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George Monbiot, 19 July 2005 The G8 leaders refuse to accept that anything difficult needs to be done about climate change. One day we will look back on the effort to deny the effects of climate change as we now look back on the work of Trofim Lysenko. Lysenko was a Soviet agronomist who insisted that the entire canon of genetics was wrong. There was no limit to an organisms ability to adapt to changing environments. Cultivated correctly, crops could do anything the Soviet leadership wanted them to do. Wheat, for example, if grown in the right conditions, could be made to produce rye. Because he was able to mobilise enthusiasm among the peasants for collectivisation, and could present Stalin with a Soviet scientific programme, Lysenkos hogwash became state policy. He became director of the No one is yet being sent to the Guantánamo gulag for producing the wrong results. But the denial of climate science in the Cooneys work was augmented by Harlan Watson, the Perhaps most pertinently, the official policy of climate-change denial, like Lysenkoism, relies on a compliant press. Just as Pravda championed the disavowal of genetics, so the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Times, the Daily Mail and the Daily and Sunday Telegraphs champion the Bush teams denial of climate science. Like Pravda, they dismiss it without showing any sign that they have read or understood it. But climate change denial, like Lysenkoism, cannot last forever. Now, as the G8 communique shows, the White House is beginning to move on. Instead of denying that climate change is happening, it is denying that anything difficult needs to be done to prevent it. The other G8 leaders have gone along with this. Faced with the greatest crisis humanity has ever encountered, the most powerful men in the world have meekly resolved to promote better practice and to encourage companies to do better. The R-word is half-mentioned twice: they will improve regulatory
frameworks. This could mean anything: most of the G8 governments define better regulation as less regulation. Nowhere is there a clear statement that they will force anyone to do anything to stop destroying the conditions which sustain human life. Instead they have agreed to raise awareness, accelerate deployment of cleaner technologies and diversify our energy supply mix. There is nothing wrong with these objectives. But unless there is regulation to reduce the amount of fossil fuel we use, alternative technologies are a waste of time and money, for they will supplement rather than replace coal and oil and gas burning. What counts is not what we do but what we dont. Our success or failure in tackling climate change depends on just one thing: how much fossil fuel we leave in the ground. And leaving it in the ground wont happen without regulation. They agreed to support energy efficiency, which would be a good thing if it didnt rely on a market-led approach. Otherwise, they will cross their fingers and place their faith in a series of techno-fixes, some of which work, and some of which cause more problems than they solve. They will study the potential of clean coal, which so far remains an oxymoron, and accelerate the burial of carbon dioxide, which might or might not stay where its put. They will promote carbon offsets (you pay someone else to annul your sins by planting trees or building hydroelectric dams), which have so far been a disastrous failure. They will encourage the development of hydrogen fuel cells, which do not produce energy but use it, and the production of biofuels, which will set up a competition for arable land between cars and people, exacerbating the famines that climate change is likely to cause. Not bad for six months of negotiations. We cant blame only the Americans. While Bushs team has been as obstructive as possible, the Our problem is that, just as genetics was crushed by totalitarian communism, meaningful action on climate change has been prohibited by totalitarian capitalism. When I use this term I dont mean that the people who challenge it are rounded up and sent to break rocks in I dont know how long this system can last. But I did see something in
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