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Clock running out on irreversible climate change - Part II
Thursday, 22 May 2008
By Bo Ekman
irreversibleclimatechange.jpg

To all intents and purposes, the Kyoto Protocol is dead, and unless urgent actions are taken its successor, the Copenhagen process may turn out to be dead on arrival or comatose. Kyoto never delivered reductions of CO2 emissions, but still binds 174 nations until 2012. Meanwhile, global greenhouse gas emissions have steadily increased since the reference year of 1990.

New negotiations for “Kyoto 2” must produce nothing less than the Perfect Agreement, to be followed by Perfect Implementation. The clear and present danger is that the Copenhagen process will deliver a compromise between nations that will fall far short of this ambition.

Repeatedly events have shown failure of collective governance in dealing with political adventurism sheltered by the principle of sovereignty. The war in Iraq, the occupation of the West Bank or repression in Tibet, the horrific tragedy of Darfur or painful madness of Zimbabwe, the concentration camp at Guantanamo Bay, not to mention the global arsenal of 27,000 nuclear warheads, show that the international vehicles of today are no stronger nor more dependable than any time in the past.

Trust levels are low within international systems; paranoia and citizen surveillance and nationalism are at a high. Thus the Copenhagen process takes place in an atmosphere of institutional distrust and competition. No nation wants to emerge as loser before their national audiences.

The loser will be nature; the biosphere with which none of us can strike a deal. Nature is represented at the negotiating table only through the analyses of the IPCC reports of 2007. No new reports are due until 2010, but science does not wait. However, while James Hansen of NASA now convincingly shows that humanity must reverse the atmospheric content of CO2 from today’s 385 parts per million (ppm) to 350 ppm - itself a Herculean task - nations and negotiators aim for targets of 450 to 500 ppm and the illusionary governance ability to limit the increase of temperature to a maximum of 2C. This will prove as unfeasible as the stamping out of humans cheating one another. 

Targets are defined according to what is judged as politically possible in the short term and economically desirable, rather than what is required to guarantee a stable ecosystem in the long-term.

Current scientific knowledge starkly presents “350 ppm” as a boundary condition in Nature that humankind should not have transgressed. It marks the point beyond which we can no longer be sure to maintain the stability and predictability of nature. This stability was the most important prerequisite for the evolution of human civilisation over the last 10,000 years. There are several more boundary conditions that we should avoid transgressing: limits to fresh water use, fishing, deforestation, toxic waste, land use and misuse of other biodiverse ecosystems such as wetlands. These limits must be defined, never to be surpassed.

Safely keeping human activity within nature’s boundary conditions does not necessarily mean limits to growth - humans have always been a flexible and creative species. But surpassing those boundaries will, with absolute certainty, result in economic and social decline.

The biosphere is a complex, adaptive system evolving to support life. Civilisation is a human-designed system whose purpose is to create secure economic, social and cultural value. This system is built upon the combination of technology, energy and ecosystem “services”, i.e., outputs of water, biomass, food, minerals and breathable air. These two systems - biosphere and civilisation - are no longer synchronised at the global scale. They are, in fact, colliding.

irreversibleclimatechange2.jpg

Humankind is overextending earth’s annual biocapacity by 125 percent. Short-term consequences will increase prices for energy, food, water and resources for the ever-growing global population. Long-term consequences could be devastating to all forms of life on the planet. This is why we can accept nothing less than the Perfect Agreement from the Copenhagen process. We can only bind our future to an agreement that secures, with prudent margins for time eternal, the intricate internal balances and interactions of nature’s systems.

The world has extremely complex systems problems but we have no matching forms of governance to correct them. We need to move from soft to hard global governance, from “Global Compact” to “Global Contract”. The Copenhagen process could provide such an opportunity.

It must therefore be redefined, redesigned and rescheduled. Above all its targets must be stated with clarity and leaders of nations must morally and operationally rise to this occasion. The declarations on climate change spoken in the General Assembly on September 24, 2007, by hundreds of heads of states were badly matched by the discouraging performance at Bali.

The expected compromise of Copenhagen we call Plan A. Each nation’s fallback plan prioritising its own interests is a Plan B. If there’s no credible Plan A, the world will descend into eco-protectionism, where struggles over food, water, fuels, and biomass overshadow any principle of solidarity.

The Tällberg Foundation has taken the initiative to develop a Plan C, a shadow plan for Kyoto 2. We will suggest an idealised design of the Perfect Agreement, with mechanisms for Perfect Implementation. It will be based on the definition of those natural boundary conditions we must not transgress, and will guide the moral imperatives of a leadership acting in the interests of the whole.

Nature is neither a political nor an economic system. Nature is neither ideological nor religious. Nature is simply nature and Homo sapiens is a product of Nature. Brian Arthur, the brilliant Irish economist, observes in his forthcoming book on the theory of technology that technology brings hope but that trust can only be achieved through our conscious relationship with nature. Trust and hope must be fundamental ingredients in our vision of the future and the redesign of the Kyoto agreement.

The easy way out for many is the elusive promise of new technology, with the wisdom of market forces like cap-and-trade systems. We may remember that it was earlier generations of technologies and market mechanisms that created the current problems. Modern society put its hope in technology rather than trust in nature, fixated by the idea that if only new technologies yield a competitive financial Return on Investment (ROI) the market will fix the environmental mess.

The reality is that the financial markets never fix recurrent failures. The market did not fix apartheid, fascism or World War II. Politics did. Governance did. The yield of good politics is another kind of ROI, the Return on Insight. We own the necessary insight into the acute and massive ecosystems crises but not yet the responsible politics needed. Let’s invent them.

We need a new global deal that combines trust with hope. The patrolling and defence of nature’s boundary conditions is a political assignment. Its implementation will demand law-enforcement regimes that, by design, infringe on the sovereignty of nations and their monopolies of military and police force, and of natural resources. Political insight will not, however, be applied without a thundering tsunami of global, enlightened public opinion demanding solutions to the question “How on earth can we live together - we the humans, we with nature?”

Reprinted with permission from YaleGlobal Online - www.yaleglobal.yale.edu - (c) 2008 Yale Center for the Study of Globalization.

Bo Ekman is chairman of Tällberg Advisors and founder and chairman of the Tällberg Foundation, an organisation dedicated to sustainable globalisation and the creation of a secure relationship between man and nature.


An opinion provided by OnlineOpinion.com.au - Australia's e-journal of social and political debate.
Comments
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posted by: Vivienne 23-May-08 08:19:50
While our global population is still increasing at faster rates, and new wealthy people are moving up the food chain, there will be no reduction in ghg emissions. Our economy in Australia, apparently, depends on increasing our population to replace our older generations. Without non-renewable energy and the continued dependence on livestock industries, there cannot be deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. It is all just white-washed.
posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 24-May-08 02:41:17
One of the ways is rapid greenhouse gases capture on large scales. Such capture can also significantly increase our food production capacities. I have outlined one possibility here: http://www.sciencealert.com.au/opinions/20083004-17248.html
posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 25-May-08 02:56:14
Dear Bo Ekman,

Although I agree with many points you raise, I cannot help but to notice how part I was accepted with much more interest.
It would probably be even more interesting if it were crisp, straight to the point and brief.
I certainly hope that you do not contemplate parts III, IV etc. Cause might be noble, but you are drowning it.

Kind regards,
posted by: Steve Borton 25-May-08 06:24:57
Mr. Ekman,
I could not agree more strongly with your statements. For at least 2.5 million years humans and their predecessors lived in harmony with nature. It wasn't until we switched to being farmers that we started degrading our environment. I have very great fears about our ability to return back to systems which work in harmony with nature. This is a truly daunting task which must be done now.
I could not agree with you more about politicians being the ones which must take the lead. I am skeptical about their willingness to make radical changes. What I have observed over the last forty years makes me very pessimistic. I almost believe that the only thing which will cause true change is a disaster of such huge proportions that we will stop arguing and begin to truly act.
Sincerely Steve Borton
posted by: I. S. Mel Arat 29-May-08 18:51:34
10 years from now this CO2 nonsense will be seen for what it is — Collective Insanity and Mass Delusion.

Yes, Nature needs our protection for without Her we are doomed. We are part of Nature and if we love ourselves we must literally worship Her.

People please! — We are destroying Nature — Deforestation is one terrible example. Killing the Great Whales is another. Murdering each other in wars is yet another.

But Carbon Dioxide? Please — smell the roses!

It was NEVER ever the Carbon — wishing it so, or dreaming that it is so, does NOT make it SO!
posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 29-May-08 23:31:49
Dear I. S. Mel Arat,

Please see closing argument at:
http://www.sciencealert.com.au/opinions/20081605-17331.html
It addressed an issue of a petition against GW/AGW signed by 31,000 scientists in US and I will repeat the answer:

Why we do not have such petitions in the rest of the world?
Fact: US are the only major developed country that did not ratify Kyoto Protocol.
Fact: US are great country where science flourishes.
Fact: The most of research in US is funded by big business.
Can we exclude a conflict of interests?

What is big business funding in US can easily be found and we, in Australia, should take such debates with a grain of salt.

The argument is structurally sound and I will use it whenever and wherever I see an attempt to downplay the risks of GHG pollution.

Kind regards,
posted by: Dream Time 31-May-08 23:21:40
My Country
by Dorothea McKellar

(Her famous poem, in its entirety, about her Australia follows.)

The love of field and coppice,
Of green and shaded lanes,
Of ordered woods and gardens
Is running in your veins.
Strong love of grey-blue distance,
Brown streams and soft, dim skies -
I know but cannot share it,
My love is otherwise.

I love a sunburnt country,
A land of sweeping plains,
Of rugged mountain ranges,
Of droughts and flooding rains.
I love her far horizons,
I love her jewel-sea,
Her beauty and her terror –
The wide brown land for me!

The stark white ring-barked forests,
All tragic to the moon,
The sapphire-misted mountains,
The hot gold hush of noon,
Green tangle of the brushes
Where lithe lianas coil,
And orchids deck the tree-tops,
And ferns the warm dark soil.

Core of my heart, my country!
Her pitiless blue sky,
When, sick at heart, around us
We see the cattle die –
But then the grey clouds gather,
And we can bless again
The drumming of an army,
The steady soaking rain.

Core of my heart, my country!
Land of the rainbow gold,
For flood and fire and famine
She pays us back threefold.
Over the thirsty paddocks,
Watch, after many days,
The filmy veil of greenness
That thickens as we gaze.

An opal-hearted country,
A wilful, lavish land –
All you who have not loved her,
You will not understand –
Though earth holds many splendours,
Wherever I may die,
I know to what brown country
My homing thoughts will fly.

Please see: http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/naturaldisasters/

This next quote is from the above Australian Government site:

"The experience of natural disasters [including long and devastating droughts] has come to be seen as part of the Australian national character as described in the poem 'My Country' by Dorothea McKellar (1904).”

Dorothea McKellar wrote of the blood that ran in the veins of Australians that loved another place —— but now had learned to love their new home —— Australia.

Australians know in their veins that droughts hereabouts are not caused by greenhouse gasses or by humans. There is something much more fundamental, more important, than us puny humans at work here.

Welcome to the Dreamtime.
posted by: Mel Arat 31-May-08 23:34:58
G'Day Damir —— Thank you for your interesting response Mate!

I doubt that 31,000 American scientists can all be corrupted by oil companies and generally by the whole private sector — besides there are many individuals/corporate entities in this "corrupting" private sector who/which would actually AGREE with YOU.

Furthermore many of these 31,000 scientists have tenure at leading universities — this tenure provides them with freedom to be beholden to no one.

Perhaps we only need to give the European scientists a little more time to come up with their own list of names.

Let me also add that, by my own observation, people tend to ‘believe’ AGW or to ‘not believe’. Very few take the time to educate themselves as you have obviously done —— instead most first take a position of belief or non-belief and ONLY THEN create or look up evidence to support that chosen position.

I know Australia has just come through a multi-year drought of epic proportions. But Australia has always been a country/continent of extreme weather — either flood or drought, famine or feast.

I also agree with you, where there are humans there will be organizations and where there are organizations there will be conflicts of interest. But that does not mean that there has to be a conspiracy here — it could just be bad science on either side or both sides.

Many institutions are too hindered and burdened by agendas and politics that have nothing to do with science.

In the informed opinion of Sherwood B. Idso and Craig D. Idso — http://www.co2science.org/education/reports/reportarch.php — you can see how much of what actually goes into the testimony of well-known and well-respected scientists is only their own personal opinion, not science.

And I agree with you — overall, much, too much, heartfelt emotion goes into the debate — please see:
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/01/01/are-there-are-any-good-weather-omens/
posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 01-Jun-08 09:14:14
Dear Mel Arat,

Happy to see us agreeing.
Yes, much more believes than science. And this is what is irritating.
What is even more irritating is that big business and politics are promoting these, often conflicting, believes. And we fall for this!
Doesn’t this tell us something about ourselves?
There are no petitions about how much is 2 2. (Accountants might disagree about results, though.) There are no petitions about out of Africa theory. And yet we see petitions about GW. Big bang theory also hardly holds water better than AGW.

I do believe that majority of scientists is honest. But I cannot discount a possibility that they have been simply duped.
The best we can do is to stop debating and return to our work. Only this will help to resolve the issue.

Kind regards,
posted by: DimmingTheMind 02-Jun-08 21:09:01
I cannot agree with Bo Ekman's comment which follows:

"The reality is that the financial markets never fix recurrent failures. The market did not fix apartheid, fascism or World War II. Politics did. Governance did. The yield of good politics is another kind of ROI, the Return on Insight. We own the necessary insight into the acute and massive ecosystems crises but not yet the responsible politics needed. Let’s invent them."

I don't know where to begin. Financial markets were never intended to fix apartheid or the other historical tragedies listed above. So setting up the straw men here and then attacking markets is disingenuous and irrelevant.

I think "Politics and Governance" are what got us into Fascism and World Wars. It may have been "bad" Governance or "bad" Politics (from bad fascists and evil politicians) but I think the market was pretty much used by any side the way it wanted.

As for "Good Politics" saving us — well, don't hold your breath.

This is like expecting "Good Policies" from Hitler.

Witness the fiasco with BIO-fuels — higher food prices, more deforestation, higher fuel prices, more tropical forest turned over to palm plantations, more hunger, etc., etc., etc. — all of it DIRECTLY from your 'good' politicians, acting I might add on the basis of advice from environmentalists. The politicians listened to the "expert" advice from good GREEN people and then went out and subsidized fuel from food crops — there is your beloved Social Engineering at work — MARKETS had nothing to do with — until they were misused by people with Good Intentions. But the road to Hell is paved with good intentions.

Dear Bo, good luck with your expectation that ALL politics = GOOD politics. I expect more GOOD from private companies and your hated Financial Markets.

And don't get me started on your prescription for a solution with what you say in this comment:

"Its implementation will demand law-enforcement regimes that, by design, infringe on the sovereignty of nations and their monopolies of military and police force, and of natural resources."

Remember the Soviet Union — that "Workers' Paradise"?

That was Social Engineering run amuck — and now you want MORE of THAT?

No thanks!

(I have not even addressed the points about how WRONG I think you are in your BASIC premises that SOMETHING MUST BE DONE — please, give me a break!)
posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 02-Jun-08 23:46:08
There would be no economy without rules/legislations. These rules evolved throughout history and some can be forgiven for not noticing them. Every business every person must obey these rules, for penalties can be harsh. Talking otherwise is rather irresponsible.

All this sounds like much ado about nothing, except for fear that these rules will have to change. We already tax waste and pollution in number of ways. All we need is to add to the list. Politics is better left to politicians. And we would be better off waiting until they ask us for advice.

It would be presumptuous of us to claim that any of us has the best piece of advice. Politicians are likely to wait until the dust settles. Alternatively, they might choose to ride on one or on another sentiment. Let us say, liberals on anti GW and labour on AGW. But this never ends well and would be a disaster for good science.
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