At first glance, the Copenhagen climate summit seems like a Salvador
Dali dreamscape. I just saw Archbishop Desmond Tutu being followed by a
swarm of Japanese students who were dressed as aliens and carrying
signs saying "Take Me To Your Leader" and "Is Your Species Crazy?".
Before that, a group of angry black-clad teenage protesters who were
carrying spray cans started quoting statistics to me about how much
carbon dioxide the atmosphere can safely absorb. (It's 350 parts per
million they pointed out, before sucking their teeth.) Before that, I
saw a couple in a pantomime cow costume being attacked by the police,
who accused them of throwing stones with their hooves.
But the surrealism runs deeper and darker than this. Inside the
Bella Centre, the rich world's leaders are defiantly ignoring their
scientists and refusing to sign a deal that will prevent our climate
from being dramatically destabilized. The scientific consensus shows
the rich world needs to cut 40 per cent of our emissions of warming
gases from 1990 levels by 2020 if we're going to have even a 50-50
chance of staying this side of the Point of No Return, when the Earth's
natural processes start to break down and warming becomes unstoppable.
Yet the scientists at Climate Analytics calculate our governments are
offering a dismal 8-12 per cent cut - and once you factor in all the
loopholes and accounting tricks, it becomes a net increase of four per
cent.
Privately, government negotiators admit there's no way the
negotiations will end with the deal scientists say is necessary for our
safety. Indeed, it looks possible that this conference won't deepen and
broaden the Kyoto framework, but cripple it. Kyoto established a
legally binding international framework to measure and reduce
emissions. The cuts it required were too small, and the sanctions for
breaking it were pitifully weak - but it was a start. Kyoto's current
phase expires in 2012, but the treaty's authors believed its
architecture would be retained and intensified after that. The
developing countries assumed that's what they were here to do. But the
US is proposing to simply ditch the Kyoto infrastructure - won over
decades of long negotiations - and replace it with an even weaker
voluntary deal. In their proposal, every country will announce cuts and
stick to them out of the goodness of their hearts. No penalties, no
enforcement.
So at the center of this summit is a proposition stranger than any
number of arrested cows or Nasa-quoting hoodies: we're playing Russian
roulette with the climate, and our most powerful governments are
filling the barrels with extra bullets, one by one.
Yet this conflagration here in Copenhagen is heartbreaking and
heartwarming all at once. Our governments are showing their moral
bankruptcy - but a genuinely global democratic movement is swelling to
make them change course. Mass democratic agitation is the only force
that has ever made governments moral before; it will have to do it
again.
An army of dedicated campaigners is gathering here, and they are
prepared to take real risks to oppose this sham-deal. The protest march
on Saturday here must have been the most genuinely global demonstration
in history. Under banners saying "There Is No Planet B", "Nature
Doesn't Do Bailouts" and "Change the Politics, Not the Climate", there
seemed to be people from every nation on earth. Lawrence Muli from
Kenya's youth delegation told me: "We are having the worst drought in
memory in Kenya. The seasons have changed in ways we don't understand.
My family can't grow crops any more, so they are going hungry. I am
here to say we won't die quietly."
Next to him was Bhuwan Sambhu from Nepal, who has seen his glaciers
retreat dramatically in his short lifetime. Just behind them was Manuel
Wiechers from Mexico City, who said his hometown has been devastated by
the worst rains on record. At his side was Utte Richter, a 76-year-old
German woman who said: "It would be immoral to stay at home when these
decisions were being made, with everything they mean for the world.
This system is near the end of the road, and we must change to a new
way."
The same arguments are heard in the corridors of the Bella Centre,
where the representatives of the poor countries are refusing to sign up
to a deal that will dry out or drown much of their land. The government
of Tuvalu - the low-lying island that is already being drowned by
rising seas - has calmly, with great dignity, interrupted meetings that
presume we can carry on emitting carbon, pointing out this means "we
will die". Lumumba Di-Aping, the chief negotiator for the G77 block of
developing countries, wept as he explained: "The more you defer action,
the more you condemn millions of people to immeasurable suffering." He
said our governments are acting "like climate skeptics. If they really
believed global warming was happening, how could they do this?"
Today, these two strands of protest - inside the conference, and
outside - will combine. Some of the delegates are expected to walk out
of the Bella Centre talks in disgust. At the same time, brave young
protesters supporting their message will be trying to break in, to
express their revulsion at the betrayal of us all going on there. Of
course, the parts of the global media that serve the interests of the
polluting rich will be keen to shift the story on to "vandals" and
"violent protest". There may be a minuscule minority of protesters who
behave unacceptably. But in reality, there are two forms of vandalism
about to happen in this city. There is the cutting of a few fences as
part of an act of mass civil disobedience. It is an attempt to
symbolically resist the much bigger act of vandalism - the trashing of
our own habitat, by leaders too short-sighted and too money-addled to
listen to the science.
Isn't it violent to knowingly condemn whole countries to drown?
Isn't it vandalism to knowingly let the world's most crucial farming
land crust over, its most precious rivers run dry, and its hurricanes
become super-charged? Isn't that immeasurably worse than breaking a
fence and cutting a cordon? Couldn't resistance to this
destruction-machine justify this tiny act of destruction? The young
protesters who will do this have proved themselves, so far, the sanest
force in town. They have ensured that the corporate lobbyists punching
holes in the deal are followed and shamed wherever they meet. They
chant: "It's not your business - it's our climate."
When I hear the activists, I remember something Farley Mowat, the
Canadian conservationist, wrote in the 1990s: "The last three decades
of this century have witnessed the ignition of the most significant
internal conflict ever to engage the human species. It is not the
struggle between capitalism and communism or between any other set of
'isms'. It is the conflict between those who possess the means and will
to exploit the living world to destruction, and those who are banding
together in a desperate and last-ditch attempt to prevent the New
Juggernaut from trashing our small planet."
This week, the small band of the sane got a little bit bigger and a
lot more global. For today, it is vastly outgunned by the forces of
ecological destruction, and it will certainly not be able to ensure a
sane deal in Copenhagen. But think of all the other movements that were
small at first and held up impossible dreams. They called him "Martin
Loser King"; they said civil rights would never come; now everyone says
he was right and there's a black President (although alas not a green
one).
As Archbishop Desmond Tutu pointed out here, they said the Berlin
Wall would never fall, and they said apartheid would never die; now
they say we cannot make the transition from an economy powered by coal
and oil to one powered by the sun, the wind and the waves. But unlike
previous protest movements, we can't wait for it to accumulate speed
over generations. Each tonne of carbon brings us closer to climatic -
and climactic - tipping points. This is a leap human beings must make
in one generation.
We know it can be done. We have the knowledge and the science. If we
refuse to do it - out of inertia and denial and so a few fossil fuel
corporations can carrying on raking in profit and bribing our
politicians - that will be this summit's most surreal scene of all.
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