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The Climate Debt the U.S. Owes the World

By Bill McKibben, December 3, 2020

Central America has been through a wet version of Hell these past few weeks, as first a Category 4 and then a Category 5 hurricane crashed into the same part of Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast, dumping crippling amounts of rain on that country, Guatemala, and Honduras. Delphine Schrank opened an account of the toll on Honduras’s second-largest city, San Pedro Sula, for the Washington Post with this anecdote: “Blanca Costa crouched on a wooden cart with her three daughters under a highway bridge. . . . The cart was the one possession Costa was able to save when they clambered out [of their flooded house]. The three horses that pulled it, enabling her to earn money as a trash collector, were gone. It would take years, she said, to save enough to buy another one.”


Image may contain: Human, Person, Shorts, Clothing, Apparel, Wood, Transportation, Vehicle, Watercraft, Vessel, and Summer

Photograph by Inti Ocon / AFP / Getty

It goes without saying that Costa and her daughters had done nothing to cause the increase in global temperature that, in turn, allowed massive late-season hurricanes to form in their corner of the Atlantic. And it goes without saying that Honduras will now have an even harder time paying for a changed energy system to help it convert to clean energy, as its commitments set in the Paris climate accord envision—its cobbled-together reconstruction plan is unsurprisingly focussed on rebuilding the bridges and roads that the storms destroyed.

Such intuitions about blame and responsibility have usually been offered in airy moral terms, but a new report released on Wednesday puts them into numbers. The analysis, from the activist group U.S. Climate Action Network, draws on the work of Tom Athanasiou, at a California-based nonprofit called EcoEquity, and his colleagues at the Climate Equity Reference Project. It tries to calculate how much of the burden each country should be bearing, based on its historical contribution to the cloud of greenhouse gases and its “capacity to pay”—a reflection of how rich the nation became during the fossil-fuel era. The report finds “that the US fair share of the global mitigation effort in 2030 is equivalent to a reduction of 195% below its 2005 emissions levels, reflecting a fair share range of 173-229%.” That is, we can’t meet our moral and practical burdens simply by reducing our own emissions; we’ve already put so much carbon into the air (and hence reduced the space that should rightly go to others) that we need to make amends. Of this hundred-and-ninety-five-per-cent reduction, Athanasiou says, seventy per cent would be made domestically, by building solar panels, rolling out electric cars, and insulating buildings. “This is about the maximum achievable by 2030, though cuts of this magnitude would require a full Green New Deal war footing,” he notes. “The rest—the other 125%—would come by way of financial and tech support for adaptation and rapid decarbonization in poor and developing countries.”

For the past year, nations (and companies) have been announcing plans to reduce their emission levels to zero by mid-century. As Athanasiou says, that’s a welcome development, but, he adds, “Not one of these countries has made anything like an adequate move to support ambitious decarbonization and adaptation plans in the developing world. Or even, despite lots of talk, to significantly cut fossil subsidies. In fact, as I’m sure you know, a lot of the covid recovery money has gone to the fossils.”

A country like Honduras has not used anything like its fair share of the planet’s carbon budget. By decarbonizing, it will be doing far more than its fair share—and it won’t be able to, unless countries like the United States help foot the bill. That is the only honorable, and only sensible, course: they don’t call it global warming for nothing, and you can’t control it anywhere without controlling it everywhere. Our political debate has poisoned the idea of foreign aid in recent years, and it will be a hard lift for the Biden Administration to come close to meeting the requirements of justice. But it won’t be as hard a lift as Blanca Costa is facing these next few years, pulling a trash cart without her horses.


Passing the Mic

Lynne Quarmby is a professor of molecular biology at Simon Fraser University, in British Columbia. She is also a veteran of many environmental campaigns, and the author, most recently, of “Watermelon Snow: Science, Art, and a Lone Polar Bear.” The title refers to the way that algal blooms can tint a snowpack pink. (Our interview has been edited for length and clarity.)

I first saw watermelon snow high in the backcountry of Yosemite. What is it, and why should we be paying attention?

From spring through summer, single-celled algae grow on alpine and polar snow. In full bloom, the snow can look like watermelon flesh. White snow reflects solar radiation, whereas colored snow absorbs more of that energy, causing more melt and algal growth. Whether, on balance, the algae exacerbate global warming by absorbing heat, or mitigate it by pulling carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during photosynthesis, we don’t yet know. The more pressing issue may be that algal blooms speed the melt of alpine snowpacks—freshwater reservoirs for many cities—spelling drought later in the season.

Under the microscope, the algae look like small jewels—diamond-encrusted rubies, sapphires, and emeralds. Together with the algae, we find rotifers, tardigrades, and ciliates, their bellies full of red cells; fungi with three arms; and slime, teeming with bacteria, archaea, and viruses. From microbial communities like these, we are learning that evolution is as much about coöperation as it is about competition. My concern is less about whether the algae are “good” or “bad” with respect to climate change than about the imminent extinction of this microscopic Serengeti.

You’ve been watching the Arctic, where the temperature is rising faster than anywhere else. What lessons should the world to the south be taking in?

Warm temperatures in the Arctic are disrupting the atmospheric and oceanic currents, which for ten thousand years reliably drove stable climate patterns. Driven by temperature differentials, atmospheric currents with altered speed and patterns impact climate—for example, the duration and intensity of droughts in North America. At the same time, the influx of cold freshwater from melting glaciers and ice caps is changing ocean currents in complex ways. In some cases, altered ocean currents are predicted to cause counterintuitive outcomes—for example, the cooling of northern Europe.

Changing ocean currents not only affect our climate but also impact the previously predictable circulation of nutrients. Organisms across the food web are facing increasing temperatures and changing patterns of nutrient availability throughout the world’s oceans. Finally, beyond the loss of habitat for ice algae and walruses, the shrinking of Arctic sea ice reduces the reflection of solar radiation and amplifies global warming.

And how do you keep from unproductive despair?

I have direct experience with unproductive despair. After several years of climate activism driven by fear, panic, and anger—two arrests, being sued by a pipeline giant, and a run for a seat in the Canadian Parliament—I was exhausted. After getting my job back on track, I found myself rested but still irritable, angry, and unable to engage with environmental issues. Finally, I recognized that I was suffering from a failure to grieve—a failure to acknowledge that, for many things I love, it is too late. By slowly opening myself to grief, I began to find some peace. The question became: How to live in this world with this knowledge? For me, living a fulfilling, satisfying life means engaging with others on issues that matter. I work on letting go of the old life—the decadence of a fossil-fuel-driven world—and embracing my personal vision of a better future. I sit with the grief, vigorously defend the truth, and engage in politics. It’s a good life.


Climate School

● People subscribing to The New Yorker is what allows this newsletter to keep appearing for free. I was first on its staff as a very young man in the nineteen-eighties, and it is a great pleasure to be writing regularly for it again, because no magazine in the world supports more great writing and reporting; it is, all these years later, a highlight of each week to pull a new copy from the mailbox. Subscribe here.

● Crucial new numbers have been released on the so-called production gap. A consortium of researchers led by the Stockholm Environment Institute calculates that, to meet the temperature targets set in the Paris accord, “the world will need to decrease fossil fuel production by roughly 6% per year between 2020 and 2030. Countries are instead planning and projecting an average annual increase of 2%, which by 2030 would result in more than double the production consistent with the 1.5°C limit.”

● Everyone’s after Joe Biden for a job, including the Australian former finance minister Mathias Cormann, who wants Biden’s support to become the next secretary-general of the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Environmentalists down under are opposed: Cormann has been an apologist for Australia’s truly dismal climate action and took the stage at Davos this year to explain that “not every coal mine is a bad thing for the environment.”

● With the remarkable news last month that the governor of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, was shutting down the Line 5 oil pipeline beneath the Straits of Mackinac, attention shifted west to Minnesota, where Governor Tim Walz approved Line 3, a tar-sands pipeline heavily opposed by indigenous campaigners. Kendall Mackey, an organizer with 350.org (which I helped found) said to me that the Biden Administration could be asked to make the final call. “A new Administration could order an immediate pause on oil-pipeline construction and a moratorium on any new projects or expansion projects while they review Trump-era approvals for conflict or undue influence of industry,” she explained. Tara Houska, an indigenous campaigner who has been battling Line 3 for years, told the Intercept that “it is obvious on its face that this does not meet emissions standards—this does not meet our climate goals.” It’s particularly sad to see pipeline workers arriving in a state already suffering from a dire coronavirus surge.

● Bloomberg carries a fascinating account of how China decided to offer a shock promise to go carbon neutral by 2060: “Xie Zhenhua, a former environmental bureaucrat and veteran diplomat, oversaw the work from his threadbare office as head of [Tsinghua University’s] Institute of Climate Change and Sustainable Development. Few within China’s strict hierarchy can match Xie’s mastery of government bureaucracy and climate science, making him an influential voice on the issue among the ruling elite.”

● European civil-society groups are organizing to persuade the European Union to stop counting energy created by burning trees as “renewable.” They are right on climate grounds and also because much of the wood that Europe burns comes from heavy logging in the southeast United States, where poor and minority communities bear the brunt of the damage.

● It’s been five years since Pope Francis issued his remarkable encyclical “Laudato Si,” and his message about the climate crisis has been slowly working its way through the vast and sprawling network that is Roman Catholicism. Parts of the American hierarchy have been slow to catch on, but the most recent American named a cardinal (and the first African-American cardinal), Wilton Gregory, of the Washington, D.C., archdiocese, is apparently a firm believer. Meanwhile, Francis himself took to the pages of the Times for an op-ed on the coronavirus pandemic—which is among the deeper pieces of writing that the crisis has produced. He argues that responding generously to our common threat could be good practice; otherwise, “How will we deal with the hidden pandemics of this world, the pandemics of hunger and violence and climate change?”

● Danny Kennedy, the longtime visionary behind some of the early efforts at large-scale commercialization of clean tech, has launched a new effort, Third Derivative, to bring in corporations and venture-capital investors with two billion dollars under management to help finance forty-seven climate-related startups, working on everything from batteries to air-conditioning. With technical help from the Rocky Mountain Institute, they’re pursuing what Kennedy described to me as “a uniquely integrative approach—cultivating an open, collaborative ecosystem of all the major stakeholders necessary to speed the transition to a more sustainable, prosperous, and equitable world.”

● We’re used to thinking of the forests in the Northeast as fairly safe from wildfire—but, as Inside Climate News notes, in a heating world, we probably shouldn’t.

● A long investigation by Politico details the extent to which federal agencies continue to pump mortgage money into properties that will soon be under water, in both senses of the word.

● For the very youngest readers, the filmmaker and activist Bonnie Sherr Klein has published “Beep Beep Bubbie,” a somewhat autobiographical account of what she described to me as “a grandmother in a motorized scooter who takes her grandkids to climate marches.” Klein may be best known as the mother of the activist and author Naomi, but her son, Seth, a public-policy researcher based in Vancouver, has just published a meticulously researched new book, “A Good War: Mobilizing Canada for the Climate Emergency.” It draws on the lessons of the Second World War, which he describes as the previous “existential threat” faced by our neighbor to the north.


Scoreboard

⬆️ Widely circulated reports last year that a half-hour of watching streamed video was the carbon equivalent of driving a car four miles turn out to have been dramatically overstated. A painstaking new analysis from George Kamiya, at the International Energy Agency, in Paris, says that the real equivalent is driving your car about a hundred yards. (And it’s a lot less than that if you watch on your phone.)

⬆️ The annual report from the office of Canada’s energy regulator, released last week, says that, as the country stiffens its climate targets, there will likely be no need for the planned twelve-billion-dollar expansion of the Trans Mountain tar-sands pipeline from Alberta to British Columbia, a project that has met widespread opposition from indigenous groups and environmentalists. (The report also says that the Keystone XL pipeline, stretching from Alberta across the U.S. to the Gulf of Mexico—which Biden has promised to stop—is probably unnecessary.)

⬇️ There is great sadness in activist communities over the death, last month, of Debra White Plume, a Lakota leader who had been crucial in, among many other battles, the fight against the Keystone and Dakota Access Pipelines. “If somebody wants to label me, I guess it would be water protector,” she said, in an interview at Standing Rock.

⬆️ Last week, I pointed out that Bank of America was the only major U.S. bank to not yet rule out drilling in the Arctic, “apparently uncertain whether wrecking America’s largest wildlife refuge in search of more oil to further warm the climate is an idea sufficiently evil not to try to make some money off of it.” This week, thanks in large part to relentless campaigning by the Gwich’in indigenous communities, the Sierra Club, and others, the bank did the right thing.


Warming Up

From Ken Kragen, who convinced six million people to hold Hands Across America to raise money to fight hunger in 1986, comes a new project: Hands Around the World, to raise climate awareness. According to the project’s Web site, it will try to use “cutting edge hologram technology and the power of Augmented Reality and Social Media” to connect a billion people holding hands around the entire world in a “virtual selfie chain.” The Indian composer and singer A. R. Rahman is an early collaborator—a trailer for the event, featuring some of his music, emerged earlier this year.

(Sources: The New Yorker)

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