The power in these words.

Day three of recognising the passing of 400 ppm atmospheric CO2.

In nearly four years of writing for Learning from Dogs, I can’t recall devoting three days of posts to a single subject. To put that into context, today’s post is number 1,683 since the first one was published on July 15th, 2009; not all of them from the brain of yours truly by any means you understand!

Today, I’m going to feature a recent essay written by George Monbiot finishing up three days of ‘reporting’ on the deeply disturbing, but fully anticipated, news that the planet’s atmosphere has reached a concentration of 400 ppm CO2.

Last Monday, I published What legacy do we wish to leave for others?

Then yesterday, a post under the title of 400 ppm, as the BBC reported it.  I closed with a reference to a remark made by Professor Sir Brian Hoskins, director of the Grantham Institute for Climate Change at Imperial College London; the remark being “A greater sense of urgency was needed.

I wrote that those wishy-washy words were pathetic.  That we needed the sort of words that George Monbiot penned a few days ago in the Guardian newspaper.  There it was entitled “Climate milestone is a moment of symbolic significance on road of idiocy“.

But I think the title that Mr. Monbiot chose to use on his own blog was far more apt: Via Dolorosa.  (Note that I haven’t formally requested permission to republish the essay but trust that the following is acceptable to both Mr. Monbiot and the Guardian newspaper.)

Here’s how it opened:

Via Dolorosa

May 10, 2013

Corruption and short-termism are pushing us along the path of sorrows.

By George Monbiot, published on the Guardian’s website, 10th May 2013

The records go back 800,000 years: that’s the age of the oldest fossil air bubbles extracted from Dome C, an ice-bound summit in the high Antarctic. And throughout that time there has been nothing like this. At no point in the pre-industrial record have concentrations of carbon dioxide in the air risen above 300 parts per million. 400 is a figure that belongs to a different era.

The difference between 399 and 400ppm is small, in terms of its impacts on the world’s living systems. But this is a moment of symbolic significance, a station on the Via Dolorosa of environmental destruction. It is symbolic of our collective failure to put the long term prospects of the natural world and the people it supports above immediate self-interest.

The symbolic significance of the planet’s atmospheric concentrations of CO2 passing 400ppm  is that, I hope, with all the hope that my heart can summon up, it will bring us back from the brink.  Then one ponders about this possibility as Monbiot’s next paragraph unfolds:

The only way forward now is back: to retrace our steps along this road and to seek to return atmospheric concentrations to around 350 parts per million, as the 350.org campaign demands. That requires, above all, that we leave the majority of the fossil fuels which have already been identified in the ground. There is not a government or an energy company which has yet agreed to do so.

“not a government or an energy company … has yet agreed to do so.”

I’m going to repeat that again, with emboldening; “not a government or an energy company … has yet agreed to do so.

In fact, one could reasonable argue that having any hope for a turning back is utterly naive. Look what the essay goes on to say:

Just before the 400-mark was reached, Shell announced that it will go ahead with its plans to drill deeper than any offshore oil operation has gone before: almost three kilometres below the Gulf of Mexico.

A few hours later, Oxford University opened a new laboratory in its department of earth sciences. The lab is funded by Shell. Oxford says that the partnership “is designed to support more effective development of natural resources to meet fast-growing global demand for energy.” Which translates as finding and extracting even more fossil fuel.

The European Emissions Trading Scheme, which was supposed to have capped our consumption, is now, for practical purposes, dead. International climate talks have stalled; governments such as ours now seem quietly to be unpicking their domestic commitments. Practical measures to prevent the growth of global emissions are, by comparison to the scale of the challenge, almost non-existent.

As an example of the scale of the hypocrisy in which we are all immersed, last week’s The Economist magazine carried a full-age advertisement from Chevron on page 5 under the banner of ‘Protecting The Planet Is Everyone’s Job – We agree‘ and going on to explain:

We go to extraordinary lengths to protect the integrity of the places where we operate.  Places all over the world, like Australia’s Barrow Island.  It’s home to hundreds of native species of wildlife, including wallabies, ospreys, and perenties.

We’ve been producing energy on the island for more than 40 years, and it remains a Class A Nature Reserve.

Didn’t take me two moments to find this image:

Barrow Island, Australia.  Taken from the Chevron Australia website.
Barrow Island, Australia. Taken from the Chevron Australia website.

To my mind this advertisement completely misses the point; deliberately or otherwise.  Chevron and all other oil producing companies in the world are endangering the future of the entire planet by continuing to ‘produce energy’, aka oil.  Period. Full stop.

Or to put it in the words of George Monbiot’s essay:

The problem is simply stated: the power of the fossil fuel companies is too great. Among those who seek and obtain high office are people characterised by a complete absence of empathy or scruples, who will take money or instructions from any corporation or billionaire who offers them, and then defend those interests against the current and future prospects of humanity. This new mark reflects a profound failure of politics, worldwide, in which democracy has quietly been supplanted by plutocracy. Without a widespread reform of campaign finance, lobbying and influence-peddling and the systematic corruption they promote, our chances of preventing climate breakdown are close to zero.

Thus the final sentence in GM’s essay carries a deep sadness.

So here we stand at a waystation along the road of idiocy, apparently determined only to complete our journey.

http://www.monbiot.com

Why are we not seeing, hearing and reading words of a similar weight and power from just about every ‘opinion maker’ in the world?

Why not?  Why not?

10 thoughts on “The power in these words.

  1. As implied in my response to yesterday’s post, George Monbiot is probably dismissed by current UK government as (at best) a liberal or (at worst) a ‘watermelon’. The same cannot be said for Professor Sir Brian Hoskins (who is probably ignored because governments have been duped into doing nothing by fossil fuel lobby propaganda).

    In the meantime, here are some more – supposedly “wishy-washy” or “pathetic” but definitely ignored – words from colleagues of Hoskins’ at the Grantham Institute, taken from their ‘Assessing the costs of adaptation to climate change’ report [PDF available here] in 2009:

    …we believe that the UNFCCC estimate of investment needs is probably an under-estimate by a factor of between 2 and 3 for [agriculture, coasts, ecosystems, human health, infrastructure and water]. It could be much more if other sectors are considered. We conclude that for coastal protection the factor of under-estimation could be 2 to 3… For health, the ‘intervention sets’ that were costed relate to a disease burden that is approximately 30–50% of the anticipated total burden in low- and middle-income countries (and do not include interventions in high-income countries). Including ecosystems, protection could add a further $65–$300 billion per year in costs. Furthermore, estimates are not made for sectors such as mining and manufacturing, energy, the retail and financial sectors and tourism. This probably explains why the investment levels proposed by the UNFCCC appear so small – roughly the annual cost of running two or three Olympic Games. That this represents a doubling of current [global humanitarian aid spending] only highlights the very low current level of development assistance.

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  2. Given the revelation that oil companies have almost certainly been guilty of falsely reporting crude oil prices for at least the last ten years, Monbiot’s words – or your re-posting of them – could not have been better timed… This looks like it could be even bigger than the LIBOR scandal in the City of London. Not satisfied with receiving trillions of dollars in tax breaks, the oil companies have been over-inflating the retail prices of refinery products. Words fail me. No wonder David Cameron is “deeply concerned”

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  3. Martin, thanks for both comments and apologies for not being more attentive. Our two guests from England have just left 10 minutes ago and over the next 48 hours, I will be catching up on things, including following up on the ‘news’ in your last comment. Best wishes, Paul

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    1. Given that you have had house-guests I think you have been remarkably attentive (even if you were the only one awake some of the time)…! On a more positive note, check out this astonishingly candid apology from the US Secretary of State’s for the way in which the USA has acted as a roadblock to progress on tackling climate change for the last 20 years:
      http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/kerry-climate-change-life-and-death-issue_724453.html

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  4. The 400 ppm is misleading. It does not take into account other greenhouse gases produced by Homo SS. In truth, considering those gases, but not H2O, we are above 450 ppm… Gist: it’s easier to do something about those, than about CO2.

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  5. Thank you for this insightful and important post, Paul. I guess you have seen the movie from 350.org ‘Do the Math”….. and then this news about 400 ppm on the heels of it. My God I am tired of living in a world full of idiots and uncaring, greedy bastards, to put it bluntly. Truly, the question goes from why not? to What the f+&@#j=k and then to Where are human beings, and all of nature, supposed to live once they make the planet uninhabitable??? Have you read about the Swedish and Italian scientists who have proven beyond a doubt that there is a way to make free energy with a safe form of nuclear fusion? question is, will enough humans on the planet say ENOUGH to the big 5, so we can move to free, clean energy SOON?

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    1. Dear Leigh, I’m getting monotonous! I can only keep on writing because people like you embrace my words and out of that embrace comes the feeling that there is this great mass of quiet, peaceful souls who are joined together, virtually, in the face of so much stupidity.

      Which is a bit of a rambling way of saying a big thank you for your supportive comment. As you say on your own blog: Insights, reflections and creative imaginings for our awakening world. Spot on.

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      1. Keep on fighting the good fight, Paul. It DOES make a difference, just as you write… more and more are waking up each day, and we, the faithful, are here to be the wayshowers as they do so. Hold to the truth and the Light, the enormous, beautiful Light of Truth. blessings, Leigh

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