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Countdown:
Humanity Has Only 100 Months to Save The Planet From Climate Change Tipping
Point.
Now
is the time to scream “Fire!” So writes Andrew Simms, the policy director
and head of the climate change program at the New Economics Foundation (NEF) –– a “think and do tank”
–– in an opinion editorial at the Guardian. Carbon Catalog has heard an even
less conservative five year estimate from experts we’ve interviewed (see GreenFuel’s Isaac Berzin).
On
the website onehundredmonths.com,
conceived by the NEF and others, we can see a second-by-second countdown of one
hundred months (8.3 years) until irreversible climate change sets in. While
personal carbon offsetting and lifestyle change can play a small role in saving
our planet from despair, Simms reasons that this is not enough. He outlines a
list of tactics we need to take today. There is no time for stalling.
According
to Simms, “in just 100 months’ time, if we are lucky, and based on a quite
conservative estimate, we could reach a tipping point for the beginnings of
runaway climate change. That said, among people working on global warming, there
are countless models, scenarios, and different iterations of all those models
and scenarios.”
Simms
rationale for 100 months is outlined in the Guardian story. “But, even just
before that point, there is still a one third chance of crossing the line,” he
warns. Here at Carbon Catalog
we are very concerned about climate change and do our best to help people
navigate through the carbon offsetting options.
But
voluntary carbon projects (like the offset projects we rate) are likely only to have an impact in
the far (not near) future (learn more here).
More pressing, says Simms, are the following steps:
·
Avoid
infrastructure that is fossil-fuel-dependent
(such as the construction of new airports, coal-fired power plants) that lock us
into patterns of future greenhouse gas emissions and radically reducing our
ability to make the short- to medium-term cuts.
·
Appeal to governments to stop defecting blame and responsibility:
“It is wildly unrealistic to think that individuals alone can effect a
comprehensive re-engineering of the [West’s] fossil-fuel-dependent energy,
food and transport systems. The government must lead.”
·
Governments should launch
a Green New Deal, similar to the one launched in the
UK
last week, taking inspiration from President Roosevelt’s famous 100-day
program implemented in the face of the dust bowls and depression.
·
Rein in reckless financial institutions
and use a range of fiscal tools, new measures and reforms to the tax system,
such as a windfall tax on oil companies.
·
Resources
should be invested in a massive environmental transformation program that
could insulate the economy from recession, and create countless new jobs.
·
Overhaul
a nation’s building stock, and tackle the city. First up, he says, remove the money of oil companies pouring into cities.
Re-list these companies’ resources as “unburnable.”
·
Instead
of using vast sums of public money to bail out banks (because they are
considered “too big to fail”), banks should be reduced in size
until they are small enough to fail without hurting anyone.
·
With
oil prices wobbling around $130, there is a huge amount of unearned profit waiting for a windfall tax (companies
made profits when it was $10 a barrel). Money raised would go towards a
long-overdue massive decarbonization of our energy system.
·
A
rolling program to overhaul heat-leaking buildings and homes
will massively cut emissions and tackle fuel poverty.
·
Weaning
agriculture off fossil-fuel dependency.
·
The
“one person, one car” on the roads, should be transformed to a variety of
clean reliable forms of public transport. This should be visible by the middle of our
100 months.
Simms
believes that if these steps are followed in the
UK
, the nation will be able to lead other western and developing countries. “But
it will also leave the people of
Britain
more secure in terms of the food and energy supplies,” he says. “and with a
more resilient economy capable of weathering whatever economic and environmental
shocks the world has to throw at us.”
If
Simms is right, we now have less than one hundred months. And the clock is
ticking. What are you going to do about it?
::The Guardian
::BBC
Posted by: http:www.carboncatalog.org

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