Governments agree that it is an imminent environmental
crisis yet they are unwilling to act in an effective manner that shows that
they have taken the facts on board. Inaction is attractive when polluters do
not care about the impacted and refuse to accept the fact that ultimately
everyone on planet Earth is vulnerable. Politicians commit large amounts of
money climate research yet pays scant attention to its science. Negotiations to
tackle climate change have remained largely political lip-service. There is no
longer any talk of binding commitment to emissions reduction by nations and instead
proposals for vague voluntary self-monitoring action. The further away the target
dates for measures are, the easier it is for political leaders to agree to such
plans. The nearer the implementation of these dates is, the less enthusiastic
support for them. The urgency of the climate crisis demands that the world
decarbonises urgently. No one can predict the outcome of the December Paris climate
summit, but few expect the measures it may endorse to be tough enough to keep
future increases in global temperatures below two degrees Celsius, the maximum
amount most scientists believe the planet can absorb without incurring climate disasters
far beyond anything seen to date. We cannot allow politicians to intentionally
refuse to act now and shift responsibility for action to generations yet
unborn. No. We must not allow that.
The World Bank and the International Energy Agency as well
as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have acknowledged that
substantial percentage of known reserves of fossil fuels must not be burned,
that is, they must be left underground if catastrophic temperature increase is
to be avoided. This reality now makes it urgent for nations to close their
fossil shops and for corporations to shift their attention to clean energy and
other forms of production. A large-scale wind, water and solar energy system
can reliably supply the world’s needs, significantly benefitting climate, air
quality, water quality, ecology and energy security. Is that what we see? No. The
obstacles are political, not technical. Rather than work on urgent transition
from fossil fuels, nations and corporations are embarking on more extreme and
reckless modes of exploration and extraction of fossil fuels, including
fracking and deep seas drilling. Rather than shifting to safer and cleaner
energy forms, many countries, including many on the African continent, are
celebrating new oil and gas finds. They are delirious with joy and getting set
to enjoy the pyrrhic bounties that the sector promises. Without the new finds,
it was already estimated that the value of fossils to be left underground
topped 22 trillion dollars. Those fuels -- oil, natural gas, and coal -- will,
of course, continue to dominate the energy landscape for years to come, adding
billions of tons of heat-trapping carbon to the atmosphere. Not surprisingly,
the oil states and those energy corporations continue to dream of a future in
which they will play a dominant role. The fact that such fossils to be left
underground are often referred to as stranded resources suggests that
corporations and governments will don the garb of saviour to rescue the
resources from being stranded!
False solutions such as agro-fuels (ethanol) and REDD (Reducing
Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) have already had serious
negative impacts on our peoples. Geo-engineering experiments have failed
spectacularly, and even if they were to succeed, all scenarios reviewed by
scientists and by the ETC (Erosion, Technology and Concentration) Group show
that Africa would suffer severe negative impacts from such moves. As one highly
regarded physicist told a recent meeting, “geo-engineering experiments have
shown that it is totally useless.” It is a silver bullet that permits polluters
to keep polluting and cannot deliver on its promise to suck released carbon
from the atmosphere. The climate crisis can be tackled by working with nature
and not against it. We have to halt activities that have known negative
impacts, including dependence on industrial agriculture and its litany of
artificial and chemical inputs. We have to say yes to life and no to mining. It
may be inconveniencing, but the pleasures and so-called easy life of today
cannot justify a knowing condemnation of the planet and peoples to unacceptable
future. We must all stand up, speak and act against climate crimes.
Individual mass movements must all coalesce in the global
space to demand the urgent change of this present mode of production and halt
the intentional crimes to the environment. “The cost of doing business.” That’s what
corporations call it then they claim a deduction from their taxes for the
damage they’ve done to people and the planet. It’s a cost of doing business all
right; a cost to us, of doing business with them the way we currently do it,
and it’s just one of the reasons so many people are calling for a whole new
system.
BP’s Deepwater Horizon kept spewing oil into the Gulf of
Mexico for 87 days while the media was warned off and the company told the
public lies. BP was been found guilty of gross negligence and misconduct.
They’ve been slapped with $42 billion in fines and damages. But the BP not only
threatening politicians they’ll pull out of the Gulf entirely if their fines
aren’t reduced, they’re claiming a lot of that money back, thanks to a tax
loophole that will enable BP to claim as much as 80 percent of the damages
they've paid out so far as an ordinary business expense.
It’s not just BP either. Car makers, chemical companies,
mine owners and those notorious banksters routinely deduct part of their court
ordered payouts from their taxes. Which means that means we the people who
sustain the damage, are also the ones subsidizing the damages. Big Business has
too much power and that’s dangerous for people and the planet. That is why some
of us are seeking an alternative system: not just renewable energy, not
nationalization of energy companies but an entirely new social and economic
system. Some in the green movement offer a utopia of small is beautiful with
local businesses and co-ops. It is utopian because capitalism grows anew out of
all commodity production; a utopia of small businesses can only be the prelude
to the return of competitive cut-throat capitalism.
There’s a revolution going on right now. Don’t take the
detours and don’t accept the delays. Right now, we live in terrible times. Horrific
wars in the Middle East seem endless, with atrocities committed by all the
participants. The future of our planet is in doubt because of the destructive,
wasteful and polluting logic of capitalism. In most societies, sexism, racism
and xenophobia are widespread, and prospects for many cannot but be worrying
and depressing. The Socialist Party does not believe we are born racist or
sexist – we are made so by the social conditions we live in. We are confident
in our ability to persuade the majority.
The Socialist Party is are not in the business of falsifying
reality. We are not a religious sect that seeks to isolate its members from
reality. There are no capitalist solutions to climate change. We reject the
idea that national interest can be fully defeated under capitalism. On the
contrary, we argue that the system relies on divide and rule, that commercial
rivalries are the natural by-products of the prevailing economic order. No
amount of carbon taxation or emission capping agreements will succeed. A wind,
water and solar energy plan gives the world a new, clean, efficient energy
system rather than an old, dirty, inefficient one. Is it feasible to transform
the world’s energy systems? Could it be accomplished in a short time? Only
through socialism is the answer. We are revolutionaries not reformists. We are
for revolutionary change as the only way to combat climate change. Capitalism
is no friend of the Earth; its need for economic expansion makes it the enemy
of the people.
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