Letters

Flannery a dubious ally

Anne Picot and I must have read different copies of Tim Flannery’s Quarterly Essay, “Now or Never” about global warming.

Flannery’s commitment to the market and carbon trading leave him bereft of solutions to global warming and irrelevant to an increasingly urgent debate.

True, he talks up the possibilities of geothermal power, but even this is put forward as part of a capitalist development fantasy of it turning Australia into a global mineral processing giant (Flannery notably includes uranium!).

Worse, at the centre of Flannery’s argument is clean coal—indeed his proposition that Australia could be a global mineral processing centre (revealingly including uranium!) is based on Australia’s “unique position to develop and rapidly deploy clean coal technology.”

If this wasn’t strange enough clean coal is also at the centre of his “Clean Development Mechanism”—Flannery’s global version of a carbon trading scheme. And on the world scale he proposes that first world polluters should be able to pay for emissions abatement in places like China, “if that is more cost-effective than reducing pollution themselves.”

Such is his fascination with technological fixes, he advances the idea of using the world’s jet fleets to seed the stratosphere with sulphur to cause “global dimming”.

Flannery does believes that human activity is responsible for global warming, but his attachment to the system means he is reduced to fanciful schemes and just-so stories.

Flannery has always been a dubious ally in the fight against global warming, if for no other reason than his vacillation on nuclear power. With this essay Flannery has confirmed his irrelevance.  The essay thankfully is doomed to oblivion.

Ian Rintoul, Ipswich

Follow us

Magazine

Solidarity meetings

Latest articles

Read more

Fighting racism and the far right—One Nation can be stopped

One Nation’s support may have dropped slightly after Pauline Hanson put her full agenda on show in her speech at the National Press Club. But One Nation’s rise has exposed a deep crisis in Australian politics.

Union campaign in Victoria wrong to avoid Hanson’s racism

Victoria faces the terrifying prospect of One Nation in government after November’s state election. One Nation could either win the most seats itself or do well enough that the Liberals need their support to form government.

One Nation’s ideas gaining a hearing in workplaces

Workers who have never expressed support for One Nation before are sharing its content and calling for “Pauline for PM.”