PARALLEL UNIVERSE
by
NAYAN CHANDA
_____________
Nayan
Chanda is Director of Publications at the Yale Center for the
Study of Globalization, Editor of YaleGlobal Online and is the
author of Bound
Together, a book that explores the long history
of globalization. Parallel Universe appeared in Businessworld
and YaleGlobal
and is reprinted with the permission of the author.
Listening
to the earth scientists at the Tallberg Forum speaking about
the likely calamities caused by global warming, I had the sensation
of entering a parallel universe. It is a universe where an adaptive
and inventive human race has grown to over six billion people,
created bountiful and rich civilizations built on fossil fuels,
and has emerged as the most important specie to geologically
alter the planet. Man-made greenhouse gas has placed the earth
in a slow cooker. In this parallel universe, the phrase ‘glacial
pace’ does not mean excruciatingly slow. Not when the
vast majority of the world’s 160,000 glaciers are in retreat,
at an increasingly rapid rate. The Gangotri glacier feeding
the Ganges has been retreating since the Industrial Revolution,
but its shrinking has accelerated in recent years. In the past
25 years, it has shrunk almost a kilometer. As the Gangotri
is the main source of fresh water nourishing the north Indian
plains, the decline of this frozen reservoir is the starkest
reminder of the danger that global warming poses to the lives
of millions of people.
Scientists
are alarmed by the gathering speed at which the Arctic sea ice
sheet is melting. The displacement of sunlight-reflecting ice
by dark, heat-absorbing water, the scientists say, may be setting
in motion a feedback loop. NASA’s top climate scientist,
James Hansen, warns that the breakup of the West Antarctic and
Greenland’s ice sheets could push the world climate system
across a tipping point, where the disintegration of thick ice
sheets would be unstoppable. The melting of the Siberian permafrost
will release a huge quantity of methane gas from organic material
below, contributing further to the greenhouse effect. While
rising ocean levels will threaten the poorest first -- from
Bangladesh to the Pacific islands -- the world’s major
coastal cities may not be spared. Rising temperatures will bring
drought to some parts of the world, and storms and flooding
to others.
While
scientists are loath to link the hurricanes and massive floods
of recent years to global warming, these events do fit the pattern
predicted by scientists decades ago. Hansen warned that “if
humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to the one on which
civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted,
CO2 must be reduced from its present 385 ppm [parts per million]
to, at most, 350 ppm.” Others, gathered at Tallberg Forum
in late June, spoke of a planetary emergency that called for
urgent action to put an end to fossil fuel emission. The universe
that scientists spoke of looks like the one we inhabit, yet
it is not the one that politicians seem to be concerned about.
That
there is indeed a different universe inhabited by world leaders
was brought into view in Washington DC and the recent G-8 summit
in Rusutsu, Japan. The Bush administration, which only recently,
and grudgingly accepted the reality of global warming, finally
showed what it really believes by disowning its own scientists.
It decided to bury the Clean Air Act, which its own Environmental
Protection Agency wanted to use to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
It was the wrong tool for the job, the agency’s head said
in a volte-face, as White House officials slammed the aborted
proposals as “cumbersome” and “an economic
burden.”
In
this universe, the political expediency of kicking the can to
the next administration and not big business backers trumps
abstract concerns about the planet. Though much loftier in rhetoric
than plain-speaking White House officials, the pronouncement
from G-8 leaders originated in a universe in which retaining
power, maneuvering to stay ahead, and passing the buck matter
more than coming to grips with an unprecedented challenge. They
spoke of achieving at least a 50 per cent reduction in global
emissions by 2050, but without specifying from what level or
how they intend to achieve that target. They promised to help
support the mitigation plans of developing economies through
technology, financing and capacity-building, but the resources
for the task mentioned were pitifully inadequate. And that promise
of help too was predicated upon commitment by major developing
countries to cut emissions. It is business as usual in our known
universe where politicians pander to short-term interests rather
than ask for sacrifice.
The
fact is that there really is one universe where north and south
will sink together. As Bo Ekman, founder of the Tallberg Forum,
put it, “We have only ourselves with whom to negotiate.
We cannot negotiate with melting glaciers.”
Rights
© 2008 Yale Center for the Study of Globalization