I understand climate scientists’ despair – but
stubborn optimism may be our only hope
Christiana
Figueres
Fighting spirit helped us achieve the Paris accords in
2015 – and we need it now the world is on course to overshoot 1.5C
Christiana Figueres was the head of the UN
climate change convention from 2010 to 2016
Thu 9 May
2024 16.26 BST
“Hopeless
and broken”: that is how a top scientist interviewed by the Guardian described
feeling as she and hundreds of other climate experts shared harrowing
predictions of the future of the planet this week.
I resonate
with her feelings of despair. Even as the former head of the UN climate change
convention that achieved the Paris agreement in 2015, I, like many, can succumb
to believing in the worst possible outcome. Just after I assumed the role of UN
climate chief in 2010, I said to a room full of reporters that I didn’t believe
a global agreement on climate would be possible in my lifetime.
Now,
scientists say we are on track to shoot through the 1.5C temperature ceiling
enshrined in the Paris agreement, leading to a dystopian world plagued with
famine, conflict and unbearable heat. Climate impacts have hit so fast that
worst-case scenarios predicted by scientists are in some cases already coming
true.
This isn’t
scaremongering: these climate scientists are doing their job. They are telling
us where we are, but now it’s up to the rest of us to decide what this moment
requires of us and to radically change the direction of travel.
Collective
doubt in our ability to respond to the climate crisis is by now dangerously
pervasive. Beyond climate scientists, it’s shared by politicians and some young
people. It’s also shared by some philanthropists who fund climate NGOs, and by
many who work in those NGOs. It is shared by some financiers, and some of those
who work in companies struggling to reduce their emissions.
Christiana
Figueres, left, UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, French foreign secretary
Laurent Fabius and French president Francois Hollande celebrate at the Paris UN
climate conference in 2015.
A sense of
despair is understandable, but it robs us of our agency, makes us vulnerable to
mis- and disinformation, and prevents the radical collaboration we need. Doubt
holds us back from taking bold action, which is why it is strategically seized
upon by incumbents, who have invested millions of dollars (probably much more)
in sowing uncertainty around the climate crisis and its solutions among the
general public.
We all have
a right to grieve the loss of a future free from the climate crisis. It is a
deep, hard loss. And it’s particularly painful, because those of us who read
these reports bear a great responsibility in passing an unsafe planet on to our
children and future generations. But grief that stops at despair is an ending
that I and many others, most notably those on the frontlines, are not prepared
to accept.
We also
have the responsibility – and the opportunity – to shape the future
differently. We must take stock of the science, triple down on our efforts and
deploy the perspective of possibility.
For
example, what has been achieved in transforming the energy system to this
point, pushing against a fossil fuel industry deliberately intent on delaying
progress, and within a lacklustre policy environment, is extraordinary.
We also
learned this week that we have just reached a crucial turning point towards
powering our world with clean energy. Last year saw a record absolute increase
in solar generation. With renewables in the energy mix now at 30%, fossil fuel
generation is expected to fall this year and then decline rapidly in the near
future. Solar, in particular, is accelerating faster than anyone thought
possible: last year it was the fastest growing source of electricity generation
for the 19th year in a row. This really is the beginning of a different kind of
future. Not enough, by itself, of course, but it shows a reality that is
exponentially changing day by day.
While we
grapple with the current lack of political will, and the abhorrent inequities
of the climate crisis, we can take some comfort that so many of those who are
key to designing our future have heard climate scientists’ urgent warnings and
are channelling their spirit by taking positive action in response: think of
the engineers reforming our grids, the architects, the social entrepreneurs,
the regenerative farmers restoring our soil, the legal advocates, and the
millions of people everywhere who are advancing new systems of care, repair and
regeneration.
It will
take much more courageous collective action to turn the seemingly impossible
into the new normal. But we are on the brink of positive societal tipping
points. I believe that the children of children born this year will be the
first fossil-fuel-free generation in modern history. Their generation, just a
few years from now, will benefit from development and smart climate adaptation
based on the certainty of abundant, homegrown and distributed clean energy. It
doesn’t mean they will live in a utopian future – we know too much climate
change is already baked into the system – but enormous positive change is
coming.
I mentioned
earlier telling the press that I didn’t believe a global agreement on climate
was possible back in 2010. What I didn’t share is that I immediately afterwards
had to change my attitude. And that made all the difference. It was a candle in
the darkness that I used to light a spark in many others. I am still using the
candle of stubborn optimism today – and I’m not the only one.
A world in
which we pass 1.5C is not set in stone.
Christiana
Figueres was the head of the UN climate change convention from 2010 to 2016,
and is the co-host of the climate podcast Outrage + Optimism
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