The cop-out of COP21 Paris climate talks


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News broke that a “historic” deal had been stuck in Paris by the largest gathering of states in human history at the COP21 United Nations conference meant to address climate change. Yet despite the self-congratulation, adulation from the lame-stream press, and over-glorified silliness, activists and scientists were adamant that the whole affair was simply a gigantic ruse, with Friends of the Earth International (FEI) calling the agreement “a sham”.

“Rich countries have moved the goal posts so far that we are left with a sham of a deal in Paris. Through piecemeal pledges and bullying tactics, rich countries have pushed through a very bad deal,” said Sara Shaw, Friends of the Earth International climate justice and energy coordinator. Dipti Bhatnagar, Friends of the Earth International climate justice and energy coordinator, said “Vulnerable and affected people deserve better than this failed agreement; they are the ones who feel the worst impacts of our politicians’ failure to take tough enough action.”

At the core of the deal currently being touted as a success are the following policy goals:

  • Limit global temperature rise to 2*C (3.6*F), if not 1.5*C
  • Limit greenhouse gas emissions beginning somewhere between 2050 and 2100
  • Review of each state’s contribution every five years
  • Rich countries will finance adaptation to climate change and transfer to a renewable energy grid in poorer ones

Yet as Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! reported all week from the City of Love, the agreement has always been lacking several key elements. It fails to protect women and indigenous peoples and does not include a mechanism allowing for states to claim damages from the large polluter nations and corporations that have already affected millions of lives with climate change. Consider what Dr. Bill Nye told The Huffington Post at the beginning of the month about how climate change had caused the war in Syria:

The news is filled weekly with stories of natural disasters, exacerbated by climate change, that cause cataclysmic events throughout the world. And when one considers that it has recently been revealed that the Exxon oil company knew in the 1970s that climate change existed and was caused by the burning of fossil fuels, one can easily see a clear-cut case of industrial malfeasance that resulted in catastrophic consequences for the population, not unlike the case of tobacco companies, especially since both the petroleum and tobacco companies intentionally misled the public about the harmful affects of their products. This would create the opportunity for governments throughout the world to file massive class-action lawsuits against the oil companies and even perhaps the nation states that aided and abetted this cover-up. Furthermore, as reported on Democracy Now! when Goodman interviewed Dr. Kevin Anderson, things are far worse than the public believes.

Well, those of us who look at the—running between the science and then translating that into what that means for policymakers, what we are afraid of doing is putting forward analysis that questions the sort of economic paradigm, the economic way that we run society today. So, we think—actually, we don’t question that. So what we do is we fine-tune our analysis so it fits within a sort of a—the political and economic framing of society, the current political and economic framing. So we don’t really say that—actually, our science now asks fundamental questions about this idea of economic growth in the short term, and we’re very reluctant to say that. In fact, the funding bodies often are reluctant to fund research that raises those questions. So the whole setup, not just the scientists, the research community around it that funds the research, the journalists, events like this, we’re all being—we’re all deliberately being slightly sort of self-delusional. We all know the situation is much more severe than we’re prepared to voice openly. And we all know this. So it is a—this is a collective sort of façade, a mask that we have. [Emphasis added]

How bad is it? Consider this recent article in Science Daily. A rise of 6*C in ocean temperatures, something that could happen by the end of the century, would cause phytoplankton to stop photosynthesizing. These phytoplankton are responsible for 2/3 of the planet’s oxygen, which would cause the planet’s air to have a massive drop in oxygen content, resulting in a massive die-off of animals and humans, something not dreamed of seriously perhaps since John of Patmos delivered his Book of Revelations.

Now consider also recent developments regarding the Trans-Pacific Partnership. The deal, revealed recently to massive outrage, would severely impact the ability to file class-action lawsuits against corporations and entities over consumer safety issues. Poorer nations, especially those island nations in the Pacific Ocean that face massive land loss within the next fifty years, should be able to sue for damages. Yet instead, the COP21 agreement foists onto these nations proposals for a neoliberal loan package that will entail greater hegemony for capital, parasitical debt resulting in cuts to vital social services, and no protection for those most impacted by climate change and who find themselves on the front lines of the battle. It as if an arsonist were to light your house on fire and then offer to sell you a garden hose to put the blaze out with a caveat that you become their indentured servant for an unspecified amount of time!

To quote the Bard at this point seems almost cliche. Yet I cannot help but recall the words of Cassius:

Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow world
Like a Colossus, and we petty men
Walk under his huge legs and peep about
To find ourselves dishonorable graves.
Men at some time are masters of their fates:
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves

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Paris agreement: COPout21


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COP21: Victoria Barrett, the teen suing Obama over climate change

The “final draft” for the COP21 climate deal in Paris is in and the Twitter spin machine is working overtime:

Another gushing tweet:

COP21: Victoria Barrett, the teen suing Obama over climate change
COP21: Victoria Barrett, the teen suing Obama over climate change

Never mind that last month a court in Washington issued a groundbreaking ruling in a case of eight youth petitioners who requested that the Washington Department of Ecology write a carbon emissions rule that protects the atmosphere for their generation and those to come. The court validated the claim that the “scientific evidence is clear that the current rates of reduction mandated by Washington law … cannot ensure the survival of an environment in which [youth] can grow to adulthood safely.”

James Hansen has been involved in this  Atmospheric Trust Litigation for years.  In contrast with Senator Whitehouse, Hansen is not funded by National Grid and he explains in an interview with the Guardian why he disagrees with our “leaders:”
logolobbyplanet

It’s a fraud really, a fake. It’s just bullshit for them to say: “We’ll have a 2C warming target and then try to do a little better every five years.” It’s just worthless words. There is no action, just promises. As long as fossil fuels appear to be the cheapest fuels out there, they will be continued to be burned.

Self-congratulation of our politicians cannot cover up that fracked-gas boosters— such as President Obama, Senator Whitehouse and Governor Raimondo—continue to support an energy policy that ignores that in the anthropocene, when humanity has become the geological driving force, the pertinent time scale is a decade.

Climate change used to happen over the course of thousands of years.  These days, it only takes a couple of decades. Here, once again, is Hansen:

Global warming is already affecting people. The Texas, Oklahoma, Mexico heatwave and drought last year [read 2011], Moscow the year before and Europe in 2003, were all exceptional events, more than three standard deviations outside the norm [fewer than 3 in 1000].  Fifty years ago, such anomalies covered only two- to three-tenths of one percent of the land area. In recent years, because of global warming, they now cover about ten percent—an increase by a factor of 25 to 50.

This month, scientists of the International Cryosphere Initiative published a report Thresholds and closing windows—risks of irreversible cryosphere climate change. 

cryosphere

Some of these cryosphere changes have actually already begun. Scientists widely accept that even if we could magically halt warming today, committed and irreversible sea-level rise from glaciers, ice sheets and the natural expansion of warming waters is 1 meter (3 feet), though this new normal will not be reached for about two hundred years. Most scientists also agree that the West Antarctic ice sheet has been so destabilized by warming to-date that it likely cannot be halted without a very rapid stabilization of temperatures, and perhaps not even then. At best, we might only delay the resulting ice sheet collapse, and the associated 3–4 meters of additional sea-level rise, by some hundreds of years.

How much worse things get – how many other irreversible triggers are tripped – is up to us. Unfortunately, this report’s analysis of current Paris climate commitments indicates that they will fail to prevent many, if not most of these irreversible cryosphere processes from beginning.

“Never has a single generation held the future of so many coming generations, species and ecosystems in its hands,” as the report states, and yet we keep building fossil fuel infrastructure that will haunt us for the next fifty years.  This energy policy ignores health and climate implications discussed at great length in this Compendium of scientific, medical, and media findings demonstrating risks and harms of fracking (unconventional gas and oil extraction.

If for some reason you do not have time to read the full 151-page report, you might want to look at this handy two-page summary of the “blessings” fracked gas brought to us by our corporately owned federal and state governments.

Our Orwellian #CleanPowerPlan seems to have been written by the fracked-gas lobby.  Indeed, if you follow the money, you won’t be surprised that Senator Whitehouse never responded to my open letter of June 23 of this year nor found time to visit Burrillville to explain his support for the destruction he supports.

Environmental Justice League sends three climate delegates to Paris


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Abe Vargas, Seena Chhan and Dania Flores­ Heagney
Abe Vargas, Seena Chhan and Dania Flores­ Heagney

Seena Chhan and Abe Vargas are Providence high school students and board members of the Environmental Justice League of Rhode Island (EJLRI).​They will be traveling to Paris with EJLRI Executive Director Dania Flores ­Heagney for the United Nations’ Conference of Parties 21 (UNFCCC COP21) from December 3rd ­-13th, where they will be joining more than 100 other delegates from dozens of climate impacted communities as part of the “It Takes Roots to Weather the Storm” delegation.

The It Takes Roots delegation is a broad alliance of leaders and organizers from US and Canadian grassroots and indigenous communities on the front lines of the climate crisis. It joins together three powerful international alliances: Grassroots Global Justice Alliance (GGJ), t​he Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN), a​nd the Climate Justice Alliance (CJA). ​The delegation is calling for a global climate agreement based real solutions, while speaking out against the proposed agreement, saying it falls far short of what is needed to avoid a global catastrophe. Inadequate action and false solutions will result in extreme consequences for the planet that will have notably disproportionate impact on the peoples of the Global South, as well as working class communities, communities of color, and indigenous and marginalized peoples living on the frontlines of the escalating climate crisis.

A major climate change issue for Rhode Island is the expanding use and dependence on natural gas produced by fracking, which is worse for the climate than coal or oil due to the potent nature of methane as a greenhouse gas. EJLRI is fighting National Grid’s proposed liquefied natural gas (LNG) production facility in the Port of Providence, and drawing attention to the environmental racism of having so many hazardous fossil fuel and petrochemical facilities concentrated in a low income community of color. Throughout the Global South and in many part of the US, frontline communities are already facing the devastating impacts of governmental climate inaction, from concentrated pollution to the impacts of heat waves, floods and droughts. “We need to mobilize and show to the whole world that we are not taking it anymore, that it is time for a change and the change has to be at the core of the system”, said EJLRI Executive Director Dania Flores­ Heagney.

Climate justice is about ending the systems of oppression that caused climate change, and centering the leadership of those who are most impacted ­ especially youth of color. “We’re always told that we are the next generation of leaders but we are not given the opportunity and guidance to grow, learn and shine. It’s like they are saying, you are the next generation of leaders but it’s not your turn yet”, said Seena Chhan, EJLRI Youth Organizer and Board Member.

As a youth­ oriented organization, EJLRI is bringing intergenerational youth delegates to COP21 to represent frontline communities in New England. As the birthplace of industrial revolution, in the region today people are dealing with asthma epidemics, expansion of natural gas, and rising seas in a low lying ocean state with many old contaminated sites from industrial revolution, which are now in floodplains in urban communities of color. “This is why youth being a part of this big opportunity is so important to us because we are helping pave the path for youth to grow and shine, whether it’s locally, nationally or internationally”, said Abe Vargas, EJLRI Youth Organizer and Board Member.

EJLRI is a small non­profit that has been promoting environmental justice in Rhode Island through advocacy, education, networking, organizing, and research for the past 8 years. EJLRI’s mission is to promote safe and healthy environments for ALL by building power, leadership and action in the communities most affected by environmental burdens. The organization depends on the support of the community. By donating to help send members to the delegation in Paris, people will be supporting the continuation of this work to build our communities and give us the opportunity to develop our youth to become the leaders that they rightfully are.

Donations for the trip to Paris can be made here.

[From an EJLRI press release]