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Sleeping
to Extinction
Something about the human mind appears
to prevent us from grasping the reality of climate change
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 12th August 2003
We live in a dreamworld.
With a small, rational part of the brain, we recognise that our existence
is governed by material realities, and that, as those realities change,
so will our lives. But underlying this awareness is the deep semi-consciousness
which absorbs the moment in which we live then generalises it, projecting
our future lives as repeated instances of the present. This, not the superficial
world of our reason, is our true reality. All that separates us from the
indigenous people of Australia is that they recognise this and we do not.
Our dreaming will,
as it has begun to do already, destroy the conditions necessary for human
life on earth. Were we governed by reason, we would be on the barricades
today, dragging the drivers of Range Rovers and Nissan Patrols out of
their seats, occupying and shutting down the coal-burning power stations,
bursting in upon the Blairs' retreat from reality in Barbados and demanding
a reversal of economic life as dramatic as the one we bore when we went
to war with Hitler. Instead, we whinge about the heat and thumb through
the brochures for holidays in Iceland. The future has been laid out before
us, but the deep eye with which we place ourselves on earth will not see
it.
Of course, we cannot
say that the remarkable temperatures in Europe this week are the result
of global warming. What we can say is that they correspond to the predictions
made by climate scientists. As the Met Office reported on Sunday, "all
our models have suggested that this type of event will happen more frequently."
(1) In December it predicted that, as a result of climate change, 2003
would be the warmest year on record. (2) Two weeks ago its research centre
reported that the temperature rises on every continent matched the predicted
effects of climate change caused by human activities, and showed that
natural impacts, such as sunspots or volcanic activity, could not account
for them.(3) Last month the World Meteorological Organisation announced
that "the increase in temperature in the 20th century is likely to have
been the largest in any century during the past 1000 years", while " the
trend for the period since 1976 is roughly three times that for the past
100 years as a whole." (4) Climate change, the WMO suggests, provides
an explanation not only for record temperatures in Europe and India but
also for the frequency of tornadoes in the United States and the severity
of the recent floods in Sri Lanka. (5)
There are, of course,
still those who deny that any warming is taking place, or who maintain
that it can be explained by natural phenomena. But few of them are climatologists,
fewer still are climatologists who do not receive funding from the fossil
fuel industry. Their credibility among professionals is now little higher
than that of the people who claim that there is no link between smoking
and cancer. Yet the prominence the media gives them reflects not only
the demands of the car advertisers. We want to believe them, because we
wish to reconcile our reason with our dreaming.
The extreme events
to which climate change appears to have contributed reflect an average
rise in global temperatures of 0.6C. (6) The consensus among climatologists
is that temperatures will rise in the 21st century by between 1.4 and
5.8C: by up to ten times, in other words, the increase we have suffered
so far. (7) Some climate scientists, recognising that global warming has
been retarded by industrial soot, whose levels are now declining, suggest
that the maximum should instead be placed between 7 and 10C. (8) We are
not contemplating the end of holidays in Seville. We are contemplating
the end of the circumstances which permit most human beings to remain
on earth.
Climate change of
this magnitude will devastate the earth's productivity. New research in
Australia suggests that the amount of water reaching the rivers will decline
by up to four times as fast as the percentage reduction of rainfall in
dry areas. (9) This, alongside the disappearance of the glaciers, spells
the end of irrigated agriculture. Winter flooding and the evaporation
of soil moisture in the summer will exert similar effects on rainfed farming.
Like crops, humans will simply wilt in some of the hotter parts of the
world: the 1500 deaths in India through heat exhaustion this summer may
prefigure the necessary evacuation, as temperatures rise, of many of the
places currently considered habitable. There is no chance of continuity
here; somehow we must persuade our dreamselves to confront the end of
life as we know it.
Paradoxically, the
approach of this crisis corresponds with the approach of another. The
global demand for oil is likely to outstrip supply within the next 10
or 20 years. Some geologists believe it may have started already. (10)
It is tempting to knock the two impending crises together, and to conclude
that the second will solve the first. But this is wishful thinking. There
is enough oil under the surface of the earth to cook the planet and, as
the price rises, the incentive to extract it will increase. Business will
turn to even more polluting means of obtaining energy, such as the use
of tar sand and oil shale, or "underground coal gasification" (setting
fire to coal seams). But because oil in the early stages of extraction
is the cheapest and most efficient fuel, the costs of energy will soar,
ensuring that we can no longer buy our way out of trouble with air conditioning,
water pumping and fuel-intensive farming.
So instead we place
our faith in technology. In an age in which science is as authoritative
but, to most, as inscrutable as God once was, we look to its products
much as the people of the Middle Ages looked to divine providence. Somehow
"they" will produce and install the devices - the wind turbines or solar
panels or tidal barrages - which will solve both problems while ensuring
that we need make no change to way we live.
But the widespread
deployment of these technologies will not happen until rising prices ensure
that it becomes a commercial imperative, and by then it is too late. Even
so, we could not meet our current levels of consumption without covering
almost every yard of land and shallow sea with generating devices. In
other words, if we leave the market to govern our politics, we are finished.
Only if we take control of our economic lives, and demand and create the
means by which we may cut our energy use to 10 or 20% of current levels
will we prevent the catastrophe which our rational selves can comprehend.
This requires draconian regulation, rationing and prohibition: all the
measures which our existing politics, informed by our dreaming, forbid.
So we slumber through
the crisis. Waking up demands that we upset the seat of our consciousness,
that we dethrone our deep unreason and usurp it with our rational and
predictive minds. Are we capable of this, or are we destined to sleepwalk
to extinction?
www.monbiot.com
References:
1. Reuters, 8th August 2003. Europe's Heatwave Doesn't Prove Global Warming.
2. Geoffrey Lean, 29 December 2002. Official: next year will be the hottest
since records began. The Independent on Sunday.
3. Meteorological Office, 28th July 2003. Europe and North America warming
due to human activity. Press release. 4. World Meteorological Organisation,
2nd July 2003. Extreme Weather Events Might Increase. Press release.
5. ibid.
6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2001. Climate Change 2001,
Synthesis Report.
7. ibid
8. Fred Pearce, 4th June 2003. Global warming's sooty smokescreen revealed.
New Scientist. http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993798
9. Research by the Cooperative Research Centre for Catchment Hydrology,
cited in The Institute for Sustainable Futures, 2003. Impacts of Climate
Change on Water Supplies and Soil. Sydney.
10. See for example Richard Heinburg, 2003. The Party's Over: Oil, War
and the Fate of Industrial Societies. New Society Publishers, Canada;
Kenneth S. Deffeyes, 2001. Hubbert's Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage.
Princeton University Press; Bob Holmes and Nicola Jones, 2nd August 2003.
Brace Yourself for the End of Cheap Oil. New Scientist. 12th August 2003
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