The gloves are off: 'predatory' climate deniers are a threat to our children


Author: Tim Flannery

(MENAFN- The Conversation) In this age ofrapidly melting glaciers ,terrifying megafiresand ever more puissanthurricanes , ofacidifyingandrisingoceans, it is hard to believe that any further prod to climate action is needed.

But the reality is that we continue to live in a business-as-usual world. Our media is filled with enthusiastic announcements aboutnew fossil fuel projects , or the unveiling of the latestfossil-fuelled supercar , as if there's no relationship between such things and climate change.

In Australia, the disconnect among our political leaders on the deadly nature of fossil fuels is particularly breathtaking.




Energy Minister Angus Taylor, left, and Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Both believe the polluting coal industry has a strong future in Australia.
Lukas Coch/AAP

Prime Minister Scott Morrison continues tosing the praises of coal , while members of the government call for subsidies for coal-fired power plants. A few days ago, Energy and Emissions Reduction Minister Angus Taylor urged that the nation's old and polluting coal-fired power plants be allowed torun 'at full tilt' .



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In the past, many of us have tolerated such pronouncements as the utterings of idiots – in the true,original Greek meaning of the wordas one interested only in their own business. But the climate crisis has nowgrown so severethat the actions of the denialists have turned predatory: they are now an immediate threat to our children.


A 'colossal failure' of climate activism

Each year the situation becomes more critical. In 2018, global emissions of greenhouse gasesrose by 1.7%while the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmospherejumped by 3.5 parts per million– the largest ever observed increase.

No climate report or warning, no political agreement nor technological innovation has altered the ever-upward trajectory of the pollution. This simple fact forces me to look back on my20 years of climate activismas a colossal failure.


Many climate scientists think we are already so far down the path of destruction that it isimpossible to stabilise the global temperature at 1.5℃above the pre-industrial average without yet to be developeddrawdown technologiessuch as those that remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. On current trends, within a decade or so, stabilising at 2℃ will likewise be beyond our grasp.

And on the other side of that threshold, nature'spositive feedback loopspromise to fling us into a hostile world. By 2100 - just 80 years away – if our trajectory does not change, it is estimated that Earth will be4℃ warmerthan it was before we began burning fossil fuels.


Far fewer humans will survive on our warming planet

That future Earth may have enough resources to supportfar fewer peoplethan the 7.6 billion it supports today. British scientist James Lovelockhas predicted a future human population of just a billion people . Mass deaths are predicted to result from, among other causes,disease outbreaks ,air pollution ,malnutrition and starvation ,heatwaves , andsuicide .

My children, and those of many prominent polluters and climate denialists, will probably live to be part of thatgrim winnowing– a world that theAlan JonesesandAndrew Boltsof the world have laboured so hard to create.




Thousands of school students from across Sydney attend the global climate strike rally at Town Hall in Sydney in March 2019.
Mick Tsikas/AAP



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How should Australia's parents deal with those who labour so joyously to create a world in which a large portion of humanity will perish? As I have become ever more furious at the polluters and denialists, I have come to understand they are threatening my children's well-being as much as anyone who might seek to harm a child.

Young people themselves are now mobilising against the danger. Increasingly they're giving up on words, and resorting to actions.Extinction Rebellionis the Anthropocene's answer to the UK working classChartists , theUS Declaration of Independence , and the defenders of theEureka Stockade .

Itsdeclaration states :


Words have not cut through. Is rebellion the only option?

Not yet a year old, Extinction Rebellion has had an enormous impact. In April itshut down six critical locations in London , overwhelmed the police and justice system with 1,000 arrests, and forced the British government to become thefirst nation everto declare a climate emergency.

So unstable is our current societal response that a single young woman,Greta Thunberg , has been able to spark a profoundly powerful global movement. Less than a year ago she went on a one-person school strike. Today school strikes for climate action are aglobal phenomenon .




Greta Thunberg, a 16-year-old climate change activist from Sweden, participates in a school strike in Washington in September 2019.
Shawn Thew/EPA



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On September 20 in Australia and elsewhere, school principals must decide whether they will allow their students tomarch in the global climate strikein an effort to save themselves from the climate predators in our midst, or force them to stay and study for a future that will not, on current trends, eventuate.

I will be marching with the strikers in Melbourne, and I believe teachers should join their pupils on that day. After all, us older generation should be painfully aware that our efforts have not been enough to protect our children.

The new and carefully planned rebellion by the young generation forces us earlier generations of climate activists to re-examine our strategy. Should we continue to use words to try to win the debate? Or should we become climate rebels? Changing the language around climate denialism will, I hope, sharpen our focus as we ponder what comes next.



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