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Climate change -- the case for public ownership

Arising out of the UK Climate Camp in August 2008 there has developed an interesting debate between Ewa Jasiewicz, an activist in Britain, and well-known radical columnist George Monbiot about the role of so-called “state solutions” to climate change. Jasiewicz’s article, published on the Guardian website[i] and entitled “Time for a Revolution”, was an attack on Monbiot for a “controversial presentation [at climate camp] … in which he endorsed the use of the state as a partner in resolving the climate crisis”. It was also prompted by a debate between Monbiot and former National Union of Mineworkers’ leader and head of Britain’s Socialist Labour Party Arthur Scargill about what is more polluting: nuclear or coal energy.
Jasiewicz stated:
“State solutions to the climate crisis were presented
to us 10 years ago through the
“The question is, who and under what conditions,
controls decision making, and has climate-changing power?”
In response, Monbiot, in an article on his website[ii]
wrote:
“[Jasiewicz]
claims to want to stop global warming, but she makes that task 100 times harder
by rejecting all state and corporate solutions. It seems to me that what she
really wants to do is to create an anarchist utopia, and use climate change as
an excuse to engineer it.
“Stopping runaway climate change must take precedence
over every other aim. Everyone in this movement knows that there is very little
time: the window of opportunity in which we can prevent two degrees [Celsius] of
warming is closing fast. We have to use all the resources we can lay hands on,
and these must include both governments and corporations. Or perhaps she
intends to build the installations required to turn the energy economy around
-- wind farms, wave machines, solar thermal plants in the Sahara, new grid
connections and public transport systems -- herself?’’
There are some confused notions in these two articles,
like the
The reality is that no fossil fuel corporation can be
convinced to stop expanding and making profits and instead invest its wealth in
a wholesale conversion of its operations to a renewable energy-powered,
sustainable industry. At the same time no capitalist government is going to be
either willing or able to constrain corporations’ rights to make profits in
order to drastically reduce emissions.
In other words, the only way we can make use of the
massive corporate wealth that isn’t in the hands of the people is with a revolutionary struggle that
institutes a government which acts in the interests of people and the planet
and puts control of all sectors of the economy in the hands of ordinary working
people.
The real question is what needs to be done to achieve
this? There does not need to be a contradiction between what we call for today in
terms of immediate measures to combat global warming and building the movement
for revolutionary change. Arguing for the nationalisation of polluting
industries, to be placed under the democratic control of ordinary people, is
essential to constructing a movement capable of halting climate change.
Market
anarchy or a planned approach
Since the release of the interim Garnaut Review (a
report commissioned to recommend what policies are required by Australia to
address climate change) and the Australian federal Labor government’s green paper
on climate change, the focus of the debate has been almost solely on what is the
best market response to global warming and how much “government regulation” is
appropriate to guide this. The role of the government is reduced to determining
how much large corporations will be subsidised under an emissions trading
scheme (ETS).
On
It is clear that we have reached a major tipping point
in climate change, which indicates that we are already experiencing dangerous
climate change. As Dr Jay Zwally,
glaciologist at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, put it, “the
NASA Climatologist Dr James Hansen has concluded that
a safe climate zone necessary to preserve the Arctic lies somewhere within the
region of 300 to 325 parts per million (ppm) carbon dioxide (CO2) atmospheric
concentration. However, we currently are sitting around 385ppm.[vii]
In short we need an urgent and immediate response to
the crisis, one which relies on a centralised accounting and coordination of
the activities of major polluting industries through the government and
enforced by the state. Market mechanisms, corporate handouts and government
investment in false solutions like “clean coal” spell nothing less than the
death of the liveable planet.
Two examples illustrate what is possible when the
primary sources of wealth are under popular control.
The first is
With the advent of the film The Power of Community, a number of environmental activists have
developed the perception that this transformation was merely initiated by the
artificially imposed “peak oil” crisis that hit
Because of the US-enforced and illegal economic
blockade of
The result was an enormous food crisis. While
A very useful report conducted by the UK Institute of
Science in Sustainability, “Organic Cuba without Fossil Fuels”, documents
exactly how the government was able to drive the process of transformation.[ix]
Beginning with a nationwide call to increase food
production by restructuring agriculture, the government redivided the land and
gave control of that land to the community, to best determine how to respond to
the community’s food requirements. One major initiative was in urban areas,
where all sorts of land was given over by the government for food production, including
old car parks, disused buildings, vacant lots, etc. As a consequence 60% of
But the government’s role extended far beyond this. It
set up a seed bank in the cities to distribute seeds to urban farmers, it massively
invested in biotechnology to develop increased food production without pesticides,
and it even passed a law banning the use of pesticides.[xi]
As Cuban permaculturalist Roberto Perez pointed out in
an interview with Green Left Weekly,
no rapid solution to
“When the revolution gained sovereignty over the
resources of the country, especially the land and minerals, this was the base
for sustainability. You cannot think about sustainability of your resources if
they are in the hands of a foreign country or in private hands. Even without
knowing, we were creating the basis for sustainability.”[xii]
The second example worth considering is
While
Since socialist president Hugo Chavez was elected in
1998 the government has taken back control of the oil industry and used the
wealth from it to fund social programs aimed at alleviating poverty.
It has also been extremely conscious of reducing the
country’s dependence on the oil industry and of ending the legacy of putting
the needs of the environment behind that of oil production.
This is indicated in the new United Socialist Party of
Venezuela (PSUV) program, which includes a section on “Defence of Nature;
Planned Production”. This states that “the program of the PSUV proposes the
preservation of nature and the planning of production for the satisfaction of
collective necessities in harmony with the requirements of the ecosystem.” [xiii]
In 2005 the Chávez government and the PDVSA oil
company made the decision to eliminate lead-based petrol. Since then, PDVSA has
begun recuperating green areas, reducing emissions and cleaning up rivers and
lakes. [xiv]
Under Mission Energy, some 53 million light bulbs in
more than 5 million homes have been replaced with energy-efficient fluorescent
bulbs[xv],
with the next step being to substitute almost 27 million inefficient incandescent
light bulbs by energy-saving light bulbs in the official, industrial and
commercial sectors.[xvi]
President Chávez has also announced plans for a wind
farm to generate electricity on the
While there are major restrictions on the Venezuelan government’s
ability to implement these plans, due to a corrupt bureaucracy within state
institutions, it is clear that none of these things would be possible if the
government didn’t have real control over the oil industry to be able to fund and
enact these programs.
Nationalisation,
a transitional demand
As socialists we recognise that the only way out of
the mess of climate change is for the vast bulk of the economy to be put under
public ownership and control, with the creation of a workers’ government that can
oversee a thorough and detailed process in which the entire community can have
democratic control over how the economy is run and for what purposes.
However this doesn’t prevent us advancing the demand
for the nationalisation of strategic industries even before we reach that stage.
In fact this demand is extremely important for posing the possibility of working
people having complete and democratic control over the wealth of society (which
after all was created by the labour of working people and has been stolen by a
tiny number of capitalist owners), and building a movement that can win this.
Given the state of the crisis and the urgency with
which we need to act, any effective program of action advanced by the
environment movement to stop climate change must include the demand for
nationalisation – that is to put the key energy-producing and energy-consuming
industries, and other unsustainable industries, under public ownership.
But first we need to make it clear that we aren’t
arguing for a public sector operating like the commercialised, profit-making enterprises
we see all too often today.
Most of the public sector, if it already hasn’t been
sold off and converted into privately run companies, has been turned into more
or less the same thing in preparation for the time when it becomes politically
possible for governments to privatise it.
Second, the public sector under capitalism is run by a
big bureaucracy that the people have no control over. While we can vote for
people to be in parliament who can introduce new laws, we don’t have any say
over who the state employs to implement those laws. Not to mention the fact
that the major parties in parliament are the representatives of big business
and act to preserve profits. This means that such a struggle for nationalisation
needs to be accompanied with a push for real democratic control over how the
public sector is organised.
What would
real government action on climate change look like?
Currently, governments in
So the question is, what kind of government response
is needed to avert the catastrophe?
Electricity sector
First it is essential that the electricity generation
sector be put under public ownership, instead of sold off to private companies,
as is being attempted by the New South Wales state Labor government. The
majority of
Furthermore, a national network of publicly owned
electricity generators would ensure that the electricity produced actually
meets people’s needs. A board could be elected democratically by the people and
given the task of drafting a plan to transform the sector to meet the needs of
the environment. This plan could be ratified by referendum and if those in
charge fail to implement the necessary measures there should be the right to
recall them.
The government could also set up programs to roll out energy-efficient
light bulbs and whitegoods, and ban the selling of inefficient ones.
The government should adopt stringent limits on how
much greenhouse gases private companies are allowed to emit and take serious
measures to curb energy inefficiency. If a company continues to break the rules
it should be made clear that it will be nationalised.
Public transport and freight
In
A recent article in the
The federal government should nationalise
A publicly run public transport system is essential
for rapidly expanding public transport, so that we can take millions of cars
off the road, while providing the necessary levels of alternative transport.
This must extend to rural areas and involve the development of high-speed,
long-distance trains to drastically reduce need for carbon-intensive flying.
Another major task is the moving of freight. It was
recently revealed that the state government is planning to expand
Water
Another problem project of the Victoria Labor
government is the $3 billion desalination plant, which will have its carbon
emissions “offset” by ``clean coal’’ and other “clean’’ energy sources,
possibly from interstate.[xxiv]
The plant is being used to discourage people from installing rainwater tanks,
and failing to introduce tighter restrictions on commercial irrigators who use
up most of the state's water.[xxv]
To preserve future water supplies and the natural
environment, it is essential that our water supply is completely publicly
owned, and managed in a manner that responds to the needs of people, not of big
business.
One major thing the government must do is take over
the most water-consuming farms, particularly cotton and rice, and instead use
the land to grow less water-intensive crops like hemp. Instead, the government
is unwilling to restructure the water allocation to irrigators to help save the
Murray-Darling system.
For domestic urban water usage the government could
set up a system to roll out free water tanks and fit grey water systems to each
home.
There are also a range of big corporate industries
like the aluminium industry, logging, coalmining etc., which contribute enormously
to climate change. The basis of their profits are processes which are
intrinsically harmful to the environment so it is essential for them to be put under
public ownership. Only by ensuring that the big industries are no longer run
for profits, will it be possible to determine to what extent they are actually
needed and to what degree their impact on the environment can be reduced.
Jobs versus
the environment?
The bulk of the industries that are the biggest
polluters are simply going to have to be shut down, and no corporation is going
to willingly accept such a proposition. Furthermore, while some corporations
are investing in renewable energy, what’s needed is a massive government
investment and commitment to renewable energy, and the direct conversion of the
fossil fuel industry not just a gradual “transition”.
The
socialist approach puts it clearly that it isn't about putting the environment
ahead of jobs, but instead that the only way any sustainable industry can
operate is with workers to run it. It's clear there is a huge pool of possible
workers to fill jobs in new renewable and sustainable industries, but these
workers will be thrown onto the scrap heap unless there is a government plan to
utilise these workers and skill them to work in those industries.
The reality is that under capitalism big business
regularly chucks workers onto the scrap heap, in order to preserve profits –
just look at the 380 workers being axed from the
Some right-wing unions, such as the Australian Workers
Union, have been able to tap into this fear by workers that they will be left
without jobs. The radical environmental movement must make it clear that the
only solution is the nationalisation of those industries which will have to be
reorganised or phased out, to allow public boards to be established to plan the
rapid industrial transition and retrain workers so that they can be (voluntarily)
deployed where they are needed. This is what happens in the public education
sector.
What we propose also includes a huge investment in
education and skills training – to re-skill workers in the fossil fuel industry
to run solar thermal plants or build wind turbines etc. There also needs to be
serious investment in the research and development of more energy-efficient
technology and renewable energy sources.
But it is clear that no demand for nationalisation can
be won without a mass struggle of workers that forces the government to do so. Furthermore
we know that no industry can operate long term within a capitalist framework as
a truly community-controlled public sector. Whenever a private corporation
thinks it can make a profit, there will be a push from our present capitalist governments
to carve up the public sector and privatise it. Despite the fact that these are
necessary services and real public assets, wealth built up by the hard labour
of working people, capitalism cares only about finding new areas it can take
over and operate for profit.
If we win our demand for partial nationalisation, it
would open the way for many more workers to comprehend the advantages of far
wider (and even complete) public ownership of the economy and shift the
struggle towards achieving real democratic control over entire industries. Only
when we have control of the gears, pedals and steering wheels of the economy
will we have any real chance to steer us away from the brink of a climate catastrophe.
[Trent
Hawkins is an activist with the Australian socialist youth organisation
Resistance and a member of the Democratic Socialist Perspective, a Marxist
organisation affiliated to the Australian Socialist Alliance. He also runs the Inhabitable
Earth blog at http://inhabitable-earth.blogspot.com/.]






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