Bill McKibben: Climate Change Is Scary鈥擭ot the Green New Deal
Myron Ebell of the conservative Competitive Enterprise Institute, the man who led the drive to pull America out of the Paris climate accords, said the other day that the Green New Deal was a 鈥渂ack-to-the-dark-ages manifesto.鈥 That鈥檚 language worth thinking about, coming from perhaps the Right鈥檚 most influential spokesman on climate change.
Ebell鈥檚 complaint (and that of the rest of the Right) is that the set of proposals to address climate change and economic inequality put forth last week by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey would do too much, and cost too much. Indeed, he describes the Green New Deal this way: 鈥淚t calls for net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in 10 years, 鈥榰pgrading all existing buildings鈥, and replacing our vehicle fleet with electric cars and more mass transit. And turning our energy economy upside down must be accomplished while ending historic income inequities and oppression of disadvantaged groups.鈥 All of which sounds good not just to me, but to most people: , especially so ably organized by the Sunrise Movement.
But even if ending historic oppression doesn鈥檛 catch your fancy, it鈥檚 not a return to the Dark Ages.
A return to the Dark Ages is what happened in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina hit: Survivors dying in the convention center of a modern American city, locals organizing a makeshift 鈥渘avy鈥 to try to pluck people from rooftops after levees collapsed.
A return to the Dark Ages is what happened in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, when most of the island was literally dark for months as workers struggled to rebuild power lines.
A return to the Dark Ages is what happened in California last fall, when old people burned to death in their cars while stuck in traffic jams trying to flee deadly wildfires.
And that鈥檚 just the United States. Around the world now we鈥檙e seeing climate change help ignite diabolical civil war in places like Syria, where the fiercest drought in the history of what we used to call the Fertile Crescent has driven millions of farmers off their land. We鈥檙e watching the rapid spread of diseases such as zika via the wings of insects whose range expands as climate warms. Studies have demonstrated that, after years of decline, starvation and child labor are now on the rise as the result of climate stress.
That鈥檚 what a modern Dark Ages looks like.
What the future looks like is electric cars, to use one of Ebell鈥檚 examples. They outperform internal combustion vehicles by every metric: They move more nimbly, they cost less to own and operate, they break down less often because there are fewer moving parts.
What the future looks like is mass transit. Visit Europe and ride on the trains for a few days and then explain how much more modern it is to sit in traffic jams in American exurbia.
What the future looks like is 鈥渦pgrading all existing buildings,鈥 because it鈥檚 now easy to do. Example after example shows that technology like, say, air-source heat pumps don鈥檛 just cut carbon, they cut heating bills, making them affordable from day one.
We鈥檙e against these things because鈥攚hy again?
That better future doesn鈥檛 come for free鈥攂ut it costs pennies on the dollar compared to the future Ebell and his Beltway ilk apparently accept, the one where you have to start moving all the residents of Miami, the one where fire season never stops, the one where growing wheat becomes a chancy proposition. And if you think these political conservatives prefer a less costly plan, think again: When Barack Obama proposed the mighty-modest Clean Power Plan to reduce the use of coal-fired power plants, Ebell called it 鈥渋llegal.鈥
What Ebell and his colleagues prefer is鈥攏othing. It鈥檚 sticking with coal and gas and oil while the global temperature rises another degree and another and another. Forget the Dark Ages merely 1,500 years ago鈥擡bell would set Earth back to the interglacial Eemian era, 130,000 years ago. Or maybe the Eocene-Paleocene Thermal Maximum, 55 million years ago.
It鈥檚 very clear that conservatives have one plan for dealing with the popularity of the Green New Deal: scaring the hell out of people. And it鈥檚 very clear that they have one big problem: The hell they鈥檙e building through inaction is a lot scarier than 鈥渦pgrading all existing buildings.鈥
Bill McKibben
is the Schumann Distinguished Scholar in Environmental Studies at Middlebury College, the founder of 350.org, and the winner of the 2014 Right Livelihood Award. He is a 大象传媒 contributing editor.
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