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This Changes Everything

Page 73

by Naomi Klein


  Climategate, 41

  climate justice, see climate debt

  climate manipulation, see geoengineering

  climate movement:

  coming of age of, 11–12

  deregulated capitalism and, 20

  economic justice and, see climate debt

  growing power and interconnectedness of, 451–52

  historical precedents for, 452–57, 459–61

  Keystone XL protests and resurgence of, 139–40

  lack of sustained and populist, 157

  moral imperative in, 336, 386–87, 464

  and need for viable economic alternatives to extraction industries, 349, 398, 399, 400–401, 403, 413–18

  origins of, 73–75

  see also Blockadia

  climate science, 46, 59, 127, 152, 158

  climate treaty negotiations, 11, 77–80, 411

  see also emission reduction

  Clinton, Bill, 83–85, 213, 231–32

  Clinton administration, carbon trading proposed by, 218

  Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting of 2006, 231

  Clodumar, Kinza, 165

  Clorox, 356, 357

  cloud brightening, 258

  cloud seeding, 279

  Club of Rome, 185–86

  CNN, 45

  Coal & Climate Summit, 200

  coal, 102, 128, 143, 159, 176, 214, 224

  capitalism and, 175, 176

  collapsing U.S. market for, 319–20

  exporting of, 144n, 301, 320, 322, 349, 352, 362, 374, 376

  lignite, 136

  as “portable climate,” 174

  rail transport of, 234, 362, 389, 397

  water power vs., 171–73

  coal-fired power plants, 3, 67–68, 81–82, 83, 97, 136–39, 141, 200, 208, 236, 247–48

  global campaign against, 319–20, 348–49, 350–52, 365

  public utilities and, 100, 196

  coal industry, 197, 300–301

  opposition to, see anti-coal movements

  political and economic power of, 316, 321

  see also extractive industries

  coal mining, 145, 398

  in Appalachia, 309, 353

  in Montana, 320, 342–43, 346, 370, 388–93, 395, 397, 445

  mountaintop removal in, 2, 303, 309, 310, 329, 353

  water supply contamination from, 332

  coal-powered economies, 88

  Coates, Ta-Nehisi, 415

  Cobenais, Marty, 318–19, 332

  Cochabamba, Bolivia, 444n

  Cohen, Nick, 156

  Cold War, 15, 42, 43, 74, 261

  collective action, 36

  collective sacrifice, 16–17

  colleges and universities:

  divestment movement and, 354–55, 401

  renewable energy investment by, 401–2

  Colombia, 202, 348, 376–77

  colonialism, 154, 370, 414–16

  coal and, 173, 176

  extractivism and, 169–70

  Industrial Revolution and, 171, 175, 457

  Scientific Revolution and, 170–71

  Colorado, 52, 357n

  Colorado School of Public Health, 428

  Combes, Maxime, 304n, 317–18

  Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, 45

  Common Sense (Paine), 314

  communism, 20, 39, 42, 44, 177

  communities, 106

  building of, 92

  climate change and, 364–65

  renewable energy in, 131–32, 133

  see also worldview, communitarian

  Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs, 405

  compassion, 62–63, 462

  Competitive Enterprise Institute, 32, 45, 411

  complexity, 267, 290

  composting systems, 108

  computer models, of climate change, 270–71

  Conant, Lionel, 380

  Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, 319

  Conference Board of Canada, 145

  Congo, 220

  ConocoPhillips, 226, 227–28, 246

  Conservation Fund, 196, 205

  Conservation International, 84, 189, 196, 205–6, 209, 211–12

  Conservative Party (Canadian), 36

  Constitution, Canadian, 371

  construction, green, 90

  consumer lifestyles, 2, 75, 116–17

  consumption, 116

  decrease in, 90

  excess, 85, 91, 92, 93, 210, 412, 413

  green, 211–13, 252

  container ships, 76, 79

  Conway, Erik, 42

  Cook, James, 266

  Cook, Katsi, 419

  coolants, 219–20

  “Cool Dudes” (McCright and Dunlap), 46–47

  Coon, David, 374

  co-ops:

  energy, 130, 131–32

  worker-run, 122–23, 133

  Coos Bay, Oreg., 349

  Copenhagen Climate Summit of 2009, 11–14, 34, 150, 262, 451

  copper, 91n, 296

  coral, coral reefs, 301, 348, 434

  Corexit, 432

  Cornell University, 143, 217, 317

  corn ethanol, 239, 240

  corporate donors, 83, 210n

  corporations, 25

  centralization under, 179

  crisis exploited by, 8

  democracy vs., 7

  deregulation of, 19, 20, 72, 142, 154, 210

  disaster prevention at, 51–52

  environmental groups’ cooperation with, 196, 206–11

  freedom from regulation for, 19

  free speech for, 151

  goals of private, 129–30

  ideology of, 75

  impact of climate change on, 49

  Indigenous peoples vs., 221–23

  natural world vs., 60–61

  political power of, 199, 124–26, 141–52

  right-wing think tanks funded by, 44, 50

  taxes avoided by, 115

  USCAP and, 226–28

  Correa, Rafael, 180–81, 410–11

  corruption, of government regulators, 333–34

  Cosbey, Aaron, 70

  Costa Rica, 348

  Coste, Torrance, 363

  “Cowboys and Indians alliance,” 302, 318–19, 322–23, 346

  crash of 1929, 88

  Crawford, Julia Trigg, 361

  Crompton, Tom, 60

  crops, 9, 34, 57

  crowdfunding, 198

  Crow Reservation, 389, 397

  Crutzen, Paul, 261–62

  Cuadrilla, 130

  cultural cognition, 36, 44–45, 59, 63, 186

  Culture of Narcissism (Lasch), 117

  Czechoslovakia, 178

  Czech Republic, 42–43, 144, 348

  Dai, Aiguo, 272, 275

  Daily Mail, 5454

  Dallas, Tex., 329

  Daly, Herman, 173

  dams, 180, 183, 202

  Daniel, Patrick, 331–32

  dark money, 44

  Darling, Jay Norwood “Ding,” 185

  Dauphin Island Sea Lab, 433–34

  David, Ned, 247

  Davis, David Brion, 463

  Dayaneni, Gopal, 448

  Day One, 391

  DDT, 185, 201, 203, 207

  de Boer, Yvo, 87

  decade zero, 24, 143

  Dediu, Doina, 344

  deep ecology, 75

  deepwater drilling, see offshore drilling, deepwater

  Defense Department, U.S., 113

  deforestation, 202

  degrowth strategies:

  selective, 93–95

  for wealthy nations, 88, 89

  Delaware River Basin, 346

  Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, 371

  Delingpole, James, 42

  Delucchi, Mark A., 101

  democracy:

  Blockadia and, 361, 380

  climate change as crisis in, 363–64

  corporations vs., 7

  free trade agreements as thr
eat to, 358–60

  Democratic party, 35, 83, 141, 153, 234

  climate change accepted by majority in, 35–36

  climate change deniers in, 46

  Demos, 216

  Denmark, renewable energy in, 70, 131–32, 138, 179, 398

  deregulation, 8, 19, 20, 72, 142, 154, 210

  Derham, William, 171

  derivatives market, weather, 8–9

  De Schutter, Olivier, 134–35

  “Design to Win: Philanthropy’s Role in the Fight Against Global Warming,” 199

  Detroit, Mich., 154

  developed world:

  blame passed by, 82

  capping of emissions from, 218

  carbon emissions from, 40, 75, 79–80, 411

  climate debt of, 387, 388–99, 408–18, 457

  developing world, 75, 110, 180, 257

  climate debt as excuse for pollution by, 412

  climate debt owed to, 5, 7, 40, 387, 408–18

  greenhouse gas emissions from, 79–80, 82, 409–10, 411, 412

  green technologies for, 76, 85

  and move to low-emissions economy, 417

  poverty in, 40, 55, 88n, 179–82, 409, 416, 418

  trade access to, 85

  diabetes, 150, 161, 164

  dirty energy, see extractive industries

  disaster:

  austerity and, 106–10

  climate change and, 2–3, 17, 102–3, 154, 406, 465

  infrastructure for, 51

  as opportunities for change, 406–7, 465

  profit and, 9, 109

  public spending and, 106–10

  response to, 103–6

  disaster denialism, 51

  diseases, 14, 176

  dispersants, 325

  Divest Harvard, 354

  divestment movement, 206, 353–58, 365, 401, 402–3, 451

  Dixson, Bob, 407

  Doe, Aria, 106

  dolphins, die-off of, 432–34, 436

  Donahue, Bill, 326

  Donohue, Thomas J., 31

  Douglass, Frederick, 463

  Dow Chemical, 226

  Dowie, Mark, 83–84, 203

  Downie, Ewan, 382

  droughts, 9, 14, 107, 165, 440

  Pinatubo Option and, 279

  volcanic eruptions and, 272–73

  Dubner, Stephen J., 262–63, 271–72

  Duke Energy, 196, 226

  Duke University, 328–29, 401

  Dunlap, Riley, 35, 38, 46–47

  DuPont, 226, 227

  Dust Bowl, 64

  Earth Day, 153, 206–7, 285

  Earth First!, 206, 310

  Earth Mother/Mother Earth concept, 419, 423–24, 443–44

  earthquakes, fracking and, 329

  East Bay Tea Party, 38

  Eastern Bloc, 75

  Eckersley, Robyn, 77

  Eckhart, Michael T., 67

  EcoEquity, 417–18

  ecological amnesia, 3–4

  Ecological Economics, 185–86

  Ecological Economics (Daly and Farley), 173

  economic disruption:

  extractive industries and, 316, 386

  minimizing of, 12

  economic geologists, 46

  economic growth, 21, 129–30, 186

  atmospheric limits vs., 86–89

  in capitalism, 89

  climate change denial and, 3, 45–46, 59–60

  corporate deregulation and, 19

  dirty model of, 82

  limits on, 185–86

  orthodoxy of, 81, 94, 178

  economic justice, 10, 59, 91, 94, 157

  see also climate debt

  economy:

  climate action and, 21, 90, 124–26, 155, 252, 453

  decentralized, 158

  elite control over, 18

  fracking and, 94

  fossil fuel, 23, 45–46, 121, 173, 456

  local, 7, 68–70, 71, 76, 85–86

  planned, 94

  post-growth, 178

  resource-intensive, 21

  wage and price controls in, 125

  ecosystems:

  fertility cycle of, 438–39, 446–48

  loss of, 13

  restoration of, 93, 127, 444

  ectopic pregnancy, 425

  Ecuador, 13, 180, 197, 220, 377

  Chevron lawsuit of, 309, 378

  climate debt and, 408–9

  constitutional rights of nature in, 443–44

  EDF Energy, 149

  Edmonton, Canada, 302

  Edwards, Murray, 281

  “effervescence of rebellion,” 465

  Egypt, 158

  El Chichón eruption (1982), 274

  Eldorado Gold, Skouries forest project of, 293–94, 296–98, 303, 314, 342, 347, 445

  elections:

  of 1992, 83

  of 2008, 149

  of 2012, 149

  electricity grids, 90, 122, 133

  electronic waste, 91

  Ellis-Lamkins, Phaedra, 92

  Elsipogtog First Nation, 299, 370, 373, 374

  Elwha River, 374–75

  Elysium, 59

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 174

  emission credits, 219–20

  emission reduction, 16, 18–19, 31, 55, 73, 79, 85, 88, 90, 108–9, 127, 144n, 146, 154, 157–58, 213, 218, 283, 355

  failure of, 256, 276

  historical responsibility vs. capacity to contribute to, 417–18

  voluntary, 232

  see also climate treaty negotiations

  empathy, 46–54, 62–63

  Enbridge:

  Canadian Security Intelligence Service as lobbyist for, 362

  Michigan pipeline rupture of, 331–32, 338

  profit-over-safety culture of, 331, 333

  see also Northern Gateway pipeline

  Enbridge NB, 362

  endocrine disruptors, 439

  energy, public ownership of, 7, 284

  energy conservation, 116–18

  Energy Department, U.S., 102, 214, 247, 282

  energy efficiency, 127

  energy nationalization, 130, 454

  energy plants, “combined-cycle,” 129

  Energy Policy, 101, 102

  energy sources, zero-carbon, 18

  EnergyWire, 332

  Engelfried, Nick, 314

  Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR), 247–48

  Enlightenment, 159, 178

  Environics, 36

  Environment Agency (EA), U.K., 106–7

  Environmental Action, 213

  Environmental Coalition for NAFTA, 84

  Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), 84, 191, 198, 201, 233n, 235–36, 257

  carbon trading supported by, 218, 226–29

  fracking supported by, 215–17, 235n, 355–56

  pro-business makeover of, 207–10, 233

  environmental impact assessments, 203

  environmentalism:

  acceptable risk and, 335

  astronaut’s-eye view adopted by, 286–87, 296

  command and control, 204

  grassroots, 305–10; see also Big Green; Blockadia

  Keystone pipeline and revival of, 303

  top-down, failures of, 295

  “environmentalism of the poor,” 202

  environmental justice, 92, 155

  see also climate debt

  environmental movement, 157, 197

  cap-and-trade and, 229

  golden age of environmental law in, 201–4

  green consumerism and, 211–13

  insider strategy of, 203–4

  NAFTA supported by, 83–85

  political timidity in, 184–85, 186–87

  privileged origins of, 183, 201, 211–12

  pro-business ideology in, 207–11, 213

  radicalism in, 183–86, 201–3, 206–7

  in Reagan era and following, 203–11

  schisms in, 206–7

  singlemindedness of, 153

  see also Big Green

 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 48, 118, 227, 328

  Northern Cheyenne and, 390, 393

  Environmental Rights Action (Nigeria), 309

  Environment Canada, 325, 326–37

  ethane, 328

  eucalyptus, 239

  eugenics, taboo against, 278

  Europe:

  emissions from, 40, 411

  program cuts in, 110

  “squares movement” in, 464

  wealth in, 114

  European Community, environmental law in, 202

  European Parliament, 91n, 114

  European Transport Workers Federation, 127

  European Union, 218

  airline taxes considered by, 249

  Emissions Trading System (ETS) of, 219, 225, 226

  fuel quality standards of, 71, 248–49

  renewable energy in, 138

  U.S. oil and gas exports restriction and, 71

  WTO challenges brought against, 65, 70

  WTO challenges brought by, 68–69

  executive pay, 111, 112

  extinctions, 14

  extractive industries, 79, 121, 133, 141, 181, 213

  alienation of onetime friends by, 313

  Big Green and, 191–201

  billionaires’ investments in, 235–37

  climate change deniers funded by, 44–45, 149

  depletion of conventional reserves in, 310

  divestment movement and, 206, 353–58, 365, 401, 402–3

  donations to environmental groups by, 196–97, 215–16

  early victories against, 348–53

  ecologically and socially responsible, 447

  as economic disrupters, 316, 386

  economic and political power of, 149, 151, 377–80, 384–87, 400, 403, 461

  emissions regulations blocked by, 200

  extreme projects of, 295, 303, 304, 310, 311, 315–34, 446

  free trade agreements and, 358–60

  geoengineering and, 281–84

  government collusion with, 297–99, 303, 306–7, 308, 360, 361–66, 378–80

  grassroots opposition to, 305–10; see also Blockadia; climate movement

  growth as measure of, 129–30

  high risk in, 324–25, 331

  Indigenous land rights and, see Indigenous peoples, land rights of

  infrastructures of, 315–24

  lawsuits against, 112, 309, 368, 371–72, 378–80, 384, 386

  lax regulation of, 129, 330–31, 333

  lobbying by, 149–50

  local ecology ignored by, 295

  nationalization of, 130, 454

  new technologies developed by, 145–46, 253, 310

  polluter pays principle and, 110–19, 202–3

  profit-seeking imperative of, 111, 126, 129, 148, 253, 330–31

  progress blocked by, 110–11, 149

  publicly owned, 130

  public mistrust of, 330, 332, 333, 334

  reserve-replacement ratio of, 146–47

  sacrifice zones in, 172–73, 310–15

  self-preservation instinct of, 149, 253

  shareholders of, 111, 112, 128, 129, 146–47, 148

  spills and accidents in, 330–34; see also specific accidents

  Steyer’s walking away from, 235

  subsidies for, 70, 115, 118, 127, 418

 

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