Tech | October 22, 2011 | 15 comments

The ethical dimension of tackling climate change

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JanforGore
The global challenge of climate change poses a perfect moral storm — by failing to take action to rein in carbon emissions, the current generation is spreading the costs of its behavior far into the future. Why should people in the future pay to clean up our mess?
by stephen gardiner

Sometimes the best way to make progress on a problem is to get clearer on what that problem is. Arguably, the biggest issue facing humanity at the moment is the looming global environmental crisis. Here, the problem is not that we are unaware that trouble is coming. After all, the basic science is both well known and continually being reiterated in major national and international reports. Rather, the core problem is that thus far effective action seems beyond us. We seem at best paralyzed, and at worst indifferent. Put starkly, there seems little place within our grand institutions and busy lives for what may turn out to be the defining issue of our generation.

Why? In my view, at the heart of the matter is the fact that humanity is in the grip of a profound ethical challenge that our current institutions and theories are ill-equipped to meet.

Sebastian Junger’s book The Perfect Storm tells the story of a fishing boat caught at sea during the rare convergence of three independently powerful storms. Similarly, the global crisis of climate change brings together three major challenges to ethical action — and in a mutually reinforcing way. It is genuinely global, profoundly intergenerational, and occurs in a setting where we lack robust theory and institutions to guide us. Neglect of this perfect moral storm leads us to underestimate the climate problem and fail to appreciate the wider implications in predictable ways.

Conventional wisdom identifies climate change as primarily a global problem. Wherever they originate, emissions of the main greenhouse gas (carbon dioxide) quickly become mixed in the atmosphere, affecting climate Those least responsible for past emissions are likely to suffer the most serious impacts.everywhere. According to the standard analysis, this makes climate change a traditional “tragedy of the commons,” played out between nation states that represent the interests of their citizens in perpetuity. In Garrett Hardin’s tragedy, each herdsman prefers the collective outcome where none over-consume — so that the commons is not overburdened. Nevertheless, when acting individually each prefers to over-consume himself, no matter what the others do — with ruinous results for all.

In climate change, we are often told, states reason in the same way. Each prefers the collective outcome where none over-consume with carbon emissions — so that dangerous climate change is avoided. Yet, when acting individually, each prefers to over-consume, no matter what the others do — so overconsumption is rife. In both cases, then, we are led to an outcome that no one wants, and which is severe enough to seem tragic.

Unfortunately, this traditional model is at best dangerously incomplete. To begin with, it ignores one central spatial aspect of the climate problem. Those least responsible for past emissions are likely to suffer the most serious impacts (at least in the short- to medium-term). This is partly because the poorer nations are disproportionately located in more climate-sensitive regions, but it is also because, being poor, they lack the resources available to the rich to address negative impacts. Since it ignores this basic problem of fairness, the traditional model underestimates the nature of the relevant “tragedy.”

Even more importantly, the traditional model obscures the temporal aspect of the perfect moral storm. Once emitted, a substantial proportion of climate emissions typically remain in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, and some persist for tens — even hundreds — of thousands. This means that the current generation takes benefits now, but spreads the costs of its behavior far into the future.

Worse, many of these benefits are comparatively modest (e.g., those of bigger and more powerful vehicles), and many of the projected costs are severe, even catastrophic (e.g., severe flooding and famine). Worse still, the problem is iterated: The same temptation to take modest benefits now even Most victims of climate change cannot hold us to account, being very poor, not yet born, or nonhuman.in the face of severe costs to the future is repeated for subsequent generations as they come to hold the reins of power. Hence, there are cumulative impacts further in the future. Worst of all, such impacts may eventually provoke the equivalent of an intergenerational arms race. Perhaps some future generations will face such appalling environmental conditions that they are entitled to emit more in self-defense, even foreseeing that this behavior makes matters even worse for their successors. And so it goes on.

The third storm exacerbates the situation. Climate change brings together many areas in which our best theories are far from robust, such as intergenerational ethics, global justice, scientific uncertainty, and humanity’s relationship to nature. The problem here is not that we do not have any guidance at all. For example, the idea that imposing catastrophe on the future for the sake of our own modest benefits is not a defensible way to behave is a relatively secure basic ethical intuition. Rather, the problem is that it is difficult to move beyond those basic intuitions to deal with the details, and we are too easily distracted by counterarguments, especially from theories that have merits in other contexts, but fail to take the future seriously enough.

For example, some influential economists claim the current generation is justified in moving slowly on climate change because future people will be richer due to economic growth, and so should pay more. But are we entitled to assume that the future will be richer even in a climate catastrophe? And even if they are, why should they pay to clean up our mess?

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___________________
The decisions we all make now have an effect on future generations. To leave this world this way for future generations is a moral crime.The environmental debt we leave our children is even more heinous a crime than the economic debt we leave them. I will never understand the mindset of the quick fix.

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15 comments // The ethical dimension of tackling climate change

  • JanforGore
  • WakeUpPeople
    • +2
      WakeUpPeople  
    • It is a tragedy that we are endangering not only ourselves, but our posterity. Our social conscience needs therapy. We pretend that our actions have no consequence, and our children will pay dearly for our irresponsibility.

    • 7 months ago
  • Anonmaly
    • +1
      Anonmaly  
    • I battle it out every day... First hand with at least one teenager, and some middle aged people...

      At this rate the future is not sustainable, I think every community needs to send at least one person to Will Allen's school for urban farming (I'd go myself it's cheap for education, but to pricey for me).... There are a myriad of ways a fairly large (at very least an acre) urban farm could help a community from; helping vets heal the emotional wounds of combat, to helping communities unite for a common goal, to just putting a produce stand in communities who's closest stores all say "Liquor" in neon lights on top.....

      Climate change and sustainability is also why I support less regulated industrial hemp, with what like 2 states where industrial hemp is allowed and the regulations so strict no one can grow it....

      In all this technology, all these scientific and intellectual advancements, we seem to have lost ourselves.... And the greed of the people writing policy aren't helping a damn thing in terms of the future....

    • 7 months ago
  • Gravity_Man
    • 0
      Gravity_Man  
    • Anonmaly:

      Superman said that => all these great powers and couldn't save the one he loved... altho Spiderman... A PATTERN!!! Young DareDevil Matt said it too.

      As superheroes we have failed to perform. The wars set us back 9 years. Nine years spent saving what WAS instead of pressing forward and making WHAT NEEDED TO BE. Even Supergirl failed (JfG).

      At any rate, looking to politics & politicians & political solutions destroyed the clock. We would have to pour on the Manhattan Project coal plus run at Flash's speed ~or with Flash Gordon's strength~ to catch the ball now.

      Even our satellites hate us. Estimated ROSAT crash in 4 hours.

    • 7 months ago
  • letsliveinpeace
  • Gravity_Man
    • +1
      Gravity_Man  
    • The Toy-Flooded Generation hates this post... and if Obama provides college grads some new jobs he's a shoe-in don't even bother spending $1 trillion for campaigning. Billion, whatever.

      uh, what are ethic pleez?

    • 7 months ago
  • David_H
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • David_H:

      "people simply do not wish to make personal sacrifices now to produce a better future."

      Then how can we say we love our children? Of course, society has also skewed the meaning of love. Loving your child means buying them a car, not planting a tree. Again, our perception of this world and its true intrinsic value as opposed to the illusionary one we create truly needs to change before we can understand the absolute importance of the ripple effect of our actions. From my viewpoint I just can't understand why that is so hard for so many to understand. Especially regarding the crossroad we are at now with our environment.

    • 7 months ago
  • David_H
  • Gravity_Man
  • Cruzankenny
    • +1
      Cruzankenny  
    • As an individual you can make sure your own nest is clean as possible.
      After that, where do you turn?
      From my viewpoint, I use vermiculture to compost my organic waste because it releases less carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, there is Globally nowhere to contribute, effort wise; aside from donations and forgive me for being trepidatious were I give my money.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • They wouldn't have power if we didn't buy their c*ap. If we weren't so consumptive. If we thought about the future. If we truly treated climate change as the urgent issue it should be instead a side issue. If we held politicians accountable for it regardless of their party. So many ifs, so little time.

    • 7 months ago
  • kennymotown
  • kennymotown
  • Kelly_Balthrop
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