually billions of people will be displaced and die, fascism will rise, climate wars will intensify and the rule of law will break down. The myth of American exceptiona­lism will offer no protection from deadly heat and climate famine.

In the US we now live under the sway of robed, superstiti­ous fools hellbent on rolling back basic civil liberties and rejecting scientific facts. Carl Sagan, warning against this sort of antiscienc­e, wrote: “The candle flame gutters. Its little pool of light trembles. Darkness gathers. The demons begin to stir.” The consequenc­es of ignoring scientists for too long are coming home to roost.

We desperatel­y need a government working to stop Earth’s breakdown rather than accelerate it, but petitions or pleas to “vote harder” will not make this happen. Due to capture by the ultra-rich, our only option is to fight. To shift society into emergency mode and end the fossil fuel industry, we must join together and do all we can to wake people up to the grave danger we are in. We must engage in climate disobedien­ce. I believe that the tides could still turn, that power could shift suddenly. But this can only happen when enough people join the fight.

Peter Kalmus is a climate scientist and author of Being the Change: Live Well and Spark a Climate Revolution

 ?? Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty Images ?? ‘The myth of American exceptiona­lism will offer no protection from deadly heat and climate famine.’
Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty Images ‘The myth of American exceptiona­lism will offer no protection from deadly heat and climate famine.’

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