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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 25, 2020
Time to Start Shredding ?

Donald Trump’s speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos on Monday
contained no surprises: half an hour of chest-thumping self-praise,
although without the usual xenophobia and dog-whistle racism. It was,
after all, an audience of the ultra-rich and powerful in which most of
the movers and shakers were not American.
There was no point in insulting them, and he didn’t. Presumably for the
same reason, he downplayed his climate denial at a conference whose
theme this year is sustainability: just two minutes denouncing climate
scientists as "the heirs of yesterday's foolish fortune tellers," and
then back to the boasting. But you couldn’t help wondering what the
audience was thinking.
Most of them are owners or senior managers of businesses with a global
reach, and their views on economic issues often chime with Trump’s. In
the past they echoed his views on climate change as well, because taking
it seriously threatened their business models, but they are not stupid.
Some of them always knew the science was right, and just muddied the
waters deliberately to win a few more decades of profit. Others drank
the Kool-Aid and truly believed for a while that it was a
Chinese-sponsored hoax, but they know it’s not the Chinese who are
melting the glaciers and setting Australia on fire.
So a majority of the people in that audience now realise that the
climate threat is very real, and some are starting to take serious
action against it. One of the world’s three biggest asset-management
firms, BlackRock, has just started pulling its investments out of the
coal industry. It’s a small start, and it’s very late, maybe too late,
but the wind is clearly changing.
Over the past few months Goldman Sachs, Liberty Mutual, and the Hartford
Financial Services Group, Inc., have all taken similar steps. The
European Investment Bank has announced that it will stop lending to
fossil-fuel projects altogether. But beyond wondering when and how to
take their own businesses in the same direction, a lot of the CEOs at
Davos will be asking themselves: is it time to start shredding the
evidence?
I am speaking metaphorically, of course. There are doubtless still
megatons of paper documents that contain incriminating material about
how companies deliberately subsidised climate denial campaigns in the
past, but much of it was ‘restricted circulation’ and never saw a
photocopier. Just call in the shredders. But the real problem is the
electronic evidence.
The most damning evidence for how Boeing slid the now grounded 737 Max
past the FAA regulators is not the official documents but the internal
email chat about the plane that Boeing has now had to release. "This
airplane is designed by clowns who in turn are supervised by monkeys,"
said one. "I still haven’t been forgiven by God for the covering up I
did last year," said another.
There will be metaphorical tons of damning internal email chatter about
how a great many companies conspired to cast doubt on the scientific
evidence for global warming over a period of several decades. Tracking
it down and killing it will be very hard. In fact, it will be close to
impossible.
People do what they have to in order to make a living. Many people who
profoundly disapproved of what the guilty companies were doing
nevertheless took the job and kept their mouths shut. But a few of them,
at least, will have been quietly saving documents and emails for the
day when the lawsuits start.
In fact, the class-action lawsuits are already getting underway,
especially in the world’s most litigious country, the United States.
It’s unexplored legal territory, and it may be some time before one of
the cases makes it in court, but the model everybody has in mind is the
Tobacco Master Settlement of 1998, in which the four major cigarette
companies ended up paying out $206 billion over 25 years.
They were also legally obliged to stop advertising aimed at young
people, limit their lobbying, and fund anti-smoking campaigns. That was a
case where the main victims were people who actually used their
products. The public pressure to punish companies whose activities have
harmed everybody’s future will be far greater: if new and retrospective
legislation is required, it will be passed.
In this case, we are not just talking about fines, although they may
ultimately be immense and even crippling. We are also talking about
criminal liability.
Even if we finally start taking serious measures against global warming
now, a lot of people are going to die from the damage that has already
been done: millions at least, and possibly a great many more than that.
Most of them will live in developing countries, and have no access to
the legal systems of the countries where the headquarters are. But
enough people will die in the rich countries that those who led or
financed the denial campaign will almost certainly end up facing
criminal charges ten or twenty years from now. Time to get shredding.

