Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger published the op-ed āGlobal Warming Scare Tacticsā in the New York Times on April 8. Participants in recent debates over climate change may recognize their names. Theyāre the guys who run the Breakthrough Institute, a pseudo-contrarian āenvironmental research organization.ā
Nordhaus and Shellenberger co-founded the Apollo Alliance in 2003, a worthy effort to unite organized labor, social justice advocates, civil rights activists, and environmentalists behind increased public spending on renewable energy. They followed up a year later with āThe Death of Environmentalismā (initially, and importantly, presented to a gathering of environmental organization funders).
Their apparent intentionāto open up a debate about the strategic direction, self-understanding, and public communication practices of leading environmental groupsāwas commendable. Their criticisms of Big (white male) Environmentalism succeeded in generating angry responses from people like the Sierra Clubās Carl Pope (who addressed his rebuttal to environmental grant-makers), but the cramped nature of their critique constrained its value.
While occasionally on point in its charges against the big organizations, the essay (based on interviews with mostly white male leaders of large national groups) had nothing to say about the environmental justice movement, or other grassroots groups led by women and people of color. It neglected as well the environmental movements of the Global South, today the heart of the climate justice movement.
They did not talk to radical environmentalists (the people who truly understand the drivers of socioeconomic-ecological self-destruction): left Greens, ecofeminists, social ecologists, deep ecologists and others who criticized the technocratic, capitalism-friendly Gang Green decades earlier. They ignored the countless individuals and groups building diverse community greening projects out of hope as much as fear (from municipal compost systems to sustainable agriculture, from farmersā markets to alternatives to automobility). It was, in sum, a (sometimes unfair) critique by some youngish liberals of the failure of middle-aged liberal DC/NYC environmentalism (while leaving out much and obfuscating yet more) to get government to address climate change.
The main point of Nordhaus and Shellenbergerās Times op-ed is that fear-based appeals to drum up public support for policies to address climate change are more likely to turn people off than fire them up. Itās not a new point, and has been made by people on the left too.
They cite several studies to bolster their claim (but, interestingly, none from economists or game theorists for whom fear of loss trumps possible gains most every time). They do not admit that fear and its emotional kinārage and sorrowāhave been and will continue to be powerful motivators for disparate social movements.
Fear of nuclear war drove the atomic scientists movement of the late forties, Ban the Bomb campaigns of the late fifties-early sixties, and the Nuclear Freeze of the eighties. Fear of loss of irreplaceable species and spaces aroused preservationists from John Muir to Rachel Carson, from Aldo Leopold to Dave Foreman. Fear of loss of community and culture moved Jane Jacobs to oppose Robert Moses. Fear of further erosion of hard-won rights compels feminist organizing for reproductive health. Fear of exploitation and discrimination, of detention and deportation, animates activists for immigration reform. Fear of complicity in cruelty galvanizes animal rights advocates. Fear of contamination, sickness and premature death propelled citizens to demand action in Love Canal and Woburn, Chester and Harlem.
Is fear of disruption of what Habermas calls the life-world the sole inducer of civic action? Of course not: social movements also cohere around other shared, negotiated understandings, identities, diagnoses of problems, and assessments of opportunities. Might fear paralyze rather than mobilize? Yes: in cases when the perceived threat appears impervious to resistance, and when commitment to the cause flags over time. Fear-based campaigns require a tangible evil: a draft card, a nuclear plant cooling tower, a polluting facilityās smoke plume, an Operation Rescue picket line.
Thus the importance for sustainable society advocates of reducing the seeming remoteness of climate change, of making concrete the threats to life and livelihood. And thus the mostly careful attempts by environmentalists to connect increasingly frequent extreme weather to ongoing carbon loading of the atmosphere.
The question of how to best frame climate change in order to generate sufficient societal response to avoid catastrophe is an important one. The common Big Environmentalist focus on āpopular solutionsā like clean energy is smart, think Nordhaus and Shellenberger (much better than complaining about the weather).
What bothers them is that most environmental groups, even the largest and most mainstream, will not buy into nuclear powerāthis stubborn and ignorant stance āpolarize[s] rather than unite[s].ā After all, itās ālow carbon;ā what could be wrong with it? Building āsafer nuclear power systemsā to ward off climate disaster was even endorsed, the authors remind us, by James Hansen and three other prominent experts in an open letter. Leaving nukes aside, itās unfair to blame āpolarizationā over the existence of or responses to climate change on environmentalistsā bad public relations strategies.
Of the massive, coordinated, ongoing effort by Exxon-Mobil, the Koch brothers, and the Heartland Institute (et al.) to do to climate science what the Tobacco Institute did to cigarette science, Nordhaus and Shellenberger have only this to say, āSome conservatives and fossil-fuel interests questioned the link between carbon emissions and global warming.ā
Thereās no mention of how under- and mis-educated TV weathermen have been central progenitors of climate change skepticism. Thereās no acknowledgement of how Big Coal, Oil and Gas have bought off local and national legislators, stalled attempts to put forward even wimpy programs (like cap and trade), or underwritten NPRās gushing embrace of fracking.
They cherry pick āfactsā from Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports, and claim that thereās no evidence that āthe economic costs of natural disastersā has increased due to climate chaos-connected extreme weather. Tell that to the National Climatic Data Center and to the (re)insurance industry (the first global corporate sector to make peace with climate science).
And tell that, while licking the irony from your lips, to Peter Teague, former Environmental Program Director (now Chief Strategy Officer) of the Nathan Cummings Foundation, who wrote the Foreword to āThe Death of Environmentalism.ā Hereās Teague, from the Foreword,
As I write this, the fourth in a series of violent hurricanes has just bombarded the Caribbean and Florida. In Florida, more than 30 are dead and thousands are homeless. More than 2,000 Haitians are dead. And ninety percent of the homes in Grenada are destroyed. . . .
Scientists have long said that stronger and more frequent hurricanes would be a result of global warming. Itās an effect of warmer oceans.
Yet not one national prominent leaderāenvironmental or otherwiseāhas come out publicly to suggest that the recent spate of hurricanes was the result of global warming. Thatās in part due to the fact that the common wisdom among environmentalists is that we mustnāt frighten the public but rather must focus its gaze on technical solutions, like hybrid cars and fluorescent light bulbs.
Truth telling regarding the growing evidence of links between global change and local effects convinces only liberals say Nordhaus and Shellenberg now, ābut they alienate conservatives in equal measure.ā The authors actually believe that more than a handful of additional āconservativesā might board the climate change bus if we just get the message right? Whatās more conservative than ensuring the planet doesnāt bake all the babies yet to be born (given āconservativeā opposition to contraception and abortion)? Even Barak Obama, Self-Deluder in Chief, no longer believes he can work with āconservativesā (after years wasted trying to prove otherwise).
One can apparently reduce conservativesā climate skepticism if āthey first read articles suggesting nuclear energy or geoengineering as solutions.ā This dubious pitch to broaden the appeal of messages meant to mobilize support for a carbon-free worldāno serious person can today endorse geoengineeringāis coupled to a muffled endorsement of fracking. āAfter all, if climate change is a planetary emergency, why take nuclear and natural gas off the table?ā
Because those technologies make the problem worse rather than better. Without government loan guarantees, liability limitations, and a pass on waste disposal, thereād be no nuclear power industry. Nordhaus and Shellenberger believe itās better to spend billions of dollars and a decade to construct a nuclear power plant than to invest the time and money in energy conservation and efficiency (creating more jobs and preventing more pollution while at the same time ending the worries of eternal radiation, meltdowns, and terror attacks)?
They believe that pretending the US is Qatar for a few years outweighs the growing number of adverse effects of fracking? The single problem of methane leaks is enough to rule out fracking for natural gas as a āsolutionā for climate change. Thatās what I mean by the pseudo-contrarian label at the top. Nordhaus and Shellenberger are frustrated, and feel the need to lash out at their impotent environmentalist brethren. They, like big environmental group leaders, do not understand (or will not admit) that climate change is an unavoidable outcome of an unsustainable political-economy, and are thus limited to suggesting failed techno-fixes.
Nordhaus and Shellenberger are right that ābuilding a better worldā arguments are necessary to enroll a greater mass of people in sustainability campaigns. āPlaying defenseā alone, focusing limited resources solely on āputting out fires,ā preaching only to the choir, does not a sustainable world build. But neither does pretending that inspiring rhetoric about solar panels, or a better public service announcement for energy policy tweaks, get even close to the epochal socioeconomic changes necessary to both stave off calamity and construct a superior civilization.
Steve Breyman teaches āHow to Read the New York Timesā at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Reach him at [email protected]
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2 Comments
I agree Richard. I believe the whole “terrorizing people into inaction” argument is dishonest and condescending. Just think of who it serves best! If someone approaches you saying their child has been kidnapped and they want your help after they get done doing their laundry, do you take them seriously?
If the climate movement approaches people saying you should buy a solar panel, do you believe the situation is critical? Hardly.
As for Nordhouse, he can only envision solutions that leave the destructive market systems in place. That’s why the NYT publishes him.
One problem with the approach that Nordhaus and Schellenberger seem to be advocating is that by refusing to connect current weather disasters with global warning the problem remains in the abstract rather than the concrete. If the message is āsomeday global warming will have catasrophic effects, but no catastrophes today can be attributed to it,ā then one actually reinforces the climate skepicism and denial. A problem that is always coming yet never arrives is not likely to be taken seriously by a majority of the masses. Connecting current weather events with global warming, on the grounds that such events are what is to be expected more frequently in the future as a result, is both correct in terms of the science as well as from an activist perspective. If people understand clearly what is coming, there is a greater potential for actions to be taken to combat the problem.