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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.
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.
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