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Home / NATIONAL FRAMEWORK / Additional information / News / Climate action is fighting back against big polluters. We don’t need to end Australia’s climate wars – we need to win them
Climate action is fighting back against big polluters. We don’t need to end Australia’s climate wars – we need to win them
18.07.2022  
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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/jul/19/climate-action-is-fighting-back-against-big-polluters-we-dont-need-to-end-australias-climate-wars-we-need-to-win-them

 

There is no 'peace' to be brokered with fossil fuel companies who stand to make billions. Effective policy is to threaten their gains

 

Anthony Albanese has repeatedly pledged to "end the climate wars".

He won't.

The global warming catastrophe manifestly demands changes to the human relationship with nature. It forces a rethink of how we work, how we live, how we travel and much else besides.

These issues are the quintessence of politics. They demand more, not less, debate - and imagining that a "peace" could or should be brokered in respect of them is akin to urging candidates to forego "election wars" when they run for office.

The yearning for an apolitical response to an intensely political crisis can be traced to a different historical period.

As I've noted before, warnings about climate change first emerged in the late 1980s, the zenith of neoliberalism.

When James Hansen from Nasa's Goddard Institute for Space Studies told the US Senate about his confidence in a global warming trend, free market ideas once associated with far-right cranks had already cohered into an unchallenged orthodoxy. The Thatcherite slogan "There is No Alternative" (to the market) exemplified the depoliticisation of neoliberalism, with the privatisations, deregulations, cuts and other signature policies of the era understood not as decisions but as externally imposed necessities.

An earlier generation might have reacted to Hansen's warnings much as governments did during the second world war, when, during a different kind of emergency, western leaders nationalised key industries to direct production to required outcomes. But because neoliberalism established the market as more natural than nature itself, the consensus of the early 1990s held that the environment should be adjusted to the economy rather than the other way round.

Accordingly, from the Kyoto protocol onwards, the mainstream response to global warming centred on the commodification of the atmosphere: from cap-and-trade schemas in which companies bought and sold rights to pollute, to offset systems in which promises not to emit were traded.

These were bad choices. They were wrong choices. But, crucially, they weren't presented as choices at all, with even many environmentalists accepting byzantine systems of financialisation as the only available option.

The global financial crisis shattered illusions in the omnipotence of the market. But if neoliberalism's dead, its technocratic perspectives continue to shamble like zombies through the Australian public sphere.

Centrist commentators who came of age under the Hawke-Keating-Howard administrations still laud the free market reforms of that era as the acme of bold leadership and look upon the governments that followed as unfortunate aberrations.

With an Accord-admiring pragmatist like Albanese in power, they think that maybe, just maybe, the late unpleasantness about climate might give way to old-style consensus about market solutions, similar to that which prevailing at the 1992 Earth Summit when the Republican George HW Bush urged "concrete action to protect the planet".

But that was a different time.

Precisely because neoliberal environmentalism proved a catastrophic failure (at least in terms of preventing carbon emissions - it worked quite well as a method of enriching corporations), global warming now manifests not as a future abstraction but as a horror show playing out in each day's headlines.

The heatwave besetting Europe and northern Africa means that Portugal, Spain, France and Morocco currently face devastating fires (the headline in one Portuguese paper reads: "Panic and despair.") Forecasters warn of unprecedented temperatures through swathes of the southern and western US; across China, some 900 million people will reportedly endure extreme conditions into August.

The emergency now impinges upon all the traditional cabinet portfolios.

 

 

 


 
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