Another 'it's not too late' (apologies if it's already been posted).
https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... chael-mann
I read the article and a few things occurred to me.
“We haven’t yet exceeded the bounds of viable human civilisation, but we’re getting close,” says Prof Michael Mann. “If we keep going [with carbon emissions], then all bets are off.”
Michael Mann is a bit of a climate science rock star so his opinions count. The above quote suggests this is just another failure to read the politics in the room but then again, confusingly, maybe not.
“When we look to all these past episodes, we come away with a sense that we’re not doomed yet – we have not yet ensured our extinction,” he says. “But if we continue on a fossil fuel-dependent pathway, we will leave that safe range we see in the evidence from past Earth history. That’s what makes this such a fragile moment – we’re at the precipice.”
So the question here is whether the headline is about the end of civilization or human extinction. There's a big difference.
To be fair, one would have to read the book that the interview is based on, and I haven't so that has to be acknowledged. Anyway, he doesn't like doomers:
One motivation for the book, Mann says, is the rise of climate doomism: “We haven’t seen an end to climate denial, but it’s just not plausible any more because people can see and feel that this is happening. So polluters have turned to other tactics and, ironically, one of them has been doomism. If they can convince us it’s too late to do anything, then why do so?”
But this is a strawman. Are fossil fuel promoters going for a doomer vibe? Maybe, but what i see mostly is masses of greenwashing from corporations and their rentboys, not doomism. But maybe i've missed it. In any case, being of a doomer mindset does not mean we should do nothing. Of course we should continue to transition to renewables but we should also understand that it will not be enough to sustain our current economic/social/political system. Therefore, we not only have to continue the Sisyphean transition but we need a politics of adaptation to save as many communities as possible and it's there that the infrastructure of transition will come in handy.
Probably at this point we'd need a very clear definition of 'civilisation.' I do wonder sometimes whether 'civilisation' is code for neoliberal capitalism, neocolonialism and advanced world lifestyles of the wealthiest 10%. If so, doomism is a very positive space to be in, and i personally recommend it broadly.