Why we need a socialist solution to
climate change
John Molyneux
A lot has been written, including by myself, on why
capitalism, by its very nature, cannot tackle or stop climate change. The
purpose of this article is not to repeat those arguments but to make the
positive case for socialism as necessary to deal with this existential crisis
for humanity.
By socialism I mean simply the combination of two things:
public ownership and democratic control of production and society.
By public ownership I mean not the elimination of personal
private property or the nationalisation of every small business and corner shop
but of the main banks, corporations, industries, services and utilities. For
example public ownership of bus and transport networks, of the health service,
of one main state bank and one main state insurance company, of social housing,
of waste management, of water, electricity, gas, wind and solar power
production, of Larry Goodman’s ABF Food Group, of Denis O’Brien’s Communicorp and so on.
By democratic control I mean that each major workplace –
each hospital, factory, train station, school, university, construction company
etc. – should be run by the elected and recallable representatives of its
workforce, within the context of a democratic plan for the economy and society
as a whole. That would need to be proposed by government based on and
accountable to democratically elected popular assemblies.
Without large scale public ownership, capitalism and the
laws of the capitalist market will continue to dominate and this will have
disastrous consequences for the environment as it has done already. Without
democratic control you have not socialism but state capitalism[i]
with a new ruling class of state bureaucrats which, as has been seen in
Stalinist Russia and in China, also has terrible ecological consequences
because it subordinates the needs of the people and nature to accumulation for
accumulation’s sake in competition with other states.
Only through socialism will it be possible to generate both
the political will at the top and the genuine popular support and collaboration
to achieve the immense coordinated transformation of the national and international
economy necessary in the current emergency. Only public ownership and
democratic planning can coordinate the establishment and expansion of free
public transport, the urgent transition to renewal energy, the mass
retrofitting of homes and a vast programme of aforestation and rewilding.
Most of the climate and environmental movement support the idea
of a just transition but only socialism with its commitment to ending class
privilege and inequality can actually deliver this. In any society where there are
billionaires alongside homeless people, and immense divisions between rich
countries and poor countries as a result of imperialism and globalised
capitalism all attempts at transition to ending carbon emissions , even where
they are made, will inevitably be structured and blighted by this inequality.
The rich will look to protect themselves and their life styles in gated
communities in the uplands while trying to shift the burden of paying for the
transition onto ordinary people.
Take the example of transport. If, as is absolutely
essential, we get people out of the private car and onto free public transport,
what will be the consequences of this? Under capitalism it will mean the
bosses of the giant auto companies
(Volkswagen, Toyota, General Motors etc) will see which way the wind is
blowing, loot their own companies and
put the proceeds in their Swiss bank accounts , while throwing their hundreds
of thousands of workers on the scrap heap.
Under socialism the auto industry CEOs and big shareholders could be
relieved of their ill-gotten gains while the rundown of the industry is managed
in a way that retrains and re-employs the workers in socially useful work eg
building wind turbines or buses. The same applies to flying. If air travel were
to be reduced, as it must be to save the planet[ii],
under capitalism this would most likely be done by a price mechanism so that
executives would continue to jet round the world to their conferences while
ordinary people had to give up their holidays to Spain and the Greek Islands .
That in turn would mean redundancy for airline workers and crisis in the
Spanish and Greek tourist industry.
Again only socialist planning could solve this.
And it would be the same for the utterly deadly coal
industry. When Margaret Thatcher destroyed the British coal industry in 1984-5 she
did it for entirely capitalist ‘economic’ reasons - there wasn’t an ounce of environmentalism
in it – but the effect on mining communities and villages was devastating; many
have still not recovered. Avoiding such communal destruction on a vastly
greater requires socialist planning.
Climate justice on a global scale is totally unthinkable
without socialism. Five hundred years ago the different continents and regions
of the world were roughly at the same level of economic development; for
example China was every bit as economically advanced as Europe and India was
seen as a rich country. Centuries of
capitalism, slavery and imperialism, with the latter growing out of the former,
created an immensely uneven world; industrial production, wealth and power
became concentrated in the so-called advanced ‘West’ – essentially Europe and
North America – with poverty, starvation and lack of industrial development
concentrated in Asia, Africa and Latin America, now usually called the Global
South. This pattern has changed somewhat in recent decades with massive
capitalist development in China and other parts of South and East Asia but it
is still a massive reality across much of the world. Historically and still
today the peoples of Asia, Africa and Latin America have contributed least to
climate change but will be hugely disproportionately affected by it. For example a 1.5-2 C global temperature
increase will be a death sentence for much of Africa because it will destroy
their agriculture; melting Himalayan glaciers and rising sea levels will
utterly devastate the deeply impoverished Bangladesh. This cannot be challenged or dealt with
without socialist redistribution of wealth and socialist planning internationally.
Only socialist internationalism based on the common interests of the world’s
working people could achieve such international cooperation; any capitalist
option, no matter how ‘green’ its intentions, would degenerate into national
and international rivalries which would destroy any coherent international
planning
Then there is the question of overall economic growth. There
is a growing view in the environmental movement that the idea of continuous
economic growth is completely unsustainable. Greta Thunberg, in her speech to
the UN, spoke of ‘fairy tales of eternal economic growth’. But under capitalism
stagnation or, even more so, de-growth is an immediate crisis, a recession when
it is short and a ‘great depression’ when it is extended, spelling mass
unemployment, poverty and austerity (with
the risk of fascism thrown in). This is because capitalism has a drive to
growth built into its very fabric.
Achieving a non-growth economy (measured in terms of GDP) or, should it
prove essential, a de-growth in certain areas would also only be possible on
the basis of socialist planning combined with the popular consent that would
come from mass involvement in the democratic planning process.
Then there is the fact that the proliferation of extreme
weather events associated with climate change has already begun, as is evident
from the numerous disasters currently observable round the world. This is
clearly going to intensify in the years ahead. Even in the event of a Damascene
conversion by the world’s rulers – of which there is no sign – it is unavoidable,
due to the climate change already built into the system, that we will see a
dramatic escalation of ‘natural’ catastrophes – storms, floods, droughts, fires
etc – over the next 5-10 years. But we know from abundant experience that the
way capitalism responds to such events is
through a combination of crocodile tears (for a very short while), followed by
callous indifference and abandonment.
This pattern has
repeated itself through the Bush Administration’s response to Hurricane Katrina
in New Orleans in 2005, to Superstorm Sandy in 2012 under Obama and Hurricane
Maria in Puerto Rica in 2017. In all of these cases all sorts of pledges of aid
and reconstruction were made in the immediate aftermath of disaster only for
them to disappear into thin air when it came to delivery. Years later people
who lost their homes and everything in them were still unable to return. The case of Hurricane Maria was particularly
atrocious. Initially the death toll was officially claimed to be 64. A year
later it was admitted to be 2,975 [iii] and many critics argue that it was really
much higher. Bitterness at the appalling
response to the Hurricane, by both the Trump administration and the local
governor, was a significant factor in the great revolt of the Puerto Rican people
earlier this year. On a lesser scale similar scenarios were played out over the
Grenfell Fire and in relation to flood victims in Ireland. Moreover, class and
racial privileges will continue to operate even within the extreme weather
events as happened with Katrina in New Orleans and the more frequent and
extensive these are the more this will be the case. The rich and white will be
saved, while the poor and black will be sacrificed and demonised as ‘dangerous
looters’.
When we grasp the
fact that escalating climate change will make events like the California fires,
Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas and flooding in Bangladesh a regular and
ongoing occurrence – regardless of what is done to stop it now – it is clear
that a socialist response at governmental and societal level is necessary to
cope with them and minimise the death toll and human suffering. In other words
we will need huge state intervention resting on popular participation and
solidarity to rescue the victim, feed the hungry and house the homeless.
Speaking of housing the homeless it is worth noting that rich societies such as
the US, Britain and Ireland, operating on
a capitalist basis, cannot even do this in normal times: what will they be
like in time of catastrophe?
Moreover, rising
temperatures and extreme weather will inevitably increase the flow of refugees,
probably massively so because swathes of the planet will cease to be habitable,
and in the next decade, not the end of the century. How will the better placed
countries respond? On the basis of a capitalist economy, an economy based on
the profit motive, it hard to see how there will be any even moderately humane
response. Again only a socialist economy
and society, which harnesses the collective labour and talents of all and
understands that with every new person comes a new and equal contributor to
society regardless of nationality, colour or ethnicity, will respond with
dignity and humanity.
Finally, some
imagine that there might be a third alternative, neither capitalism nor
socialism, but a return to some kind of pre-capitalist society based on small
scale ecologically sound self-sufficient villages or communes. Whatever one
thinks of the moral value of such communities as experiments or pre-figurations
of life in an imagined future, the fact is such a lifestyle is simply not an
option for the vast majority of ordinary people in our society and will not and
cannot gain any large scale popular take up any more than did the phalansteres of the early nineteenth
century (communes inspired by French utopian socialist, Charles Fourier) or the
hippy communes of the sixties. And when we think of a world of seven billion
people in a state of crisis the idea
that such a ‘third’ or ‘deep green’ alternative would be viable for the
majority is completely untenable. Are we
saying the 100 million people in Guangdong (the hyper industrialised and
urbanised region of South China) or the 24 million people of Shanghai should go
back to rural communes? This is literally not possible. Only a solution in which the 100 million of
Guandong or the 20 million of Mumbai or the eight million of Paris or the one
and half million of Dublin (together with all the millions in smaller towns and
in the countryside) take collective ownership
and control of the immense productive resources generated by workers’ labour
under capitalism and move forward to a society based on production for human
need offers a real way forward for humanity.
Unfortunately there
is a possible ‘third alternative’ to both socialism and capitalist business –as
–usual in a society in extreme crisis.
That alternative is fascism or some other form of ultra- right
authoritarian dictatorship. This would not abolish either class inequality or
capitalism but it might partially bring private capital under state control and
it would certainly abolish democracy, even in its current very limited
parliamentary form. And in conditions of acute climate crisis it would mean, and would be premised on, racist
barbarity that globally would exceed that of the holocaust and the Second World
War. This has not happened yet but we see a whiff of it with Trump, Bolsonaro
and Salvini. Parliamentary democracy and the limited democratic rights gained
by working people should, of course, be defended against this fascist threat
but in the immense crisis we are entering capitalist business-as-usual will
become less and less a viable option . A socialist solution is an historic
necessity.
[i] As James Connolly put it back in 1899,
‘Socialism properly implies above
all things the co-operative control by the workers of the machinery of production;
without this co-operative control the public ownership by the State is not
Socialism – it is only State capitalism.’
James Connolly, ‘State Monopoly versus Socialism’, https://www.marxists.org/archive/connolly/1901/evangel/stmonsoc.htm
[ii]
There are currently no signs of this happening – witness the expansion of
Heathrow Airport and the fact that on the day of Global Climate Strike Leo
Varadkar was opening a new runway at Knock.
[iii] Baldwin, Sarah Lynch; Begnaud, David. "Hurricane
Maria caused an estimated 2,975 deaths in Puerto Rico, new study finds". CBS News.
Retrieved August 28, 2018.
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