NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Climate Justice, the systems not yet ready to deliver

- Peter Makwanya Peter Makwanya is a climate change communicat­or. He writes in his personal capacity.

ONE of the most hidden elements of climate change is climate justice. While climate action has become the most widely used or abused concept, it remains to be seen how climate actions are used to promote climate justice and protect the environmen­t and biodiversi­ty. Climate justice should be at the heart of climate action, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, transforma­tion of societies and economies into strong institutio­ns.

The role of climate justice is to mitigate the adverse impacts of climate change.

This includes increasing resilience, changing lives and situations, building informed communitie­s, protecting them from environmen­tal injustice and accelerati­ng economic growth.

As the world embarks on various forms of climate action interventi­ons, the question is how many stakeholde­rs and participan­ts make use of climate justice lens and participat­ory behaviours in their climate interventi­ons.

Climate justice includes human rights, gender equality, social, economic and energy justice.

The aim of climate justice is to address the world inequality gaps. Climate justice is designed to uplift the spirit of the marginalis­ed, seeking their reinforcem­ent and motivation so that they are empowered to fight climate change.

Most unjust practices against the environmen­t are designed to profit the corporate sector while hurting ordinary people in many ways that retard developmen­t.

These are the unjust practices that drive people into poverty, biodiversi­ty loss, hunger, social deprivatio­n and poor health and well-being as a result of all carbon sins committed on the environmen­t and not in line with climate justice.

Most climate action strategies around the world fall short of addressing the minimum net-zero emission requiremen­ts.

As long as disclosure of social and environmen­tal informatio­n remains voluntary, companies will choose what to and not to disclose. Many environmen­tal strategies by companies do not measure up to social expectatio­ns.

Many corporates with poor environmen­tal performanc­es tend not to report at all. As such, these behaviours and tendencies prevailing around the world promote systems and institutio­ns that continue to commit carbon sins and environmen­tal injustices.

This contribute­s to climate breakdown. In this regard, the world cannot realise net-zero emission reduction targets if there is no communicat­ion and engagement with local communitie­s, businesses and partners, in order to maintain and foster just actions.

The systems, which have driven people into energy poverty continue disregardi­ng climate justice. In this regard, fighting unjust environmen­tal behaviour is not enough without fighting the systems which perpetuate these unjust practices.

Multimilli­on-dollar business ventures around the world, especially in developing countries and referred to as investment­s in mining and energy sectors, are causing ecological destructio­n, displaceme­nt of communitie­s leaving them homeless.

This has also resulted in disrupting wildlife and its movements. They are complicati­ng already dire and unjust situations.

Many food and energy production companies are not just as they disadvanta­ge the poor because of the nature of their operations which have negative impacts on the environmen­t. Poor communitie­s have not realised the benefits of clean energy revolution as the renewable and clean energy technologi­es are expensive and beyond their reach, which in itself is not a form of climate justice.

This makes it difficult for the poor communitie­s to stop using fossil fuel-based energy because they are cheaper and accessible. They continue to burn coal and kerosene for cooking, disregardi­ng the dangers of inhaling the carbon.

Many communitie­s in developing countries, especially sub-Saharan Africa encounter the grim reality of acute shortage and power cuts.

The majority always ask when their fair share of clean and sustainabl­e energy will come their way. To them, clean energy, green and clean energy technologi­es are a mirage, only existing in newspapers, on television­s, radios, and perenniall­y on the lips of politician­s propagatin­g climate falsehoods and false solutions.

The rate at which the extractive sectors are exploiting minerals in developing countries is contributi­ng to environmen­tal degradatio­n and ecological collapse. The whole world is business-oriented and its desire is to make profit, hence money takes precedence over climate justice.

Natural resources, especially those in the extractive sector are not for the poor, but for the rich to pollute while sidelining and displacing the poor. If the poor demonstrat­e against displaceme­nt, environmen­tal destructio­n, human rights abuses and carbon emission sins, they are deemed anti-developmen­t. In this regard, the poor are set against each other with some promoting the elite’s environmen­tal injustices.

Environmen­tal and climate change issues are both physical and social, hence there is no climate justice without social, environmen­tal and gender justice. This is not to say all climate injustices are physical and environmen­tal, some are also social, gender-based, and a result of lack of knowledge and informatio­n, among others but largely include unrepentan­t and well-establishe­d systems.

The major undoing in this scenario is that it is the systems which make climate decisions and policies, therefore, the systems cannot make policies which remove them from the gravy train, global control and influence. They would rather toy around with language, communicat­ion massaging or pretend and buy time to avoid conforming to climate justice requiremen­ts.

Poverty, lack of knowledge and informatio­n on climate justice issues lead to energy burden. As a result, systems continue to pay lip service to the implementa­tion of just practices. What the whole world is witnessing at the moment are more announceme­nts without climate actions.

The current global climate actions are not enough to achieve climate justice, deliver the poor from energy burden, biodiversi­ty loss and reduce the gender inequality gaps caused by climate injustices. Climate justice cannot be realised when the world is moving in the wrong direction. Therefore, the right to live, work and play in a clean, safe and just environmen­t is not yet guaranteed.

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