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Last night, just weeks after the largest climate mobilization ever, the world’s two biggest polluters—the U.S. and China—announced
their most ambitious climate action yet. That is not a coincidence:
it’s a sign that our pressure is working, and that we need to apply much
more.
Here’s my take on what the just-announced plan from President Obama and Premier Xi is, and isn’t:
1. It is historic. John Kerry was right to use the phrase in his New York Times oped
announcing the deal: for the first time a developing nation has agreed
to eventually limit its emissions. This is a necessity for advancing
international climate negotiations.
2. It isn’t binding in any way. In effect President
Obama is writing an IOU to be cashed by future presidents and Congresses
(and Xi is doing the same for future Politburos). If they take the
actions to meet the targets, then it’s meaningful, but for now it’s a
paper promise. And since physics is uninterested in spin, all the hard
work lies ahead.
3. It is proof—if any more was needed—that renewable energy is ready to go.
The Chinese say they’ll be using clean sources to get 20 percent of
their energy by 2030—which is not just possible, it should be easy.
Which they know because they’ve revolutionized the production of solar
energy, driving down the cost of panels by 90 percent or more in the
last decade.
4. It is not remotely enough to keep us out of climate trouble. We’ve
increased the temperature less than a degree and that’s been enough to
melt enormous quantities of ice, not to mention set the weather on
berserk. So this plan to let the increase more than double is
folly—though it is good to see that the two sides have at least agreed
not to undermine the 2 degrees Celsius warming target, the one tiny
achievement of the 2009 Copenhagen conference fiasco.
5. It is a good way to put pressure on other nations.
I’ve just come back from India, which has worked hard to avoid any
targets of any sort. But the lesson from this pact is, actual world
leaders at least need to demonstrate they’re talking about climate; it
makes the lead-up to the global negotiations in Paris next year more
interesting.
6. It is a reason projects like Keystone XL and fracking make even less sense than ever. If
President Obama is serious about meeting these kinds of targets, then
we need serious steps; the surest way to undermine this commitment would
be to approve new pipelines or authorize other new fossil fuel
developments like fracking. If you pledge sobriety and then buy a keg of
beer, people are going to wonder.
7. It is another reminder that it is past time to divest from fossil fuels.
The burgeoning divestment movement has been arguing not just on moral
grounds, but also making the point that the future will inevitably lead
to a downsloping curve for the old energies. This is another warning—for
anyone who looks more than a few quarters out, the writing is on the
wall that the fossil fuel era is on its way out.
8. It’s not, in any way, a stretch goal. These
numbers are easy—if you were really being cynical, you could say they’re
trying to carefully manage a slow retreat from fossil fuels instead of
really putting carbon on the run. The Germans, for instance, will be
moving in on 60 percent of their energy from clean sources by the
mid-2020s, when we’ll still be cutting carbon emissions by small
increments.
9. It is—and this is the real key—a reminder that movements work.
President Obama first endorsed the 80 percent by 2050 goal he enshrined
in this pact when he was running for president in 2007, a week after 1,400 demonstrations
around the nation demanded that goal. This comes seven weeks after by
far the largest global climate demonstrations in history, and amidst
ongoing unrest in China about the filthy air in its cities.
10. It isn’t, in other words, a reason to slack off one bit
in the ongoing fight for a livable climate, a fight we must continue at
all cost. If we want this to be a start, and not a finish,
we’ve got to build even bigger and more powerful movements that push the
successors of these gentlemen to meet what science demands.
Today is an achievement for everyone who’s held a banner, signed a
petition and gone to jail—and a call for many more to join us going
forward!
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