Why ‘predatory’ climate deniers are a threat to our children

Image Source: www.schoolstrike4climate.com

The Conversation

In this age of rapidly melting glaciers, terrifying megafires and ever more puissant hurricanes, of acidifying and rising oceans, it is hard to believe that any further prod to climate action is needed.

But the reality is that we continue to live in a business-as-usual world. Our media is filled with enthusiastic announcements about new fossil fuel projects, or the unveiling of the latest fossil-fuelled supercar, as if there’s no relationship between such things and climate change.

In Australia, the disconnect among our political leaders on the deadly nature of fossil fuels is particularly breathtaking.

Energy Minister Angus Taylor, left, and Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Both believe the polluting coal industry has a strong future in Australia.
Lukas Coch/AAP

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison continues to sing the praises of coal, while members of the government call for subsidies for coal-fired power plants. A few days ago, Energy and Emissions Reduction Minister Angus Taylor urged that the nation’s old and polluting coal-fired power plants be allowed to run “at full tilt”.




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In the past, many of us have tolerated such pronouncements as the utterings of idiots – in the true, original Greek meaning of the word as one interested only in their own business. But the climate crisis has now grown so severe that the actions of the denialists have turned predatory: they are now an immediate threat to our children.

A ‘colossal failure’ of climate activism

Each year the situation becomes more critical. In 2018, global emissions of greenhouse gases rose by 1.7% while the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere jumped by 3.5 parts per million – the largest ever observed increase.

No climate report or warning, no political agreement nor technological innovation has altered the ever-upward trajectory of the pollution. This simple fact forces me to look back on my 20 years of climate activism as a colossal failure.

Many climate scientists think we are already so far down the path of destruction that it is impossible to stabilise the global temperature at 1.5℃ above the pre-industrial average without yet to be developed drawdown technologies such as those that remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. On current trends, within a decade or so, stabilising at 2℃ will likewise be beyond our grasp.

And on the other side of that threshold, nature’s positive feedback loops promise to fling us into a hostile world. By 2100 – just 80 years away – if our trajectory does not change, it is estimated that Earth will be 4℃ warmer than it was before we began burning fossil fuels.

Far fewer humans will survive on our warming planet

That future Earth may have enough resources to support far fewer people than the 7.6 billion it supports today. British scientist James Lovelock has predicted a future human population of just a billion people. Mass deaths are predicted to result from, among other causes, disease outbreaks, air pollution, malnutrition and starvation, heatwaves, and suicide.

My children, and those of many prominent polluters and climate denialists, will probably live to be part of that grim winnowing – a world that the Alan Joneses and Andrew Bolts of the world have laboured so hard to create.

Thousands of school students from across Sydney attend the global climate strike rally at Town Hall in Sydney in March 2019.
Mick Tsikas/AAP



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How should Australia’s parents deal with those who labour so joyously to create a world in which a large portion of humanity will perish? As I have become ever more furious at the polluters and denialists, I have come to understand they are threatening my children’s well-being as much as anyone who might seek to harm a child.

Young people themselves are now mobilising against the danger. Increasingly they’re giving up on words, and resorting to actions. Extinction Rebellion is the Anthropocene’s answer to the UK working class Chartists, the US Declaration of Independence, and the defenders of the Eureka Stockade.

Its declaration states:

This is our darkest hour. Humanity finds itself embroiled in an event unprecedented in its history, one which, unless immediately addressed, will catapult us further into the destruction of all we hold dear […] The wilful complicity displayed by our government has shattered meaningful democracy and cast aside the common interest in favour of short-term gain and private profit […] We hereby declare the bonds of the social contract to be null and void.

Words have not cut through. Is rebellion the only option?

Not yet a year old, Extinction Rebellion has had an enormous impact. In April it shut down six critical locations in London, overwhelmed the police and justice system with 1,000 arrests, and forced the British government to become the first nation ever to declare a climate emergency.

So unstable is our current societal response that a single young woman, Greta Thunberg, has been able to spark a profoundly powerful global movement. Less than a year ago she went on a one-person school strike. Today school strikes for climate action are a global phenomenon.

Greta Thunberg, a 16-year-old climate change activist from Sweden, participates in a school strike in Washington in September 2019.
Shawn Thew/EPA



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On September 20 in Australia and elsewhere, school principals must decide whether they will allow their students to march in the global climate strike in an effort to save themselves from the climate predators in our midst, or force them to stay and study for a future that will not, on current trends, eventuate.

I will be marching with the strikers in Melbourne, and I believe teachers should join their pupils on that day. After all, us older generation should be painfully aware that our efforts have not been enough to protect our children.

The new and carefully planned rebellion by the young generation forces us earlier generations of climate activists to re-examine our strategy. Should we continue to use words to try to win the debate? Or should we become climate rebels? Changing the language around climate denialism will, I hope, sharpen our focus as we ponder what comes next.The Conversation

Tim Flannery, Professorial fellow, Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, University of Melbourne

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Comments

3 responses to “Why ‘predatory’ climate deniers are a threat to our children”

  1. john Avatar
    john

    “https://sites.uci.edu/zlabe/arctic-sea-ice-figures/”

    If those figures do not make your eyes pop I will be surprised.

  2. Alexander Hromas Avatar
    Alexander Hromas

    Tim is absolutely right the current crop of climate change deniers are child abusers unlike Pell they don’t limit themselves to a few choir boys but threaten all of the planet’s young people. The Liberal leadership from J Howard to T Rabbit, Turnbull and now Scomo have managed to divorce climate from power systems both stationary and transport, the 2 areas where we have the technology to rapidly de-cabronise our economy. As a result we have continuing arguments about costs and range coupled with the delaying tactic of switching to nuclear with no mention of climate change. The Lib/Nats are in the pocket of the coal lobby and Labor is dead scared of offending the mining unions and as a result have effectively no policy. The Greens are the only significant party with a climate change policy. They pushed through a carbon tax under the Gillard/Green partnership. This was wrecked by Tony Rabbit and yet the press successfully branded the Greens as toxic and not Rabbit odd but the label has stuck. As a result they regularly poll about 10% the same as that marvelous progressive mob One notion. If we want action then we have to push for a huge swing to the Greens even if they don’t get in it should at least scare Labor into action

  3. des_reputable Avatar
    des_reputable

    I understand that right now:
    1. there is a stratospheric warming event above the antarctic, which is pushing unseasonal frigid air over AU and NZ
    2. the north hemisphere jet-stream is normally in a fairly straight-line around the top of the globe, holding arctic air in to the arctic, but right now it is going in a meridional pattern, which means a continental-size finger of cold is reaching down the middle of the US, and a warm one is reaching up through Alaska (and others up and down over Europe)
    Do any of the IPCC models predict this sort of behaviour? They should, if they make use of historic climate/weather data from the Dalton minimum 1790 to 1820 or threabouts, where it looks like the same things were happening.
    I’ve yet to see that – which is not a good look for IPCC et al, but let me know otherwise!

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