FROM GREEN CONSUMERISM TO DEGROWTH AND RADICAL SYSTEMIC CHANGE
~ Yavor Tarinski ~
It is a good thing that there is increasingly more talk about the looming
catastrophe that threatens our societies because of climate change and deepening
ecological crises. This is, one can suggest, an improvement in this respect in
comparison to previous years, when such issues were covered by denial. And it’s
not only citizens and social movements that emphasise the urgency – governments
and corporations try to give the impression that they too are concerned about
the environment, even though they are the ones chiefly responsible for the
current mess.
But there is a major problem with the way the issue is being examined in the
mainstream, due to the dominant systemic parameters. Deeply submerged within the
imaginary of top-down management and constant economic growth, it completely
misses the root causes of the ecological crises we currently face.
One stark example is the question of energy production and distribution.
Mainstream environmentalists and politicians increasingly advocate in favour of
the replacement of dirty fossil fuels with renewables. And while one such
transition is, of course, crucial for combating climate change and environmental
degradation, it is by no means the only prerequisite, since the issue is not a
technical one, but a matter of paradigm.
People who tend to focus solely on the transition towards clean renewable
energy take for granted, even as ‘natural’, the current capitalist pattern of
perpetual economic growth. This logic doesn’t question the parameters of the
dominant system, but only seeks ways of ‘greening’ them so that business as
usual can continue. In its essence, this way of thinking doesn’t really strive
towards resolving the forthcoming ecological catastrophe, but only to prolong
the time we have left until then.
It is most certain that the energy of a democratic and ecological society will
derive from renewable sources, rather than from the extraction and burning of
finite resources. This is among the prerequisite for sustainability, but most
certainly not the only one. Cornelius Castoriadis was warning social movements
about this as early as the 1980s, writing that “projects that deal with
renewable energy resources can, in part be co-opted towards ends that could not
even be labelled reformist – that is, toward the end of plugging up the holes in
the existing system”.
It is the idea that our societies can continue down the same path of perpetual
growth that must be tackled. There is simply no ecological way of satisfying the
ever-increasing energy needs of an increasingly wasteful way of life. In this
line of thought contemporary degrowth advocate in Less is More: How Degrowth
Will Save The World, Jason Hickel calls on us to face the issue:
“Even if this wasn’t a problem, we must ask ourselves: once we have 100% clean
energy, what are we going to do with this? Unless we change how our economy
works, we’ll keep doing exactly what we are doing with fossil fuels: we’ll use
it to power continued extraction and production at an ever-increasing rate,
placing ever-increasing pressure on the living world, because that’s what
capitalism requires. Clean energy might help deal with emissions, but it does
nothing to reverse deforestation, overfishing, soil depletion and mass
extinction. A growth-obsessed economy powered by clean energy will still tip us
into ecological disaster”.
The continuous increase of our energy use will demand the constant expansion of
renewables, whose production is not without its own environmental and social
cost. Wind turbines, solar panels, etc. are all made using rare minerals and
materials that have to be extracted from the earth, with considerable ecological
imprint. For a society based on extreme consumerist lifestyles there will never
be enough energy, there will always be a need for more.
A more holistic way to approach the issue will be to advocate simultaneously for
renewables replacing dirty fossil fuels, while also resisting the dominant
capitalist paradigm and advance an alternative project that seeks to degrow the
economy, reduce unnecessary consumption, etc. It is only in this way that we can
avert the looming ecological catastrophe.
This will imply the usage also of low-tech technologies that do not leave
environmental impact, while still allowing us to live dignified life. By
departing from the imaginary of perpetual economic growth we can realise that
the resolution of our daily problems can come not only from high-tech solutions,
which are preferred by the current capitalist standards as more marketable and
more prone to planned obsolescence, but also by simpler, older methods and
techniques that may prove invaluable in dealing with the looming climate crisis,
while also paving the way for an ecological society. As Hickel suggests, “Our
understanding of what counts as technology should not be limited to complex
machinery. Sometimes simpler technologies are more effective, more efficient,
and more democratic: bicycles, for instance, are an incredibly powerful
technology for helping to decarbonise urban transport, and agro-ecological
methods are vital to restoring soil fertility”.
An example for such a non-energy intensive technology can be found in the city
of Yazd, located in contemporary Iran. Built between two deserts, it experiences
its fair share of extreme highs in temperature. But since ancient times its
inhabitants have developed an ingenious way of cooling and ventilation, where
with a little clay they have devised an extraordinary technology that in a
perpetual, natural and truly renewable way does the work of an expensive air
conditioner with a heavy ecological footprint.
We are talking about the so-called “wind catchers”, chimney-like towers that
draw in a pleasant cool breeze and direct it into the house of the residents for
better, natural air conditioning that is non-electrically intensive,
carbon-free, and with a very low maintenance cost.
In fact, many wind towers were made to connect to underground water pipes so
that they could drive the cold air below ground so that the running water can
also be cooled.
By this process the internal temperature of houses can drop by 8C to 12C in such
a hot place.
Public transport is another approach that uses much less energy than the
dominant means of transportation that has taken over most cities around the
world – the automobile. Urban environments are mercilessly dominated by cars, a
domination that results from a lifestyle pushed by a powerful industry and the
capitalist time-is-money pace. And the dominance of the automobile contributes
significantly to pollution.
The response of mainstream environmentalism has been to advance the electric car
as “the ecological alternative” to the one that runs on fossil fuels. But this
view tends to overlook the environmental and social cost that the production of
electric cars has. In fact, this so-called alternative tries to sustain intact
the consumerist lifestyle associated with automobiles, while “greening” it.
A much more ecological approach would be to shift urban mobility away from
private cars and towards public transport, which is much more sustainable, with
significantly smaller environmental impact and much less energy intensive. As
eco-socialist Simon Pirani suggests, “cities with more public transport and
fewer cars are not only more socially equal, more healthy and less polluted.
They also emit far fewer greenhouse gases”.
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Such approaches to energy may seem unprofitable in a growth-obsessed capitalist
framework, where planned obsolescence is embedded into technologies so as to
coerce individuals and communities into replacing, rather than repairing and
sustaining what they already have. But in a democratic and ecological
post-capitalist setting, self-managed by the grassroots, rather than run by
profit-driven markets and elites, it seems as self-evident.
According to Richard Heinberg, author and Senior Fellow at the Post-Carbon
Institute, we need “a realistic plan for energy descent, rather than insisting
on foolish dreams of eternal consumer abundance by means other than fossil
fuels. Currently, politically rooted insistence on continued economic growth is
discouraging truth-telling and serious planning for how to live well with less”.
One such paradigm cannot be implemented in a top-down manner, because
hierarchies always prioritise the interests of the ruling class – the higher
your position in the social ladder, the greater your interest is in maintaining
the basic systemic parameters that got you in that privileged position in the
first place. Such approach can only produce shallow reforms that can lead to no
meaningful change.
Instead, it must be built from the ground-up so as to reflect the needs and
desires of all members of society, rather than those of tiny business and
political elites. A direct-democratic society where decision-making processes
are open, inclusive, and transparent, enables a shift away from the
profit-driven, growth-oriented global economy towards more sustainable, and
equitable alternatives that allows for greater community control over local
economies and natural resources. The potentials of energy production and
distribution within one such framework is highlighted by Pirani, who writes that
“decentralized renewable power generation has great potential: it is well-suited
to municipal and local development, and to forms of common ownership, and is
compatible with more effective, and lower, levels of final use of electricity”.
In a stateless post-capitalist setting, where power is equally shared by
everyone collectively, we have every right to believe that the priorities and
ways of doing things will be radically altered, posing questions that today may
appear unthinkable, like ‘energy – why and for whom?’. Following this reasoning,
Castoriadis suggests that “another society, an autonomous society, does not
imply only self-management, self-government, self-institution. It implies
another culture, in the most profound sense of this term. It implies another way
of life, other needs, other orientations for human life”. He also asks: “How far
can the ‘right’ (the legally and collectively assured effective possibility) of
each individual, of each group, of each commune, of each nation to act as it
wants, extend once we know – and we have always known it, but the ecology
movement forcefully reminds us of it – that we are all embarked on the same
planetary boat and that what each one of us does can have repercussions on
everyone else?”
In conclusion, it can be suggested that it’s becoming increasingly clear to a
growing number of people that no serious solution can come from the dominant
systemic framework in response to ecological breakdown. Regardless of who is in
position of power, it is the capitalist obsession of growth and competition that
won’t allow for any substantial change to take place, but only minor reforms
that mostly have to do with greening of consumerist patterns. What is urgently
needed is a radical alteration of the societal organization. Only by shifting
decision-making power away from bureaucratic institutions (like parliaments) and
mechanisms (like the profit-driven capitalist market) towards grassroots
participatory organs (such as popular assemblies and councils of delegates) that
a new, much more sustainable, ecological, and democratic future can emerge.
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