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	<title>What is COP15? &#187; Factsheets and other detailed &#8220;issues&#8221; literature</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/category/issues/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net</link>
	<description>An instant archive compilation of the climate movement in resistance to the corporate agenda of the COP15 talks</description>
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		<title>Transnational Institute: Pre-Copenhagen resource guide</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/transnational-institute-pre-copenhagen-resource-guide/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/transnational-institute-pre-copenhagen-resource-guide/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Dec 2009 08:04:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>seaslug</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Factsheets and other detailed "issues" literature]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whatiscop15.net/?p=910</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FACT SHEETS
1. Cap and Trade [7]
What is wrong with cap and trade? Who profits from these schemes? What is EU&#8217;s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS)? Can cap and trade markets be reformed?  This fact sheet answers all your questions about cap and trade.
2. Carbon Offsets [8]
What are carbon offsets? Why do they negatively impact environment? Isn&#8217;t [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/4779-TNI.jpg" rel="lightbox[910]"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-918" title="4779-TNI" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/4779-TNI.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="300" /></a>FACT SHEETS</strong></p>
<p>1. <strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/article/fact-sheet-cap-and-trade">Cap and Trade</a> [7]</strong><br />
What is wrong with cap and trade? Who profits from these schemes? What is EU&#8217;s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS)? Can cap and trade markets be reformed?  This fact sheet answers all your questions about cap and trade.</p>
<p>2. <strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/article/fact-sheet-carbon-offsets">Carbon Offsets</a> [8]</strong><br />
What are carbon offsets? Why do they negatively impact environment? Isn&#8217;t carbon trading better than nothing?  This fact sheet answers all your questions about carbon offsets.</p>
<p>3. <strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/article/fact-sheet-whats-stake-copenhagen">What&#8217;s at stake in Copenhagen</a> [9]</strong><br />
Why are some countries intent on killing Kyoto? Do the reductions targets tell the whole story? Who is paying for it all? This fact sheet answers all your questions about the UN climate talks in Copenhagen.</p>
<p><strong>INTERVIEWS</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/interview/copenhagen-talks-lies-damn-lies-and-emissions-reductions-pledges">Copenhagen talks: “Lies, damn lies and emissions reductions pledges”</a> [10]</strong><br />
Interview with <em>Oscar Reyes</em><br />
A dazzling array of delegates from all over the world is in Copenhagen to hammer out a deal on tackling climate change. Oscar Reyes makes sense of the complex negotiations process.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/interview/how-myth-unlimited-growth-destroying-planet">How the myth of unlimited growth is destroying the planet</a> [11]</strong><br />
Interview with <em>Edgardo Lander</em><br />
Economic growth and continued expansion are a vital requirement for the current pattern of civilisation. We need to change this if we are to solve the climate crisis.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/interview/carbon-con">Carbon Con</a> [12]</strong><br />
Interview with <em>Tamra Gilbertson</em><br />
How the US forced carbon trading onto the global climate agenda, and why popular movements worldwide have vowed to end this &#8216;false solution&#8221; to climate change.</p>
<p><strong>BLOGS<br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://copcop15.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">La estrategia del avestruz</a> [13] </strong>- Apuntes desde la cumbre del clima en Copenhague (only in Spanish)</p>
<p><strong>REPORTS</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/carbon-trade-fails">Carbon Trading: How it works and why it fails? </a> [14]</strong><br />
<em>Oscar Reyes and Tamra Gilbertson</em><br />
This accessible, well-researched book provides a devastating critique of both the theory and practice of carbon trading, which lie at the heart of global climate policy.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/tnibook/contours-climate-justice">Contours of Climate Justice</a> [15]</strong><br />
<em>Ulrich Brand, Nicola Bullard, Edgardo Lander, Tadzio Mueller (eds.)</em><br />
This publication aims to contribute to a more sophisticated understanding of the emerging climate justice movement and to create resonances between different perspectives and spheres of engagement. The activities around the COP 15 in Copenhagen are a starting point in the creation of such a broad movement.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/paper/world-climate-crossroads">The World at the Climate Crossroads</a> [16]</strong><br />
<em>Praful Bidwai</em><br />
It is depressingly clear that Copenhagen will at best produce a ‘political’ agreement—just as the Bali conference did two years ago—but not a global climate compact with time-bound, quantifiable, legally binding and enforceable goals or measures.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.ourworldisnotforsale.org/sites/default/files/trade_and_climate_FINAL_with_acknowledgements%5B1%5D.pdf" target="_blank">Change Trade, Not Our Climate (PDF)</a> [17]</strong><br />
<em>Ronnie Hall </em>on behalf of Our World is Not for Sale &#8211; Trade and Climate Change Working Group</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/article/taking-care-business">Taking care of business</a> [18]</strong><br />
<em>Oscar Reyes</em><br />
The world’s biggest corporations have hijacked the UN climate talks. That’s bad news for our future.</p>
<p><strong>VIDEO:</strong> <strong><a href="http://www.tni.org/multimedia/story-cap-trade">The Story of Cap and Trade</a> [19]</strong></p>
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		<title>Climate Chronicle</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/climate-chronicle/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/climate-chronicle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Dec 2009 08:01:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>seaslug</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whatiscop15.net/?p=907</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

The Climate justice newspaper was produced every two days during the Copenhagen climate talks, reporting and decoding what is going on both inside and outside the climate negotiations. Find out what is really going on behind the media headlines.




Printed copies are available in Copenhagen at the KlimaForum and the Bella Center.
Climate Chronicle is a co-publication [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/ClimateChronicle_issue2.jpg" rel="lightbox[907]"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-908" title="ClimateChronicle_issue2" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/ClimateChronicle_issue2.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="198" /></a></p>
<div>
<p>The Climate justice newspaper was produced every two days during the Copenhagen climate talks, reporting and decoding what is going on both inside and outside the climate negotiations. Find out what is really going on behind the media headlines.</p>
</div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
<p>Printed copies are available in Copenhagen at the <a href="http://www.klimaforum09.org/" target="_blank">KlimaForum</a> and the Bella Center.</p>
<p>Climate Chronicle is a co-publication of Transnational Institute&#8217;s <a href="http://www.carbontradewatch.org/" target="_blank">Carbon Trade Watch</a>, <a href="http://www.earthlife.org.za/" target="_blank">Earthlife Africa</a> and the <a href="http://www.iss.co.za/" target="_blank">Institute for Security Studies</a>.</p>
<p>AVAILABLE AT <a href="http://tni.org/briefing/newspaper-climate-chronicle">http://tni.org/briefing/newspaper-climate-chronicle</a></p>
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		<title>New book uncovers carbon trading flaws ahead of UN climate talks</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/new-book-uncovers-carbon-trading-flaws-ahead-of-un-climate-talks/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/new-book-uncovers-carbon-trading-flaws-ahead-of-un-climate-talks/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Dec 2009 07:29:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>seaslug</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whatiscop15.net/?p=890</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
At a time when Copenhagen talks and the Kyoto Protocol seem likely to end in failure, calling for an entirely different framework for addressing the climate crisis may seem like madness. Carbon Trading: How it works and why it fails, produced by the Transnational Institute’s Carbon Trade Watch Project, is sure to change your mind.
The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/cc.jpg" rel="lightbox[890]"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-891" title="cc" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/cc.jpg" alt="" width="461" height="390" /></a></p>
<p>At a time when Copenhagen talks and the Kyoto Protocol seem likely to end in failure, calling for an entirely different framework for addressing the climate crisis may seem like madness. Carbon Trading: How it works and why it fails, produced by the Transnational Institute’s Carbon Trade Watch Project, is sure to change your mind.</p>
<div>The accessible, well-researched book provides a devastating critique of both the theory and practice of carbon trading, which lie at the heart of global climate policy. It shows how the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme, the world’s largest carbon market, has consistently failed to ‘cap’ emissions, while the UN’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) routinely favours environmentally ineffective and socially unjust projects.</p>
<p>The book includes original research with compelling case studies of CDM projects in Brazil, Indonesia, India and Thailand that have proved to be fraudulent, based on dispossession and human rights abuses, and led to strong resistance from communities in the Global South.</p>
<p>The book reveals how carbon trading is only a very recent invention by business and political elites that undermines existing environmental legislation and diverts from planning a rapid transition away from current fossil fuel expansion. It points to a plethora of ways forward without carbon trading &#8211; from subsidy shifting to regulation – based on local knowledge and political organising if climate change is to be addressed in a just manner.</p>
<p>The authors, Tamra Gilbertson and Oscar Reyes, are both researchers with Carbon Trade Watch. The project combines high quality research and integration with social movements worldwide which has made it a respected commentator on global climate policy since 2002. The new book is published by the Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation (<a href="http://www.dhf.uu.se/" target="_self">www.dhf.uu.se</a>) as part of its Critical Currents series.</div>
<div><a href="http://www.carbontradewatch.org/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=322&amp;Itemid=292" target="_self">GO TO DOWNLOAD PAGE</a></div>
<p>WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING:</p>
<p><cite></cite></p>
<p><em>&#8220;Anyone who still thinks that creating a carbon casino can solve our climate crisis owes it to themselves to read this book. The most convincing and concise challenge to the green profiteers yet.&#8221;</em><br />
- Naomi Klein, author, the Shock Doctrine</p>
<div><em>&#8220;Carbon trading is a scandalous story of economic dogma, government-business collusion, windfall profits, and promotion of emissions-intensive growth, compounded by speculative sub-prime trading and creation of divisions within vulnerable communities. This incisive analysis demolishes many myths and argues for sustainable solutions to the climate crisis.&#8221;</em><br />
- Praful Bidwai, Delhi-Based journalist and author of <em>An India that can Say Yes: a Climate-Responsible Development Agenda for Copenhagen and Beyond </em></div>
<div><em>&#8220;This book is an invaluable contribution to understanding the pitfalls of relying on the carbon markets to save the world&#8217;s poor and the planet&#8221;</em><br />
- Meena Raman, Third World Network</p>
<p><em>“The transition to a post-oil model is inevitable but instead of starting this process, it is delayed by barriers and traps such as the carbon market. This book teaches us how this barrier works and what there is behind this new trap of green capitalism. It is obligatory reading for all who fight for a post-oil civilization.”</em><br />
- Ivonne Yanez, Oilwatch South America</p>
<p><em>&#8220;A clear and enlightening explanation of a problem that vested interests want to make incomprehensible. Great job.&#8221;</em></div>
<div>
<div>- Ana Filipini, coordinator of the Latin American Network Against Monoculture Tree Plantations</div>
</div>
<div><em> Carbon Trading: How it works and why it fails </em>can be downloaded at <a href="http://www.tni.org/carbon-trade-fails" target="_self">http://www.tni.org/carbon-trade-fails</a>.</div>
<div>For more details on Carbon Trade Watch see <a href="http://www.carbontradewatch.org/" target="_self">http://www.carbontradewatch.org</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>To obtain a printed copy, contact Nina Brenjo (nina.brenjo AT tni.org) +31-20-6626608</p>
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		<title>The Indigenous Environmental Network on REDD</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/the-indigenous-environmental-network-on-redd/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/the-indigenous-environmental-network-on-redd/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Dec 2009 08:45:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>davidb2</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whatiscop15.net/?p=589</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Click here to read the booklet the Indigenous Environmental Network has prepared on what REDD means for indigenous people.
source: http://www.ienearth.org/
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/14363_186270130641_186264980641_3025632_4217993_n.jpg" rel="lightbox[589]"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-590" title="14363_186270130641_186264980641_3025632_4217993_n" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/14363_186270130641_186264980641_3025632_4217993_n.jpg" alt="" width="483" height="396" /></a></p>
<p>Click <a href="http://www.ienearth.org/REDD/index.html">here</a> to read the booklet the Indigenous Environmental Network has prepared on what REDD means for indigenous people.</p>
<p>source: <a href="http://www.ienearth.org/">http://www.ienearth.org/</a></p>
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		<title>The G77 Position on Climate Action</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/the-g77-position-on-climate-action-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/the-g77-position-on-climate-action-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Dec 2009 04:27:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>davidb2</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whatiscop15.net/?p=515</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“A deal that cannot save god, humanity and nature is a deal that we should not entertain in the first place.”
Click here for a report-back from a briefing conducted by G77 nations outlining their demands for a climate action treaty.
source: http://www.foodfirst.org/en/node/2694
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_516" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 463px"><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/G77countries1.png" rel="lightbox[515]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-516" title="G77countries" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/G77countries1-300x131.png" alt="" width="453" height="198" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">G77 Nations, as of 2008.</p></div>
<p>“A deal that cannot save god, humanity and nature is a deal that we should not entertain in the first place.”</p>
<p>Click <a href="http://www.foodfirst.org/en/node/2694">here</a> for a report-back from a briefing conducted by G77 nations outlining their demands for a climate action treaty.</p>
<p>source:<a href="http://www.foodfirst.org/en/node/2694"> http://www.foodfirst.org/en/node/2694</a></p>
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		<title>It&#8217;s Too Late to Compromise on Climate</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/the-first-large-urban-casualty-of-climate-change/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/the-first-large-urban-casualty-of-climate-change/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Dec 2009 20:51:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>davidb2</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[That is the question the New York Times mooted regarding the fate of El Alto, Bolivia, a large suburb of the capital, La Paz. Residents of metropolitan La Paz had long depended on the melting glaciers ringing their city to supply drinking water- but now that these glaciers are disappearing, the very lives of residents [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_486" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 230px"><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/image_preview.jpg" rel="lightbox[485]"><img class="size-full wp-image-486 " title="image_preview" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/image_preview.jpg" alt="" width="220" height="165" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This used to be the site of one of the highest glaciers in South America. Photo by Jimmie Giles.</p></div>
<p>That is the question the New York Times mooted regarding the fate of El Alto, Bolivia, a large suburb of the capital, La Paz. Residents of metropolitan La Paz had long depended on the melting glaciers ringing their city to supply drinking water- but now that these glaciers are disappearing, the very lives of residents of the La Paz metropolis are at risk.</p>
<p>source: <a href="http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/its-too-late-to-compromise-on-climate">http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/its-too-late-to-compromise-on-climate</a></p>
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		<title>Countering Critics of a Cap-and-Trade Critique, by Patrick Bond</title>
		<link>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/countering-critics-of-a-cap-and-trade-critique-by-patrick-bond/</link>
		<comments>http://www.whatiscop15.net/2009/12/countering-critics-of-a-cap-and-trade-critique-by-patrick-bond/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Dec 2009 06:53:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>seaslug</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whatiscop15.net/?p=339</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Eight million people viewed Annie Leonard&#8217;s The Story of Stuff video since December 2007, and her new nine-minute Story of Cap and Trade (http://www.zcommunications.org/zvideo/3310) received 400,000 hits in the two weeks after its December 1 launch.
The film, produced by Free Range Studios, was developed in collaboration with the Durban Group for Climate Justice and Climate [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/PatrickBond.jpg" rel="lightbox[339]"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-916" title="PatrickBond" src="http://www.whatiscop15.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/PatrickBond.jpg" alt="" width="116" height="157" /></a></p>
<p>Eight million people viewed Annie Leonard&#8217;s The Story of Stuff video since December 2007, and her new nine-minute Story of Cap and Trade (http://www.zcommunications.org/zvideo/3310) received 400,000 hits in the two weeks after its December 1 launch.</p>
<p>The film, produced by Free Range Studios, was developed in collaboration with the Durban Group for Climate Justice and Climate Justice Now! networks, which  joined Climate Justice Action and other networks to put tens of thousands of activists on the streets of Copenhagen, London and dozens of other cities in recent days, demanding large emissions cuts, the payment of ecological debt to climate victims, and the decommissioning of carbon markets.</p>
<p>But critics abound, so what trends can we discern from the sometimes venomous feedback to Story of Cap and Trade, and what do these tell us about US and global climate politics? Consider three categories:</p>
<p>* libertarian climate change denialists;</p>
<p>* Big Green groups and other carbon trading supporters; and</p>
<p>* self-interested green capitalists.</p>
<p>To start, rightwing extremists are easiest to dismiss because they deny that climate change is a product of human/economic activity &#8211; but there&#8217;s a schizophrenic double agenda. For although they&#8217;re pro-business, libertarians like Fox tv&#8217;s Glenn Beck oppose market-based cap-and-trade schemes.</p>
<p>The most dangerous, Oklahoma Senator Jim Inhofe, denies &#8216;that we&#8217;re going to pass a cap-and-trade or we&#8217;re going to do something on emissions reduction,&#8217; as he told the rightwing NewsMax agency on Sunday.</p>
<p>Australian climate denialists now control the official opposition party, having overthrown its leader last month due to his cap-and-trade endorsement, in the process halting the state&#8217;s proposed emissions trading scheme (http://agmates.ning.com/forum/topics/canberra-protest-rally-live?commentId=3535428%3AComment%3A9579).</p>
<p>Those of us fighting carbon markets certainly *don&#8217;t* want alliances with cretins like Inhofe or intrepid videoblogger Lee Doran. After a clumsy rebuttal to The Story of Stuff, Doran offered another zany video-attack (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWjGZNDEH-A), in which he first agrees with the demolition of cap-and-trade, but then replies to Annie&#8217;s charge that rich-world overconsumption victimizes those least responsible for global warming:</p>
<p>Annie: &#8216;Did you know that in the next century, because of the changing climate, whole island nations could end up underwater?&#8217;</p>
<p>Lee: &#8216;Yes, and islands will emerge from the water too, it&#8217;s part of the natural cycle of the planet.&#8217; (minute 6)</p>
<p>Enough said about flat-earth libertarian ideologues.</p>
<p>In the second group we find both pro-market &#8216;green&#8217; ideologues &#8211; i.e., &#8216;always find a market solution for a market problem!&#8217; &#8211; and well-meaning environmental advocates operating under conditions not of their own choosing within Washington&#8217;s adverse balance of forces.</p>
<p>From at least 1997, when Al Gore shoved cap-and-trade into the Kyoto Protocol with the soon-to-be-broken promise that Washington would then endorse the climate treaty, many greens who earlier criticized market solutions concluded that the market was the only game in town, due to prevailing power relations.</p>
<p>But instead of trying to change those power relations, most of Washington&#8217;s Big Green groups held their noses and went to work expanding carbon trading from London to the Chicago Climate Exchange, joined by like-minded academics and green policy wonks.</p>
<p>Along the way some turned eco-egotistical about their chosen trade. Eric de Place of Sightline Institute takes the policy critique personally: &#8216;All these years that tens of thousands (sic) of folks like me have worked long hours at low pay (or no pay) to hash out a workable and effective climate policy and it turns out that our purported allies like Leonard would rather paint us as duplicitous bankers in pin-striped suits.&#8217;</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the long underpaid hours hustling cap-and-trade &#8211; wasted, if judged by the subsequent evidence of carbon market failures &#8211; de Place&#8217;s injured tone is misplaced. As Annie did in fact acknowledge, &#8216;Some of my friends who really care about our future support cap and trade. A lot of environmental groups that I respect do too. They know it&#8217;s not a perfect solution and don&#8217;t love the idea of turning our planet&#8217;s future over to these guys, but they think that it is an important first step and that it&#8217;s better than nothing.&#8217;</p>
<p>However, as the film demonstrates, carbon trading is not better than nothing, it&#8217;s far worse than nothing. As the US&#8217;s top climate scientist, James Hansen, insisted in the New York Times last week, a Senate bill or Copenhagen deal based on cap-and-trade are indeed worse than no bill, no deal: carbon trading &#8216;actually perpetuates the pollution it is supposed to eliminate&#8217; (www.nytimes.com/2009/12/07/opinion/07hansen.html).</p>
<p>Ideologically, the market environmentalists risk sliding down a dangerous slope. For instance, amongst conservationists in both Southern Africa (where I live) and Seattle (where de Place lives) this question has been posed: should markets be relied upon to preserve threatened wildlife, even endangered species?</p>
<p>In our case, the challenge involves rhinos and elephants whose ivory tusks attract murderous poachers seeking riches in the East Asian aphrodisiac markets. Poachers have reduced the big animals&#8217; populations dramatically in recent decades. In the Pacific Northwest, instead of aphrodisiacs, macho trophy hunters seek coastal grizzly bears for their fireplace mantels.</p>
<p>Market-environmentalists react with a simple formula, which &#8211; to quote Robert Mugabe &#8211; reduces life to a commodity: &#8216;They must pay to stay&#8217; (http://baraza.wildlifedirect.org/2008/03/10/illegal-wildlife-trade-is-fueling-wars-in-africa/). Mugabe and his allies seduce hunters to visit Zimbabwe in order to maintain a &#8217;sustainable&#8217; herd for the killing pleasure of rich tourists (not ordinary Zimbabweans&#8217; viewing pleasure).</p>
<p>De Place, too, defends the trophy industry: &#8216;I&#8217;m not sure that hunting is bad for the species being hunted&#8217; (http://www.grist.org/article/to-save-a-species-shoot-here &#8211; and for a rebuttal by the Raincoast Conservation Foundation, see http://www.grist.org/article/raincoast-responds-to-eric-de-place ).</p>
<p>David Roberts of Grist (http://www.grist.org/article/2009-12-01-annie-leonard-misses-the-mark-her-new-video-story-cap-and-trade/) also suffers pro-trading panic, calling the film &#8216;the perfect representation of all the confusion and misplaced focus that plagues the green left right now.&#8217; In contrast, he confesses, &#8216;I&#8217;m generally viewed among greens as a defender of cap-and-trade-or, in the less charitable version, a defender of the &#8220;party line,&#8221; a shill for the administration, a sell-out &#8220;insider,&#8221; whatever.&#8217;</p>
<p>Quite. Roberts cannot defend the US and EU cap-and-trade systems&#8217; free pollution allowances and billions of tons of offsets, rebutting that we should criticize not carbon markets, simply prevailing legislation. But the dreadful Waxman-Markey and Kerry-Boxer carbon-trading bills were complemented in mid-December by Senator Joe Lieberman &#8211; &#8216;This is the market-based system for punishing polluters previously known as &#8220;cap and trade&#8221;&#8216; &#8211; to now include offshore drilling for oil and natural gas, nuclear energy and &#8216;clean coal&#8217; scamming.</p>
<p>Another new bill offered by Senators Maria Cantwell and Sue Collins last week was endorsed by de Place and his colleague Alan Durning even though it has only a 4% emissions reduction target for 2020 from 1990 levels. Go figure, the author of the great 1992 anti-consumption book How Much is Enough?, Durning, now calls this irresponsibly low target &#8217;solid&#8217; (http://www.grist.org/article/2009-12-11-cantwells-cap-and-trade-bill-almost-genius/).</p>
<p>Ideally Kerry, Lieberman et al will be punished by Washington&#8217;s grid-lock, as the bills suffocate in Capitol Hill&#8217;s corporate pollution &#8211; a good thing, since their death would at least preserve the existing Clean Air Act, which all the main legislators except Cantwell-Collins threaten to gut.</p>
<p>Roberts grows yet more defensive on matters of principle: &#8216;I don&#8217;t know why the green left has decided that markets are bad, in and of themselves, but it seems both politically unwise and substantively thin.&#8217; He *doesn&#8217;t know why*? Only a year after the world&#8217;s worst market failure in recorded history, with global trade and financial indicators far lower after eighteen months than a similar period in 1929-31?!</p>
<p>Aside from concern about the self-destructive tendency of financial markets which host carbon trading (witness the EU Emissions Trading Scheme collapses in April 2006 and October 2008), the green left offers many substantively thick arguments why business environmentalism is flawed, and why commodifying natural resources &#8211; like the air, in carbon trading &#8211; generates systemic market failures.</p>
<p>For example, Africa&#8217;s greatest political economist, Samir Amin, has just penned a damning attack on environmental markets (http://seminario10anosdepois.wordpress.com/2009/12/01/the-battlefields-chosen-by-contemporary-imperialism/#more-37), as has University of Oregon professor John Bellamy Foster (http://sociology.uoregon.edu/faculty/foster.php): The Ecological Revolution: Making Peace with the Planet (http://www.monthlyreview.org/books/ecologicalrevolution.php). Either can assist Roberts to plug the gaping holes in his pro-market consciousness.</p>
<p>Roberts doesn&#8217;t seem to understand the severe dangers associated with an anticipated $3 trillion in carbon trades by 2020, which will become the basis for further trade in financial derivatives, for he derides the film&#8217;s warning about Wall Street speculation: &#8216;Leonard et al. seem instead to have decided that &#8220;market Goldman Sachs derivatives bugga bugga!&#8221; suffices.&#8217;</p>
<p>But Roberts, de Place and NRDC policy director David Doniger (http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/ddoniger/the_rest_of_the_story_of_cap_a.html) dare not trash the film&#8217;s proposed solutions, such as stronger EPA regulatory enforcement and citizen activism (e.g. West Virginia mountaintop defense). There is greater potential to push the EPA into action &#8211; in spite of misgivings by NewEnergyNews&#8217; Herman Trabish (http://newenergynews.blogspot.com/2009/12/oversimple-story-of-cap-and-facts.html) &#8211; than to win legislation regulating carbon within ill-functioning, untransparent financial markets, in which &#8216;too big to fail&#8217; deregulatory freedom was amplified by Bush-Obama&#8217;s 2008-09 bailouts.</p>
<p>The third critical group includes green technocrats with financial self-interest. That may explain why at least one of them &#8211; Adam Stein from TerraPass &#8211; is so very cross, absurdly entitling his attack on the film, &#8216;Why does Annie Leonard hate the environment?&#8217; (http://www.terrapass.com/blog/posts/why-does-annie-leonard-hate-the-environment, and another is carbon consultant Gay Harley,http://carboncommentary.blogspot.com/2009/12/no-rest-in-copenhagen.html).</p>
<p>Stein claims, &#8216;cap and trade and carbon taxes are functionally equivalent policies&#8217; &#8211; but they&#8217;re not. As Hansen points out, carbon fees would easily withstand the scamming and price volatility so notorious in the carbon markets.</p>
<p>Ultimately, for Stein, &#8216;one criterion clearly stands above all others: which policy actually stands a chance of passage in the US Congress?&#8217; Unmentioned, for obvious reasons (the Congress being a wholly-owned subsidiary of big business) is that a carbon trading policy only enjoys the &#8217;strong support&#8217; of a meager 2% of the US voting population, who &#8216;favor a carbon tax over cap-and-trade by nearly two-to-one,&#8217; according to a Hart Research survey (http://www.sustainablebusiness.com/index.cfm/go/news.display/id/19351).</p>
<p>But given Washington&#8217;s adverse power relations, a genuine climate policy must avoid the corporate-ruled Congress for now, and instead focus on command/control by the EPA. (To be sure, a stronger EPA would also rule many of TerraPass&#8217;s own projects &#8211; especially those methane-electricity landfill conversions that undermine zero-waste strategies &#8211; as unworthy of green investment.)</p>
<p>Of all the film&#8217;s supposed errors, says Stein, &#8216;my favorite for sheer chutzpah, if not for actual importance, is when Leonard dings Kyoto because &#8220;energy costs jumped for consumers.&#8221;&#8216;</p>
<p>But Stein may want to look at what European consumers now see: no net emissions reductions on the one hand, and on the other, massive criminality in the EU&#8217;s carbon trading scheme (Europol estimates five billion euros have been stolen in tax fraud, as just one example), alongside regressive energy price increases (the poorest suffer a much higher burden of expenses than the wealthy, and are least able to make the transition to the post-carbon economy).</p>
<p>So when the film refers to higher EU energy costs, this is not chutzpah, it&#8217;s critical realism. No one more than Annie is committed to raising consumption costs appropriately so as to deter waste; Story of Stuff&#8217;s viewers learned of unaccounted-for eco-social externalities that should be internalized in her $4.99 radio, for instance.</p>
<p>Actually, the most telling contribution to the critiques of our cap-and-trade critique comes from an unlikely source: Charles Krauthammer (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/10/AR2009121003163.html). The despicable neocon columnist fused all three hostile narratives when he wrote, last Friday, against the EPA: &#8216;Congress should not just resist this executive overreaching, but trump it: Amend clean-air laws and restore their original intent by excluding CO2 from EPA control and reserving that power for Congress and future legislation. Do it now. Do it soon. Because Big Brother isn&#8217;t lurking in CIA cloak. He&#8217;s knocking on your door, smiling under an EPA cap.&#8217;</p>
<p>Sorry, the big brother who so frightens Krauthammer is far bigger than a beleaguered Washington environmental agency and far more dangerous to corporate profits than pro-market &#8216;green&#8217; critics of The Story of Cap and Trade actually comprehend: simply, a new global movement known as Climate Justice.</p>
<p>(Patrick Bond, a content advisor to The Story of Cap and Trade, has written widely on the climate crisis:http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs/default.asp?2,68,3,1887.)</p>
<p>By Bond, Patrick</p>
<p>Patrick Bond&#8217;s ZSpace Page</p>
<p>Join ZSpace</p>
<p>Eight million people viewed Annie Leonard&#8217;s The Story of Stuff video since December 2007, and her new nine-minute Story of Cap and Trade (http://www.zcommunications.org/zvideo/3310) received 400,000 hits in the two weeks after its December 1 launch.</p>
<p>The film, produced by Free Range Studios, was developed in collaboration with the Durban Group for Climate Justice and Climate Justice Now! networks, which  joined Climate Justice Action and other networks to put tens of thousands of activists on the streets of Copenhagen, London and dozens of other cities in recent days, demanding large emissions cuts, the payment of ecological debt to climate victims, and the decommissioning of carbon markets.</p>
<p>But critics abound, so what trends can we discern from the sometimes venomous feedback to Story of Cap and Trade, and what do these tell us about US and global climate politics? Consider three categories:</p>
<p>* libertarian climate change denialists;</p>
<p>* Big Green groups and other carbon trading supporters; and</p>
<p>* self-interested green capitalists.</p>
<p>To start, rightwing extremists are easiest to dismiss because they deny that climate change is a product of human/economic activity &#8211; but there&#8217;s a schizophrenic double agenda. For although they&#8217;re pro-business, libertarians like Fox tv&#8217;s Glenn Beck oppose market-based cap-and-trade schemes.</p>
<p>The most dangerous, Oklahoma Senator Jim Inhofe, denies &#8216;that we&#8217;re going to pass a cap-and-trade or we&#8217;re going to do something on emissions reduction,&#8217; as he told the rightwing NewsMax agency on Sunday.</p>
<p>Australian climate denialists now control the official opposition party, having overthrown its leader last month due to his cap-and-trade endorsement, in the process halting the state&#8217;s proposed emissions trading scheme (http://agmates.ning.com/forum/topics/canberra-protest-rally-live?commentId=3535428%3AComment%3A9579).</p>
<p>Those of us fighting carbon markets certainly *don&#8217;t* want alliances with cretins like Inhofe or intrepid videoblogger Lee Doran. After a clumsy rebuttal to The Story of Stuff, Doran offered another zany video-attack (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWjGZNDEH-A), in which he first agrees with the demolition of cap-and-trade, but then replies to Annie&#8217;s charge that rich-world overconsumption victimizes those least responsible for global warming:</p>
<p>Annie: &#8216;Did you know that in the next century, because of the changing climate, whole island nations could end up underwater?&#8217;</p>
<p>Lee: &#8216;Yes, and islands will emerge from the water too, it&#8217;s part of the natural cycle of the planet.&#8217; (minute 6)</p>
<p>Enough said about flat-earth libertarian ideologues.</p>
<p>In the second group we find both pro-market &#8216;green&#8217; ideologues &#8211; i.e., &#8216;always find a market solution for a market problem!&#8217; &#8211; and well-meaning environmental advocates operating under conditions not of their own choosing within Washington&#8217;s adverse balance of forces.</p>
<p>From at least 1997, when Al Gore shoved cap-and-trade into the Kyoto Protocol with the soon-to-be-broken promise that Washington would then endorse the climate treaty, many greens who earlier criticized market solutions concluded that the market was the only game in town, due to prevailing power relations.</p>
<p>But instead of trying to change those power relations, most of Washington&#8217;s Big Green groups held their noses and went to work expanding carbon trading from London to the Chicago Climate Exchange, joined by like-minded academics and green policy wonks.</p>
<p>Along the way some turned eco-egotistical about their chosen trade. Eric de Place of Sightline Institute takes the policy critique personally: &#8216;All these years that tens of thousands (sic) of folks like me have worked long hours at low pay (or no pay) to hash out a workable and effective climate policy and it turns out that our purported allies like Leonard would rather paint us as duplicitous bankers in pin-striped suits.&#8217;</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the long underpaid hours hustling cap-and-trade &#8211; wasted, if judged by the subsequent evidence of carbon market failures &#8211; de Place&#8217;s injured tone is misplaced. As Annie did in fact acknowledge, &#8216;Some of my friends who really care about our future support cap and trade. A lot of environmental groups that I respect do too. They know it&#8217;s not a perfect solution and don&#8217;t love the idea of turning our planet&#8217;s future over to these guys, but they think that it is an important first step and that it&#8217;s better than nothing.&#8217;</p>
<p>However, as the film demonstrates, carbon trading is not better than nothing, it&#8217;s far worse than nothing. As the US&#8217;s top climate scientist, James Hansen, insisted in the New York Times last week, a Senate bill or Copenhagen deal based on cap-and-trade are indeed worse than no bill, no deal: carbon trading &#8216;actually perpetuates the pollution it is supposed to eliminate&#8217; (www.nytimes.com/2009/12/07/opinion/07hansen.html).</p>
<p>Ideologically, the market environmentalists risk sliding down a dangerous slope. For instance, amongst conservationists in both Southern Africa (where I live) and Seattle (where de Place lives) this question has been posed: should markets be relied upon to preserve threatened wildlife, even endangered species?</p>
<p>In our case, the challenge involves rhinos and elephants whose ivory tusks attract murderous poachers seeking riches in the East Asian aphrodisiac markets. Poachers have reduced the big animals&#8217; populations dramatically in recent decades. In the Pacific Northwest, instead of aphrodisiacs, macho trophy hunters seek coastal grizzly bears for their fireplace mantels.</p>
<p>Market-environmentalists react with a simple formula, which &#8211; to quote Robert Mugabe &#8211; reduces life to a commodity: &#8216;They must pay to stay&#8217; (http://baraza.wildlifedirect.org/2008/03/10/illegal-wildlife-trade-is-fueling-wars-in-africa/). Mugabe and his allies seduce hunters to visit Zimbabwe in order to maintain a &#8217;sustainable&#8217; herd for the killing pleasure of rich tourists (not ordinary Zimbabweans&#8217; viewing pleasure).</p>
<p>De Place, too, defends the trophy industry: &#8216;I&#8217;m not sure that hunting is bad for the species being hunted&#8217; (http://www.grist.org/article/to-save-a-species-shoot-here &#8211; and for a rebuttal by the Raincoast Conservation Foundation, see http://www.grist.org/article/raincoast-responds-to-eric-de-place ).</p>
<p>David Roberts of Grist (http://www.grist.org/article/2009-12-01-annie-leonard-misses-the-mark-her-new-video-story-cap-and-trade/) also suffers pro-trading panic, calling the film &#8216;the perfect representation of all the confusion and misplaced focus that plagues the green left right now.&#8217; In contrast, he confesses, &#8216;I&#8217;m generally viewed among greens as a defender of cap-and-trade-or, in the less charitable version, a defender of the &#8220;party line,&#8221; a shill for the administration, a sell-out &#8220;insider,&#8221; whatever.&#8217;</p>
<p>Quite. Roberts cannot defend the US and EU cap-and-trade systems&#8217; free pollution allowances and billions of tons of offsets, rebutting that we should criticize not carbon markets, simply prevailing legislation. But the dreadful Waxman-Markey and Kerry-Boxer carbon-trading bills were complemented in mid-December by Senator Joe Lieberman &#8211; &#8216;This is the market-based system for punishing polluters previously known as &#8220;cap and trade&#8221;&#8216; &#8211; to now include offshore drilling for oil and natural gas, nuclear energy and &#8216;clean coal&#8217; scamming.</p>
<p>Another new bill offered by Senators Maria Cantwell and Sue Collins last week was endorsed by de Place and his colleague Alan Durning even though it has only a 4% emissions reduction target for 2020 from 1990 levels. Go figure, the author of the great 1992 anti-consumption book How Much is Enough?, Durning, now calls this irresponsibly low target &#8217;solid&#8217; (http://www.grist.org/article/2009-12-11-cantwells-cap-and-trade-bill-almost-genius/).</p>
<p>Ideally Kerry, Lieberman et al will be punished by Washington&#8217;s grid-lock, as the bills suffocate in Capitol Hill&#8217;s corporate pollution &#8211; a good thing, since their death would at least preserve the existing Clean Air Act, which all the main legislators except Cantwell-Collins threaten to gut.</p>
<p>Roberts grows yet more defensive on matters of principle: &#8216;I don&#8217;t know why the green left has decided that markets are bad, in and of themselves, but it seems both politically unwise and substantively thin.&#8217; He *doesn&#8217;t know why*? Only a year after the world&#8217;s worst market failure in recorded history, with global trade and financial indicators far lower after eighteen months than a similar period in 1929-31?!</p>
<p>Aside from concern about the self-destructive tendency of financial markets which host carbon trading (witness the EU Emissions Trading Scheme collapses in April 2006 and October 2008), the green left offers many substantively thick arguments why business environmentalism is flawed, and why commodifying natural resources &#8211; like the air, in carbon trading &#8211; generates systemic market failures.</p>
<p>For example, Africa&#8217;s greatest political economist, Samir Amin, has just penned a damning attack on environmental markets (http://seminario10anosdepois.wordpress.com/2009/12/01/the-battlefields-chosen-by-contemporary-imperialism/#more-37), as has University of Oregon professor John Bellamy Foster (http://sociology.uoregon.edu/faculty/foster.php): The Ecological Revolution: Making Peace with the Planet (http://www.monthlyreview.org/books/ecologicalrevolution.php). Either can assist Roberts to plug the gaping holes in his pro-market consciousness.</p>
<p>Roberts doesn&#8217;t seem to understand the severe dangers associated with an anticipated $3 trillion in carbon trades by 2020, which will become the basis for further trade in financial derivatives, for he derides the film&#8217;s warning about Wall Street speculation: &#8216;Leonard et al. seem instead to have decided that &#8220;market Goldman Sachs derivatives bugga bugga!&#8221; suffices.&#8217;</p>
<p>But Roberts, de Place and NRDC policy director David Doniger (http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/ddoniger/the_rest_of_the_story_of_cap_a.html) dare not trash the film&#8217;s proposed solutions, such as stronger EPA regulatory enforcement and citizen activism (e.g. West Virginia mountaintop defense). There is greater potential to push the EPA into action &#8211; in spite of misgivings by NewEnergyNews&#8217; Herman Trabish (http://newenergynews.blogspot.com/2009/12/oversimple-story-of-cap-and-facts.html) &#8211; than to win legislation regulating carbon within ill-functioning, untransparent financial markets, in which &#8216;too big to fail&#8217; deregulatory freedom was amplified by Bush-Obama&#8217;s 2008-09 bailouts.</p>
<p>The third critical group includes green technocrats with financial self-interest. That may explain why at least one of them &#8211; Adam Stein from TerraPass &#8211; is so very cross, absurdly entitling his attack on the film, &#8216;Why does Annie Leonard hate the environment?&#8217; (http://www.terrapass.com/blog/posts/why-does-annie-leonard-hate-the-environment, and another is carbon consultant Gay Harley,http://carboncommentary.blogspot.com/2009/12/no-rest-in-copenhagen.html).</p>
<p>Stein claims, &#8216;cap and trade and carbon taxes are functionally equivalent policies&#8217; &#8211; but they&#8217;re not. As Hansen points out, carbon fees would easily withstand the scamming and price volatility so notorious in the carbon markets.</p>
<p>Ultimately, for Stein, &#8216;one criterion clearly stands above all others: which policy actually stands a chance of passage in the US Congress?&#8217; Unmentioned, for obvious reasons (the Congress being a wholly-owned subsidiary of big business) is that a carbon trading policy only enjoys the &#8217;strong support&#8217; of a meager 2% of the US voting population, who &#8216;favor a carbon tax over cap-and-trade by nearly two-to-one,&#8217; according to a Hart Research survey (http://www.sustainablebusiness.com/index.cfm/go/news.display/id/19351).</p>
<p>But given Washington&#8217;s adverse power relations, a genuine climate policy must avoid the corporate-ruled Congress for now, and instead focus on command/control by the EPA. (To be sure, a stronger EPA would also rule many of TerraPass&#8217;s own projects &#8211; especially those methane-electricity landfill conversions that undermine zero-waste strategies &#8211; as unworthy of green investment.)</p>
<p>Of all the film&#8217;s supposed errors, says Stein, &#8216;my favorite for sheer chutzpah, if not for actual importance, is when Leonard dings Kyoto because &#8220;energy costs jumped for consumers.&#8221;&#8216;</p>
<p>But Stein may want to look at what European consumers now see: no net emissions reductions on the one hand, and on the other, massive criminality in the EU&#8217;s carbon trading scheme (Europol estimates five billion euros have been stolen in tax fraud, as just one example), alongside regressive energy price increases (the poorest suffer a much higher burden of expenses than the wealthy, and are least able to make the transition to the post-carbon economy).</p>
<p>So when the film refers to higher EU energy costs, this is not chutzpah, it&#8217;s critical realism. No one more than Annie is committed to raising consumption costs appropriately so as to deter waste; Story of Stuff&#8217;s viewers learned of unaccounted-for eco-social externalities that should be internalized in her $4.99 radio, for instance.</p>
<p>Actually, the most telling contribution to the critiques of our cap-and-trade critique comes from an unlikely source: Charles Krauthammer (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/10/AR2009121003163.html). The despicable neocon columnist fused all three hostile narratives when he wrote, last Friday, against the EPA: &#8216;Congress should not just resist this executive overreaching, but trump it: Amend clean-air laws and restore their original intent by excluding CO2 from EPA control and reserving that power for Congress and future legislation. Do it now. Do it soon. Because Big Brother isn&#8217;t lurking in CIA cloak. He&#8217;s knocking on your door, smiling under an EPA cap.&#8217;</p>
<p>Sorry, the big brother who so frightens Krauthammer is far bigger than a beleaguered Washington environmental agency and far more dangerous to corporate profits than pro-market &#8216;green&#8217; critics of The Story of Cap and Trade actually comprehend: simply, a new global movement known as Climate Justice.</p>
<p>(Patrick Bond, a content advisor to The Story of Cap and Trade, has written widely on the climate crisis:http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs/default.asp?2,68,3,1887.)</p>
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