[Mb-civic] Climate, the Absent Issue
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Sat Nov 20 18:01:49 PST 2004
This month-old article, from before the election, is of course still as
relevant as ever....Clearly for our kids' and grandkids' sake, we need to
continue to pursue understanding and to demand action on this issue,
which of course is intertwined with the general deadly dysfunction of our
rulers..
comment | Posted October 13, 2004
Climate, the Absent Issue
by Mark Hertsgaard
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20041101&s=hertzgaard
Every once in a while there is good news in this troubled world, and the
choice of Kenyan environmentalist Wangari Maathai as this year's
Nobel Peace Prizewinner is one such moment. The timing could not be
more apt. The choice of Maathai was announced near the end of a US
presidential campaign that has resolutely ignored the greatest danger
facing humanity, global climate change. Her selection thus stands as an
implicit rebuke to the environmental backwardness of America's political
and media classes. It also represents an explicit assertion that, as the
Nobel committee put it, "Peace on Earth depends on our ability to
secure our living environment."
The Bush Administration remains in denial about climate change even
though its closest overseas ally, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, said
in September that climate change is the single biggest long-term
problem his nation faces. Blair's top scientific adviser, David King, has
gone further, declaring that climate change is the biggest threat
civilization has ever faced--bigger even than the global terrorism that
dominates headlines and obsesses George W. Bush. King warned in
July that there is now enough carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to melt
all the ice on earth, which would put most of the world's biggest cities
under water, starting with low-lying metropolises like New York, London
and New Orleans. "I am sure that climate change is the biggest problem
that civilization has had to face in 5,000 years," King said. Even Shell
Oil chairman Ron Oxburgh admitted in June that he is "really very
worried for the planet."
Climate change is to the twenty-first century what the nuclear arms race
was to the twentieth: the overriding threat to humanity's continued
existence on this planet. And it is already killing people. In the summer
of 2003, some 15,000 people died in France from an unprecedented
heat wave. No single weather event can be definitively attributed to
climate change, but such heat waves are exactly what scientists expect
as warming intensifies. If climate change is not moderated, more will die
in years to come--either directly, through more destructive storms and
droughts, or indirectly, through declines in food production and the
spread of infectious disease.
Yet except for two brief references to the Kyoto Protocol during the
Bush-Kerry debates, climate change has been absent from the
presidential campaign. Kerry criticized Bush for walking away from
Kyoto without mentioning that he himself also opposes the protocol
(though Kerry pledges that, as President, he would re-open negotiations
and fix what he considers its flaws). Bush sounded almost proud of
having rejected Kyoto, which he claimed, incorrectly, would hurt the US
economy.
Although parts of the media have woken up to the danger--Business
Week and National Geographic ran cover stories on it this past
summer--most US journalists still don't get it. At best, they see climate
change as just one of many environmental issues. At worst, they are
still fooled by industry propaganda casting doubt on the science behind
claims of climate change. Television networks approach the issue with
a particular conflict of interest. As Robert Kennedy Jr. has observed,
cars are the leading source of US greenhouse gas emissions, but car
ads are the leading revenue source for US television networks.
Thus climate change remains marginal to the political debate in the
United States. Public awareness and policy-making lag years behind
the rest of the world, as the impending implementation of the Kyoto
accord, without US participation, illustrates. (Now that Russia supports
Kyoto, the United States and Australia are the only major industrial
countries outside the protocol.) Some state and local governments are
reacting; California recently required that automakers increase fuel
efficiency 30 percent by 2009. But progress is incremental when it
needs to come at hyper-speed.
Which is where the example of Wangari Maathai offers hope. The 64-
year-old biologist is Kenya's assistant minister for environment and
natural resources, but she has spent most of her life as a grassroots
activist and critic of the former US-supported dictatorship of Daniel Arap
Moi. Maathai's great innovation was to create the Green Belt
Movement. This radical but practical program pays poor women to plant
tree seedlings in their communities; 30 million trees have reportedly
been planted since the program began in the late 1970s.
The selection of Maathai for the peace prize generated controversy in
Norway from critics who said that honoring an environmentalist diluted
the meaning of peace work. But that criticism was contradicted by a
United Nations report issued a week earlier, showing how deforestation
and water scarcity--which are exacerbated by global warming--have
repeatedly led to armed conflict in Africa.
Maathai's Green Belt Movement is based on a holistic analysis of the
intertwined problems of war, poverty, environmental degradation and
lower status for women. (Kenya had one of the highest birth rates in the
world when Green Belt was founded in 1977, in part because women
thought their only option in life was to bear children.) Green Belt puts
money in women's pockets, boosting their independence and the
educational prospects for their children. Meanwhile, the planting of trees
replenishes the forests that are the foundation of Kenya's agricultural
productivity and the primary fuel source for its poor. And thanks to
photosynthesis, the new trees also fight global warming by absorbing
carbon dioxide.
Like the best political ideas, Wangari Maathai's Green Belt program is
specific yet universal, grounded in intellect but insistent upon action. Its
underlying principles are the very ones needed to build a sustainable,
and therefore peaceful, future: restoration of ravaged ecosystems,
expansion of economic opportunity for the poor, a guarantee of equal
justice for all and strengthening of democracy. The Nobel committee
lauded Maathai for work that has transformed the lives of countless
Kenyans. But her achievements also suggest how the rest of the world,
including the vastly richer United States, can combat climate change, if
only it wakes up and tries.
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