'Climate Reparations' an idea that seems to be all about money

Climate Reparations—A New Demand

Guest opinion by Peter Wood

At the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference in December 2009, leaders from more than a hundred nations gathered to consider an agenda that included a massive transfer of money from developed countries to the Third World.  The developed states were tagged to provide $130 billion by 2020 to help developing nations deal with the consequences of global warming.  The proposed transfer was widely discussed as “reparations” for the damage caused by use of fossil fuels in the developed world.

The Copenhagen proposal went down in ignominious defeat.  A motley collection of Third World countries brought the idea up again in 2013 in the run-up to the UN’s climate conference in Warsaw, but by then whatever impetus the idea had had was gone.  President Obama instructed the U.S. delegate to oppose it.  The State Department explained:

“It’s our sense that the longer countries look at issues like compensation and liability, the more they will realize this isn’t a productive avenue for the [UN Framework Convention on Climate Change] to go down.”

The U.S. Government may have sidled away from this climate change compensation scheme but the underlying idea hasn’t gone away.  When the broader public and the world at large dismisses a “progressive” idea, that idea is almost certain to find an enthusiastic welcome on university campuses.  The notions of “climate reparations” and more broadly “climate justice” have settled in as things that campus philosophers philosophize about and campus activists activize over.

Possibly this is something that busy people should ignore. “Climate reparations” may turn out to be like the campaign to establish Esperanto as a world language. Esperanto, invented in the 1870s, was put forward as a tool for ending ethnic conflict and fostering world peace.  It enjoyed an American vogue in the 1960s, perhaps best remembered for a 1966 horror movie, Incubus, starring William Shatner, in which the entire dialogue was spoken in Esperanto.

Those who speak to Americans right now of climate reparations might as well be lecturing in Esperanto, since few of us want this economic incubus.  But it is never wise to entirely ignore the ideas gestating in the faculty towers.  Sometimes they get translated into actual political movements.

From Race to Environment

This thought came to mind when I came across an essay by a writer for the New America Foundation.  In “The Cost of Ignoring America’s Past,” Hana Passen begins by setting forth an astonishing parallel:

“If we do not face the lasting impact of slavery, which has been abolished by law and condemned in the court of morality, how will we be able to legislate issues like climate change, which some still deny?”

Passen, it turns out, hadn’t conjured the moral equivalence of slavery and climate change out of thin air.  She was paraphrasing Atlantic editor Ta-Nehisi Coates, who sets it out even more starkly:

“What [slavery] reparations requires is a country and a citizenry that can look at itself in the mirror naked and see itself clearly,” Coates said during a recent conversation with New America President Anne-Marie Slaughter. “And that’s the same argument for climate change. What is required for reparations, that kind of citizenry, that kind of patriotism, is not just required on that front.”

Coates’ article in the Atlantic,The Case for Reparations,” was a huge hit for the rather stodgy journal.  According to its editor James Bennett, Coates’ article “brought more visitors to the Atlantic [website] in a single day than any single piece we’ve ever published.”  It also sold out on newsstands.  But in his article Coates stuck entirely to the theme of racial reparations and did not raise the green flag of climate reparations he brought up his New America interview.

Reparations for slavery is an idea that has been churning among African-Americans for a very long time, and one that grows less and less plausible as a practical political matter with every year that passes since the Emancipation Proclamation (1863) and the passages of the 13th and 14th Amendments (1865, 1868).  But slavery reparations, or reparations for racial injustice more broadly conceived, are a durable fantasy, and it isn’t wholly surprising that a fresh enunciation of the case for them has excited attention.

But that’s a topic for another day.  The relevance of racial reparations to “climate justice” is that it serves as a conceptual and moral model.  Somebody has done something bad to someone.  Somebody has to pay.

Cotton Mather’s View

Mr. Coates is an editor, not an academic.  But the academic world is astir with ideas about how to apportion responsibility for climate change.  In this realm, any debate whether global warming is occurring and to what degree it can be attributed to human actions is entirely foreclosed.  It is simply assumed or asserted that catastrophic man-made climate change is upon us, and the discussion moves directly to identifying the culprits and apportioning the costs.  In this vein, the discussion bears a certain resemblance to debate in 17th century New England on how to handle the danger posed by witches.  It is as provocative today to express doubt in anthropogenic global warming (AGW) as it would have been to argue with Cotton Mather about relying on spectral evidence.  As Mather said, “Never use but one grain of patience with any man that shall go to impose upon me a Denial of Devils, or of Witches.” In what follows, I will abide by Mather’s counsel.

What do academics argue about when it comes to climate reparations?  Simon Carey, a professor of political theory at the University of Birmingham, lays out some useful distinctions in “Cosmopolitan Justice, Responsibility, and Global Climate Change.”  There is wide agreement on the “polluter pays principle” (PPP), Carey says.  But there is disagreement whether the true polluter is the individual who pollutes or the nation that benefits from his actions.  “Many of those who adopt the PPP approach to climate change appear to treat countries as the relevant units.”  Carey, who might be described as a climate liberal, rejects this collectivist approach, which he said is founded on the “beneficiary pays principle” (BPP). Current generations have benefited from the pollution caused by their ancestors, so the current generation should be held collectively responsible.  The Copenhagen proposal—which came four years after Carey’s article—embodies BPP logic.

Carey himself, however, believes that BPP violates PPP.  The original polluter often doesn’t pay at all, because he is dead, and the payments ignore all the improvements to the standard of living that flow from past industrialization. Carey isn’t against making people pay; he just wants individuals to pay for the harm they themselves do.  Presumably he would endorse making BP (the oil company) pay for the damage caused by the 2010 blowout of its well in the Gulf of Mexico.

This summary is probably enough to suggest that the debate over climate reparations is a serious matter drawing serious attention from scholars.  I won’t take the space here for a deep dive into climate reparations scholarship, but a little snorkeling around the reef is enlightening.

Backward-Looking Laws

In 2008, Daniel Farber published “Basic Compensation for Victims of Climate Change” in Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review.  Farber attempted to identify the injuries that deserve compensation and the “responsible parties.”  He also gave voice to the racial reparations analogy:

“The problem is somewhat analogous to the diffuse issues raised by those seeking reparations for slavery and past racial discrimination.”

Farber is a professor of law at UC Berkeley where he holds a named chair and co-directs the Center for Law, Energy & the Environment.  He is a consequential and well-published figure.  His works include, not incidentally, a law review article, “Backward-Looking Laws and Equal Protection:  The Case of Black Reparations” (2006).  His books include Disaster Law; Disaster Law and Policy; and Eco-pragmatism:  Making Sensible Environmental Decisions in an Uncertain World.  His article on black reparations is essentially a meditation on Justice Stevens’ approach to reparations, who he says, “clearly prefers forward-looking rationales for affirmative action over remedial ones” and “might vote against reparations on that basis.”

Farber’s article on compensation for victims of climate change elicited a number of responses, most interestingly from Kenneth Feinberg, the man who served as Special Master to the September 11 Victim Compensation Fund and who also ran the $20 billion BP oil spill victims’ fund.  Feinberg disagreed with Farber’s approach that distributes financial responsibility among culprits by a “market share” contribution formula.  Feinberg thinks it “more reasonable—and more politically feasible—to expect governments themselves to fund any compensation regimen.”  Feinberg also thinks it is premature to start cutting the checks.  “There is a great deal to be said for waiting until climate change litigation develops and matures…”

Why Wait?

There are many in the sustainability movement, however, who aren’t inclined to wait at all.  They act quickly, as we saw recently when an adjunct professor at American University ventured a criticism on the op-ed page of The Wall Street Journal of the climate reparations movement.  Professor Caleb Rossiter noted that:

“More than 230 organizations, including Africa Action and Oxfam, want industrialized countries to pay ‘reparations’ to African governments for droughts, rising sea levels and other alleged results of what Ugandan strongman Yoweri Museveni calls ‘climate aggression.’”

Rossiter argued that the campaign extended to efforts “to deny to Africans the reliable electricity—and thus the economic development and extended years of life—that fossil fuels can bring.”  The reward to Rossiter for his airing this complaint was a prompt firing from his position as a fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies.  (Cotton Mather would approve.)

As part of the National Association of Scholars’ study of the sustainability movement, I have begun to track the “reparations” thread within the universities.  It has several aliases, including “environmental justice,” “climate compensation,” “climate change liability,” “climate debt,” and “climate reparations.”  The last in the list is the term preferred by Maxine Burkett, a law professor at the University of Hawaii, who argues that reparations put the “moral issues” appropriately at the center of the debate and offer the possibility of “galvanizing greater enthusiasm and commitment to repair from individuals, communities and nation-states.”  She thinks reparations would “foster civic trust between nations and manifest social solidarity.”

Judging from the Copenhagen and Warsaw conferences, that dream of international amity is far-fetched.  We might have a better chance by sitting ourselves down to learn Esperanto.

But lest this seem too airy a dismissal of a movement that combines heartfelt sympathy for a world imagined to be warming to disaster with cold determination to plunder the West by litigation and treaty, let me add that I take the reparations movement as a force to be reckoned with.  Hundreds of professors are honing it at law schools, environmental institutes, and schools of public policy.  Who pays?  As we say in Esperanto, Finfine, vi kaj mi. [Eventually, you and me.]

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Originally published in Minding the Campus. Peter Wood is president of the National Association of Scholars.

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June 26, 2014 11:22 am

The entire GW farce is all about money and controlling the populace. Simply VILE.

June 26, 2014 11:34 am

The developing world knows we’re technically broke; no hope of reparations money. The poor are realistic like that.
http://thepointman.wordpress.com/2014/06/26/why-the-developing-world-hates-environmentalists/
Pointman

Tom J
June 26, 2014 11:39 am

Actually, I think reparations would be a great idea. When the climate catastrophes don’t come to pass, well, we could charge a whole boatload of climate scientists, environmentalists, NGOs, and universities with paying reparations for the destroyed economy and jobs. And, speaking of universities, I think the new graduates can charge those institutions with reparations for preparing them for nothing other than $10/hour jobs through which to pay back their six figure student loans. Does debt “slavery” come to mind? In fact, perhaps we can charge Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for reparations for debt slavery as well; for all those home mortgages that outstrip the homeowner’s equity, thanks to Fannie’s and Freddie’s actions. And, I’d like to demand reparations from that damn driver who took my parking place this morning. And, from my neighbor who didn’t sweep all his grass clippings off my walkway. Oh, he got most of ’em. But, he didn’t get ’em all dammit. And, I think their families, and their families’ families, can ante up some money. And, furthermore…

June 26, 2014 11:44 am

Peter-we have discussed before the magical year of 1987 when the Brundtland Commission kicked off sustainability with its Our Common Future report that was really about social and economics justice. The reparations cry is just a way of masking that demand. Your book on Diversity also notes that concept suddenly erupting from false assertions about the future. That now becomes crucial as the US is quietly pushing mandatory REOs-Racial Equity Outcomes.
Something else happened in 1987 that pertains to what is really being sought now as slavery reparations (lucky me was at the rollout of one of those City Equity Atlases and I listened well) or climate reparations. The World Order Models Project, at Gorby’s request in 1986, had a meeting in Moscow to lay out “alternative policies that promote the world order values of peace, economic well-being, social justice, ecological balance, and positive human identity.”
All of these excuses are just a means of diverting the reality of transferring money and power away from individuals to political control over the economy per Marx’s Human Development Model vision. Only cronies win in this scenario, but few in academia grasp that because pushing this gets grants and promotions.

June 26, 2014 11:47 am

Reblogged this on Public Secrets and commented:
Why not? Merging the “global warming” fraud with the reparations scam.

more soylent green!
June 26, 2014 11:52 am

Can anybody name a group of people who haven’t been harmed by some other group of people? Can I sue the Italians for enslaving my ancestors during the Roman Empire? Everyone has a grievance against everyone else if you take things far enough.
And just to be clear — when you look at the details for reparations, the money doesn’t go directly to the allegedly aggrieved, but the special interest groups claiming to represent the (allegedly) aggrieved. It’s all a redistribution scheme designed to take money from people you don’t like and give it to people who will funnel it back into your campaign coffers.

June 26, 2014 12:06 pm

Reparations for past deeds make moral sense if they are welded to reparations for FUTURE deeds. So China, India and the growing users of fossil fuel in Africa would pay into a payment fund for the “damage” their improved lifestyle will create.
As the developed CO2 production falls, while that of the developing world rises, the developing world would pay the developed world. After all, if increased CO2 is how you improve yourself – but at a cost to others in the process – we should be paid for the pain they cause us.
Bet that moral implication doesn’t get any applause.

wally
June 26, 2014 12:10 pm

No biggie…
all we need to do is go to the State Department and change the word “Aid” to “climate reparations”.
US gives $50 billion per year.
That’s a lot of reparations….

DesertYote
June 26, 2014 12:32 pm

Robin says:
June 26, 2014 at 11:44 am
” but few in academia grasp that because pushing this gets grants and promotions.”
Hayek has a better explanation.

John Ledger
June 26, 2014 12:46 pm

Peter Wood
Thank you for an excellent overview of the ‘reparations’ syndrome.
The President of South Africa, Honourable Jacob Zuma, was at that noteworthy climate change jamboree in (very cold!) Copenhagen in 2009, where he made the extraordinary and unilateral declaration that South Africa would voluntarily reduce its Carbon Dioxide emissions by 34%, on condition that the world would assist his country with financial compensation to do so.
He was obviously advised to do this in the hopes of scoring big bucks in reparation payments. This has not happened, but South Africa is nonetheless implementing a substantial renewable energy investment programme on the basis of competitive bidding, which seems to be working quite well. We await the reports of environmental monitoring about the extent of bird and bat deaths at South African wind farms (when will they ever learn?… RIP Pete Seeger)
More sinister is the apparent commitment of government here to implement a ‘Carbon Tax’ next year – we are short of electricity, our economy is under huge stress, and we have millions of unemployed young people ready for revolution. Australia has seen a change of government because of a very unpopular carbon tax, and South Africa could see the same backlash.
The South African government’s climate alarmism is misplaced, and is based on a Hockey Stick mentality fuelled by local NGO activists (WWF and Greenpeace in particular). Climate alarmism has seriously distracted South African government institutions at municipal, provincial and national level from doing their jobs, and delivering basic services to their constituents.

Betapug
June 26, 2014 12:49 pm

Since the actual capturing of African slaves for sale and transport to North America was done by African coastal tribes and Arabs, should not they be the ones to pay reparation?
Following the slavery model, since the whole business of AGW CO2 “pollution” and the disaster of evolution began with the discovery of fire, should we not be extracting Climate Justice from the Homo erectus who had the bright idea?
The Contraction and Convergence movement (to which a number of prominent Climateers adhere) would somehow achieve justice for say, Somalia, by converging our standard of living toward theirs. If we half sink our ship, it will cause theirs to surface. Should the experiment fail…..
http://www.gci.org.uk/

Robert of Ottawa
June 26, 2014 12:57 pm

The phrase “Transferring money [from] poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries” comes to mind. Buy shares in Swiss Banks.

June 26, 2014 12:57 pm

Well, with respect to slavery, since native Africans sold the ancestors of Afro-Americans
into slavery, I believe that Afro-Americans need to seek reparations from native Africans.
I’m sure that’ll go over well.

Reply to  Col Mosby
June 27, 2014 9:37 am

Given the sellers stayed (for the most part) in Africa, where are they going to get the money for reparations?

Robert of Ottawa
June 26, 2014 12:57 pm

The phrase “Transferring money FROM poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries” comes to mind. Buy shares in Swiss Banks.

Jimbo
June 26, 2014 1:01 pm

This whole thing is a sick joke. What if it was shown that developing countries have benefited from man’s co2 emissions? Who pays? Crop yields on the whole are up around the world. You have to show a flood or hurricane was caused by man’s greenhouse gases. That is not so easy.
Who was to blame for THIS and THIS, when co2 was below the 350ppm safe level?

Joey B
June 26, 2014 1:17 pm

In order to keep the accounting straight, those countries owed “reparations” should also be required to pay for the countless benefits they have received because of the use of fossil fuels. We’ll take a cheque or a repayment schedule can be arranged.

beng
June 26, 2014 1:28 pm

Putting all these marxist/academic “ideas” in one post is nauseating. Peter Wood must have an iron-gut.

June 26, 2014 1:55 pm

yeah, to sum it up…f* them.

June 26, 2014 2:03 pm

Bryan A says:
June 26, 2014 at 10:31 am

I think reparations for slavery makes a boat load of sense and I will happily pay appropriate amounts of compensation to anyone who was a slave or the child of a slave.

Then there’s the view that reparations for slavery in the US have already been paid — in the blood of 360,000-plus young Union soldiers who themselves owned no slaves and came from families who owned no slaves or arrived from other countries (Ireland) who owned no slaves.
Recent research suggests that foreign-born soldiers were under-counted in the long-standing casualty figures and the actual deaths could be as much as 20% higher.

June 26, 2014 2:22 pm

I am grateful for all these responses. When I proposed to the editor of Minding the Campus that i write something about the “climate reparations” movement, he was skeptical. It isn’t necessary, he said, to cover every fringe idea in the academy. Indeed it isn’t, but a good many of those seemingly fringe ideas have a way of worming themselves into public debate and eventually into public policy. “Climate reparations” seems like a crazy idea to me but I can see how it has gathered behind it the kind of academic determination that has helped make “climate consensus” such a powerful rhetorical weapon in the hands of people who are clueless about the actual science.
The only disconcerting comment in this string is from “hunter” who somehow thinks I was quoting Cotton Mather out of approval. It is called irony, Mr. Hunter, irony.
I was especially interested in John Ledger’s description of what has happened in South Africa, Jacob Zuma, I assume, has to be reckoned a true believer–someone who went ahead with a dead-end carbon-fuel reduction, anti-development scheme that promises enormous hardship to his nation, even when he was not rewarded with a Copenhagen pot of gold. Thereis no mistaking the sincerity of many of the Warmists. Yes, they often have a financial motives of their own, but it is an error to think they are merely mercenaries. The Warmist movement weaves together a creedal orthodoxy, an emotional catharsis, and a lure of profit. We skeptics shouldn’t lose sight of how these elements reinforce each other. It is about money, but it isn’t “ALL about money.”
Peter Wood

June 26, 2014 2:23 pm

I have an idea. Why don’t we conduct a survey to find how many people feel they are owed compensation as victims of one wrong or another. Tabulate the results, including how much each respondent thinks he/she is owed, and extrapolate to the entire population of the planet. I wonder how many years of planetary GDP will be required to satisfy the total claimed compensation?
Paging Stephan Lewandowsky, paging Stephan Lewandowsky. Please pick up the white discourtesy phone …

Bryan A
June 26, 2014 2:27 pm

Alan Watt, Climate Denialist Level 7 says:
June 26, 2014 at 2:03 pm
Bryan A says:
June 26, 2014 at 10:31 am
I think reparations for slavery makes a boat load of sense and I will happily pay appropriate amounts of compensation to anyone who was a slave or the child of a slave.
Then there’s the view that reparations for slavery in the US have already been paid — in the blood of 360,000-plus young Union soldiers who themselves owned no slaves and came from families who owned no slaves or arrived from other countries (Ireland) who owned no slaves.
Recent research suggests that foreign-born soldiers were under-counted in the long-standing casualty figures and the actual deaths could be as much as 20% higher.
I like the way you blog

June 26, 2014 2:31 pm

I am grateful for all these comments. My thanks especially to John ledger about the South African situation, Jacob Zuma has to be taken as a sincere true believer in the Warmist thesis. He is willing to sacrifice the welfare of his nation in pursuit of energy fantasies even without getting the Copenhagen pot of gold. That’s a good illustration of why this movement isn’t “all about money.” The lure of financial gain is real and powerful, but so are the delusions about a deeper insight into physical reality and the emotional catharsis of believing that you are saving the world.
The comment from “Hunter” took be aback. Mr. Hunter seems to think I quoted Cotten Mather approvingly. It is called irony, Mr. Hunter, irony.
Peter Wood

Margaret Smith
June 26, 2014 2:44 pm

Betapug says:
June 26, 2014 at 12:49 pm
Since the actual capturing of African slaves for sale and transport to North America was done by African coastal tribes and Arabs, should not they be the ones to pay reparation?
Exactly. This was quite a shock for black Americans after the ‘Roots’ fiasco. It doesn’t excuse the slave trade, of course, but in sub Saharan Africa many women are little better than slaves to this day. This is something more money won’t cure but dictators would certainly get richer.

betapug
June 26, 2014 2:58 pm

“The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.”
Let’s focus on the present. It’s hard enough to see clearly here and the only space in which we can act.