03 April, 2015

David Roberts puts his view on 'the climate thing'


W

riting in Grist about a literary fiction author - “Jonathan Franzen is confused about climate change, but then, lots of people are” – David Roberts makes this observation.

His thoughts resonate and would be understood by most who care about the damage we are casing to the world’s climate system.
 
“Shouldn’t our responsibility to other people, both living and not yet born, compel us to take radical action on climate change? The problem here is that it makes no difference to the climate whether any individual, myself included, drives to work or rides a bike. The scale of greenhouse-gas emissions is so vast, the mechanisms by which these emissions affect the climate so nonlinear, and the effects so widely dispersed in time and space that no specific instance of harm could ever be traced back to my 0.0000001-per-cent contribution to emissions. I may abstractly fault myself for emitting way more than the global per-capita average. But if I calculate the average annual quota required to limit global warming to two degrees this century I find that simply maintaining a typical American single-family home exceeds it in two weeks. Absent any indication of direct harm, what makes intuitive moral sense is to live the life I was given, be a good citizen, be kind to the people near me, and conserve as well as I reasonably can.”
-      David Roberts.

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