Название: The Green New Deal and Beyond
Автор: Stan Cox
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Юриспруденция, право
Серия: City Lights Open Media
isbn: 9780872868076
isbn:
The Green New Deal is a stimulus package in both name and aim. If not implemented with great care, it will encourage the same pursuit of economic growth that got us into this climate predicament in the first place.7 Resource use must be carefully restrained during the transition; otherwise, the new non-fossil energy coming online will feed growth rather than displace oil, natural gas, and coal. (I generally avoid the term “renewable energy,” because a wind turbine or solar array is not self-renewing in the way a forest or prairie is. But I will sometimes use the term when referring to others’ documents or remarks.) Full displacement of fossil energy by non-fossil energy can happen only if a cap is imposed on fossil fuels, and that cap is lowered each year in order to eliminate their emissions on schedule. Even an urgent buildup of new energy capacity cannot proceed quickly enough to compensate for all of the fossil-fueled capacity being withdrawn, so our society will need to operate on a smaller total energy supply. The national economy will need to reorient toward ensuring sufficiency for all rather than feeding the accumulation of wealth by the few.
Successfully enacting such a system will not be easy, and time is running out. As the struggle for the Green New Deal and other legislation proceeds, there will be much wrangling over the question of what is politically acceptable. That’s inevitable, but we must keep at the center of the public debate the most urgent question of all: What actions must be undertaken to eliminate greenhouse emissions in time?
THE DANGERS OF INACTION
The IPCC’s 2018 report calls for a stepped-up rate of emissions reductions and highlights the devastating impacts expected if warming is allowed to rise past 1.5°C.8 Letting the global temperature blow up to 2° or beyond would, says the report, risk irreversible loss of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets, eventually raising sea levels by one to two meters. At 2°, one-fourth to over one-half of all permafrost will disappear, irreversibly releasing a surge of stored carbon into the atmosphere. Storms, wildfires, and pest outbreaks will cause far more widespread forest dieback at 2°, especially in Central and South America, the Mediterranean Basin, South Africa, and South Australia. The report expresses “high confidence” that warming of 2° would generally increase the number of species extinctions, and the “irreversible loss of many marine and coastal ecosystems” in particular. Between 70 and 90 percent of coral reefs will be lost at 1.5°; at 2°, virtually all will die off.
The IPCC cites evidence suggesting that if we allow temperatures to rise from 1.5°C to 2°, the percentage of the world population exposed to severe heat waves in at least one out of five years would rise from 14 percent to 37 percent, affecting an increase of 1.7 billion people. An additional 420 million more people will be “frequently exposed to extreme heat waves,” and about 65 million additional people will be exposed to “exceptional heatwaves,” facing prolonged high temperatures that have only occurred very rarely up to now.9
The IPCC also projects a tenfold increase, to 362 million, in the number of people suffering crop loss and an almost eightfold increase, to 680 million, in the number living with severe habitat degradation if warming reaches 2°C. The number of people suffering increased water scarcity will increase by 184 million to 270 million. The number likely to experience flooding at 1.5° will be double the number subjected to flooding in the period from 1976 to 2005, and warming of 2° will expose an additional 26 to 34 million. The average monthly number of people exposed to extreme drought will rise globally from 114 million at 1.5° to 190 million at 2°.
The report projects that global warming and the food shortages that result10 will increase the rate of childhood undernutrition, stunting, and mortality, particularly in Asia and Africa, and that the undernourished population will be much larger globally at 2°C than at 1.5°. Incidence of malaria will increase, and the geographic reach of the Anopheles mosquito will be extended. Ditto for the Aedes mosquito, which carries dengue fever, chikungunya, yellow fever, and the Zika virus. Also, according to the IPCC: “Most projections conclude that climate change could expand the geographic range and seasonality of Lyme and other tick-borne diseases in parts of North America and Europe.”
The bad news doesn’t stop there. The IPCC projects unprecedented waves of human migration: “Tropical populations may have to move distances greater than 1,000 km if global mean temperature rises by 2°. . . . A disproportionately rapid evacuation from the tropics could lead to a concentration of population in tropical margins and the subtropics, where population densities could increase by 300 percent or more.” If warming exceeds 2°C by 2050, “rates of human conflict could increase.” Going from 1.5° to 2° could increase the numbers of people susceptible to poverty “by up to several hundred million by 2050.” And “populations at disproportionately higher risk of adverse consequences . . . include disadvantaged and vulnerable populations, some indigenous peoples, and local communities dependent on agricultural or coastal livelihoods.”
The horrific wildfire emergency in Australia and deadly flooding in Jakarta, Indonesia, that ushered in the year 2020 demonstrated that for parts of the Earth, the nightmare future is already here, well before the 1.5°C global temperature rise. A 1.5° hotter world, when it arrives, will be an even tougher one to live in, and it appears inevitable at this point, according to IPCC. A 2° hotter world would clearly be catastrophic and must be avoided. The climate policies we adopt can’t simply rely on green technology and high hopes to carry us into the future. They must be designed to directly and reliably minimize the risk of surpassing a 1.5° increase in global temperature. It is far more important to steer clear of a nightmare future than to strive for an idealized one.
THE POSSIBILITY OF A BETTER WORLD
Legislation for direct, rapid, and equitable elimination of fossil fuels, along with ecological renewal that goes beyond climate mitigation, will be keys to achieving the Green New Deal’s vision. Its plans for urgently needed economic and social policies to create jobs, workers’ and union rights and benefits, inclusive economic justice, guarantees of living wages and health care coverage, Indigenous rights, and vision for an end to racial oppression are all much-needed breakthroughs and are crucial for creating a genuinely more just society. The Green New Deal is forthright in recognizing that market forces would be sorely deficient in addressing the climate emergency, and its necessarily ambitious goals for the elimination of greenhouse emissions are achievable if Congress also takes tough action to stop the extraction and use of fossil fuels, by law and on schedule. Keeping fossil fuels buried in the Earth’s crust will complement the Green New Deal’s energy and justice proposals, rather than competing with them.
The promise of a Green New Deal resonates with an enormous and growing number of people. When, in 2019, The Intercept and Naomi Klein presented a seven-minute film called A Message from the Future with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,11 it garnered 2 million views within eight hours of being posted. Written by Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), who was sponsor of the Green New Deal bill in the House of Representatives, and the filmmaker Avi Lewis, with animated art by Molly Crabapple and narration by Ocasio-Cortez, it tells the story of the Green New Deal in retrospect, looking back from 2030. After the Democrats won back the White House and Congress in 2020, the film tells us, “We knew that we needed to save the planet, and that we had all the technology to do it.”
There is value in the Klein/Crabapple/Ocasio-Cortez/Lewis film and other works that envision a world that we would like to see become reality, along with policies that will be needed to take us there. Such visions can inspire us to act and not be paralyzed by dread and inertia. But it is necessary as well to envision the ways in which our best-laid plans could fail to keep future generations from falling not only into the 2°C world that IPCC projects, but even farther, into the hell of a 3° or 6° world as foreseen by Mark Lynas in his book Six Degrees and David Wallace Wells in his book The СКАЧАТЬ