May 11, 2006
NOTES FROM A DYING PLANET
The Media's Aversion To Addressing The Juggernaut of Economic 'Growth'
Last year we reported that Michael McCarthy, environment editor of the Independent,
was “taken aback" at dramatic scientific warnings of "major
new threats" in the Earth's climate system. For instance, the West
Antarctic ice sheet, previously considered stable, could collapse leading
to a 5-metre rise in global sea level. As McCarthy noted: "Goodbye
London; goodbye Bangladesh". (Media Alert, 'Is
The Earth Really Finished?', March 1, 2005)
Returning home by train from the climate conference where the warnings
had been delivered, McCarthy mulled it all over with Paul Brown, then environment
correspondent of the Guardian:
"By the time we reached London we knew what the conclusion was.
I said: 'The earth is finished.' "(McCarthy, 'Slouching towards disaster,'
The Tablet, 12 February, 2005; available at www.gci.org.uk/articles/Tablet.pdf)
McCarthy's bleak conclusion was later amplified by substantial coverage
devoted in The Independent to scientist James Lovelock's latest book, 'The
Revenge of Gaia'. Lovelock argues that it is already too late to avert climate
chaos:
"The worst will happen and survivors will have to adapt to a hell
of a climate." (Lovelock, 'The Earth is about to catch a morbid fever
that may last as long as 100,000 years,' Independent, January 16, 2006)
A news headline proclaimed, 'Attempts to counter global warming are already
doomed to failure, says Lovelock.' (McCarthy, The Independent, January 16,
2006)
The best we can do here, according to Lovelock, is to build a kind of fortress
Britain, conserving our own resources, and rapidly expanding the nuclear
sector in a bid to cut carbon dioxide emissions. No questions were raised
in Lovelock's comment piece, or in the accompanying news stories and editorial,
about the supreme driver of climate catastrophe: the corporate-driven obsession
with economic 'growth' on a finite planet.
But now Michael McCarthy finally appears to have seen the light. A recent
front-page Independent article by the environment editor highlighted "a
different way forward in the struggle to combat global warming. [...] It
will mean turning established principles of British economic life upside
down."
McCarthy was reporting the conclusions of the Commons all-party parliamentary
climate change group, led by Colin Challen MP. The Commons group put "the
case for abandoning the 'business as usual' pursuit of economic growth,
which has been the basis of Western economic policy for two hundred years."
Note, however, that 'growth' should be placed in inverted commas because
standard measures of economic activity externalise - in plain terms, ignore
- the often enormous attendant environmental and social costs. As Colin
Challen warned:
"No amount of economic growth is going to pay for the cost of the
damage caused by a new and unstable climate."
McCarthy expanded: "the pursuit of growth, which essentially has not
changed since Victorian times, is misleading, and the terms need to be redefined.
Instead, we need a different policy which looks at how much carbon we can
afford to emit." (McCarthy, 'Global warming: Your chance to change
the climate,' front-page story, The Independent, March 28, 2006)
In an accompanying comment piece, Challen presented this "different
policy" called 'contraction and convergence', devised by the London-based
Global Commons Institute (www.gci.org.uk) which is led by Aubrey Meyer in
London:
"We know that we need to reduce our carbon emissions so that we
arrive at a safe concentration in the atmosphere - perhaps 450 parts per
million. We also know that without developing countries being part of
a global agreement, it won't work. The answer is convergence - we should
aim to contract our emissions while converging to a per-capita basis of
shared emissions rights."
Challen's warning was expressed in unusually stark terms for a mainstream
press article:
"We are imprisoned by our political Hippocratic oath: we will deliver
unto the electorate more goodies than anybody else. Such an oath was only
ever achievable by increasing our despoliation of the world's resources.
Our economic model is not so different in the cold light of day to that
of the Third Reich - which knew it could only expand by grabbing what
it needed from its neighbours.
"Genocide followed. Now there is a case to answer that genocide
is once again an apt description of how we are pursuing business as usual,
wilfully ignoring the consequences for the poorest people in the world."
(Challen, 'We must think the unthinkable, and take voters with us,' The
Independent, March 28, 2006)
This is a crucial message from Challen. But how would the mainstream media
respond?
An Environment Editor Wakes Up To His Responsibilities
Michael McCarthy, for one, now seemed to have fire in his belly. A recent
government policy review admitted that Blair will fail to meet his promise
to cut carbon dioxide emissions to 20 per cent below 1990 levels by 2010.
The Independent environment editor was scathing:
"Britain's credibility as a leader in the fight against climate
change has suffered a massive blow."
He continued:
"The size of the failure stunned observers, as well as embarrassing
ministers and eliciting contemptuous criticism from environmental groups
and opposition parties.
"There can be no more flagrant example in all of Labour's years
in office of the gross miscarriage of a key policy."
McCarthy noted for the first time (as far as we are aware) "that the
pursuit of economic growth makes controlling CO2 an impossibility, and that
a different path must be sought."
He concluded:
"The lesson that can be drawn from the spectacular failure to deliver
the target is to realise how hard it is to cut carbon emissions by tinkering
at the edges of a capitalist economy in full growth mode. It is now clear
that the pursuit of economic business-as-usual is simply not an option."
(McCarthy, 'Blow for Britain's fight against climate change as emissions
target is missed,' The Independent, March 29, 2006)
Thus, having been resigned to the end of the world last year, Independent
environment editor Michael McCarthy is now showing some degree of robust
challenge in his climate reporting. If only his counterparts on the other
'serious' newspapers would follow suit.
Media Business As Usual
Sadly, the environment editors and correspondents at the Daily Telegraph,
Financial Times, The Guardian and The Times all had nothing to say about
the parliamentary climate change group's challenge to the supremacy of economic
'growth'. The Times did, however, publish a commentary by its anti-green
columnist Mick Hume rubbishing the group's argument as "irrational".
(Hume, 'Today's militants - a cream-puff army out for a jolly ideological
picnic,' The Times, March 31, 2006)
The Guardian, supposedly a platform for 'green' issues in the eyes of much
of the environment movement, ignored the parliamentary group's challenge
to the primacy of economic 'growth' as the driver of policy. Instead, the
newspaper perpetuated the myths that "Britain has at least acted more
responsibly than most" on climate, and that Tony Blair and (then) environment
secretary Margaret Beckett "are certainly sincere on the issue".
The Guardian's editors have yet to ditch the tired bromides of years gone
by: "Small measures will help, but big ones are needed too. Some of
them will hurt and voters will squeal." But whatever the measures,
it "does not mean abandoning economic growth." (Leader, 'Climate
change: Hot air but no action,' The Guardian, March 29, 2006)
Other than the Independent, the only British newspaper to report the parliamentary
group's challenge was the London-based Evening Standard. But it was given
the briefest of mentions - just 56 words at the end of a short article reporting
the Archbishop of Canterbury's charge that George Bush is failing in his
Christian duty to tackle global warming. (Evening Standard, 'Archbishop
blasts "unChristian" Bush,' March 28, 2006)
In a pro-nuclear energy editorial, The Scotsman called economic growth,
"not a luxury but necessary to look after an aging population."
(Leader, 'Iron logic points way to nuclear power,' The Scotsman, April 22,
2006)
A Times editorial stated that:
"It is true that economic growth can degrade the environment: the
noxious fumes in many Chinese cities are a case in point. It is also possible
that climate change may hit the poorest countries hardest. But it is not
yet clear how to trade off that as yet unknowable scale of risk against
the proven benefits to those countries of economic growth."
The Times then warned darkly of irrational "forces" operating
in society:
"The debate about climate change is not always rational: there are
other forces at work. Too often, this issue is hijacked by leftist ideologues
to serve an anti-capitalist, anti-globalisation and anti-American agenda.
All would be well, they argue, if we put an end to consumption and trade.
That is not fair, nor is it a productive way forward. (Leader, 'The moral
climate,' The Times, March 29, 2006)
End of discussion, then, in the eyes of this establishment newspaper.
The Fantasy World Where Green Is Tory Blue Or Gordon Brown
Mainstream politicians have been vying with each other in a desperate bid
to appear greener than thou. Thus, Tory leader David Cameron flew to a Norwegian
glacier in a ludicrous photo-op to view evidence of global warming. This
coincided with a speech by Chancellor Gordon Brown to the United Nations
in New York in which, reported the Daily Telegraph, "he promised further
action to combat climate change."
The Telegraph continued, playing the usual media role as stenographer to
power:
"Mr Brown said failure to act on the environment would threaten
economic growth. Environmental sustainability was not an option, but a
necessity.
"The two would-be Prime Ministers have effectively gone head-to-head
on the environment, with the Chancellor calling into question Mr Cameron's
green credentials, claiming they were based on spin rather than substance."
This is the abysmal level to which climate discussion in contemporary culture
has sunk. But there was more:
"Mr Cameron said the Conservatives had to lead a 'new green revolution
and recapture climate change from the pessimists'." (George Jones
and Charles Clover, 'Cameron turns blue to prove green credentials,' Daily
Telegraph, April 21, 2006)
This is Cameron's analogue of New Labour's utterly discredited "ethical
dimension" to foreign policy: a blatantly transparent attempt to woo
progressive voters. The idea that the Tories, one of the major wings of
the profit-led Business Party that has crushed real sustainability and social
justice, could lead a "new green revolution" lies beyond the realms
of science fantasy.
Over in the Telegraph's business section, a casual observer might have
thought that an outbreak of sanity had occurred:
"While we might like to luxuriate in the benefits of globalisation,
the nasty fact is that increased trade and wealth have a dark side, which
is leading to profound and unsettling climate changes. The world's agricultural
system is beginning to warp and this might one day wreck the global trading
mechanism. We are close to the limit in terms of increasing crop yields."
(Keith Woolcock, a director of WestHall Capital, an independent research
stockbroker, 'Perhaps we should not be quite so hungry for globalisation,'
Daily Telegraph, April 20, 2006)
But fear not because: "The one place on earth where cultivation could
be increased dramatically is Brazil."
This, we are told with a straight face, is good news for business investors:
"But first discuss timing with your financial adviser, Brazil is
on a bit of a tear at the moment, you might be better off waiting for
a setback."
At this point, the sane observer does not know whether to laugh or weep.
The Independent Backs Away From Dangerous Truths
The awakening of environment editor Michael McCarthy to the cataclysm of
the economic 'growth' folly is to be welcomed - though a consistent follow-through
in his critical reporting, and in the Independent's as a whole, has yet
to emerge. More crucially, the newspaper's own editorial line has yet to
match the parliamentary climate change group's challenge to the basis of
Western economic policy for the last two hundred years. The paper's critique
of current policy still lacks any critical substance and depth. It is too
easy to issue editorial platitudes that "this Government is failing
over climate change, and without an urgent rethink on how our political
system deals with this threat, the problem will only get worse." But
what does the Independent propose?
"A unilateral tax on airline fuel would be seized upon by Gordon Brown's
rivals to argue he is cutting Britain's economic throat."
Instead, the paper can only lament:
"At every turn, we run into the line of argument that says tough
measures to curb Britain's carbon emissions are bad for Britain's economy.
It is true that economic pain is inevitable in the short term. But that
will be as nothing compared with the cost of failing to take sufficient
action."
It is hardly original to tell readers: "Governments are too afraid
of short-term electoral punishment to do what is right for the future of
Britain and the world." And it is vacuous for the paper to call for
"a genuine political consensus on ways to deal with climate change
[which] would give ministers the political space to develop the sort of
policies we urgently require."
Unsurprisingly, after all that clichéd hand-wringing, the paper's
editorial leanings emerge in the weak conclusion:
"The Liberal Democrats are committed to doing what is necessary
to deal with climate change." (Leader, 'A political system failing
to rise to the challenge,' The Independent, 28 March 2006)
The appalling truth is that none of the major political parties are prepared
to propose the systemic changes that are necessary to address impending
climate catastrophe.
And, crucially, the media is failing in its vaunted, but illusory, role
of holding power to account - even as humanity's fate lies in the balance.
The media's delusions could literally prove fatal. Consider The Independent's
self-congratulatory tone on its 'Your World, Your Say' write-in campaign:
"This is uncharted territory - both for politics and our planet.
But it is a debate that cannot be delayed. Thank goodness it is finally
taking place." (Leader, 'A revolution in attitudes,' The Independent,
March 29, 2006)
But the 'debate' is avoiding the key issues that so urgently require attention
and action. One contributor to The Independent's letters page summed it
up well: "your published responses show an unwillingness to acknowledge
that economic growth is the problem. The capitalist system and the world's
ecological system are incompatible - there cannot be unending economic growth
in a world of finite resources, even including renewables."(Letter,
John Keeley, 'Economic growth is problem for climate,' The Independent,
April 8, 2006)
Granting a tiny space on a newspaper letters page for such a dose of reality
is but a sop. Tragically, addressing the salient issues in media reporting
and analysis remains a long way off at present.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect
for others. In writing letters to journalists, we strongly urge readers
to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone. Write to one
or more of the journalists and editors below. It is more effective to write
in your own words.
Write to Michael McCarthy, environment editor of the Independent:
Email: m.mccarthy@independent.co.uk
Write to Simon Kelner, editor of the Independent:
Email: s.kelner@independent.co.uk
Write to Geoffrey Lean, environment editor of the Independent on Sunday:
Email: g.lean@independent.co.uk
Write to Tristan Davies, editor of the Independent on Sunday:
Email: t.davies@independent.co.uk
Write to Charles Clover, environment editor of the Daily Telegraph:
Email: Charles.Clover@telegraph.co.uk
Write to John Bryant, acting editor of the Daily Telegraph:
Email: john.bryant@telegraph.co.uk
Write to Fiona Harvey, environment correspondent of the Financial Times:
Email: fiona.harvey@ft.com
Write to Lionel Barber, editor of the Financial Times:
Email: lionel.barber@ft.com
Write to John Vidal, environment editor of The Guardian
Email: john.vidal@guardian.co.uk
Write to Alan Rusbridger, editor of The Guardian
Email: alan.rusbridger@guardian.co.uk
Please also send copies of all emails to Media Lens:
Email: editor@medialens.org
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