The decisions made during the remainder of this year – a mere 6 months – to recover
economically from the COVID-19 crisis, are likely to determine the practical
actions set in motion for the next 3 years, regarding the control of carbon emissions, and thence the course of the climate crisis up
to 2050... and beyond.
It is now part of the public psyche that to mitigate climate change requires curbing our use of fossil fuels, although the vast scale of this, as needed to check global warming to within necessary limits, is less readily comprehended. Likewise, that there should be such a large difference in consequences between a rise of 2 degrees Celsius, and one of just half a degree less than this, is not immediately obvious, until the massive amount of additional energy absorbed into the Earth system that this represents, is appreciated.
It is now part of the public psyche that to mitigate climate change requires curbing our use of fossil fuels, although the vast scale of this, as needed to check global warming to within necessary limits, is less readily comprehended. Likewise, that there should be such a large difference in consequences between a rise of 2 degrees Celsius, and one of just half a degree less than this, is not immediately obvious, until the massive amount of additional energy absorbed into the Earth system that this represents, is appreciated.
It is sometimes tempting to despair that zero-carbon will be attained by 2050, and the chances of doing so by 2030 appear far less
compelling. Nonetheless, the reduction in carbon dioxide emissions that have
been “achieved” as an inadvertent consequence of locking down to control the
transmission of the coronavirus, by almost one sixth in April 2020, compared with 2019 levels, might be taken to indicate that significant progress
along this path is indeed possible. The question arises, however, of whether
such an ameliorated emissions level might be preserved in the longer run, but
the subsequent “rebound” in CO2 being poured into the atmosphere to
within about 5% of 2019 levels, somewhat dilutes optimism about this.
Clearly, by simply curbing the milliard tonnage of fossil fuels that we burn, CO2 emissions would be attenuated, but with economic
catastrophe as an unwelcome bedfellow. Huge sums of money are being pledged by
governments across the globe this year, to stimulate their economies post COVID-19,
totalling $9 trillion. Since, with the aid of these fiscal booster-jabs, the die will be cast for the
global economy over the next 3 years, how the money is spent is critical, and
if it does not coincide with a dramatic and permanent fall in CO2
emissions, climate targets will become unattainable. In short, the time is now
or never.
However, according to a recent International Energy Agency (IEA) report, a “green alternative” is within our grasp. Not surprisingly, this requires a principal emphasis on the proliferation of wind
and solar energy, but also that buildings and industries be made more energy
efficient, and that electricity grids are remodelled and updated. The creation
of millions of new jobs across the world is vital, particularly in those
nations where very many have been rendered unemployed, as a result of the
lockdowns imposed to hold the COVID-19 crisis in check.
The report concludes that rather than injecting finance into the prevailing high-carbon
economy, more jobs can be created by investing in such activities as retrofitting
buildings, fabricating wind farms, installing solar panels, inaugurating new
power networks, implementing greater numbers of electric vehicles, improving
the energy efficiencies of industry, long distance transportation, and appliances
in general, along with more end-use renewables, biofuels production, and creating
environmentally sound urban infrastructure. It is thought that such a
“sustainable recovery plan” could generate an annual 9 million new jobs.
While the European Union, for example, appears poised to initiate
a swathe of green as part of its recovery, globally, little money has so far
been directed toward low-carbon industries, with the majority of the pledged funding aimed toward their high-carbon counterparts. For example, the aviation industry is targeted for a
$33 billion bailout. As the Executive Director of the IEA, Fatih
Birol, has commented, governments “had an excuse” to support these industries, as
a first reaction to dealing with the suddenness and scale of the COVID-19
crisis, since “the first recovery plans were more aimed at creating firewalls round
the economy.” However, some governments are still investing in high-carbon projects,
such as coal-fired power stations.
There is an additional danger, namely that the currently available
cheap and plentiful oil might act to derail the essential transformation to
renewable energy. Especially at this critical time, to allow this to happen
would be very short sighted, to say the least, and it is the longer game we
must prepare for. As has been stressed elsewhere, the oversupply of oil is
temporary, and will finally be drained away into the enlarging backdrop of declining conventional fields.
Investment in the countryside has also been proposed as a
potentially significant source of new jobs. Sir Mark Rylance, the actor and former artistic
director of Shakespeare's Globe theatre, in London, has said that members of the
theatrical profession are not happy “just sitting on their butts”, furloughed or
unemployed due to COVID-19, and would prefer to be occupied in hands-on environmental
activities. He has declared that, due to his own freelance status, he is
prepared to devote one month per year for the next decade, to carry out building
and digging work in the service of countryside and environmental initiatives,
which he very much believes in. Sir Mark is also said to have proposed that the
UK government invest £315 million in a range of countryside and environmental projects which could create (paid) jobs and improve the nation’s health.
A considerable opposing force to making such vital
changes is the incentivisation of global capitalism, which, as a result of its massive resource consumption, is now reckoned to be eroding the safe, operating space of human civilization, leading
to breaches of key planetary boundaries, such as land-use change, biosphere
integrity and climate change.There are also indications that it may be more difficult than is generally thought to transform to a low-carbon society, and until renewables have been established on a sufficient
scale to achieve net energy payback, a large-scale expansion of low carbon
energy capacity will rely upon subsidies from the fossil fuels, which
are, in any case, becoming increasing scarce.
Most probably, a redesign of our system of industrialised
civilization, to use less energy overall,
primarily involving relocalisation strategies, is the critical approach to addressing these and many other
issues that confront us, and it would be perilous to overlook this.
I dedicate this article to the late Bruce Arthur (“Woody”) Wood, author of the “Values Trilogy” set of essays, and a stalwart in the communities and co-operatives movement, with which he was involved for over forty years.
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