Posts Tagged ‘climate change’

Its not an emergency…. What he did on his holidays

December 20, 2019

Interesting. The Australian Financial Review reports that “the Prime Minister’s minders ordered the media not to report that he had taken leave…” in the middle of a national bush fire emergency in which, in two weeks, over half of Australia’s yearly carbon emissions have been released, while refusing to talk to fire chiefs, or even recognising that there was a problem…. ‘Its not climate change. Its not climate change. How dare you suggest its climate change. How disrespectful is that….’

Weirdly, you might have thought the AFR would be a bit annoyed about this instruction, but they are calmly and kindly understanding. It was to protect the PM from “churlish criticism” and “undergraduate outrage on social media.”

Yes , it’s an “unremarkable holiday” and “everyone needs to take time out to recharge and reconnect with family,” especially a “hard-working Prime Minister” who is just like us, “Just a suburban dad.”

The problem with this, is that we all know that if a Labor PM bailed out on a major emergency, or if people were told not to report that, then the AFR would be howling for that PM’s head.

This is especially the case when we know his office at least twice denied the PM was in Hawai’i. They lied, but that is apparently not a problem.

Its Trump 101 reaching Australia.

Another minor thing, is that the instruction/request, assuming it existed (and why would the AFR, of all people, report it if it had not happened to them?), appears to assume that the media would largely treat the whole issue gently, and that the news would be suppressed. They assumed that, with the mainstream media onside, as usual, there would be no problem. There would also be no problem from the Labor Party, who have been consistently gentle about the Coalition. This was largely correct as the Right receives protection as standard.

However, a few outlets reported the issue (The New Daily, being the most vocal and breaking the story as far as I know) and it was taken up by ordinary people who then made it news through the derided social media, and they made it news in precisely the way that the Government and the PM, did not want it to be news. Some media clearly tried to play the issue down, others initially ignored it, and then under pressure from letters and fuss, decided to see it as worthy of discussion.

Whether this will be the change point in media representation of the government, in the way that Tony Abbott’s attempt to knight Prince Phillip and block gay marriage became a change point, it is too early to say. After all Abbott had to raise an huge amount of resistance before that change happened. But the politics of this is interesting to consider.

[I’m not linking to the AFR, because why give them clicks?]

A Second Jeremiad on Neoliberalism and Climate Change

December 17, 2019

As a reminder: Neoliberals are those people who consider the capitalist market the most important thing in life, with the implied consequences that markets always produce the optimum results, wealthy capitalists are obviously the best rulers and the State exists primarily to make and enforce the laws that allow established capitalists to operate profitably.

Neoliberalism corrupts culture, because culture is seen in terms of profit and power, and hence as produced through the falsehoods, advertising, hype, and PR which support profit and power. Only what is profitable and what contributes to plutocracy is valuable and good. Because Climate Change challenges some sources of power and profit, it becomes an unsolvable cultural and social problem, to be ignored, avoided or hidden for as long as possible.

Neoliberal politicians have no place for deep thinking, or hard virtue in facing reality, only thee word slogans, obfuscation and the promotion of established businesses. National pride is used to build racism, and loyalty to the corporate project. Economic theory is used to justify poisoning people and polluting environments, because any regulation of big business is foolishness and anathema. Culture wars are used to entrench their ‘common sense’, and to show that thinking will be excoriated and punished – doubly useful because if scientists or other experts say that neoliberal policies are rubbish and achieve the opposite of what they claim, then they are to be dismissed as part of the culture wars. The objections of others to their fantasies, are branded as politically evil, not attempts at trying to deal with reality, and people on the right know they face punishment should they turn. There is no need for neoliberals to listen to the opposition. Liberty of big business is to be preserved over your ‘accidentally’ dead bodies, and stultified minds.

Neoliberal inability is best demonstrated by climate change and ecological destruction. Rather than face up to the growing problems, to the growing knowledge we have about these problems or even to public demand, they run away.

They are faced with the problem that powerful and wealthy companies make massive profits out of selling fuels which are poisonous, through mining which is ecologically destructive, and through emissions which disrupt the global climate system. As profitable, it is taken for granted that these fuels are good. Challenging those fuels being burnt is evil, because it would threaten profit, or threaten the expansion of “free markets” and corporate domination elsewhere in the world.

There is nothing else to think, or which can be allowed to be thought.

So the problem is politicised. We get neoliberals claiming that climate change is a socialist plot – because people on the left see the potential desctruction of Western civilisation as a problem. We are told that it means the end of capitalism, when it probably means that some businesses have to change their ways of gaining profit, and adapt to reality. We are told that because the left has proposed solutions, the right is justifiably reluctant to propose its own solutions.

Neoliberals both cannot, and have not, proposed any solutions. They have managed to make this lack of thought and action part of their culture, because their culture is not geared to reality, but to maintaining existing profit and power. Neoliberal theory appears to have no way of beginning to think about this problem, other than hoping the market will solve it in time, and bear the cost of developing extensive new technology, even while they continue to pour subsidies into the fossil fuel industry to corrupt the market. This is the simple truth of the matter.

Hence in Australia, the East Coast is burning because of extended drought and high temperature. Sydney’s particulate pollution exceeds the recognized hazardous levels by a factor of 11. The neoliberals made the fires worse by ignoring warnings, cutting back on experienced fire fighting crew, refusing to plan for extended conflagrations, and refusing (and still refusing) to talk with fire chiefs. The Prime Minister refuses to go to the fire fronts, and instead apparently goes on holiday, to a place with breathable air (its secret you see).

[If you are Australian, you know that all previous prime ministers, including the neoliberals, would have been seen at the front, and would have emergency consultations, because it was their duty, even if they did nothing as a result. Now we have a marketing man in charge, and there is no duty. It is a sad day indeed, when one feels nostalgia for Tony Abbott.]

They are full of blame and displacement. The situation has nothing to do with them. They can take no responsibility, perhaps because they model their favoured form of social organization, the corporation, which is designed to avoid personal responsibilities and be potentially immortal.

Neoliberals misdirect as a matter of course. They claim it was the hostility of the greens to preventative burning that caused the fires, when that is not a Greens’ policy, Greens have marginal influence on government action, and in NSW the fire service exceeded government targets for preventative burning in a shorter period of time than expected (because the suitable periods of time are shrinking due to climate change). It was the fault of criminal people lighting fires, but this always happens, it just so happened that the drought and climate change made the consequences of fire-lighting worse. This is not exactly unpredictable. They say we always have fires in Australia. This is true, but these seem to be worse than we have ever had; instead of Black Friday, or Black Saturday, we have Black November and December, and the days of real heat and wind are still to come. Some of them still say climate change is not real, that all climate scientists are deluded – anything but think neoliberals might be the ones with a problem.

We have a country which is imperiled by drought. The drought is the worse I have seen. Even in the areas around Berrima, which are nearly always green the fields are dry and brown. However, in these drought regions some mining companies have unlimited access to water, or expect to be able to continue to take water from farmers and country towns, because they are big business and that is how it works. This is apparently not a problem for neoliberals.

Ecological destruction is not a problem for neoliberals; indeed sometimes it seems a triumph, as if they are transcending reality in their fantasy, and giving mortality and threat the boot, by producing this destruction.

Is this because they think enough wealth (the marker of proficiency and virtue) will save them? And if the rest of the people suffer, then, that is not a problem, as those people have shown they are not virtuous by not being rich enough to survive? Ordinary people are just labour-fodder to them?

Neoliberals seem paralysed by reality, because it goes against their culture of hoping that the market and big business can solve every real problem there is. They live in a world of delusion, of positive thinking, of PR, Hype, and advertising; in other words they live in a culture of lies.

Its too late to stop climate change

December 12, 2019

It is now probably too late to stop climate change.

It was not too late to stop it 10 years ago. We could have succeeded if there had not been massive political resistance to stopping it. Somewhere between then and now, we probably have passed a tipping point or two. Methane is being released from the seas and the Tundras. Forests, which were supposedly too wet to burn are burning. The Antarctic ice shelf is breaking up. Land ice is melting in Greenland. The Northwest Passage is becoming navigable. Towns and cities are without water supplies.

While we cannot stop change, disruption and chaos, we still have the option of making the results even worse, or holding the worse at bay. We also have the option of preparing for the worse, so we can deal with it as best we may, and diminish the damage. This is the best we can now aim for: mitigation and preparation.

Currently the East Coast of Australia is on fire. One of the reasons for the extent of the Bushfires is because Right Wing governments decided climate change was impossible or would not have an effect for years. They cut back experienced staff, and refused to prepare. They still seem to be holding back on helping firefighters. Even now they are trying to blame the extent and ferocity of the fires on anything other than climate change, and they are still arguing that we should increase emissions because it is profitable.

This is a classic example of how not to face a problem. They have walled themselves up. They cannot admit they were mistaken, and that they need to change. They have either never been able to propose a solution or wanted to propose a solution, and so politicised the problem so as to make doing nothing look righteous.

The Labor opposition is not much better, with their leader explicitly declaring the party in favour of coal exports as they make some money and we might as well make it. Neither of the main parties seems up to the challenge, although at least Labor might admit there is a problem. So, expecting the parties to change in time to stop total disaster, is almost certainly futile.

People who want to survive in a relatively stable society have got to keep fighting for us to prepare for the worse and to diminish the possibility of the worse, and they will have to fight inside and outside the political parties. Otherwise life will become extremely difficult, and keep getting harder and more unpredictable.

We may no longer be able to stop climate change, but we can prepare for it, and try to stop making it even worse. Hence a active climate movement is still necessary, and perhaps more necessary than ever.

Climate arguments

November 26, 2019

Hardly original, but…. A small number of arguments against doing anything about climate change get eternally repeated.

CO2 is a natural product, produced from respiration, would you alarmists ban people from breathing?

CO2 like a lot of other substances is absolutely necessary at low levels. At high enough levels (say 15% or so) it is poisonous to humans – which is why putting your head in a completely intact plastic bag, and sealing it around your neck, is not a good idea.

If there is enough CO2 and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, then they act like blankets on beds, and trap the heat in. The person in the bed gets warmer. The areas under the Greenhouse gasses get warmer. The basic science of this has been known for over 100 years. It has not been successfully overthrown, or falsified, in all that time, which is pretty impressive for a theory.

All the respiratory creatures in the world breathing together are not a problem as they have evolved within the system over a long period of time – that system was reasonably balanced; we recently have disrupted that balance. There is no need to worry about breathing, unless you are worrying about breathing in particulate pollution from massive forest fires, coal dust from coal trains, fumes from coal burning, smog from car exhausts, and so on; that is often quite harmful, and should be worried about.

There is only a small amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, it cannot have any significant effect. Why is this only a problem now?

We might have only increased the percentage of CO2 in the atmosphere a small amount, but in complex systems sometimes small changes have large results. That is just life.

The real problem is the rate of change. In the last 70 years we have massively increased greenhouse gas emissions. In the first decade of this century we doubled world coal consumption. An article I read today, argued that Global CO2 emissions have grown by 62% since 1990, and we were currently on track to beat last years record emissions. This increase stresses the natural systems, a stress which is increased by deforestation, ocean acidification and so on, all of which lessen the capacity for draw down of the emissions. There are a lot of factors at play, such as methane discharge, which make the consequences worse than they might have been otherwise.

We have not been burning fossil fuels for that long. Previously, people did notice the hideous smog pollution in cities from the burning of coal; London was famous for its ‘pea-soupers,’ and people died of respiratory complaints generated by the smog. This was fixed in the 1950s, and pollution lowered. It is still a problem in many cities.

Fossil fuel burning is releasing hundreds of millions of years of accumulated and stored carbon into the atmosphere in a very short period of time. The earth system is extremely unlikely to be able to cope with this, any more than your body system might if you drank an alcoholic’s life-time’s worth of alcohol in half an hour.

Humans are too puny to destroy the world.”

Let us hope so, but we have no evidence for that position always being true. Anyway, we are not talking about destroying the world, just about it being altered enough to undermine current civilisation and its comforts.

Humans have changed and destroyed environments repeatedly, often completely destroying their own societies in the process. Now we have the opportunity to do it globally.

While we are not predicting that all humans will die, it is true the world will happily go on without humans.

Climate changes Naturally

Yes it does. That does not mean humans are not changing it now, or that climate change is always going to be gradual and easy to deal with.

Climate can change as a result of events such as volcanic action, large enough meteorite strike, rotation of the magnetic fields, levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The fact that climate can change because of these kind of events, suggests that it is also possible that humans could change climate. Indeed, the idea of solar radiation management, depends on the idea that humans can change climate.

Life flourished when CO2 Levels have been much higher than they are in any foreseeable future.

True. Life will flourish eventually under almost any circumstances: the previous five great extinctions show that. I’m just not sure human life, of the kind that we have now, could flourish during the unstable transition period. And some geological period’s climates would seem to have generated conditions which could have been difficult for humans to survive in, without biological change.

Climate is complex you cannot predict what will happen. You can’t even predict the weather next week with certainty. Saying climate change is going to destroy us is extravagant alarmism. It won’t happen.

It is true that climate forms a complex system. However, that does not mean you cannot make any predictions at all. You can often predict trends, even while you cannot predict specific events at particular times. It is quite legitimate to expect that weather will be colder in Winter than in Summer. It is also legitimate to predict that weather will become more tumultuous and intense, with increasing warming, while not being able to predict the weather in a specific place in a year or more.

If climate is complex, which it is, I don’t understand how ‘skeptics’, can be so certain that we can have no effect on it, and that any change won’t be too bad.

All the models have failed and there is no proof of climate change, and no proof that CO2 is responsible.

That depends on what you count as proof. I find the evidence and theory pretty persuasive myself, although it is true that I am not qualified in climate science. It is also true that some of the predictions have seriously underestimated the changes that are happening.

An increase in rates of warming will make things worse, that’s just logic: it cannot make things better.

We are already getting runs of temperatures in Australia, which can make survival without air conditioning difficult, and certainly lowers the amount of day time work people can do outside. The water losses we are suffering from could be primarily arising because of financialisation of the water supply, rather than climate change, but society can always make things worse. Drought will increase the severity and spread of bushfires. For some reason some governments are refusing to prepare for climate disruptions. This seems to be a bad idea – we generally prepare for forecasted threats even if they are relatively unlikely and small scale.

Global Warming is just a theory.”

Yes. That is true. It is a theory on which a lot of work has been done, and most people who are experienced in the field, think that it is pretty good, and that the facts seem to support it.

That there is no global warming, that global warming is entirely natural, that we cannot do anything about it, and that climate change is not that bad, are equally theories, even if some people think they are true. Most people who are more qualified than me to make pronouncements on the issue, do not think these particular theories are correct or that there is much evidence for them. You may know better of course, and let us hope that you are correct, but we cannot be certain you are.

I’ve found this paper which disproves global warming. It shows it’s all a hoax.”

If true, that’s a massive amount of work to be done in one paper. If the paper is that revolutionary it will certainly make the author’s name and be noticed in the field.

Where was it published? Is that a name journal reviewed by other climate scientists, a pay to be published journal or some think-tank journal?

What does it actually argue? Sometimes the connection between these supposedly path breaking articles and humanly generated climate change is not that great. I have been shown supposedly revolutionary, articles which are said to argue that climate change has occurred without human intervention. Yes, that’s true. No big deal, it does not mean human acts cannot produce climate change. Or someone might say this article shows that climate models ignore some obvious feature of climate (like cloud cover). I don’t know enough about the models to say for sure, but if it is obvious and ignored, I’m pretty sure someone will factor it into a model now and run them to see what results are produced. That is the point, science is meant to improve with criticism; if the article is good, then some people in the field will probably take up the ideas.

Sometimes we will hear that one set of measurements completely refutes climate change. This is improbable. If we used the sets of measurements I gathered in high-school physics then Newtonian mechanics is inaccurate as well. The data which allows us to say climate change is happening comes from a large variety of sources, and was made by many different groups, and checked by many different groups, and the correlations between different data sources would be examined. Scientists are not inherently more stupid than non-scientists. Given that climate is a complex system, it would not be surprising if some sets of data where anomalous or surprising. Again, it is the general trend that is important, one set of results proves nothing. It could have been warmer in one part of the polar circle in the past than it is now, while it was colder everywhere else.

I don’t actually know the consequences of one paper or one set of results, but I suspect the person bringing it forward does not either.

AGW is a religion in which faith is enough.”

It seems to me that there is no proof that civilisation can survive growing ecological destruction and climate change either. Thinking that we can do so without any change in the ways we live is a matter of faith, as it does not depend on the best knowledge that we have.

In fact, it depends on the best knowledge that we have being completely wrong. That may even be true, but I would not want to risk the fate of my children and myself on such an assumption.

Climate change is global socialist conspiracy to get the State to control us…

That many solutions to climate change involve some kind of change in capitalism does not mean that climate change is a socialist conspiracy, it just means that, on the whole, pro-capitalist thinkers and politicians can’t, or won’t, deal with the problem, or they can’t see a way out without changing something they want to keep. If you really don’t want a ‘socialist solution’, then work towards a solution which pleases you (surely you are smart enough); and this does not mean leaving it to fossil fuel companies to decide not to make a last ditch profit out of burning and pollution.

Anyway, were the socialist 1950s to 60s with their high tax rates, extension of political participation and expanded social security really that terrible? I don’t think so. Socialism is just about increasing the participation and influence of ordinary people on the State, and that is what happened. It does not aim at control of the people, but it does oppose leaving rulership to the liberty of capitalist elites and their cronies. But, by all means choose something else.

By the way, those anti-recognising-global-warming types do seem quite prepared to use the State to threaten and control people who want to do something – so as that could be seen as a State based infringement of liberty, how about you help stop them?

Scientists are conspiring to produce junk science

Do you have any real evidence for that, other than a lot of scientists agree that the evidence supports a proposition that you don’t like?

Have you ever met any scientists? Do you know how unlikely it is that all climate scientists are socialists? The whole career path of many scientists is based on the idea that they will discover something new and overthrow some piece of established science. They don’t sit around trying to figure out how to ignore data that is contrary to other people’s research. In my experience they can spend all night arguing about some obscure piece of stuff, that nobody cares about. They don’t all have great social skills, and they seem unlikely to manage to get a group of people scattered all over the world, with no particular connection (except membership in some scientific body to get a bit of prestige), to agree on anything, certainly not something political. Unless, that is, they think the theory and data are true. Let’s also be real here, how many people outside science actually read scientific papers? They have almost no commercial or popular pull. Scientists, on the whole would be lousy politicians.

On the other hand fossil fuel companies are linked by organisations whose sole purpose is to promote sales of fossil fuels and make them look good. They are notorious for trying to gain political advantage for themselves, teaming up to deceive people and buy politicians to implement their will. They are prone to bribery, corruption, threat, taking tax payers’ money and refusing to clean up after themselves. They routinely lie about the extent of the damage they cause and the ease of fixing it up. We know, they have known about climate change and ignored the data, because it would affect them economically. Exxon is currently in court over this. They have interests in commercial media and can, to a large extent, control the stories that people hear. They have connections with other businesses which also work towards complete corporate domination over the political process disguised as ‘free market’ think tanks. Think of the Atlas Network for example.

Unlike scientists they have the tradition, the money, the motivation, the power, the ability and the organization to conspire.

Is it more likely that a disorganized bunch of nerds has managed to deliberately scare the world for obscure political purposes, or that a bunch of powerful well connected companies are trying to deceive you about the danger to keep their profit going?

I’d say, any realistic political worldview would choose the fossil fuel companies as the most likely villains.

You just want to pull down capitalism, or society, or do something unpleasant.

No. I want to avoid the ecological destruction that arises from our success, and I would rather that production, and the extraction of resources, does not poison humans or other creatures, and make it impossible for current societies to continue to improve. Let’s face it, if climate change does keep coming, the results will be very unpleasant.

Lots of good things are happening in the world, like poverty reduction, and you want to stop them”

The idea that we can have lots of good things happening, does not mean that no bad, or disastrous, things can be happening at the same time.

However, the bad things which are likely to happen because of climate change will almost certainly primarily affect the world’s poor in the initial stages. So if you really do care about poverty, then you would probably want to stop climate change.

“The Socialist agenda of AGW types, means that solutions cannot be debated on merit. The politicisation has driven the Right away.”

Personally, I would expect people to try and solve problems in accordance with their normal social and political agenda. It is not as if the Right has never done this. They usually apply their neoliberal agenda to everything.

However, with this problem, they have rather oddly insisted on doing nothing and pretending the problem does not exist. They offer no solutions, they don’t even promote adaptation. They did not have to do this, and they would not normally deal with problems in this manner.

This unusual behaviour cannot be blamed on the Left. How could the Left force them to do nothing? – that was their own decision; they should take responsibility for it rather than excuse themselves by blaming others for their own actions. Blaming others is just more politicization of the reality.

I love a sunburnt country,
A land of sweeping plains,
Of ragged mountain ranges,
Of droughts and flooding rains.

and “We all admit that Climate is changeable and variable. There is nothing new here”

This is perhaps a uniquely Australian objection. However if Australia is subject to floods, droughts, bushfires and variable and extreme weather events, then we can expect that climate change and other ecological destruction (forest clearing, fracking, massive water use in mines, building over fertile land, etc.) will make the situation worse.

Therefore it would be sensible to prepare for longer droughts, bigger floods, and earlier, more intense and widespread bushfires. We need to train more fire fighters, and have the military trained and ready to help. It would be good to prepare country towns for longer water shortages and to make sure rivers flow rather than get held back for industrial crops which require huge amounts of water, and where the profit all ends up overseas. We need to stop mining under catchment areas, so that our water does not disappear down cracks. We may need more solar or wind powered desalination plants (rather than mock the few we have as unnecessary alarmism). We possibly need to protect endangered wildlife and scenic areas as well, if we want to retain our tourist potential. And we may need to change farming techniques to retain soil fertility and reduce moisture loss.

To keep Australia economically functional we cannot pretend that climate change is unlikely to have any significant effects on the country because the country is ‘harsh’. The harshness means we have to look after it better, and expect even wilder turns. Things are not the same as they were, even if we neglect climate change – larger population (as encouraged by both sides of politics) is also adding strains given the way we organise our ecology. We need to think hard about the way we live in our country.

“Its not our fault, we make only a small amount of emissions, so there is no reason for us to do anything, it won’t make any difference.”

See Only 1.3%

While Australia only emits 1.3–4% of global emissions, this puts us in the highest emitters per head of population, and we export masses of coal and gas which also increases emissions elsewhere in the world, so Australia is directly responsible for a lot of the pressures leading to runaway climate change.

Basically if wealthy developed countries can’t be bothered to cut their emissions, then we cannot expect poorer, still developing countries to be careful about their emissions either. The most likely result or our refusing to do anything, is that it will encourage us to encourage others to do nothing, and embolden others to refuse to do anything, and climate change really will get out of hand.

It is often difficult to set a good example, but that does not mean it should not be done.

Criticism of Climate Protest

November 26, 2019

As should be clear there appears to be a possibly rising wave of protest against:

  • climate change and policies on climate change,
  • ecological destruction and
  • cruelty to farm animals and live sheep exports.

So far the Australian Federal and State governments response can be tabulated easily:

  • Play down the problem and say they are dealing with it, when they are not, and have a history of not dealing with it.
  • Say we should not discuss climate change during a lengthening period of crisis.
  • Say that Australia only produces a small amount of emissions (I have dealt with that issue earlier).
  • Promote new coal mines and suggest more taxpayer subsidies for new mines and for coal-fired power stations.
  • Promote gas as a substitute for coal, but not actually cutting back on coal.
  • Make the electricity market regulations so complex it is hard for new entry companies to figure out.
  • Propose new laws and regulations that make protesting against corporate destruction criminal, and increase fines and jail terms for protestors.
  • Suggest that protestors are hypocritical because they don’t live completely on the renewable energy the governments and corporations are blocking.
  • Suggest that the science is not in yet.

Let’s briefly discuss the science of climate change, even though climate change is a mere sub-category of the problems we face through destroying our ecologies for profit and ‘development’.

The scientific theory of Global warming has been around since the late 19th Century, as shown by this supposedly old clipping from a New Zealand Newspaper from the early twentieth Century (I say ‘supposedly’, because I’ve not gone through the newspapers archives and seen it myself):

The theory is straightforward. Carbon Dioxide, Methane and various other “greenhouse gases” (including water vapour), act like a blanket does on a bed. They trap the heat in, and slow down its escape, making the areas under the blanket hotter.

One of my friends suggested it is like going into a car on a hot day, shutting the windows and turning off the air conditioner; the temperature in the car will rise and, as most people know, sometimes pets and kids left in such a car will die, even if they would have easily survived outside.

This theory of greenhouse gases has been around for a long time and has not met with any serious challenges as to its accuracy. This is despite the fact that any proposition about the universe carries some levels of uncertainty, despite us now knowing an awful lot more about climate change than we did at the turn of the Century and despite the fact that scientists more or less professionally disagree with each other and try to tear down established theories. [In my experience, scientists of a particular type are unlikely to ever team up to form a conspiracy, they would splinter almost immediately]

We now know there can be many factors which cause climate change. Without the burning of fossil fuels, it is possible we would be heading into a colder period, but the burning seems to be over-powering other effects. The burning seems to be the dominant cause of our current change.

Some people suggest that we have been burning things for a long while, and wonder why it is only just a problem now. That is pretty simple. The amount of burning that has been happening has massively increased since the eighteenth century. It has further massively increased since the 1950s. In the first ten years of this century alone, world coal consumption doubled. While debate continues as to how much coal burning is continuing to increase, there is little doubt that the projected increase in available coal will further increase emissions at a huge rate.

This extremely rapid, in geological time, increase in greenhouse gases puts incredible strains on the planet’s balancing mechanisms, which now seem more or less used up, or breaking down. It is likely to be the wild oscillations of those systems which are producing the wild weather we experience. The strain on these systems is increased by deforestation and ocean acidification and poisoning. There is not enough photosynthesis going on to draw down the excess Carbon, and make it part of the natural cycles.

It also needs to be stated that, while it is getting harder to mine some sources, we will not run out of fossil fuels in time to save us. We have more than enough to reach the end of civilization as we know it.

Let us be clear, if people burnt fossil fuels at the rate we were burning them in the 1950s then we almost certainly would not have the severe problems we have now, and could probably have solved any future problems if we had been inclined to.

After all, as the old proposition states, even if the scientists are wrong and we do something, we will be producing less harmful and less polluting energy, and destroying our world ecology less. The costs will be a bit of lost profit, the sacrifice of the political power of fossil fuel companies, and the forcing some corporate change. If scientists are right (we trust them with the theories behind computers and aircraft, and cars, and so on), then not doing anything is close to suicidal.

We have less than 1 degree temperature change at the moment, and things are not looking good. If we don’t stop 3 or 4 degrees of increase from happening, we will be in a bad way. Yes those are small increases, but in complex systems, some small changes can make a huge difference. This is life.

While destruction of viable ecologies and emissions of greenhouse gases are major problems, we could have solved them, if we had taken them seriously.

However, we face a reluctance by some governments and corporations to even consider the problem and, in the face of opposition, their attempts to shut down commentary and discussion. This appears aimed at keeping on with the destruction and the marketing of fossil fuel burning.

I suspect that a problem for these political parties and corporations is that, if they were to act, they would be implying they had been wrong in the past, and that is not allowable. They can never be wrong. They can only be Right.

This is a simple form of authoritarianism, imposed largely for the benefit of a segment of the dominant groups. It will eventually harm everyone, whether that is intended or not.

Political action is needed, as this is primarily a political problem.

The PM on the Bushfires

November 24, 2019

Right wing politicians still condemn people for mentioning the possible connection between climate change and intense early bushfires. The condemnation seems to have been started by the National Party trying to make it look as though mentioning the connection was politically motivated and inappropriate, despite the connection coming from non-political sources, who were not blaming the government parties. The condemnation was, of course, supported by the Murdoch Empire.

After making the point several times himself, the PM made the following tweets:

Scott Morrison@ScottMorrisonMP·Nov 19

There are 70+ fires burning in Qld. I spoke to Premier Palaszczuk yesterday to offer any assistance they need. Our @DeptDefence continue to transport firefighters to where they’re needed and to undertake other tasks as requested by the States, like clearing overgrown firebreaks.

Scott Morrison@ScottMorrisonMP·Nov 20

I visited the @QldFES Centre today to get an update on the current and forecast bushfire conditions. Australia is facing some dangerous fire conditions all across the country in the coming days. Please keep updated on fires in your area. Stay alert. Stay informed. Stay safe.

and

Scott Morrison@ScottMorrisonMP·Nov 20

Going to be a great summer of cricket, and for our firefighters and fire-impacted communities, I’m sure our boys will give them something to cheer for. [1]

In other words, we don’t need any leadership on climate change, or attempts to prepare for a summer of fires; all the firefighters and people who’ve lost their homes need is success at cricket!!

On the other hand, a report released at the beginning of the year stated that millions of people in Australia’s East face natural disaster risk.

Across greater Sydney, there are 317,000 people in council areas facing high bushfire risks, with most of these in Richmond, Windsor and Blaxland.

Another 484,000 are in medium-risk areas, stretching from Hornsby in the north to the fast growing suburbs south of Camden….

There are 66,000 residents in the Hawkesbury catchment facing very high threats of flooding.

There are another 1.3 million people at high risk of flooding, including in Penrith, parts of Fairfield, Liverpool and Camden…

Outside greater Sydney, there are another 1.7 million people in NSW at risk of flooding….

133,000 people living around Port Macquarie and Taree face a high risk of storms. 

That is just in NSW.

More than 4.4 million people in NSW and Queensland live in local council areas with extreme or high risk of cyclones,

And so on. Nothing to worry about. Nothing to plan about. No fears things could get worse. Don’t be political….

Australia increases fossil fuel exports

November 24, 2019

This is largely a series of quotes from the UN 2019 Production Gap report.

Governments [through out the world] are planning to produce about 50% more fossil fuels by 2030 than would be consistent with a 2°C pathway and 120% more than would be consistent with a 1.5°C pathway.

P.4

Australia is not only a major fossil fuel producer, but also the world’s leading exporter of coal (IEA 2019a) and the second largest producer and exporter of LNG (IGU 2018). With government backing, and proposed major new investments in mines and port facilities, Australia’s coal and gas outputs and exports could continue their rapid rise (Office of the Chief Economist 2019). Proposed large coal mines and ports — if fully completed — would represent one of the world’s largest fossil fuel expansions (around 300 Mt per year of added coal capacity) (Buckley 2019a; Department of the Environment and Energy 2018). The rise of hydraulic fracking has also opened the door to discussions on tapping into the country’s vast resources of unconventional (shale) gas (Westbrook 2018).

Australia supports increased fossil fuel production through several measures:

Tax-based subsidies total more than AUD 12 billion (USD 9 billion) per year (Market Forces 2019). This includes the fuel tax credit scheme, which allows fossil fuel companies to claim tax credit on their fuel use (Australian Taxation Office 2017), and a budgeted AUD 1.7 billion (USD 1.3 billion) for accelerated depreciation for oil and gas assets (Australian Department of the Treasury 2015).

Geoscience Australia, a government agency, absorbs sector risk by financing and conducting resource exploration, which was worth AUD 100 million (USD 75 million) in fiscal 2017 (Department of Industry, Innovation and Science 2018).

The government takes various steps to support increased coal production, including, for example, fast-track approval, private road construction, and reduced royalty payments for Adani’s recently approved Carmichael coal mine project in the Galilee Basin (Buckley 2019b).

Recent legislation increased government support for investment in new overseas infrastructure projects from AUD 2 million to AUD 1.2 billion to accommodate Australian coal and gas exports (Parliament of Australia 2019; Hasham 2019).

Government projections show coal production growing another 10% by 2024 and 34% by 2030, relative to 2018 levels (Office of the Chief Economist 2019; Syed 2014). As shown in Figure 4.6, the government also envisions gas production growing 20% by 2024 and 33% by 2030 relative to 2018 levels (Office of the Chief Economist 2019; Syed 2014).

Under these projections, Australia’s extraction-based emissions from fossil fuel production would nearly double (a 95% increase) by 2030 compared to 2005 levels. However, its NDC targets a reduction in territorial GHG emissions of 26–28% over the same period (Government of Australia 2016)”

p.35

This likely illustrates:

  • The heavy symbolic importance that coal has for developmentalism and prosperity, even faced with ecological destruction and massive climate change: the coal rush continues.
  • The dominant groups in the world are heavily identified (self-cateogrised) as belonging with fossil fuel companies, the use of fossil fuels, or the traditional trajectories of development through fossil fuels. They do not seem to care what will happen to their populations if climate scientists are correct about the likely tumultuous effects of higher Greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Dominant groups do not see that a method which used to produce order, is now highly likely to produce chaos, unintended effects or blowback. Reality has changed but ideology lingers, as do the power and wealth relations of fossil fuel societies.
  • The mess of information, provides many alternate stories which can make it seem that the risk of the process is negligible, and that the dominant groups find it easy to dismiss information which suggests the risk is not negligible, which further reassures them. I have been told that Right wing MPs in Australia refuse to attend climate briefings, and we know that despite the requests of State Governments, the Coalition recently refused to allow a general briefing of State Treasurers by a member of the Reserve Bank, on the risks of Climate Change. Acceptance of Information seems now almost totally driven by political and market allegiances. They also deny large bush fires could have anything to do with extended droughts, higher than average temperatures, and longer runs at peak temperatures. Instead they and the Murdoch Empire blame the effect on non-existent Greens policies.
  • The green paradox; the more likely it is that fossil fuels will be stopped, the more pressure there is to mine and sell them before it is too late, and there are fewer purchasers.

Rewrite of the Toynbee cycle

November 23, 2019

I have just extensively revised the post called Corporate society and the Toynbee Cycle I was intending to make it a new post here, but blew that completely 🙂

So if you are interested then please click the link above, and check it out….

Only 1.3%

November 23, 2019

Australia and Climate Change

It is frequently argued that Australia’s CO2 emissions are tiny, and that there is no point in Australia’s federal government acting to cut them. The Prime Minister, Scott Morrison, was making this argument the other day.

Faced with criticism over the recent bushfires, because it seems logical that increased drought and temperatures from climate change would increase bush fire danger and severity, he said

the suggestion that any way, shape or form with Australia accountable for 1.3 per cent of the world’s emissions, that the individual actions of Australia are impacting directly on specific fire events, whether it’s here or anywhere else in the world, that doesn’t bear up to credible scientific evidence either. Climate change is a global phenomenon, and we’re doing our bit as part of the response to climate change. We’re taking action on climate change. But I think to suggest that with just that 1.3 per cent of global emissions that Australia doing something differently, more or less, would have changed the fire outcome this season. I don’t think that stands up to any credible scientific evidence at all.

This lack of urgency for action, seems reinforced when the US, under President Trump, also pretends there is no problem. US emissions are huge, and we can have no obvious effect on those, and by comparison our general effect is small. We also cannot directly affect emissions in China and India, which are also significantly larger than our own.

However, there are significant problems with this issue. Australia does not have 1.3% of the world’s population. We have about 0.33%, so we are batting at just under four times our weight in emissions – which is impressive. We are also, as the Climate Council pointed out, when Mr. Morrison used the same argument at the UN, around the 17th largest emitter in the world, ahead of 175 other countries.

We also reputedly have amongst the highest per capita emissions in the developed world.

Climate Analytics stated in their 2019 fact sheet that:

Australians emit more than twice as much per person as the average of the ‘Group of Twenty’ (G20) in terms of greenhouse gas emissions. This includes burning fossil fuels and other processes in industry, agriculture and waste treatment.

Figures released in August of 2019, for March 2019, by the Australian government show emissions rose 0.6 per cent over the previous 12 months, largely because of gas. So our emissions are not heading in the right direction for long-term survival, and Mr Morrison could be said to be engaging in deception if he implies that any targets we are meeting, are useful, or that we really doing our bit to save everyone.

Furthermore, none of these figures about emissions, factor in the emissions from exports of coal, gas or oil which are burnt elsewhere. We are about the third largest exporter of fossil fuels in the world, so we are responsible for their availability. We are also apparently going to boost our coal production by 34% over a decade. That is probably a conservative estimate given the potential of Clive Palmer’s mines in Queensland. Given that our emissions are not declining, then the actual, and future, emissions which can be attributed to Australia or to the burning of Australian products is likely to be considerably more than 1.3% and increasing.

If Australia is acting on climate, it is to make climate change worse.

By not attempting to ameliorate climate change, and not attempting to prepare for climate change (not being ready for early and large bush fires or drought) Australia is showing that it does not care about climate change, it will not protect its people from climate change, and that it will not object that strongly to other bigger polluters continuing to pollute. It puts no pressure on local industries or other Countries to reduce and it does not set a good example. Our actions help to make Greenhouse gas production normal which produces more climate change.

By making these choices, and encouraging coal mining in Australia, Australian governments are allying with the commercial and political forces which produce climate change. Our governments (of all persuasions) are apparently demonstrating that they care more for the profit of some companies, than they care about preserving the land, water, people’s health or maintaining a climate balance. They care more about maintaining profits than they do about ordinary people’s lives. Choices made, such as the mining under Sydney’s water supply, or the Adani mine in the Great Artesian basin, compound the problems of climate, by affecting water supply, and demonstrating further lack of concern.

It is sometimes argued that if we do not sell fossil fuels, then countries will buy them from other suppliers, and Australians will lose jobs. This may be true, but it hardly makes those sales moral or sensible – virtue can be difficult – and there are not that many jobs in mining these days either.

If we did decide not to sell fossil fuels then (according to orthodox economics) this would lower supply and increase the price, thus adding more incentive for other countries to move out of fossil fuels.

Damage to our ecology, agriculture and cities by climate change through sea level rise, massive storms and droughts will also cost us money – only most of it will be from the taxpayers and not the companies who profit.

By not being worried that Australians have one of the highest Greenhouse gas emissions per head in the world, Australian governments are further implying that a prosperous life style depends upon destroying climate and ecological stability, and that everyone destroying that stability should be encouraged, so they can become prosperous. This one reason why Australian governments probably promote the developmental capacity of coal (apart from making money for miners).

By being half hearted or indifferent to climate change they provide an exemplar and an excuse for the behavior of other countries (‘If wealthy countries in the West can’t be bothered, then why should less developed countries?’).

There is also truth in what the Prime Minister says, if we currently made half the emissions we do now, and nothing else had changed, then it is probable that there would be little difference in the current bushfires. But the question is would nothing else have changed over the last 20 or so years, if we had acted? Would we be as equally unprepared for bush fires? Would we have sacked so many people with experience in fire preparation in cost cutting escapades? Would other countries have not been influenced by Australia’s example, and cut emissions? Would we have been a more effective force at the UN, rather than prevaricate and support fossil fuels? Would we have sold as many fossil fuels? Would we have helped other countries to move out of fossil fuels?

If we had reduced our consumption, then everything would not be the same.

If we act to cut emissions and support transition to renewables then we provide an exemplar of behaviour which also might influence both other governments and corporate behaviour – at the least we would not appear hypocritical – and indeed the world might be different. If we had begun the work in 1990, or even 2008, then, even without support from other countries, it is probable the world would be in a much better space.

If we keep doing nothing, we keep increasing the possibility that events can get much worse than they would otherwise.

Insurance and the measure of climate damage

November 21, 2019

This is a proposition only.

People often ask about how we can measure the effects of climate change. And this does seem to be difficult.

One possible method might be to compile a yearly figure which involves the combined factors of insurance company figures for weather related damage, added to the cost of weather disasters in each year for government departments.

If we factor in inflation, we should get some kind of sense as to whether, the effects of climate change have been getting worse.

One advantage of this method is that insurance companies are widely rumoured to underpay and underestimate damage, to keep their profit under control. So the figures should have be recognized as conservative, rather than exaggerated.

One of the problems with this method is, that as fires, cyclones and other extreme weather events become much more severe as we slide out of established climate stability into a new state of climate turmoil, we might expect climate damage to be so great that measures like this are totally inadequate.

For example, Insurance companies will probably try to avoid paying out, because that is how they make their money, and they have no way of calculating risk in the new circumstances, so they are continually threatened by the change. To help deal with this, flood plain areas, for example, are likely to be expanded giving insurers excuses for extending the lack of coverage. The same kind of thing will happen as governmental budgets run out, and help gets scaled back: I am told that Hurricane Katrina already broke the US national flood insurance.

As insurers retreat from insuring people, and government budgets run out, then the figures will become much too conservative to be of use, so we might have to find other measures of real damage. However, until then such measures might be worth while.

Addenda from 4 March 2021

In 2018, natural disasters killed more than 10,000 people and left millions more homeless. In the same year, natural catastrophe-related economic losses reached US$160 billion (A$215 billion) (half of which were all insured losses). The vast majority – 95 per cent – of the registered events were weather-related.

Ticha How resilient is the insurance industry against climate change? UNSW newsroom. 16 December 2020

One problem for the Insurance industry is that they rely on stability. They assume that changes in mortality and property damage, on the whole, move slowly, and that any crisis will probably be succeeded by a return to normality. This is not the case in a changing climate system. We simply do not know the changes in weather which will be produced. This makes calculating risk extremely difficult and highly inaccurate. It may also affect their business in general.

Insurers, however, must be careful not to underestimate the true threat of climate change. Because its effects are systemic, climate risk is likely to stress local economies and—more grimly—cause market failures that affect both consumers and insurers. More frequent catastrophic events, in combination with the need to meet evolving regulatory requirements, can threaten company business models—and make insuring some risk unaffordable for customers or unfeasible for insurers…. Some historically stable premium and profit pools will shrink, and possibly disappear…

McKinsey research shows that the value at stake from climate-induced hazards could, conservatively, increase from about 2 percent of global GDP to more than 4 percent of global GDP in 2050. And the risks associated with climate change are multiplying. They vary by locale, evolve, and have nonlinear systemic effects that tend to be regressive. In short, a small physical shift can change entire systems irreversibly

[Some companies] have publicly committed to reducing their exposure to carbon-intensive industries by 2030 or 2040. In recent interactions with industry executives, more than half have said that the industry’s response so far has been underwhelming and inadequate—even though the vast majority said that responding to climate risk is either “very important” or “a top priority.” 

Grimaldi et al. Climate change and P&C insurance: The threat and opportunity. McKinsey & Company 19 November 2020 [Rearranged]

The Ticha article referenced above, tries to explain some ways of countering these problems, but I’m not sure I understand what they are talking about.

The only safe thing to do for the industry is stop insuring people in areas which seem to be likely to get increasing damage, or massively increase the price of insurance. This action has huge consequences for the precariousness of ordinary people, as if they get hit by climate change they can lose everything.

The Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority (Apra) executive director Dr Sean Carmody told a Senate hearing on Tuesday the nation’s insurers and banks were taking steps to prepare for worsening bushfire seasons and more extreme weather events.

However, he said the resultant rising insurance premiums may put coverage out of reach for many people, threatening the stability of the wider economy…..

The total cost to the insurance industry from extreme weather and natural disasters between November 2019 and February 2020 alone stood in the range of $5bn.

Kermelov Climate change could put insurance out of reach for many Australians. The Guardian 2 March 2021