Climate Change is not a political issue
From The Consciousness of Sheep.
One of the biggest threats behind an increasingly likely
human extinction is our tendency to compartmentalise (in order to ignore)
information. Each one of us does this
unconsciously in a process that psychologist Norman Dixon referred to as “trading
safety for peace of mind.” According to
Dixon, when faced with danger most humans do not respond rationally; following
the course of action (or inaction) that is most likely to keep us safe. Rather, we respond emotionally; taking the
course of action (or inaction) that distresses us the least. In his book Our Own Worst Enemy, Dixon gives
a plethora of examples that ultimately led to tragedy. Among these are:
The train driver
whose engine exploded because he had hammered a steam valve shut because it was
too noisy. Ironically, the explosion blew out his ear drums so that loud (or,
indeed, any) noise was no longer an issue for him
The airline
co-pilot who acquiesced in an unauthorised take-off attempt rather than argue
with the pilot; leading to the largest ever loss of life in an air disaster
The nuclear
engineers at Three Mile Island who opted to believe that their instruments were
faulty rather than entertain the possibility that the reactor was overheating.
There is a relatively small part of the human population
that is able to process information rationally (although, unfortunately, half
of them are psychopaths): People like
the NASA engineers who warned their managers not to proceed with the launch of
the space shuttle Challenger in January 1986.
Not, as was the case in that tragedy, that a warning from one or more
alert individuals within a particular discipline makes much difference.
The Challenger disaster was as much the product of politics
and economics as it was to do with engineering and chemistry. Managers were under huge pressure from
politicians to carry out the launch for PR value. There was also the looming economic threat
that the US military (whose payloads made up the bulk of shuttle missions)
might develop their own rival system if NASA kept delaying launches.
In the end, rather than act rationally and delay the launch
– with all the emotionally uncomfortable fallout that would have entailed –
they found ways to convince themselves that it would be okay to launch. The result, tragically, was that all seven
members of the crew died along with any hope of good PR.
It is in this light that we need to view the recent – more
alarming than usual – call for radical change from the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change. The scientists
raising the alarm are akin to the NASA engineers warning of the danger of
launching space shuttles in sub-zero temperatures. The economists and politicians are like the
NASA managers who are under extreme economic and social pressures to avoid
saying or doing anything that might emotionally distress themselves or the
wider electorate.
One psychological device commonly employed to begin this
process of denial can be found in the headline chosen by the BBC in their
coverage of the story:
In fact, “the world” is doing something akin to what our
bodies do when they become infested with an unwanted infection or toxin; it is
warming its temperature by a few degrees in order to kill the organism
responsible. The world, you see, is in
no danger whatsoever. It has been
through eons during which temperatures were far higher than we are likely to
make them. During those periods it
produced stunning natural wonders; insects as big as large dogs, ferns as tall
as houses and reptiles the size of trucks.
The world can get along fine irrespective of whether humans are present.
This talk about “saving the world” is merely trading safety
for peace of mind so that we do not have to entertain our species’ headlong
charge to oblivion in exactly the same way as we individually avoid thinking
about the fact of our own mortality.
Instead, we fall into another psychological device; assuming that
someone else has got our backs.
The climate scientists themselves do this when they call
upon our political leaders to make radical changes to four key areas of our way
of life:
Energy – shift to
entirely zero carbon and carbon-negative energy sources
Land use – more
vegetables, less meat
Cities –
restructuring to prioritise walking and cycling, energy-saving building
standards, etc.
Industry –
electrify, cut back on material use, recycle, go digital, etc.
It is at this point that we realise that climate scientists
are not up to speed with the emerging energy economics. While a handful of countries in the developed
regions of the world have deployed modern renewables in large enough volumes to
impact their electricity systems; most of their actual energy consumption has
been offshored to the parts of the world that manufacture the goods they
consume. This allows the (trading safety
for peace of mind) illusion that these regions are “greener” than is actually
the case. The global reality is very
different. As energy expert Kurt Cobb
explains:
“I recently asked a
group gathered to hear me speak what percentage of the world’s energy is
provided by these six renewable sources: solar, wind, geothermal, wave, tidal,
and ocean energy.
“Then came the
guesses: To my left, 25 percent; straight ahead, 30 percent; on my right, 20
percent and 15 percent; a pessimist sitting to the far right, 7 percent.
“The group was
astonished when I related the actual figure: 1.5 percent. The figure comes from
the Paris-based International Energy Agency, a consortium of 30 countries that
monitors energy developments worldwide. The audience that evening had been
under the gravely mistaken impression that human society was much further along
in its transition to renewable energy. Even the pessimist in the audience was
off by more than a factor of four.”
Worse still, none of the renewable energy generation
deployed so far has been used to replace the energy generated from fossil
fuels; global energy consumption continues to grow remorselessly, and
renewables have merely been added to the mix.
The only major energy transition has been the shift from coal to
gas-fired power stations.
The common public/political response to the realisation that
we are nowhere near even beginning to wean ourselves off fossil fuels, is to
(trading safety for peace of mind) call for governments to redouble their
efforts. This, however, depends upon the
fallacy that governments are doing anything more than adding hot air and
volumes of unworkable policy proposals.
The reality is that the only difference between Donald Trump and Angela
Merkel when it comes to climate policy is that Trump revels in burning coal
while Merkel desperately attempts to convince us that she isn’t doing it.
As with proposals to totally reengineer the global energy
systems, proposals for the radical reform of cities, industry and land use are
beyond us. The fundamental flaw is
visible in the way we deploy so-called renewable electricity. Rob Mielcarski summarises the problem:
“Renewable energies
cannot stand on their own without fossil energy to create, install, and
maintain their materials and infrastructure. For example, wind turbines use
large quantities of concrete, steel, and copper that cannot be made without
fossil energy. Renewables are at best fossil energy extenders. At worst they
accelerate economic growth and burn up the remaining fossil energy faster to
capture some wind or solar energy with equipment that will wear out in less
than 50 years when there will be little or no fossil energy needed to replace
the equipment.”
There is simply no good way in which we can switch to a
renewable energy-powered economy without burning so much of the remaining
fossil fuels and consuming so many of the remaining resources that we
accelerate the very crises we are seeking to prevent.
There is one, very simple way that we can keep global
temperatures from reaching the point where our species goes extinct. We stop burning all fossil fuels
immediately. If we do so, of course, we
will be plunged into a new dark age as all of the life support systems we
depend upon would collapse within hours.
From the ashes, a much smaller – 1 billion at most – population will be
able to restore the kind of renewables-only economy of the Atlantic slave
economies in the seventeenth century.
It is, of course, very emotionally challenging to
acknowledge that one way or another, this is the type of economy humans – if
they do not become extinct – will have to adopt. Instead, we trade safety for peace of mind by
continuing with a way of life that we readily admit to being unsustainable in
the vain hope that clever people somewhere else are going to come up with a new
energy source that is both carbon-free and capable of providing sufficient net
energy not just to power continued economic growth; but to simultaneously
repair the damage we have already done to the human habitat.
Patzek understands the politics of the crisis better than
most: “Our children have far less access to the luxuries of the global amoeba
and to that extent they are more in tune with reality. But they are mostly
passive, alienated from the natural environment, and brainwashed by living with
smart phones and Facebook. So, by and enlarge, our children don’t vote and
don’t try to change what they see coming.
“My generation,
though, consists mostly of the frightened, self-centred cowards who hope that
preserving the governing narrative will protect us from the inevitable. Welcome
to the overpopulated world with the climate change, increasing international
chaos, growing nationalism, xenophobia, racism, fascism and religious
intolerance…”
So no, climate change is not a political issue; it is a
profoundly psychological one. Until and
unless far more of us are prepared to drop our comfort blankets and look our
predicament in the face, extinction is our most likely fate. As Mielcarski puts it:
And even if a majority can bring themselves to stop trading
safety for peace of mind, the time is running short. The seas are rising faster than anyone
thought and the time we have left to act can be counted in months rather than
decades. It may be that none of us will
survive the storm that is about to break around us…
As you made it to the end…… you might consider supporting
The Consciousness of Sheep.
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