Being
stuck in one place has allowed us some unusual opportunities. Blue
Earth is home of the Green Giant frozen vegetable company, and every
year at this time the town holds fireworks, a parade, and other
events in a mini-festival called "Giant Days," all under
the presumed benevolent gaze of a 53-foot-tall fiberglass statue of
the Jolly Green Man himself. We paid the entry fee and joined the
parade, sashaying our way down Main Street to the strains of "Pretty
Woman" arising from the teen marching band behind us, while
handing out copies of our newly revised Climate Crisis Information
Sheet. It was a strange event, to be sure.
Our
new information sheet is more specific in its prescription for
responding to the climate situation. So much news is coming daily
about the climate that there is a new hazard for our project: if we
introduce ourselves as simply "climate activists," or
"walking to raise awareness about the climate situation,"
many people will assume they know what our message is; and, yet, our
message is still starkly different than what the politicians and
journalists are saying, even now. In a nutshell, climate policy that
isn't based on the scientific understanding of the climate system's
limitations means nothing at all, will not save our planet for us.
As we
walk, it is obvious the planet is changing. Not only does the land we
pass through seem different, and person after person tells us that
their homeland is not what it was when they were growing up (this
from 70-year-olds and 20-year-olds alike), but the train of news
stories about extreme weather disasters continues unabated. Colossal
floods in India, 6,000 people missing, presumed dead. Nineteen
firefighters dead in Arizona, charred in a huge fire that no one
could contain. This is the crazy world we are birthing. Events that
boggle the human imagination cartwheel through the 24-hour news cycle
and disappear beneath the froth of our current distractions. This
week, an "iceberg" larger than the city of Chicago
splintered off Antarctica at a location where two large fissures
appeared suddenly last year in a great ice shelf. It now drifts in
the Southern Ocean, thousands of miles from civilization but still
telling the time of the planet.
While
we are essentially "stuck in place" for the time-being, we
read about Australia and its current struggles with climate
regulation. Australia is considering abandoning its carbon "tax,"
even though economists, scientists, and fossil fuel industry people
are all in support of the program that created it, and the tax is
having a measurable effect in reducing Australia's greenhouse gas
emissions. The coalition that put the policy in place is threatening
to fracture under the stress of the opposition declaring that the
"tax" represents a broken political promise and will
bankrupt Australian families. (The political opposition there has
been unable to find a single Australian economist to back that
opinion up.)
Australia
is an important bellwether for the U.S. for a few reasons. Although
Australia has a more-complex multi-party coalition government (or
maybe because of it), they are the only major greenhouse polluting
country to impose a carbon fee -- limited as it is. Created in 2010,
the carbon fee program has already demonstrated itself to be
effective in curtailing pollution, despite the fact that Australia is
the heaviest emitter of greenhouse gases per household in the world.