Floods and
Storms– the shape of things to come
Editorial in Irish Socialist Worker (18/2/2014)
The
exceptional storms and floods that have hit Ireland over the last month have devastated
the homes and livelihoods of thousands of people especially in Cork, Limerick and Galway.
It has been
the same in Britain with much of Somerset under water all this year.
As always
in these disasters the response of the government and the system is grossly
inadequate. This is because for politicians like Enda Kenny or Phil Hogan, or
Cameron in Britain, their priority is profit not the
needs of ordinary people.
The Irish
government has announced a fund of €70 million to deal with flood damage which
can sound a lot till you remember that its roughly one thousandth of the money
they raised for the bank bail – outs and less than one fiftieth of the personal
fortune of Denis O’Brien.
Meanwhile
thousands will be left with damaged and uninsurable houses, because insurance
also puts profit before people.
But
actually the situation is even more disastrous than this. This because the storms
and floods that have hit Ireland and Britain are symptoms of the deeper problem
of global climate change and the deadly threat of climate chaos.
It is not coincidence that they have come as
America experienced both an ultra-cold ‘polar vortex’ and record drought and
heat in California, while there was the terrible Typhoon Haiyan in the
Philippines and temperatures over 50 degrees C in Australia. That is what
climate change means: not just gradual warming but more and more extreme
weather events – more storms, floods, fires and disasters.
Some people
will there is no direct link between climate change and a particular disaster
but this misses the point. The point is that climate change, especially warmer
oceans, increases both the frequency and the intensity of weather catastrophes.
That is why these floods are the shape of things to come – as Bob Dylan put it
‘A hard rain’s a-gonna fall’.
Our rulers
and the giant corporations like Exxon, Shell and BP, know this only too well
but they do nothing because they and the capitalist system as a whole have a
huge vested interest in the use of fossil fuels which cause climate change. As
always they put profit first and literally ‘fiddle while Rome burns’ doing nothing to reduce
global carbon emissions.
Unless, in
the years and decades to come, we seriously challenge the priorities of
capitalism the future for humanity will be bleak indeed.
John
Molyneux
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