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Putting Climate Change in the Budget Now Will Save Lives and Money

Posted: 10/03/2012 8:08 am

The failure of world leaders to act on the critical issue of global warming is often blamed on economic considerations. Over and over, we hear politicians say they can't spend our tax dollars on environmental protection when the economy is so fragile. Putting aside the absurdity of prioritizing a human-created and adaptable tool like the economy over caring for everything that allows us to survive and be healthy, let's take a look at the economic reality.

A new scientific report concludes that climate change is already costing the world $1.2 trillion a year and is eating up 1.6 per cent of global GDP, and rising. It's also killing at least 400,000 people every year, mainly in developing countries. That's not counting the 4.5-million people a year who die from air pollution caused by burning fossil fuels.

As Michael Zammit Cutajar, former executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, told the Guardian: "Climate change is not just a distant threat but a present danger -- its economic impact is already with us."

But we're to believe that corporate profits, ever-increasing growth, consumer culture, disposable products and often meaningless jobs to keep it all going are more important than the health and survival of humans and other species, and true long-term economic prosperity.

The report, "Climate Vulnerability Monitor: A Guide to the Cold Calculus of a Hot Planet," was compiled by 50 scientists, economists and experts for the Europe-based non-governmental organization DARA and 20 countries that joined to form the Climate Vulnerable Forum.

As stated in the preface, it "challenges a conventional view: that global action on climate change is a cost to society. Instead, it enlightens our understanding of how tackling climate change through coordinated efforts between nations would actually produce much-needed benefits for all."

The report's authors also conclude that the challenges of global poverty and climate change "can be tackled simultaneously with the same policy framework that would shift our development path to a low-carbon footing," creating "jobs, investment opportunities, new possibilities for international cooperation and technological deployment to the benefit of all."

Although the researchers note that adaptation must be part of any climate change strategy, they caution that "treating only the symptoms but not the cause of the climate crisis would result in spectacular economic losses for the world economy."

It shouldn't be surprising to realize that using finite resources in a wasteful manner and at a pace much faster than the Earth's ability to replenish them is economic folly. Nor should we be surprised to learn that polluting, damaging and destroying the natural systems that keep us alive and healthy will not be good for our long-term prosperity, economic or otherwise.

Rapid population growth and technological innovation, combined with our lack of understanding about how the natural systems of which we are a part work, have created a mess. We have altered the physical, chemical and biological properties of the planet on a geological scale. We have left no part of the globe untouched. French scientists who recently completed a two-and-half-year journey covering more than 112,000 kilometres through the Atlantic, Pacific, Antarctic and Indian oceans found plastic debris in a remote ocean area that was thought to be pristine.

Researchers on the boat Tara, who were studying the effects of climate change on marine ecosystems and biodiversity, found plastic fragments in the Southern Ocean and Antarctica at levels comparable to the global average. "The fact that we found these plastics is a sign that the reach of human beings is truly planetary in scale," said Chris Bowler, scientific co-ordinator of Tara Oceans, quoted in the Guardian. It also reminds us that we live on a planet where everything is connected.

We must learn to shift our ways of thinking. We have to stop using so many disposable plastic items and fossil fuels. We need to conserve resources and energy and stop being so destructive. The DARA report offers many recommendations for governments, policy-makers, civil society, the private sector and the international development and humanitarian communities.

Its advice for communicators applies to all of us: question received wisdom, recognize awareness of risks as an opportunity and take a stand. Economies must function to serve people, not just short-sighted and often-destructive corporate interests.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Manager Ian Hanington.

Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.

For more insights from David Suzuki, please read Everything Under the Sun (Greystone Books/David Suzuki Foundation), by David Suzuki and Ian Hanington, now available in bookstores and online.

 
 
 
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The failure of world leaders to act on the critical issue of global warming is often blamed on economic considerations. Over and over, we hear politicians say they can't spend our tax dollars on envir...
The failure of world leaders to act on the critical issue of global warming is often blamed on economic considerations. Over and over, we hear politicians say they can't spend our tax dollars on envir...
 
 
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12:53 AM on 10/04/2012
Thank you for all you do Mr. Suzuki to continually alert the citizens about the planet in peril. There has been hardly any rain for so long here in B.C. People, as usual, remain oblivious as to how drought conditions affect other species and nature in general. It's such a shame that people continue to live in denial about climate change which is a frightening reality.
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08:36 PM on 10/03/2012
personally climate change and trash i can pick up
compared to the 50 million new chemicals (actual patent number) introduced into our bio-sphere
or the millions of tons of drugs released into our waters that cannot be removed
are not a problem.
depleted uranium that lasts for millions of years and is released by the ton (currently enough to kill everybody) gets my intention.
GMO corn and all the GMO plant friends will kill double his climate change "death count"
add the tons of fertilizers and pesticides and herbicides and fungicides that stray

so
WHY the HOOPLA about climate change?
the things i have mentioned cause death by disease...the treatment makes money already
climate change causes death by heat stroke and mudslides and floods and starvation and conflict....terrible yes
but there is no money in it....unless you can make everyone pay by treating the problem
so
good news ...."getting warmer " no big deal, move a little
bad news
all the others are extremely deadly for years ,thousands of years
and never make the medias radar
will never be addressed because they can't be addressed or they make money
and at some point we all die
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john frodo
armchair expert
04:36 PM on 10/03/2012
Lets legalize pot. Aside from the $20 Billion a year net benefit to the GDP, after the buds are picked industry is left with virtually free green feedstock for hemp, plastic, bio fuel. Global warming has already made cotton unsustainable, while hemp is a green substitute.
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07:43 PM on 10/03/2012
your sense is too common young frodo
only 2 in 3 Canadians would support this
01:56 PM on 10/03/2012
So if the ANTARCTIC ice cap is growing and is the largest it has ever been (in recorded history), does that mean that the ANTARCTIC is in a different dimension on planet Earth (since the claim is that the whole world is getting hotter) because that would be the best explanation of why on a growing-hotter-by-the-dollar planet, the whole ANTARCTIC region is actually getting colder. Just sayin'
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canuckistaneh
Science!
08:52 PM on 10/03/2012
No alternate dimension just physical differences. The Arctic is water based and the Antarctic is land based. When the earth warms it holds more moisture in the atmosphere and snows more in cold regions like the Antarctic. Because it is land based it will take longer to heat up than a water based environment like the Arctic. The Arctic ocean has a higher heat capacity than the Antarctic land and air therefore warming the Arctic ocean much faster than the Antarctic. The Earth self-regulates and will naturally do so, so it will snow until it warms too much and then rain. Anyhow that's my understanding of it and i'm sure i've read about computer modelling simulating this.
01:01 PM on 10/03/2012
The Climate Vulnerability Monitor 2nd Edition contains no actual proof of climate change "killing at least 400,000 people every year" as Suzuki would have the public believe. instead poor people using firewood for cooking causes substantial amounts of deaths from smoke inhalation. Nothing to do with climate change.
This group also wants to tap into the supposed $100 million dollars to be set aside for climate change mitigation, by the UN.

Not buying this one !!!