Opinion
Climate
change
Targets like ‘net-zero’ won’t solve the climate
crisis on their own
Mathew
Lawrence
There are ambitious new goals in the US and UK. But
governments also need to decarbonise the economy and rethink how it’s planned
Fri 30 Apr 2021
11.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/30/net-zero-climate-crisis-decarbonise-economy
Last week
was a critical time in the global response to the climate emergency: the US
vowed to cut its emissions by at least 50% by 2030, while the UK government
committed to reducing emissions by 78% by 2035, relative to a 1990 baseline.
Both announcements were important steps that reflected the significance of one
particular tool in climate governance: the target. From the legally binding
targets in the UK’s Climate Change Act (2008) to those of the 2015 Paris
agreement, targets define a sense of direction and signpost of ambition. Alone,
however, targets are not enough. We need more than just targets to transition
to a post-carbon future. We need planning.
Despite
what free-market economists may suggest, markets are not “free”, nor do they
emerge spontaneously. They are created and sustained by governments, laws and
political institutions, which plan how they operate and whose interests they
serve. What’s more, the global economy, far from being organised by the anarchy
of competition, is itself structured by institutions with vast planning power.
Targets may dominate the headlines, but it’s these institutions of planning
that are central to the climate struggle.
Central
banks are at the apex of economic planning. The actions of central banks during
the Covid-19 emergency, such as buying assets to stabilise turbulent financial
markets and controlling interest rates, reflect the coordinating function they
perform. Financial institutions, from banks to treasuries, also structure the
global economy and plan our economic and environmental future by choosing which
businesses and activities to invest in. Decisions about who gets liquidity and
who doesn’t are the difference between a business living or dying, stagnating
or thriving.
These
economic institutions all have a common theme. They are responsible for
planning, and therefore bringing to life one particular version of the future
that is accelerating environmental breakdown and stark inequality. The world’s
biggest 60 banks, for instance, have provided $3.8tn of financing for fossil
fuel companies since 2015. The Bank of England’s corporate bond holdings as of
June 2020 are consistent with – and contribute towards – catastrophic average
temperature increases of 3.5C above pre-industrial levels by 2100, and provide
no-strings attached finance to carbon-intensive companies. These priorities are
also reflected in the UK’s public policies; while the government has committed
itself to climate targets, it still supports the development of fossil fuel
extraction and carbon-intensive infrastructure, while providing inadequate
support for low-carbon public transport or net-zero housing.
Announcing
new climate targets without rethinking how our global economy is planned can
quickly amount to “greenwashing”. In 2018, the increase in fossil fuel
production was more than three times higher than in renewables. Since then,
fossil fuel giants have announced “net-zero” goals that still envisage a
critical role for oil, gas and coal in 2100. In this way climate targets can
give a green veneer to plans that merely continue the carbon-intensive status
quo.
The
political challenge is to ensure that planning itself is more democratic and
centred on meeting our needs and decarbonising our economy. To reach the UK and
world’s climate targets, we’ll need to reimagine planning: the tools we use,
the time horizons involved, the voices and values that shape these plans, and
how they are enacted. This is not about centralising power in an unresponsive
and overweening state, turning our futures over to algorithmic decision-making,
or further concentrating corporate power. Instead, it’s about prioritising our
ability to plan for the common good: in our homes, in our communities, and in a
democratic economy, from workplaces and markets to the state.
What might
this look like? As John Maynard Keynes foresaw when he called for the steady
socialisation of finance and the “euthanasia of the rentier” in 1936,
investment should be organised by needs, rather than short-term profits. In our
era of sustained economic stagnation, we can’t afford to wait for a revival of
capitalist dynamism to trigger investment. Instead, governments should be
coordinating a green industrial strategy and heavily investing to build the
low-carbon infrastructures, industries and institutions we need. There is so
much to be done, and yet current plans fall dangerously short; even Biden’s
much-trumpeted infrastructure plan fails to deliver the levels of public
investment needed to decarbonise at the pace and scale the climate emergency
requires.
If we’re to
rethink how planning works, central banks will play a crucial role. By
consciously embracing their planning function, central banks could steer
societies toward rapid decarbonisation. They could do this through changing the
relative cost of “green” versus “dirty” capital, for example, by enforcing higher
capital requirements for carbon-intensive industries and guiding credit to
low-carbon activities. They could also introduce new, socially just rules for
carbon pricing that would ensure private investment is geared towards tackling
the climate crisis.
Part of
rethinking planning will also involve rethinking the tools that are used to
organise the global economy: the legal contracts, accounting and auditing
processes, property claims and financial flows at the heart of it. Currently,
these tools and processes are geared towards maximising short-term returns in
an economy that excludes ordinary workers and communities from decision-making.
We need to refocus these on securing social and environmental wellbeing.
Targets are
necessary, but they’re only half of the picture. In addition to setting
ambitious goals, governments now need to decarbonise the global economy and
democratise how it is planned and organised. Our economy isn’t a natural state,
but a malleable creation. We still retain the power to reimagine what version
of the future it is hurtling towards – and now we must urgently embrace this.
Mathew
Lawrence is director of the Common Wealth thinktank and author of Planet on
Fire, published by Verso books.
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