That it was not thought worth raising in the US presidential debates is astounding
Nature does not care what we think about it. Indeed, nature does not care about us at all. But we should care about nature. Above all, we should care about nature if our actions are affecting it adversely. Probably the most important way in which we are affecting nature is via the climate. Yet our response is foolish denial and fond hope. Nature will not be impressed.
What nature is doing at present is heating the planet. Of this no serious doubt remains. The global warming “pause” of 1998-2013 is definitively over. Even before recent temperature rises to the highest on record, the notion of a pause was absurd. In 1998 there was a strong El Niño — a feature of which is high global temperatures. What was remarkable is that the years after 1998 remained so hot.
Both
 last year and this one, with another strong El Niño, temperatures have 
hit records. A straight line between the peaks of January 1958 and 
February 2016 lies above the temperature in all intervening months. The 
same is true for a line drawn between March 1990 and February 2016. 
Twelve-month and 60-month moving averages give a similar picture. No 
slowdown in underlying rates of temperature rises is happening. After 
this El Niño another purported pause might occur — but probably at a 
higher average level than during the previous one. (See charts.)
Just as the world is hitting peak temperatures (relative to 
the 1951-80 average and pre-industrial levels), so is it hitting peak 
concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. This year, the 
global average will almost certainly pass 400 parts per million, which 
is more than 40 per cent above pre-industrial levels. Given the 
well-known physics of the greenhouse effect, the causal relationship 
between the rising concentrations of greenhouse gases and consistently 
rising temperatures is at the very least overwhelmingly plausible.
Finally,
 we also know that the rise in concentrations of carbon dioxide are sure
 to continue, and for a long time. This is because emissions have 
themselves continue to rise, despite the talk about bringing them under 
control. So not only are the stocks of carbon dioxide continuing to rise
 but even the emission flows from human activities. 
It is a remarkable fact that, given these simple truths, the question of climate change was barely addressed in the US presidential debates.
 This is not because it cannot matter. It is not because the candidates 
do not disagree. It is because few wish to think about the implications 
of these realities.
The two dominant responses to the evident reality of climate risks are denial. But they are very different forms of denial. I think of them as “denial major” and “denial minor”. 
“Denial
 major” comes from the right. It starts from two facts and one 
supposition. Fact one is that many of the people who take climate change
 seriously are very suspicious of — if not downright hostile to — the 
market economy. Fact two is that climate change implies a costly global 
spillover from market-driven economic activity. The supposition is that 
doing anything to mitigate climate change must entail massive 
interference in the market economy and impose large economic costs. 
The
 natural conclusion is that the idea of man-made climate change has to 
be fraudulent because the possibility of its truth is too painful to 
contemplate. It would be possible for those who want no action to agree,
 instead, that climate change is true but not worth any action. The 
drawback of this is that it would force a discussion about why doing 
nothing makes sense.
“Denial minor” comes from those who recognise the evident 
dangers but argue that tackling climate change effectively is a 
relatively low-cost and simple challenge. This, too, is implausible. 
Even if, as some argue, the technologies needed to sustain economic 
growth while progressively eliminating carbon emissions are either here 
or arriving at ever-falling cost, the political, social and economic 
challenge of delivering a decisive break in these trends is daunting. It
 is too easy to get away with applauding what are in fact little more 
than gestures in the direction of tackling climate risks as if they are 
the real thing. 
The much-praised Paris agreement
 of December 2015 is not only toothless but would fall far short even of
 keeping temperature rises below 2C, let alone below the 1.5C thought 
more desirable. This has to be a global effort of appropriate scale and 
urgency. Otherwise nothing relevant would change.
“Denial
 major” guarantees failure. It is what a President Donald Trump would 
take with him into the White House. Under him, the US would presumably 
abandon the modest steps taken under President Barack Obama. But the US 
is not just the world’s second-largest emitter; it is one of the biggest
 emitters per head. Without the US, the effort to reduce climate risks 
would be dead. That this was not thought worth even raising in the 
debates is astounding.
A President Hillary Clinton would 
not be guilty of “denial major” but is likely to indulge in “denial 
minor”, substituting modest gestures for policies able to bring credible
 change. 
Indeed, without at least a start on carbon 
pricing and a determination to develop technologies far faster, the 
necessary shift in trends could not happen in time. The world would then
 have to adapt to the consequences of climate shifts it did not have the
 capacity to mitigate. 
It is impossible to have just a 
US climate policy or a Chinese climate policy. It has to be a global 
policy. Much has changed in attitudes since the UK government published 
the Stern review
 a decade ago. But little has yet altered on the ground. Only if we 
collectively recognise and act upon the realities right now is anything 
much likely to change. On this, I remain pessimistic.




No comments:
Post a Comment