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Debating Climate Change 1 2 3 Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH) 4 SPRI, Cambridge, Friday 16th February 2007 5 6 ‘A Non-Skeptical Heresy: taking the science out of climate change’ 7 Not for circulation 8 9 10 For the fourth time in 17 years, the world’s leading scientists who study the Earth’s climate system 11 have pronounced. In 1990, the First Assessment Report of the IPCC concluded that ‘… the 12 unequivocal detection of the enhanced greenhouse effect from observations is not likely for a 13 decade or more.’ In 1996 the ‘balance of evidence’ suggested a discernible human influence on 14 climate, while in 2001 most of the warming of the last 50 years was ‘likely’ due to greenhouse gas 15 increases. And now, seventeen years after the first IPCC report, we now have the statement from 16 the IPCC scientists that ‘… it is very likely’ that most of the warming of the last 50 years has been 17 caused by humans. 18 The Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC is just the latest in a series of major reports, 19 statements, campaigns and events of the last three years each of which have been heralded by many 20 as marking the turning point in the fight against climate change. The siren voices thus brought forth 21 have spoken from the worlds of science, economics, journalism and entertainment. They have been 22 the prophets around which politicians, campaigners, celebrities, business leaders and scientists have 23 congregated … and on listening these apostles have amplified the message and transmitted it to the 24 inner and outer reaches of our society. These megaphone voices have cajoled, scolded, bullied, 25 preached, explained - pleaded even – with society to take heed, to repent, to change beliefs, 26 behaviours and practises. 27 But the enlightenment has not arrived. Our hearts remain stubborn. 28 Some policy-tinkering has occurred here and there. Business has taken the plunge into 29 carbon markets. Many millions of the masses have signed up for voluntary emissions reduction 30 pledges. But emissions of greenhouse gases keep on rising and, of course, so does the world’s 31 temperature. Perhaps this particular way of framing climate change – as a Mega-problem awaiting 32 a Mega-solution – has struggled down the wrong road. 33 Let me explain. 1 34 I will start with Hollywood. In May 2004, Roland Emmerich’s film The Day After 35 Tomorrow was released to the world offering the promise to some environmental campaigners of an 36 induced sea-change in public opinion. Groups as diverse as Greenpeace and the Energy Savings 37 Trust used Emmerich’s apocalyptic vision of climate change to promote their cause. 38 Next it was the turn of science. In February 2005 the UK Government hosted the Exeter 39 international science conference on ‘Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change’. As a prelude to the 40 July G8 Summit of that year, Tony Blair called on the scientists to identify what level of greenhouse 41 gases in the atmosphere was self-evidently too much. For one week, the UK media struggled to 42 keep pace with the stream of future climatic threats revealed by the (mostly English-speaking) 43 scientists. 44 The journalists then had their turn. Following the Exeter Conference, The Independent 45 newspaper started its climate change campaign which has been running ever since, joined briefly in 46 September last year by a week of special climate change stories from … The Sun. 47 The climate system itself then stepped in with a demonstration of chaos and threw Hurricane 48 Katrina at New Orleans in August 2005. And New Orleans was found wanting. For a while the 49 public discourse in the USA was all about global warming, unfortunately deflated by the following 50 year’s hurricane season which was unduly pacific. 51 The BBC, not to be outdone by Hollywood, scientists or print journalists, commenced its 52 own ‘Climate chaos’ season a year ago, inspired by the coalition of civic campaigning organisations 53 convening under the slogan Stop Climate Chaos. David Attenborough lent his considerable 54 presence to the season, with an encore just four weeks ago on BBC1. 55 And most recently it has been the turn of the economists led by Sir Nicholas Stern, under 56 commission from the Prime Minister-in-waiting to soften up the international diplomatic 57 community and to head off the new domestic political challenge on environmental policy being 58 offered by David Cameron. 59 Many of the above reports and activities and campaigns have demonstrated professionalism 60 of the very highest quality – film and TV producers, scientists, journalists and economists working 61 at the tops of their professions and using all the tricks of their trades to entertain, explain, 62 communicate and quantify. It has indeed been entertaining. And at times it has been dramatic. 63 And at one level it has been effective. We can now all talk about climate change. Taxi- 64 drivers can be heard discussing what the carbon dioxide target should be in parts per million; the 65 CBI have formed a climate change taskforce of business leaders; Leonardo di Caprio and Sienna 66 Miller have endorsed the web-campaign Global Cool. 67 But where have these siren voices led us? What prospect of success do they offer? 68 Emissions of carbon dioxide continue to rise – globally (by 16 per cent in the last decade), in the 2 69 EU (since 1999, and now only 1% below 1990 levels) and, perhaps most surprisingly, in the UK 70 (after a fall in the 1990s, emissions are again on the rise). Few now believe the Kyoto targets will 71 be met … perhaps by Britain and Sweden if we are lucky, certainly not by the EU or the other 72 signatories to Kyoto. And there are not many of us left who believe Kyoto Plus will look much like 73 Kyoto. The explicit EU policy goal of limiting global warming to 2degC above pre-industrial (just 74 1.2degC above today’s climate) – endorsed by the UK Government, by the Conservative Party and 75 by most other environmental campaigners - has been fatally wounded. Initially, it was the 76 compromise of an allowable ‘overshoot’ – temperatures could rise above 2degC as long as they 77 eventually stabilised below this threshold. But this I suspect is only a first step towards an eventual 78 relaxation towards a 3degC policy goal – as already hinted at by Sir David King, even if heavily 79 criticised by those more tenacious for success. 80 The Emperor is exposed – he has no clothes. 81 [pause] 82 Let me pause here in case I am misunderstood. The above account of the last three years is 83 not written by a cynic. Nor by a skeptic. I have no doubt that climate is changing and that humans 84 are now the dominant force in driving this change. We undoubtedly do have the unwanted, and 85 rather unexpected, ability to shape the future of the world’s climate. These changes warrant our 86 closest attention and demand that we re-consider all our favourite development strategies in the 87 light of this reality. I sincerely believe that the world would be a better and safer place with less 88 carbon dependency in our energy system, that our atmosphere and oceans do not need the billions 89 of tons of carbon dioxide we are pumping out year after year. 90 But we need to face up to reality. Nineteen years of IPCC assessments, fifteen years of the 91 UNFCCC negotiations, ten years of activities inspired by the Kyoto Protocol (two of which have 92 seen it in full force), successive rounds of G8 conferences in which climate has been agenda item 93 number one – none of these sustained efforts has yielded the prize we sought. Earth system science 94 has told us that the climate system is sluggish; we have now also discovered that the world’s energy 95 economy is sluggish and, no discovery this, that humans do not like being told what to do. As 96 recognised recently by Sophie Hug – the People and Planet campaigner – ‘ … we need to move 97 from publicising the problem, which hasn’t got us anywhere, to using the language of 98 empowerment’. 99 [pause] 100 101 I conclude from all of the above that our current framing of climate change is wrong. We have been struggling down the wrong road. 102 Rather than seeing climate change as the Mega-problem to be ‘solved’, we need to identify 103 and then separate out the different dimensions of the issue. At least two are easy to spot. The first 3 104 is to develop a sustainable, secure and environmentally benign energy system. The second is to 105 minimise the welfare costs that climate imposes on our societies (note, importantly, the cost that 106 climate imposes, not climate change). These are two quite different problems operating on different 107 time and space scales, with different communities of effective actors and with different available 108 policy instruments. The politics required are also radically different. 109 Sustainable energy and resilient societies in fact represent social and policy challenges that 110 have been recognised since at least 1973 - the El Nino of that year brought home to us the huge 111 impacts (especially in the Sahel) and costs of climate (again, note, climate not climate change), and 112 the oil price shock of that same year demonstrated that oil was perhaps not the ideal fuel. This was 113 well before these two almost unrelated concerns were unhelpfully stitched together in the official 114 wording of the 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change by well-meaning 115 meteorologists and lawyers. 116 Since 1973 we seem to have made very limited progress on either of these challenges. 117 The delusion offered us by the current framing of climate change is that we can design, 118 engineer and enforce a development pathway for world society for the next hundred years, if not 119 beyond; the blind hope that with the aid of numerical models, quantitative economics (neo-classical 120 or not) and global governance, we can achieve what has never before been achieved – designing, 121 steering and then fine-tuning our global civilisation towards securing a normative long-term goal. 122 Human beings are smart, but we are not this smart. And our faltering first steps towards such a 123 hubristic goal should convince us of the fact. 124 Far better to focus on tractable, bounded problems where alignment of diverse political 125 interests is achievable and where we can accept partial and clumsy solutions. If we are concerned 126 about the impacts of climate change on future generations, let us first be concerned about the 127 impacts of climate on the present generation. We should be concerned about the victims of 128 hurricanes, floods and heatwaves, because we can do something to help them now. The science and 129 technology to reduce many climate-related deaths and welfare losses already exists in our 130 laboratories and in our best institutions of government. Yes, the deep structural crevasses of social 131 inequality and injustice will be revealed by such actions and will need to be bridged, but this is 132 exactly the essence of what we have to tackle in any case. We cannot be serious about climate 133 change tomorrow if we are not serious about social injustice and chronic poverty today. 134 And then on energy. The real issue here is how to forge coalitions of the willing around 135 mutually beneficial actions. The Chinese understand this. Energy to them is about efficiency, 136 security, affordability, sustainability and environmental impact. It is not about climate change. We 137 should not artificially force these various dimensions of energy into the straight-jacket of 138 contentious emissions reduction targets. Nor should we burden such willing coalitions with having 4 139 to find a way of connecting any agreed set of energy goals or actions with the different concerns of 140 development, social justice and climate change adaptation. From a different starting point – from 141 the position of revealing multiple, diverse yet synergistic goals – a stronger drive towards 142 technological and behavioural transformation of our energy system is possible, even some may say 143 inevitable. 144 But in the end society cannot be brow-beaten by science into such a transformation. Science 145 – least of all Earth system science - cannot simply speak truth to power and all will be well. 146 Science cannot tell us what is ‘self-evident’, to use Tony Blair’s phrase. No number of IPCC 147 reports, Exeter Conferences, World Bank economists or Hollywood movies will do the job. Less 148 likely still is that society will be re-fashioned through the use of terroristic language of a new 149 environmental inquisition. As Ian McEwan has commented, “It is tempting to embrace with 150 enthusiasm the latest bleak scenario because it fits our mood. It would be self-defeating if the 151 environmental movement degenerated into a religion of gloomy faith.” We do not need to alarm 152 ourselves with clocks of doom. 153 No. We need to let society take ownership of climate change away from the scientists and 154 the UN bureaucrats. For too long we have been bewitched by the hubristic claims that the models 155 of our scientists can define our future. Instead, we need a billion voices to speak. Instead of the 156 prophets of the apocalypse, we need to use our knowledge of climate change to inspire the future, 157 not be fearful of it. Climate change is an idea to be embraced, not a Mega-problem that can be 158 solved. 159 The idea of climate change can help us solve the real problems that lie elsewhere in our 160 world – poverty, social exclusion, corruption, infectious disease, affordable and secure energy for 161 all. 162 163 [2,100 words] 164 165 Professor Mike Hulme 166 School of Environmental Sciences, UEA, Norwich 167 February 2007 168 169 Acknowledgements to the writings of Roger Pielke Jr. and Dan Sarewitz 170 5