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Guest post

Guest post – “Why Our Evolutionary Roots Can Inspire Us to Address the Climate Crisis” by @adventuwe

By: Hayven Rakotoarimanana (they/them), MS

Midsummer–the two weeks following the northern hemisphere’s summer solstice (June 21)–has traditionally been a time of celebration and festival for those living in Northern Europe, parts of North America, and Northeast Asia.These northern, temperate areas laud this season’s warm temperatures and long, often sunny days. However, in South Asia, Madagascar, and parts of East Africa, this time of year marks the beginning of monsoon season, where lifegiving rains replenish the ground, parched after the long dry season.

Unfortunately, the South Asian-East African monsoon has become unreliable in recent years, fueled by anthropogenic global warming. In 2021, India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh suffered one of the worst droughts in recorded history, as warmer ocean temperatures forced the seasonal monsoonal gyre to the south. The drought was most intense in Nagaland and Assam, in northeast India, along with Odisha and Rajasthan in western India. In these places rainfall during the 2021 monsoon season measured less than 50 percent of normal totals, marking this as an exceptional drought (Shagun 2021). This drought devastated crop production, creating a famine that killed thousands of people.

A year later, in 2022, an increase in the monsoon rains (which arrived months ahead of schedule) caused a deluge across South Asia and central China, causing widespread flooding that caused significant damage to life and property. The rain damage was worst in Henan, China, where more than 300 people died and roads transformed into rivers, sending cars careening down flooded streets into homes and businesses.

These erratic tendencies in the monsoons across Asia and East Africa are likely to increase with anthropogenic climate change, according to a recent study by researchers from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (Katzenberger, Schewe, Pongratz, & Leverman 2021). Practically, this means that the coming decades will see an increase in natural disasters, floods, and famines. This not only impacts the region’s human populations, who will experience more climate-related poverty, suffering, and death, but it will also decimate the environment and non-human animal populations, many of whom are endemic and already close to extinction.

How did we get here?

The origins of the current climate crisis lie much further back than the disasters of the past two years, or even the last century or the Industrial Revolution. The roots go back much deeper, to humanity’s fundamental relationship with the rest of Nature.

For most of Homo sapiens 300,000-year history, the species lived much like other animals do: relying on the land and what it provided for survival–food, shelter, health, connection. Population levels remained in a natural balance, with births and deaths remaining roughly equivalent, allowing for long-term resource sustainability. The vast majority of human history, in all parts of the world, was one spent in harmony with nature. There was no anthropocene, since humans did not have the ability to dominate nature in a way similar to societies today.

This began to change with the advent of agriculture approximately 12,500 years ago. Farming freed humans from reliance on natural resources for survival; they could grow their own food, trap and exploit other animals, and store resources for tough times. Domestic dogs aided in hunting and defense, leading to a surplus in meat-based food. In addition, the domestication of horses and camels gave humans easy, fast transportation (at the expense of animal suffering).

The changes brought by this agricultural revolution allowed humankind to develop a number of new innovations: writing, codified religions, cities, pyramids, irrigation systems, weapons, transportation systems, and market economies. These were the catalyst for a new relationship between humanity and (the rest of) nature: Homo sapiens was no longer just one species living on the bounty of the planet, but an overlord, exploiting the land for personal and collective gain. In the mind of most post-agricultural humans, the Earth stopped being that which sustained life, and became a mere resource to be used.

It is this attitude–which became even more pronounced with the industrial revolution and the rise of modern capitalism–that drives the anti-environmental, growth-at-any-cost ethos behind the climate crisis. 

Remember your roots to save the planet

Although our species was most in tune with the Earth before the rise of agriculture, industry, and modern economics, no one is suggesting that we return to a Stone Age lifestyle. So what can we do to address climate change, in light of current technological and social conditions?

-Stop having kids. Remember that, for the vast majority of human history, net population growth was zero. Having one fewer child reduces your personal emissions rate by 60 tons of carbon dioxide per year (Perkins 2017). National policies which disincentivize reproduction, especially in countries such as India, where population growth is most severe, would be greatly effective at curbing emissions and climate change.

-Go vegan. Modern animal agriculture is one of the largest contributors to carbon emissions. Switching to a plant-based diet reduces personal carbon dioxide emissions by one ton per year (Perkins 2017). On a societal level, phasing out animal agriculture has a much larger impact, reducing carbon emissions by 68 percent annually (Than 2022).

-Consume only what you need. Today’s throwaway consumer lifestyle, which is common in the West and now booming across the Global South, is a major contributing factor to carbon emissions and global warming. Growing food, knitting clothes, and collecting rainwater can have a small impact on an individual level, and a larger one on a societal level. Taking a cue from our ancestors and letting the Earth provide as much of your food, clothing, and shelter as possible disconnects us from the exploitative-capitalist cycle, and allows us to appreciate nature as a sustainer, rather than a mere resource.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments!

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United States of America

June 30, 2008 – Judge stops a coal-burning power plant getting built.

On this day, June 30 2008, lawfare worked. 

Thelma Wyatt Cummings Moore, a Fulton County (Georgia) Superior Court judge, on 30 June 2008, blocked construction of the first coal-burning power plant proposed in Georgia in more than 20 years, ruling that it must limit emissions of carbon dioxide. This was the first time that a court had applied an April 2007 ruling of the US Supreme Court recognizing that carbon dioxide is a pollutant under the federal Clean Air Act to an industrial source.

(Johansson, 2015: 83) [EcoHustle!)

See also here.

Why this matters

“The law” is an interesting construct, isn’t it?  Sometimes the power of its words force those running the show onto the back foot, at least for a while.

“They make the laws, to chain us well [the clergy dazzle us with heaven, or they damn us into hell]”.

What happened next?

The plant, Longleaf, never got built – as part of a quid pro quo with the Sierra Club, something else did, in Texas. The atmosphere definitely noticed the difference, oh yes.

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International processes Japan

June 29, 1979 – G7 says climate change matters. Yes, 1979.

On this day, June 1979, the declaration at the end of the G7 Meeting in Tokyo contained this gem.

3. We pledge our countries to increase as far as possible coal use, production, and trade, without damage to the environment. We will endeavor to substitute coal for oil in the industrial and electrical sectors, encourage the improvement of coal transport, maintain positive attitudes toward investment for coal projects, pledge not to interrupt coal trade under long-term contracts unless required to do so by a national emergency, and maintain, by measures which do not obstruct coal imports, those levels of domestic coal production which are desirable for reasons of energy, regional and social policy. “We need to expand alternative sources of energy, especially those which will help to prevent further pollution, particularly increases of carbon dioxide and sulphur oxides in the atmosphere.” http://www.g7.utoronto.ca/summit/1979tokyo/communique.html

The G7 had started in the mid-70s, initially as a one-off meeting hosted by the French. Everyone was in a panic about the economy (stagflation), the uppityness (and yes, I mean that – freighted with all the horrors of white supremacism) of people of colour in the Majority World, and also the unruliness of the locals (strikes etc).

Why this matters. 

Promises been going on a long time, haven’t they?

What happened next?

Climate was not there on the agenda in Venice 1980, and once Reagan came in, that was it – it would be another ten years before the G7 pretended to be green.

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Energy United Kingdom

June 28,1982 – Secretary of State for Energy justifies flogging off public assets

On this day, June 28 1982 (40 years ago today) Nigel Lawson, as Secretary of State for Energy in the first government of Margaret Thatcher, gave a “landmark speech” on energy policy to the International Association of Energy Economists. I can’t find a copy of it online. Ho hum.

According to Amber Rudd, speaking more recently (18 November 2015, since you asked) –

In his seminal speech in 1982, he defined the Government’s role as setting a framework that would ensure the market, rather than the state, provided secure, cost-efficient energy.

This was driven by a desire to create a system where competition worked for families and businesses.

“The changes in prospect,” said Lawson at the time, “will help us ensure that the supplies of fuel we need are available at the lowest practicable cost.”

So, what did these fine words mean? Publicly-owned assets were flogged off and some people got even richer.

Planning became impossible. It was all “fine” (not really, but looked it to some) until we needed to think long-term and strategically about what kind of fuel sources we used to get how much energy and for what purposes. Because privately owned companies are going to want to sell more of their product, not less. This is not rocket-science.

Why this matters. 

Well, that period – late 70s, early 80s, , was probably our last best chance to do anything meaningful about climate change. Oh well.

What happened next?

With energy policy? Ha ha ha ha ha.  

We now (April 2022) have an “Energy Security Strategy” that doesn’t mention demand reduction, energy efficiency, on-shore wind. Instead it goes Full Fantasy on nuclear, CCS and hydrogen.  

Epic thread by Michael Jacobs, that ends thus –

We’re deep in the magical thinking phase, aren’t we?

Nigel Lawson? You many know him from the esteemed Global Warming Policy Foundation.

Categories
Australia Denial

June 27, 2000 – crazy but well-connected #climate denialists schmooze politicians

On this day in 2000, the beserk but effective “Lavoisier Group” of  Australian climate denialists schmoozed senior politicians (former Treasurer Peter Walsh, an ALP thumper, probably set this up).

The Lavoisier Group (named for a French chemist, because these groups are always – somewhat pathetically – trying to bolster their cred and signal their, ah, “erudition”) had been formed as a radical flank effort to try to stiffen John Howard’s resolve in keeping Australia from ratifying the Kyoto Protocol.  (Australia had, by various means, gotten a sweet sweet deal of an emissions “reduction” target of [checks notes] … a 10% INCREASE in emissions – see Clive Hamilton on this.]

“Last year, the Lavoisier Group held meetings around the country, including a June 27 dinner for a select group of federal parliamentarians in the House of Representatives’ dining room.”  

Jim Green (2001)  Corporate greed behind US dumping of greenhouse treaty, Green Left Weekly, April 4

Why this matters. 

Small groups of determined and well-connected people who are going to help other people stay rich can be surprisingly effective in blocking things. Who knew.

What happened next?

Lavoisier kept on being effective for as long as Howard was PM (though things got trickier for them by 2006 or so). They were an important building block for the climate denial “movement” that flourished from 2009 or so through to 2013 or so. They are still, bless them, publishing their idiocies.

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Australia

June 26, 1991 “environment is not flavor of the month any more”

On this day, June 26 in 1991, Australian journalist Maria Taylor gave a good example of how the wave of climate concern that had begun in 1988/9 was ending.(they always do).

STATE OF THE WORLD 1991. A Worldwatch Institute Report on Progress Toward a Sustainable Society. Allen and Unwin. $19.95.

Reviewer: MARIA TAYLOR

A SYDNEY marketing man and sometime advisor to the environmental movement told me recently that these days it’s hard to sell business on sponsoring environmental projects because “environment is not the flavour of the month any more”.

While sheer survival may top many a corporate agenda at the moment, it’s still a breathtakingly quaint notion to suppose that “the environment” is a media beat-up begun a year or so ago and now about run its course.

The implication is that just as soon as we can get the economy to behave again, it will be back to business as usual. A lot of people also believe in fairy tales….

Taylor, M. 1991. Heads in the sand over the environment. Canberra Times, 26 June, p.8.

Why this matters

The “Issue Attention Cycle” is a thing. You can think it is stupid, but that doesn’t change its thing-ness, and your need to think carefully about what you do within it to be able to keep doing things after it.

What happened next?

Maria Taylor wrote a PhD thesis. A good one It became this book: Global warming and climate change: what Australia knew and buried. You can read it here

She has a website here.

Categories
Carbon Capture and Storage Technophilia

June 25, 2002, 2003 and 2008 – CCS’s first hype cycle builds

On this day, June 25, across 6 years, we can watch a technology emerge from obscurity (see June 4 for how an issue goes through an arc).

Carbon capture and storage is the proposal to stop carbon dioxide molecules, released when you burn a hydrocarbon (oil, coal or gas), from getting into the atmosphere. I could go on, but I won’t…

On this day in 2002 the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) held an “ Improved Oil Recovery” Research Seminar.

Then, a  year later the US, EU, 12 countries agreed to develop carbon capture technologies” – the grandly named “Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum” became a thing.

Then, five years after that, with CCS very high up the agenda in the UK,  a Shell-sponsored CCS supplement turned up in the Guardian  containing 14-articles, all focusing on CCS. Page 234 of Mander et al (2013)

Why this matters. 

Technologies build up a head of, erm, steam. Or they don’t. It takes time for things to emerge. Then they work, or they don’t, or they do something else.

What happened next?

CCS? It went away. Then it came back, as fantasies do.

Categories
Guest post Scotland United Kingdom

June 24, 2009 – Scottish Parliament passes insufficient climate legislation; claims ‘leadership’ anyway

On this day, June 24th, in 2009, the Scottish parliament unanimously passed the Climate Change (Scotland) Act. This enabled the devolved Scottish government, led by the Scottish National Party’s minority administration, to look slightly more progressive than the UK New Labour government at Westminster. This government, then led by Gordon Brown, had passed the Climate Change Act for the whole of the UK in 2008.

Some provisions in the Scottish Act went further than the UK legislation; for example a slightly higher emission reduction target for 2020. This was the result of a parliamentary bidding war (a 42% target reduction in Scotland, compared to 34% for the UK as a whole). Also, there were to be annual targets to sit within 5 year carbon budget periods (the UK Act didn’t have those annual targets).

Sarah Louise Nash has written extensively in the academic journal Environmental Politics about the alliances that were formed in Scotland to shape the Act during a period of increased activist and media attention to climate change (paywall). A key factor was the desire for Scotland to be able to position itself as a global leader at the COP19 summit held in Copenhagen later in 2009, which ended famously in acrimonious failure.

In 2019, during the latest wave of enhanced activist and media concern about the worsening climate crisis, the Climate Change (Scotland) Act was amended to set more stringent emission reduction targets. The UK Government had just altered its legislation to set a net zero target for 2050 (up from an 80% reduction target). Scotland again followed suit and positioned itself as slightly more ambitious by proposing net zero by 2045, with interim targets for 2030 and 2040. The Scottish Green Party abstained on the Bill that introduced the new targets, arguing that an 80% reduction target by 2030 is needed, instead of the Bill’s 75% target (increased from the SNP’s proposed 70%).

Just like in 2009, 2019’s legislative change came before an important global summit that failed to meet inflated expectations. COP26, scheduled to be held in Glasgow in 2020, and delayed due to Covid until 2021, involved Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon trying, with limited success, to get on stage to position Scotland as a world leader, as cringy selfies showcased by the Murdoch Press (Sunday Times) help make apparent.

Nicola Sturgeon poses in red with various leaders at COP26 in Glasgow in 2021.

Despite the talk of global leadership, the climate scientist professor Kevin Anderson noted in Scotland’s 2020 Climate Assembly that ‘when you look at Scotland’s consumption emissions, that is its total carbon footprint over the last twenty years, you will see that there has been no meaningful reduction over that twenty year period’.

The lesson to take from this history is that, despite bidding wars for the status of virtue and global leadership on climate change that help to increase legislative ambition, the numbers still fail to add up when the baseline for ‘leadership’ is so disastrously low.

Dr Robbie Watt is an academic at University of Manchester, a core group member of Climate Emergency Manchester and an all-round lovely bloke. He has another guest post on All Our Yesterdays, here.

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Ignored Warnings United States of America

June 24, 1986 – New Yorkers get to watch a documentary on “The Climate Crisis”

On this day, June 24 in 1986, A New York television channel showed a documentary with the does-what-it-says-on-the-tin title of “The Climate Crisis”-

“PICKING up where a high-school chemistry class might end, ”Nova,” the public-broadcasting science series, offers the nonmatriculating viewer an advanced course in worrying. The cause of the concern is all the carbon dioxide that’s being pumped into the industrialized and motorized air. The hour-long broadcast is called ”The Climate Crisis: The Greenhouse Effect,” at 9 tonight on Channel 13.

“The conclusion, conveyed with great authority by several big-league climatologists from government and private research organizations, is terrible: by the year 2000, the atmosphere and weather will grow warmer by several degrees and life – animal, plant, human – will be threatened. The experts say that melting ice caps, flooded cities, droughts in the corn belt and famine in the third world could result if the earth’s mean temperature rises by a mere two or three degrees.”

Mitgang, H. 1986. Earth’s Climatic Crisis Examined by ‘Nova’. New York Times, 24 June.

Why this matters. 

Good to remember that serious efforts were being made. It’s too easy to tell stories about “then this politician did this, then this CEO did that”, and therefore public opinion changed to “x”.

It is an easy narrative device, and it is a career-helper AND it helps with this idea (comforting) that there is a bridge to storm to save the Titanic by grabbing the wheel and yanking.  

Yeah, no.

What happened next?

Public education efforts continued. Two years later, eight years after she was first given credible warnings, Thatcher started saying the “right” words, as did George Bush. That went well, didn’t it?

Categories
UNFCCC

June 23, 1997 – Australian Prime Minister skips climate meeting to fanboy Thatcher #auspol

On this day, 23rd June 1997, world “leaders” gathered in Rio for a meeting packed with self-congratulatory speeches, this one to celebrate (if that is the word), five years since the Rio Earth Summit. (The 1992 Rio Earth Summit is the one that gave us the Biodiversity Treaty and the UNFCCC).


In the US the American Petroleum Institute was taking out full page ads to put pressure on President Clinton. In Australia Clive Hamilton co-ordinated the release of an open letter from 131 economists about the cost-effectiveness of early action.

Meanwhile, this good reporting by an Aussie journo gives you a sense of what happened. (John Howard didn’t go to Rio +5, but then his predecessor Paul Keting had not gone to Rio itself).

John Howard was too busy meeting Baroness Thatcher to attend Earth Summit II in New York this week. It was a controversial decision in light of our position on greenhouse gases.

FIRST thing on Monday morning, as Earth Summit II began in New York, the German Chancellor, Helmut Kohl, brought his huge bulk into the chamber of the United Nations General Assembly – the venue for the biggest environment conference since the Rio Summit in 1992.

A few minutes later, the US Vice- President, Al Gore, made a passionate but carefully worded speech welcoming delegates from over 70 countries. For a few minutes he even wandered into the throng on the floor of the General Assembly, and took a seat with the rest of the US delegation.

Both of these leaders were having a back-slappingly, hands-hakingly good time. Both seemed to be making the most of the opportunity to meet and talk with other leaders. For both men the reason for their presence was because they have a political imperative to make a statement about their concern for the environment.

James Woodford, Leaders Warm To The Task. Sydney Morning Herald, 28 June 1997

Why this matters. 

They pile promise upon promise, don’t they? Maybe the promises are what the Angel of History is seeing, as part of the wreckage upon wreckage hurled in front of his feet?

What happened next?

The next big event in the circuit was COP3, in Kyoto. An agreement was made that – as per the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities agreed at Rio – rich countries would go first in cutting emissions. The US and Australia never went with it. The fossil fuel use exploded. The atmospheric concentrations went up and up.