The Amazon
is burning. The climate is changing. And we're doing nothing to stop it
Nick Paton
Walsh 2018
Analysis by
Nick Paton Walsh, CNN
Updated
0458 GMT (1258 HKT) September 4, 2019
amazon
fires indigenous people impact npw pkg vpx_00012925
Porto
Velho, Brazil (CNN)Soaring in a Cessna above the Amazon canopy isn't meant to
sting your eyes with smoke, soak your shirt with sweat, and cause your pilot to
climb frantically just to get visibility back. Yet the fires raging over the
past fortnight conjured what you're never meant to witness: this is what the
end of the world looks like.
A week
spent driving around or flying over the vastness of South America's largest
blessing, leaves you stunned at how much damage has been done, and how fast. Is
the Amazon edging towards its tipping point? When the moist forest canopy
becomes so dry, and the savannah spreads, that fires propagate and expand in a
vicious circle? Like much of climate science, we can only get learned warnings
and then watch as reality often exceeds our initially modest concerns. It seems
we don't understand the planet well enough to be guessing at the timetable for
our own extinction.
I didn't
ever think I would watch the Amazon burn in my lifetime, but now fear it's just
the start of the end. My editors asked me to write about what I thought at the
end of the reporting. I'm used to miserable topics, but this is pretty dark.
Something
extremely bad is happening very fast. And while it is often entirely Brazil's
fault -- with the populist policies of its President Jair Bolsonaro fueling
destruction that was cautiously limited by his predecessors, and farmers
running riot, torching fields to clear land in the pursuit of cash -- it is
also not really their fault at all.
The soy
they grow, the beef they farm, the wood they log, and everything else they tear
from the Amazon, aren't all used in Brazil. We buy them: Europe and central
Asia about 19%, China 22%, North America 14%, according to the World Bank.
Developed economies got that way through using up their own resources, and
those of their colonies. So their diktats to Brazil as it develops, might
better involve alternatives to deforestation -- other ways to make money --
than lectures. We could also stop buying their stuff too.
But the
truth is, we don't want to. You wouldn't actually want to stop having a
smartphone so you can "like" Leonardo DiCaprio's post about the
Komodo dragon, even though it uses metals mined appallingly. I didn't refuse
the stewardess' offer of a 200ml cup of water despite it coming in foil-sealed
plastic, with another plastic cup containing ice; the plane I am in is hot, and
I am thirsty.
Uncomfortable
choices
A lot of
the choices we have to make to reverse course away from slow extinction are uncomfortable.
They are also hard for politicians to impose on a population within a four- or
five-year electoral cycle. The G7 nations didn't grandstand about the Amazon in
the French resort of Biarritz last month to herald a program of years of real
climate action. It was instead an easy weekend's posturing and point-scoring
for a younger electorate.
There isn't
about to be wide-ranging change. Nobody wants to be the leader who made flying
so expensive through a carbon tax, people can't do it so much any more. Or who
utterly bans single-use plastic, meaning your fruit is all mushy when you get
it home. Talking about half-measures wins votes, not prohibitive and serious
action. We really don't want to change, and instead prefer to dream science
will clean the seas, soak up the carbon, make endless smart energy, or let us
fly off and pollute Kepler-452b.
The climate
crisis business itself does nobody any favors. This way to hell is paved with
earnest expertise. The models, the lifetimes of effort and application, the
time limits for action, have led to a cul-de-sac of varying theories and
estimates. There is so much white noise, nobody knows with authority what is
the one thing we all have to do.
A lot of
last week was spent arguing over whether the widely touted claim that 20% of
the world's oxygen is created by the Amazon was correct. Macron and Ronaldo had
both used it. So did CNN, and other news organizations. There were screeds on
Twitter. Climate scientists finding another burst of attention from disputing
the number. Clickbait using this figure to suggest pretty much everything being
said about the Amazon fires was inaccurate. It wasn't. (And incidentally, it's
up to 20% of oxygen produced on Earth's land that is estimated to come from the
Amazon rainforests). There are few things more dangerous than false climate
science, critics correctly argue, before hopefully realizing there's little
more dangerous in this emergency than a woeful and petty distraction.
I don't
usually cover the climate crisis, and I'm often grateful for that. Across the
media landscape, it is often not the surest bet for editors to part with the
tens of thousands of dollars needed to race off to the world's remotest places
and show the things people would rather not see, that make them shift
uncomfortably in their desk chairs, and wish they were reading instead about
Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth's breakup.
And it's harder
still to make the slow degradation of oceans, or the gradual razing of forests,
seem like news. It isn't new, there's no reason to talk about it today
especially, other than we should be talking about it every hour of every day.
It's been this bad for a while, we just have preferred not to talk about it at
all. An older generation of news consumers doesn't really care, until their
kids tell them about it over the dinner table. A younger generation are so
angry about it, they sometimes forget the need to do something practical, bar a
few very cross commuters in capital cities on their way into work.
Climate is
a business for many -- a career -- in much the same way as destroying it is for
others. The Katowice summit for COP24 that I covered last year in Poland was a
gentle cocoon, where urgency and politeness somehow co-exist. Most attendees
drafting future pacts did so in a language of obfuscation and technicality
almost guaranteed to alienate the swathes of popular opinion they need to
alter.
.
Change will
be unavoidable
To top
that, most action plans over the climate crisis exist in the future tense. What
we will do. How we have goals. What we must change. Then everyone orders
another coffee, takes a taxi to the airport, gets back in their jet, orders
beef on the plane, and carries on as before. We are also a bit exhausted by
decades of the flailing of limbs and shrieking "emergency."
It's
depressing watching the lungs of the earth burn. It isn't going to stop until
we stop buying the stuff it makes. And even then, we'll need the resources from
somewhere else. We will have to plant more trees. The scope of change -- of
diet, of consumer habits, of recycling, of technology, of political will -- is
too massive to expect in my lifetime. In fact, the steeper the spiral appears
in front of us, the more stuff we will likely need to make us feel better --
cooler, smarter, happier -- in the worse days ahead.
The most
obvious resolution will come in a few decades, when the heat gets too much, crops
fail, clean water becomes more valuable than oil, and the things you were
warned about start to kill a lot of people. Then change will be inevitable, and
unavoidable, and the number of people all hoping for the same life of wow will
sadly drop to something more sustainable.
It's the
issue of our time. It encompasses how far and fast we have journeyed as a
species -- just as our car starts to shake as it reaches its speed limit.
That's why we don't like to talk about it. What comes next is simply uglier,
and most of us would rather not say that out loud.
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