“What goes against the
grain of conditioning is experienced as not credible, or as a hostile act.”
--
John McMurtry,
philosopher
Bizarre Conversations
Climate crisis is not
a future risk. It is today’s reality. As Myles Allen, a climate scientist at
Oxford University, warned recently: “The danger zone is not something we are
going to reach in the middle of this century. We are in it now.” (Roger
Highfield, “Screen saver weather trial predicts 10 deg rise in British
temperatures,” Daily Telegraph, 31 January, 2005)
Human-induced climate change has been killing
people for decades. Climatologists estimate that global warming has led to
the deaths of 150,000 people since 1970. (Meteorological Office, “Avoiding
Dangerous Climate Change,” 1-3 February 2005, Table 2a. ‘Impacts on human
systems due to temperature rise, precipitation change and increases in
extreme events’, page 1;
www.stabilisation2005.com/impacts/impacts_human.pdf) By 2050, as
temperatures rise, scientists warn that three billion people will be under
“water stress”, with tens of millions likely dying as a result.
At such a desperate
moment in the planet’s history, we could simply throw up our hands in
despair, or we could try to reduce the likelihood of the worst predictions
coming true. The corporate media has yet to examine its own role in setting
up huge obstacles to the latter option of hope.
Consider, for example,
Michael McCarthy, environment editor of The Independent. McCarthy
described how he “was taken aback” at dramatic scientific warnings of “major
new threats” at a recent climate conference in Exeter. One frightening
prospect is the collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet, previously
considered stable, which would lead to a 5-metre rise in global sea level.
As McCarthy notes dramatically: “Goodbye London; goodbye Bangladesh.”
On the way back from
Exeter on the train, he mulls over the conference findings with Paul Brown,
environment correspondent of the Guardian:
By the time we reached London we knew what the
conclusion was. I said: “The earth is finished.” Paul said: “It is, yes.” We
both shook our heads and gave that half-laugh that is sparked by
incredulity. So many environmental scare stories, over the years; I never
dreamed of such a one as this.
And what will our
children make of our generation, who let this planet, so lovingly created,
go to waste? (McCarthy, “Slouching towards disaster,” The Tablet, 12
February, 2005; available at
www.gci.org.uk/articles/Tablet.pdf)
This is a remarkably
bleak conclusion. McCarthy glibly notes the “inevitability of what [is]
going to happen,” namely: “The earth is finished.” We applaud the journalist
for presenting the reality of human-caused climate change. But the
resignation, and the apparent lack of any resolve to avert catastrophe, is
irresponsible. As Noam Chomsky has put it in a different, though related,
context:
“We are faced with a kind of Pascal's wager:
assume the worst and it will surely arrive: commit oneself to the struggle
for freedom and justice, and its cause may be advanced.” (Chomsky,
Deterring Democracy, Vintage, London, 1992, p. 64)
Following McCarthy’s
anguished return to the Independent’s comfortable offices in London, one
searches in vain for his penetrating news reports on how corporate greed and
government complicity have dragged humanity into this abyss. One searches in
vain, too, for anything similar by Paul Brown in The Guardian.
The notion of government and big business
perpetrating climate crimes against humanity is simply off the news agenda.
A collective madness of suffocating silence pervades the media, afflicting
even those editors and journalists that we are supposed to regard as the
best.
Contraction and Convergence: Climate Logic for
Survival
In 1992, the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was agreed. The objective of
the convention is to “stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations in the
atmosphere at a level that will avoid dangerous rates of climate change.”
The Kyoto protocol, which came into force in February, requires developed
nations to cut emissions by just 5 percent, compared to 1990 levels. This is
a tiny first step, and is far less than the cuts required, which are around
80 per cent.
One of the major gaps
in the climate “debate” is the deafening silence surrounding contraction and
convergence (C&C). This proposal by the London-based Global Commons
Institute would cut greenhouse gas emissions in a fair and timely manner,
averting the worst climatic impacts. Unlike Kyoto, it is a global framework
involving all countries, both “developed” and “developing”.
C&C requires that
annual emissions of greenhouse gases contract over time to a sustainable
level. The aim would be to limit the equivalent concentration of carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere to a safe level. The pre-industrial level, in
1800, was 280 parts per million by volume (ppmv). The current level is
around 380 ppmv, and it will exceed 400 ppmv within ten years under a
business as usual scenario. Even if we stopped burning fossil fuels today,
the planet would continue to heat up for more than a hundred years. In other
words, humanity has already committed life on the planet to considerable
climate-related damages in the years to come.
Setting a “safe” limit
of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration actually means estimating a
limit beyond which damage to the planet is unacceptable. This may be 450
ppmv; or it may be that the international community agrees on a target lower
than the present atmospheric level, say 350 ppmv. Once the target is agreed,
it is a simple matter to allocate an equitable “carbon budget” of annual
emissions amongst the world’s population on a per capita basis. This is
worked out for each country or world region (e.g. the European Union).
The Global Commons
Institute’s eye-catching computer graphics illustrate past emissions and
future allocation of emissions by country (or region), achieving per capita
equality by 2030, for example. This is the convergence part of C&C. After
2030, emissions drop off to reach safe levels by 2100. This is the
contraction. (Further information on C&C, with illustrations, can be found
at:
www.gci.org.uk).
Recall that the
objective of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change is to “stabilize
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that will avoid
dangerous rates of climate change.” Its basic principles are precaution and
equity. C&C is a simple and powerful proposal that directly embodies both
the convention’s objective and principles.
Last year, the
secretariat to the UNFCCC negotiations declared that achieving the treaty’s
objective “inevitably requires Contraction and Convergence.” C&C is
supported by an impressive array of authorities in climate science,
including physicist Sir John Houghton, the former chair of the science
assessment working group of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(1988-2002). Indeed, the IPCC, comprising the world’s recognized climate
experts, has announced that: “C&C takes the rights-based approach to its
logical conclusion.”
The prestigious
Institute of Civil Engineers in London recently described C&C as “an
antidote to the expanding, diverging and climate-changing nature of global
economic development.” The ICE added that C&C “could prove to be the
ultimate sustainability initiative.” (Proceedings of the Institution of
Civil Engineers, London, paper 13982, December 2004)
In February 2005,
Aubrey Meyer of the Global Commons Institute was given a lifetime’s
achievement award by the Corporation of London. Nominations had been sought
for “the person from the worlds of business, academia, politics and activism
seeking the individual who had made the greatest contribution to the
understanding and combating of climate change, leading strategic debate and
policy formation.”
Although Meyer is at
times understandably somewhat despondent at the enormity of the task ahead,
he sees fruitful signs in the global grassroots push for sustainable
development, something which “is impossible without personal and human
development. These are things we have to work for so hope has momentum as
well as motive.” (‘GCI’s Meyer looks ahead’, interview with Energy Argus,
December 2004, p. 15; reprinted in
www.gci.org.uk/briefings/EAC_document_3.pdf, p. 27)
And that momentum of
hope is building. C&C has attracted statements of support from leading
politicians and grassroots groups in a majority of the world’s countries,
including the Africa Group, the Non-Aligned Movement, China and India. C&C
may well be the only approach to greenhouse emissions that developing
countries are willing to accept. That, in turn, should grab the attention of
even the US; the Bush administration rejected the Kyoto protocol ostensibly,
at least, because the agreement requires no commitments from developing
nations. Kyoto involves only trivial cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, as we
noted above, and the agreement will expire in 2012. A replacement agreement
is needed fast.
On a sane planet,
politicians and the media would now be clamoring to introduce C&C as a truly
global, logical and equitable framework for stabilizing the atmospheric
concentration of carbon dioxide. Rational and balanced coverage of climate
change would be devoting considerable resources to discussion of this
groundbreaking proposal. It would be central to news reports of
international climate meetings as a way out of the deadlock of negotiations;
Jon Snow of Channel 4 news would be hosting hour-long live debates; the
BBC’s Jeremy Paxman would demand of government ministers why they had not
yet signed up to C&C; ITN’s Trevor Macdonald would present special
documentaries from a multimillion pound ITN television studio; newspaper
editorials would analyse the implications of C&C for sensible energy
policies and tax regimes; Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace would be
endlessly promoting C&C to their supporters. Instead, a horrible silence
prevails.
Leaders as Moral Metaphors of a Corrupt System
We conducted a
Lexis-Nexis newspaper database search to gauge the relative importance given
to different topics in climate news reports by a number of major environment
reporters. The following figures relate to the five year period leading up
to, and including, 25 February 2005. We investigated to what extent equity,
and contraction and convergence, entered into mainstream news reports on
climate, in the best British press.
Michael McCarthy (Independent)
Number of news reports
“climate” 232
“climate” + “industry” 80
“climate” + “Blair” 53
“climate” + “equity” 0
“climate” + “contraction and convergence” 0
Geoffrey Lean (Independent
on Sunday)
“climate” 105
“climate” + “industry” 40
“climate” + “Blair” 38
“climate” + “equity” 0
“climate” + “contraction and convergence” 1
Charles Clover (Telegraph)
“climate” 136
“climate” + “industry” 47
“climate” + “Blair” 38
“climate” + “equity” 0
“climate” + “contraction and convergence” 0
Paul Brown (Guardian)
“climate” 287
“climate” + “industry” 137
“climate” + “Blair” 48
“climate” + “equity” 1
“climate” + “contraction and convergence” 1
John Vidal (Guardian)
“climate” 193
“climate” + “industry” 98
“climate” + “Blair” 31
“climate” + “equity” 1
“climate” + “contraction and convergence” 0
This is not a rigorous
scientific analysis, of course, but the numbers are highly indicative
of hugely skewed priorities. Out of a grand total of 953 articles across the
Independent, Independent on Sunday, Guardian and
Telegraph, C&C was mentioned only twice, as was equity. On the other
hand, industry was addressed in 402 articles, and Blair was mentioned 208
times, both almost entirely from an uncritical perspective.
One might counter that pronouncements on
climate by Tony Blair, as prime minister, should be deemed automatically
“newsworthy”. But we must also bear in mind what Blair actually represents,
even if the media conceals it well. Canadian philosopher John McMurtry
explains:
“Tony Blair
exemplifies the character structure of the global market order. Packaged in
the corporate culture of youthful image, he is constructed as sincere,
energetic and moral. Like other ruling-party leaders, he has worked hard to
be selected by the financial and media axes of power as “the man to do the
job.” He is a moral metaphor of the system.” (McMurtry, Value Wars,
Pluto, London, 2002, p. 22)
Although public trust in Blair has collapsed
after his many deceptions over Iraq, the media continue to present him as a
fundamentally well-intentioned leader pursuing the interests of the nation.
Thus, whenever Blair, Bush and other corporate-backed political leaders are
given prominent news coverage, the media is in effect promoting its own
business goals of profit and power. This is inimical to any reasonable
prospect of averting climate catastrophe.
Contraction and
convergence is the only serious global framework on the table for plotting a
route out of the climate crisis. That C&C, and the concept of equity, can be
so systematically ignored by the corporate media, is yet another damning
indictment of the media’s systemic failings. It is incumbent upon us all to
push these issues onto the news agenda.
Media Lens is a UK-based media watchdog
group headed by David Edwards and David Cromwell. Visit the Media Lens
website (www.medialens.org)
and consider supporting their invaluable work (www.medialens.org/donate.html).
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