Amid 2020’s gloom, there are reasons to be
hopeful about the climate in 2021
John Sauven
The concerted global response to the pandemic could be
replicated for the fight against the climate crisis
Thu 31 Dec 2020 09.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/dec/31/amid-2020s-gloom-reasons-hopeful-climate-2021
In a world
rife with disputes and divisions, there will be one emotion likely to unite
most people at the stroke of midnight on 31 December: sheer relief that 2020 is
finally over.
There’s no
risk of overstating it: this past year has pushed our world right to the edge.
A single virus leaping from animals to humans was enough to kill 1.6 million
people, bring major economies to their knees, and cause untold anguish and
suffering all over the world.
And while
the pandemic was raging, so was the climate emergency, like two horror films
overlapping. We saw record-breaking wildfires engulf the west coast of the US,
a record number of powerful Atlantic storms, the Arctic ice failing to freeze
in late October and deadly floods hitting countries from Italy to Indonesia. We
got a glimpse of a chaotic world battered by multiple crises, each making the
other worse, and it was terrifying.
Exceptional
as the calamities of 2020 may seem, they could be just a taste of what’s to
come unless we change direction. Neither the pandemic nor extreme weather are
random events. Disease outbreaks are on the rise and about 70% are the result
of viruses crossing the barrier from animals to humans.
From
rampant deforestation in the Amazon to Covid-infected mink farms in Denmark,
industrial farming is opening up a viral Pandora’s box that could unleash
pandemics even worse than the present one. While scientists were busy
developing a vaccine, destructive industries were even busier clearing forests
and displacing wildlife, increasing the risk of awakening the next deadly
virus. We’re mopping up the floor while making the leak worse.
When it
comes to the climate, there’s no vaccine, no single fix for it. Technology can
help, but the real breakthrough can only come from a radical change in
political and corporate will. Despite the economic slowdown caused by the
pandemic, levels of planet-heating gases in the atmosphere have hit a new
record high this year. It’s clear that nothing short of a complete
transformation of our economy and society can save us from climate breakdown.
This is why
sliding back to the old normal is not an option. Unless we stop oil firms
drilling for more oil, food giants destroying rainforests, and destructive
fishing depleting our seas, the worst isn’t over – it’s just begun. Ending the
pandemic is only half the job – we must also start something new and better. We
must create new green jobs, invest in communities and tackle the hardship faced
by many at the same time. And 2021 is the year to do it.
For all the
devastation it has caused, the pandemic has taught us some important lessons.
It’s forced us to slow down and rethink what really matters in life, what the
important jobs are, the value of family, friends and access to nature. And the
most basic lesson of all: if we get complacent about the threats we face,
there’s hell to pay.
There are
reasons to be hopeful. In this past year, what previously would have been
considered impossible turned out to be possible. The chancellor, Rishi Sunak,
found the money to increase protection for people’s jobs and health. Ministers
prioritised working together to tackle the virus, and world leaders have
collaborated to develop vaccines. If our politicians can do all that to respond
to a health crisis, why not do it to tackle the climate crisis, too?
Across the
Atlantic, US voters have defied the odds by defeating a sitting president who
also happens to be the world’s most powerful climate crisis denier. With Donald
Trump out of the White House and a stronger focus on climate action from
leading economies such as China, South Korea and Japan, we now have a fighting
chance to bring the world back together in a moonshot effort to cut
planet-warming emissions.
Climate
summits rarely turn out to be the make-or-break, all-or-nothing moment people
imagine them to be. But next year’s UN climate conference in Glasgow could be
the catalyst for the breakthrough we so badly need. For that to happen, real
leadership from Boris Johnson and his government in the UK will be key, yet so
far the signals have been mixed. We have seen a big leap forward with the
phase-out of new diesel and petrol cars by 2030, but a lurch backward with the
proposed aid budget cuts. The UK’s newly set emissions-slashing target for the
next decade is among the most ambitious in the world, but the prime minister’s
much-vaunted 10-point plan would leave us nearly 10 percentage points short of
it, provided it gets implemented in full.
What
ministers must do now is ramp up the action needed to cut emissions from homes,
roads, farms and power sources in the UK. Britain should lead by example and
show that by stopping the climate crisis, we can also restart our economy and
create the jobs and industries of the future that can benefit everyone. This
isn’t a burden, it’s an opportunity.
If we want
the future to look as different as possible from the crises-ravaged mess of the
past year, then tackling the climate and nature emergency head-on really is the
only way forward. If we can muster the energy for a new year resolution as we
toast good riddance to 2020, let it be a determination to leave behind the old
normal and make a truly new beginning.
John Sauven
is the executive director of Greenpeace UK
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