Is there an alternative to global warming?


Stoking Up A Disaster

NEW RESEARCH has shown that the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in
the atmosphere, as a result of burning fossil fuels such as coal and oil, has
risen dramatically in the past two years. This follows several decades of
already rapid increases.

Pete Dickenson

The rising level of CO2 causes an increase in global temperature because it
has the effect of trapping heat due to the sun’s rays inside the earth’s
atmosphere. Global warming’s particular effects on poor countries have been
highlighted by another recent report.

Produced jointly by environmental and development NGOs, the report
pinpoints the devastation that will occur in the ex-colonial world due to
floods, droughts and other extreme weather events, linked to human-induced
climate change. It shows that poor countries will suffer more than any others
because they cannot afford to introduce counter-measures, such as flood
defences.

The sudden rise in CO2 concentrations in last two years could be due to
what has been called the "feedback" effect. It seems that there has been no
obvious increase in carbon dioxide output in this period, but that the ability
of the earth to absorb the gas has declined.

For example, under normal circumstances the oceans can dissolve CO2 and
therefore reduce its concentration in the air, but as sea water warms up, due
itself to the greenhouse effect, its ability to absorb any more carbon is
reduced or even halted.

In this way, a vicious environmental circle is developed, known as a
"feedback effect", leading to spiralling levels of pollution. It is too soon
to be sure if this really is happening because two years’ figures are an
insufficient basis for long-term projections, but if they are confirmed,
estimates about the effects of global warming will be radically changed for
the worse.

However, even if the new data prove to be a blip, the situation is still
extremely serious and needs urgent action.

Illusions in Europe

GOVERNMENTS IN Europe like to think that, in contrast to the Bush regime,
they take the global warming threat seriously and are pinning their hopes on
the Kyoto treaty to deliver the goods. These hopes were given a boost a couple
of weeks ago when President Putin indicated that Russia, at long last, would
sign up.

This change of position was crucial because, as it turned out for technical
reasons, Russia’s support was necessary under the terms of the treaty for it
to come into force.

The Kyoto treaty was devised with a market mechanism to encourage states to
reduce carbon emissions that involves trading permits to pollute. Firms or
other bodies that are heavy carbon emitters, according to an arbitrarily set
level, will have to buy a quota to pollute from those that are below the
level.

The theory goes that this extra cost faced by polluters will gradually
induce them to change, or alternatively they will be forced out of business
and be replaced by environmentally friendly companies. The treaty’s target is
to reduce greenhouse gas output by 4.8%, compared to the level in 1990, by
2012.

The question is will it work? In the first place, the target of a 4.8%
reduction, if genuine, would be extremely modest compared to what is required.
Most climate experts say a fall of about 80% is necessary for sustainability,
and even when this is achieved it will take decades or even centuries to
stabilise the situation.

A closer examination of the terms of the Kyoto treaty shows also that its
very limited target figure for a cut in greenhouse gases is bogus. This is
because the baseline year chosen to measure reductions from, (i.e. 1990) was
before the disintegration of the Soviet Union and its subsequent economic
collapse.

This collapse led to a halving of polluting gas emissions in this region,
meaning that the ‘target’ for Kyoto, when it was put forward in 1997, had
largely been met and few further cuts on a global basis would probably be
necessary to maintain that position until 2012.

Kyoto was put together in a largely cosmetic form to try to encourage the
USA to take part but it failed completely. Bush, or any Democrat for that
matter, including Kerry, would have nothing to do with it. To them, and the
corporations they represent, it is the thin end of an environmental wedge that
ultimately will penalise them far more than any other country.

This is because America accounts for 25% of all greenhouse gas output,
almost twice as much as the EU. The USA’s refusal to take part in Kyoto also
dealt a massive blow to its pollution trading system.

The main players in the new market were always envisaged to be Russia,
because it would have a lot of spare pollution capacity to sell due to
economic collapse, and America, because it is the biggest greenhouse gas
culprit.

Without its main buyer, the USA, the market will never get far off the
ground, at least not in the sense of producing a significant reduction in
emissions, although the permit-trading speculators will probably still make a
killing.

The limited market that will take shape will have a small impact if any on
reducing global warming, in fact current projections show it is likely that
greenhouse gas levels will continue to rise, possibly at an accelerating rate.

Poor suffer

At the same time, the market mechanisms that do operate, in effect a form
of carbon tax, will hit the poorest hardest. This is because the costs that
are incurred by firms (e.g. power generators) that buy permits to pollute will
be passed on to poor people who use a disproportionately large share of their
income on fossil fuel for heating, lighting and cooking.

Many environmental activists are beginning to see that the Kyoto treaty is
a deception that will never work, but behind which European capitalist
political leaders can hide and claim to be tackling global warming.

Some environmental campaigners however, such as Friends of the Earth and
Greenpeace, still cling to Kyoto on the grounds that it is ‘the only show in
town’ and hope that it will develop into something more viable in the next
phase after 2012. There is absolutely no sign though of this happening, which
is not surprising since the vital interests, i.e. corporate profits, of the
dominant power, the USA, would be directly threatened.

Nuclear waste

WITH THE increasingly clear failure of Kyoto, the nuclear power lobby is
growing more influential, and many governments are seriously considering
expanding this sector again, since nuclear, co-incidentally, doesn’t produce
greenhouse gases.

This could produce an environmental disaster since no safe method exists,
or is likely to in the foreseeable future, to store the radioactive waste that
would be produced in large quantities.

Since this waste will be toxic for 100,000 years, the problem is to devise
a storage method that can be guaranteed to be secure for this period of time,
a task which poses huge uncertainties and problems because it is difficult to
predict what natural conditions will be so far into the future.

If the material is buried, the onset of earthquakes in previously
unaffected areas is possible, as is a meteor strike. If the radioactive spent
fuel is put at the bottom of the sea the integrity of the materials used as a
storage medium must be uncertain after such a long time, possibly leading to
seepage. Also undersea volcanic activity could start, producing the same
result.

Technical difficulties – and understandable opposition from local
communities where it has been proposed to dump the wastes – have meant there
will be at least another ten years’ delay before any supposedly safe site is
ready in the USA and another 20 in Europe.

Nuclear waste

How to store existing nuclear waste is a huge problem, it would be folly to
add to this by expanding its production.

There is also the danger of another disaster occurring like that at the
Chernobyl nuclear power plant in 1986. It is true that the chances of such an
event happening are small, but this must be set against the potentially
devastating consequences when it does.

When the reactor at Chernobyl blew up, the radioactive cloud that resulted
was blown to the north, over relatively sparsely inhabited areas. If the wind
had happened to be blowing in the opposite direction the poison gas would have
polluted the city of Kiiv (Kiev), only a few miles away. In this case millions
would have faced a cancer risk rather than tens of thousands.

What is more, nuclear power supporters often ignore other dangers. The
disappearance of nearly 350 tons of lethal explosives from Iraq highlighted
some of these.

Nuclear power plants produce vast quantities of plutonium. This could be an
incitement either to proliferation of nuclear weapons by nation-states or even
to ‘nuclear terrorism’. Nuclear materials have gone missing from many
countries. Terrorists or state powers could use this waste material from
nuclear power to manufacture a ‘dirty bomb’ or even a fully-fledged nuclear
weapon.

Sustainable technologies

BLAIR HAS not ruled out further development of nuclear power and other
governments like the French are starting to build new nuclear power stations.
In desperation some former nuclear opponents, such as the ‘green Bishop’ Hugh
Montefiore, have changed their position because they see global warming as the
greater problem and can envisage no other ‘viable’ non-nuclear alternatives.

Amicus, the union representing many nuclear workers has a pro-nuclear
policy and other labour movement bodies, such as the Wales TUC, have put a
rethink of their opposition to nuclear power on the agenda.

Although unions with members in the nuclear industry are understandably
worried about job losses as present plants come to the end of their working
lives, the task of de-commissioning existing nuclear power stations and
devising as safe storage methods as possible for toxic waste will need
thousands of skilled workers. The existing highly trained nuclear workforce
should be mobilised to deal with this.

The capitalist system gives us no choice at all to tackle global warming,
it offers either a failed market trading model or the risk of nuclear
disaster. Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace are wrong in thinking that there
is no non-nuclear alternative to Kyoto.

The way forward advocated by socialists is to democratically plan, outside
the market system, the introduction of non-polluting power sources such as
wind, wave and solar and to develop sustainable technologies, such as carbon
cells.

Wind, wave and solar technologies exist now, their ‘viability’ should not
however be judged on short-term profit and loss market calculations, but on
the needs of society in the long term.

Also, the introduction of sustainable technologies can only be done
effectively in conjunction with real international co-operation based on
satisfying human need.

Such co-operation will never be possible in a world dominated by
multi-national companies competing for profits.


The Dark Side Of Planet Profit

FROM NEXT January, the European Union’s emission trading scheme will try to cap carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. But British industry’s objections that stricter limits would reduce their ‘effectiveness’ i.e. their profit margins, have already softened Tony Blair’s aims.

Roger Shrives

Blair has now told Britain’s businesses that they will be allowed to emit nearly 3% more CO2 over the next three years than was originally being demanded.

The government, it seems, ‘underestimated’ how much CO2 British industry produced. Now ministers are hoping that the European Commission accept they only have to cut back emissions to 756.1 million tonnes rather than 736.3 million tonnes.

Such political backtracking at the merest hint of big business opposition is happening even before the emission trading scheme gets started!

In many countries of the world, however, capitalist experts are already operating a ‘carbon market’ which will trade permits to emit CO2, ie permits to pollute.

More than a million tons of CO2 ‘changed hands’ in September 2004, nearly double the figure for all of 2003.

Planet Profit

An example from the other side of the world shows the ‘logic’ of this market. The logic comes from the dark side of Planet Profit!

An energy analyst told business leaders in New Zealand that “their ship has come in”. Businesses in New Zealand, whose government has signed up to Kyoto, could gain from such a market more than its non-ratifying neighbours like Australia.

“Through its current tender process, the New Zealand government has up to 10 million carbon credits to assign to emissions reduction projects…. At the average price for an Emissions Reduction Unit this year, these credits are worth EUR46 million and their owners are free to trade them.”

Some capitalists realise that climate change is a vital issue – but even where they don’t immediately stamp on even the mildest proposals, big business will be preoccupied with the carbon market’s effects on profits.

However, as Pete Dickenson’s article shows, these pathetic market-based permit-swapping schemes will have little effect on reducing emissions of greenhouse gases.


Nuclear energy

Who’s Cleaning Up?

THE NUCLEAR Decommissioning Agency (NDA) starts supervising the ‘cleaning up of the UK’s public-sector civil nuclear sites’ from April 2005. The NDA is at pains to stress that its appointments to its top non-executive directors’ jobs (£25,000 for a 30-day year) have not been active for any political party.

But there are more sources of bias than that. The full-time chair Sir Anthony Cleaver was formerly chair and chief exec of IBM, former chair of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) and President of “Business Commitment to the Environment”.

Dr. Ian Roxburgh, NDA’s chief executive, previously held the same position in the Coal Authority. Roxburgh talks of working with “our newly formulated contractors British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL plc), Magnox Electric plc, Springfields Fuels Ltd and UKAEA” and hopes despite that, to be “a world leader in safe, secure and environmentally sound nuclear site restoration and clean-up”.

Nick Baldwin, former chief executive of Powergen, is an NDA non-executive director. Baldwin also “advises on private equity ventures in the energy sector”, says the NDA blurb which also tells us that fellow director Primrose Stark was “part of the successful Management Employee Buy-out from British Rail.”

In fact she made over £3 million as one of the directors of First Engineering after selling her shares from privatisation to another company Peterhouse.

Tony Cooper is described as a former senior trade union official. He was Deputy General Secretary of the Institution of Professionals, Managers and Specialists and on the TUC general council. More importantly for NDA, he’s also Chairman of the Nuclear Industry Association, a lobby group formed by BNFL and other nuclear contractors.

So this motley band of nuclear energy fans and energy industry chiefs who caused the industry’s problems in the first place are now running the NDA, aided by fat-cat gainers from failed privatisations. They may well be taking over – at public expense – British Energy’s and BNFL’s nuclear liabilities and letting them make big money again.

Under capitalism, even nuclear decommissioning puts profits first.