Gwynne Dyer: Rio+20 culprits set stage for climate ecocide

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There was no law against genocide in the early 1940s; it only became an internationally recognized crime after the worst genocide of modern history had actually happened. Similarly, there is no law against “ecocide” now. That will only come to pass when the damage to the environment has become so extreme that large numbers of people are dying from it even in rich and powerful countries.

They are already dying from the effects of environmental destruction in some poor countries, but that makes no difference because they are powerless. By the time it starts to hurt large numbers of people in powerful countries, 20 or 30 years from now, most of the politicians who conspired to smother any substantial progress at the Rio+20 Earth Summit will be safely beyond the reach of any law. But eventually there will be a law.

Rio+20, which ended last Friday, was advertised as a “once in a generation” opportunity to build on the achievements of the original Earth Summit, held in the same city 20 years ago. That extraordinary event produced a legally binding treaty on biodiversity, an agreement on combating climate change that led to the Kyoto accord, the first initiative for protecting the world’s remaining forests, and much more besides.

This time, few leaders of the major powers even bothered to attend. They would have come only to sign a summit statement, “The Future We Want”, that had already been nibbled to death by special interests, national and corporate. “[The] final document...contributes almost nothing to our struggle to survive as a species,” said Nicaraguan representative Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann. “We now face a future of increasing natural disasters.”

A plan to stop the destruction of the world’s oceans was blocked by the U.S., Canada, and Russia. The final text simply says that countries should do more to prevent overfishing and ocean acidification, without specifying what. A call to end subsidies for fossil fuels was removed from the final text, as was language emphasizing the reproductive rights of women. And of course there were no new commitments on fighting climate change.

The 49-page final declaration of Rio+20 contained the verb “reaffirm” 59 times. In effect, some 50,000 people from 192 countries travelled to Rio de Janeiro to “reaffirm” what was agreed there 20 years ago. The fact that the document was not even less ambitious than the 1992 final text was trumpeted as a success.

Rarely has such a large elephant laboured so long to give birth to such a small mouse. The declared goal of the conference, which was to reconcile economic development and environmental protection by giving priority to the goal of a “green” (i.e. sustainable) economy, simply vanished in a cloud of vague generalities.

The final text does say that “fundamental changes in the way societies consume and produce are indispensable for achieving global sustainable development,” but it does not say what those fundamental changes should be. A “green economy” becomes only one of many possible ways forward. You wonder why they even bothered.

“This is an outcome that makes nobody happy. My job was to make everyone equally unhappy,” said Sha Zukang, secretary general of the conference, but that is not strictly true. Governments seeking to avoid commitments are happier than activists who wanted some positive results from the conference, and the hundreds of large corporations that were represented at Rio are happiest of all.

How did it end up like this? Global greenhouse gas emissions have grown by 48 percent in the past 20 years, we have lost another 3 million square kilometres (1.15 million square miles) of forest, and the world’s population has grown by 1.6 billion—yet there is less sense of urgency than there was in 1992. You can’t just blame the economy: Rio+20 would probably have ended just as badly if there had been no financial crash in 2008.

Twenty years ago the issues of climate change, biodiversity, preservation of oceans and forests, and sustainable development were relatively fresh challenges. Moreover, the world had just emerged from a long Cold War, and there was plenty of energy and hope around. Now everybody understands how tough the challenges are, and how far apart the interests of the rich and the poor countries.

We now have a 20-year history of defeats on this agenda, and there is a lot of defeatism around. Politicians are always reluctant to be linked to lost causes, and the struggles against poverty and environmental destruction now seem to fall into that category. Thus we sleepwalk towards terrible disasters—but that doesn’t absolve our leaders of responsibility. We didn’t hire them to follow; we hired them to lead.

At the recent World Congress on Justice, Law and Governance for Environmental Sustainability, one of the events leading up to the Rio+20 conference, a group of “radical” lawyers proposed that “ecocide” should be made a crime. They were only radical in the sense that a group of lawyers agitating for a law against genocide would have been seen as radical in 1935.

One day, after many great tragedies have occurred, there will be a law against ecocide. But almost all the real culprits will be gone by then.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based international journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

Comments (29) Add New Comment
Pat
We are a fundamentally selfish species that really doesn't care what sort of world will exist for others in 50 or 60 years.

The majority of people won't vote for a political party that would introduce carbon-restriction measures that also take a few pennies out of the wallet.

We're so focused on our own lifestyle that even trivial sacrifices for the good of future generations are almost unthinkable.
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Goldorak
50,000 people travelling to Rio (swimming? walking?)... and yet the "ecocide" is ours. LOL Green agitprop never ceases to amuse!
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jv
There are lots of things we could be doing for the environment that don't get done because of this sole religious focus on C02. It is time to give it up. There has yet to be a single credible study to come out that shows we need to spend the trillions of dollars they are asking for to combat CO2. Either they won't supply data, their models are shown to be flawed or other problems always pop up just after the flashy news reports move out of the head lines. Don't forget the prediction that the arctic would be ice free 2 months from now.


Lets move on and do some thing worth while like protecting the water or habitat or some thing else. And Gwyn stick to topics you actually have a clue about.
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Dean Gross
This article is spot on: in 1935 there was no word for genocide, and ecocide is the right term for destroying nature. I've thought a lot about why people aren't more wise to this. It may come down to the information overload we have, and that "news" doesn't have staying power, when the next distraction is 1 second behind. Store shelves are fully stocked today, and as a customer I can almost behave like a child and ask for anything I can pay for. People are focused on making a living, and feel pressured to have a comfortable lifestyle - in a way, our quest for comfort is killing the planet.

For those that say people who care about nature are lazy, and hurt the economy, consider this: without a healthy planet, there is no economy, just like without a healthy body and mind, we could not work. It's just hard to imagine that nature could stop supporting us, that one day, the store shelves could be empty. I'm sure people thought the Holocaust could never happen, nor what we call today World War 2.

It's hard, to think like this Gwynne. Now I know how Cassandra of Troy must have felt.
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Dean Gross
jv - I'm not a scientist, but to my understanding the scientific consensus is that global warming is happening, and human industry is a major factor (emissions plus deforestation). Go to any major university and track down the natural science departments or read publications like Science or Nature. Even on wikipedia, CO2 levels in prehistoric geological periods correlate higher temperatures with higher CO2 levels.

Even if CO2 does not act as a greenhouse gas (i.e. let's disagree on its effects), does it not make sense to understand how the ecosystem works and how the sum of human activity can affect it? Would you not want to investigate the foundation of a building, and understand engineering principles before constructing one? Right now, there's disagreement about whether people and countries are abusing the Earth for their own present comfort. Well, at one point pesticides like DDT, or even lead and asbestos were considered safe: we know better now.

It's worth looking into, and at least keeping an open mind about. Did the genocide in Germany not happen, because there wasn't ready proof in 1938, and the German government denied it? Not understanding the ecosystem, "ecocide" as Gwynne mentioned, is not a future I choose. Do you?
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NoLeftNutter
Gwynne asks - "How did it end up like this?" Simple, enough people became well enough informed about the lies, corruption and deceit surrounding the CAGW scam that the faux scare stories aren't working anymore. Move on folks, nothing to see here.
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Mark Brooks
"There has yet to be a single credible study to come out that shows we need to spend the trillions of dollars they are asking for to combat CO2."
With the tiny exception of the hundreds of studies that show very clearly we need to take urgent action to reduce carbon emissions (and it won't cost trillions if you bother to do any research on the economics - next time, why not just say "a gazillion jillion dollars"? Sounds even bigger!)
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RE jv
All I have to say is that.... you should really stick to topics you actually have a clue about.
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Kate Minor
Maybe we don't deserve to survive. The dinosaurs are extinct. Maybe the next inhabitants of this planet will dig up our "bones" too and wonder why we went extinct.......
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Steven Threndyle
There's been a lot of coverage in the media about the failure of Rio 20, etc. Just asking - did anyone -- in the media, or woh were attending the conferences -- actually talk to man (or woman) on the street Brazilians to get their opinions? (And not just the Brazilian intellectuals who might have been educated at Harvard or Cambridge?) Or were they all just attending 'plenary sessions?' Maybe they thought Rio was just 'too unsafe...'
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L Leeman
Every single alarming environmental prediction is directly related to a single root cause. Now I mean species extinction, runaway CO2, water security, food security, resource depletion, ocean acidification, ... etc.
All have a single root cause which is not being adressed. Further it is well within the capability of humanity to address this cause and in multiple ways.


Would it not make sense to address that root cause if you REALLY believe the alarming predictions?

I used to say, in the 70s. when Greenpeace and Zeppora Boorman were attempting to assault forest companies that were logging in Clayquot Sound, and Howe Sound Pulp and Paper were being accosted for releasing effluent into the sea, that... "You can have as many stinking polluting pulp mills as you want....as long as you dont want too many".

You can have as many cars driving around as you want, as long as you dont want too many.

You can have as many coal electric plants as you want.. as long as you dont want too many.

But of course, it many well be, that we want too many. And you can address this in a few ways but mainly you can promote poverty, which is to say you dont want too MUCH rather than too many.. or... you can reduce how many of us there are to want things. That's right I said it. almost. Population reduction. Stabilize and reduce the number of humans on the planet.
We know how birth control works.. so it is technically doable.
Work on the root cause.
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Birdy
re: Steven Threndyle

There are a few "on the street" opinions in this article:
http://news.yahoo.com/women-march-rio-protest-green-economy-174353168.html
"Thousands of women representing social and farm movements marched in central Rio Monday to rail against the "green economy" advocated by the Rio+20 conference on sustainable development."
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Stubbs
I'm not sure why Brazilians don't just chop down their entire forest for wood, and turn the entire Amazon basin into a food-growing area, like America's Mississippi that feeds 320 million people, or China's Yangtze or India's Ganges that feed 1 billion each. With only 280 million people, Brazil could become rich like the US. At least they could charge others for their surplus food, unlike the oxygen the Amazon forest currently produces. If Brazil didn't get a huge payment for oxygen from the other countries at Rio, then why should they bother enforcing any rainforest protections?
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Natty
Putting a tax on carbon emissions is faulty logic. Look at the gas tax in BC. It goes straight to the consumer and not the big polluters. Then there's Pacific Carbon Trust which takes money from schools and hospitals and then gives it to companies like Encana. The only thing that makes sense is trying to focus on creating a world that isn't driven by petroleum. Governments need to start looking at ways to ween their citizens off of certain materials. Of course, deforestation and bio-diversity are also important.
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ROOZLE
What about the economy? What about the Economy? Wah Wah. Wasting Trillions of Dollars will do what for the economy? The same thing that wasting all the Money on WWII did for the great depression.
Tackling the challenges of climate change would be good for the economy, even IF it wasn't urgently needed. Cancer research helps the economy despite the fact that they have yet to conclusively prove whether smoking causes cancer or not (According to the same people who say that there is no proof for climate change)..
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petr aardvark
the one thing that will do more to slow the c02 emissions into the environment than any environmental movement or laws is the triple digit price of oil. In the last 10 years the price of a barrel of oil increased 5 fold. And its only going to grow -due the increasing demand from China and India. Im not a skeptic by any means, but some of the IPCC predictions are based on continuous growth in the use of fossil fuels, and yet we are going to more extremes to get the oil out. Even for coal, high value anthracite production peaked in 1998 and the brown coal is only good for local use - it would cost more in bunker fuel to ship than the coal is worth. While we are a long way from renewables replacing fossil - already in 20 US states, independent contractors can come and put pv panels on your house, no money down and often beating the local utility prices. It is only coming down, while coal is going up. And sure there is natural gas, but see what that does to the water of people living near fracking sites, (in the Gasland documentary) some folks can set the water in their tap on fire)
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scissorpaws
The initiative has to be global and it has to be sold as a positive thing. It would have been simple, cheap, effortless and possibly even enriching to place a world-wide carbon tax on all products. Everyone pays it, governments collect it themselves and do with it whatever they want, ideally return it to consumers but this being the real world we can anticipate a very few people with very large bank accounts. No matter, it would still inspire corporations to change their use of energy and development of carbon-free energy sources, solar and wind, say. A few mega projects could have been invested in. Just the thing to pull out of a depression. There's one waiting for Europe in North Africa: electricity from solar cookers transmitted under the mediterannean using High Voltage DC or - my preference - conversion to hydrogen toward the development of a world wide Hydrogen Economy. Hydrogen really is the answer. It can be burned in internal combustion engines, furnaces, stoves, and unlike batteries the technology is well understood and easy. It can prevent deforestation in many third world nations, by replacing firewood - the leading cause. Can be made from any electricity source from rooftop photovoltaics to excess wind power or nuclear during low demand periods. Unlimited and endless. This is highly doable and would leave everyone, even the rich, better off since it inspires economic growth while reducing the impact of our economies on our environment. But we need a few visionaries to go to these meetings to make it happen, to inspire the world to move in a slightly new direction.
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Birdy
re: ROOZLE
"Cancer research helps the economy despite the fact that they have yet to conclusively prove whether smoking causes cancer or not (According to the same people who say that there is no proof for climate change)"

Hi, cancer has been cured ad nauseam. The cures are not patentable, so drug companies refuse to produce them or fund research. Why would they, why sell a cheap oil that actually works and anyone can make, when they can sell you chemo creams for $7000+ a month?

Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 55, No. 3, September 1975
http://www.ukcia.org/research/AntineoplasticActivityOfCannabinoids/index...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OqSRfzqwWA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cUC8tjoB_0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tghUh4ubbg

The amount of energy wasted on profit-motivated corporate bullshit cancer research is an affront to humanity surpassed only by the energy wasted on developing military technology.

So no, cancer research does not "help the economy" it is itself a cancer on the economy, and it's continued tyranny is a result of "intellectual property/patent" laws. The concept of "idea ownership" needs to be sacrificed for us to move forward as a species.
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dru
My deep concern used to be the destruction of the planet. But now I feel as though the Earth can rejuvenate itself quite easily when we're gone.
Not "if"--but "WHEN".
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DireTimes
What a stupid thing to say that arguing against genocide in 1930s would be radical, vast majority of people knew very well it was wrong, it didn't need a word to make it wrong. As far as the article goes, it is a lot of hyperbole and fear mongering. When environment becomes your religion no cost is too high so save your sacred object. The real problem with such fear mongering is it destroys any chance of a reasonable conversation as to how to have truly sustainable development. It is clear that it will require not new taxes and legislation but a change in the consumerist culture that permeates most societies.
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