“The hand-mill,” a young Karl Marx once wrote, “gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill society with the industrial capitalist.” The sentence has often been cited to show that Marx was a “technological determinist.” One can certainly see why.
In reality, for what it’s worth, Marx was no technological or “productive force” determinist. Across his career he argued that class and “social relations of production” critically shaped what productive forces were used and how and for whose benefit they were employed in different historical eras. Marx was well aware that there where hand mills long before there were feudal lords and that capitalist social relations (characterized above all by the widespread exploitation of wage labor) predated, and provided social context for the advent of the steam mill. He knew that the steam mill would never have taken widespread root under feudalism, which relied on landed peasant labor. And Marx expected to live to see a socialist revolution, one that brought the social ownership of steam mills and other productive forces developed under capitalism.
Clearly, he did not see productive forces and technologies as determining social class relations. He leaned more in the opposite direction.
With the little slice of intellectual history as background, let me advance what might sound like a technologically determinist proposition regarding present day forces of energy extraction and production: humanity has perhaps 20 years, maybe less, to move off fossil fuels and onto renewable sources or it will ruin all prospects for a decent future.
This is not merely the judgment of apocalyptic cranks and “catastrophist” worry warts. It is the consensus finding of a vast scientific literature on the environmental cataclysm that is certain to take hold in coming decades and centuries if Homo sapiens does not get off fossil fuels. For many years now, the preponderant majority of earth and climate scientists have been telling us that the planet we all share is being made progressively uninhabitable for human and other sentient beings (and living things) by global capitalism’s relentlessly wasteful, growth-addicted burning of fossil fuels. According to the latest and last report from the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), grave consequences will follow if nothing is done to slow the anthropogenic global warming (AGW) that is already well underway thanks to the mass extraction and burning of hydrocarbons. The report cites food shortages, refugee crises, flooding, mass extinction of plants and animals and dangerously high temperatures as the effects of global warming at its current pace. The panel also warns that dying forests, melting of ice worldwide, rising sea levels and devastating heat would come if emissions continued on their current pace.
The findings and judgments of the best contemporary Earth science are clear. As the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research (UK) concluded last year, “we face an unavoidably radical future…We either continue with rising emissions and reap the radical repercussions of severe climate change, or we acknowledge that we have a choice and pursue radical emission reductions. No longer is there a non-radical option.” It is by now widely understood that preventing AGW from reaching its full calamitous potential means keeping four-fifths of known carbon reserves (coal, oil, and gas) underground.
Particularly worrisome is the strong possibility that AGW will quite soon pass an irrevocable tipping point past which human efforts to manage and cap planetary heating become irrelevant. A report earlier this year from the American Association for the Advancement of Science (the world’s largest scientific society) warns that “pushing global temperatures past certain thresholds could trigger abrupt, unpredictable and potentially irreversible changes that have massively disruptive and large-scale impacts. At that point, even if we do not add any additional CO2 to the atmosphere, potentially unstoppable processes are set in motion. We can think of this as sudden climate brake and steering failure where the problem and its consequences are no longer something we can control.”
Depressing as such reports and warnings might seem, there’s also some very good news, technically speaking. Two US academicians– Stanford engineering professor Mark Jacobson and University of California-Davis research scientist Mark Delucchi – have shown that humanity could convert to a completely renewable-based energy system by 2030 if nations would rely on technologies vetted by scientists rather than those promoted by Big Carbon. Jacobson and Delucchi show that homo sapiens could have 100% of the world’s energy supplied for all purposes by wind, water, and solar (WWS) energy by 2030 if it produces (among other things) millions of wind turbines, water machines, and solar installations. Jacobson and Delucchi’s plan includes fully feasible transformations in transportation and heating and cooling as well as power generation. “The numbers are large,” Jacobson and Delucchi write, “but the scale is not an insurmountable hurdle: society has achieved massive transformations before. During World War II,” Jacobson and Delucchi noted in Scientific American five years ago, “the U.S. retooled its automobile factories to produce 300,000 aircraft, and other countries produced 486,000 more. In 1956, the U.S. began building the Interstate Highway System, which after 35 years extended for 47,000 miles, changing commerce and society.”
The great transition required for a decent future – the shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy – is technically achievable. We can do it. “It’s absolutely not true that we need natural gas, coal or oil,” Jacobson told New York Times environmental reporter Elisabeth Ronsenthal last year. “You could power America with renewables from a technical and economic standpoint.”
So what’s the hang up? “The biggest obstacles,” Jacobson observes, “are social and political — what you need is the will to do it.” Any good “Marxist” should appreciate the dilemma: the technical know-how and technological capacity exists for a deep and broad, eco-friendly transformation in how we extract, produce, and use energy. What’s blocking this great transformation is a matter – and no small matter – of social and political and indeed (though it is unlikely Jacobson would say so) class relations.
There’s a big difference with the hand-mill and steam-mill eras, however. This time the contradiction between productive forces and sociopolitical relations is a matter of life and death for the species and other living things.
Neither Jacobson nor Rosenthal identified the precise “social and political obstacles” to the necessary conversion to wind, water, and solar. They may have felt that such elaboration was unnecessary. Everyone who cares seriously about AGW knows that the big oil, gas, and coal corporations and their financial backers – the vast Carbon industrial complex – have invested heavily in elections (campaign finance), lobbying, and “public relations” (propaganda) to convince politicians, policymakers, and citizens that it is unnecessary, impractical, and economically disastrous to try to move from fossil fuels to renewable energy. And, as every good climate justice activist knows, Big Carbon One-percenters have huge sunk capital committed to the existing eco-cidal hydrocarbon-addicted energy system – giant fixed capital investments that make the giant petrochemical corporations and utilities all too “rationally” (from a profits perspective) resistant to a clean energy conversion. According to the leading US climate activist Bill McKibben, “‘the existing fossil fuel infrastructure, from power plants and supertankers to oil furnaces and SUVs,’ is worth at least $10 trillion, and scheduled to operate anywhere from ten to fifty more years before its capital costs can be paid off.” That’s a lot of “asset inertia.”
Another significant social and political hurdle is the dominant “neoliberal” ideology that big corporations and financial institutions have underwritten and advanced for decades. This is the leading barrier that the progressive author and activist Naomi Klein emphasizes in her important new tome This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate. “What,” Klein writes, “is really preventing us from putting out the fire that is threatening to burn down our collective house? …the answer is far simpler than many have led us to believe: we have not done the things necessary to lower emissions because those things fundamentally conflict with deregulated capitalism, the reigning ideology for the entire period we have been struggling to find a way out of this crisis. We are stuck because the actions that would give us the best chance of averting catastrophe…are extremely threatening to an elite minority that has a stranglehold over economy, our political process, and most of our major media outlets.”
Despite its subtitle, there’s really not much on capitalism as such in Klein’s book. There’s little in This Changes Everything that explicitly challenges the (insane) “inner logic” of the profits system. When Klein says “capitalism vs. the climate,” she really seems to mean (a) “the climate” (livable ecology) versus (b) neoliberal ideology, market logic, and the disproportionate political and ideological power of Big Carbon.
Still, the notion that we have to move beyond capitalism to save life on Earth is implicit in the book’s conclusion. Klein writes there that “The task is to articulate not just an alternative set of policy proposals but an alternative worldview to rival the one at the heart of the ecological crisis – embedded in interdependence rather than hyper-individualism, reciprocity rather than dominance, and cooperation rather than hierarchy.” (Klein, This Changes Everything, p.462) That alternative world view, I would assert, is 21st century participatory eco-socialism.
Can the climate crisis be solved and a livable Earth saved under the competitive, chaotic, hierarchical, regressive, imperial, authoritarian, and growth- and accumulation-addicted capitalist system? The answer is almost certainly “no.” At the same time, we have little choice but to push forward towards toward the great renewable energy transformation as best we can under current social and political conditions. As Noam Chomsky observed four years ago, if we don’t act very soon to avert the unfolding environmental catastrophe, then little else that progressives and leftists talk about is going to matter very much. Who wants to turn the world upside down only to find that it has been polluted beyond repair? Who wants to more equally share out a poisoned pie?
There is no reason to delay starting on the path towards environmental healing and climate justice where we are, living under capitalism. Perhaps other radicals and I are mistaken to doubt that ecological salvation can occur under the profits system. I would be happy to be proven wrong. At the same time, we should not discount the possibility that a revitalized socialism will emerge (as Klein seems to suggest) precisely out of the struggle to save a livable Earth.
In pursuit of that chance, left progressives would do well also to heed French ecological writer Herve Kempf’s warning half a decade ago: “the left will be reborn by uniting the causes of inequality and the environment – or, unfit, it will disappear in the general disorder that will sweep it and everything else away.”
Paul Street’s latest book is They Rule: The 1% v. Democracy
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3 Comments
Although I doubt seriously the claim “we could power America with renewables” I also wonder why this has to remain the goal. Vast amounts of power are totally wasted, only used to grow GDP. I think selling a solar powered American Dream is disingenuous- better to be straight and say we can have great lives with less (especially those with middle and upper class lifestyles). Trade all that useless stuff for more liesure time, 20hr work week, free healthcare, education, retirement, etc..
Smart capitalists will soon be selling us “sustainable” solar powered sweatshops producing all the latest fashions.
i completely concur with everything Paul Street has written.
hyper-individualism is forced upon us; it is not a lifestyle choice, or personally chosen ideology; it is foisted upon us with every message broadcast into our skulls everyday, all day, from every direction, and from all corners. The fact that no one really likes living this way on a daily basis doesn’t seem to matter much. High levels of stress and continually states of anxiety produced by this dog-eat-dog philosophy overwhelm and override our inner sense of community and belonging, which is innate to most species, including our own, skinner be damned. That said, an obvious correlative is seeing/knowing that the power resides with the masses, not the few. Power is a delusion, a lie, repeatedly told, which as goebbels and hitler pointed out so spectacularly and unforgettably, is ultimately believed as being true. In a capitalist system, the source of power is capital. For the many, the 99% if you will, the main form of capital, ie that with marketable value and therefor power, is their very life’s energy, ie their body(ies) and what they, we, do with those bodies, on a daily basis, what use is made of them, and who makes such decisions. It is critical to understand, that on an everyday basis, moment to moment, we each decide what we will do, and what we will absolutely refuse to do, even if death be the consequence of refusal, or of ‘defiance’. So be it.
It may seem scary to ‘opt out’; it may be termed ‘escapism’, but, when in prison, the only rational option is escape, which is merely the option of freedom and of human dignity, which does not distinguish between self and other. Less abstractly, it is our purchasing power which every Carbon Giant seeks to rob us of, through the old ruse of “there is no alternative.” There is.
It is no sacrifice, really, to reduce one’s energy consumption by 70-80%, though we’re assured that yes, indeed, it is a huge and unthinkable sacrifice. Civilisation itself is synonymous with technological and energy consumption. So we’re told. Another lie. Each individual lifestyle decision matters, and has consequences larger than at first apparent, like the proverbial butterfly of chaos supposition. And the lifestyle decisions of many matter even more, like the density of an object means more ‘matter’ in a gravitational sense. When money=power, then who you give your money to is who you give your power to; and they will use that power for their own benefit; no surprise.
We are not lacking a technological fix. We lack an ideological cleansing. “What you need is a mental carminative,” one character says to another in a Huxley novel i read too many decades ago to remember which one it was/is. Exactly. It’s what we all need. Then we will see that the future of fossil fuels is not in the hands of Giants, but in our own. That the imperative to change is not on the shoulders of Corporate America, or the 1%: it is on our own. When we decide to change, everything will change, automatically; like a ripe fruit falling from a tree. It may seem like a leap into the Unknown, because that is how it is presented to us. But it is not. It is simply taking one step on planet earth, where our feet are always fully grounded and supported. Our heads are somewhere off in a never-never land of someone else’s devising, but this is just a “Phantom of an overheated brain.”
Life at less than 75 kwh/month is not some hell of deprivation. But life at more than 75 kwh/month will be exactly that in the not too distant future. The future is up to us, not Them. What we do changes everything. It is the only thing that ever has. Which is why Marx devoted his life to revolutionary change and personal financial struggle, and not to an academic career. But he still managed to read Aeschylus and Shakespeare every year. The right brain is the gold mine from which the left brain coins it currency.