Piling On the Guilt

by John Goetz

Guilt, by Mark Nickels

Kate Raworth of Oxfam International recently authored a 34-page report that began: “In failing to tackle climate change with urgency, rich countries are effectively violating the human rights of millions of the world’s poorest people.

Kate goes on to claim that we now have determined with “scientific certainty” that climate change (not global warming?) is

creating floods, droughts, hurricanes, sea-level rise, and seasonal unpredictability. The result is failed harvests, disappearing islands, destroyed homes, water scarcity, and deepening health crises, which are undermining millions of peoples’ rights to life, security, food, water, health, shelter, and culture.

In other words, countries like the US, France, Britain, Russia, Germany, Japan, Italy and Canada (I listed members of the G8) are essentially using global warming to violate the human rights of, well, basically the rest of the world.

It certainly is an interesting tack for a climate change activist to take. Most people don’t like being accused of violating another’s human rights. Obviously, if Oxfam can convince people that by driving their kids to soccer practice that they are in fact depriving someone of their food,  health, or even life, they will be motivated by guilt to change their habits. Images of polar bears floating on ice floes must not have been enough.

Oxfam calls for urgent action, as outlined and excerpted here:

Rich countries must lead now in cutting global emissions

The science is clear: global warming must stay well below 2C to avoid creating irreversible climate impacts that would undermine millions of people’s rights. To keep the risk of exceeding 2C low, global emissions must peak by 2015 and then fall by at least 80 per cent below 1990 levels by 2050.

[How far below 2C “well below” means is unclear]

Rich countries must provide the finance needed for low-carbon technologies in developing countries

Since rich countries’ excessive emissions have left the rest of the world with so little atmospheric space, the global reductions required now threaten the right to development in poor countries. Rich countries must therefore deliver the finance and technology needed for poor countries to develop on low-carbon pathways and realise rights at the same time.

[Now global warming is reducing the size of the atmosphere!]

Rich countries must halt their biofuel policies which are undermining poor people’s right to food

…the current rush into biofuels is both failing to deliver emissions cuts, and undermining the rights of people in developing countries…Food prices have risen over 80 per cent in the last three years, with grain-price rises costing developing economies $324bn last year alone – more than three times what they received in aid. Rich-country biofuel programmes have been identified by the International Monetary Fund, among others, as a principal driver of this crisis, and may already be responsible for having pushed 30 million people into poverty.

[Does this mean Brazil can continue producing ethanol? And should we stop research into algal fuels?]

Rich countries must provide the finance needed for international adaptation

Since rich countries’ excessive emissions have put poor people’s rights at risk in developing countries, human-rights norms create a strong obligation for them to provide a remedy by financing adaptation…Adaptation finance must be provided as grants, since people in poor countries should not be expected to repay the funds needed to remedy violations of their rights.

[I think we need a list of “rich” and “poor” countries. Where do China, India, Brazil, and the UAE fall?]

Developing countries must focus their adaptation strategies on the most vulnerable people

National adaptation strategies must put communities at the centre of planning, focus particularly on women’s needs and interests, and guarantee essentials through social protection. Good practice is emerging – and it is working – but needs to spread much faster.

[I found this surprising. Does it mean global warming affects women more than men?]

Developing countries must have ownership in managing international adaptation funds

Since adaptation finance is owed to safeguard the rights of communities facing climate impacts, their governments must have ownership in managing international adaptation funds and, in turn, must be accountable to those communities when spending the finance.

[I am sure there is no threat of corruption, because this is climate change aid.]

Companies must call on governments to act with far greater urgency in cutting global emissions

In the run up to the UN’s 2007 Climate Conference in Bali, the business leaders of 150 leading global companies – from the USA to Europe, Australia, and China – called for a ‘sufficiently ambitious, international and comprehensive legally-binding United Nations agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions’, in order to give business long, legal, and loud signals to scale up investment in low-carbon technologies.

[Isn’t investment made when a return is to be had?]

Companies must take significant steps to cut their global emissions

Too few companies have started exploring how their own operations can be made climate resilient, let alone how their strategies for achieving supply-chain resilience could help or harm the communities – farmers, workers, neighbours, and consumers – they interact with in developing countries.

[That gives me an idea for a new executive position at my company: Chief Climate Resilience Officer]

So there you have it. Joe Smith, an apple farmer in Baroda, MI – if you want to clear your conscience of the human rights violations you are committing against Ho Si Thuan, a rice farmer in Quang Tri province, Viet Nam – you better start lobbying the US government and US companies to implement the steps outlined above. Otherwise, Mr. Thuan’s misfortunes will fall squarely in your lap.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
109 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
September 13, 2008 7:03 am

Somewhere off topic:
I was perusing the Wall Street Journal this morning and came across this book review: http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB122126316904030487.html?mod=2_1578_leftbox
In the article BJØRN LOMBORG author of “Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist’s Guide to Global Warming” (Knopf, 2007). reviews Thomas L. Friedman’s new book “A Chilling View of Warming” (Farrar, Straus & Giroux).
The review is located in the September 13, 2008 Wall Street Journal; Page W13. I apologize if the online article is only available to WSJ subscribers. Perhaps I can include BJØRN LOMBORG’s closing paragraph: “I’m sure that such longing is testimony to his deep frustration with the debate. But, more important, it points to the failure of his book to make a well-reasoned case for his proposals. While occasionally interesting, “Hot, Flat, and Crowded” remains a one-sided plea for an incorrect analysis.”

evanjones
Editor
September 13, 2008 9:21 am

“If only America could be China for a day,” where we could cut through special interests, bureaucratic obstacles . . .”
That’s a hot one. (Has he ever read a line of Chinese history in his life?)

Don Shaw
September 14, 2008 5:13 am

Jeff Writes:
“I’m not a detractor. I’m all in favor of new innovations in any sector. The difference here is that these technologies are being shoehorned in when they’re not ready to take on the pressures they’ll be under. It’s like forcing people to buy a certain type of shoe whether it fits them properly or not.”
I agree 100% with this comment. The current mandate from Congress is that we will increase our production of ethanol by 4-5 times. Of course this is because Congress is in the pocket of the ethanol crowd and they want the uninformed to believe they are taking action. This mandate was pushed through even in light of all the recent reports exposing that Ethanol from corn does not make economic sense, requires huge amounts of precious water, and in fact is harming the environment more than fossil fuels.
A paper revently presented at the National Academy of Science by Prof Goldemberg from Brazil provided the relative energy production from making ethanol from various feedstocks: corn, wood and other celluosic feedstocks, and sugar cane. Corn rated about 1, cellulosic feedstocks 2, and sugar cane 9. The Department of Energy is aware of these problems. To address the poor energy production from the current feedstocks the government has recently let out $10 billion in grants to various organizations to develop more productive feedstocks. Talk about putting the cart before the horse!
So wood and similar feedstocks are only slightly better than corn, it appears we have Congress spending huge tax dollars on the wrong technology. Does this surprise you? Also it should be noted that no one has yet manufactured large scale commercial ethanol from wood, etc. with the pyrolysis or gasification processes currently being touted. Even forgetting the economics, there are huge technology hurdles that need to be overcome. Finally don’t be deceived about how clean these processes are. Wood, etc has many of the same nasty tramp elements that coal has in it. Making it clean will be a challenge.
While reasearch for new fuels is needed, it will not work as long as Congress has it’s fingers in the pie.
I read the daily biofuels digest almost ever day and am shocked at the amount of $$$ being handed out by our governments to develop what appears to be the wrong technology. If you are interested, sign up for their e-mail.
http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/blog2/est,
One recent grant caught my eye since it will provide funding to develop a computer model for technology that does not make sense to me.
“In New York, Cornell University has received a $10 million grant from the National Science Foundation for its new Institute for Computational Sustainability that will, among other goals, provide computer-based modeling and forecasting for ethanol production. The Institute will bring together environmental scientists, computer scientists, mathematicians, economists, biologists and environmental scientists who will model a variety of sustainability issues including the balance of food and fuel production. ”
Hope this model is better than the AGW models!
I seriously dobt that the current approach is going to get us off foreign oil in 20 or 30 years!!

September 14, 2008 10:14 pm

The Institute will bring together environmental scientists, computer scientists, mathematicians, economists, biologists and environmental scientists who will model a variety of sustainability issues including the balance of food and fuel production. ”
No hope here – environmental scientists are mentioned twice…Oy Veh!
(if that was a misprint, I apologise!)

Don Shaw
September 15, 2008 9:07 am

Michael,
If that was a misprint, it was in the original article. I simply did a cut and paste. I am concerned that this model will likely exemplify the garbage in, garbage out principle. Based on what I have seen from alternative fuels projects the understanding of the chemical reactions is currently very weak and the best Chemical engineers are having trouble performing heat and material balances since there is not a lot of dependable data; therefore, a lot of assumptions are required. In my mind if the government decides to fund renewable fuels the emphasis should be on getting basic lab data not funding construction of commercial plants or computer models when the fundamentals are yet to be understood.
Note that Chemists, Chemical and other Engineers were not listed who are essential to model the production . Getting to the moon and outer space required a lot of engineering accomplishments.
Does this sound familiar?

Simon Abingdon
September 15, 2008 9:43 am

Dee, If Real Climate is too technical, may I presume to refer you (again) to Duae Quartunciae´s “The APS and global warming: What were they thinking?” for another battle royale, this time between “Saturn” (in the skeptic corner, just fighting his corner) and DQ (the referee). I´m afraid that Saturn got completely rinsed by DQ in this one, DQ inflicting repeated “it´s the physics, stupid” blows on poor old Saturn. Another “must see”! Great fun!

Simon Abingdon
September 15, 2008 9:47 am

Help, I´m in the wrong blog!

evanjones
Editor
September 15, 2008 10:33 am

May you be weighed down with guilt.

Janey
September 18, 2008 9:16 am

Women taking a harder hit over global warming? Of course they will. Who owns the world’s resources? Who are the very very poor? Think of a man who is poor. Think of his female equivalent. Can she earn as much as him? What about the years when her children are small? How will being the poorest of the poor affect her health? If she is living in a household, do you think she gets an equal share of things with the adult men? Really? Does her daughter receive the same education as her son, to try to secure her future?
Thinking globally, who traditionally does the subsistence farming? Who carries the water increasing distances as water tables shrink? Fetches firewood from ever further away? Do you know which gender tends to die preferentially as a result of large-scale natural disasters?
Thinking about Oxfam (always a left-wing project) I get the feeling that many of the commenters have not worked on charitable projects for a length of time. It seems a very natural progression to want to change the setting within which your beneficiaries live, so campaigning becomes part of what you do.

1 3 4 5