Back Issue - August 2001

NOW THAT BONN IS OVER...


... what are we left with? A triumph for the rest of the world, to the exclusion of the current US administration, or a con trick? According to Mark Lynas, writing in The Guardian UK newspaper (27 July), the agreement reached in Bonn will result in a rise of about 0.3% in world-wide carbon emissions and not a fall at all. This is due to deliberately weakened targets since Kyoto by a number of the most resistant governments, and their monkeying about with the 'carbon credits' and 'carbon sinks' mechanisms in order to nullify the targets. So is it "the essential ladder needed to build global action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions", as proclaimed by Greenpeace, or not worth the paper it is written on?

We in Save our World do not have a definitive answer, and maybe no one has. But we don't need one. We can leave that to others to argue about, if they think it worthwhile. I suggest that NGO's need to move away from being 'right' or 'wrong' in their analyses of outcomes. Our role is to keep pushing for what is really needed: 60-80% reductions in CO2, and leave governments and the corporations (which governments still do not have the honesty to admit control them), to find ways of doing so. If we applaud or decry them for specific agreements we make ourselves partly responsible for the outcomes, with no more legitimacy than corporations.

It is, however, our role to challenge them on their intentions and motivations, and their dishonesty, on behalf of the sections of civic society that we claim to speak for. An understanding of the motivations and intentions of the various parties is an essential prerequisite for judging the trustworthiness of their claims and the kinds of tricks that can be expected of them, either now or in the future.

At a deeper level there needs to be a paradigm shift from arguing about facts, since governments can no longer be relied upon to act on logical, rational and scientific grounds. While we still keep playing the facts game we have to respond to the idiotic statements of the likes of Republican Senator Peterson by treating his claims as factual until shown otherwise. He claimed on a recent BBC Newsnight TV programme that thousands of scientists dispute the evidence of climate change, whereas most informed people believe it to be around ten, employed by the fossil fuel industry. On a BBC Radio 4 programme 'The Battle For Kyoto' (31 July), the training of young Republicans to go to Bonn to say the evidence for global warming is 'wrong', come what may and without their finding out whether it is true or not, makes the conflicting evidence game even more absurd. It is also commonplace for government ministers and their opponents hurl conflicting statistics at one another, fruitlessly, on Radio 4 news comment programmes.

If you start from an assessment of motives instead of arguments the whole game becomes much clearer. It is usually pretty obvious why the said ministers are making the claims that they do, as well as their opponents; and blindingly obvious where it comes to Republicans opposing the evidence for global warming. Ignore their arguments until you have challenged their motives. The paradigm shift comes when you regard everything, even something as simple as a chair, as the outcome of some person(s) intention, in place of simply as an object with certain physical characteristics. Incidentally I owe this simple realisation to an eminent sociologist, called Talcott Parsons, who called it 'the action frame of reference'.

In fact, the cardinal place of values, intentions and motivations in attitudes to climate change, hit me during a conference last March about preparations for Earth Summit 2002 next year. Somewhere inside me a bulb lit up and I realised that it is a sheer waste of time to produce, voluntarily and unpaid, technical or scientific advice for government, to which it already has ample access but may be totally unmotivated to utilise. So, when the opportunity was presented of joining in an issue-based working group in the afternoon of the Conference, I set out to declare that I wanted to address just the values behind sustainable energy and climate change.

That was easier said than done, since most members of the group were scientists who still assumed that governments act on rational arguments, based on scientific evidence, which is logically and therefore irrefutably based. And so I felt distinctly unheard at the end of the session - and still do, after two follow-up meetings, which have followed the conference. This is despite my preparing and circulating the paper 'A Values Approach to Energy and Climate Change' (which is posted to our Yahoo Group on our Links page). It has also been emailed to others who are hopefully more open to this viewpoint.

Consistent with these observations, I have been taking a different line from most of the speakers at recent Against Bush street demonstrations on climate change. Instead of joining in with simply abusing Bush, in our speech to the Green Party demonstration on Saturday 14 July, I said that Save our World is about transformation - of attitudes, beliefs and life-styles, as stated in our Principles (on the About Us web page). This is not simply on a practical level, like re-cycling waste or walking instead of driving your car. It is about transformation of hearts and minds, not just personally, but socially, nationally and globally. Unless we care passionately for this exquisite planet that we have been given, develop resolution and determination to defend it, endurance and perseverance to sustain it, we will not be any use in the times that lie ahead.

However, those on the demonstrations, to whom I paid tribute, are already showing some of the commitment needed. Instead of buying the labels of 'violent agitators' that Naomi Klein wrote, last March, are being thrown at demonstrators by politicians and in the media, they should proudly call themselves New Altruists. For many such demonstrators give of their own time and money to support causes that they deeply believe in, travel to other countries, rough it, and endure harassment and arrest - with no direct gain for themselves.

There are also many habits of mind to be undone. These are very pervasive and subtle, like the assumption which is shared among practically everyone that we meet, including family and friends, that life will carry on much as it is at present - indefinitely; and that we who take environmental issues seriously are worrying unnecessarily about our own pet interest - that does not affect them in the slightest. These habits of mind regard it as normal to consume all you want, when you want, drive around as much as you like, and divert yourself with chat-shows and winning the lottery. So it is not surprising that one of the most urgent studies is into 'States of Denial', a book by Stanley Cohen written about ethnic atrocities and suffering, which appears equally relevant to amnesia about climate change and its implications. More of this in a future Boiling Point.

Meanwhile, speaking of intentions, ours to shame the US Congress to ratify the Kyoto Agreement etc. through our on-line Petition may well not succeed but it is certainly firm and clear. What is more it is standing the test of time, having been initiated last summer, and is just as relevant now as it was before The Hague conference, the US Presidential election, Bush's revolt, and Bonn.

It gave me much pleasure to read out the text of the Petition over a microphone to the crowd in front of the US Embassy in London on Saturday 28 July, and invite people to sign by-hand versions which we are inputting into the on-line version. I said that the Petition runs till the Earth Summit in September next year, but needed to add, as I do here, that its real effectiveness will be through networking and coalitions with other organisations in order to expand it exponentially over what is really little time till then - as well as helping to develop world citizen action as a real force. If you are part of or know of a potentially linked campaign, I invite you warmly to contact me through jimscott@save-our-world.org.

Keep in touch!

Jim

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