CLIMATE: "We Scientists Must Rise Up To Prevent Climate Crisis. Words Aren't Enough"
'We scientists must rise up to prevent the climate crisis. Words arent enough.' Our profession has been great at raising awareness. But this alone wont succeed against the might of the oil and gas lobbyists. By Charlie Gardner & Claire Wordley. The Guardian, 9/6/19.
As scientists, we tend to operate under an unspoken assumption that our job is to provide the world with factual information, and if we do so our leaders will use it to make wise decisions. But what if that assumption is wrong? For decades, conservation scientists like us have been telling the world that species and ecosystems are disappearing, and that their loss will have devastating impacts on humanity. Meanwhile, climate scientists have been warning that the continued burning of fossil fuels and destruction of natural carbon sinks, such as forests and peatlands, will lead to catastrophic planetary heating.
We have collectively written tens of thousands of peer-reviewed papers, and shared our findings with policymakers and the public. And, on the face of it, we seem to have done a pretty good job: after all, we all know about the environmental and climate crises, dont we? But while were now well informed, we havent actually changed course. Biodiversity loss proceeds apace, to the extent that a million species face extinction in the coming decades, and we continue to pump carbon into the atmosphere at ever faster rates. We have emitted more greenhouse gases since 1990, in full awareness of its impacts, than we ever did in ignorance. It seems that knowledge alone cannot trigger the radical global changes we so urgently need.
It was this realisation that incited us both to embrace activism, and to take to the streets and engage in non-violent civil disobedience as members of Extinction Rebellion. The refusal to obey certain laws has a long and glorious history: from the suffragettes to Rosa Parks and Gandhi, many of the 20th centurys greatest heroes engaged in non-violent civil disobedience to win their rights. Today, civil disobedience is again on the rise. And it is working. The protests that shut down four sites in London in April raised the climate crisis rapidly up the political agenda, and into the public consciousness.
The environment is now the third most pressing issue for British voters, above the economy, crime and immigration: the UK parliament and half the countrys local councils have declared a climate emergency, and a zero-carbon target has been enshrined into law. We dont know what policy change will follow, but it is an encouraging start. Alongside this are the Greta Thunberg-inspired school strikes and our sister movements worldwide. This is what we have been waiting for. And yet, the reaction within the scientific community has been strangely muted...
Read More, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/sep/06/scientists-climate-crisis-activism-extinction-rebellion
~ Authors: Claire Wordley is a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Cambridge, Charlie Gardner is a lecturer in conservation biology at the University of Kent.
blm
(113,061 posts)Incrementalism will doom this earth.
appalachiablue
(41,132 posts)he initially thought that approaching the issue 'the academic way of presenting research with facts' was the way to proceed. But unfortunately not as the scientists who wrote the article emphasize. Time is all out now as they, most of all realize.
MasonDreams
(756 posts)Because it is too late. The under 35 crowd is still hopeful. The rest of us have seen the titanic doomsday machine accelerating for the last 30-40- 50 years. We can't even stop the accelerating. F=ma. if A, then B. If B, then C. A is true therefore C is coming The bridge is out and the train can't stop in time.