United Nations Secretary-General Ant贸nio Guterres delivered another about the climate emergency on December 2. He told the 197 country leaders assembled that global average levels of carbon dioxide have now gone over what used to be considered an 鈥渦nthinkable global tipping point鈥.
鈥淕lobal average levels of carbon dioxide reached 407.8 parts per million in 2018鈥, Guterres told the 25th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, also known as COP25, in Madrid.
鈥淣ot long ago, 400 parts per million was seen as an unthinkable tipping point. We are well over it.鈥
Further, he said, 鈥淭he last time there was a comparable concentration of CO2 [carbon dioxide] was between 3 and 5 million years ago, when the temperature was between 2 and 3 degrees Celsius warmer than now and sea levels were 10 to 20 metres higher than today.
鈥淭he signs are unmissable.
鈥淭he last five years have been the hottest ever recorded.鈥
The last three reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 鈥渃onfirm that we are knowingly destroying the very support systems keeping us alive鈥.
Guterres pointed out that countries that continue to rely on fossil fuel energy over the next decade will push temperatures well over the 1.5掳C target the voluntary Paris Agreement was hoping to prevent.
鈥淓ither we stop this addiction to coal or all our efforts to tackle climate change will be doomed,鈥 Guterres said.
It is perverse that Australia, in the grip of out-of-control bushfires and drought, is being represented by , one of the Coalition government鈥檚 fossil fuel industry proponents.
The UN conference is reviewing the December 2015 COP21 Paris targets, and is supposed to set new ones to be ratified next year in Glasgow.
But the Paris agreement has already failed. And despite sounding the alarm 鈥 again 鈥 the UN did not have other than to allocate yet more funds for 鈥渞esilience and disaster response and recovery鈥 to 鈥渄eveloping countries鈥.聽
The UN chief鈥檚 promise to keep the climate on the 鈥渢op of the agenda鈥 and his appointment of the governor of the Bank of England as his new special envoy is an inadequate response.
The above pre-industrial times, meaning there is even less time to do what the Paris Accords are meant to be doing 鈥 limiting warming to 1.5掳C.
Bleak outlook
The sheer scale of the climate emergency, summarised in a report from the on November 29, shows that world leaders know what is happening and what is at stake. That report stated bluntly its.
The world is heading for a 3.2掳C temperature rise on current carbon reduction pledges, it said. Unless global greenhouse gas emissions fall by 7.6% each year between 2020 and 2030, the temperature goal of 1.5掳C will not be met.聽
It said that as countries had failed to stop the growth in global GHG emissions since 2015 鈥渄eeper and faster cuts are now required.鈥
In particular it noted:
- Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have risen at a rate of 1.5% a year over the past decade.
- Fossil carbon dioxide emissions from energy use and industry, which dominate total GHG emissions, grew by 2% in 2018.
- There is no sign that GHG emissions will peak in the next few years.
- By 2030, emissions would need to be between 25% and 55% lower than in 2018 to put the world on the 鈥渓east-cost pathway鈥 to limiting global warming to below 2掳C and 1.5掳C respectively.
- G20 members 鈥 Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, the European Union, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States 鈥 account for 78% of all GHG emissions but 15 of these have not committed to a timeline for net-zero emissions. Only five have committed to a long-term zero emissions target. (The to leave the Paris Agreement.)
- Seven G20 members 鈥 Australia, Brazil, Canada, Japan, the Republic of Korea, South Africa and the US 鈥 need to 鈥渟tep up鈥 and Australia should not be cheating on its 2020 targets by using 鈥carry-over鈥 Kyoto carbon credits.
Overall, the UN report urged a 鈥渄ramatic strengthening鈥 of national targets in 2020, saying that had serious action begun in 2010 the carbon cuts required per year to meet the projected emissions levels for 2掳C and 1.5掳C would have been, on average, 0.7% and 3.3% per year. To meet the targets now, emissions need to be cut 2.7% per year from 2020 for the 2掳C goal and 7.6% per year for the 1.5掳C goal.
Can the world do this in time?聽
Many climate activists are pinning their hopes on a significant roll out of clean energy technology. But can more, and cheaper, green energy really be the long-term solution?
Green growth?
argues that the climate emergency movement has to grapple with the idea that a switch to green growth will not fundamentally tackle the causes of the climate emergency.
The climate movement in the advanced capitalist world has to start talking about limits to growth and waste, he said. It also has to recognise that the Global South, which has been colonised and systematically ransacked for its resources over centuries, will need help from the Global North to grow in a sustainable way.
In addition, there is the problem that the world economy is expanding much faster than we are able to transition to clean energy, Hickel said.聽
鈥淚f we carry on with growth as usual, then cutting emissions in half by 2030 would require that we decarbonise the economy at a rate of 11 per cent per year 鈥 that鈥檚 more than five times faster than the historic rate of decarbonisation and about three times faster than what scientists say is possible even under highly optimistic conditions.
鈥淚f we roll out a towering carbon tax and massive subsidies for clean energy, we might be able to decarbonise by 3 to 4 percent per year, but that鈥檚 nowhere near fast enough.鈥
It is imperative, Hickel argues, that the climate movement campaigns for 鈥渄egrowth鈥 rather than 鈥済reen growth鈥. Politicians prefer the latter, Hickel said, 鈥渂ecause it suggests that we can prevent a climate catastrophe without having to make any major changes to the economic status quo鈥.
Swedish climate scientist from Uppsala University agrees. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way that I can see how a wealthy part of the world, at an aggregate, national level, can deliver what would be necessary to stay below 2 degrees Celsius and still maintain a growing economy.鈥
While 鈥渄egrowth鈥 can imply that everyone needs to be worse off to survive, he said that was not true. Rather, 鈥渁 significant minority鈥 鈥 about 20鈥30% of the world鈥檚 population 鈥 would have to reduce its material well-being so that the rest could enjoy an improvement.
the climate crisis will only be solved when there is greater equality across a very unequal world. 鈥淭he objective of degrowth would be to scale down aggregate resource use, energy demand and emissions, focusing on rich, high-consuming nations and how to do this while improving people鈥檚 well-being.鈥
A degrowth plan could include progressive taxes on resource use, emissions and waste; a shorter working week, aiming for full employment; an expansion of universal social services and an expansion of the commons 鈥 especially high quality public health and education.
Capitalism and endless growth
To those who argue this is pie in the sky, such measures are more realistic than the idea that current Gross Domestic Product growth 鈥渃an be permanently and absolutely decoupled from resource use and emissions鈥 at a fast enough pace to reverse ecological breakdown.
Hickel argues that 鈥渃apitalism transforms even the most spectacular productivity gains not into abundance and human freedom, but into new forms of artificial scarcity鈥.
Instead of translating productivity gains into shorter working hours, higher wages and guaranteed employment, capitalists have captured the , increasing private profits while keeping wages low and retaining the threat of unemployment to discipline labour.聽
Given that capitalism requires endless growth to extract maximum profit, any strategy that does not take into account which part of the economy should grow, and which should not, is going to fail.
North-South divide
The climate emergency movement has to focus on the vast and growing inequality between the Global North and the Global South.
summed it up, saying the global North 鈥渁te their fair share of carbon emissions decades ago鈥. If the impacts of climate breakdown are not the same for everyone, she said, then neither should the responsibility for financing鈥渢ransformative鈥 solutions.
鈥淏etween 1850 and 2002, countries in the Global North emitted as many greenhouse gas emissions compared to countries in the Global South, where approximately 85% of the global population resides.
鈥淲ithin these countries, and globally, the wealthiest individuals, banks, agri-business and fossil companies are disproportionately responsible. The richest 10% of people produce approximately of the earth鈥檚 climate-harming fossil-fuel emissions, while the poorest half contribute a mere 10%.鈥
Just are responsible for 71% of anthropogenic GHG emissions.
Unequal power relations not only contribute to climate change, they are also 鈥渋ts roots鈥, Kaur Paul said, pointing to the long-lasting impacts of colonialism, discrimination and neoliberalism on those struggling against the worst impacts of the climate chaos they did not create.
Hickel points to as examples of how GDP is an inadequate indicator of social progress, as both countries have a higher life expectancy than the United States with only a fraction of its income.聽
鈥淏oth [countries] achieved their greatest gains during periods when GDP wasn鈥檛 growing at all. How? By rolling out universal healthcare and education.鈥
At a certain point, Hickel said, 鈥淕DP growth becomes less a proxy indicator of human progress and more a proxy indicator of [the] appropriation of resources, of ecosystems, of atmosphere, of public goods, of commons.鈥
Degrowth, for Hickel, would redistribute wealth. It would 鈥渟cale down aggregate resource use, energy demand and the emissions of rich, high-consuming nations and do this while improving people鈥檚 well-being.鈥
In an epoch of climate emergency, it is easy to see the practical sense behind the idea of universal social goods and a reinstatement of the commons 鈥 health, education, water, energy, housing 鈥 to ensure people can access the resources they need to.