09)
MARX IN COPENHAGEN
(The following
article is from the January 16-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
Subscription rates in Canada: $30/year, or $15 low income rate; for
U.S. readers - $45 US per year; other overseas readers - $45 US or $50
CDN per year. Send to:
People's Voice, c/o PV Business Manager, 133
Herkimer St., Unit 502, Hamilton, ON, L8P 2H3.)
By W. T. Whitney Jr.
"Goodbye Africa, goodbye South Asia;
goodbye glaciers and sea ice, coral reefs and rainforest; it was nice
knowing you." Such was UK Guardian writer George Monbiot's dismay as
the recent Copenhagen Climate Conference ended.
La Jornada
newspaper blamed "a
web of interests that are the main obstacle to reaching a serious
accord," including "governments and their accomplices in the
corporation and financial world." The profligate burning of fossil
fuels has fostered consumption, corporations' economic expansion,
accumulation, and profit. Capitalism "imposes what is in effect a
scorched earth strategy," writes Monthly Review analyst John Bellamy
Foster.
The
Copenhagen debacle recalls
markers of other capitalist crises, the 1914 war over empire, for
example, and the 1930s world depression. This time, capitalism is
putting humankind on the road to hunger, migrations, rampant disease,
and die-off. Harking back to Marx, Samir Amin asserts, "The
accumulation of capital destroys the natural bases on which that
accumulation is built: man... and the earth." (Monthly Review, 59:9.
pp. 7, 20)
The
Copenhagen gathering
followed years of scientific recommendations, negotiations, and
wrangling, beginning with the 1992 Earth Summit. With Washington opting
out, industrialized nations accepted the 1997 Kyoto Protocol calling
for modest, but legally binding limits on emissions. To keep global
temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees C, scientists have
called for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from the present 385 parts
per million to 350ppm.
Before the
Copenhagen meeting,
the UN issued guidelines accepting a temperature rise of 2 degrees C.
By 2020, industrialized nations were to have reduced greenhouse gas
emissions to 45 percent of 1990 levels, to 80 percent by 2050. The
European Union had promised a 20 percent cut; the United States, in
effect, a four percent cut. China, exempted from Kyoto requirements,
offered an ambiguous plan tying emissions cuts to units of GDP rise.
No
agreements were in sight when
world leaders arrived at the meeting's end. President Obama met with
Chinese, Indian, Brazilian, and South African representatives, later
with those of 25 industrialized nations. He then issued a press
conference announcement of an "agreement" affecting 194 nations.
Participants learned of it via television.
Legal
commitments under the
Kyoto Protocol morphed into a political agreement lacking commitments
and time tables. Reaching out to nations individually, not
collectively, it focused on monitoring and backed the two-degree limit
on global warming.
A leaked UN
scientific report
predicting a 3 degrees C global temperature rise under UN-recommended
emissions limits was ignored. "Shock Doctrine" author Naomi Klein saw
bribery in Secretary of State Clinton's $100 billion offer from
unspecified sources to help underdeveloped nations cope with climate
disaster. Danish police arrested over 1000 peaceful protesters under a
new "pre-crime law."
Speaking for
the G-77 group of
134 underdeveloped nations, Sudanese diplomat Lumumba Stanislaus
Di-Aping demanded a 1.5 degree C limit on global warming and 60 percent
emission reductions by 2020. "I will not accept the total destruction
of my continent, her people, in Copenhagen," he declared.
That's where
a Marxist approach
comes in. The struggle, defined by class interests, continues. And just
as the labour theory of value provides a material basis for unified
struggle by industrial workers, Marx's distinction between use value
and exchange value does likewise for victims of natural resources
pillage. Use values, taken together, become the public's wealth that,
in abundance, benefits all. The sum of exchange values constitutes
private riches, promoted through scarcities.
Capitalists
want use values to
be absorbed into the exchange value category opening them up to
engineered scarcities and accumulation. Or, according to Marx, quoted
by Foster: "The earth is the reservoir from whose bowels the use values
are to be torn." Climate change sets the stage for profiteers to look
covetously at food and fuel shortages, high technology energy fixes,
and carbon trading. Working people, inhabitants of small islands, and
poor African farmers - among others - fight to protect wealth held in
common.
And under a
socialist banner:
"Socialism is designed in terms of a society founded on use value, not
exchange value," claims Samir Amin, who specifies, "Socialism should be
ecological, indeed can only be ecological."
Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez
and President Evo Morales of Bolivia came to Copenhagen with a message
from the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA). "We
cannot consider climate change without thinking about changing the
system," it said. "The capitalist production and consumption model is
taking life on the planet to a point of no return."
Chavez
reminded assembled
leaders of "socialism, the other spectre Karl Marx spoke about, which
walks here too... Socialism, this is the direction, this is the path to
save the planet."