{"id":396,"date":"2013-12-10T16:06:25","date_gmt":"2013-12-10T16:06:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/2013\/12\/10\/climate-change-and-socialism-mike-treen-2013\/"},"modified":"2013-12-10T16:06:25","modified_gmt":"2013-12-10T16:06:25","slug":"climate-change-and-socialism-mike-treen-2013","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/2013\/12\/10\/climate-change-and-socialism-mike-treen-2013\/","title":{"rendered":"Climate Change and Socialism &#8211; Mike Treen (2013)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><!--more--><br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.socialistproject.ca\/bullet\/907.php#continue\">The   B u l l e t<\/a><br \/>\nSocialist Project \u2022 E-Bulletin No. 907<br \/>\nDecember 10, 2013<br \/>\n<em><strong>Climate Change and Socialism<\/strong><\/em><br \/>\n<em><strong>Mike Treen<\/strong><\/em><br \/>\nBy embracing the fight against climate change, we need to explain that this is a fight for a new world that restores the balance between Mother Earth and our needs as a species.<br \/>\nThe continuing pretense that the world governments will do anything about climate change was exposed once more at the latest round of climate negotiations held in Poland November 11-22. This was the 19th round of annual negotiations.<br \/>\nIt is 21 years since the Earth Summit in Rio in 1992. Emissions are 60-70 per cent higher than they were then. Global warming has proceeded at an accelerating pace. As a great article by economic historian Richard Smith notes:<br \/>\n\u201cFor all the climate summits, promises of \u2018voluntary restraint,\u2019 carbon trading and carbon taxes, the growth of CO2 emissions and atmospheric concentrations have not just been unceasing, they have been accelerating in what scientists have dubbed the \u2018Keeling Curve.\u2019 In the early 1960s, CO2 ppm concentrations in the atmosphere grew by 0.7 ppm per year. In recent decades, especially as China has industrialized, the growth rate has tripled to 2.1 ppm per year. In just the first 17 weeks of 2013, CO2 levels jumped by 2.74 ppm compared to last year.\u201d<br \/>\n2013 is looking like it will be the 7th warmest year since records began to be collected in 1850. The ten warmest years have all occurred since 1998.<br \/>\nThe IPCC Reports:<br \/>\nClimate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis<br \/>\nIn September, the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its latest report \u2013 its fifth since 1990. These reports must be adopted by consensus, so conclusions tend to be moderated by that fact. This report is the most strongly worded yet and it calls the evidence of climate change \u201cunequivocal.\u201d Among the effects if emissions aren&#8217;t curtailed are an irreversible rise in sea levels, mass species extinction, ocean acidification, more extreme weather events, and the list continues.<br \/>\nThe IPCC report removes any ambiguity that specific types of human activity lie at the root of these changes:<br \/>\n\u201cThe atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane and nitrous oxide have increased to levels unprecedented in at least the last 800,000 years. CO2 concentrations have increased by 40 per cent since pre-industrial times, primarily from fossil fuel emissions and secondarily from net land use change emissions. The ocean has absorbed about 30 per cent of the emitted anthropogenic carbon dioxide, causing ocean acidification.\u201d<br \/>\nThe report recommends that a carbon budget for the earth be established to prevent going beyond the two degrees Celsius rise in average temperatures that is the widely accepted \u201ctipping point\u201d for serious and prolonged damage to life on Earth. It is also feared that beyond that point additional feed back mechanism&#8217;s kick in \u2013 melting of the subarctic tundra or thawing and releasing vast quantities of methane in the Arctic sea bottom \u2013 that will accelerate the warming process and put in question the survival of the human species.<br \/>\nThe carbon consumption number that the IPCC report says can&#8217;t be exceeded is one trillion metric tonnes being burned and released into the atmosphere. But the New York Times reports that we have already burned half that amount since the beginning of the industrial revolution. At the current consumption rates, the one millionth tonne will be burned by 2040, according to one of the report&#8217;s authors.<br \/>\nLast year, fossil fuel corporations spent $674-billion scouring the earth for new deposits of coal, oil and gas. As the International Energy Agency&#8217;s World Energy Outlook 2012 reported, \u201cDespite the growth in low-carbon sources of energy, fossil fuels remain dominant in the global energy mix, supported by subsidies that amounted to $523-billion in 2011, up almost 30 per cent on 2010 and six times more than subsidies to renewables.\u201d This year 1200 coal burning power stations are under construction.<br \/>\nOther recent extreme weather events confirm the fact that many of the disasters that are happening now are related to climate change. Speaking to the Polish conference UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon noted: \u201cWarmer ocean surface temperatures and higher sea levels contributed to the strength of Typhoon Haiyan and the devastation it caused the Philippines. This disaster is more than a wake-up call. It is a very serious alarm. Typhoon Haiyan puts an anguished human face on our struggle to combat the extreme weather and other consequences of climate change.\u201d<br \/>\nIn late October, researchers from the University of Colorado released a study that showed the warming of the Canadian Arctic in the last 100 years was without precedent in the past 44,000 years \u2013 and possibly 120,000 years. The main author, Professor Gifford Miller, said: \u201cThis study really says the warming we are seeing is outside of any kind of known natural variability, and it has to be due to increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.\u201d<br \/>\nNot surprisingly, many scientists are saying that it is already too late to prevent such temperature increases. Even the World Bank is predicting a four degrees Celsius average temperature rise by 2060.<br \/>\nA pair of climate scientists in the UK were featured recently in an article by Naomi Klein headlined, \u201cHow Science is Telling Us All to Revolt.\u201d Kevin Anderson and Alice Bows-Larkin from the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research argue that avoiding a two degrees Celsius temperature rise will require a \u201crevolutionary change to the political and economic hegemony.\u201d Because the existing system is actually already on course for a greater than two degrees Celsius change this will need to involve \u201cradical and immediate de-growth strategies in the U.S., EU and other wealthy nations.\u201d<br \/>\nThe Invisible Genius<br \/>\nAs Naomi Klein notes, this is all fine but we live in a system of capitalism that, \u201cfetishises GDP growth above all else, regardless of the human or ecological consequences, and in which the neoliberal political class has utterly abdicated its responsibility to manage anything (since the market is the invisible genius to which everything must be entrusted). So what Anderson and Bows are really saying is that there is still time to avoid catastrophic warming, but not within the rules of capitalism as they are currently constructed. Which may be the best argument we have ever had for changing those rules.\u201d<br \/>\nThe article by Richard Smith that I quoted earlier gives a compelling description of why capitalism as a system is incompatible with the planet. It is excerpted from a longer essay published in the Real-World Economic Review which I encourage those interested to study.<br \/>\n\u201cWhy are we marching toward disaster, \u2018sleepwalking to extinction\u2019 as The Guardian&#8217;s George Monbiot once put it? Why can&#8217;t we slam on the brakes before we ride off the cliff to collapse? I&#8217;m going to argue here that the problem is rooted in the requirement of capitalist production. Large corporations can&#8217;t help themselves; they can&#8217;t change or change very much. So long as we live under this corporate capitalist system we have little choice but to go along in this destruction, to keep pouring on the gas instead of slamming on the brakes, and that the only alternative \u2013 impossible as this may seem right now \u2013 is to overthrow this global economic system and all of the governments of the 1 per cent that prop it up and replace them with a global economic democracy, a radical bottom-up political democracy, an eco-socialist civilization.<br \/>\n\u201cAlthough we are fast approaching the precipice of ecological collapse, the means to derail this train wreck are in the making as, around the world we are witnessing a near simultaneous global mass democratic \u2018awakening\u2019 \u2013 as the Brazilians call it \u2013 from Tahir Square to Zucotti Park, from Athens to Istanbul to Beijing and beyond such as the world has never seen. To be sure, like Occupy Wall Street, these movements are still inchoate, are still mainly protesting what&#8217;s wrong rather than fighting for an alternative social order. Like Occupy, they have yet to clearly and robustly answer that crucial question: \u2018Don&#8217;t like capitalism, what&#8217;s your alternative?\u2019 Yet they are working on it, and they are for the most part instinctively and radically democratic; in this lies our hope.\u201d<br \/>\nWhy all this is important to the union movement is explained by Naomi Klein in a wonderful speech she gave on September 1 this year to the founding conference of UNIFOR, a new, mega-union created by the Canadian Autoworkers and the Canadian Energy and Paper Workers Union. In it she challenges the union movement to take up the issue of climate change because it poses the need to change the free-market capitalist system and workers have a stake in that struggle.<br \/>\nNaomi Klein points out that she has written a lot about what is wrong with the system today. Her most recent book, The Shock Doctrine, she says, \u201cargues that over the past 35 years, corporate interests have systematically exploited various forms of mass crises \u2013 economic shocks, natural disasters, wars \u2013 in order to ram through policies that enrich a small elite, by shredding regulations, cutting social spending and forcing large-scale privatizations.\u201d<br \/>\nShe said all that remains true and is continuing in Canada and the rest of the capitalist world. However it is not enough to expose and denounce. It is not enough to protest. We need an alternative. \u201cWe can&#8217;t just reject the dominant story about how the world works. We need our own story about what it could be. We can&#8217;t just reject their lies. We need truths so powerful that their lies dissolve on contact with them. We can&#8217;t just reject their project. We need our own project.\u201d<br \/>\nClimate change, she says, give us the arguments we need for that project:<br \/>\n\u201cSo I want to offer you what I believe to be the most powerful counter-narrative to that brutal logic that we have ever had. Here it is: our current economic model is not only waging war on workers, on communities, on public services and social safety nets. It&#8217;s waging war on the life support systems of the planet itself. The conditions for life on earth.<br \/>\n\u201cClimate change. It&#8217;s not an \u2018issue\u2019 for you to add to the list of things to worry about it. It is a civilizational wake up call. A powerful message \u2013 spoken in the language of fires, floods, storms and droughts \u2013 telling us that we need an entirely new economic model, one based on justice and sustainability.<br \/>\n\u201cTaking up the climate fight doesn&#8217;t mean the unions should drop any of their existing concerns or struggles.<br \/>\n\u201cMy argument is that the climate threat makes the need to fight austerity all the more pressing, since we need public services and public infrastructure to both bring down our emissions and prepare for the coming storms.<br \/>\n\u201cFar from trumping other issues, climate change vindicates much of what the left has been demanding for decades.<br \/>\n\u201cIn fact, climate change turbo-charges our existing demands and gives them a basis in hard science. It calls on us to be bold, to get ambitious, to win this time because we really cannot afford any more losses. It inflames our vision of a better world with existential urgency.<br \/>\n\u201cWhat I&#8217;m going to show you is that confronting the climate crisis requires that we break every rule in the free-market playbook \u2013 and that we do so with great urgency&#8230;<br \/>\n\u201cIt should be clear by now that I am not suggesting some half-assed token \u2018green jobs\u2019 program. This is a green labour revolution I&#8217;m talking about. An epic vision of healing our country from the ravages of the last 30 years of neoliberalism and healing the planet in the process.<br \/>\n\u201cEnvironmentalists can&#8217;t lead that kind of revolution on their own. No political party is rising to the challenge. We need you to lead.\u201d<br \/>\nIf UNIFOR as a union takes up that challenge, Naomi Klein believes it could become \u201cthe voice for a boldly different economic model, one that provides solutions to the attacks on working people, on poor people, and the attacks on the earth itself, then you can stop worrying about your continued relevance. You will be on the front lines of the fight for the future, and everyone else \u2013 including the opposition parties \u2013 will have to follow or be left behind.\u201d<br \/>\nNaomi had another useful piece of advice that we should heed in this country. She argued that a key to the shift needed by the unions in Canada was, \u201cdeepening your alliance with First Nations, whose constitutionally guaranteed title to land and resources is the biggest legal barrier Harper faces to his vision of Canada as an extraction and export machine \u2013 a country-sized sacrifice zone. As my friend Clayton Thomas Mueller says, imagine if the workers and First Nations actually joined forces in a meaningful coalition \u2013 the rightful owners of the land, side by side with the people working the mines and pipelines, coming together to demand another economic model? People and the earth itself on one side, predatory capitalism on the other. The Harper Tories wouldn&#8217;t know what hit them.\u201d<br \/>\nThe final point I want to argue in this blog is that this merger of the workers&#8217; movement, socialism and the Indigenous rising to protect Mother Earth is at the heart of the transformative struggles being waged today in Latin America. Those struggles, too, we need to study.<br \/>\nThe governments of Bolivia and Venezuela in particular have given a lead to the left and progressive movement worldwide on why protecting the earth and protecting capitalism are incompatible objects. They have stood with the poor and oppressed of the world in resistance to demands they submit to the exploitation and destruction of their countries by wealthy imperialist countries and corporations. Just this week, Venezuela led a walkout of 133 developing nations out of the talks in Poland over the refusal by the rich nations to accept any historical responsibility for the climate changes that have occurred already.<br \/>\nPerpetual Growth?<br \/>\nThe system running the planet is incompatible with long-term survival of our species. Capitalism, as Marx explained long ago, is a system of expanded reproduction. What many people don&#8217;t realise is that much of what Marx wrote in his famous work Capital was on why capitalism grew in the way that it did. He explained that capitalism could not exist except in a perpetual growth cycle. These cycles are punctuated by periodic recessions and depressions but growth is relentless and perpetual until the planet is destroyed or we destroy capitalism.<br \/>\nThe industrialized consumer societies aren&#8217;t just over-consuming fossil fuels we&#8217;re over-consuming everything. As Richard Smith explains in his paper:<br \/>\n\u201cBetween 1950 and 2000 the global human population more than doubled from 2.5 to 6 billion, but in these same decades consumption of major natural resources soared more than 6 fold on average, some much more. Natural gas consumption grew nearly 12 fold, bauxite (aluminum ore) 15 fold. And so on. At current rates, Harvard biologist E.O Wilson says that \u2018half the world&#8217;s great forests have already been leveled and half the world&#8217;s plant and animal species may be gone by the end of this century.\u2019<br \/>\n\u201cFrom fish to forests, minerals to metals, oil to fresh water, we&#8217;re consuming the planet like there&#8217;s no tomorrow. Ecological \u2018footprint\u2019 scientists tell us that we in the industrialized nations are now consuming resources and sinks at the rate of 1.5 planets per year, that is, we&#8217;re using natural resources like fish, forests, water, farmland, and so on at half-again the rate that nature can replenish them.\u201d<br \/>\nBut Richard Smith also notes there is a enormous class bias in this consumption.<br \/>\n\u201cAccording to the World Bank, the wealthiest 10 per cent of the world&#8217;s people account for almost 60 per cent of consumption expenditures and the top 20 per cent account for more than 76 per cent of global consumption whereas the bottom 40 per cent of the world&#8217;s population account for just 5 per cent. Even the bottom 70 per cent of the world&#8217;s population account for barely 15.3 per cent of global consumption expenditures. Needless to say, those 70 per cent want and deserve a higher material standard of living. Yet if the whole world were to achieve this by consuming like Americans, we would need something like five more planets worth of natural resources and sinks for all of that. Think what this means.\u201d<br \/>\nThere is no technical solution. There is no market solution. We have to rethink what and why we produce, where we produce, how we produce, how we transport things and people. We need a new system that is based of democratic decision making for these questions.<br \/>\nMajor monopolies and sectors vital to the economy should be under public ownership and control. Workers and consumers must be involved in the boards making decisions on day-to day operations. Decisions need to be made to eliminate all destructive and wasteful production \u2013 including the military. Industries devoted to making us consume for consumption&#8217;s sake (advertizing, most marketing) should simply be closed down. Public transport needs to replace cars for most trips. Production and consumption should be localized wherever possible. Housing should be well insulated and affordable. Food should be healthy and cheap. But it all requires a plan. And plans are best if they are democratically debated and decided.<br \/>\nBy embracing the fight against climate change, we need to explain that this is a fight for a new world that restores the balance between Mother Earth and our needs as a species. Those needs will not be determined by the number of commodities we can consume but by the real needs we have for meaningful work, human relationships not based on exploitation and oppression, cooperation not competition, education for its own sake, creative labour and culture available to all to participate and create.<br \/>\nMarx and Engels called this a society of associated producers where \u201cthe free development of each is the condition for the free development of all\u201d \u2013 a socialist society.<br \/>\nThat is a world worth fighting for. And all around the globe, millions of people are mobilizing against what the current system is doing to us. People are saying another world is possible. We need to be looking for every opportunity to link hands in solidarity \u2013 in our local communities, in our workplaces and across the globe \u2013 with a vision of what that world could look like. \u2022<br \/>\n<em>Mike Treen is a founder and director of the Unite union in New Zealand. This article first appeared on The Daily Blog, a news website of union, social and other progressive activists in New Zealand<\/em>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[17],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/396"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=396"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/396\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=396"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=396"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/global-labour.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=396"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}