Britain, Environment, Government, Politics, Society

Troops could be deployed to protect rainforests

ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY

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BRITISH soldiers could be sent in to battle to stop countries cutting down rainforests and drilling for oil, according to the former foreign secretary William Hague.

The former cabinet minister says the focus of the Armed Forces could soon switch from protecting energy supplies to guarding the natural environment.

“In the past the UK has been willing to use armies to secure and extract fossil fuels,” he writes in the Environmental Affairs journal. “But in the future, armies will be sent to ensure oil is not drilled and to protect natural environments.

“The UK will need to use all of its diplomatic capacity to ensure that these resources are not used and that natural environments are protected.”

Referring to Brazil, Lord Hague predicts that “as climate change climbs the hierarchy of important political issues, it will be increasingly difficult to square our climate change policy with agreeing a free trade deal with a country that clears a football pitch-sized area of the Amazon rainforest every minute.”

He also says Britain is too reliant on China for the components of electric batteries, warning that “it is now impossible for us to remain dependant on them in such a critical area”. As a result, our policies towards China and climate change have become unavoidably linked,” he adds.

Lord Hague, who was Conservative foreign secretary from 2010 to 2014, says Britain “cannot get away with talking the talk without walking the walk” on the climate.The UK has launched a strategy that will see the Armed Forces going as “green as possible”. In the last few days, the UK has said it will speed up cuts to emissions so that they would be reduced by 78 per cent by 2035, compared with 1990 levels.

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THE Secret Intelligence Service has begun “green spying” to ensure nations uphold their climate change commitments, the head of MI6 has said.

Richard Moore, known in Whitehall as C, revealed the new form of espionage after world leaders made stronger pledges on tackling global warming.

“Our job is to shine a light in places where people might not want it shone,” he told Times Radio.

“And so clearly, we are going to support what is the foremost international foreign policy agenda item for this country and for the planet, which is around the climate emergency.

“Where people sign up to commitments on climate change, it is perhaps our job to make sure that actually what they are really doing reflects what they have signed up to.”

Mr Moore who took charge of MI6 in October, described the new task as “a bit like what we have always done around arms control”. He said: “On climate change, where you need everyone to come on board and to play fair, then occasionally just check to make sure they are.”

He declined to go into further detail about what “green spying” would involve and did not explicitly name any countries.

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Climate Change, Government, National Security, Politics, Society

The societal, cultural and geopolitical impacts of climate change…

CLIMATE CHANGE

CLIMATE CHANGE has been synonymous with polar bears and deforestation, but these days climatologists are paying more attention to people.

For many years now, climate change studies have tended to focus and rely on numbers-heavy charts and complex models to report on phenomena such as shrinking polar caps, melting glaciers and permafrost, caribou, the declining populations of reindeer and seal, as well as rising sea levels from Nigeria to the Maldives to the South Pacific.

In recent times, however, ethnographers, think tanks and sociologists have begun looking more closely at the social and cultural impacts of climate change on indigenous communities. Studies have been published on subjects including the Wauja people in Brazil (who have been impacted by the shrinking Amazon rain forest and industrialisation), Sami reindeer-herding communities across a warmer northern Scandinavia, as well as how the Bantu- and Khoisan-speaking tribes in the Kalahari Basin of sub-Saharan Africa have been affected. Of particular interest are the subsistence communities in Bangladesh and Malaysia whose coastal settlements are at continued risk of flooding from typhoons, monsoons and higher sea levels. Such research reflects a growing realisation in academic and policy circles that cultures and societies tied to nature have multigenerational knowledge that gives them special insight into changes in nature and the environment.

In the last decade or so, it has suddenly become apparent that the impact on people is really important and should be more than just an afterthought. There is undoubtedly an increasing realisation that climate change is more than a scientific artefact.

In 2014, Earth had its hottest year since weather record-keeping began 135 years ago. The 10 hottest years on record have all occurred since 1998, with nine of the total in the 21st century, according to NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Recent studies show changes happening more quickly than predicted. The highly credible journal Science reported in March that the southern Antarctic ice sheet suddenly began losing its mass in 2009 at a steady and fast rate.

There is also growing interest in the geopolitical effects of climate change. The Brookings Institute, for example, estimates that for every percentage point rise in average temperature and drop in average rainfall, violent conflict between neighbouring states rises 4 percent, while violent conflict between groups within states climbs 14 percent. Scholars foresee, too, new shipping routes opening up as the Arctic ice cap shrinks still further, potentially leading to military conflicts. Russia, for instance, planted a flag on the seabed below the North Pole in 2007 and has some 4,300 miles of Arctic coastline.

In violence-plagued northern Mali, a desiccated landscape of dust and mud huts where the average rainfall is a third less than it was nearly two decades ago, scholars recently blamed a climate-change induced drought for fuelling conflict between Tuareg separatist rebels (who need water and grass for their cattle herds), as well as government-backed forces. In March, the National Academy of Sciences published a peer-reviewed study stating that ‘there is evidence that the 2007-2010 drought contributed to the conflict in Syria.’ This was a devastating drought that led to widespread crop failure and a mass migration of farming families towards urban centres. Some studies suggest climate change will produce permanent refugees.

Last October the Pentagon published a report which said: ‘Climate change poses immediate risks to national security.’ Chuck Hagel, then defence secretary, referred to climate change as being a “threat multiplier” that could exacerbate the spread of infectious diseases and armed insurgencies. And President Barack Obama picked up that thread in May, telling graduating cadets at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy that climate change ‘constitutes a serious threat to global security, an immediate risk to our national security’ as well as invoking how those threats will impact on how the U.S. military defends its country.

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Business, Climate Change, Environment, Global warming, Government, Legal, Politics, Science, Society

Clime, crime and punishment …

(From the archives) Originally posted on August 25, 2008 by markdowe

1.

CLIMATE CHANGE AND REMEDY

THE KYOTO PROTOCOL, a climate change treaty that spanned over a decade in an attempt to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, is perceived by some climate scientists as an ineffective waste of time and energy. The biggest polluters on the earth, the United States and China, both failed in ratifying Kyoto which, had they done so, would have seen a vast improvement in how global warming could have been tackled and managed.

The only effective way in dealing with the threats and risks posed by climate change is through legal enforcement and wider use of the courts. Science appears more than capable in linking climate change as a probable cause of deadly weather events which the world has experienced in recent years – such as the heat-wave that hit Europe during the summer of 2003. If this is the case then global warming becomes a matter for product liability law.

The threat of judicial arguments in an attempt to resolve the scourge of climate change should, if nothing else, force many companies to radically change their behaviour than any government policy ever could.

Pinning individual weather events on climate change

Scientists usually purport that we can’t attribute individual weather events to climate change. But, the example quoted of the 2003 European heat-wave, should have been the first weather event where that link could have been made. That event, particularly within European latitudes, was probably a one-in-a-thousand year event. The immediate effect was a series of anticyclones over Europe. We can’t say those were made more likely by climate change but, what we can say, is that climate change made the background temperatures within which those anticyclones operated that much higher. This, surely, goes central to what the problem is.

Small changes in averages make extreme events much more likely. The 2003 heat-wave was far outside the range of normal climate uncertainty. Scientists and environmentalists say that there is 90% certainty that the risk of such a heat-wave in Europe has at least doubled as a result of climate change. More recent estimates (Myles Allen, University of Oxford) suggest that is probably a four to six-fold increase. The finding of a “doubled risk” is significant because established legal precedent holds that this is the threshold on which civil liability sets in. The argument remains, therefore, that lawyers must have a case against those people and companies who caused and exasperated global warming. In 2003, the heat-wave claimed the lives of 30,000 people. Whilst most who died were older people, fewer than a quarter would have died in the following year. If such a scale of deaths had been due to the toxic effects of a drug or chemical spill, lawyers and the courts would have been swiftly involved. Suing the big oil companies, for the environmental damage and degradation they have caused, seems, now, only a matter of time before such organisations are subpoenaed. Legal redress seems the only rational way forward.

At the time of the European catastrophe, many people blamed the healthcare services for not being prepared. That, too, seems a bit irrational because how many sectors in society can cope with a once-in-a-thousand year event? The real culprits are the 20 or so coal and oil companies that we know have been responsible for 80% of carbon dioxide emissions.

Statute

If the lawyers attempt to go for product liability, then everyone down the supply chain would be liable: the company that sold you the petrol, the oil company that pumped it out of the ground, and the showroom that sold you the car that burnt the fuel. But, if it is said to be an industrial waste issue, then the polluter pays. That might be the car driver.

Previously, actions have already been taken against greenhouse gas polluters under public nuisance and human rights legislation. But, none as yet, has alleged actual harm. That could become a critical moment if proven and, yet, could be over something quite trivial, like someone in Alaska suing an oil company because their conservatory subsided as the permafrost melted. Legal precedent could have huge implications if harm was ever proved but an effective way to tackle and deal with climate change.

Knowing the harm

In order to successfully sue an organisation, you have to show that they knew the ‘harm’ in what they were doing, and went ahead with it anyway. But, the question underpinning causation is, at what point in history did the impacts of climate change become foreseeable? Should it, for instance, be 1896, when Svante Arrhenius first calculated the greenhouse effect? Or, when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) first reported it in 1990? Of course, up until the recent signing of the Climate Change Bill by President Bush, the United States has never accepted climate change as being foreseeable at all. If 1990 is accepted as the start date for ‘foreseeability’, then companies can get away with some of their past emissions. By 2030, more than half of the excess greenhouse gases in the air would have been emitted since 1990. The concept of foreseeability will, therefore, rapidly diminish.

Whilst this approach is very different to that of Kyoto and of national emission targets, the legal route would have much more impact on the use of fossil fuels than any conceivable formula devised by government.

Ironically, though, when government’s started to make attempts in regulating carbon dioxide emissions – as the British Government has done for some time – then the companies producing them are given a defence: that their government had acted, so they didn’t have too. Such an argument, largely, mitigates responsibility.

Pursuing the legal option

Kyoto’s decade-long negotiations over a 2% reduction in emissions by industrialised nations, was hardly an initiative that got very far. The legal option remains a credible and viable alternative particularly as the science can now predict and forecast with some certainty what must be done to prevent further environmental degradation.

Most climate scientists do not like the liability idea. They believe that action on climate change should be a managed and sequential process. It’s certainly true, though, that the law can be unfair and arbitrary in its effects and application. Rich people might get settlements, whilst the poor would not. But, the conventional approach introduces, inherently, its own injustices. Besides, the ultimate goal is, primarily, to cut carbon emissions, not to win compensation or financial recompense.

Just the possibility of legal action would have a big effect. Climate change, if it hasn’t already, would become an even bigger issue at boardroom level. Look, for example, at the impact on share prices when a threat exists of legal action against food companies over obesity. 12-years of climate negotiations have not had the (same) effect as it should have had. The threat of being pursued with legal action and/or enforcement remains the only effective way to enforce company compliance if nations are ever to sustainably reduce carbon emissions. The introduction of an international court, too, seems logical.

Science

We still need to work much harder by showing how greenhouse gases are altering our world. Although climate scientists should be commended for spending large chunks of time and using vast resources in predicting what might happen in a hundred years time, we should also be focussing on helping today’s victims.

Interestingly, a research group headed by Myles Allen (Oxford University), previously, compiled reports of how the weather today would have looked without climate change. The modellers described it as it was, and as it might have been. The American legal community was interested in this research because, in 2000 – the year the reports were compiled – the weather was very dry. Reservoirs emptied and there were ‘brown-outs’: electricity in short supply from hydro sources. Allen’s research models could, yet, become the basis for legal action.


International Court for the Environment…

(From the archives) Originally posted on December 6, 2008 by markdowe

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REGULATION & ENFORCEMENT

STEPHEN HOCKMAN, QC, a former chairman of the Bar Council, has called for the establishment of an international court for the environment to punish states that fail to take adequate measures in protecting wildlife and in preventing climate change. Mr. Hockman proposes a body similar to the International Court of Justice in The Hague to be the supreme legal authority on issues regarding the environment.

Underpinning the role of such a body would be to enforce international agreements on cutting greenhouse gas emissions to be set and agreed upon next year. The court would fine national governments or individual companies who fail to take adequate measures in protecting endangered species or through wanton neglect and degradation of the natural environment. Enforcing the “right to a healthy environment” seems the next logical step given the seriousness associated with the long-terms effects of climate change.

The pioneering idea has been presented to an audience of scientists, politicians and public figures at a symposium held at the British library.

Mr. Hockman, a deputy High Court judge, believes that it is imperative now given the threat of climate change for the law to protect the environment.

 

A UN Climate Change Conference recently held in Poznan, Poland, began negotiations that is hoped will lead to a new agreement in replacing the Kyoto protocol in Copenhagen, next year. Developed countries are expected to commit cutting emissions quite drastically, while developing countries will be urged in halting deforestation.

The British Government has agreed in-principle that the concept of an international court will be taken into account when consideration is being made on how to make international agreements on climate change binding.

Mr. Hockman said an international court would be needed to enforce and regulate any agreement, saying: ‘Its remit will be overall climate change and the need for better regulation of carbon emissions but at the same time the implementation and enforcement of international environmental agreements and instruments.’

Whilst the creation of the court would provide an arena and setting in resolving disputes and in providing resolutions between states, the court would also likely be useful for multinational firms by ensuring environmental laws are kept to in every country.

It is believed that the court would uphold a convention on the right to a healthy environment; and by making provision for a higher body within itself, so as individuals or non-governmental organisations could appeal or protest against any environmental injustices.

The primary role of such a court would be in making “declaratory rulings” that, essentially, would be made to influence and embarrass countries into upholding the law. The court would also likely be equipped with powers in fining companies and individual states where breaches of the law are made.

Mr. Hockman added: ‘Of course regulations and sanctions alone cannot deliver a global solution to problems of climate change, but without such components the incentive for individual countries to address those problems – and to achieve solutions that are politically acceptable within their own jurisdictions – will be much reduced.’

It is envisaged that the court would be led by retired judges, climate change experts and other public figures. It would also include, as a central part of its function, a scientific body in considering evidence and by making available any data on the environment.

The creation of an international court on the environment would invariably influence public opinion that in turn would force Governments to take issues associated with the environment seriously. If there are established bodies that can give definitive legal rulings that are accepted as ‘fair and reasonable’ that would likely have its own impact on public opinion.

Environmental campaign groups such as Friends of the Earth have welcomed the idea as it helps and promotes the rights of people to live in a clean and healthy environment.

See also:

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