On Climate Change This Government Is Indifferent
To Life, In Love With DeathBy George
Monbiot
December 02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Guardian" - Where you would expect to see
caution and circumspection, instead there is a rush to action. Where
you would expect to see determination and resolve, there is only
vacillation and delay.
The contrast between the government’s handling of
the Syrian crisis and its handling of the
climate change crisis could not be greater. It responds to these
issues with an equal and opposite recklessness.
“We have to hit these terrorists in their
heartlands right now,”
David Cameron told parliament last week. While it is hard to
contest the principle of fighting Islamic State, to do so without a
clear strategic purpose and intelligible objectives is lunacy.
The
70,000 fighters Cameron believes he can call upon may exist, but
most of them are fighting President Bashar al-Assad in other parts
of the country. Does he really intend to draw them away from that
fight, even if – and this seems unlikely – they are willing to be
drawn? After all,
he insists (correctly, I believe): “We will not beat Isis if we
waver in our view that ultimately Assad must go.”
Redeploy Assad’s opponents against a different
enemy, and he will consolidate his hold on
Syria. This flaw in the plan is so obvious that it should
scarcely need stating.
Where are the targets, and how will our bombers
hit them? Isis is
buried among the remaining residents of the city of Raqqa. What
ratio of dead civilians to dead fighters does Cameron consider
acceptable? For there will be a ratio, and it is likely to be a
large one: the terrorists will make sure of that.
On what grounds does he believe that a military
campaign in one part of the world will discourage terrorism in
others? One of the astonishing features of counterterrorism is the
dearth of empirical assessment. A
paper in the journal Psicothema found “an almost complete
absence of evaluation research on counterterrorism strategies … [We]
conclude that counter-terrorism policy is not evidence-based.”
Of the 11 military adventures the researchers
analysed, they found that five had had no discernible impacts on
subsequent terrorism; six were followed by more terrorism than there
had been before.
By contrast, we need no further research to tell
us that climate change requires a
fast and decisive response. Yet, on every front, Cameron’s
government dithers – or worse.
The UK is now the only G7 nation substantially to
increase its subsidies for fossil fuels: this year, George
Osborne granted a further £1.7bn of tax breaks for extracting oil
and gas from the North Sea. Cameron has imposed,
through the Infrastructure Act 2015, a legal obligation on the
government to “maximise economic recovery” of the UK’s oil and gas.
As it also has a legal obligation (through the
Climate Change Act 2008) to minimise the burning of oil and gas,
this creates something of a quandary. But no one in the government
appears to care.
Cameron has, in effect, shut down the development
of onshore windfarms and large-scale solar power, and now
wants businesses to invest in gas instead. The only way in which
more gas burning could be reconciled with our climate change
commitments is to capture and bury the carbon dioxide it produces.
But seven days after the government announced its dash for gas, it
dumped its
carbon capture and storage competition, ensuring that its
contradictions are now impossible to resolve.
It has
cut the funding for energy efficiency in homes by 80%. It is
selling its
Green Investment Bank. It has cut the incentives to buy less
polluting cars. It wants to build new roads and runways. Only with a
reversal of these policies, and the vastly expensive closure of the
plants Cameron now seeks to commission, could Britain meet its
climate targets.
So while one Cameron claims to protect us from
global threats, another Cameron contributes to a catastrophe likely
to dwarf anything Isis could unleash. Even if they are honoured, the
pledges that nations have brought to the climate change conference
in Paris commit the world to dangerous global warming. But bad faith
is contagious, and if governments undermine their own commitments,
as Cameron is doing, the outcome will be even worse.
A study published in
Nature Climate Change last month found that if climate breakdown
is not curtailed by the end of this century, temperatures in parts
of Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Kuwait, Iraq and Iran “are likely to
approach and exceed” the levels that human beings can survive in.
That doesn’t sound to me like a formula for peace on Earth.
During his statement on Syria, Cameron
told the House of Commons: “My first responsibility as prime
minister … is to keep the British people safe.” So why does he
expose us to such threats? Why, when the outcomes are so unlikely
and uncertain, does he pursue his bombing campaign with such
passionate intensity, while his statements on climate change – where
the need for action is so clear – lack all conviction?
No politician does anything with enthusiasm unless
they wanted to do it all along: look at the glee with which George
Osborne pursues austerity, even as its initial justifications are
forgotten. Cameron, like other prime ministers, appears to suffer
from Churchill syndrome: the belief that, to be a great leader, you
need a great conflict. Unlike Tony Blair, he has not invented the
war he wishes to join, though his involvement risks its escalation.
There is nothing thrilling, nothing that conjures
a mental image of sitting codpieced and cockaded on a rearing steed,
gazing into the middle distance, about decarbonising the economy.
The measures required are mundane and unglamorous. To make your
mark, to take your place on the political panelling, you need a few
explosions.
If the political effort and expense devoted to the
bombing of foreigners over the past 25 years had instead been
addressed to the world’s environmental issues, we might not now be
facing a multitude of crises. But the threshold for bombing has
always been low, and the threshold for protecting the living world
has always been high. It’s as if governments were indifferent to
life and in love with death.