Opinion

THE LAST WORD

mea maxima culpa

It’s hard to know what to do about the cli­mate emer­gency. When­ever it comes up I feel under pres­sure to do some­thing about it. I must say that deal­ing with what could be the sin­gle most ur­gent ex­is­ten­tial threat to hu­man­ity seems a lit­tle above my pay grade, and with­out doubt there are other peo­ple who are much bet­ter qual­i­fied than I am to tackle it, but I’m will­ing to give it my best shot.

I’ve ac­tu­ally been work­ing on sav­ing the planet for some time now. I re­cy­cle all my paper, plas­tic and glass with ob­ses­sive de­vo­tion, al­though I worry that in wash­ing the re­mains of food from con­tain­ers I could be adding to Earth’s woes by wast­ing water. The prob­lem is that they begin to smell if you don’t wash them out as it takes time for the waste ma­te­r­ial to ac­cu­mu­late.

But maybe I’m doing it all wrong and should be tak­ing the waste to the re­cy­cle bins more fre­quently. Shame­ful though it is, there have been times when I’ve let my re­cy­cling build up to the point that I’ve had to use the car to get it all to the bins on the other side of the vil­lage. Imag­ine if the emis­sions I pro­duced on those trips were the ones that tipped the bal­ance and plunged us all into a cli­mate apoc­a­lypse. I’d never be able to live with my­self.

I find it hard to sleep if I know that I turned the tele­vi­sion off with the re­mote, putting it on standby, rather than un­plug­ging it from the wall. That lit­tle red light in the bot­tom left hand cor­ner burns away in the back of my mind, proof if any was needed of my bla­tant ir­re­spon­si­bil­ity and my lack of con­sid­er­a­tion for our beau­ti­ful planet and its pre­cious ecosys­tems. Even­tu­ally I give into the in­evitable, throw off the cov­ers, and go stomp­ing into the liv­ing room to un­plug the telly.

Man-made cli­mate change, they call it, which means it’s our fault, my fault. If only I hadn’t thrown that tuna tin in the bin be­cause I was too lazy to clean it out and put it with the rest of the re­cy­cling in the garage. As we speak, the 2021 United Na­tions Cli­mate Change Con­fer­ence is tak­ing place in Scot­land. I just pray that my name doesn’t come up if they start look­ing for cul­prits.

But then I read in our in­ter­view with cli­mate ex­pert pro­fes­sor Manola Brunet on page 20 that “there has to be an end to shift­ing re­spon­si­bil­ity or so­lu­tions for cli­mate change onto so­ci­ety” and that “small mea­sures like turn­ing off ma­chines to save en­ergy lead nowhere.” Ac­cord­ing to the good pro­fes­sor, it’s not all my fault – thank god – and the real re­spon­si­bil­ity lies with the gov­ern­ments and com­pa­nies that cause the vast ma­jor­ity of emis­sions. Pro­found changes in the mod­els of pro­duc­tion are re­quired, she ar­gues, and the first step is to ac­tu­ally en­force the laws and reg­u­la­tions on re­strict­ing emis­sions that al­ready exist. En­vi­ron­men­tal­ist and bi­ol­o­gist Xavi Jiménez makes a sim­i­lar ar­gu­ment in an in­ter­view on page 18.

While I must admit it’s a re­lief to learn that my lazi­ness and ir­re­spon­si­bil­ity have not had the en­vi­ron­men­tal im­pact that I’d feared, and that if any­one should take more re­spon­si­bil­ity for the prob­lem it is the politi­cians and the cor­po­ra­tions, I, and you, are not com­pletely off the hook. After all, the politi­cians only get into po­si­tions of power if we vote for them, and cor­po­ra­tions only at­tain the in­flu­ence they enjoy if we buy their prod­ucts and ser­vices.

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