G8 leaders refuse to commit to carbon cuts

YET AGAIN the presidents and prime ministers of the richest countries have put their “national interests” ahead of the need for urgent cuts in carbon emissions.

In Japan last month the best they could do was announce a vague goal of halving emissions by 2050. That will be too little, too late, with no interim targets for 2020 or even an agreed benchmark against which reductions can be measured.

The G8 countries are responsible for 62 per cent of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Rich countries must act first, then provide clean technology to developing nations, so development can be de-linked from carbon dependency.

Capitalism’s rivalry between giant corporations for profits and market share is being played out on the G8 diplomatic stage. Governments are refusing to do what the science of climate change demands: make cuts now. Instead each state is waiting to see how they can best protect their corporations from the costs of transforming the industrial economy out of dirty energy. Bush still refuses to sign Kyoto and negotiations for a replacement protocol will not get serious until next year at Copenhagen, in Denmark.

Last century this imperialist rivalry led to world wars and the threat of nuclear annihilation. Most people want urgent action on the climate crisis, and to put the needs of all humanity ahead of corporate profit. The challenge for all of us is to turn this sentiment into mass pressure on our governments to act.

By Bruce Knobloch

Follow us

New pamphlet: How workers rose up to defend the Whitlam government in 1975

Magazine

Solidarity meetings

Latest articles

Read more

Unions recommit to fight for Gomeroi rights as Pilliga gas project...

Unions NSW has sponsored a new report, “We Stand With Gomeroi: Trade unions oppose the Santos Pilliga Narrabri gas project”.

Labor’s unambitious new climate targets rest on offsets fraud

The world is on track for catastrophic warming and climate disasters are multiplying. Yet the Albanese government’s new climate targets refuse to meet the urgent need for action.

The Pacific war and the myth of liberation 80 years on

Efforts across Asia to reimpose colonial rule at the end of the Second World War show that it was a struggle over the imperialist division of the world, argues Luke Ottavi.