ANDREW GLIKSON. The criminal dimension of climate change-a new book.

We’re simply talking about the very life support system of this planet.”  (Professor Joachim Schellnhuber, Director of the Potsdam Institute of Climate Impacts)

The extreme rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) since the onset of the industrial age, reaching approximately 403 parts per million in 2017, and the corresponding rise in mean global temperature to +1.3 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperature, pose an existential risk for the future of civilization and nature. 

A new book titled “Unprecedented Crime: Climate Science Denial and Game Changers for Survival“, by Dr Peter Carter and Dr Elizabeth Woodworth, with a foreword by the leading climate scientist Professor James Hansen (https://www.amazon.com/Unprecedented-Crime-Climate-Changers-Survival/dp/0998694738/), outlines the criminality of those who actively promote the continuing emission of carbon gases into the atmosphere despite the scientific evidence, including the intensification of extreme weather events such as hurricanes, floods and fires around the world.

The book highlights the collusion of large part of the media with climate change denial and cover up, stating:

“There is no benign explanation for a full media blackout of a significant global development that was heralded by the United Nations Secretary-General. This blackout goes far beyond ignorance or negligence. It is a wilful obstruction of public knowledge of the extraordinary extent of global efforts to combat the greatest existential threat of all time by changing business-as-usual. We define this wilful, methodical blocking of vital survival information as an unprecedented crime against life on the planet.”

The book cites the US writer Tom Engelhardt:

“The fossil-fuel companies are guilty of the ultimate crime, because they are earning their ‘profits directly off melting the planet, knowing that their extremely profitable acts are destroying the very habitat, the very temperature range that for so long made life comfortable for humanity.’…  However, Big Carbon could never have been able to continue its polluting ways – long after the scientific community had reached consensus about the connection between fossil-fuel emissions, global warming, and climate change – without the assistance of the media.”

Following the presentation of definitive evidence of anthropogenic climate change, a plethora of websites has emerged, mostly reporting the views of non-scientists or scientists known to receive funding from the fossil fuel industry. These views, in breach of the basic laws of physics, ignore the peer–reviewed published climate and paleo-climate science, misrepresent observed atmosphere and ocean processes and trends, fabricate evidence and conduct personal attacks against climate scientists.

Examples abound:

  • Climate change deniers claim CO2 is not a factor driving global warming, contrary to the rise of CO2 by more than 40 percent and the laws of black body radiation of Stefan-Boltzmann, Planck and Kirchhoff (https://history.aip.org/climate/co2.htm
  • Where the average global temperature has been rising sharply since about 1975, a lower temperature rise rate pertained during 2000–2014 mainly due to (1) albedo increase from heavy sulphur aerosol emissions and (2) low sun spots, with high warming rates resuming in 2015. Climate change deniers claim this transient period represents a cessation of global warming.
  • Where the large Greenland and west Antarctic ice sheets have been melting at a rate of more than 500 cubic km per year, the cold ice melt water cooled water regions and resulted in transient extension of circum-Antarctic sea ice, claimed by climate change deniers to represent global cooling.

Virulent attacks on climate scientists followed, for example, as cited in the book: “A climate change denier who has argued that the “demonization of CO2 really differs little from the Nazi persecution of the Jews, the Soviet extermination of class enemies or ISIL slaughter of infidels.”

In Australia large parts of the conservative press have taken strong exception to the evidence of anthropogenic global warming, as reported in Robert Manne’s essay “Bad News” (https://www.quarterlyessay.com.au/)

The manifest paralysis of the political and media classes in the face of the climate impasse, evidenced by the failure of a succession of UN Framework Conventions on Climate Change to undertake meaningful steps to reduce CO2 emissions (since 2009: Copenhagen, Cancun, Doha, Durban, Warsaw, Paris) requires a search for alternative avenues to limit the deleterious consequences of continuing carbon emissions.

Traditionally, political and economic negotiations aim at a compromise. Unfortunately, no negotiation is possible with the basic laws of physics and chemistry and with processes in the atmosphere-ocean-cryosphere system.

Is there anything in international and national laws which can avert the ongoing carbon emissions? Do global and national legal systems offer any possibilities in this regard? In exploring potential restrictions on carbon emission, the following international and national laws and conventions are relevant:

  • Crimes against humanity, as defined by the Rome Statute of the international Criminal Court Explanatory Memorandum. Such crimes are particularly odious offences in that they constitute a serious attack on human dignity or grave humiliation or a degradation of one or more human beings. They are not isolated or sporadic events, but are part either of a government policy (although the perpetrators need not identify themselves with this policy) or of a wide practice of atrocities tolerated or condoned by a government or a de facto authority…”
  • United Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Part III Article 6: states, among other: “Every human being has the inherent right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life. When deprivation of life constitutes the crime of genocide, it is understood that nothing in this article shall authorize any State Party to the present Covenant to derogate in any way from any obligation assumed under the provisions of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
  • Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, 17 July 1998: Article 7 Crimes against humanity “Extermination” – includes the intentional infliction of conditions of life, inter alia the deprivation of access to food and medicine, calculated to bring about the destruction of part of a population.
  • Australian Commonwealth and State laws regarding air quality standards and prohibition of pollution:
  • Recently a successful challenge has been raised in the US in this regard, as in the statement by Professor James Hansen.

As stated by Robert Manne:

“Unless by some miracle almost every climate scientist is wrong, future generations will look upon ours with puzzlement and anger – as the people who might have prevented the Earth from becoming a habitat unfriendly to humans and other species but nonetheless failed to act” and “Our conscious destruction of a planet friendly to humans and other species is the most significant development in history”.

 The carbon-oxygen cycle of the atmosphere-ocean-land constitutes the lungs of the biosphere. The consequences of burning the vast carbon reserves buried in sediments can only result in a demise rivalling the five great mass extinctions of species in the history of the Earth. Survivors of the Sixth mass extinction of species may hold responsible those who promoted carbon emissions, turning a blind eye to the unfolding tragedy: the fossil fuel barons, the political classes and their media mouthpieces.

Andrew Glikson is an Earth and Paleoclimate scientist at the Australian National University.

Comments

5 responses to “ANDREW GLIKSON. The criminal dimension of climate change-a new book.”

  1. paul frijters Avatar
    paul frijters

    Our doom is nigh, hej? An increase in 1.3 degrees in 150 years is what, half the difference between Brussels and Paris? How those people in Belgium must be suffering, clamouring at the borders with the Netherlands to get away from the heat! And we face an existential threat because Paris might end up with the climate of Madrid in 100 years from now? Sure.

    1. Andrew Glikson Avatar
      Andrew Glikson

      For a perspective on the meaning of the average temperature rise of +1.3C above pre-industrial levels, which is actually +2C when account is taken of the transient mitigating effects of emitted sulfur aerosols, consider the transition from the last glacial to the Holocene was 4C to 5C occuring over some 4000 years.
      By contrast post-1750 (and in particular post-1950) climate change involved a change of near-2C is taking place during a century or two, an unprecedented rate in the history of the Earth atmosphere since about 56 million ears ago. . Refer to the paper “Cenozoic mean greenhouse gases and temperature changes with reference to the Anthropocene” http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.13342/abstract

  2. Pamela Rothfield Avatar
    Pamela Rothfield

    What I find most irksome and disappointing is the attitude held by many climate change deniers and even by some who accept that our climate is changing for the worse – that “Oh well, we just have to accept that humanity and the rest of life as we know it on Earth is just going to cease to exist. It’s a bit of a shame, but we can select a few ‘privileged’ people to fly off somewhere else and make a new life while the remaining billions of people on Earth can watch on and applaud.”

    It seems to me that people just don’t grasp the shockingly horrible reality that progressive climate change will mean for countless creatures, including homo sapiens. If only people were made fully aware of the ramifications of climate change perhaps we would really act to turn things around.

  3. Andrew Glikson Avatar
    Andrew Glikson

    It is hardly likely marine organisms or the dinosaurs could trigger a mass extinction of species, by contrast to creatures which mastered combustion and the splitting of the atom – like us.

  4. Rodney Edwin Lever Avatar
    Rodney Edwin Lever

    Every planet in the universe has a limited life span. In ours, the first creatures crawled from the oceans and established a happy, if brief, individual future within their own dominions. The dinasours appeared on land and enjoyed a pleasant, if occasionally irritable, activity over millions of years. Finally comes “man” and our own accommodation with the universe. Which of them was most likely to bring our own planet down?