Category Archives: Environmental politics

Environmental politics Politics

Weekend reading

* Two stories about how Britain has entirely failed on green industries:

1. From the Observer
The big six energy companies in Britain are investing on average only £30 per year from each customer in renewable energy projects. If this continues, the UK may miss its 2020 green targets by 50%.
2. The Times: According to The Sunday Times’s inaugural Green Rich List, Britain is home to only 10 of the world’s top 100 entrepreneurs in new industries such as wind energy, electric cars and clean coal.

*Victorian America: this piece from the New York Times, about former executives now working in low-level jobs made me think of tales from a century or so ago, when the great family downfall was a novelists’ and journalists’ staple. What happens when there’s no safety net.

* And Australia looks set to fail on carbon reduction – worth noting the the writer of this piece is a much-respected economics editor.

Environmental politics

Hard, but true, words

* Naomi Klein on the economic crisis:

Banking bailouts, for instance, are not illustrations of “Marxism” or “socialism”, as many have made out, but of “a new, cruder form of privatisation” in which vast sums of public wealth are being handed over to banks without the State having any say in what happens to it.

* And Melbourne is running out of water:

In Victoria, the Government is building the north-south pipeline to take water from Eildon for use in Melbourne. Eildon is down to 17 per cent capacity now and without flooding rains is likely to be empty when the multibillion-dollar project is completed.

Environmental politics

Toilet paper. No, this is serious…

Finally – someone tackles an issue I’ve been musing on for some time – toilet paper. With the West’s squeamishness about anything to do with lavatories not an easy one to take on, but I’ve wondered for years why ANY toilet paper should be made from freshly killed trees (as most of it in Britain still is).

But Greenpeace has explained just how much worse it is in America:

More than 98% of the toilet roll sold in America comes from virgin forests, said Hershkowitz. In Europe and Latin America, up to 40% of toilet paper comes from recycled products. Greenpeace this week launched a cut-out-and-keep ecological ranking of toilet paper products.

I really wonder about the politics of this; now in Britain that we’ve finally got rid of antique light bulbs, perhaps it is time to start a campaign to legislate to have all loo paper made from recycled paper?

This would not only save trees, but help to “close the market cycle” of paper recycling (and keep it close to home).

(An extensively research article in the Guardian indicates that the state of recycling is not nearly so bad as the rightwing papers have been screaming, but it is still clear that we have to build markets for recycled products, and you couldn’t get a more basic market than that.)

And once we’ve done that, then we can start on the ludicrous waste of resources that is the flush toilet…

Environmental politics

From green jobs to a complete Green vision

Notes from a public meeting held by the Green Party Trade Union group yesterday at Euston…

A Green New Deal – the Green Party was (as you might expect) in on the trend early, but since then pretty well everyone has jumped on the “green jobs” bandwagon (from the UN downwards). But, as Jean Lambert, London’s Green MEP said, the Green New Deal as published last year is not so much a final plan, but the start of a process.

With the world facing a “triple-crunch” – climate change, peak oil and the credit-fuelled financial crisis – she said the Party with its allies was working towards a new model economy – a “deal”, indeed a whole plan for the future of the planet, that was “international, intergenerational and inclusive”.

Some aspects of what were needed were clear, she said. The whole focus of trade policy had to change to focus on production methods and the outcomes for producers, rather than just prices to consumers. There had to be a recognition that we could not rely on the private sector to delivery core public sector services, from water to education. “Even Peter Mandelson is talking about a post office bank. That’s if you can still find a post office.” (Ironic really, since the meeting was just north of the Euston Road – an area that no longer has its own post office, since Crowndale Road closed last year.)

At the EU, Jean said, there was a lot of talk in terms of employment about the flexi-curity agenda – the idea being that workers trade flexibility for security, although she said that there tended to be a strong focus on the first and less on the second, but almost no attention to the third essential in this framework – a strong trade union involvement. (There also needed to be recognition of the need for a social security framework under the employment framework.)

In moving towards a low-carbon, environmentally friendly economy, an effective framework was particularly necessary for vulnerable industries such as coal and vehicle-manufacturing. Those workers needed a structured system of retraining, of subsidies to redirect production. “The rule is to make resources redundant, rather than people.”

Furthermore, Jean said, while the Labour government had been focusing on work as the be all and end all, it had ignored other important contributions to society. “Work is important, but it is not everything. Society doesn’t only rely on formal paid work.”

But still, it was essential to acknowledge that many people were now suffering a deep fear and insecurity about the future. “We have to give them hope that the economy and society can be managed better, that Britons can feel their life belongs to them, rather than their being tied on to a daily treadmill; that their life is grounded in family and community, rather than a cycle of money chasing non-existent money.”

Sian Jones, a member of the (and this really is a mouthful, but she doesn’t talk like this – was very down to earth) Trade Union Sustainable Development Advisory Committee Working Group, complimented Jean on the work she’d done in promoting the idea of having official trade union environmental reps. “We’ve got a network of organised, motivated people in most workplaces who also have a line into their communities,” and this was vital to delivering a sustainable economy, she said.

Most company’s “green policies were now top-down, management-driven, but real change would only come, and workforces would really only sign up, when they were given the chance to work together to deliver something they had been educated in and believed in.

It was easy to see a dichotomy between jobs and the environment, she said, acknowledging that some unions had supported the third runway for Heathrow. “Unions are debating how to work with the new Environment and Climate Change Department. The theme that underlies that is a ‘just transition’.”

Ann Elliot-Day, PCS (the main civil service union) communications officer, said her union, with some 300,000 members, had first mobilised around fair trade and ethical purchasing policies, and had gradually branched out into issues such as climate change, renewable energy, opposing nuclear power and opposing the third runway. She noted that last autumn the TUC had launched a campaign for green reps for trade unions, noting that she was pleased that in the same season the Green Party conference had supported the plan.

“The reason why this is important is that collective action in the workplace can lead to much larger changes than people can make as individuals. Well over 50% of Britain’s carbon emissions are workplace-related.”

She cited a project at the British Museum where the union organised a green fair attended by more than 200 staff, of whom 80 volunteered to be green reps. Flowing from that programme, there had been a 17% cut in the museum’s electricity bill. “These projects can have huge impacts; we just need more of them!”

Tony Kearns, CWU senior deputy general secretary, was definitely the angriest speaker – with some strong words for the government. “Hilary Benn told us how great green reps were, then his own government talked out the amendment [to set them up, moved by John McDonnell last year].”

He said: “That the value of society is judged by consumer spending is a terrible indictment of how people are supposed to live their lives.”
By the usual economic measures there had been nine recessions since the Second World War. “At the end of each of them the rich got richer and the poor got poorer.”

In Germany, the renewable energy sector provided half a million jobs. In Britain, depending on how you counted it, there were 7,000- 30,000. Meanwhile, elderly people were left with the impossible decision “shall we heat or shall we eat”, in inadequately insulated homes. “Instead of spending money on bankers, the government could spend it on insulation, to reduce fuel poverty, improve the economy and create jobs.”

Gordon Brown had said that 3m new homes would be needed in Britain by 2020, although many industry experts had said 5m. Even at the height of the boom, the private sector wasn’t managing to build more than 120,000 a year. “There is going to be a huge shortage of homes, and yet now construction workers are being laid off in their thousands. If the government invested in building homes there would be real jobs, real benefits to people’s lives.”

If, as was being warned, a major car plant was about to be closed, he suggested that these skilled workers and high technology could be turned instead to producing buses, to build up a proper public transport system.

Environmental politics

It’s still bad in the real world

It’s hard to drag your mind away from the latest flood of disasters in the world economy, but it’s worth remembering that the environmental disasters aren’t going away.

* A good piece in the Sunday Times sums up the dangerous state of the British bee: “In the bounteous days of teeming hedgerows and fields of clover, Britain had 25 kinds of bumble, all merrily gathering nectar and pollinating plants and trees. Three of these already have vanished, and seven more are in the government’s official Biodiversity Action Plan (Uk Bap) as priorities for salvation….Losses in the UK [of honeybees] currently are running at 30% a year — up from just 6% in 2003….Lord Rooker [in 2007], declared in the House of Lords that if things went on as they were, the honeybee in the UK would be extinct within 10 years. The situation since then has worsened, so at the best estimate the 10 years have shrunk to eight.”

* While Britain is killing its citizens in large numbers with filthy air: “More than 20 cities and conurbations were found to have dangerous levels of particulate matter between 2005-7.”

* And ocean acidity, particularly in the vital top layers, is swooping ever upward: “‘ocean acidification may render most regions chemically inhospitable to coral reefs by 2050.’ The group said that acidification could be controlled only by limiting future atmospheric levels of the gas. Other strategies, including “fertilizing” the oceans to encourage the growth of tiny marine plants that take up carbon dioxide, may actually make the problem worse in some regions, it said.

* And Australia – per capita a severe climate change criminal – is, in a rare case of natural justice, suffering badly from its early effects: “Chaos ruled in Melbourne on Friday after an electricity substation exploded, shutting down the city’s entire train service, trapping people in lifts, and blocking roads as traffic lights failed. Half a million homes and businesses were blacked out, and patients were turned away from hospitals. More than 20 people have died from the heat, mainly in Adelaide. Trees in Melbourne’s parks are dropping leaves to survive, and residents at one of the city’s nursing homes have started putting their clothes in the freezer.”

* And for a warning of the inexorable power of natural forces, there’s the news that malaria parasite is showing signs of resistance to the recently much developed, if ancient, “wonder drug” artemisinin.

Environmental politics

Getting back to basics

I thought this New York Times piece brought into layman’s terms the economic/environment conundrum:

Right now, it seems almost impossible to imagine ever spending more on things except, maybe, gasoline. And yet the prospect of less consumption fills us with dread. It’s not the having less part that is frightening — people are generally happy as long as everybody’s in the same boat. What’s frightening is the fear that our system can’t handle less, and it’s not as if there’s some other system out there shouting: “Try me! Try me!”

And if you want to take a longer view, maybe we’ve got to – somehow – abolish the whole judgement implied in the word “taste”, if you follow the view that the chase for taste drives consumerism.