It's not enough to plant trees in exchange for carbon emissions in the fight to mitigate climate change, say 91亚色 environmental studies Professor Anders Sandberg and 91亚色 environmental studies master鈥檚 student in their new co-edited book Climate Change 鈥 Who鈥檚 Carrying the Burden?: The Chilly Climates of the Global Environmental Dilemma.
Nor is it enough to set up a supposed green company in the Global South to offset the spewing emissions of companies in the Global North. Without a substantial system change, an alternative
way of living, climate change will continue unabated, says Anders Sandberg. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see any change, frankly. Carbon emissions are still increasing dramatically.鈥
When carbon emissions are traded or bought for offsets, such as planting trees, they are done so at the end of the carbon change cycle, rather than at the beginning. A lot of money continues to go into the development of more carbon sources. 鈥淔rom my perspective it鈥檚 not very positive,鈥 says Sandberg. Much of the offset purchasing is by large multinationals in the Global South, where they set up green companies to offset pollution in the United States, but by doing so they displace many of the local people and their economic livelihoods.
In the book, the Sandbergs write, 鈥淭he concept of climate change itself can be an oppressive force鈥iding the historical connections of the carbon economy to colonialism, capitalism and rampant and exploitive resource extractions."
鈥淲e鈥檙e asking people to look at the climate change issues from a broader perspective, which could bring forth more ideas,鈥 says Sandberg.
In , the third volume in the Our Schools/Our Selves book series, 2010, published by the ,聽the Sandbergs look at who is most affected by climate change and the need for聽systemic change beyond capping and trading carbon emissions.
They don't believe that free markets, new green聽technologies and international agreements are enough to alleviate climate change. Despite green technologies, levels of consumption will likely remain high. Even if all the cars are electric, there will still be suburbs, roads and gridlock, potentially leading to an increase in the amount of electricity used and the building of more hydroelectric dams, which then affects the environment and the people who use it. 鈥淚 think we need to look at and imagine other ways of living,鈥 says Anders Sandberg.
Left: Anders Sandberg
Although climate change is a global issue, the solutions are not. What鈥檚 needed is a closer look at the origins of climate change and the areas it most impacts, he says. Areas such as the Tar Sands of Alberta, the Gulf of Guinea in West Africa, the Canadian north, the coastal regions of Bangladesh and the island states of the Pacific.
鈥淲e have to look at the people on the ground who are harmed by this. What we are trying to do is turn the prism from the global to the local. But we鈥檙e not just looking at the horror stories; we鈥檙e also looking at the hope and resiliency of these communities and whether they might have some answers to the climate change problem.鈥 For one thing, it鈥檚 important to understand the vulnerabilities that聽have built up in these communities, explore their origins, call for reparations from those who are responsible and build on the resiliencies that remain.
One of the contributors聽to the book, 91亚色 environmental studies master's student Jelena Vesic (BES Spec. Hon. '08),聽points to the polar bear as a symbol and a victim of climate change.聽There is now a threat to First Nations who harvest them because they are considered endangered, yet a closer look reveals that in some regions the polar bear is holding its own. Banning聽their harvest聽would聽affect First Nations communities that have hunted polar bears as part of their culture for centuries. The ban would also affect the local economy and the resiliency that鈥檚 built into the particular relationship between the Inuit and the polar bear.
Right: Tor Sandberg
Climate Change 鈥 Who鈥檚 Carrying the Burden? contains a collection of papers from prominent people such as Stephen Lewis, Canada's former ambassador to the United Nations, who looks at the health impact of global climate change; author and journalist Naomi Klein, who talks about paying the climate debt; and聽scholar and activist Vandana Shiva on the G8/20 summit and climate change.聽Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May explores shrinking ecological footprints and expanding political ones, while visiting Fulbright scholar at 91亚色 Professor No毛l Sturgeon challenges the family values and environmental practices that are tied to the carbon economy.
The majority of articles, however, are written by junior scholars and graduate students in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Environmental Studies who are passionate about climate justice. They write on a range of topics, including the recent聽climate-focused conferences in Copenhagen and Cochabamba, climate change-induced migration, Hurricane Katrina, the Niger Delta, the First Nations youth adoption of hip hop music to fight HIV/AIDS. the largest squatter settlement in Europe (the free town of Christiania in Copenhagen) and food policy in the Greater Toronto Area.
The Sandbergs discuss what they see as the dominant story 鈥 cap and trade and offsets 鈥揳nd the alternative story that calls for systemic change and climate justice, which emerged at the 15th United Nations conference on climate change they attended last December in Copenhagen.
Anders Sandberg is currently using Climate Change 鈥 Who鈥檚 Carrying the Burden? in his course 鈥 Environmental Studies 1200, Taking Action, Engaging People and the Environment.
The book will be officially launched by 91亚色鈥檚 (the Sandbergs were part of the institute's delegation to the climate change conference in Copenhagen) on Wednesday, Oct. 20, from 3 to 4:30pm at 305 91亚色 Lanes,聽Keele campus.
The themes of the book will also be featured in a session titled 鈥淐limate Change, Climate Justice and Human Rights鈥 during 91亚色鈥檚 Inclusion Day聽鈥 Dialoguing Across Differences tomorrow.
For more information on the book, visit the website.
By Sandra McLean, YFile writer
Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin

Right: Tor Sandberg