Activists Take Hold of the Weather: Climate ActivistsBy Jane Holtz Kay You don't need a weatherman to tell you that Washington's pace of action on global warming will remain glacial. Never mind the spring droughts in Florida, the floods in Texas, the early bumble bees in Boston -- or the other portents of climate change. Stiffing his European hosts during his first state visit overseas, our Chief Oil Executive dismissed carbon dioxide's impact, disdained the latest National Academy of Sciences report and proposed an energy plan predicted to promote 30 percent more greenhouse gases in less than two decades. Let the polar bears eat cake and the island nations buy boats, he¹ll be hyping oil wells in the Gulf of Mexico as the world chats about climate needs in Bonn this month.
Greenpeace, perhaps the most visible of the climate campaigners, animates the battle on the frontlines. Their antics at last November's meeting at The Hague were typical of the organization;s spirited intervention. Their climate crusaders, some 228 American students, pitched in with 5,000 European peers to construct a sand dike around the conference site -- a symbolic dam to stave off the floods from global warming. Chanting "stand strong," they handed flowers to the European delegates as a "thank you" for holding fast against the United States, whose emission of one-quarter of the world;s greenhouse gases -- and self-serving offer to count existing forests and farms as carbon dioxide "sinks" instead of genuinely reducing emissions -- foiled progress. This month, the organization will send 28 students to the next Kyoto meeting in Bonn. Other well-known environmental advocates doing battle expand. The Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGS) agitate against "filthy fuels" like coal. Clean Air Cool Planet works to promote voluntary commitment to the Kyoto Protocol in the Northeast, while Climate Solutions does the same on the opposite coast. Friends of the Earth and the World Wildlife Fund commit to the cause on multiple fronts. On a smaller scale, communities outside the staple green community are pursuing clean renewables all by themselves, from Minnesotans for an Energy Efficient Economy to entire states like New York and Maryland, which have passed legislation for energy conservation tax credits. Shareholder protest rallies organized by Campaign ExxonMobil hit the oil companies and corporate elite where it counts. While the Rainforest Action Network has been focusing its efforts on climate change, *the Woods Hole Research Center's scientists have pushed to save the Amazon rainforests. To spread the information that would rouse an even larger public, Eban Goodstein, an economist at Portland's Lewis and Clark University, launched the Green House Network three years ago. Alarmed by "out of place, bizarre and extreme events," Goodstein undertook to train after-hours missionaries as single-focus speakers on the subject of global warming. "It's the defining issue of the world and neighborhoods," Goodstein tells audiences at his coaching program, showing them slides of his own activist theater work as a Santa Claus displaying An "I don't want to be Ho Ho Homeless" sign that made the local news and TV. Beyond the roster of street-theater performers, green believers and scientists, a workaday constituency of bureaucrats has joined the crusade. Strikingly, the "faceless" officials behind the nation's municipal desks have embraced the hands-on task of adopting and adapting the Kyoto protocol percentages rejected by the U.S. Senate. While Washington lags, the Cities for Climate Protection (CCP) has mobilized many of these groups, here and abroad. An arm of the International Coalition for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), the urban organizers have enlisted some 350 international and local governments, cities and towns, most recently New York, to trim a Kyoto-based percentage off their carbon emissions. Neither political novices nor partisans, involved officials hail from staple progressive cities like Portland, Madison, Cambridge, Burlington and Berkeley, but also from places like Los Angeles (the largest) and lesser-known cities like Fort Collins, Florida, or Arlington, Massachusetts. Theirs is door-by-door, nitty-gritty work: a four-step program of auditing and activism. A project begins with city workers looking into their own corners and cupboards to accomplish the community cleanup that Washington ignores. They map their current emissions, target the trouble zones, create and then finally implement a clean-up plan. One example is Dave Konkle of Ann Arbor, Michigan's Department of Natural Resources. To fulfill his emissions-reduction goal of 10 or 20 percent, Konkle went on a virtual treasure hunt for carbon emissions around town. After targeting travel and utility consumption, the city is now capturing methane gas from landfill sites. This deadly gas that usually escapes into the atmosphere is more harmful though less plentiful than carbon dioxide, and has entered the cleanup roster of many cities. In New Orleans, whose sinking sidewalks suggest a watery future aggravated by climate change, Mayor Marc Morial welcomed 150 community climate activists to the CCP's meeting last fall. Nudged by hotel-room admonitions to "save the planet" by hanging up their towels, the ready audience of delegates listened to the deluge of environmental difficulties and what could be done about them. The focus of this year's session, the automobile and its attendant pollution and sprawl, broadened attention to the energy glutton that ravages urban cores and paves the planet. With the automobile causing one-third of energy consumption, this often neglected source of pollution ranked high among the gathering;s concerns, as it did in the nation's hundreds of "smart growth" ballots in the last election. America's patterns of sprawl and escalating vehicle miles are slated to grow by 32 percent in the next decade. And a top goal is to trim down or reduce these carbon-spewing energy hogs, at times through the superficial adoption of "clean" cars with low mileage or alternative fuels, but, more fundamentally, through developing well-centered, transit-oriented surroundings to let Americans shed them altogether. Will such cleaning measures become a common cause? "A lot of concerns come together," says Konkle. "Save electricity and you save money. Reduce waste and you help the environment." "The real energy battle will be the local skirmishes across the country to keep dirty energy out of peoples' backyards and fight for clean energy alternatives such as solar," says Phil Radford, who organized the Greenpeace work at The Hague and is now executive director of Power Shift. With its market growing 42 percent a year, "solar energy is on the cusp of competitiveness," he says. Europe, light years ahead of the United States, has proceeded far more energetically. Sweden plans a no-net-energy consumption goal. Photovoltaics line the German autobahns. Wind turbines have cut the Netherlands¹ use of fossil fuels. The European Union is close to agreeing to 25 percent renewable energy in the electricity sector by 2010. Even private companies have come on board. When BP -- the old British Petroleum, now advertising itself as "Beyond Petroleum" -- buys a photovoltaic plant, the times they are abating, if not yet cooling. As summer advances, and Bush;s recalcitrance shocks the larger world dismayed by this nation;s greenhouse gas gluttony, the question is whether broader awareness can overcome not only the oil hegemony at the head of state but the ongoing habits of backroom budgeting and decades of coal and oil subsidies. Can the grassroot activists, researchers and city-tending civil servants push their piece of the rock up the hill? Will today's momentum undo the damage of decades or budge the administration at the top? "A man receives only what he is ready to receive," as Thoreau had it. "Whether physically or intellectually or morally, we hear and apprehend only what we already half know." Ready or not, "half known" or whole, the number of climate preachers broadcasting that new morality mounts. Originally published in In These Times, July 2001
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