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	<title>International Panel on Climate Change &#8211; Evening Report</title>
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		<title>Climate crisis: Bold call for security partners to prevent ‘catastrophe’</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2019/06/26/climate-crisis-bold-call-for-security-partners-to-prevent-catastrophe/</link>
		
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					<description><![CDATA[ANALYSIS: By Pip Hinman in Sydney Long-time Australian climate campaigner David Spratt and former fossil fuel company executive Ian Dunlop have issued a bold call for unlikely partners to work together to avoid climate catastrophe. In particular, their policy paper, Existential climate-related security risk: A scenario approach appears to call on the national security sector ]]></description>
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<p><strong>ANALYSIS:</strong> <em>By Pip Hinman in Sydney</em></p>
<p>Long-time Australian climate campaigner David Spratt and former fossil fuel company executive Ian Dunlop have issued a bold call for unlikely partners to work together to avoid climate catastrophe.</p>
<p>In particular, their policy paper, <a href="https://www.preventionweb.net/publications/view/65812" rel="nofollow">Existential climate-related security risk: A scenario approach</a> appears to call on the national security sector to step in and save the day.</p>
<p>The 10-page paper put out by the climate-focused think tank Breakthrough is a succinct warning of the dire consequences of not acting on the climate science now and spells out possible scenarios of doing little to nothing.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.preventionweb.net/publications/view/65812" rel="nofollow"><strong>READ MORE:</strong> Existential climate-related security risk: A scenario approach</a></p>
<p>It points out that the Paris Agreement was a “political fix” and is not enough to stop runaway climate change.</p>
<p>It also says that the International Panel on Climate Change has been too cautious — even conservative — in its projections regarding the prospects of climate catastrophe.</p>
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<p>The paper affirms that more than 1.5°C warming will lead to “catastrophic” outcomes for the Earth. Some scientists are saying 1.5°C warming is imminent in 10 years.</p>
<p>In another decade we may well see an Arctic free of summer sea ice — a circumstance that two decades ago was not expected to happen for another 100 years.</p>
<p><strong>Global mobilisation</strong><br />While Spratt and Dunlop’s call for some kind of global emergency mobilisation is welcome, its (admittedly) vague proposal for an alliance with the national security sector is odd.</p>
<p>They say that “a massive global mobilisation of resources is needed in the coming decade to build a zero-emissions industrial system and set in train the restoration of a safe climate”.</p>
<p>The paper also backs calls for “a drastic, economy-wide makeover … within the next decade”.</p>
<p>They then say: “The national security sector has unrivalled experience and capacity in such mobilisation, and can play a unique role in its development and implementation, as well as educating policy makers of the existential security risks in failing to do so”.</p>
<p>Their short list of recommendations urges policy makers to examine how the national security sector can play a role “in providing leadership and capacity for a near-term, society-wide, emergency mobilisation of labour and resources, of a scale unprecedented in peacetime, to build a zero-emissions industrial system and draw down carbon to protect human civilisation.”</p>
<p>While vague, this proposal contains a lot of assumptions about the national security sector and comes across as eco-authoritarian.</p>
<p>It also reveals the problematic nature of thinking up “solutions” to the climate emergency while ignoring the existing balance of forces.</p>
<p><strong>Real change</strong><br />Do Spratt and Dunlop really believe that the security sector would be willing to go after the 100 fossil fuel producers (including privately held and state-owned companies) responsible for 71 percent of the greenhouse gas emissions released since 1988?</p>
<p>Let’s not forget where the power for real change resides. As Jeff Sparrow wrote in Overland, “we might all be in this together but, politically, we are not”.</p>
<p>Winning a safe climate future has to include holding those most responsible for the current crisis to account.</p>
<p>There is no doubt about the need to chart a new direction for a safe climate. But to pull that off, society would have to mobilise on a scale capable of forcing governments to do so. To achieve this, the climate movement has to significantly expand and deepen.</p>
<p>The climate movement has to be looking out for all possible allies, but it has to prioritise natural allies such as the global student-led climate strike movement.</p>
<p>The climate movement has to devote time to winning people over to take action — and the student strikers are leading the way.</p>
<p>They have called for another global strike on September 20 and are asking for help. They want everyone on board. The challenge is now on us to expand the organising.</p>
<p><strong>Democratic movement</strong><br />If the climate movement is going to be able to grow to the point where governments find it is politically impossible to continue with business-as-usual, the movement has to be democratic, inclusive and capable of building united fronts, including with unlikely partners.</p>
<p>As the big struggles against wars, racism and sexism show, there are no top-down short-cuts to creating the kind of system change we need.</p>
<p>Those who think the urgency to act may necessitate some sort of eco-authoritarian measures — a kind of 21st century Malthusianism — will find they will lose their best and most powerful ally: the global student strike movement.</p>
<p>Supporting the students must be our key policy recommendation.</p>
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