Twitter: @Oosterenvan
We know our energy
production and consumption are not sustainable and we want to change it. How can we do this? Three
things are needed to start with :
Logos : a clear, logical and rational reason
to change
We have this. If we
continue to burn as much fossil fuel as we currently do, the atmosphere will
heat over 2°C. This would make life on earth literally impossible for our
children’s children, which is a situation we rationally want to avoid. The
scientific backbone of this logos can be found in this document written by 4000
scientists:
Ethos: a sense of what’s wrong and right and
about what has to be done
We have this. One example:
900 Dutch people found it wrong that their State did not contribute its share
of measures to avoid global warming over 2°C. They felt the need to take
responsibility and took action with the help of NGO Urgenda (see this link). The judge proved them right, and now other climate cases are
being started in other countries.
Pathos: the emotional power behind the message
that sparks action
We have this. The 900
Dutch citizens and their NGO platform Urgenda proved it: they’re sick of
watching our living environment and future being destroyed. Many other citizens all over
the world feel the same way. They prove this every day in the social media by massively expressing their wish
to stop polluting energy production and switch to clean energy. Besides the “pockets”
of the oil and coal industry, most people strongly desire this change. Search on
twitter for “#COP21” and you'll see what people want the world to decide during the
upcoming climate conference in Paris: move to Plan B because we have no planet
B!
But why do we
still not have a global agreement that commits States to change (meaning: curbing carbon emissions)?
The answer is that we lack one more thing:
Solidarność: Polish for “solidarity”
We don’t have that enough on
a global scale yet. But we do have solidarność here and there. Already 900 Dutch
citizens managed to commit their own State to reduce their carbon emissions by at
least 25% before 2020 instead of by the 17% originally planned. Of course this
small difference of 8% less emissions only for the Netherlands is not going to
stop climate change. But this small difference could become big in terms of solidarność:
in fact other citizens already started similar climate cases. Not because the Urgenda
case gave them more logos, ethos or pathos but because it connected them to other
citizens with the same logos, ethos and pathos. The Urgenda case shows that no
matter how strong we feel about change, change will only come if we share this conviction and act upon it with “todos”, meaning with
everyone.
Later this year, UNESCO’s
General Conference might declare 2016 the International Year of Global
Understanding (see link). The goal of this United Nations initiative is to
address “the ways we live in an increasingly globalized world and the
transformation of nature from the perspective of global sustainability (...) for the sake of future generations”. If this initiative goes
through, it could provide a formidable platform for the Urgenda case to warm up
the global solidarność we need to avoid
global warming.
No comments:
Post a Comment