From "Dulled Acceptance" To "Magical Thinking" - Elizabeth Kolbert On Our Response To A Crisis That Is Not Going Away [View all]
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In the first six months of this year, the cost of climate-related disasters in the U.S. set a new record: a hundred and one billion dollars. (Though the Trump Administration has stopped keeping track of such costs, the nonprofit group Climate Central has continued to gather the data.) Worldwide, every other week seems to bring a new climate-related crisis. Hurricane Melissa, which roared across Jamaica, Cuba, and Haiti last month, exploded from a Category 1 storm to a Category 5 in less than a day. Melissa, which killed at least seventy-five people, was kind of a textbook example of what we expect in terms of how hurricanes respond to a warming climate, Brian Soden, a professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Miami, told Wired. A second scientific report released last month announced the start of a a grim new chapter for life on Earth.
Increasingly, the response to all this has seemed to be a dulled acceptance. In the lead-up to this years COP, every country was supposed to announce an emissions target for itself, extending through 2035. The U.S.submitted such a target in the last month of the Biden Administration; it is now considered largely meaningless. Last week, China submitted its target, which was widely described as inadequate. Brazils target, too, has been criticized as insufficient. And, just a few weeks ago, the Brazilian government decided, for the first time, to allow oil drilling near the mouth of the Amazon. Critics called the move an act of sabotage against the COP. Marina Silva, the countrys environmental minister, defended the move, saying that Brazil has so far only approved oil exploration in the area and that, in any case, oil drilling is perfectly compatible with Brazils long-term plans to transition away from fossil fuels.
In the midst of the back-and-forth over Brazils move, Bill Gates weighed in with a memo to COP delegates. In it, Gates noted that the worlds poorest people are also the most vulnerable to the effects of rising temperatures. But, he said, these people have more acute problems than warmingnamely, being poor. Therefore, he argued, money now spent on reducing emissions would be better spent on encouraging economic growth: Health and prosperity are the best defense against climate change. Gatess comments generated a swirl of attention, in part because, just a few years ago, he wrote a book warning of a climate disaster. Trump, on Truth Social, characterized the memo as an admission by Gates that he had been completely WRONG, and cited it as evidence that I (WE!) just won the War on the Climate Change Hoax. Gates countered Trumps crowing by saying that it represented a gigantic misreading of the memo.
It is understandable, in the age of Trump, that peoplebillionaires includedwould want to focus on more tractable problems than climate change, even if those problems are as immense as global poverty. After thirty yearsor thirty-three, if youre counting from Rioits hard not to be discouraged by all that has, and hasnt, happened. But there is no getting away from climate change. All other problems, poverty included, are linked to it and will be exacerbated by it. The notion that you can alleviate suffering in a world of uncontrolled warming isnt just shortsighted, it edges toward magical thinking. ♦
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https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-lede/governments-and-billionaires-retreat-ahead-of-cop30-climate-talks