
Emission
Control?
– We Have A Problem
Socialists
have for years railed at capitalist market production for being on a
relentless collision course with the environment, and have been more
than once guilty of tired clichés like ‘profits of doom’
and ‘merchants of menace’. Nobody expected, twenty or so years
ago, that the fat cats in their plexiglass palaces would lift their
noses from their account books long enough to notice that, outside
the window, the last tree was dying in a desert. Now, mysteriously,
we see 150 of the world’s largest corporations, including Nestle,
Coca Cola, General Electric and Shell, enthusiastically demanding
carbon emission cuts of up to 50 percent by 2050 (New Scientist, Dec
8, 07). And in the wake of the recent Bali accord, we have most of
the world’s countries behind a global effort to cap carbon
emissions and prevent disastrous global warming. What is behind this
sudden laudable concern for the environment, and how are they going
to achieve their aims? Simple, the only way capitalism can think of
doing anything. By making loads of money out of it.
Now
the way you make money out of anything in capitalism is to deprive
everyone of it, and then charge them for access to it. Thus, at
Kyoto, was born the idea of depriving everyone equally of the right
to emit greenhouse gases, and then charging a flat rate for access to
metered pollution rights. It would work, so long as all countries
signed up to it. This last proviso is of course what has taken so
long to resolve, which is why Kyoto never really worked and Bali,
which was strong on emotion but weak on hard targets, still might
not.
So
how do businesses make money out of a carbon tax? By developing
‘green’ technologies that produce less pollution, allowing
countries to save money on buying or sell on their spare credits to
the belching giants like China and the USA. Hence all the new debate
in the UK about nuclear power. Hence also the probable Second Coming
to Europe of GM technology, previously scorned but now about to
return with a vengeance. Agriculture is the largest contributor to
global warming, not through carbon directly but through nitrogen in
fertiliser, which, apart from the considerable problems of nitrate
pollution, algal blooms and dead zones in coastal waters, has the
unhappy effect of oxidising into nitrous oxide, which is a greenhouse
gas 300 times more potent than carbon (New Scientist, Jan 5).
Genetically modified crops which don’t need so much fertiliser, or
which can take up more nitrogen and waste less of it, are seen as one
way to reduce this huge impact.
And
genetic modification of crops won’t stop at a few strains of
cereal. Rice feeds half the world, and in a more drought-prone world,
rice cultivation will be seriously at risk, so drought-resistant
strains will have to be developed. And as with salt-resistance,
another important factor in coastal areas more prone to flooding,
what happens when modifications migrate, as they are known to do, to
wild and weedy cousins? Crops could in the future be strangled by
superweeds that can withstand flood, drought or weedkillers to
threaten the world’s food supplies.
But
one of the biggest money-making production bonanzas is biofuels.
Transport is responsible for roughly one quarter of all global human
emissions, but the oil is running out and the much-vaunted hydrogen
option requires unfeasibly massive infrastructure changes for storage
and filling-station delivery. Besides, biofuels are close to
carbon-neutral, absorbing as much in growing as they emit in burning.
Better still, with some strains such as switchgrass offering up to
540 percent more energy than is required to grow them, leading to a
carbon-saving of 94 percent compared to petrol, the smart money is in
inedible crop-growing (BBC Online, Jan 8). Already large swathes of
North America are switching to corn-based biofuel production, both to
earn carbon credits and as a future hedge against Arab and
Chinese-controlled petroleum, while Latin American countries, in
particular Brazil, are gearing up to sugarcane-based ethanol
harvesting.
So
lucrative is this potential market that, not to be outdone,
developing countries like Indonesian Sumatra are hurriedly destroying
what’s left of their last vestiges of rainforest in order to cash
in on palm oil production for diesel fuel. And who could blame them
when, prior to Bali, there was no agreement under Kyoto to recompense
‘green’ countries for preserving such unprofitable natural
forest. As much of Sumatra’s richest forest is bulldozed, the peat
that it has lived in for thousands of years is ripped up, and this
releases more carbon than will ever be saved by the palm oil grown on
it (New Scientist, Dec 1, 07). The Bali accord hurriedly attempted to
address deforestation for the first time, but much of the damage has
already been done and it remains to be seen whether forest-rich
countries stand to gain more by sitting on their green growth or
churning it up for the bio-barrels.
Nor
are these the only problems. Subsistence farmers pushed off land to
make way for biofuel production, and given no help or financial aid
by regional governments, have no choice but to invade natural forest
and clear it by slash and burn in order to live. And food supplies
are threatened on a larger scale too, as biofuels, though efficient
in some ways, are the most land-hungry method of producing energy,
many times more than fossil, wind, nuclear, hydro or solar. There is
only so much arable land, and the population is rising. What happens
to human food supplies as the world’s engines groan ever more
hungrily to be fed? According to recent research, the total
availability of suitable undeveloped land for biofuels is between 250
and 300 million hectares, but even using the most efficient crops it
will take 290 million hectares to produce 10 percent of the world’s
projected energy requirement in 2030. But by then, the world will
also need 200 million of these same hectares to feed the extra 2 to 3
billion people who will then be alive (New Scientist, Dec 15, 07).
And this is to say nothing of all the extra nitrous oxide being
emitted by fertilised biocrops, if suitable GM alternatives are not
developed or are not accepted for use. On top of all that, there is
the problem of water supply. Switching 50 percent of transport and
electricity requirement to biofuels by 2050 will require up to 12,000
cubic kilometres of extra water per year, close to the total annual
flow down the world’s rivers (New Scientist, Dec 15, 07). All this
and in a drier world too where water wars are already widely
predicted.
The
truth is, nobody really knows if the pros of biofuel production
really outweigh the cons. Like all capitalist economics, it is
largely guesswork. All capitalism really knows for sure is that, in
the words of the aforementioned large corporations, “the shift to a
low-carbon economy will create significant business opportunities”,
or in plainer language, there’s gold in them thar green hills.
Besides, the subtleties of comparative studies may be lost on
governments keen to assuage a growing public demand that they ‘do
something’ about the environment. Australia, already suffering the
longest drought in its recorded history, has recently turfed out its
long established climate-sceptic government in favour of one which,
within weeks, signed up to Kyoto. As Bob Dylan would say, it don’t
take a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.

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