TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
Climate Change
The home of latest and greatest in climate change and youth action news! Post here on stories from your backyard and around the world. Share successes, reflections, ideas...

Featuring a feed from It's Getting Hot in Here, the blog of the global youth climate movement, THIS is the place to be!

Join up and speak out!



ighih   ighih It's Getting Hot In Here's TIGblog
It's Getting Hot In Here's profile

Garnaut Disappoints Us All; But We Can’t Give Up Now


It is with a mix of despair, desperation and defiance that I read the news reports as they roll into my inbox and my computer screen this morning. Professor Ross Garnaut, the government’s chief climate change advisor, seems to have made a last-minute decision to recommend action based not on what the science demands, but what he judges the rest of the world will do, or not do.

He has decided we don’t have much of a chance of solving climate change because, “It is too complex. The special interests are too numerous, powerful and intense.” He recommends that Australia should pursue a global climate deal that - even he admits – puts the world at risk of the disastrous climate change consequences he set out in his draft report.

He says Australia should basically not bother fighting for my future and that of my friends, and certainly not the futures of my children or grandchildren, because “Is the international community ready to commit itself to such a strong outcome? Not yet.”

So - the international community isn’t ready (in his opinion) for aiming below 450 parts per million, so let’s not try because it will cost us too much if we take strong action alone, is essentially what he’s saying. Professor Garnaut - if your son John was at direct risk of being wiped out by the floods devastating Bihar in India right now, would you apply the same logic?

I am sitting here with tears in my eyes as I read his report and the news reaction. Aptly, I’ve come home to Newcastle for the weekend – the world’s biggest coal export port – and there is a crazy storm going on outside. Maybe it’s the planet’s reaction to Garnaut’s rubbish recommended target of 450 parts per million carbon in the atmosphere. This recommendation, and his corresponding target of 10% reduction by 2020 from 2000 levels, is so low that, as Crikey says, “the sea level will rise above it in a year”.

But now is no time for despair, despite Garnaut’s seemingly best efforts to demoralize the entire climate movement and give our government – a government elected in the world’s first climate election – an excuse to do nothing while the world’s future goes down the drain.

I can’t help but feel we should have done more this year to pressure Garnaut. I guess I’ll always feel that, even though we all work non-stop, to the point of risking our health, our friendships and anything in our lives outside climate activism. I mean, it’s 7 am on a Saturday morning and I’m already working.

But we still have time – a small but precious window of time – to influence the federal government to adopt the strongest 2020 reduction targets that are politically possible. And luckily, “politically possible” is not what Garnaut judges it to be, but the political situation that we ourselves create.

And that is why I have hope that the youth climate movement can be the one input in this crazy political system that still has the potential to change everything. And when 5,000 young people converge on Canberra, to our Parliament House, next April for Power Shift Australia, we are going to re-frame the debate and place ourselves, and our futures, in the middle of it. And when we launch this massive national youth climate campaign in the next few months, it will be impossible for any Australian – let alone any politician – to ignore the fact that young Australians will not let anyone get away with setting a target of only 10% reductions by 2020. Because that target lacks courage, vision, and any credibility with our generation.

As the Sydney Morning Herald reports and we all know, “In the past two months an intense lobbying campaign by Australia’s major greenhouse gas polluters has already threatened to gut the Rudd Government’s climate change plans. From Don Voelte, the head of Woodside, to Don Argus, chairman of BHP Billiton, the nation’s heavy hitters have taken aim at plans to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions and push Australia to produce 20 per cent of its power from renewable sources by 2020.”

This is what we’re up against and we shouldn’t fool ourselves. It will take a massive grassroots organising campaign to win this struggle, just as that is what it has taken to win every struggle in history. It will take the Australian Youth Climate Coalition, it will take GetUp, it will take the Australian Student Environment Network, every NGO in Australia, and all the tools in our toolbox. It’s everyone’s opportunity – and responsibility – to step up.

So, please read Garnaut’s report, and the news analysis, but remember that while Garnaut has given up hope, I have not, and neither has the rest of the youth climate movement, and we need your help to back us up on this and stop climate chaos.

Ps - All the victims of the flooding in northern Bihar, India are in my heart right now. At least 55 people have already lost their lives. If anyone wants to help the relief effort, my friend Abhishek Bharadwaj is organising direct assistance through a flood relief campaign. His email is bharadwajtiss [a] gmail.com.


September 5, 2008 | 6:09 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:
You must be logged in to add tags.


Owner
This Group TIGBlog is owned by: P.J. Partington.

Membership
PEACE
Adam MacIsaac
adewole taiwo
Aiden Abram
Allison McLean
Apeikumo Bubagha
Bhuwan
Debashree দেবশ্রী
DELROY
Elizabeth Fraser
ចន្រ្ទពង្ស - Chandrapong
ilyes
INALEGWU FRANK UJI
It's Getting Hot In Here
Vermonster
jean celeste paredes
Jenny
Jess Wishart
Jonathan-Frank
Kathleen Morris
Kimia
YtseJammer
lupe
marie celimene valcourt
Melinda
Michael Furdyk
Vindicator
Nigel Allan
Nkya George
NNAEMEGO, NKIRUKA
Ogaga Onowighose
oluseun onigbinde
P.J. Partington
Pablo Astudillo
Pauline
Kahendi
Rhiya Trivedi
Richard Graves
Rishi Aggarwal
Robert Amoafo
Suzanna Archibald
Tetteh Kofi Hadjor
Vicente Garcia-Delgado
Wangchuk Chungyalpa

You must be logged in to join this group TIGblog.

Latest Posts
Excuse me, do you...
Bank of America...
Bank of America to...
Bush Clears the Path...
Coal Plant Setback in NC!

Monthly Archive
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
December 2008

Change Language



57226 views
Important Disclaimer