David Suzuki: Better ways to spend $4.1 trillion

Many of you are working to recycle, reduce energy consumption, and improve the world for your families and neighbours. The collective impact of these many small efforts is making a big difference.

Just think what you could do with $4.1 trillion!

That’s how much the U.S. and 17 Western European countries are spending to bail out financial institutions involved in an economic crisis that began in the U.S. and soon reverberated around the world. (The final amount will likely be a lot more. It’s difficult to fathom such a large number, but consider that one trillion seconds is about 32,000 years!) To top it off, most of the details are secret; we don’t really know what the money is being used for—although that probably hasn’t stopped your retirement savings funds from plummeting.

The effect on people in developing nations is even worse. Most of them didn’t have savings to begin with, and now the economic crisis, coupled with the effects of the climate crisis—including drought and food shortages—is causing more of our human family to suffer from extreme poverty and joblessness.

Just think what they could do with $4.1 trillion!

A report from the Institute for Policy Studies, Skewed Priorities: How the Bailouts Dwarf Other Global Crisis Spending, points out that the amount is 40 times what the U.S. and Europe are spending in developing nations on programs to deal with poverty ($90.7 billion) and climate change ($13.1 billion, none of it from the U.S.). In fact, the U.S. spent far more to bail out insurance firm AIG—$152.5 billion—than all the countries together spent on developmental aid last year.

And what did the AIG executives do after getting the taxpayer-funded bailout? They celebrated with a $440,000 trip to a luxury spa resort. The cost of the trip is about what the U.S. spent on food aid last year to Lebanon, “a country struggling to recover from conflict”, according to the IPS.

If we think we needn’t worry about what happens to developing nations because it isn’t affecting us, we should remind ourselves that, just as everything in nature is connected, so is everything in our global economic and political systems. Increased international job competition and reduced export opportunities are just two of the smaller impacts mentioned in the IPS report.

But the worst meltdown isn’t of the global economy. Another report, Climate Safety, from the Public Interest Research Centre, shows that the Arctic’s late-summer ice is melting much faster than scientists previously predicted and may disappear within three to seven years. The cascading consequences of such an event could be catastrophic.

Just think what we could do with $4.1 trillion!

Instead of giving companies these huge sums of money so they can continue business as usual, buying and selling, merging, and paying their executives obscene salaries and bonuses, we could put it toward renewable energy, sustainable urban planning, and research into ways to lessen the impact of climate change—things that really would stimulate economies.

But, as the world’s nations meet at the UN Climate Change Conference in Poland this month, the focus remains on the false dichotomy of economy versus environment. Canada has continued to bolster its reputation as a country lacking in imagination and concern for the planet. Environment Minister Jim Prentice told Alberta business leaders recently that, “We will not aggravate an already weakening economy in the name of environmental progress.” His job is to protect the environment yet he sounds like the minister of finance!

But if Canada is hindering progress, other nations are showing more enlightened leadership. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said before heading to Poland that nations must keep their commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. “Climate change is so important that we cannot use the financial and economic crisis as a pretext for dropping it,” he said. Eminent economist Sir Nicholas Stern has already told us that meeting the challenge of climate change could cost about one per cent of annual GDP but doing nothing will destroy the global economy. Seems there’s only one thing we can do, and it won’t cost $4.1 trillion.

As citizens, we can and must do everything possible to keep our finite world alive and healthy. Along with the small but important changes we are making in our own lives, we must also call on our leaders to stop downplaying the unequivocal science that tells us failing to quickly address the climate crisis will make the economic crisis seem like a minor blip in history.

We could tell them where to put that $4.1 trillion!

Take David Suzuki’s Nature Challenge and learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org/.

Comments

3 Comments

Antonio San

Dec 5, 2008 at 6:01pm

"But if Canada is hindering progress, other nations are showing more enlightened leadership. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said..."

So 34 million Canadians + 65 million French gives us 100 million people or barely 5% of the population of India and China... And of course this is OUR fault and jet flying Gore is the answer...

You are no climatologist, no meteorologist, no earth scientist and yet you spew fear. Your own fundraising letters are so vague, so liquid with no scientific references... so there is nothing to hang one's hat on.

So typical Canadian in lecturing the world, start by getting a sewer treatment plant for Victoria before you could have any credibility about the environment!

d s

May 20, 2009 at 12:58pm

climate change is unstoppable suziki should drop dead muthat fucker

MILLER

Oct 19, 2009 at 1:18pm

FIRST, STOP THE SEAL HUNT BOYCOTT THE WINTER OLYMPICS SHOW CANADA,THE WORLD WILL NOT STAND FOR THIS SLAUGHTER ANYMORE.