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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, February 28, 2019
Here’s My Super-Abridged Green New Deal
KEVIN DRUMFEBRUARY 24, 2019
Let’s noodle some more about climate change today. On Thursday I regaled you with my abridged Green New Deal. It’s still fine, but I think it can be abridged even more. Bear with me here.
First off, I want to acknowledge that for all the infighting in liberal
circles, the real problem is that full-scale climate denialism has taken
over the Republican Party. This is what’s keeping us from making
serious inroads into carbon emissions. In Europe, by contrast, there is
no equivalent to the Republican Party. Nobody denies that climate change
is real, and there’s no monolithic political opposition to doing
something about it. As a result, over the past two decades Europe has
been far more successful at reducing carbon emissions than the United
States:
Wait. What’s going on here? In fact, the United States has reduced per-capita carbon emissions slightly more than
Europe, and neither one has managed much reduction at all except when
they’re forced to.¹ Nearly all of the reduction since 2000 came during
the five-year period when oil prices spiked and the Great Recession
killed off economic activity.
In other words, it doesn’t seem as if either the Republican Party or
America’s dysfunctional politics is really the problem. So what is? It
must be something common to both Europe and the US, and the obvious
answer is that we all live in democracies. Roughly speaking, our
governments do what the public wants, and the public doesn’t have much
interest in reducing carbon emissions. Oh, we say we
do, and we’ll support minor things like ETS or CAFE that have a barely
noticeable effect on us. We’ll support solar power—if it produces
electricity nearly as cheaply as coal. We’ll all buy electric cars—but
only when the price comes down and the batteries get better. We’ll check
out the energy star rating the next time we buy a new refrigerator. And
that’s about it.
As for the rest of the world, I won’t even show you the chart. It’s too
depressing. Outside of Europe and the US, carbon emissions are just
going steadily up, up, up. Even the Great Recession barely made a dent.
For the world as a whole, carbon emissions have increased more than 20
percent in the past two decades as poor countries try to catch up to the
living standards of the West.
This is one reason I don’t really care one way or the other about the Green New Deal. Here is how Dave Roberts describes it:
The GND resolution is not a policy or a series of policies. It is a set of goals, aspirations, and principles. It purposefully puts the vision up front and leaves the policymaking for later.
Precisely. It’s just a bunch of goals: “net zero” greenhouse emissions
and 100 percent renewable power via a “10-year mobilization”; a 40-60
percent reduction in global carbon emissions by 2030; “millions” of new
green jobs; etc. These are familiar goals. We all know them and we all
support them—but only as long as nobody is rude enough to talk about
what it would take to actually meet these goals. The GND certainly
doesn’t. That’s because the folks who wrote it know perfectly well what
would happen if it did: it would die instantly.
None of what I’m saying should be even slightly controversial. Outside
of war, I can’t think of an example in all of human history where a
large polity—let alone the entire world—willingly made significant
sacrifices in service of a fuzzy, uncertain hazard that’s decades away.
We are overclocked hairless apes who are simply not designed to think
that way. Why would anyone deny this?
This, then, circles back to what I was saying a couple of days ago: A
climate plan that requires significant sacrifice might work on planet
Vulcan, but not on planet Earth. Assuming otherwise is nonserious. We
need a plan that will work with only homo sapiens to
carry it out, and that means a plan that takes into account human
selfishness and shortsightedness. It means a plan that will appeal to
China and India and Brazil and the rest of the world. It means a plan
that will somehow reduce atmospheric carbon a lot even while most of us
sit around fat, dumb, and happy.
The only such plan I can think of is one that increases global R&D
spending on climate mitigation by, oh, 10x or so. Maybe 20x if it’s
feasible. This money would be spent on developing new sources of clean
energy and energy storage; reducing the price of current sources of
clean energy; figuring out ways to remove carbon from the atmosphere;
and pretty much anything else that seems remotely useful. The fruits of
this research would be turned over to the private sector for free, and
they would then compete to sell it all over the globe. This would harness human
selfishness instead of fighting it. It’s not guaranteed to work, but
unlike the GND and similar manifestos, at least it’s not guaranteed to
fail.
POSTSCRIPT: Just
to make something absolutely clear, I’m not in any way opposed to
taking additional steps to address climate change. In fact, I’m all in
favor of trying to scare the hell out of people about just how bad
climate change is likely to be. I think the goals of the GND are great.
I’m all in favor of ETS and CAFE and the Paris Accords. They don’t
accomplish a lot, but they accomplish something,
and every little bit helps. I just wouldn’t count on the public ever
supporting strong enough versions of this stuff to prevent a
catastrophic future.
¹This chart shows relative declines, but Europe’s emissions were far
lower than the US at the start and are still far lower today in absolute
terms. However, almost none of this has to do with policies aimed at
climate change, which are fairly recent. Europe’s per-capita emissions
have been lower all along because (a) the modern EU contains a lot of
fairly poor countries which have low GDPs and therefore low carbon
emissions, (b) even rich European countries generally have lower GDPs
than the US, and (c) automobile usage is lower thanks to big taxes on
gasoline. Those taxes, and the European devotion to small cars, were a
result of postwar policies designed to reduce gasoline use decades
before anyone had ever uttered the words climate change.