Naomi Klein’s latest blockbuster, This Changes Everything: Capitalism Vs. The Climate, is a powerful rallying cry, both less and more radical than you might expect.
Klein calls for a revolution, but not the kind feared by the Right that would overthrow private property, or democracy, or establish a world government. In an interview last month, Klein told Crikey the book was not programmatic, as it does not try to spell out exactly policies that need to be adopted if we are to solve the climate crisis.
“I’m not a purist,” Klein said. “I get attacked on the Left for the fact that this is not a coherent socialist program, because I’m not driven by ideology.”
For Klein, the fault is on both sides of politics and everywhere in between, including the author herself. Environmental crusaders cop it too: This Changes Everything damns the appeasement of fossil fuel interests by conflicted, philanthropically funded “Big Green” groups searching for acceptable market-based solutions, and the billionaire green messiahs like Virgin founder Richard Branson and former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, who say one thing while doing another.
Klein’s radical call is for us to overthrow our view of the earth — not resource, but source — and our place in it, moving from an extractive system, which takes from nature, to a regenerative system, which protects life by taking and giving back.
Sounds hippie? It isn’t. This Changes Everything is a fierce denunciation of fossil fuels — not just the harmful pollution they create, but also the mindset that desires their industrial exploitation, which Klein traces back to Francis Bacon, inventor of the scientific method, who saw man as master who could “hound nature in her wanderings”, and James Watt, who found nature’s “weak side” when he invented the first coal-fired steam engine in 1776. That is the same year in which Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations was published, but though Klein ties these two events together, the book does not become a dry economic treatise on the failings of the free market.
Rather This Changes Everything is a cry, like a thousand slogans strung together by meticulous research, to defend life itself: the sacred ability of species to reproduce, of nature to regenerate, which is threatened by continued burning of fossil fuels. From the peer-reviewed study that associated fracking with higher birth defects in Colorado to the little-reported after-effects of BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster to the air pollution choking China’s cities, fossil fuels are literally poisoning us, even as they warm the planet. Klein writes:
“Lethal when extraction goes wrong and the interred carbon escapes at the source, lethal when extraction goes right and the carbon is successfully released into the atmosphere.”
The response is Blockadia, the worldwide but localised resistance to increasingly extreme fossil energy, which is forming unlikely alliances between indigenous people (whose native title rights are often the last line of defence against development) and farmers, activists, workers — anyone joined by love of a threatened place and (so often) its life-sustaining water resources.
But Klein wants more than a switch from brown energy to green energy; she wants an end to inequality. No more environmental or human “sacrifice zones” — the dumping grounds that have always accompanied fossil fuel development. No more winner-takes-all.
“There is so clearly no way of responding to this crisis without massive public investment and redistribution of wealth …”
To achieve this, one over-arching principle is clear: polluter pays. Klein — who is also a director of the Bill McKibben-led climate movement 350.org — passionately backs divestment from fossil fuels (and investment in climate solutions), to confer on the industry the same status as tobacco companies:
“It might even create the space for a serious discussion about whether these profits are so illegitimate that they deserve to be appropriated and reinvested in solutions to the climate crisis.”
Higher taxes on fossil fuel companies would fund developing countries that are not responsible for the warming already locked in and that need help to avoid the extractive path out of poverty taken by the already industrialised countries. Klein writes that this is in our own self-interest, because it is necessary to avoid catastrophic climate change:
“The resources for this just transition must ultimately come from the state, collected from the profits of the fossil fuel companies in the brief window left while they are still profitable.”
Alive to the possibility she is making an already hard task harder, Klein falls short of outlining the steps that need to be taken to solve climate and inequality at once. She is dismissive of regulatory tools we know might help, like carbon pricing and other market mechanisms, writing of carbon offsets that “the prospect of getting paid real money based on projections of how much of an invisible substance is kept out of the air, tends to be something of a scam magnet”. True, and Tony Abbott would agree, but that doesn’t mean all offset schemes are useless.
Klein writes that “a fight for a minimal carbon tax might do a lot less good than, for instance, forming a grand coalition to demand a guaranteed minimum income” (because it would give workers an alternative to dirty fossil fuel jobs). That is debatable.
Klein refers often to Germany, where local communities have taken back ownership of their energy grids when the incumbents refused to shift from fossil fuels. In Australia this jars a little, given publicly owned electricity networks have been more prone to gold-plated, carbon-munching inefficiency than their private rivals. But it is true that looming grid privatisations in NSW and Queensland, if they lock in fossil fuel dependence, will be a major setback for climate action in this country. Klein is too dismissive of the search for “miracle” technological solutions to climate change, when the continuing rise of solar, soon with power storage, really does feel like a miracle, close to upending the electricity industry globally.
Klein’s book attacks as “magical thinking” the hope of progressives that solutions to the climate crisis will come easily, drawing heavily on the work of leading UK scientist Kevin Anderson of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, who has argued no economy has never achieved the kind of -8% to -10% per annum emissions reductions necessary to give us a solid chance of limiting warming to 2 degrees, and that the tight carbon budget “demands revolutionary change to the political and economic hegemony”.
As Klein told Crikey: “There is so clearly no way of responding to this crisis without massive public investment and redistribution of wealth … I would say the Right understands this and centrist liberals are constantly trying to finesse it and paper over it by claiming that ‘no, we can just have market-based policies and let’s not talk about north-south inequality’, because that’s hard to sell and they’re constantly imagining that there’s going to be some magic formula that makes climate action palatable to extreme conservatives, and it never will be. It is a losing battle.”

32 thoughts on “‘A losing battle’: Naomi Klein on human sacrifice zones and why solar won’t save the world”
Liamj
December 10, 2014 at 9:25 amKlein is right about the scale of change needed, but australias gerontocracy will persist in irresponsible selfishness until its demographic bulge is dead & buried.
Still, give our suburban wonderlands a few more heat waves without airconditioning and that will be alot sooner than they think. Even in 2009, heat waves killed more than the bushfires (that were started by fossil fueled elec network).
drsmithy
December 10, 2014 at 9:27 amEven in 2009, heat waves killed more than the bushfires (that were started by fossil fueled elec network).
Er, what ?
AR
December 10, 2014 at 9:44 amThe thing to remember about the New-Right (aka Neo-Con and its useful idiots like the teabaggers)is that it is neither ‘new’ nor ‘correct’, just the same old oligarchy supported by the meretricious middle who tugged their forelocks until they were bald in the hope of an extra crumb from the groaning Board and terrified of not even getting that when (not if) the whole rotten system crumbles beneqath the weight of greed.
Liamj
December 10, 2014 at 9:55 am@ drsmithy:
Best known – Kilmore East-Kinglake
“Survivors of Victoria’s devastating 2009 Black Saturday bushfires have secured a $500 million payout, in what lawyers have called the biggest class action settlement in Australian legal history.
Maurice Blackburn Lawyers said victims of the Kilmore East-Kinglake bushfire, which started on February 7, had got “some justice today”.
The action against power distributor SP AusNet and asset managers Utility Services Group involved 10,000 people, including relatives of the 119 people killed in the fire, people injured and those who lost their homes and property. The blaze razed 125,000 hectares and destroyed more than 1,000 homes.”
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-07-15/black-saturday-bushfire-survivors-secure-record-payout/5597062
Many more, not just in 2009:
“Five Black Saturday bushfires were caused by electrical faults, according to the Black Saturday Victorian Bushfire Royal Commission, which also found the risk of power line failure increases on days of extreme fire danger.”
http://www.lawyersweekly.com.au/news/bushfires-spark-liability-debate
David Hand
December 10, 2014 at 11:23 amMJPC,
It’s encouraging to read that even a leftie like you has faith in the market. Your belief that the wholesale shift to electric and carbon fibre as it becomes affordable places you in the mainstream of thinking regarding future measures to reduce carbon.
So the fossil fuel industry will die and Klein’s revolutionary zeal is exposed as the commie nostalgia they it is.
drsmithy
December 10, 2014 at 1:23 pmBest known – Kilmore East-Kinglake
So your contention is renewable energy doesn’t need power distribution grids ?
Norman Hanscombe
December 10, 2014 at 2:00 pmThe absurd nature of Klein’s faux ‘solutions’ is summed up well by two posters on very different sides to this ‘debate’
Venise Alstergren asks “Why on earth quote Francis Bacon as the fountain head of our negative and extractive woes? The real reasons are human greed and human overpopulation. Quoting Bacon may lead to a good story and money for the author but it obscures the truth.”
David Hand suggests “Klein’s entire world view is distilled into the final paragraph. ‘There is so clearly no way of responding to this crisis without massive public investment and redistribution of wealth.’”
MJPC
December 10, 2014 at 4:30 pm[email protected]
http://www.enviroshop.com.au/info/cogeneration
This doesn’t need a power distribution grid and fuel cells will run not only on gas but also hydrogen (or biomass). Fuel cells can also power electric cars (and spacecraft); CSIRO world leader (or was) and is proven technology now.
The whole electricity distribution is an interesting point. Too expensive to put the lines in the ground we are told, yet every summer season we have some fault that could cause a massive destruction of environment/property and/or life. Hotter summers= more likelihood of electrical line faults.
[email protected]: I only have faith in some people in the market, not the market itself. For instance Elon Musk of Paypal and Space x fame. Brilliant engineer and humanitarian whose aim is to help make sustainable power available to the world. Not only building the largest Li battery factory in the world and affordable electric cars, he is also developing cheap solar power systems for emergency deployment to the worlds disaster areas.
Look at the work of the Rocky Mountains Institute in sustainable energy systems and solar power, working with China on the adoption of electric cars
Then we have the capitalists; ie BP and the Deep Horizon oil spill; the worst oil spill in US history; Cause cost cutting and insufficient safety systems. I have no faith in the market as the market has got us to this point. Some will see an opportunity, some will want to maintain the status quo.
drsmithy
December 10, 2014 at 5:05 pmThis doesn’t need a power distribution grid and fuel cells will run not only on gas but also hydrogen (or biomass). Fuel cells can also power electric cars (and spacecraft); CSIRO world leader (or was) and is proven technology now.
So, there’s a few points to be made here.
* Bluegen is not (currently) marketed towards, or suitable for, domestic electricity generation
* Bluegen requires a gas line connection
* Fuel cells are only going to be viable for higher-earners due up-front costs
* Fuel cells are only going to be viable for home owners (not renters)
* Fuel cells are only going to be viable for people in detached homes (not apartments, townhouses, or anything else with common infrastructure)
The last three constraints apply equally to other forms of localised generation and storage like solar.
The whole electricity distribution is an interesting point. Too expensive to put the lines in the ground we are told, yet every summer season we have some fault that could cause a massive destruction of environment/property and/or life.
I imagine the cost of putting major distribution lines underground, is monstrous, both in terms of initial expense and ongoing maintenance. My wife is an Electrical Engineer in the power industry, I’ll run it by her and see what she thinks.
The simple fact is that mass-scale renewable energy has a significant dependency on a smart, reliable power grid due to its distributed nature. If people want to be able to say that when the sun isn’t shining or the wind isn’t blowing nearby, it’s OK because the power can be piped in from places where it is, or that Hydro and other forms of energy storage can be used during the night, the presence of an extensive power grid is implicit.
Ramble
December 12, 2014 at 12:14 pmPromoting the German situation and negates any credibility Ms. Klein may have had, viz.:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/12/10/the-unsinkable-german-anti-co2-titanic-just-found-its-iceberg/