Burn zero: Difference between revisions
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Before we do anything, first we need to look what has come before. There have been many great movements which have started with good intentions | Before we do anything, first we need to look what has come before. There have been many great movements which have started with good intentions but have ultimately failed. | ||
=== Stage 1 === | === Stage 1 === |
Revision as of 11:22, 5 February 2022
Before we do anything, first we need to look what has come before. There have been many great movements which have started with good intentions but have ultimately failed.
Stage 1
Decorpratise corporates - a key reason for a lot of the unaccounted externalities of our economy is that corporates exist as natural people. There are already many alternatives in existence, co-operatives etc however they have not become the dominant institutions on earth as corporations have an unfair advantage, much the same as China having a police-state advantage over the west. Corporates are computers, machines unfeeling in the pursuit of profit, they are not governed by a hierarchy which tends to select people with narcissistic traits to lead them in a direction that does not take into account externalities which affect us all.
Ban lobbying - by instigating a law that states that direct sponsorship of political parties is illegal. Political parties can finance campaigns by the use of Democracy Vouchers which are tokens for funds which are evenly distributed by the state to whoever requests them.
Ban pro consumption advertising - #AdvertisingShitsInYourHead
Increase transparency - power corrupts, for anyone to hold power over another they need to commit to being 100% open, this means publically available bank accounts and open email messages.
Religious backing - world religions can make a climate offensive happen. Being good stewards of the Earth and mission work are a big piece of what they do, and planting trees is something even youth groups can do. Can’t fathom why they haven’t taken up this mission already. Local competition would drive a big turnout.
Meet Basic Needs - by transitioning away from carbon-based fuels in the future this will create a basic need gap for the most vulnerable. As such we need to protect people by establishing a firm social foundation—a social guarantee. We need to guarantee universal public healthcare, housing, education, transport, water, and energy and the internet so that everyone has access to the resources they need to live well. And as unnecessary industrial production slows down, we need to shorten the working week to share necessary labour more evenly and introduce a climate job guarantee to ensure that everyone has access to a decent livelihood—with a basic income for those who cannot work or who choose not to. This is the bread and butter of a just transition.
Commission a large electrified train system - which can take on board lorries and other smaller vehicles. So only the last mile is off rail.
Any government that has monetary sovereignty can fund it by issuing the national currency; think of quantitative easing, but this time for people and the planet. This is true for all high-income countries, although for EU countries it would have to be done in a coordinated fashion. The crucial thing is that to prevent any risk of inflation, we also have to reduce the purchasing power of the rich. And that brings us to the next key point.
Tax the rich. Throughout history a populist movement is often used to enact change. Historically this has often been manipulated by scape goating onto immigrants and marginal groups. The new marginal groups are the 1%, we need to tax the rich out of existence. As Thomas Piketty has pointed out (https://www.lemonde.fr/blog/piketty/2019/06/11/the-illusion-of-centrist-ecology/), cutting the purchasing power of the rich is the single most powerful way to reduce excess energy use and emissions. This may sound radical, but think about it: it is irrational—and dangerous—to continue supporting an over-consuming class in the middle of a climate emergency. We cannot allow them to appropriate energy so vastly beyond what anyone could reasonably need.
How can we do this? One approach would be to introduce a wealth tax. Make it tough enough that rich people will be incentivized to sell off assets that are surplus to actual requirements. We can also introduce a maximum income policy, such that anything over a certain threshold faces a 100% rate of tax. In addition to cutting excess consumption at the top, this approach will reduce inequality and eliminate the oligarchic power that pollutes our politics.
Stage 2[edit | edit source]
Burn Zero Carbon - follow the advice of 100 Nobel laureates and several thousand scientists calls for a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty to do just that: an international agreement to end fossil fuels on a fair and binding schedule. We don't need net zero (reliance on future technology to suck carbon out of the air) we need aim at burn zero. Nationalize the fossil fuel industry and the energy companies, bringing them under public control, just like any other essential service or utility. This will allow us to wind down fossil fuel production and use in line with science-based schedules, without having to constantly fight fossil capital and their propaganda. It also allows us to protect against price chaos, and ration energy to where it’s needed most, to keep essential services going. At the same time, we need to scale down less-necessary parts of the economy in order to reduce excess energy demand: SUVs, private jets, commercial air travel, industrial beef, fast fashion, advertising, planned obsolescence, the military-industrial complex and so on. We need to focus the economy on what is required for human well-being and ecological stability, rather than on corporate profits and elite consumption.
Eating meat license - eating meat is the third worse thing one can do as a consumer.
Contingency stage
One possibility for cooling the earth is to Inject Sulfur into Air. Injecting sulfur into the second atmospheric layer closest to Earth would reflect more sunlight back to space and offset greenhouse gas warming, according to Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California at San Diego.