I
was struck by this quote from an essay called “Learning to Live in an
Apocalypse” from the MIT Technology
Review’s April 2019 issue on climate change:
Nevertheless, the fact that our situation
offers no good prospects does not absolve us of the obligation to find a way
forward. Our apocalypse is happening day
by day, and our greatest challenge is learning to live with this truth while
remaining committed to some as-yet-unimaginable form of future human flourishing—to
live with radical hope. Despite decades
of failure, a disheartening track record, ongoing paralysis, a social order
geared toward consumption and distraction, and the strong possibility that our
great-grandchildren may be the last generation of humans ever to live on planet
Earth, we must go on. We have no choice.
Oh,
but we do. There are at least three
other choices. We can fight back
ineffectively, if not cynically, like India and China are. Or we can do nothing, like the U.S. is. Or we can speed up the apocalypse, like
Brazil is. But no matter which choice we
make, the outcome is the same: we’re toast—no pun intended.
Consider
this. The Paris Climate Agreement is failing, as the image of the melting chunks of icebergs off Greenland above illustrate. The agreement's objective is “holding the increase in the
global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and to
pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial
levels.” However, its emissions targets
are non-binding and therefore unenforceable.
In addition, the 194 signatory nations aren’t meeting the targets, and
even if they were, they’re probably not enough to keep a temperature increase below
2°C, much less 1.5°C. This from Wiki:
A pair of studies in Nature have said that, as of 2017, none of the major industrialized
nations were implementing the policies they had envisioned and have not met
their pledged emission reduction targets, and even if they had, the sum of all
member pledges (as of 2016) would not keep global temperature rise "well
below 2 °C.” According to UNEP [United Nations Environment Program], the
emission cut targets in November 2016 will result in temperature rise by
3 °C above pre-industrial levels, far above the 2 °C of the Paris
climate agreement.
In addition, an MIT News article discussed
recent MIT studies on the true impact that the Paris Agreement had on global
temperature increase. They concluded that, although beneficial, there was
strong evidence that the goal provided by the Paris Agreement could not be met
in the future under the current circumstances.
That’s
right. Carbon emissions are
increasing—not decreasing-- worldwide. 95%
of the world’s scientists agree that we have to reduce carbon emissions by 45%
by 2030 and by 100% by 2050, to avoid exceeding a temperature increase of 1.5°C. If the failure of the Paris Climate Agreement
is any indication, there is no way
we’re going to meet that target. Which means that the target is blown and
the only question is by how much. UNEP thinks it’s 3°C. Why are we making bad choices?
India’s attempt to develop renewable energy sources
is a good example of ineffective mitigation efforts and the scale and intractability of the crisis. As the MIT Technology Review cautions (emphasis
added):
India would need to add about 500 gigawatts
of renewables capacity by 2030, nearly seven times the current total, just to
meet the growth in demand without building new coal plants. That’s
simply not going to happen.
Sobering. Fortunately, India accounts for only 7% of
carbon emissions. But its emissions from power plants alone are projected
to increase by 80% through 2040, even with the renewables currently
planned. No matter what it does, India will add to global warming, not
reduce it.
With
these kinds of governmental responses, it seems as if there is a snowball’s
chance in hell of doing what really needs to be done: To counteract the increases in carbon emissions from
ineffective, cynical, non-existent, and counter-productive responses to climate
change, the developed nations have to reduce more to make up for the increases. But that would require a world-wide consensus
and an enforceable agreement with effective sanctions. That’s simply
not going to happen. Been there,
done that with the failing Paris Climate Agreement—which isn’t even binding and
has no consequences. We're not going to get anything stronger.
So
I think the likely scenario is that things will get worse and we will run out
of time, if we haven’t already. As the
situation worsens and the oncoming disaster becomes more visible, there will be
no sharing of responsibility and no sharing of resources: clean water,
arable land, places where the temperature stays in the survivable zone and
you’re well above sea level rise. And in an atmosphere of competition,
apprehension, uncertainty, and fear, things will get ugly. Once people realize there isn’t enough cool
air, clean water, and arable land to go around, it will be the survival of the richest,
baby.
Hence
Trump’s wall and the migrant detention facilities in the U.S. The refusal
of Europe to accept more refugees and its militarization of the Mediterranean.
India’s deportation of those who can’t prove residency—mainly Muslims.
The name of the climate crisis game is scarcity, and the way to play the game
is to gird your loins, take care of your own kind, family first, and keep the
others out.
I
hate to say it, but I think we are seriously screwed and that many of the world leaders in charge (politicians,
corporate heavyweights) know it’s too late to solve the climate crisis. They know it’s going to be a disaster of epic
proportions, as in a 6th mass extinction, (some? most? all?) humans
included. How else to explain the recklessly insufficient investment in available carbon
capture technologies, easy-peasy tree planting on a massive scale, ramped up renewables,
hybridization of plants, and indoor farms? None
of these measures or technologies is scaling up, and none of them is getting
the level of governmental support needed to make a difference. Why is that?
I have an idea. If
you’re up for a real mind game, think about this. If these leaders are correct, i.e., that there
is no fix in time, then they are arguably reacting rationally to the
crisis. If a cost benefit analysis simply
doesn’t support the massive expense of curbing emissions by an individual
nation, because whatever that single nation does, it won’t make a difference in
the absence of a total, coordinated, global response, then why do anything at
all? Live it up today and hoard for tomorrow! If that’s the calculus, then these leaders
are acting logically, even as those actions are immoral and suicidal.
And
another part of that calculus is to keep your mouth shut. These leaders are smart enough to also know that if they talk about its being
too late, two things will happen. First, there will be mass
pandemonium. Second, there will be a huge groundswell of demand for a
solution. But it will be too late. Politics, technology, and
religion will fail their faithful. Social bonds will fray. People
will lose all confidence in their institutions and leaders. There will be
social instability and most likely wars for life-sustaining resources.
I
know it’s a grim prediction, and I acknowledge being a pessimist, but if you
look hard at what is and is not happening, I think it’s the most probable outcome. And I think there are other “little” people
like me who also understand the likelihood of this outcome on at least a gut,
subliminal level. That understanding is
adding an unprecedented level of anxiety to daily life, which has a multiplier
effect. It exacerbates negative trends
already present in developed countries: extreme political and
religious views, alcohol abuse, suicide, opioid addiction, low birth rates, and mass shootings. And it exacerbates negative trends already present in developing countries: poverty, corruption, gang violence, drug cartels, hunger, and emigration. There is a whiff of desperation, despair,
denial, and disbelief in the air. We live in interesting times that sometimes feel
to me like the End of Times.
I
wish I could agree with the essayist from the MIT Technology Review that we have no choice but to go on, but I think we’ve already made the choice to
go out.
Notwithstanding all the gloom and doom, let me leave you with a little levity. The photo above comes from a website called www.godtv.com. I wonder who its sponsors are? The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse? Sorry. But at this point, blasphemy is the least of our problems.
Keep
it real!
Marilyn








Clearly, the existential threat of our time, and we are failing disastrously. Our only chance in countries everywhere is to elect leaders who understand this and can lead the way to reduce fossil fuel emissions and figure out how to mitigate and sequester what's going to continue spewing forth until we find a balance. Life is so way way way out of balance https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koyaanisqatsi
ReplyDeleteI had never heard of this film and we’ll run it down. The Hopi prophecies at the end seem horribly possible.
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