2021/03/11

Fukushima communities are building a sustainable future | New Internationalist

Fukushima communities are building a sustainable future | New Internationalist





FUKUSHIMA COMMUNITIES ARE BUILDING A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
10 March 2021
Japan


Ten years on from the devastating nuclear disaster, citizens are working together to show that nuclear power and fossil fuels are not the only way. Tina Burrett visits the red zone.
The abandoned remains of a forklift overgrown with trees, next to a destroyed beachfront house in Futaba, Fukushima. Credit: C.E.J. Simons.

Stepping out of the train station Fukushima’s bustling city centre looks like any other in Japan. But once you travel beyond the city limits, the legacy of 2011’s nuclear disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station is quickly revealed. Driving along the highway toward the red zone, from which over 150,000 people were forced to evacuate, derelict buildings, blinking radiation monitors and fields lined with plastic bags full of contaminated soil are a sobering sight.

It is mostly the elderly who have returned to this area since evacuation orders were partially lifted, beginning in 2017 – young families fear it is not safe. ‘Ten years later, there are still so many ghost houses,’ laments one local woman. When the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) first commissioned Fukushima Daiichi in 1971 they promised nuclear jobs would improve local livelihoods. But the ten years since the meltdown, which was triggered by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and 10-metre tsunami, have been hard for local people. The number of evacuees living on low incomes has almost doubled, and those in non-regular work have grown by 60 per cent.

Despite these hardships Fukushima’s communities have been trying to build a brighter future for generations to come. Soon after the 2011disaster, local representatives declared ambitions to make Fukushima a zero emissions area by 2040, a policy at odds with the national government that remains beholden to the nuclear and fossil fuel industries. The prefecture is turning its contaminated land into massive renewable energy fields to generate employment as well as electricity.

In Iwaki, 50 kilometres from Fukushima Daiichi, the Ethical Energy Project, a non-profit created by local citizens, maintains a solar energy system ‘of the people, by the people, for the people.’ The Fukushima Airport Solar Power Project is similarly funded by local citizens and businesses. New ride-sharing programmes using electric vehicles provide zero-emission transport. Fukushima is also home to the Renewable Energy Research and Development Centre, a publicly funded institute researching wind, solar and geothermal technologies, that is bringing quality jobs to the region. The institute also educates visiting children about sustainable lifestyles.

Many locals have had to become citizen scientists. Unwilling to rely on government data, Takenori and Tomoko Kobayashi, who live on the edge of the exclusion zone, regularly test soil for radiation in what they call their ‘grandma and grandpa lab’. The couple want to know that it’s safe for their children and grandchildren, who left permanently after the disaster, to come and visit. In Minamisoma, local farmers are responding to consumer fears of food grown in contaminated soil by experimenting with hydroponics. Internationally acclaimed Iwaki-born chef Hagi Harutomo is helping destigmatize Fukushima produce by serving locally-grown vegetables at his famed restaurant, and even to former French President Francois Hollande.

Fukushima’s younger citizens are also being proactive. Students working with the Happy Road Net NPO are planting cherry trees along the highway running through the red zone and surrounding towns. Yumiko Nishimoto who started the project says, ‘I want people around the world to see that we won’t let the nuclear disaster beat us.’ Students have also travelled to Belarus to learn about the impact of the Chernobyl disaster and to share their experiences.
A new art mural by the Over Alls group of artists, part of a regeneration project in Futaba, Fukushima.Credit: C.E.J. Simons.

In Futaba, a town off limits until March 2020, art collective Over Alls are creating a series of murals to welcome back residents who are scheduled to return from 2022. Just outside the station, a graffiti-style painting shows Romeo and Juliet reaching out to each other. Juliet stands on a balcony fashioned as a graph showing the town’s declining radiation levels since 2011. Another piece features the ‘Mother of Futaba’, a local legend with red hair and a winning smile who formerly worked in the popular Penguin restaurant. Over Alls artists continue to produce work they hope will eventually attract tourists and revitalise the town. ‘We lost so much in the nuclear disaster,’ says one from the group. ‘If we can rebuild Futaba as an art town, we can change perceptions of the past.’ But for now this is a distant dream. On the day we visit Futaba we only encounter wild monkeys and the suspicious glances of TEPCO security guards. The power company’s derelict office – its floors covered in debris – stands in Futaba as a testament to the chaos its negligence inflicted on the region.

Fukushima’s residents have been at the heart of efforts to hold TEPCO and the Japanese state accountable for the nuclear catastrophe that upended their lives. Local citizens spearheaded the only criminal prosecution against TEPCO executives. Although their action was ultimately unsuccessful, over many years it kept pressure on the company and government as they sought to restart Japanese reactors in the face of strong public opposition. The hearings also revealed facts about the disaster that helped citizens pursuing ongoing civil actions. Most recently, in February 2021, the Tokyo High Court ruled that the Japanese government as well as TEPCO must pay compensation to people who were evacuated from Fukushima.

For Japan’s government, the Fukushima disaster is an international embarrassment, undermining the country’s reputation for technological prowess and national solidarity. To overcome the negative PR, Tokyo’s 2020 Olympic bid was billed as ‘the Recovery Games’, a moniker angering Fukushima residents still suffering from the 2011 triple emergency. Many anti-Olympics grassroots groups sprung up to oppose spending billions of yen on the games when tens of thousands remain displaced by the disaster. As one local Fukushima woman pointed out, ‘now isn’t the time to host the Olympics’.

The recovery narrative is essential to the Japanese government’s future energy strategy. Japan’s 2018 ‘Basic Energy Plan’ specifies that 22-24 per cent of its energy should come from renewables by 2030, along with 20-22 per cent from nuclear power and 56 per cent from fossil fuels. Prior to the Fukushima disaster around 30 per cent of the country’s electricity was generated by nuclear power. In February 2021, Japan’s energy minister Hiroshi Kajiyama declared nuclear energy ‘indispensable’ to meeting Japan’s energy needs and for reducing dependence on fossil fuels. But by turning tragedy into an opportunity to pursue more sustainable, safe and community-orientated living, Fukushima citizens are showing there is a better way to safeguard the future.

Tina Burrett is Associate Professor of Political Science at Sophia University, Tokyo. This article was funded by the Polden-Puckham Charitable Foundation.




HELP US PRODUCE MORE LIKE THIS

Patreon is a platform that enables us to offer more to our readership. With a new podcast, eBooks, tote bags and magazine subscriptions on offer, as well as early access to video and articles, we’re very excited about our Patreon! If you’re not on board yet then check it out here.

2021/03/10

미래를 향한 선택 - 화해의 여정 > 웹진 | 예수회 인권연대연구센터

미래를 향한 선택 - 화해의 여정 > 웹진 | 예수회 인권연대연구센터



[평화] 미래를 향한 선택 - 화해의 여정
김성한 121.♡.116.95
2021.03.10 15:31 63 0
LV.110%


- 짧은주소 : https://advocacy.jesuit.kr/bbs/?t=6g 주소복사



1. 르완다 학살

남아프리카공화국 케이프타운까지 가는 길은 멀었다. 1974년 스위스 로잔에서 열렸던 로잔세계복음화대회가 1989년 필리핀 마닐라에 이어서 21년 만에 2010년 케이프타운에서 열렸다. 케이프타운 시내에 위치한 대회장 가까운 곳에서 혹독했던 인종차별 정책인 아파르트헤이트가 남긴 흔적들을 발견하는 일을 어렵지 않았다. 법원이었던 건물 앞에는 유색인종을 위한 전용 벤치가 남아 있었다. 법원에서 다뤄지는 판결은 그 사람이 어느 인종에 포함되는지를 판결하는 일이었다. 그 판결에 따라 그 벤치에 앉아서 기다리던 누군가의 인생은 뒤바뀌었을 것이다.

로잔대회 셋 째날 아침이었다. 르완다에서 온 안투완 루타이시어(Antoine Rutayisire)가 사람들 앞에 섰다. 학생사역을 하던 그는 르완다 학살(Rwanda genocide)의 생존자였다. 1994년 4월부터 7월까지 르완다에서는 80만 명에서 100만 명이 죽는 학살이 벌어졌다. 상대적으로 짧은 시간에 너무 많은 사람들이 몽치, 도끼, 마체테(벌채용 칼)와 같은 일상적인 도구로 살해당했다. 안투완은 1994년에 일어난 르완다의 이야기와 함께 네 가지 교훈을 세계교회와 나누었다.1)


첫 번째로 그는 르완다의 교회가 자신들의 진짜 문제들을 다루지 않았다고 했다. 벨기에의 오랜 식민 통치를 경험한 르완다에는 전체 인구의 80%를 차지하는 후투, 15%를 차지하는 투치, 그리고 5% 정도의 트와, 세 부족이 있었다. 벨기에는 다른 식민국가와 같이 ‘분리해서 통치’하는 과정에서 소수 부족인 투치를 전면에 내세워 다수인 후투를 통치하였고 이 식민 통치 기간 동안 생긴 두 부족 간의 깊은 갈등은 1965년 벨기에가 르완다를 떠난 뒤에도 계속 남아 있었다. 1994년 이전에도 후투와 투치 사이에 크고 작은 충돌과 학살이 있었지만 교회는 이것을 신앙의 문제로 직면하지 않았다.

두 번째로 신자들은 신앙고백과 함께 필수 성경 구절을 암송하는 단기간의 교리 교육을 마치면 세례를 받고 교회의 멤버가 되었다. 하지만 문제가 생기거나 갈등이 발생할 경우 사람들은 자신들에게 익숙한 르완다의 전통적인 부족 중심의 세계관으로 돌아서곤 했다. 1994년 당시 르완다 인구의 90%가 그리스도교인 (가톨릭 아니면 개신교)이었다.

세 번째로 안투완은 선교 주체들 간의 갈등을 언급했다. 교회는 성장했고 복음은 널리 전파되는 것 같았지만 르완다의 교회들은 서로 일치되거나 서로 사랑하기 보다는 경쟁하며 때로는 폭력을 수반한 충돌을 일으키기도 했다. 놀랍게도 르완다는 1970년대까지 계속 되었던 동아프리카 개신교 대부흥 운동의 핵심 지역 중 하나였다. 네 번째로 국가 권력과 깊이 연합한 교회를 언급했다. 벨기에의 식민 통치기간동안 가톨릭교회는 식민지 통치의 주된 협력자였으며 식민 통치가 끝난 뒤에도 교회는 자신들의 과거로 인해 현실에 대한 예언자적인 목소리를 낼 수 없었다고 했다.

종합하자면, 르완다 대학살의 가해자와 피해자는 후투와 투치이기도 했지만, 또한 대부분은 그리스도인이었다. 이것이 안투완의 이야기에서 가장 충격적인 부분이었다. 이 끔찍한 일에 대한 많은 연구가 진행되고 있지만, 우리가 꼭 물어야 할 질문은 ‘교회가 학살과 관련해서 어떤 역할을 했는가?’이다.

안투완 루타이시어(Antoine Rutayisire)의 강의 영상

르완다 학살을 연구한 롱맨(Longman)은 르완다의 교회와 국가 모두에게 근본적인 내부개혁과 그들이 맺어온 역사적인 관계를 변혁시켜야 한다는 압력을 받고 있었으며, 두 기관 모두 ‘대중적 인기를 다시 얻기 위한 수단으로 인종에 대한 논의’를 이용했다고 설명한다. 롱맨은 이 발전 과정이 1994년에 일어난 대량 학살에서 교회가 담당했던 후원자 역할이라고 주장한다. “교회는 ‘대량 학살의 계획의 중심’에 있지는 않았어도 ‘권위에 순종하라고 격려하였고 인종 차별이 그리스도교의 가르침과 일치하는 듯 만들어서’ 대량 학살을 도왔다”는 것이다.2) 그러나 안타깝게도 롱맨의 주장과 달리 실제로 많은 신부들과 목사들이 학살에 직접 가담했다는 기록들이 많이 남아있다. 그들은 단지 후견인이 아니었으며 적극적으로 학살에 참여했다.3)


2. 한국전쟁과 그리스도교

르완다에서 벌어진 이 끔찍한 학살의 이야기는 우리와는 아무 상관이 없을까? 안투완이 제시하고 있는 네 가지 문제를 우리 교회의 상황으로 가져온다면 우리는 어떻게 답할 수 있을까? 한국전쟁에 대한 공식적인 통계에 따르면 남북한의 군인 사망자의 합이 약 44만 명, 민간인 사망자의 합이 약 65만 명으로 민간인 사망자가 군인 사망자보다 훨씬 많다. 그리고 광범위한 민간인의 희생과 피해의 대부분은 무차별적인 폭격과 국가권력과 그 수족역할을 했던 좌우익에 의한 학살의 결과였다.4) 박해와 순교자의 이야기만 주로 다루는 교회에서는 숨겨진 이야기들이다. 더 나아가서 전쟁기간 중 교회의 역할과 책임을 묻는 것은 어려운 질문이다. 물론 교회는 순교자들로만 채워지지 않았다는 것도 사실이다. 그리고 무엇보다 70년 동안이나 전쟁이 끝나지 않고 계속되는 상황에서, 전쟁 이후의 미래에 대해서 무엇을 준비하고 있는가에 대해서 우리는 고민해야 한다. 그러나 안타깝게도 분단과 전쟁의 트라우마에 사로잡힌 교회는 복음의 능력으로 온전히 치유되지 못한 것 같다.

한국전쟁기 학살 사건의 진상을 규명하기 위해 구성 된 진실화해위원회에서 활동했던 김동춘 교수는 “화해가 중요한 국가적 쟁점이 되었는데도 한국의 대표적인 종교단체나 종교 지도자들은 이 문제에 거의 개입하지 못했다...한국 기독교는 강한 반공주의를 견지하고 있었기 때문에 화해보다는 적대와 증오의 종교에 가까웠다. 공산주의에 피해를 본 경험이 강하게 드리워서 그런지 대체로 군경 학살에 대해 무관심했고 화해에 대한 입장이나 철학 자체가 없었다”라고 회고한다.5) 적대와 증오로는 오늘의 현실을 바꿀 수 없으며, 미래도 주어지지 않는다는 것을 우리는 이미 알고 있다.

3. 화해의 여정을 위해서



다시 케이프타운으로 돌아가 보자. 1994년 5월 르완다에서 학살이 계속되고 있는 동안 남아프리카공화국은 모든 인종이 참여하는 최초의 총선을 치르게 되고 27년 동안 정치범으로 수감 생활을 한 넬슨 만델라가 승리한다. 오랜 기간 가장 정교한 방식으로 인종분리 정책을 시행해왔던 남아공의 미래는 불분명했다. 그러나 만델라가 이끄는 남아프리카공화국의 선택은 아파르트헤이트 기간 동안 일어난 국가 폭력과 테러의 진실을 밝히고 화해하는 것이었다. 이를 위해 진실과 화해 위원회(Truth and Reconciliation Commission)를 꾸리고 과거를 다루게 된다.

더 놀라운 일은 만델라가 진실을 밝히고 화해를 이루는 어려운 과업을 법률가나 정치인이 아닌 성공회 대주교였던 데스몬드 투투(Desmond Tutu)에게 맡겼다는 것이다. 바오로는 코린토인들에게 보내는 둘째 편지 5장에서 하느님이 그리스도를 통해 우리와 화해하셨고, 우리에게 ‘화해의 임무’와 ‘화해의 이치’를 맡겼다고 한다.


지금 우리의 교회는 깨어지고 분열 된 세상에서 정의와 평화를 이루어 낼 수 있는 역량을 갖추고 있는가? 70년 넘게 계속되는 전쟁이 끝난다하더라도 교회가 화해의 공동체로 나설 수 있을까?

존 폴 레더락은 시편 85편을 사용하여 화해를 진실, 자비, 정의, 평화가 함께 있으며 그 모두가 하나로 드러나는 자리라고 설명한다.6) 진실 없는 자비와 정의가 실현되지 않는 평화는 화해가 이루어지지 않은 상태이며 반대로 자비 없는 진실과 평화를 위한 수고 없는 정의의 구현도 온전하지 못한 상태라는 것이다. 그의 말대로라면 하느님께서 우리에게 맡기신 화해의 임무는 능동적이며 적극적인 실천을 요구한다.

거듭 말하지만, 그리스도 안에서 새로운 존재가 된 이들은 적대와 증오의 임무를 받지 않았다. 그들에게 주어진 새로운 임무는 화해를 이루는 사람들이 되는 것이다. 그리고 지금 이곳에서부터 우리가 화해의 여정을 시작한다면 교회와 세상은 지금과는 다른 모습이 될 것이다.
-------------------

1. 안투완의 이야기는 ‘상처입은 민족들, 상처입은 치유자들, Wounded Nations, Wounded Healers’라는 제목으로 다음의 링크에서 직접 들을 수 있다. 나는 안투완의 이야기에 내 나름대로의 해석과 의견을 덧붙였다. https://www.lausanne.org/content/reconciliation-gospel-of-reconciliation-rwanda?_sfm_wpcf-groupings=Session+Videos&_sfm_wpcf-select-gathering=2010+Cape+Town&sf_paged=2

2. Longman, T. 『Christianity and Genocide in Rwanda』 (Cambridge University Press, 2010), 28. Anthony Court, “The Christian Churches, the State, and Genocide in Rwanda,” 『Missionalia』 44:1 (2016) 에서 재인용.

3. 필립 고레비지/강미경 옮김,『일 우리 가족이 죽게 될 거라는 걸, 제발 전해주세요! -아프리카의 슬픈 역사, 르완다 대학살』 (갈라파고스, 2011).

4. 박찬승 지음, 『마을로간 한국전쟁-한국전쟁기 마을에서 벌어진 작은 전쟁들』 (돌베개, 2010).

5. 김동춘 지음, 『이것은 기억과의 전쟁이다-한국전쟁과 학살, 그 진실을 찾아서』 (사계절, 2013), 191-12.

 

6. 존 폴 레더락/유선금화해를 향한 여정』 (KAP, 2010)

 


 

김성한 (메노나이트 중앙위원회 동북아 대표)

메노나이트중앙위원회(MCC)에서 평화교육가이자 동북아시아 지역 대표로 일하고 있다.

   

History of Korean Quakers By Bo-Kyom Jin

History of Korean Quakers By Bo-Kyom Jin

1. History of Korean Quakers

After the Korean War, some British and American Quakers came to Korea for rehabilitation programs. After the overseas workers had left Korea, some of the Korean assistants of the programs held the first Quaker Meeting in 1958 and some American Friends who worked at the international Cooperation Administration in Seoul supported them. Meeting began with silent worship for thirty minutes, and about an hour was given for study and fellowship.

FWCC encouraged Seoul Friends to build relationship with Japan Yearly Meeting or with Honolulu MM and two of the Koreans became Quakers whose membership belonged to Honolulu Meeting in 1958. Historically, Japan and Korea have had a difficult relationship since Korea was colonized and devastated by Japan. So it was difficult for us to intervisit for some time. The same year, AFSC energetically tried to bring some Koreans to the seminars and work camps in Japan and Korean Friends began to participate in the program. As the result of their visits, correspondence with Japanese Friends began taking place. In 1961, FWCC began sponsoring some visitors and Friends in residence in Korea and Seoul Friends requested a direct and official relationship with FWCC. The Meeting then had about thirty regular attenders and study programs were actively carried out and FWCC helped strengthen its links with overseas Friends.

In 1964, with the help of overseas Friends, a meeting place for the Seoul Friends was purchased after having had to change places of worship ten times in 6 years.“Seoul Friends Meeting Monthly Newsletter” was published in 1966. The Meeting decided to take up the leper village in Tandong as its main service project. The visiting Friends from Japan, USA, Australia and England, have strengthened us very much. Every Sunday, Bible study was led by Sok Hon Ham, who was a widely recognized spiritual leader in Korea.

In 1967, Seoul Meeting became a Monthly Meeting under the care of the FWCC. The visit of the Chairperson of FWCC, Douglas Steere and his wife Dorothy in 1967 and his public lecture at the YMCA with about one hundred people in the audience meant a great deal in Quaker outreach. At the same year, Sok Hon Ham left Korea for the USA to attend the Greensboro Gathering and the tenth triennial meeting of FWCC.

After the meeting, he attended the Pacific Yearly Meeting, studied at Pendle Hill and visited many Friends Meetings and Friends in the United States and Japan. International Quaker contacts such as work camps, travel and study abroad(at Pendle Hill or at Woodbrooke in England), participation in Quaker conferences, an inter-visitation program with Japanese Quakers, and numerous visiting friends contributed greatly to nurturing Korean Friends during the 1970s and 1980s and are still an enriching experience to us.

In 1980, SMM was active having a study group, outreach activities and raised a voice of conscience under the dictatorship of military government. Under the leadership of Sok Hon Ham, Seoul MM flourished with members and attenders at its height numbering close to fifty. In 1988, a second floor was added to the meetinghouse to meet the demand of the growing memberships. In 1990s, Seoul MM went through a dark period after the demise of Sok Hon Ham. Fortunately, since 2000, Seoul MM has revived some of its vitality.

2. State of the Meeting

Over the past year our number of members has decreased from 20 to 10. Some of the attenders are Americans who are married to Koreans In the past few years, a worshipping group began to meet regularly and more than 10 F/friends continues to gather every week in Daejon (a city 2 hours far from Seoul) They have established a vibrant, worshipping and studying community. We used to have a retreat annually but there were no retreats in 2007/8 because of the absence of initiatives or the decrease of members. Vocal ministries are rare in Seoul MM and sometimes I feel eager for vocal ministries in my Meeting. In addition, the financial situation of SMM has gotten worse mainly as monthly donations decreased.

Since 2007, AVP programs have been introduced by a Korean Friend (Jonghee Lee) and co-facilitated by her and German Friends (including Ute Caspers). Most of the participants were NGO activists. A Direct Education workshop facilitated by George Leakey from the USA was also held in Seoul last year. We are planning a Korea version of Faith and Practice. I know you have made your own Faith and Practice and hope that Australian Friends will give some useful advice to us.
Last year we had quarterly gatherings named Family gatherings. The intention is for us to invite our family members who are not Quakers and sing together and share food and fellowship. We have an annual gathering (business meeting and fellowship)

3. Committee activities

We have Peace Service committee, Learning committee, Outreach committee, library and website committee, Facilities care committee, Finance committee. Our committees are not fully functioning partly due to shortage of manpower but we are thankful that we could maintain this Meeting and carried out some service activities.

From the beginning of the Korean Quaker history, service work was emphasized. As a first step, medicines were supplied to two Tuberculosis patients beginning in 1961 for two years. Work camps for orphans and the blind, In 1964, a house for leper patients was built. Emergency food was supplied in 1960s. In 2003, the
Meeting participated in an anti Iraq War demonstration and actively raised funds to help anti Iraq War activists’ organizations. The meeting now supports Foreign Migrant Workers Center , Ssi-Al Women’s Center, and the Anti-Mine Association. Since the Korean War, landmines that were buried during the war have become a threat to civilians but those victims haven’t been cared enough by Korean government.

Our program consists of Business Meeting every 1st Sunday; George Fox Journal reading 2nd Sunday; Pendle Hill pamphlet discussion group every 3rd Sunday; Bible reading group every 4th Sunday.

4. Children in the Meeting

Child care issues emerged again during the 2008 annual meeting. At present, a few children attend the Meeting irregularly and SMM is going to assign F/fs to take care of them during the worship in case children come.

5. International Contacts

Sister Meetings : 
Canberra/Australia, 
Kapiti/ New Zealand, 
JYM Hosted 2005 AWPS Section Gathering.

Korean Friends have attended international Friends gatherings including Bhopal, India gathering and Auckland and Dublin Triennials.

Epilogue :In December 2008, Seoul Friends had their annual meeting to review the past year and to think about and plan 2009. We are thankful that we could maintain this tiny meeting and that our worshiping group is getting more active. 

The Folly of Mann | The Breakthrough Institute Mann trots out the tired old trope that we are a “nuclear front group.”

The Folly of Mann | The Breakthrough Institute

The Folly of Mann
You can't defend the truth with lies
Jan 27, 2021
I’ve never met Michael Mann, corresponded with him, or written anything about him. Nor have I ever had any particular beef with the hockey stick graph or his work as a scientist. But a few months after I signed up for Twitter in 2014, I discovered that he had blocked me. A few years after that, I learned that he had alleged in a 2016 book that Breakthrough was funded by fossil fuel interests.

Mann’s accusation about our funding is false. The entirety of the claim refers to a single small grant we received in 2014 from the George and Cynthia Mitchell Foundation, a charitable foundation that, like many other prominent environmental philanthropies, has an endowment that traces back to a fossil fuel fortune.

The purpose of the grant was to host a conference about the innovation lessons that clean energy advocates might draw from successful federal investments to develop hydraulic fracturing technologies. We hosted federal scientists from national laboratories, engineers who had worked on the technology for private industry, and leading innovation scholars from around the world to spend two days carefully working through the history of federal programs that had supported the development of fracking technologies — demonstration programs, tax credits, regulations, and public-private partnerships between the Department of Energy and the natural gas industry. The report from the conference is publicly available and is a treasure trove of insights for anyone interested in how government can support innovation to accelerate the clean energy transition.

Perhaps, Mann simply didn’t do his homework on that one. But it turned out that Mann’s 2016 book was chock-full of further falsehoods and misrepresentations of our work, which he has continued to repeat, including in a new book published earlier this month.

Mann claims that we are free-market libertarians opposed to renewable energy. In fact, we have supported far-reaching public investment in renewable energy since our founding and have long argued that scaling low carbon technologies consistent with mitigating climate change would require sustained and substantial public support. He claims we oppose energy efficiency and a tax on carbon. In reality, we have long supported both, although we have also pointed to the limitations of those efforts as climate mitigation policies. He claims that we promote geoengineering as an alternative to mitigating climate change, a claim that is patently false. Mann knows these are all demonstrably false claims. We have pointed them out publicly for years and my colleagues Alex Trembath, Zeke Hausfather, and I wrote him earlier this month detailing falsehoods in his latest book. And yet he continues to make them.

An Abused Scientist Becomes an Abuser
Anyone even a little bit familiar with Mann’s personal history will appreciate the irony in his deliberate misrepresentations of our work. Mann has himself been the target of slanderous and defamatory attacks from actual opponents of climate action. He figured prominently in the “Climategate” hack; has been investigated by the former Republican Attorney General of the State of Virginia, Ken Cuccineli, and by Senator James Inhofe; and has sued the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the Frontier Center for Public Policy, and the National Review for libel.

One might think that having been on the receiving end of this sort of thing, Mann would not want to traffic in mistruths and disinformation himself. All the more so as a scientist who has risen to prominence in no small part as a leading tribune of the claims that climate science makes upon policy. One need not believe that scientists should abstain from politics to think that how they engage in politics and public discourse matters.

I wouldn’t claim to know what exactly goes on inside Mann’s head, why he thinks it’s ok to make such claims, or why he has singled out Breakthrough. But his own writing and public persona at least suggest some answers.

Almost everything Mann has written for popular audiences in recent years has been wrapped up in personal biography. Climategate and, most especially, the Cucinelli investigation, made Mann a cause celebre. Since then, Mann has positioned himself quite explicitly as the personification of climate science under attack, a victim of an organized campaign not only to smear his personal reputation but to undermine truth, democracy, and human survival.

Some of this is true. Ideological opponents of climate action, some underwritten to varying degrees by fossil fuel interests, did seize upon correspondence revealed in the Climategate hack to falsely suggest that the entire climate science enterprise was fraudulent. Mann was a major focus of those efforts, and of subsequent investigations, because his hockey stick graph had featured prominently in climate advocacy efforts, most especially Al Gore’s Inconvenient Truth.

Michael Mann did not deserve these assaults on his work or his integrity. And I can understand why, having been subject to them, he would be angry and prone to see many other things through those experiences. But Mann goes well beyond that, basically reducing the entirety of the struggle to address climate change globally to his personal history. For Mann, climate change is a Manichean struggle between greedheaded corporations (and the craven shills and right-wing ideologues they underwrite) and heroic climate scientists fighting to save humanity from ecological catastrophe, the latter personified by Michael Mann.

Once you have convinced yourself that all climate politics can be reduced, basically, to one’s personal history and beliefs, it is just a short leap to conclude that all dissent from one’s views is an attack upon both one’s’ person and the planet. Here, notably, Mann’s primary targets are not actually those who question the basic relationship between greenhouse gas emissions and climate change but rather those who diverge from standard green framings of the problem and its solutions. Hence the title of his book, “The New Climate War,” refers not to battles over questions such as cloud behavior or climate sensitivity or methane feedbacks, but what to do about the problem, technologically and politically.

This is not accidental. Mann has, in recent years, become the patron saint of the most vocal and ideological climate advocates, those who see the world’s continuing dependence on fossil fuels as, at bottom, a gigantic conspiracy by the fossil fuel industry. James Hansen, whose Congressional testimony in the late 1980s put the issue on the map and who, as a government scientist, was repeatedly muzzled by Republican administrations, was once similarly exalted by many climate activists. But Hansen has always carried his status as an eco-celebrity uncomfortably, and his more recent criticisms of carbon trading and renewable energy and his advocacy of nuclear energy have made him an unreliable totem

Mann, by contrast, is much more reliable ideologically and can be counted upon to conflate climate science with green technological and policy preferences and to wrap it all up in a sweeping narrative inseparable from his personal history. Doing so has served Mann well, establishing him as the go-to climate scientist for many of the big green NGOs, particularly those on the environmental Left. And it has served the interests of the most dogmatic wing of the climate advocacy community, who seek to delegitimize as climate denial any challenge to the claim that addressing climate change requires expansive government regulation, global governance regimes, and a rapid transition of the global energy economy to one powered exclusively by renewable energy.

That’s where we come in.

Green Ideology Versus Green Identity

The effort to reduce all climate politics to a binary conflict between green defenders of truth and science and corrupt denialists is part ideological and part tribal, the former less coherent than the latter.

Indeed, the ideological claims that contemporary greens have made upon the issue have actually evolved quite a bit in the 15 years since Breakthrough’s founding, often in ways that our work has anticipated. Back then, we were savaged for suggesting that the world was not going to tax or regulate its way to a low carbon future. Today, most climate advocates broadly agree, having soured on climate policy that centered on taxing or trading carbon as “green neoliberalism.”

And while a multi-trillion dollar Green New Deal is unlikely to materialize in place of more traditional demands for carbon pricing or regulation, the basic framework – direct public investments in low-carbon infrastructure and technology focused around job creation and economic opportunity, owes far more to Breakthrough’s work over the last two decades than anything produced by either the billion-dollar environmental NGO community or the economic, public policy, or environmental studies programs of the nation’s elite universities.

Mann trots out the tired old trope that we are a “nuclear front group.” For the record, we have never taken any funding from the nuclear industry. But we were the first well-known environmental NGO to come out strongly in favor of nuclear energy as a critical climate mitigation technology a decade ago. Today, that view has gained grudging acknowledgment even in many environmental circles. The Union of Concerned Scientists, for instance, has acknowledged that closing nuclear plants is a bad idea. A federal low carbon electricity standard inclusive of nuclear energy now appears to be the most plausible federal vehicle to drive deep decarbonization of the power sector.

Even environmental attitudes towards natural gas, which has in recent years become public enemy #1, has been less consistent than most acknowledge. The environmental community was broadly supportive of natural gas before it was against it. The Sierra Club alone took $28 million from the industry. Much of the mainstream movement counted on gas to support the transition to renewable energy. Even Bill McKibbon as recently as 2010 touted natural gas as a bridge fuel.

If there were any doubt that Mann’s commitments and claims are mostly about his tribal political identity, not any sort of principled defense of science, the fact that he has chosen to smear us based on a $10,000 grant from a foundation several decades removed from the industry while entirely ignoring the tens of millions of dollars that have flowed into the environmental community directly from the oil and gas industry ought to put that question to rest.

Indeed, it’s not even clear that Mann has actually bothered to read most of the sources he cites for his claims about Breakthrough. The footnote about our views on geoengineering leads to a guest essay we posted on our website in 2013 by an unaffiliated academic, consistent with our long-standing commitment to hosting open-minded debates around geoengineering and other contested environmental questions.

As evidence of our bad faith opposition to climate action, Mann has linked at various times to an old Joe Romm blog post attacking us for an analysis we produced during the Waxman-Markey debate demonstrating that the cap-and-trade program it proposed would allow so many international offsets that emissions under the cap could functionally rise for decades.

As it happened, US emissions have remained well below the proposed Waxman-Markey cap as we suggested they would. Indeed, insofar as there was bad faith on anyone’s part, it was Romm’s, the long-time voice of the Center for American Progress on all things climate, who had conveniently reversed his view about offsets, which he had for years panned as “rip-offsets,” when it became clear that the Democratic climate proposal was going to be up to its ears in them.

I could go on. But the broader point is that Mann hasn’t checked his sources because he simply doesn’t care. What he is really defending is affective environmental identity, not science. In that role, his environmental audience is going to take his word for it. Everybody in that bubble knows who is on which team and anyone criticizing environmental organizations, or for that matter icons like Mann, is clearly not on the right one. Among the tribe, scientists literally speak for the truth, even when they say things that are demonstrably false, and activists speak for the people, even when they make demands that most of the public opposes.

Mann knows that few journalists, scientists, or experts will call him on any of it, because, mostly, they are of the tribe and even those who are not won’t dare to cross it. The journal Science, to take one particularly egregious example, handed its review over to a climate advocate who works for the Union of Concerned Scientists. What followed, suffice to say, was not a careful examination of Mann’s claims or the strengths and weaknesses of his argument.

Losing the Last War
Many, of course, will excuse Mann’s misrepresentations as the cost of war. But that presumes that Mann and his coreligionists are actually winning it. In fact, over the 12 years since Mann became a public figure and dedicated himself to winning the climate war, there has been little change in the number of Americans telling pollsters that they are concerned about climate change, that its effects have already begun, or that scientists agree that it is happening.

According to Gallup, in early 2019 - at the end of the decade long economic expansion after the Great Recession, and after four years of “thermostatic response” to Donald Trump’s climate denial - 44% of Americans reported being very concerned about climate change versus 41% at the end of the last major economic expansion and Republican administration in 2007. 59% of Americans believed global warming’s effects had already begun, versus 60% in 2007. 35% said news about global warming was greatly exaggerated, versus 33% in 2007. 65% said that most scientists believed that global warming is occurring, exactly the same share as in 2006 and 2008 (Gallup didn’t ask the question in 2007).

Indeed, the only significant change that occurred over that period with regard to public understanding of climate change was that it became intensely polarized. The gap between Democratic voters and Republican voters on the issue grew dramatically.

The White House, meanwhile, has been occupied for the last four years by an unapologetic climate denier. All of this during a period when what little funding had ever existed for outright climate denial almost entirely disappeared and climate denial, such as it is, was effectively de-platformed in even major conservative outlets like the Wall Street Journal.

Once the actual record of the last decade comes into focus, the abject failure of those who would prosecute a climate war becomes clear. Climate action has not required vanquishing, once and for all, climate denial. Insofar as the US and the world have made progress on climate change, it has been through what Breakthrough has called quiet climate policy — targeted policies by governments to support technological innovation and low-carbon infrastructure to make clean energy cheap. Just last month, dozens of Republican members of Congress overwhelmingly voted for the most significant federal investment in low-carbon innovation and infrastructure in US history, even as Mann was preparing to launch a new book insisting that it is all just a new and more insidious form of climate denial.

By contrast, efforts to frame the entirety of the issue as an epic battle to defend truth and science against climate deniers have not led to a great awakening among the American public. Rather, they have aligned attitudes about climate change even more firmly with other political and ideological commitments that are more strongly held and less likely to yield to evidence, debate, or cross-partisan engagement. As a result, the deniers have not been banished. They have literally been elevated to high office.

Mann’s attacks upon “false solutions,” which include everything from nuclear energy to carbon capture to adaptation to geoengineering are not, as he suggests, about moving beyond the phony debate about the reality of anthropogenic climate change but rather its opposite, an effort to reimpose that debate upon framings, technologies, policies, and political possibilities that might disrupt it. They are not actually in service of the cause of progress on climate change. A decade of prosecuting the climate war has achieved nothing other than raising the ideological stakes associated with the issue, making the possibility of concerted federal climate action even less plausible than it was when he started.

Over the last decade, Mann has now published what is essentially the same book three times, once, literally, in cartoon form. What the ritualized incantations of his personal history and its political meaning actually serve is to enforce ideological discipline within the Left/environmental bubble that pays attention to him, to warn his disciples away from impure thoughts, and, perhaps most importantly, to keep himself at the center of it all.

Climate Scientist Michael Mann: ‘We’re Going to Need Every Tool We Have’ - The Allegheny Front

Climate Scientist Michael Mann: ‘We’re Going to Need Every Tool We Have’ - The Allegheny Front

Michael Mann, professor of atmospheric science at Penn State. Patrick Mansell / Penn State

CLIMATE SCIENTIST MICHAEL MANN: ‘WE’RE GOING TO NEED EVERY TOOL WE HAVE’
KRISTINE ALLENJANUARY 22, 2021
CLIMATE CHANGEENERGY

Michael E. Mann is recognized around the world as a leading expert on climate change. He’s a distinguished professor of atmospheric science at Penn State and director of the Penn State Earth System Science Center. His latest book is “The New Climate War: The Fight to Take Back Our Planet.”

WPSU’s Kristine Allen talks with Mann about tactics used by climate change deniers, what needs to be done about the climate crisis, and why he’s optimistic about tackling climate change.
LISTEN to their conversationAudio Player



00:00

00:00
Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume.


ALLEN: What is what you call the new climate war as opposed to the old climate war?

MANN: Well, the old climate war, which we have been fighting for decades, is the industry-funded effort to discredit the science of climate change by fossil fuel interests, and those doing their bidding who don’t want to see us transition off fossil fuels to renewable energy. You know, the science of climate change has been inconvenient to those special interests, and they have used their tremendous power and influence to undermine the public understanding and faith in the science of human caused climate change.

Over the last several years, the impacts of climate change have simply become so profound, so obvious to the person on the street, that it just isn’t credible to deny them anymore. And so what these forces of inaction — I call them “inactivists” in the book — have done, they haven’t given up their war on climate action. But they’re changing their tactics, moving away from outright denialism to a more insidious array of tactics that are nonetheless aimed at blocking efforts to transition off of the burning of fossil fuels.

And that consists of efforts to divide the climate advocacy community to get them arguing with each other so that they don’t present a united front, efforts to deflect attention from the needed systemic solutions, the needed policy changes, to individual behavior, as if it’s simply about individuals changing their own lifestyle.

ALLEN: And climate activists would possibly buy into that a bit, because, you know, everyone wants to do what they can to mitigate climate change. Right?

MANN: Yeah, I mean, the reality is that we should engage in you know, everyday actions and changes in our lifestyle, that reduce our environmental footprint, that often make us healthier and happier and save us money, things we ought to do anyway. But what we can’t allow is for that to somehow become a substitute for the demand for policy action. And that’s what the inactivists have sort of done to try to divert attention completely away from the need for regulation of the fossil fuel industry entirely.

There are other tactics as I detail in the book: promoting despair, doom, because if they can lead us down this path of despair, it ultimately leads to the same destination: inaction.

So those are some of the central tactics. That’s really what the book is about: being aware of the tactics that are being used now to prevent the needed transition from fossil fuels, recognize those tactics and make sure that we don’t become victims of them. Because we are at an amazing moment where there really is an opportunity now to make substantial progress in acting on the climate crisis, and we can’t allow ourselves to be distracted.




Rachel McDevitt / WITF

Students from Susquehanna Township and Cedar Cliff high schools demonstrate for action on climate change in front of the state capitol on Friday, December 6, 2019.

ALLEN: Your iconic “hockey stick” graph, published in 1998, made you a target of climate change deniers. Could you recap for us that controversy, why that graph was such a wake-up call?

MANN: Sure. So more than two decades ago, as you said, April 1998, on Earth Day of 1998 April 22, we published the first of a series of articles presenting the now iconic hockey stick graph, which was an effort to reconstruct how global surface temperatures have varied over the past. We only have about a century and a half of widespread thermometer measurements, and they show that the planet has warmed up now more than a degree Celsius for the better part of two degrees Fahrenheit.

But what we don’t know from the historical measurements alone is how unusual that warming might be in the longer-term context. Our study sought to use indirect natural archives that tell us something about past climate conditions, like tree rings and corals and ice cores and lake sediments to piece together this puzzle of how the climate changed in the more distant past.

It revealed … a graph demonstrating the trends over the past 1,000 years showing that the warming spike that we’ve seen over the past century without precedent as far back as we could go at the time, 1,000 years. It became a lightning rod for climate change deniers precisely because it told such a simple story. You didn’t need to understand the complex physics of Earth’s climate system to understand what this graph was telling us: that there’s something unprecedented about the changes taking place today. By implication, it probably has to do with us.

Because it became such a potent image in the climate change debate, it and I and my co-authors found ourselves at the center of orchestrated attacks by politicians fossil fuel interests, those doing their bidding, seeking to discredit the hockey stick, as if by discrediting the graph or by discrediting me personally, somehow, the evidence for human caused climate change that they find so inconvenient would somehow collapse like a house of cards.

In fact, there are dozens of different lines of evidence that all tell us that the climate is warming and that we’re responsible. Even if the hockey stick curve didn’t exist, we would still know that. But it’s really because it was such a powerful image, it and I found ourselves at the center of the larger effort to discredit the science of climate change the climate wars, as it were.

ALLEN: There’s an effort to discredit the scientists themselves. Tell me about what you call the “Serengeti strategy.”

MANN: Yeah, in fact, I coined that term in my earlier book, “The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars,” because I was struck by something I had seen at a meeting in Africa, of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change back in the late 1990s.

A group of us took a side trip to the Serengeti. One of the striking visuals that I encountered during that Safari was a wall of zebras. When zebras travel as a group, and they’re feeding, they’re stationary, they will stand back to back in such a way that they essentially form this very long wall of stripes. It’s a way to confuse predators. They can’t pick out an individual zebra, they just see a wall of stripes.

So I likened that to this phenomenon that we’ve seen in the climate wars, where fossil fuel interests, those who do their bidding, have targeted individual scientists, because they know they can’t take down the entire scientific community. It’s this very sturdy wall of scientific evidence that is accrued over decades. But if they can just take one scientist, attack them, discredit them and make an example of them maybe they can scare off other scientists. I call that the Serengeti strategy.

But the evidence has just become so overwhelming, you know. Now, the new climate war consists of this other array of tactics, less an effort to discredit and deny the science and more of an effort to distract us with non-solutions to divide us to deflect attention, etc.


ALLEN: The climate war has its espionage as well. I was intrigued by an incident you talk about in the book, “Climategate,” where there were emails stolen from a server before a climate conference. What happened there?

MANN: Climategate was this effort 10 years ago, by those who have been working for years to discredit the science of climate change and discredit climate scientists, the inactivists, as I call them, to distract the public and policymakers with a manufactured fake scandal in the lead-up to the Copenhagen summit of December 2009, which at the time was really seen as the best opportunity in years for meaningful global action on climate.

In the lead-up to that summit, various individuals and organizations that have been promoting climate change denial and attacking scientists had gotten ahold of thousands of emails from a server in the UK. These are emails between various climate scientists around the world, myself included, and they had combed through these emails to find individual words and phrases that they could use to try to make it sound like the science was not sound, that the scientists were engaged in efforts to mislead people. They did that by taking simple innocent words like “trick”: a trick, in the lingo of science and mathematics, is a clever approach to solving a vexing problem. But take it out of context. It can be sort of used to somehow try to claim that the scientists were trying to trick the public.

All of these were really cynical distortions of what the scientists were actually saying. They were used to (trying to) discredit the science by discrediting the scientists themselves. It was a very effective disinformation campaign that was heavily promoted by fossil fuel interests, by the organizations and front groups that they fund, by the right-wing media, the Murdoch press, Fox News, Wall Street Journal, etc. It was a full on press for several weeks, in fact, over months to try to promote this narrative that the basic science was untrustworthy, and they got mainstream media outlets to cover it, to actually regurgitate their narrative.

It probably had a negative impact on the proceedings in Copenhagen. In fact, the Saudi Arabian delegate (Saudi Arabia is a petrostate like Russia). These are governments that see fossil fuels as their primary asset and have done everything they can to block global efforts on climate. That applies to Saudi Arabia and applies to Russia, who has also had a role in these efforts.

We now think that Saudi Arabia and Russia probably both played a key role in this manufactured scandal. The Saudi delegate used these climategate allegations to declare that the science of climate change was fundamentally untrustworthy, and that this would negatively impact any efforts in Copenhagen aimed at meaningful climate policy.

So it’s perhaps the most profound example of the sorts of disinformation campaigns that have been used by inactivists over the years to distract the public to prevent action on climate. The fact remains that now, 10 years later, the impacts have become so obvious that they can’t really deny that climate change is real or human caused anymore. And so they’ve turned to more insidious and nefarious means of trying to distract the public and block action.

ALLEN: You mentioned the Russians, and we’re used to thinking about the Russians interfering with our elections. But I understand they’ve been active in climate debate and in social media over the climate issue as well.

MANN: Absolutely. This is something that we now understand in light of the 2016, their efforts to sway the election in Donald Trump’s favor. A lot of things have come to light. One of them is that Exxon Mobil, and Rosneft, which is Russia’s state oil company, had a half trillion-dollar oil deal. It was a joint venture to extract the extensive fossil fuels from Siberia and Russia together in Exxon Mobil had the equipment necessary to do it.

So as a joint venture between the Russian government and the world’s largest fossil fuel organization, Exxon Mobil, which too has been a major funder of climate change denial, and one of the principal actors in the climate wars, they had this half trillion dollar oil deal that was blocked because of the sanctions against Russia over their actions in Crimea.

One of the first things that happened at the Republican convention prior to the 2016 election, in the drafting of the Republican platform, Paul Manafort. He’s a lobbyist who has been connected to Russia, and Ukraine, he helped change the language in the Republican platform that removed Republican support for sanctions against Russia. So an argument could be made that Russia’s involvement, their effort to defeat Hillary Clinton (who would have continued with the sanctions) and instead elect Donald Trump, who had promised to get rid of them.

That was really about fossil fuels. And it puts this past climategate matter in a new light, because we can now understand that some of the same actors that we know worked with Russia to discredit Hillary Clinton through her stolen emails, we know that Wikileaks was working with Russia, Julian Assange was working with them. We now see that all of those same actors were involved in the climategate affair, back in 2009, which itself was an effort by state actors and fossil fuel interests.

Russia now seems to be principal among them, and they’re looking to forestall any meaningful climate action. They’ve been doing the same thing in our most recent election. And we know the reason: fossil fuels are their single greatest asset.

ALLEN: In the book you have a chapter on how market mechanisms can help fight climate change. Can you explain why those are important and why climate activists might shy away from those?

MANN: There are lots of tools in the toolbox that we can use to spur the decarbonization of our economy. Some of them are what we would call demand side measures, reducing public demand for fossil fuel energy.

You can do that by leveling the playing field: so that renewable energy, which isn’t degrading the planet in the way that fossil fuel energy is, can compete fairly in the market by leveling the playing field, to force the fossil fuel industry to basically pay for the damage that they’re doing to the planet. Pricing that damage that’s being done has to be part of the economics.




Amy Sisk / StateImpact Pennsylvania

The owners of Beaver Valley nuclear power station in Shippingport, Pa. reversed a decision to shut it down early, citing Gov. Tom Wolf’s plan to join the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a cap-and-trade program among several northeastern states that is designed to lower carbon emissions.

You can level the playing field in that manner by providing explicit subsidies for renewable energy. There’s a lot of support for doing that. There’s even support for that in the most recent stimulus package that passed Congress on a bipartisan basis.


Think of it as sort of a carrot and a stick: you can do that by providing subsidies for renewable energy, and that’s the carrot. You can do it by putting a tax or putting a price on carbon, that’s the stick. There are different ways to do that: carbon pricing, you can have a carbon tax, and if it’s a carbon tax, there are different ways to do it, that make the tax more or less progressive. That’s where the politics comes in. You can use a tradable emissions permit so called “cap and trade.” There are lots of ways to do this.

But ultimately, market mechanisms are an important tool in the toolbox. We’re going to need every tool that we have. As I note in the book, what’s unfortunate is that there’s this trend over the last several years where environmental progressives have increasingly become antagonistic to market measures, like carbon pricing, for leveling that playing field and for accelerating the transition off fossil fuels.

It has to do with a number of what I would really say are myths to a large extent: the idea, for example, that a price on carbon would be regressive. Well, that depends precisely on what you do with the revenue, if you return it to frontline communities to sort of lower income families selectively. There are ways to actually make it progressive.

Then the carbon taxes that have been passed in Australia and Canada, those carbon taxes have ended up being progressive, they’ve actually helped lower income in frontline communities economically. There’s also this notion that a carbon tax just isn’t enough to reduce demand for fossil fuel energy. Well, that depends on you know how large the carbon tax is. Once again, it’s just one of the tools in the toolbox. Nobody’s saying it’s a panacea.

But to take it off the table means that we’re sort of tying one hand behind our back in this war, to act on the climate crisis. Some of the bad actors that I’ve talked about, Russia, in particular, through social media, through bots and troll armies, has worked hard to actually alienate progressives, when it comes to carbon pricing. That’s the great irony. They recognize that the political right is already sort of leaning towards their position of inaction. So if they can get some environmental progressives, for example, by convincing them that carbon pricing is regressive in nature, it’s a great way for them to dampen enthusiasm for meaningful climate action.

I’ve tried to alert people, really progressives, in this case, to the insidious nature of this tactic, some of the things that I think play into it, frankly, are this notion that carbon pricing buys into neoliberal economics, market economics. Well, yeah, but so do pretty much all of the solutions that we’re talking about, you have to work within the framework of, you know, the economy you have today, and we do have a market economy. And sure, there’s a worthy discussion to be had about whether capitalism and market economies are ultimately consistent with a sustainable sort of existence on this planet.

We need to have that larger conversation. But we’ve got to solve the climate crisis, now, in a matter of years. We don’t have time to remake the global economy, we have to use the tools that are available to us within the context of the existing economy. And carbon pricing is a big part of that.


ALLEN: In recent years, we’ve experienced natural disasters that are linked to climate change. Can you talk about how things like wildfires and hurricanes can be connected?

MANN: Yeah, I’ll tell you there was a satellite image that literally connected those two things late this fall, when you know, we had this very late hurricane season that continued on into late November. And that, in part, we know is connected to the warming of the tropical Atlantic Ocean, which is creating more favorable environment for Atlantic hurricanes. We’re seeing both more active seasons and more powerful and damaging hurricanes. But that season is getting longer as surface temperatures in the Atlantic warm up and they remain warm enough for tropical hurricanes to form well into the late fall, and persisting again into the late fall well outside of the typical fire season out west, where these massive wildfires record wildfires this summer in California, Oregon and Washington.

To bring this back to the satellite image, I believe it was in November. It was one of the Greek-named Atlantic hurricanes, very late in the season, that was spinning out in the North Atlantic. If you looked at that satellite image, at the periphery of this hurricane, there was a brown cloud that was swirling in towards the center of the hurricane. And that was the smoke in the ash from those wildfires.

So that one image sort of embodied these twin assaults of human caused climate change, and really underscored how direct the impacts now are, where they’re literally playing out in real time in the form of multiple weather disasters that have been amplified by human caused climate change. I think that’s part of why it’s just no longer credible for the inactivists to deny that this is happening. They’re instead using every tactic in the book to try to confuse and distract us. But the impacts of climate change are now playing out in real time. This isn’t about polar bears off in the Arctic, it’s about us here. And now in the negative devastating impacts we’re already dealing with.

ALLEN: You write in the book that watching the pandemic unfold was like watching a time lapse of the climate crisis. What can we learn about climate change from the pandemic?

MANN: It’s a great question. It’s a big question. There are lots of lessons that we can take away from it. I tried to go through those various lessons in the closing chapter of the book. There are some pretty deep overriding lessons about resilience and fragility, and sustainability. I mean, look, you know, we have a planet of nearly a billion people now competing for finite space, and food and water. A microscopic organism can now turn all that on its head turns society upside down.

We are so fragilely dependent on the earth system continuing to provide the resources that we continue to extract. I’m hoping that there’s some larger lessons that we take away from the pandemic about how fragile that infrastructure really is. Again, the importance of asking some deeper questions about whether our current path, our current behavior is a sustainable one.

But there are some immediate lessons that can be taken — the death and destruction that can be wrought by ideologically motivated science denial. In the case of COVID-19, the Trump administration saw it as advantageous to their politics, in those supporting them, which includes the fossil fuel industry. The conservative media and that entire ecosystem, saw it as favorable to their agenda, to deny the science that was telling us we need to engage in lockdowns and social distancing, and mask wearing and all of these other things.

We can measure directly the cost of that science denial now in what will be millions of deaths around the world that have resulted and much more sort of long-term health impacts, people who will be dealing with the devastating permanent impacts of this virus for the rest of their lives and the toll that that will take on the health care system.

All of that, a large part of it anyway, because we had an administration that denied the science and looked to discredit in the same way that the fossil fuel industry has tried to discredit scientists like myself. Look at how the right wing media and Trump and Republicans looked to discredit Anthony Fauci because of his message as a leading health expert about the need to engage in these lockdown(s), in social distancing measures, and mask wearing.

A principle lesson is that the cost of science denial can be measured directly in human lives and human suffering. We saw that play out over a period of months with coronavirus. It’s playing out on a longer timeframe with climate change.

But make no mistake, much larger number of lives will be lost from climate change because of our inaction our failure to act meaningfully thus far. Far more lives will be lost because of climate inaction and the science denial and the inaction agenda, the fossil fuel interest — far more lives will be lost because of that than will be lost because of the pandemic. Look, we’ll get past this pandemic a year from now, it will largely be in our rearview mirror to a large extent. But the looming crisis of climate change will still be there.

ALLEN: As we record this interview, it’s January 19, 2021. Joe Biden is the president-elect, soon to be inaugurated. And just this week, as we speak, Democrats took control of the Senate, they will control both houses of Congress, albeit by a very slim margin. What are you hoping for from the new Congress and the new president in terms of climate legislation?

MANN: You know, it’s a very favorable development. Because the Senate will now be controlled by a Democratic majority leader, we could now see a climate bill actually brought to the Senate floor, which would never have happened under Mitch McConnell.

So we now have the possibility of climate legislation getting a vote. Now the question is, can it pass? There probably will be the votes to get a climate bill or a set of climate bills passed, but probably not one that looks like the Green New Deal in its current form. We may not have a political climate where something as expansive as the Green New Deal in the way it’s been proposed by, you know, Ed Markey and AOC, where something like that can pass.




Richard Vogel / Associated Press

Climate change activists holding signs join in on a rally supporting the “Green New Deal” in Pershing Square in downtown Los Angeles on Friday, May 24, 2019.

But what could pass would be compromise climate legislation, where you would have most if not all of the Democrats, maybe a few holdouts from fossil fuel states, and at least a half dozen Republicans crossing the aisle to join with them to pass a bill or series of compromise climate bills, which would include among them carbon pricing, where there’s sort of a consensus among moderate conservatives and Democrats that we can use market mechanisms to try to accelerate the transition towards renewable energy.

We can provide stimulus and funding for renewable energy. The recent stimulus bill that was passed on a bipartisan basis by the Congress actually does that provide something like $30 billion for funding and green energy. So we could see a compromise climate bill passed Congress in the next couple years. It would involve, again, moderate conservatives and Democrats. It would involve market pricing mechanisms, along with other sort of demand-side and supply-side measures to accelerate this transition that’s underway.

So there’s a real cause for optimism here. For a number of reasons, there’s a greater awareness than there’s ever been in substantial part because of the youth climate movement, Greta Thunberg and other youth climate protesters who’ve really raised awareness about the ethical obligations on our part to not degrade this planet for future generations.

You have these unprecedented extreme weather events that have driven home the direct impact of climate change the catastrophic consequences. You have this pandemic, which has sort of opened our eyes to the threat of science denial, and a failing to heed the warnings of scientists when it comes to crises, whether it be the pandemic or the even larger climate crisis. You have this favorable shift in political winds, which finally puts the United States in a position to re-establish global leadership on this issue. Joe Biden has very clearly indicated that he will do that.

So there are reasons to be very cautiously optimistic that we’ll see real meaningful action that will look back at 2020 as awful a year as it was, Kristine, I think we’re going to look back at it as the year where we turn the corner on climate.

ALLEN: Michael Mann, thank you very much.

MANN: Oh, thank you. It’s always a pleasure to talk with you.



This story is produced in partnership with StateImpact Pennsylvania, a collaboration among The Allegheny Front, WPSU, WITF and WHYY to cover the commonwealth's energy economy.





Share this:

Click to print (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)


22 JANUARY 2021 EPISODE

KRISTINE ALLEN

Kristine Allen is Program Director of WPSU-FM. She also files feature stories for WPSU on the arts, culture, science, and more.

Do We Need To Go Nuclear On Climate Change?

Do We Need To Go Nuclear On Climate Change?
May 28, 2015,11:24am EDT
Do We Need To Go Nuclear On Climate Change?

Tom Zeller Jr.Contributor
Energy
Minding the collision of business, energy, science & the environment.
This article is more than 5 years old.





"Climate change is the biggest environmental challenge of our time," Yukiya Amano, head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, told French ministers at a meeting in Paris on Wednesday. "As governments around the world prepare to negotiate a legally binding, universal agreement on climate at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris at the end of the year, it is important that the contributions that nuclear science and technology can make to combating climate change are recognized."

A few days earlier, Christine Todd Whitman, the former Republican Governor of New Jersey and one-time chief of the Environmental Protection Agency under George W. Bush, added her thoughts on the same topic: "Nuclear energy already provides more than 64 percent of our nation's clean-air electricity," Whitman wrote in an op-ed for The Hill blog — one sponsored by the industry's chief lobby, the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI).

"[I]ts long-term benefits simply cannot be replaced by any other energy source," Whitman added, "especially when we consider the long-term impacts of climate change."

It would be easy to dismiss such appeals as so much self-serving industry propaganda — not least because Whitman herself serves as a co-chair of the Clean and Safe Energy Coalition, a Washington DC-based outfit that bills itself as a "grassroots organization that supports the increased use of nuclear power," but which is essentially a public-relations project financed by the NEI.

It is surely a bit of spin, but the core argument here — that nuclear power has a key role to play in the effort to combat global warming — is one that increasingly cuts across social and partisan lines. President Obama's proposed Clean Power Plan would provide a small credit to states that rely on nuclear power as part of their proposed emissions reduction schemes, and the nuclear industry is lobbying hard to have that credit increased — something that the administration has suggested it is considering.



"Nuclear power is part of an all-of-the-above, diverse energy mix and provides reliable baseload power without contributing to carbon pollution," an Environmental Protection Agency spokeswoman recently told The Hill blog. "Nuclear power from current and future plants can help the U.S. meet its [emissions reduction] goals.”

That notion has become axiomatic in certain scientific and policy circles — and indeed, many experts have argued that the sort of swift reduction in global carbon emissions that is needed to stabilize global warming simply cannot be achieved without an expansion of nuclear power. Such was the conclusion of a handful of the world's most prominent climate scientists, who penned an open letter to environmental groups in 2013 imploring them to abandon their reflexive opposition to nuclear energy, for the sake of the planet.


PROMOTED

Google Cloud BRANDVOICE | Paid Program
How Capital Markets Can Prepare For The Future With AI


Mitsubishi Heavy Industries BRANDVOICE | Paid Program
Oil & Gas Outlook – Embracing Change From Now To 2040


Grads of Life BRANDVOICE | Paid Program
How Reimagining Employment Practices Can Advance Racial Justice


"As climate and energy scientists concerned with global climate change, we are writing to urge you to advocate the development and deployment of safer nuclear energy systems," wrote the group of scientists, which included NASA's James Hansen, Kerry Emanuel of MIT, Tom Wigley of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research in Colorado and Ken Caldeira at the Carnegie Institution for Science in California. "We appreciate your organization’s concern about global warming, and your advocacy of renewable energy. But continued opposition to nuclear power threatens humanity’s ability to avoid dangerous climate change."
"Almost half of the American population believes that nuclear power makes the global warming problem worse."

The reasoning behind this: While renewable, low-carbon power sources like wind, solar and biomass are important, these energy sources simply can't be developed quickly enough, and at the sort of scales necessary, to truly combat the gathering climate crisis.

Not everyone agrees with this line of thinking, of course, and two years after the scientists' impassioned letter — and despite some bipartisan support and continued investment in safer, next-generation nuclear technologies — a true nuclear renaissance remains, for the most part, an industry pipe dream.

"The nuclear industry is in decline," declared the authors of the most recent World Nuclear Industry Status Report. Part of this can be blamed on the meltdown that befell the Fukushima Daiichi plant in Japan in 2011, which spread new fears about nuclear power across the globe and nudged several governments to halt projects or forswear nuclear power development all together.

Still, the industry was stagnating long before this. The 2014 nuclear status report counted a total of 388 operating reactors globally as of 2014 — 50 fewer than the high point for the nuclear power industry in 2002. Total installed nuclear power capacity inched up as high as 367 gigawatts in 2012, but has since retreated to 333 gigawatts, which is "comparable to levels last seen two decades ago," according the authors. Nuclear power's total share of the energy pie is now at a new low, accounting for just 4.4 percent of global commercial primary energy production.

The International Energy Agency attributes the industry's broader struggle, which began in the 1990's, to a variety of factors. These include increasing public concerns over safety, to be sure (see earlier incidents like Three Mile Island or Chernobyl), but also a plague of high costs and construction delays (a 1985 article in Forbes magazine suggested that the U.S. nuclear power plant build-out was "the largest managerial disaster in business history"), and the more recent re-emergence of cheap and abundant fossil fuels — particularly natural gas.

The upshot of all of this is that whatever reactor construction is underway is concentrated mostly in Asia, while ambivalence toward nuclear power continues in the West — including in the United States, which is among the world's giants in per capita greenhouse gas emissions, and where climate scientists have begun pleading with anti-nuclear activists to reconsider their positions for the sake of the planet.

So far, the argument isn't working.

Public support for nuclear power in the U.S. is nearly at its lowest point in 20 years of polling, according to the Gallup organization. Even more telling: According to the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut, most Americans really don't make a strong connection between nuclear power and climate change solutions. In fact, while there are virtually no greenhouse emissions associated with the day-to-day operation of a nuclear power plant, almost half of the American population — 44 percent — believes that nuclear power plants actually make the global warming problem worse, according to Roper's analysis.

That sort of confusion doesn't bode well for a rapid expansion of nuclear power — and that seems to suit many climate advocates just fine.

Early last year, in response to the nuclear advocacy of of Hansen et al, a group of over 300 civil society and regional environmental groups published a letter of their own: "Instead of embracing nuclear power, we request that you join us in supporting an electric grid dominated by energy efficiency, renewable, distributed power and storage technologies," the organizations wrote. "We ask you to join us in supporting the phase-out of nuclear power as Germany and other countries are pursuing. It is simply not feasible for nuclear power to be a part of a sustainable, safe and affordable future for humankind."

More recently, Worldwatch Institute founder and Earth Policy Institute president Lester Brown has argued that a global transition away from fossil fuels and cleaner, climate-friendly sources of energy is already well underway — and all without the help of nuclear power. As of last year, Brown and his co-authors note in a new book, The Great Transition, "some 31 countries were still operating nuclear power plants, but scarcely half as many ... were building new ones."

Whether that's good news or bad news for the climate remains very much an open question. Critics argue that nuclear power is simply too risky, and more practically speaking, too costly to be considered a significant part of the post-carbon energy portfolio. Others wonder why cost is seen as an impediment for some technologies, but not others.

"When renewables are expensive, people want to find ways to bring costs down, [but] when nuclear is expensive, people see cost as a reason to reject the technology," noted Ken Caldeira, the atmospheric scientist and one of the co-authors of the 2013 open letter arguing for further development of nuclear power. "I would think some combination of innovation and more sensible regulations could bring costs down in the nuclear sector."

Caldeira also suggested that those hoping wind and solar power alone might deliver the world from runaway greenhouse gas emissions are fooling themselves.

"From the position of physical possibility, sufficient power could be delivered without nuclear," Caldeira said. "In the real world, with technical, economic, and political constraints, it seems highly unlikely that society can stabilize climate without nuclear power.

"The question is not 'What is possible?'" he added, "but 'What is feasible?' or 'what is achievable given real world constraints?'"

Reasonable people might disagree on the answers, but these are precisely the sort of questions that the nation's leaders ought to be confronting with a greater sense of urgency, according to Michael E. Mann, professor of meteorology and the director of Earth System Science Center at Penn State University.

"I think there is an honest debate to be had about the role of nuclear power in the transition away from fossil fuel energy," Mann said. "I don’t see it as my role to try to prescribe that debate, but I will say this: Were that Congress was busy engaging in this worthy discussion of solutions, rather than denying that climate change even exists."


Follow me on Twitter or LinkedIn. Check out my website.

Tom Zeller Jr.


I have spent nearly two decades writing on topics related to technology, energy policy, the environment and climate science for a variety of national publications, including The New York Times, National Geographic magazine, The Huffington Post, and Bloomberg View. As the recipient of a 2013-14 Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT, I spent a year studying the often fractious intersection of business, economics, science and public policy — particularly as they relate to the environment and national and global energy production. When not writing or traveling, you can usually find me enjoying the outdoors somewhere in the back woods of New England. You can also find me on Twitter: @tomzellerjr. Read Less

Print
Reprints & Permissions