Climate Rage

The only way to stop global warming is for rich nations to pay for the damage 
they've done - or face the consequences

By Naomi Klein

November 16, 2009 "Rolling Stone" -- One last chance to save the world — for 
months, that's how the United Nations summit on climate change in Copenhagen, 
which starts in early December, was being hyped. Officials from 192 countries 
were finally going to make a deal to keep global temperatures below 
catastrophic levels. The summit called for "that old comic-book sensibility of 
uniting in the face of a common danger threatening the Earth," said Todd Stern, 
President Obama's chief envoy on climate issues. "It's not a meteor or a space 
invader, but the damage to our planet, to our community, to our children and 
their children will be just as great."

That was back in March. Since then, the endless battle over health care reform 
has robbed much of the president's momentum on climate change. With Copenhagen 
now likely to begin before Congress has passed even a weak-ass climate bill 
co-authored by the coal lobby, U.S. politicians have dropped the superhero 
metaphors and are scrambling to lower expectations for achieving a serious deal 
at the climate summit. It's just one meeting, says U.S. Energy Secretary Steven 
Chu, not "the be-all and end-all."

As faith in government action dwindles, however, climate activists are treating 
Copenhagen as an opportunity of a different kind. On track to be the largest 
environmental gathering in history, the summit represents a chance to seize the 
political terrain back from business-friendly half-measures, such as carbon 
offsets and emissions trading, and introduce some effective, common-sense 
proposals — ideas that have less to do with creating complex new markets for 
pollution and more to do with keeping coal and oil in the ground.

Among the smartest and most promising — not to mention controversial — 
proposals is "climate debt," the idea that rich countries should pay 
reparations to poor countries for the climate crisis. In the world of 
climate-change activism, this marks a dramatic shift in both tone and content. 
American environmentalism tends to treat global warming as a force that 
transcends difference: We all share this fragile blue planet, so we all need to 
work together to save it. But the coalition of Latin American and African 
governments making the case for climate debt actually stresses difference, 
zeroing in on the cruel contrast between those who caused the climate crisis 
(the developed world) and those who are suffering its worst effects (the 
developing world). Justin Lin, chief economist at the World Bank, puts the 
equation bluntly: "About 75 to 80 percent" of the damages caused by global 
warming "will be suffered by developing countries, although they only
 contribute about one-third of greenhouse gases."

Climate debt is about who will pick up the bill. The grass-roots movement 
behind the proposal argues that all the costs associated with adapting to a 
more hostile ecology — everything from building stronger sea walls to switching 
to cleaner, more expensive technologies — are the responsibility of the 
countries that created the crisis. "What we need is not something we should be 
begging for but something that is owed to us, because we are dealing with a 
crisis not of our making," says Lidy Nacpil, one of the coordinators of Jubilee 
South, an international organization that has staged demonstrations to promote 
climate reparations. "Climate debt is not a matter of charity."

Sharon Looremeta, an advocate for Maasai tribespeople in Kenya who have lost at 
least 5 million cattle to drought in recent years, puts it in even sharper 
terms. "The Maasai community does not drive 4x4s or fly off on holidays in 
airplanes," she says. "We have not caused climate change, yet we are the ones 
suffering. This is an injustice and should be stopped right now."

The case for climate debt begins like most discussions of climate change: with 
the science. Before the Industrial Revolution, the density of carbon dioxide in 
the atmosphere — the key cause of global warming — was about 280 parts per 
million. Today, it has reached 387 ppm — far above safe limits — and it's still 
rising. Developed countries, which represent less than 20 percent of the 
world's population, have emitted almost 75 percent of all greenhouse-gas 
pollution that is now destabilizing the climate. (The U.S. alone, which 
comprises barely five percent of the global population, contributes 25 percent 
of all carbon emissions.) And while developing countries like China and India 
have also begun to spew large amounts of carbon dioxide, the reasoning goes, 
they are not equally responsible for the cost of the cleanup, because they have 
contributed only a small fraction of the 200 years of cumulative pollution that 
has caused the crisis.

In Latin America, left-wing economists have long argued that Western powers owe 
a vaguely defined "ecological debt" to the continent for centuries of colonial 
land-grabs and resource extraction. But the emerging argument for climate debt 
is far more concrete, thanks to a relatively new body of research putting 
precise figures on who emitted what and when. "What is exciting," says Antonio 
Hill, senior climate adviser at Oxfam, "is you can really put numbers on it. We 
can measure it in tons of CO₂ and come up with a cost."

Equally important, the idea is supported by the United Nations Framework 
Convention on Climate Change — ratified by 192 countries, including the United 
States. The framework not only asserts that "the largest share of historical 
and current global emissions of greenhouse gases has originated in developed 
countries," it clearly states that actions taken to fix the problem should be 
made "on the basis of equity and in accordance with their common but 
differentiated responsibilities."

The reparations movement has brought together a diverse coalition of big 
international organizations, from Friends of the Earth to the World Council of 
Churches, that have joined up with climate scientists and political economists, 
many of them linked to the influential Third World Network, which has been 
leading the call. Until recently, however, there was no government pushing for 
climate debt to be included in the Copenhagen agreement. That changed in June, 
when Angelica Navarro, the chief climate negotiator for Bolivia, took the 
podium at a U.N. climate negotiation in Bonn, Germany. Only 36 and dressed 
casually in a black sweater, Navarro looked more like the hippies outside than 
the bureaucrats and civil servants inside the session. Mixing the latest 
emissions science with accounts of how melting glaciers were threatening the 
water supply in two major Bolivian cities, Navarro made the case for why 
developing countries are owed massive compensation
 for the climate crisis.

"Millions of people — in small islands, least-developed countries, landlocked 
countries as well as vulnerable communities in Brazil, India and China, and all 
around the world — are suffering from the effects of a problem to which they 
did not contribute," Navarro told the packed room. In addition to facing an 
increasingly hostile climate, she added, countries like Bolivia cannot fuel 
economic growth with cheap and dirty energy, as the rich countries did, since 
that would only add to the climate crisis — yet they cannot afford the heavy 
upfront costs of switching to renewable energies like wind and solar.

The solution, Navarro argued, is three-fold. Rich countries need to pay the 
costs associated with adapting to a changing climate, make deep cuts to their 
own emission levels "to make atmospheric space available" for the developing 
world, and pay Third World countries to leapfrog over fossil fuels and go 
straight to cleaner alternatives. "We cannot and will not give up our rightful 
claim to a fair share of atmospheric space on the promise that, at some future 
stage, technology will be provided to us," she said.

The speech galvanized activists across the world. In recent months, the 
governments of Sri Lanka, Venezuela, Paraguay and Malaysia have endorsed the 
concept of climate debt. More than 240 environmental and development 
organizations have signed a statement calling for wealthy nations to pay their 
climate debt, and 49 of the world's least-developed countries will take the 
demand to Copenhagen as a negotiating bloc.

"If we are to curb emissions in the next decade, we need a massive mobilization 
larger than any in history," Navarro declared at the end of her talk. "We need 
a Marshall Plan for the Earth. This plan must mobilize financing and technology 
transfer on scales never seen before. It must get technology onto the ground in 
every country to ensure we reduce emissions while raising people's quality of 
life. We have only a decade."

A very expensive decade. The World Bank puts the cost that developing countries 
face from climate change — everything from crops destroyed by drought and 
floods to malaria spread by mosquito-infested waters — as high as $100 billion 
a year. And shifting to renewable energy, according to a team of United Nations 
researchers, will raise the cost far more: to as much as $600 billion a year 
over the next decade.

Unlike the recent bank bailouts, however, which simply transferred public 
wealth to the world's richest financial institutions, the money spent on 
climate debt would fuel a global environmental transformation essential to 
saving the entire planet. The most exciting example of what could be 
accomplished is the ongoing effort to protect Ecuador's Yasuní National Park. 
This extraordinary swath of Amazonian rainforest, which is home to several 
indigenous tribes and a surreal number of rare and exotic animals, contains 
nearly as many species of trees in 2.5 acres as exist in all of North America. 
The catch is that underneath that riot of life sits an estimated 850 million 
barrels of crude oil, worth about $7 billion. Burning that oil — and logging 
the rainforest to get it — would add another 547 million tons of carbon dioxide 
to the atmosphere.

Two years ago, Ecuador's center-left president, Rafael Correa, said something 
very rare for the leader of an oil-exporting nation: He wanted to leave the oil 
in the ground. But, he argued, wealthy countries should pay Ecuador — where 
half the population lives in poverty — not to release that carbon into the 
atmosphere, as "compensation for the damages caused by the out-of-proportion 
amount of historical and current emissions of greenhouse gases." He didn't ask 
for the entire amount; just half. And he committed to spending much of the 
money to move Ecuador to alternative energy sources like solar and geothermal.

Largely because of the beauty of the Yasuní, the plan has generated widespread 
international support. Germany has already offered $70 million a year for 13 
years, and several other European governments have expressed interest in 
participating. If Yasuní is saved, it will demonstrate that climate debt isn't 
just a disguised ploy for more aid — it's a far more credible solution to the 
climate crisis than the ones we have now. "This initiative needs to succeed," 
says Atossa Soltani, executive director of Amazon Watch. "I think we can set a 
model for other countries."

Activists point to a huge range of other green initiatives that would become 
possible if wealthy countries paid their climate debts. In India, mini power 
plants that run on biomass and solar power could bring low-carbon electricity 
to many of the 400 million Indians currently living without a light bulb. In 
cities from Cairo to Manila, financial support could be given to the armies of 
impoverished "trash pickers" who save as much as 80 percent of municipal waste 
in some areas from winding up in garbage dumps and trash incinerators that 
release planet-warming pollution. And on a much larger scale, coal-fired power 
plants across the developing world could be converted into more efficient 
facilities using existing technology, cutting their emissions by more than a 
third.

But to ensure that climate reparations are real, advocates insist, they must be 
independent of the current system of international aid. Climate money cannot 
simply be diverted from existing aid programs, such as primary education or HIV 
prevention. What's more, the funds must be provided as grants, not loans, since 
the last thing developing countries need is more debt. Furthermore, the money 
should not be administered by the usual suspects like the World Bank and USAID, 
which too often push pet projects based on Western agendas, but must be 
controlled by the United Nations climate convention, where developing countries 
would have a direct say in how the money is spent.

Without such guarantees, reparations will be meaningless — and without 
reparations, the climate talks in Copenhagen will likely collapse. As it 
stands, the U.S. and other Western nations are engaged in a lose-lose game of 
chicken with developing nations like India and China: We refuse to lower our 
emissions unless they cut theirs and submit to international monitoring, and 
they refuse to budge unless wealthy nations cut first and cough up serious 
funding to help them adapt to climate change and switch to clean energy. "No 
money, no deal," is how one of South Africa's top environmental officials put 
it. "If need be," says Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, speaking on 
behalf of the African Union, "we are prepared to walk out."

In the past, President Obama has recognized the principle on which climate debt 
rests. "Yes, the developed nations that caused much of the damage to our 
climate over the last century still have a responsibility to lead," he 
acknowledged in his September speech at the United Nations. "We have a 
responsibility to provide the financial and technical assistance needed to help 
these [developing] nations adapt to the impacts of climate change and pursue 
low-carbon development."

Yet as Copenhagen draws near, the U.S. negotiating position appears to be to 
pretend that 200 years of over-emissions never happened. Todd Stern, the chief 
U.S. climate negotiator, has scoffed at a Chinese and African proposal that 
developed countries pay as much as $400 billion a year in climate financing as 
"wildly unrealistic" and "untethered to reality." Yet he put no alternative 
number on the table — unlike the European Union, which has offered to kick in 
up to $22 billion. U.S. negotiators have even suggested that countries could 
fund climate debt by holding periodic "pledge parties," making it clear that 
they see covering the costs of climate change as a matter of whimsy, not duty.

But shunning the high price of climate change carries a cost of its own. U.S. 
military and intelligence agencies now consider global warming a leading threat 
to national security. As sea levels rise and droughts spread, competition for 
food and water will only increase in many of the world's poorest nations. These 
regions will become "breeding grounds for instability, for insurgencies, for 
warlords," according to a 2007 study for the Center for Naval Analyses led by 
Gen. Anthony Zinni, the former Centcom commander. To keep out millions of 
climate refugees fleeing hunger and conflict, a report commissioned by the 
Pentagon in 2003 predicted that the U.S. and other rich nations would likely 
decide to "build defensive fortresses around their countries."

Setting aside the morality of building high-tech fortresses to protect 
ourselves from a crisis we inflicted on the world, those enclaves and resource 
wars won't come cheap. And unless we pay our climate debt, and quickly, we may 
well find ourselves living in a world of climate rage. "Privately, we already 
hear the simmering resentment of diplomats whose countries bear the costs of 
our emissions," Sen. John Kerry observed recently. "I can tell you from my own 
experience: It is real, and it is prevalent. It's not hard to see how this 
could crystallize into a virulent, dangerous, public anti-Americanism. That's a 
threat too. Remember: The very places least responsible for climate change — 
and least equipped to deal with its impacts — will be among the very worst 
affected."

That, in a nutshell, is the argument for climate debt. The developing world has 
always had plenty of reasons to be pissed off with their northern neighbors, 
with our tendency to overthrow their governments, invade their countries and 
pillage their natural resources. But never before has there been an issue so 
politically inflammatory as the refusal of people living in the rich world to 
make even small sacrifices to avert a potential climate catastrophe. In 
Bangladesh, the Maldives, Bolivia, the Arctic, our climate pollution is 
directly responsible for destroying entire ways of life — yet we keep doing it.

>From outside our borders, the climate crisis doesn't look anything like the 
>meteors or space invaders that Todd Stern imagined hurtling toward Earth. It 
>looks, instead, like a long and silent war waged by the rich against the poor. 
>And for that, regardless of what happens in Copenhagen, the poor will continue 
>to demand their rightful reparations. "This is about the rich world taking 
>responsibility for the damage done," says Ilana Solomon, policy analyst for 
>ActionAid USA, one of the groups recently converted to the cause. "This money 
>belongs to poor communities affected by climate change. It is their 
>compensation."

[From Issue 1091 — November 12, 2009]
 
 






Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
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Verba volant scripta manent...
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