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Saturday April 20, 2024

Climate movement

By Jamie Henn
December 15, 2015

Exposing the gap between rhetoric and reality has been a critical strategy for the growing fossil fuel divestment movement, as well. At the heart of the campaign has been some more simple math: governments say they want to keep global warming below 2°C to avoid catastrophe; that will require limiting the amount of carbon that goes into the atmosphere below 595 gigatons; the fossil fuel industry has over 2,795 gigatons in their reserves; that’s five times too much; therefore their business plan is incompatible with a livable planet.

The fossil fuel industry has tried to critique the divestment campaign from a thousand different angles, but they’ve never been able to argue with it’s basic logic, which is why every week more and more divestment wins keep coming in. As the reality of the situation begins to sink in, institutions that care about addressing the climate crisis realize that to maintain their investments would amount to hypocrisy. Those with moral character, divest. Those who lack it, come under immense pressure to do so.

The agreement that is emerging from here at the climate talks is far weaker than many of us would like. So weak in some places that it amounts to an utter disaster. The rights of indigenous peoples have been relegated to a line in the preamble. The United States and others have succeeded in refusing to link any compensation to the loss and damages that vulnerable countries will experience because of the emissions we pumped into the atmosphere over the last hundred years. The greenhouse gas reduction pledges on the table will still push global warming over 3°C – which, in the elegant phrasing of Bill McKibben is the equivalent of ‘hell’.

But there are some things to point to. Thanks to a massive push from the world’s most vulnerable countries, supported by activists around the world, contained in the text are commitments to now try and limit global warming to below 1.5°C. Countries like Canada, Brazil, and the United States have all recognised the target. The text also has a recognition of the carbon budget, and the need to scale up pre-2030 emissions pledges to keep more greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere. There’s good language about reviewing country pledges and scaling up ambition every five years.

None of it is radical, none of it is enough. It’s unacceptable that the fossil fuel industry has forced us to wait this long for a global agreement on climate change, especially now that we know companies like Exxon knew their product was fuelling climate change 25 years ago. But I still think the Paris agreement gives us a new tool to fight with.

Canada wants to expand tar sands development? How exactly are you going to justify that with your recent commitment to keep global warming below 1.5°C? Banks want to finance more coal fired power plants? Didn’t you just see every country on earth commit to a plan that will require the end of fossil fuels? You’re pursuing a business plan that is counting on your ability to keep emitting enough carbon to push the world to over 7°C of warming – how exactly do you plan on explaining that to your investors, let alone government regulators?

There are many ways to look at the climate deal coming out of Paris. We can identify with both those who criticize its lack of ambition, and those who are desperate to celebrate its success. Because the real outcome of the agreement isn’t contained in the text, but what comes after. As always, the amount of change we see will be determined by the amount of courage we have to fight for it.

At 350.org, we’re already working with allies around the world to organize a series of massive mobilizations against the fossil fuel industry this spring, and will be doubling down on the divestment campaign starting, well, today. We’ll be doing so with a lot of new promises to put on our placards, and a lot of politicians to hold accountable.

This article has been excerpted from: ‘After Paris: the climate talks end and the movement
continues’. Commondreams.org