Is The Climate Crisis Creating A Global Consciousness Shift?
By David Suzuki
When an assassin killed Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria
in 1914, no one called it the start of the First World War. That happened years
later, after the implications, consequences and scale of the response could be
assessed. It’s often the way. That’s why historians are important; they put
events in context.
Similarly, I doubt anyone knew how our world would change
after Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak built their first computer in Jobs’ parents’
garage in 1975.
In 1988, when climate scientist James Hansen testified in
Washington that human-caused global warming was kicking in, people might have
been excused for failing to grasp the significance of his early warning. But there’s
no excuse for humanity’s subsequent dismissal and denial of the reality of his
statements and the deliberate, aggressive opposition to any action to reduce
the threat.
For years, environmentalists have called for an urgent
response to runaway climate change. Evidence has poured in from around the
world to corroborate Hansen’s conclusions, from melting glaciers, sea level
rise and ocean acidification to increasing extreme weather events and changes
in animal and plant behaviour and ranges.
Despite the evidence, few governments have taken the
necessary steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Instead of listening to
scientists and citizens, many leaders have chosen to heed the fossil fuel
industry’s massive PR machine and right-wing ideologues who see the call for
global action as a socialist threat to capitalism.
There has been progress, at national and subnational levels,
and among forward-thinking corporations and organizations. Some, like the
commitment by countries including Denmark and Germany to reduce dependence on
fossil fuels after the 1973 Arab oil embargo, were in response to markets
rather than the climate crisis, but it positioned them well as evidence for
climate change mounted.
More recently, people on the frontlines of climate change
such as Pacific Islanders and Inuit have warned of the changes they’re
experiencing. The insurance industryand a number of corporations have called
for action, with some, like Tesla, designing solutions. But many in the media
and government continue to downplay the problem.
I’ve been astounded by the lack of response over the years,
but I’ll go out on a limb and suggest a shift is now taking place. Although we
may not recognize its significance without the benefit of hindsight, we appear
to be in the early stages of something huge.
Even some news outlets are shifting. The U.K.’s Guardian
decided earlier this year to increase its coverage of climate change, going so
far as to encourage divestment from the fossil fuel industry. The New York
Times decided to use the more accurate term “denier” rather than “skeptic” to
refer to those who reject the overwhelming evidence for human-caused climate
change.
People power is another sign of the growing shift: 400,000
at the largest climate march in history in New York in September, with 2,646
simultaneous marches in 162 countries; an unprecedented gathering of 25,000 in
Quebec City in advance of a premiers’ climate change summit in April; and more
than 10,000 in Toronto (including me) on July 5 for the March for Jobs, Justice
and the Climate in advance of the Climate Summit of the Americas.
When Pope Francis reached beyond the world’s 1.2 billion
Catholics to call for action on climate change, his message was endorsed by
other religious leaders and organizations, including the Dalai Lama, the
Islamic Society of North America, an influential group of Jewish rabbis and the
Church of England.
Beyond visible evidence of the increasing willingness to
meet the challenge of global warming, one of the biggest signs of a shift has
been the almost unnoticed but spectacular increase in renewable energy
investment in countries like the U.S.,Brazil and China.
It’s easy for governments and industry to prioritize
corporate profits and short-term gain over the best interests of complacent
citizens. But when enough people demand action, take to the streets, write to
business, political and religious leaders and talk to friends and family,
change starts happening. We never know how big it will be until it’s occurred —
but this time, it looks like it could be monumental! Let’s hope so.
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