'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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Paul Coppin
June 26, 2014 3:20 pm

“Peter Wood says:
June 26, 2014 at 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.”
You’re welcome. We do skepticism here.
Personally, I’m getting really tired of the cult of victimhood.Get your own lunch. I’m also getting tired of the cults of hyphenated-justice, and while I’m at it, the cults of hyphenated-nationalities, like “African-American”. I’m not a hyphenated anything – maybe I need a grant or a handout…or a Supreme Court special dispensation, or reparations. I’m not hyphenated so somebody must have screwed me over at some point.

June 26, 2014 3:29 pm

I think the West has already provided wealth and health to all nations whether directly, indirectly or by accident in the form or the vast body of knowledge, particularly from the ‘hard’ sciences, that is freely available to all, such as the periodic table. Also. I still find the graphic of health and wealth from Gapminder astonishing (http://www.gapminder.org/). Click on ‘Load Gapminder World’ and watch what happens from around 1945. Every country begins to move up in health and wealth. More people are living longer and are wealthier than ever before and that is because of the knowledge passed around of how to do that.

June 26, 2014 4:06 pm

dmacleo says:
June 26, 2014 at 1:55 pm [ ” …” ]
That says it for me, too.

more soylent green!
June 26, 2014 4:15 pm

What about all the money spent on foreign aid, disaster assistance, World Bank loans, etc.? Shouldn’t we ask for an accounting for all that, first?

TimO
June 26, 2014 5:41 pm

Only if Al Gore and his pals give up all their money FIRST (and you know that ain’t gonna happen…)

rogerknights
June 26, 2014 5:55 pm

more soylent green! says:
June 26, 2014 at 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.

You don’t have to go back that far. There was a 500-year period of “the Norman yoke” after 1066. Even if the invading Normans have merged into the native population now, we can at least sue the province of Normandy–right?

Reply to  rogerknights
June 27, 2014 11:08 am

#Rogerknights- that brings up an interesting paradox. just as the Normans interbred with the Anglo Saxons, so to did many of the original slaves with the slave owners. So does that mean some of us have to pay ourselves?

rogerknights
June 26, 2014 6:04 pm

Peter Wood says:
June 26, 2014 at 2:31 pm
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.

Mencken called it “the messianic delusion.”

Richard Day
June 26, 2014 6:27 pm

I’m still waiting for my cheque from big oil and the Koch brothers. WHERE’S MY MONEY??

Goldie
June 26, 2014 7:30 pm

I’ve commented on this before – if we need to make reparations for everything since the industrial revolution then we should reset everything;
1. Calculate the cumulative sum of aid given freely to other countries over the last 150 years.
2. Calculate the value of antibiotics, vaccines and every other form of western medicine.
3. Calculate the value of western farming methods.
4. Calculate the value of western technology – planes, trains, automobiles, ships telephony etc.
5. Calculate the value of western tourism.
Then subtract that from the reparation value.
Next understand that the value of all forms of foreign aid including disaster response, currently given feely, will be offset against future reparation values. Also an entry tax will be charged to tourists returning from countries receiving reparations. Also all forms of technology transfer will be embargoed.
Actually, as I write this, it sounds more and more like apartheid, which makes it even more of a dumb idea!
I suppose that’s the point of these water melon policies – divide and conquer.

jones
June 26, 2014 9:33 pm

I am still waiting for my cut from Julius Caesar’s rampaging antics across England a couple of years ago….
Traumatised…traumatised I tell you.

Mike Lewis
June 26, 2014 11:27 pm

Not to mentions the evil Clan Macgregor who stole the land of my ancestors on the Isle of Lewis.

jones
June 26, 2014 11:51 pm

I have the very deepest sympathy for your pain Mr Lewis.

pat
June 27, 2014 12:13 am

reparations would have only kicked in if the carbon cowboys got their CO2 emissions trading going in the order of trillions of dollars per year in climate derivatives. fortunately, that scam has pretty much crashed, but they’re meeting up again in the EU (Brussels) today to try to FIX it, so beware:
27 June: Bloomberg: Nidaa Bakhsh: EU Seen Curbing Coal Use by Quadrupling Carbon Price
Europe could coax utilities to shift from burning coal to cleaner natural gas by quadrupling the price that financial markets place on carbon dioxide emissions, the head of Spain’s biggest power generator said.
Ignacio Galan, chairman and chief executive officer ofIberdrola (IBE) SA, said European Union leaders should take steps to boost prices in the EU Emissions Trading System in addition to setting a target to reduce pollution by 40 percent by 2030.
“A carbon price of 20 to 30 euros is the right level for switching from coal to gas,” Galan said in an interview at Bloomberg’s office in London. Carbon has fallen by a third to less than 6 euros ($8.17) a metric ton since 2011 as slower economic growth reduced industrial production and the need to offset pollution…
The comments were meant to guide EU leaders as they negotiate targets to restrain emissions, part of an effort by more than 190 countries led by the United Nations to curb the gases blamed for global warming…
***Coal’s share of world energy demand rose to the highest level since 1970, making it the fastest-growing fossil fuel, the oil producer BP estimates…
The Iberdrola executive also wants to see reforms to the carbon trading system that would boost prices, sending polluters a signal that they’ll have to pay more for fossil fuel emissions. Iberdrola is a major developer of wind farms and natural gas-fired power stations, which emit less carbon than ones that use coal…
***A shale boom in the U.S. led to a collapse in gas prices that’s helped consumers and stimulated industries, forcing cheaper, more-polluting coal to be shipped to Europe for use in power stations…
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-27/eu-seen-curbing-coal-use-by-quadrupling-carbon-price.html

brent
June 27, 2014 12:55 am

Ecuador seeks oil ‘compensation’
Daniel Gordon, BBC News . The Yasuni National Park in Ecuador is reckoned to be one of the most biodiverse regions on the planet. Beneath it, though, lie an estimated one billion barrels of oil.
snip
“We are presenting a new way to prevent global warming. Instead of trading with produced emissions – as under the Kyoto protocol – we are proposing to avoid production, by keeping the oil in the ground,” he told the BBC.
http://www.sosyasuni.org/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=103:ecuador-seeks-oil-compensation&catid=1:news&Itemid=34
Europe admired Ecuador’s oil drilling ban but didn’t want to pay
The European Union admired Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa’s now-abandoned radical conservation effort to keep Yasuní’s vast oil reserves untapped but did not want to foot the bill, preferring more traditional forms of aid
http://www.euractiv.com/sustainability/europe-admired-ecuador-oil-drill-news-530054

June 27, 2014 1:34 am

Goldie says:
June 26, 2014 at 7:30 pm
Slightly to one side but I think related. Groups like Boko Haram who despise western thinking and want to return to ‘traditional’ values should do just that. They must stop using 4x4s, petrol, guns, radios, phones, TVs, maps, medicines, media access, modern clothing, paved roads, industrially produced food, money derived from industrial countries and of course electricity..

June 27, 2014 8:21 am

Reparations or compensation is actually the only action I support related to climate change.
From an AGW perspective its assumed that climate change is causing damage right now – that emitting co2 is hurting people.
From a skeptical position its still undeniable that global warming will cause damage to some people. Even if GW is a benefit to the planet as a whole we can assume that some climate patterns will change and that some regions will be adversely affected. I don’t see how this is debatable.
So if we agree that AGW will damage some people, even if the number is very low those people deserve compensation under pretty much any system of ethics.
This is why ideas of carbon taxes that use their revenue to support gren technologies is disgusting – especially from AGW activists. It goes against all the principals of a liberalism and humanism (not that I believe in those but most do).
When I emitt co2 I would like to compensate people for any damages it causes. That’s the only thing I feel ethically responsible to do.
Imagine that co2 is mostly beneficial. Emitting it would be like going into a room of people and giving each person a random amount of cash. Unfortunately one or two people are unlucky and need to pay some cash instead. Does the fact that mist people got cash get you off from compensating the ones who post cash? I don’t think so.
Internalizing costs of things that damage the commons should he a basic goal of economics. Doing so means you need less government intervention after the fact and should be encouraged by all libertarian/small government advocates.
Having said all that I think the free market would do a much better job in the compensation department through something like the fair trade model than governments could do.

empiresentry
June 27, 2014 11:14 am

Since the 3rd world countries have benefited gretly from our advances and recieved hte benfits of said democratic developments (scince, education, cars, medicines, telecommunications, computers, refrigerators, etc.) then, using their calulations, we are even.
I worked on pandemic and continuity planning for Africa and other continents. 5 million people a year die from bad water….because it takes electricity and energy to run a water/sewer system…things the greens block at every turn.
3 million people die every year from bad air pollution…pollution inside their homes…because hte Green idiots refuse to allow any other fuel besides dung.
Tried to get pandemic vaccines to a doc out in the sticks….his choice was one refirgerator to keep them in or the one light bulb for surgeries…because the leftists decided he should use a solar panel instead of 1500 feet of electrical line.
The ethnocentric perspectics of liberal elitists and Berkley uber rich kids within their world and lifestyle making the determination of what works for people two continents away is truly remarkable. LOL and they truly believe sending $2 million to a depsot in Africa will serve the people from future deaths lolol
Leftist ethnocentrism does nothing but cost millions of lives every year.

J Martin
June 27, 2014 1:59 pm

The third world should pay the develped world reperations.
Satellite evidence, JAXA, shows tht the developed world’s crops consume more co2 than the developed world produces. It also shows that the third world produce more co2 than they consume.

John Ledger
June 27, 2014 2:21 pm

Peter Wood
Many thanks for your kind response to my opinion about the climate alarmist policies in South Africa. You painted a picture of our president as a true believer in the CAWG threat, and elevated him to the position of an enlightened and concerned leader of the nation.
Nothing could be further from the truth. His speech at the COP meeting in Copenhagen was written for him by the Department of Environment Affairs (DEA), on a roll of hubris about ‘job creation’ in the ‘Green Economy’. Most of the government officials who drafted that speech have since left the DEA and play no further role in climate change policy development in South Africa.
The ‘Green Economy’ in South Africa has indeed created many jobs and brought in millions of dollars in Direct Foreign Investment – but readers should note how much local financial banks have contributed to this so-called ‘Green Economy’. All of this is fuelled by the misplaced notion that ‘Catastrophic Anthropogenic Climate Change’ awaits if we do not invest in the ‘Green Economy’.
For the financially stressed international renewable energy vendors, the South African renewables programme has been a critical and very welcome lifeboat for their floundering businesses. Their local partners have also made a lot of money from the ‘Green Economy’ in South Africa.
The executives at Vestas, Abengoa, Suzlon, Siemens and a raft of other renewable energy proponents are very happy right now!
Wind turbines and solar farms are springing up like new shoots from our once unspoilt landscapes and beautiful vistas.
South Africa has now joined the international community of land despoilers, in the name of a greener planet.
A real pity about that….
John Ledger

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
June 27, 2014 3:57 pm

Heh. For me Esperanto is best remembered as the overwhelmingly dominant language in Harry Harrison’s The Stainless Steel Rat series, which even aliens decided to adopt for its superiority as an easy-to-understand language. The paperbacks I read even had an extra page stating “Esperanto is real!” and that newspapers and books were printed in it, it provided contact info for something like ‘The World Esperanto Society in America’ so you could learn more.
This is in science fiction, written in English. “Esperanto” sounds like the rant of an ESPer.
Otherwise, I think I heard a Groucho Marx joke about something was like reading a newspaper written in Esperanto. And that was about it.

Evan Jones
Editor
June 27, 2014 6:32 pm

Yes, third-world countries will need large subsidies to counteract global warming. (To be used to construct coal-fired plants to provide electricity for air conditioning.)