There’s a reason why 2050 is such an attractive target for the Morrison government’s climate plans: none of them will be around to be held accountable.
Scott Morrison will be 82 in 2050, and likely long gone from politics. Barnaby Joyce will be 83 — if he makes it that far, something his complexion and lifestyle would suggest is an open question. Angus Taylor will be 84. Matt Canavan will only be 69, so he may still be adorning the Senate and dressing up as a fake tradie at mid-century. But Keith Pitt will be 81, and Bridget McKenzie will be 80 — her days of pork-barrelling marginal seats well behind her.
They’ll all be enjoying comfortable retirements, perhaps funded by the shareholders of the mining and fossil fuel companies whose boards they may join after public life is over. They’ll be safe from any electoral retribution as Australia succumbs to bushfires, droughts and ever more extreme weather driven by the accelerating global warming they helped enable.
Perhaps they’ll pen the odd op-ed for The Australian — run by 79-year-old Lachlan Murdoch or his sprightly 119-year-old pop — insisting that the devastation inflicted on Australia by global heating is entirely due to natural factors, or that Australia contributed just 1% of the problem, or that no one could have foreseen the damage that would result.
In contrast, 2030 is just three elections away, and one of those is almost due. It’s closer now than the financial crisis is to us; more than a third of the MPs elected eight years ago in the 2013 election remain in Parliament now despite the turnover of prime ministers.
If Scott Morrison harbours Howard-like hopes, he might expect to still be PM in 2030. Certainly, Peter Dutton or Josh Frydenberg, both of whom hope to replace Morrison in the top job, might be thinking they’ll be in the Lodge by then.
And for the large fossil fuel companies that dictate climate policy to the Coalition, 2030 isn’t long-term: major projects decided on now will be hitting their stride in 2030. Santos’ huge investment in the highly emissions-intensive Barossa gas field won’t see any gas piped onshore until 2025; coal-fired power companies are examining the timetables for the shutdown of their plants in the 2030s already.
That’s why a vague target 29 years away is infinitely preferable to actual policies that might have impacts in the next nine years, and for which the current generation of ministers may still be around to be criticised over. Of course, that assumes there’ll be a press gallery in 2030, and one with any kind of institutional memory for what happened five minutes before, let alone in the distant past of 2021.
What might result by 2050, however, is something different. The level of voter outrage at the venal irresponsibility of the current generation of political and corporate leaders, who continued to drive fossil fuels long past the point where it was clear what damage would result, might become so great that those who remain of that generation are hauled from their luxurious homes and held to account.
The climate trials of the 2050s — held amid acrid bushfire smoke on a 50 degree day in Sydney or Melbourne — might provide at least some justice, if little comfort to our children and grandchildren whom we’ve betrayed.
that those who remain of that generation are hauled from their luxurious homes and held to account.
I dream of this already, but sadly it’s only a dream at this stage.
Let’s see what the Federal Court determine for the Minister for Extinction, Sussan Ley’s appeal against the duty of care ruling in favour of Anjali Sharma et al. By 2030 vandals like her and her colleagues should be personally liable for their crimes against humanity.
By continuing to approve new coal mines and expansions to existing ones, could it be that she is already in contempt of the Court’s ruling?
That is the only possible reading of the Court’s decision, logically.
Legally however, there are 2nd & 3rd wings, pool renovations and investment properties in need of funding.
The Federal Court will only rule on current legislation. We have a crisis on our hands now that demands much tougher laws that properly sheets responsibility to where it belongs, and metes out suitable punishment for the damage inflicted on the many by the irresponsible few. A Labor government flanked by a good handful of quality independents can make those laws happen quickly.
I’ll be there with my pitchfork 🙂
Apropos of nothing, I wonder how many moderns would know the function of a pitchfork?
Like the difference between a scythe & sickle or the significance of the hammer type in the communist symbol.
Not important, I’m just curious – we reap what we sow and it’s a hard row to hoe to reclaim lost meaning when so deracinated.
How easily forgotten was the excuse for invading Iraq, because of the threat of WMDs. Not particularly devastating for the pollies that spruiked those lies.
And, of course, no penalties were ever imposed on the Australian and US politicians who so happily about that issue.
The soap opera obsession about an utterly meaningless 2050 ‘target’ has been an embarrassing comedy. If any of these idiots are PM in 2030, we will be truly f*cked. And I think the Australian electorate now knows that, unlike 2019.
As far as I can establish, the dubious Net Zero 2050 concept was crystallised by Figueres and other “greens” in the 2010s, not by scientists or even economists. But you can see why it’s catnip. For the acquisitive right, it means endless growth, till whenever. On the caring left, you never have to mention, the near quadrupling of human population since WWII.
You are right, population growth is a big factor, but not the only one. Over consumption, our throw away society and our technology addiction are some of the many factors that have contributed to where we are now. In fact, fertility rates have been dropping round the world for many years, and population growth will plateau. Check out this by Hans Rosling – author of Factfullness – on world population, a very enlighteneing and entertaining presentation. Well worth the time.
Oops, here’s the link time https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FACK2knC08E
Population has been a central plank of -ve agitprop in the Anglosphere since Malthus through to now spin offs of ZPG, to avoid constraints on fossil fuels and allowing (undefined) ‘immigration’ as the purported driver to be made responsible for all of a nation’s ills aka Brexit, Trump; path made too easy for radical right libertarian ideology to be inserted bu gaming ageing electorates.
Rosling was one of the first to identify through analysis that fertility rates had already been dropping ex. sub Saharan Africa (which is now also slowing), hence, future population growth would be constrained and any growth is due to longevity and people staying in data longer; often it’s simply mistaking increasing ‘mobility’ or ‘churn over’ for permanent immigration and pop’n growth.
More recently, Bricker & Ibbitson in ‘Empty Planet‘ confirm what others’ analysis had, fertility rates are dropping faster than expected, hence, global peak mid century below the UNPD estimates, which have been challenged.
Canadian current affairs program The Agenda has a good interview with Bricker & Ibbitson in ‘The World’s Shrinking Population‘ from few years ago https://youtu.be/SYZPTaV-RcQ
“If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there does it make a sound?”
If the planet burns to a cinder and you died years ago does it happen?
To these bastards apparently not.