George Monbiot
World leaders at Earth summits seem more interested in protecting the interests of plutocratic elites than our environment
Worn down by hope.
That’s the predicament of those who have sought to defend the earth’s
living systems. Every time governments meet to discuss the environmental
crisis, we are told that this is the “make or break summit”, upon which
the future of the world depends. The talks might have failed before,
but this time the light of reason will descend upon the world.
We know it’s rubbish, but we allow our hopes to be
raised, only to witness 190 nations arguing through the night over the
use of the subjunctive in paragraph 286. We know that at the end of this
process the UN secretary-general, whose job obliges him to talk
nonsense in an impressive number of languages, will explain that the
unresolved issues (namely all of them) will be settled at next year’s
summit. Yet still we hope for something better.
This week’s earth summit in Rio de Janeiro is a
ghost of the glad, confident meeting 20 years ago. By now, the leaders
who gathered in the same city in 1992 told us, the world’s environmental
problems were to have been solved. But all they have generated is more
meetings, which will continue until the delegates, surrounded by rising
waters, have eaten the last rare dove, exquisitely presented with an
olive leaf roulade. The biosphere, that world leaders promised to
protect, is in a far worse state than it was 20 years ago(1). Is it not
time to recognise that they have failed?
These summits have failed for the same reason that
the banks have failed. Political systems which were supposed to
represent everyone now return governments of millionaires, financed by
and acting on behalf of billionaires. The past 20 years have been a
billionaires’ banquet. At the behest of corporations and the ultra-rich,
governments have removed the constraining decencies – the laws and
regulations – which prevent one person from destroying another. To
expect governments funded and appointed by this class to protect the
biosphere and defend the poor is like expecting a lion to live on
gazpacho.
You have only to see the way the United States has
savaged the earth summit’s draft declaration to grasp the scale of this
problem(2). The word “equitable”, the US insists, must be cleansed from
the text. So must any mention of the right to food, water, health, the
rule of law, gender equality and women’s empowerment. So must a clear
target of preventing two degrees of global warming. So must a commitment
to change “unsustainable consumption and production patterns” and to
decouple economic growth from the use of natural resources.
Most significantly, the US delegation demands the
removal of many of the foundations agreed by a Republican president in
Rio in 1992. In particular, it has set out to purge all mention of the
core principle of that earth summit: common but differentiated
responsibilities(3). This means that while all countries should strive
to protect the world’s resources, those with the most money and who have
done the most damage should play a greater part.
This is the government, remember, not of George W
Bush but of Barack Obama. The paranoid, petty, unilateralist sabotage of
international agreements continues uninterrupted. To see Obama
backtracking on the commitments made by Bush the elder 20 years ago is
to see the extent to which a tiny group of plutocrats has asserted its
grip on policy.
While the destructive impact of the US in Rio is
greater than that of any other nation, this does not excuse our own
failures. The UK government prepared for the earth summit by wrecking
both our own climate change act(4,5) and the European energy efficiency
directive(6). David Cameron will not be attending the earth summit. Nor
will the energy and climate change secretary Ed Davey (which is probably
a blessing, as he’s totally useless). Needless to say Cameron, with
other absentees such as Obama and Merkel, are attending the G20 summit
in Mexico, which takes place immediately before Rio. Another tenet of
the 1992 summit – that economic and environmental issues should not be
treated in isolation(7) – goes up in smoke.
The environmental crisis cannot be addressed by the
emissaries of billionaires. It is the system that needs to be
challenged, not the individual decisions it makes. The struggle to
protect the biosphere is in this respect the same as the struggle for
redistribution, for the protection of workers’ rights, for an enabling
state, for equality before the law.
So this is the great question of our age: where is
everyone? The monster social movements of the 19th century and first 80
years of the 20th have gone, and nothing has replaced them. Those of us
who still contest unwarranted power find our footsteps echoing through
cavernous halls once thronged by multitudes. When a few hundred people
do make a stand – as the Occupy campers have done – the rest of the
nation just waits for them to achieve the kind of change that requires
the sustained work of millions.
Without mass movements, without the kind of
confrontation required to revitalise democracy, everything of value is
deleted from the political text. But we do not mobilise, perhaps because
we are endlessly seduced by hope. Hope is the rope on which we hang.
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