Monthly Archives: August 2018

A new Forestry Investment Zone in Northumberland could reduce timber imports from China

Tree planting must be made easier to encourage investment in Northumberland and offer new opportunities in the uplands after Brexit, a forestry summit has been told.

Councillor Peter Jackson, leader of Northumberland County Council, told the meeting hosted at the EGGER forestry site in Hexham: “We have the UK’s largest man-made forest on our doorstep (Kielder) but we are not doing enough; we are importing millions of tonnes of timber.”

Despite Kielder, forest cover in Northumberland is just eight percent, below the English average (10 percent) and UK average (13 percent). The EU average is around 35 percent.

At the same time, the UK is the world’s second-largest net importer of wood products after China, with 80 percent of timber coming from overseas.

Post-Brexit

Councillor Jackson said: “We are not doing enough in terms of production and the potential for Northumberland and the whole of the Borderlands area to do that is enormous.

“We need to find a way to get through funding and bureaucratic issues because it’s not particularly easy to plant a new forest, for reasons that escape me.

“As a renewable resource, it seems to be common sense for us as a society to grow more timber.”

Councillor Jackson, a farmer, was speaking at an event to discuss the role of forestry and wood processing in the Borderlands Growth Deal, which aims to revitalise five areas either side of the English-Scottish border – Northumberland, Cumbria, Dumfries & Galloway, The Scottish Borders and the city of Carlisle.

He said farmers in the uplands clearly faced challenges after Brexit and that forestry had a big part to play in the future of those areas.

Manufacturing industry

Simon Hart, EGGER Forestry business development manager, said: “We support the need to plant more trees, as wood is one of the key raw materials required to manufacture our products. 

“At Hexham, EGGER has invested approximately £250 million in the site over the last decade to ensure it is one of the most technologically advanced chipboard plants in Europe.”

EGGER is the largest manufacturing employer in Northumberland, with over 600 employees and produces a range of wood-based material products for the furniture, interior design and housebuilding industries.

“More than 100 lorries deliver roundwood, wood chips, sawdust and recycled wood every day for the company to make its products.”

Mr Hart added: “Approximately  60 percent of the raw materials required to make EGGER high quality products are classed as ‘virgin fibre’ (that is roundwood from newly-harvested trees and woodchips and sawdust from sawmills).”

Modern and multi-purpose

He said there were investors ready to put money into planting modern, multi-purpose forests, with Forestry Commission grants to support the investment, but added: “The problem is that it is really difficult to get permission to plant trees in the North of England, so people go to Scotland, where it is easier.

“The North of England is letting the opportunity slip between its fingers. From EGGER and the wider industry’s perspective, it’s a simple message: PLANT MORE TREES.”

Stuart Goodall, chief executive of Confor, which represents 1,500 UK forestry and wood-using businesses, said: “There is a different attitude in Scotland. The presumption is that we should find ways to plant modern, multi-purpose and well-designed forests in the right places.

“It is recognised that such forests can deliver good-quality rural jobs and investment and provide timber to build attractive, efficient new homes very quickly. 

“At the same time, there are significant environmental benefits – tree planting helps mitigate the effects of climate change, reduces flooding and encourages biodiversity – as well as offering recreational opportunities.”

Investment zone

EGGER has produced a document asking for the Borderlands Growth Deal to recognise the significance of forestry and wood processing to the north of England and south of Scotland.

Other large wood processors in the Borderlands include A&J Scott near Wooler, BSW in Carlisle and James Jones & Sons in Lockerbie.

The document, supported by Confor and other forestry and wood processing businesses, calls for:  a Forestry Investment Zone to stimulate new planting in Northumberland; a Strategic Timber Transport Fund for northern England to match the one working successfully in Scotland, to create new forest roads and reduce pressure on fragile rural roads; a skills audit to plug future gaps in the industry, especially drivers of forest machines.

‘Opportunity mapping’ 

Janice Rose, who leads on the Borderlands Growth Deal for Northumberland County Council, said a skills audit for a range of sectors, including forestry, would be in a high-level summary of the deal, due to be launched this autumn by the UK and Scottish Governments and five local authorities. 

She said the team was also considering a timber transport officer role and that a pilot Forestry Investment Zone (FIZ) in north-west Cumbria could provide helpful feedback for future FIZs.

Ms Rose said forestry and wood processing was very much in the minds of the Borderlands Deal team. “It’s not just about a Forestry Investment Zone, it’s about how we embed forestry in everything,” she said.

This would involve ‘opportunity mapping’ local areas to examine how different land uses, such as farming, forestry and tourism, would work best in specific parts of the Borderlands – and how economic, environmental and social benefits would work together in those areas.

This Author 

Marianne Brooker is a contributing editor for The Ecologist. This story was based on a press release from the Confederation of Forest Industries. 

Is James Corden right to claim Sweden is a clean, green, ecological paradise?

James Corden – actor, TV comedian, and one of the many who believe Sweden is a clean, green, ecological paradise.

Here he is on The Late Show: “Guys, this is going to blow your mind. In Sweden, they burn waste in gigantic, state-of-the-art recycling plants and use that energy for heat.

“It’s really cool but there’s one problem. They’ve run out of trash and they’re having to import it from other countries.”

Climate-friendly

Corden picked up on a popular meme that Sweden is so clean that it even does garbage disposal for the rest of the world. Here’s his conclusion:

“Sweden is amazing, it’s incredible. The people are beautiful, they have no trash, nothing bad ever happens there.”

Sweden talks a good talk on the environment. In its latest green initiative to make the headlines, it enacted “the most ambitious climate law in the world”, aiming to make the country carbon neutral by 2045.

So what can the rest of the world learn from Sweden? There are some distinct features of the “Swedish model” – the way Sweden organises its economy – that facilitate climate-friendly reforms.

1. It pays to be green

First, let’s look at why got James Corden so excited. About 15 years go, Sweden banned dumping waste in landfill sites. As a result, the amount of waste sent to incinerators grew four times. In fact, Swedish incinerators developed overcapacity – so they started to import waste.

Bumblebee Nation
Bumblebee Nation

Huge investment has gone into making this a clean process, but the power companies still manage to make a profit. How?

In the 1960s, district heating – where a central boiler supplies heat to many homes – spread rapidly in Sweden, thanks to a basic acceptance of centralised, community-wide solutions to social issues.

So about half Sweden’s homes are heated by district heating systems. The plants are also used to generate electricity – so-called combined heat and power.

When concerns began to grow about greenhouse gas emissions, it was relatively easy to switch the district heating boilers from oil to garbage. The revenue from selling both heat and power meant operators could still make a profit, despite the high costs.

“This is one of the main reasons that Sweden performs so well on the environment,” says Per-Oscar Hedman of Fortum, a Finnish company that owns power stations together with the Stockholm city administration.

2. The public sector is strong

Stockholm city’s stake in power plants means it can prioritise climate goals.

“If you have a system you control, you can take measures to phase out greenhouse gas emissions,” says Björn Hugosson, head Stockholm city’s climate unit. “When power stations are [solely] in the hands of private owners, you can’t.”

Partnerships between the public and private sectors are necessary when large and risky investments are needed for the climate, says Oskar Larsson of the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency.

“If we want that to happen, government has to team up with industry – it will cost tax payers’ money at the beginning,” Larsson says.

He points to a three-way collaboration developing a zero-emissions method for making steel. Called Hybrit, this project – if successful – could revolutionise steel production. Hybrit involves private Swedish steel company SSAB, publicly owned miner LKAB, and public utility Vattenfall, all backed by the Swedish Energy Agency.

“It is important to raise your sights and change perspective,” says Mårten Görnerup, boss of the joint venture formed by the three companies.

3. A tradition of consensus

Stockholm is investing about €2 billion over 25 years in a large-scale experiment in green living. This area – called the Royal Stockholm Seaport – has a strict limit on energy consumption, scoring all its buildings on a range of sustainability measures.

The better a company scores, the more chance it has of winning tenders to build. In return, companies get to work with universities to experiment with green design.

“By learning how to build low energy buildings they are ahead of the competition, it is an investment for them,” says Bo Hallqvist of the city development administration.

Since the project began, the city administration has changed hands twice from left to right, and back again. But this has not affected progress, pointing to another feature of the Swedish model – it takes consensus seriously, which is good for big, long-term projects demanded by climate change.

“We don’t start major projects until all the major parties agree – we cannot afford for changes in political leadership to affect them,” Hallqvist says.

4. Long-term focus

When Stockholm was trying to persuade private companies to run cars on ethanol, they encountered surprisingly little resistance.

“Companies said: we want long term rules,” Hugosson says. “If you provide us with the rules and strategy and tell us this will last for 20 years, then we can adapt.”

The city has also converted a quarter of its buses to biogas, a byproduct of human sewage. In 2006 the administration agreed to buy all the biogas produced by the municipal water company for the next 20 years.

This long-term agreement between two public bodies created the stability of demand necessary for private companies to step in and make fuel for buses.

A long-term outlook is also built into the Swedish economy through its unusual system of company ownership. Unlike shareholders in the UK or the US, who largely focus on short-term gains, most of Swedish business is still owned by “active” shareholders committed to the long term.

“Sweden has been extremely lucky to have the ownership model combined with responsible families that own companies for the long term,” says Mats Andersson, a senior Swedish financier. “It is a pretty unique system, and it has served us extremely well.”

5. It is easier to close dirty industries

A little known feature of the Swedish economy is its “transition system”, which helps workers move to new jobs when their employers make redundancies.

Each year, companies pay a percentage of their turnover into “job security agencies”, run jointly with the unions, who provide months of specialist training and counselling to prepare workers to re-enter the labour market.

As a result, around 80 per cent of laid-off workers are back in a job within a year. Sweden’s transition system therefore makes the country better equipped than most to cope with closing down parts of the economy that are an obstacle to achieving climate objectives.

Not everything in Sweden is as green as it could be. Use of private cars is soaring. The zero carbon target excludes the vast amounts of carbon generated by manufacturing goods abroad and transporting them to Sweden. Many specialists say Sweden needs to be going twice as fast on cutting its emissions.

But these features of the Swedish model have enabled the country to commit to carbon neutrality by 2045 – and have a decent chance of actually getting there.

This Author

David Crouch is the author of a new book, Bumblebee Nation: The Hidden Story of the New Swedish Model (Bonnier, 2018). He is also a former journalist at the Financial Times.

Hazardous chemicals found in popular toys

Tests on “squishy” toys have found high levels of hazardous chemicals, which can impair fertility, act as carcinogens, cause liver damage, and irritate the mucous membrane or eyes.

The tests were carried out by the Danish Environmental Protection Agency on 12 squishy toys, all of which were found to emit high levels of harmful substances, including dimethylformamide, styrene and toluene. These could harm children who sleep with their squishies or have several of them in their bedroom, the agency said.

The toys have been withdrawn from the shelves in Denmark, but the country’s environment minister has called into question the health implications of all squishies, and asked the toy industry to take action.

“When all twelve toys contain high amounts of harmful substances, alarm bells begin to go off.  This indicates that there may be an overall problem with all squishies on the market.

“All distributors and importers should take their responsibility seriously and remove all squishes from their shelves. They should not be returned to shelves until it can be documented that they do not emit chemicals that may be harmful to children”, said Jakob Ellemann-Jensen, Danish minister for environment and food.

Safety regime

The toys breach the EU Toy Safety Directive, which all EU member states are bound by. The Ministry of Environment and Food of Denmark has confirmed that it passed the test results to all EU countries via the European Commission, and that it and the EPA are talking to authorities in Norway, Sweden and the Netherlands about the issue. The UK government has not been in contact, it said.

BEIS, which regulates product safety in the UK through its agency the Office for Product Safety and Standards, did not respond specifically to a request for comment on the Danish ban, but said the UK standards were among the toughest in the world and allowed only the safest products onto the market.

However, Michael Warhurst, executive director of campaign group Chem Trust, said that the consumer safety regime in the UK was “very patchy” in regards to chemicals. “Everything depends on cash-strapped local authority environmental health officers taking samples and paying for analysis, after which they can take action and notify the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) if anything illegal is found. It is extraordinary that consumer protection is such a low priority for the UK government,” he said.

“Flimsy” research

Toy trade body Toy Industries of Europe (TIE) criticised the Danish authorities’ decision to ban the toys, and claimed that its research was “flimsy” as it used an inaccurate methodology and only assessed 12 toys.

“This small study should not have been used as the basis to determine whether squishy toys pose a risk to children and are compliant with EU Toy Safety Rules,” TIE said in a statement.

“We have consulted three independent toxicologists on the draft report, who find that the study ignores the accepted EU testing standards and disregards common understanding of children’s risk of exposure to chemical substances. They find the report’s conclusions are ill-founded and the resulting claims about the safety of squishy toys are unjustified,” it said.

Decisions to ban toys should be made in consultation with the EU’s scientific expert groups and not taken unilaterally by a single member state, it added.

It has raised concerns with the European Commission, and asked it to remind all member states to follow processes set out in the EU Toy Safety Directive if changes should be made.

But Warhust said: “Denmark has very experienced and active chemical regulators, so I would be surprised if there was a problem with the tests”.

Meanwhile, Wolverhampton City Council has seized 2,000 fake squishies after tests found “alarming” health and safety risks to young children. It tested them for phthalates – chemicals used to make plastics more flexible, but that are partially restricted in the EU for health concerns.

Although these tests were negative, they also found dangerous faults in the packaging, labelling and lack of warning labels required by law. The CE markings – which indicate conformity with health, safety, and environmental protection standards for products sold within the EU – were found to be fake.

This Author

Catherine Early is a freelance environmental journalist and chief reporter for the Ecologist. She was formerly the deputy editor of the Environmentalist. She can be found tweeting at @Cat_Early76

We need a step change in ‘home economics’

If you are an economist, you might believe in the value of incentives to encourage people to act in ways that are rationally good for themselves and society as a whole.

Yet when it comes to housing we ignore the wider effects of incentives that produce unaffordable new homes, and contribute to growing wealth inequality and climate change. 

The market is incentivised to build homes that are both inefficient and expensive. But it is possible to change the ‘home economics’ of the UK and produce homes that are both affordable to live in and encourage developers to reduce the overall costs of running and heating them. 

Speculative value

While renewable energy generation continues to grow – despite the political headwinds – there’s been little or no improvement in energy efficiency in our homes.

We might moan about the cost and turn down the heating when times are tight, slowing our consumption of fossil fuels by a few percent. Meanwhile the new homes being built are out of the reach of first-time buyers except those few who can rely on the bank of Mum and Dad. 

Over a third of users of the government’s Help to Buy ISA had incomes of more than £50,000. 

The problem is that we no longer see homes as ‘somewhere to live’ but rather as investments through which ‘savvy’ buyers can build up equity for their retirement.

That’s exacerbated by the structure of the housing market which rewards developers building homes for their short term speculative value (in the underlying land), and not the long term ‘use value’ as a home. 

Alternative solutions

Renting your own home is now predominantly a private, relatively unregulated ‘peer to peer’ affair.

Tenancies are held on short-term leases with little incentive (or compulsion) for landlords to improve their properties beyond the minimum.

I’m a long-term private renter and my landlord is intensely suspicious of installing a smart meter, let alone a better boiler or any form of green generation on the south-facing roof. 

As often, the solution is right in front of us, if only we could see the wood for the biomass.

The UK needs to build thousands of new homes to keep up with demand caused by the growth in population and single person households. Rather than extending 30 years of mortgage credit to young people, it makes more sense to invest in homes with affordable rents, long-term assured tenancy, and minimal energy impact. 

Beyond profit

This means moving away from a finance model based on building and selling to one based on building to rent, with the ownership of the tenancy being held by a not-for-profit company.

These homes can be built and priced over the long term – up to 50 years – so that the costs of additional ‘green’ infrastructure can be included more efficiently and financed relatively cheaply.

They will be homes that are truly ‘built to last’, where profits are generated by the quality of the housing over its life and not derived from speculation on future land values. 

To achieve this we need to raise different forms of finance and work with enlightened developers who see the road running out for the short term speculators and see the value in creating properties that deliver value by giving people homes to live in not pensions to invest in. 

Abundance has done this with our latest investment that moves away from green energy to affordable housing.

Working with pioneering housing developer Octevo we’ve raised £4.2 million to fund 30 new-build affordable rental flats and houses in the Liverpool area. 

Each home will be built to last and fitted with energy and water saving technology, as well as onsite renewables where possible. Because living in a greener, more affordable home should be a right not a privilege.

This Author 

Bruce Davis is managing director of Abundance Investment, which advertises with The Ecologist.

We need a step change in ‘home economics’

If you are an economist, you might believe in the value of incentives to encourage people to act in ways that are rationally good for themselves and society as a whole.

Yet when it comes to housing we ignore the wider effects of incentives that produce unaffordable new homes, and contribute to growing wealth inequality and climate change. 

The market is incentivised to build homes that are both inefficient and expensive. But it is possible to change the ‘home economics’ of the UK and produce homes that are both affordable to live in and encourage developers to reduce the overall costs of running and heating them. 

Speculative value

While renewable energy generation continues to grow – despite the political headwinds – there’s been little or no improvement in energy efficiency in our homes.

We might moan about the cost and turn down the heating when times are tight, slowing our consumption of fossil fuels by a few percent. Meanwhile the new homes being built are out of the reach of first-time buyers except those few who can rely on the bank of Mum and Dad. 

Over a third of users of the government’s Help to Buy ISA had incomes of more than £50,000. 

The problem is that we no longer see homes as ‘somewhere to live’ but rather as investments through which ‘savvy’ buyers can build up equity for their retirement.

That’s exacerbated by the structure of the housing market which rewards developers building homes for their short term speculative value (in the underlying land), and not the long term ‘use value’ as a home. 

Alternative solutions

Renting your own home is now predominantly a private, relatively unregulated ‘peer to peer’ affair.

Tenancies are held on short-term leases with little incentive (or compulsion) for landlords to improve their properties beyond the minimum.

I’m a long-term private renter and my landlord is intensely suspicious of installing a smart meter, let alone a better boiler or any form of green generation on the south-facing roof. 

As often, the solution is right in front of us, if only we could see the wood for the biomass.

The UK needs to build thousands of new homes to keep up with demand caused by the growth in population and single person households. Rather than extending 30 years of mortgage credit to young people, it makes more sense to invest in homes with affordable rents, long-term assured tenancy, and minimal energy impact. 

Beyond profit

This means moving away from a finance model based on building and selling to one based on building to rent, with the ownership of the tenancy being held by a not-for-profit company.

These homes can be built and priced over the long term – up to 50 years – so that the costs of additional ‘green’ infrastructure can be included more efficiently and financed relatively cheaply.

They will be homes that are truly ‘built to last’, where profits are generated by the quality of the housing over its life and not derived from speculation on future land values. 

To achieve this we need to raise different forms of finance and work with enlightened developers who see the road running out for the short term speculators and see the value in creating properties that deliver value by giving people homes to live in not pensions to invest in. 

Abundance has done this with our latest investment that moves away from green energy to affordable housing.

Working with pioneering housing developer Octevo we’ve raised £4.2 million to fund 30 new-build affordable rental flats and houses in the Liverpool area. 

Each home will be built to last and fitted with energy and water saving technology, as well as onsite renewables where possible. Because living in a greener, more affordable home should be a right not a privilege.

This Author 

Bruce Davis is managing director of Abundance Investment, which advertises with The Ecologist.

The long swim: endurance swimmer Lewis Pugh completes his latest challenge

Lewis Pugh, the UN Patron of the Oceans and renowned endurance swimmer, has today completed his latest and most demanding swimming challenge: The Long Swim.

Lewis swam the entirety of The English Channel wearing just a pair of Speedo swimming trunks, a cap and goggles.  On completion, Lewis became the first person to swim the length of the English Channel in accordance with Channel Swimming Association rules – the association was on hand in Dover to validate the swim.

He started The Long Swim at Land’s End in Cornwall on Thursday 12 July 2018 and swam an average of 10 kilometres for 50 days. However poor weather conditions and changes in the tide stopped Lewis swimming at all on some days, meaning he carried out a number of additional swims in the middle of the night to make up time, often swimming up to three times per day.

Raising awareness 

Lewis took on The Long Swim challenge to raise awareness of three distinct environmental issues; plastic pollution in the oceans, commercial overfishing and the impact of climate change.

Following the completion of the swim, Lewis now heads to Westminster for a series of meetings with key environmental figures at Whitehall. The Secretary of State for the Environment, Michael Gove was present in Dover to congratulate Lewis on his challenge and to talk to him about his concerns around current UK policy.

Lewis is calling on the British Government to urgently protect the seas around the UK coast and British Overseas Territories by introducing more Marine Protected Areas  around the UK coastline.

The completion of The Long Swim is just the start of a global initiative to encourage governments to do more to protect the earth’s oceans. The Long Swim marks the start of a worldwide campaign entitled Action for Oceans, an initiative that is calling on governments to fully protect at least 30 percent of the world’s oceans by 2030.

Over the past 30 years, Lewis Pugh has pioneered swims in the most challenging environments on earth including the Antarctic, the North Pole and the Himalayas. He has campaigned on behalf of the world’s last pristine marine wilderness areas and The Long Swim was Plymouth-born Lewis’ opportunity to bring his message home.

Call to action

Speaking from Shakespeare Beach, following the final swim into the Kent town Lewis commented: “Completing The Long Swim is my biggest achievement in all of the years I have been swimming and campaigning for ocean issues. But I see this as just the start – we now need to see urgent action from the British Government to protect the seas along the UK coastline.

“During The Long Swim, I saw plastic on picturesque Cornish beaches and found party balloons five miles off the coast at Brighton and saw countless other examples of the impact of climate change and human behaviour on UK waters.

“If the British Government doesn’t do more to protect our coastline, it will be our generation, not futures ones, who see the true impact of inaction on their coastline.”

Surfers Against Sewage, one of the UK’s leading marine conservation charities, is a partner in The Long Swim and hosted regular beach clean-ups involving members of the local community throughout The Long Swim.

Lewis took part in beach cleans in Penzance, Portsmouth, Brighton and will take part in a similar event in Dover before heading to London. 

Protecting our oceans

The campaign is also supported by Lead Partner global forex broker FXTM (https://forextime.com), and Speedo as an Official Partner.

Discussing the role of his Lead Partner, Lewis commented: “I’m so grateful to have had FXTM’s support during the duration of The Long Swim and I am delighted to be their brand ambassador. 

“It is so encouraging that a multi-national business like FXTM can see the issues that I am trying to address and I sincerely hope that the UK government will follow the example they have set by taking decisive action on this issue.”

Discussing the importance of the UK Government taking urgent action, Lewis Pugh continued: “Only 7 square kilometres out of a total of 750,000 square kilometres of the UK’s waters are fully protected and that is frankly shocking.

“The amount of protected water amounts to a mere one-hundred-thousandth of all UK waters and this cannot continue. The British Government must protect the UK coastline properly by introducing fully protected Marine Protected Areas.”

This Author

Marianne Brooker is a contributing editor for The Ecologist. This story is based on a press release from Lewis Pugh’s PR team. More information on The Long Swim can be found by visiting https://www.lewispughfoundation.org/ and www.lewispugh.com.

Engineering the climate could cost us the earth

Engineering the earth’s climate is nothing new. Capitalists, in coalition with alien overlords from Andromeda, have been at it for years.

That is the backstory to John Carpenter’s 1988 sci-fi classic, They Live. An alien race colonises Earth. Disguised as humans they run the world, helped by accomplices among the native business community.

They manipulate the human drones through consumerism and subliminal injunctions: ‘Obey,’ ‘Marry and breed,’ and ‘Work!’ The dutiful masses produce, reproduce and consume, all for the benefit of the Andromedan/capitalist masters.

They Live is celebrated for its cartoonish representation of capitalist ideology: wear the special sunglasses and those ubiquitous injunctions are rendered visible.

But another plot thread is equally original. Andromedans require a hot, carbon-rich atmosphere. So they hacked ours, adapting it to their needs by constructing economic systems that rely on fossil fuels.

In this, They Live subverts the approach of so much “Fabian” sci-fi, with its engineer heroes wielding applied science for the betterment of the world.

The Andromedans are malign terraformers, villainous geoengineers. And when they’ve exhausted this planet’s resources, they’ll set their locust eyes on the next.

The Holocene was Eden

Adding CO2 to the atmosphere as a form of “climate experiment”—the Andromedan mission, as it were—has been dated to 1663. Why that year? It marked the founding of the Royal Society.

The Royal Society’s structure was modelled on a sci-fi/utopian novel, Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis, and its mission statement was taken from the Bible: to rebuild Eden.

The Society’s associates combed the world, assessing environmental risks and opportunities. They developed systematic meteorology, measured climates and their rates of change, and intervened to alter them.

One of its founders, John Evelyn, advocated the deforestation of England’s temperate colonies—Ireland and North America—in order to make their “gloomy tracts” habitable.

He and his peers were at the centre of England’s colonial thrust, which generated unprecedentedly rapid and global ecological transformations.

They carried new mentalities: the world belongs to the European bourgeoisie; natural resources are free gifts for capital; science and technology provide surefire methods of taming and controlling nature.

What Evelyn & company failed to realise was that Eden is the Holocene—those brief, lush, ten millennia in which the world’s climate was unusually stable and benign for homo sapiens.

Far from creating a new paradise, the social revolution they were spearheading ushered in a new era, the Capitalocene. It guarantees that Eden will wither away, perhaps for ever.

Sulfurous schemes

In recent years the Royal Society has become the most prominent scientific organization encouraging governments to experiment with geoengineering.

In 2011 it declared that planetary-scale engineering interventions could be “the only option” for tackling a climate emergency.

But geoengineering had entered the scene half a century earlier. Indeed, ever since governments were notified of the hazards of anthropogenic climate change, geoengineering was floated by generals and technocrats as a response.

Its first appearance was in 1965. US President Lyndon Johnson’s Science Advisory Committee issued a report that warned of the potentially harmful effects of fossil fuel emissions.

Considered the first high-level government statement on global warming, the report raised the possibility of “deliberately bringing about countervailing climatic changes,” including by raising the Earth’s albedo.

The method was suggested nine years later by Soviet climatologist Mikhail Budyko. He proposed reversing global warming by burning sulfur in the stratosphere. And how might we do that? Call in the artillery! Blast a million tonnes of pulverised brimstone into the heavens.

This last was Lowell Wood’s proposal, to a NASA conference in Silicon Valley. Wood knew a thing or two about artillery. A former weapons designer at the Pentagon, he had worked on the Reagan-era Strategic Defense Initiative. His mentor, and fellow geoengineering pioneer, was Edward ‘Father of the H-bomb’ Teller.

In his stated motivations, Teller lays bare the soul of the geoengineer. He was “pessimistic about human social capacities but optimistic about technology“. 

Lacking any faith in humanity’s ability to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, he sought a technical fix that would require no radical political or economic change.

In promising a technofix, with no need for democratic engagement, geoengineering is music to the ears of authoritarians, magnates, and government agencies.

Alongside the Pentagon, Silicon Valley and the Royal Society, its boosters include the CIA and motley magnates, including Bill Gates, the co-founder of Skype, Niklas Zennström, and Richard Branson—who co-funded the Royal Society’s geoengineering programme.

The oil giants and tar sands tycoons are major backers, too. They have long seen carbon capture as a means of greenwashing “enhanced” oil extraction.

There is even talk of hooking geoengineering to carbon trading schemes. This was the plan of Planktos Inc., whose ocean fertilization experiments conjure up a dystopian future in which the global climate is manipulated for corporate profit.

Bombastic elitist bazooka projects backed by oligarchs and shot through with fetishistic and magical thinking—you’d think this would appeal to the Trump regime and you’d be right.

Since Trump entered the Oval Office, geoengineering boosters say the political climate for their agenda “has warmed.” Former Republican House Speaker and Trump confidant Newt Gingrich has hailed geoengineering for its “promise of addressing global warming concerns for just a few billion dollars a year.”

Gingrich was among the first senior political figures to publicly promote geoengineering, and helped launch a geoengineering unit at his think tank, American Economic Enterprise.

Seeds of war

The weaponization of weather has been a feature of warfare since 1947. Its heyday came during the US war on Vietnam. If major geoengineering projects go ahead, it will take another leap.

Their costs and benefits will be uneven. Attempts to reduce solar radiation in one region will likely have knock-on effects elsewhere, such as droughts and the devastation of crop yields.

Geoengineering raises questions of sovereignty. Who declares the climate emergency, who determines the geoengineering methods and locations, and how will other states react? Conflict is guaranteed.

A likely first-mover would be the US, whether through a state-backed entrepreneur or a government agency. A classic hegemonic stance would be adopted, with Washington presenting its acts as in the global interest while ensuring that the techniques chosen would favour its territories.

Let’s imagine the chosen method is ocean seeding. It leads to unforeseen consequences, shifting Arctic weather patterns which trigger savage droughts across Russia.

In response, Moscow considers torpedoing America’s ocean fertilisation vessels but instead launches a cirrus cloud-seeding programme.

It too brings devastating side-effects—to East Asian rice harvests. In its turn, Beijing pushes the button on sulphate-spraying, but this sends the monsoons haywire, imperilling the lives of hundreds of millions.

This trajectory, from geoengineering démarches to counter-geoengineering and international friction or conflagration, is far from implausible.

Crushing olivine

While the above scenario depicts the US as initiator, geoengineering boosters, such as Kim Stanley Robinson in ‘The Left’s Case For Geoengineering,’ envisage different actors.

“If a hundred million people die in a heat wave,” the sci-fi author argues, and the Indian government sprays sulphates into the stratosphere, “are we going to tell them they can’t?” In this we see a rhetorical occlusion.

Obscured is that geoengineers research is centred in the Global North, and China. Robinson also downplays or ignores the thunderous drawbacks of sulfur spraying.

It does nothing to reduce the CO2 build-up, or to mitigate its other consequences such as ocean acidification. And it must be permanent, or risk a ‘termination shock’ when switched off—whether by design, accident, or war.

Robinson’s intervention follows a raft of pro-geoengineering articles in leftwing publications such as Jacobin and Grist.

In justification of schemes such as sulfur spraying, Jacobin editor Peter Frase argues that its origins should not deter the left. Geoengineering technologies are neutral.

What matters is not the techniques but “how they are implemented, and by whom.” Sulfur’s associations with Lowell Wood and his satanic colleagues would, in a socialist system, be swiftly forgotten.

Others have noted that in Frase’s essay his recourse to tropes from sci-fi novels and movies enables the “technological, ecological, or social feasibility” of his predictions to be passed over.

Similarly, in his Mars series, Robinson stages lengthy debates over terraforming, and he proposes that many challenges of geoengineering, “both technical and social,” are “much the same” as in the pages of his novels.

But this is, at best, an exaggeration. Few of his fantastic scientists and terraforming projects would survive the leap from Martian fiction to material fact.

One can be a historical materialist novelist or philosopher with little knowledge of chalk, cheese or any empirical substance.

But materials cannot be ignored if, say, carbon sequestration is to be discussed effectively—and not as wishful thinking. If BECCS or charcoal-burying is your preferred technology, how much land will be appropriated, and whose? Will it result in a rise in emissions?

If CO2 is to be ‘scrubbed’ from thin air, will olivine be the elixir, or calcium oxide, or sodium hydroxide? How will it be produced? Out of rocks plucked from which mountains? Pulverised and processed with energy from what sources? Scattered across which steppes?

In view of the colossal wattage required, what territories will be overlaid with solar panels and where will the aluminium and rare earths be extracted? Is the estimate of 0.55 kWh—at minimum!—to capture a single kilo of CO2 realistic?

Or do leftist geoengineering fans pray that, in a cunning of chemistry, the molecular forces that bind CO2 will weaken under a socialist order, easing its capture?

Corrupting the general intellect

Devotees of geoengineering accuse sceptics of a fear of ‘science,’ or of grand projects and decisive action. These charges are farcical.

It is geoengineering projects that are designed to avoid the grand and bold decisions based on proven science: to sequester carbon through afforestation, to ramp up renewable energy and agroecological farming, to weatherise buildings, forcefully regulate energy efficiency and materials use, reduce beef and dairy consumption, and re-engineer transport systems from aviation and cars to bicycles, public transport, and ride-sharing.

Scepticism towards geoengineering is itself scientific, not only in its critique of the techniques themselves and their propensity to backfire, but also in that it subjects science—as a social institution—to critical analysis.

The organisation of scientific knowledge (the ‘general intellect’) has become increasingly subsumed by big business, with all the corruption that entails.

It is well known that Big Oil and other vested interests manipulated the science of climate change. That they were found out has not given them pause. The same corporations that sponsored climate change denial are now lobbying for biochar (charcoal-burying).

We can go further. The geoengineering industry thrives on fetishistic thinking, in two related forms. One is the belief that the reigning social order, based on capital accumulation and profit maximisation, is natural and unchallengeable.

The other is technological fetishism, the endowing of technology with magical powers and the belief that it is neutral in relation to its uses and users, and not wrapped up in social relations, institutions and mentalités.

In the fetishist’s imagination, technology is a tool separable from society, a wand waved from on high by business and state elites. This holds for most of the kit in the geoengineers’ fantasy toolbox.

Highly unaccountable, it depends on hierarchically stratified expertise, the cult of the expert, and rigidly centralised decision making.

A political technology, geoengineering belongs to the institutional apparatus that is preventing effective climate action and reducing the urgency for structural change.

Against this, a politics capable of negotiating the rapids of environmental change will require democratic negotiation and collective action, with the exercise of “collective restraint where necessary” and mobilisation for “shared, sustainable abundance where possible.”

How these struggles play out in the coming decade will, given climate feedbacks and tipping points, powerfully affect human beings (if any exist) in half a million years.

Here the sci-fi imagination can be brought into play. Its sensibility of deep time. Of the geological scales of prehistory, in which the hydrocarbons were slowly compressed, and the swifter demolition of ‘Eden’ that their usage is causing, which will affect our descendants in 3018 or 30018.

If humans have not perished by then, how will they see us? Will they see that we overcame the Andromedans? That we found the sunglasses?

This Author

Gareth Dale teaches politics at Brunel University. He is a co-editor of Green Growth (Zed, 2016), and has written on the growth paradigmsustainability, and Marx’s ecology.

How US oil billionaire Charles Koch sent his emissary to London to launch climate denial

John Blundell was an idealist. A curious, unassuming and softly spoken conservative. When a sixteen-year-old school student living in a three-storey semi-detached house in the affluent suburbs of Congleton, Cheshire, his father handed him an Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) pamphlet: “I was sitting up in bed, it was 1969 when I was trying to decide on A levels.

“My dad was on the agricultural economy faculty at Manchester University and went to the library and brought home a pile of things to make sure I knew what I was doing,” Blundell told me just months before he passed away. “I was already leaning toward the market philosophy.”

Blundell studied economics at the London School of Economics where be became an active supporter of the IEA and a lifelong devotee of Thatcher.

Economics movement

Through his work at the institute he learned about the American free market think tanks founded by Antony Fisher and financially supported by Koch.

Blundell flew out to the United States to attend the South Royalton Conference around the time of his graduation in the summer of 1974. The event would attract a new generation of ideological adherents to libertarianism, many of whom would influence world affairs.

One delegate recalled: “I met several of the Austrian luminaries for the first time and I was blown away by how seriously the youthful audience took theoretical controversies.”

Another remembered: “Milton Friedman even showed up to deliver an evening lecture. That conference was a major event in the recovery of the Austrian economics movement.”

Radical thought

The event was hosted by the Institute for Humane Studies (IHS), which had been founded by the free market advocate Hal Harper with Fisher’s support.

The conference was funded by Charles Koch, who was also a major donor to the IHS. Koch was represented at the event by George Pearson who was looking for new, young talent and free market initiatives he could fund.

And so, Blundell discovered the world of heavily financed, powerful free market think tanks where he would establish his intellectual and spiritual home and become a powerful member of this small community. It wasn’t long before he would return to the United States.

Libertarian think-tank

“John Blundell had come to the IHS for the summer from England after attending the first Austrian economics conference at South Royalton,” Leonard Liggio, its director would record.

Blundell would soon be adopted into the free market family. Koch would undoubtedly be a father figure, providing financial and intellectual support. But this new relationship was fraught with danger as his new family was as susceptible to rivalries, controversies and dramatic fallings out as any other.

Koch here was king of everything and his judgement could be as cruel as it could sometimes be kind.  

Llewellyn Rockwell Jr attended the South Royalton Conference alongside Blundell and had also been taken under Koch’s wing, for a time. “In the early eighties, Charles Koch monopolised the libertarian think-tank world by giving and promising millions,” he recalled.

Eternal Enmity

Rockwell and his close friend Murray Rothbard landed funding to set up an institute to promote the radical economics of Ludwig von Mises, the economist from Vienna who first convinced Hayek of the dangers of socialism.

But before long Koch was “gradually edging away from radical thought” and would turn on his two young disciples: “It was clear that Koch saw their break as the beginning of a long war,” Rothbard claimed.

Pearson, Koch’s right-hand-man, called Rockwell one day and told him that Mises was now considered “so extreme, even Milton Friedman doesn’t like him”.

New sponsor

The advice from the top was the think tank should be shut down: “If I insisted on going against their diktat, they would oppose me tooth and nail”, Rockwell was warned.

Koch, or his men, imposed a “boycott”. Over the coming weeks and months the Mises Institute was subjected to angry calls and letters from Koch-funded organisations. “They resigned and swore eternal enmity. We even lost some big donors. It was my baptism of fire into the world of research institutes,” Rockwell added.

“It may seem absurd to talk about this as if it were some sort of conspiracy against the Mises Institute. Why would a multibillionaire care if the institute existed or not? I mean, we were the gnat compared to his water buffalo. It is a mystery that even today I don’t entirely understand. In any case, there was blood all over the place by the time it was over.”

Blundell would have to act carefully if he were not to displease his new sponsor.

This Author

Brendan Montague is editor of The Ecologist, founder of Request Initiative and co-author of Impact of Market Forces on Addictive Substances and Behaviours: The web of influence of addictive industries (Oxford University Press)He tweets at @EcoMontague. This article first appeared at Desmog.uk

Reflections on a decade of degrowth International conferences

The first international degrowth conference in Paris – 10 years ago this year – introduced the originally French activist slogan décroissance into the English-speaking world and international academia as ‘degrowth’.

This year we celebrate with three conferences in MalmöMexico City and at the European Parliament in Brussels. How did we get here? 

Every two years, the Support Group (hereafter SG) releases an open call for the next conference. It then assists a local organising committee, the real protagonist of each conference.

Research-led activism

Within the increasing plurality of events on degrowth that we experience and participate in, the SG wishes to develop a clear identity and philosophy for the International Degrowth Conferences as a regular and recognisable event where scholars, civil society and practitioners come together to update each other on their degrowth-related research and activities.

Apart from demonstrating the latest research in the field, the conferences aim to promote cooperative research, activism and art in the formulation and development of political proposals.

Furthermore, we attempt to provide the necessary means and tools for people engaged in degrowth research and praxis to network at and between the conferences, increasing the potential of our movement to contribute to needed societal transformations.

This includes degrowth.info (with the media library and the degrowth blog), a mapping of degrowth groups and scriptum, an open source platform – developed by Ecobytes in collaboration with conference organizers – to manage the submission and review process of the contributions to the conferences. 

Past events

Six of these conferences have already taken place:

·    Paris (2008): Organized by Francois Schneider with Denis Bayon and Fabrice Flipo, with 140 participants, mainly academics from fields such as ecological economics. Most participants were presenters. In just a few days we were submerged in requests to participate. It launched the term ‘degrowth’ in English. “Décroissance” in France was mainly used by activists, but in this conference we wanted to reach international scientists. A workshop led to the Conference declaration here.

·    Barcelona (2010): With 500 participants, parallel sessions with academic papers and also workshops. Initiated by François Schneider, the conference organisation became very participative, forming a strong Barcelona R&D group. It featured a diverse audience of activists and practitioners, an innovative range of beautiful poster presentations and Group-Assembly Process (GAP) on 30 topics. The conference declaration can be read here.

·    Montreal (2012): This was the first conference in the Americas. It hd 500 participants, involving all 5 main universities in Montreal, French- and English-speaking. It brought together academics, activists, environmentalists and indigenous peoples from Canada, the USA, Europe and Latin America. Over 5 days, 95 trilingual presentations and workshops linked the themes of grounding, knowing, connecting, relating, sharing and experiencing, with a focus on links with the Global South and the North.

·    Venice (2012): This time with 1000 participants. The Italian degrowth tradition helped to move the focus away from only (ecological) economics to post-development, culture, democracy, commons and spirituality. Its hybrid formula – with scholars and activists discussing together in over 60 participatory workshops – and a massive participation by young people and women from all over the world injected some new blood into the degrowth movement, while calling for an alliance with the movements for social and environmental justice. 

·     Leipzig (2014): Again with over 3000 participants. This conference was notable for its democratic organization, focus on the Global South, and alliances with other social movements.

·      Budapest (2016): Back to ‘small is beautiful’ with 600 participants, plus decentralized activities open to all during the Degrowth week (another 500 participants). The academic discussions showed maturity, with many scholars with degrowth as their main research interest. This conference will remain in our memory because of the vibrant the social life in the city of Budapest. 

Next instalments 

The sixth International Conference on Degrowth for Ecological Sustainability and Social Equity – ‘Dialogues in turbulent times’ – took place in Malmö (Sweden), 21-25 August 2018.

Parallel to this, two complimentary and twin events will take place. The First North-South Conference on Degrowth: ‘Decolonizing the social imaginary’ (Mexico City, 4-6 September 2018); and Degrowth in the EU Parliament: Post-growth conference to challenge the economic thinking of EU institutions with influential EU policy-makers (European parliament, Brussels, 18-19 September 2018).  

A central feature of the conferences has been direct participation and collaboration among participants. The international conferences on degrowth are central landmarks and moments of convergence of the international degrowth intellectual and social movements.

They offer an unique opportunity for bringing together scholars with other members of civil society and demonstrating a different way of organizing conferences. 

The past international degrowth conferences have been strongly influential in defining and opening new research and political fields. They have been inspired by social movements and experiments, and developed policy proposals as well as initiatives in a wide range of areas.

And besides all this, they managed to attract not only significant participation but also attention from the general public and the media.

Signs of success

There is now a significant momentum, academic and political, around the idea of degrowth.

Other conferences, research projects, courses and summer schools on degrowth have taken place in the same spirit in India, Quebec, Canada, England, Sweden, Greece, Czech Republic, Finland, and the Basque Country. Each of these conferences has done a lot to advance the scientific discussion around degrowth, and to make the debate publicly visible.

One sign of the success of the conferences as well as other mentioned initiatives is the substantial body of research on Degrowth published in international academic journals (over 200 articles and 8 special issues that have gone through peer review processes).

Reference books like the “A degrowth project” or “Degrowth: A Vocabulary for a New Era” have been translated in more than 10 languages. For a more detailed account of achievements in terms of publications, training and more recently policy making, see this article.

The International Degrowth Conferences had an increasing number of participants and managed to outreach to other groups, initiatives, and movements not directly involved in the degrowth debate but working on similar issues.

The SG thanks all organizers and participants of the past conferences and is looking forward to a new decade of degrowth networking, activism, research and transformation. If anyone is interested to organize future international degrowth conferences, please do not hesitate to contact the Support Group.

This Author 

The Support Group is the official promoter of the International Degrowth Conferences. It is composed of people who have been highly involved in the local organizing committees of the previous international conferences. The current members are:

– Paris (2008): François Schneider;

– Barcelona (2010): Brototi Roy, Sofia Avila, Federico Demaria and Filka Sekulova;

– Montreal (2012): Bob Thomson;

– Venice (2012): Silvio Cristiano, Jean-Louis Aillon and Chiara Marchetti;

– Leipzig (2014): Nina Treu, Corinna Burkhart, Gualter Babtista and Barbara Muraca;

– Budapest (2016): Lidija Zivcic, Mladen Domazet and Vincent Liegey.

Kelp dredging in Scotland ‘would destroy the marine ecosystem’

Kelp dredging is currently not allowed in Scotland. This could change as the biochemical company Marine Biopolymers has submitted a scoping report to Marine Scotland outlining plans to dredge for the kelp Laminaria hyperborea over a huge area of Scotland’s West Coast. 

This type of dredging already takes place in other countries such as Norway, North America, and Iceland. The potential devastating impacts on the environment and coastal communities are just starting to be understood. 

Marine Biopolymers describe the kelp habitat as a ‘monoculture’;  it is more commonly thought of as one of the most ecologically dynamic and biologically diverse habitats on the planet. L. hyperborea supports more life than the other kelp species in Scottish waters.  Kelp is a ‘Keystone species’ at the bottom of the food chain: to remove it is ‘fishing down the food chain’ at its very worst.  

Marine ecocide

Currently kelp can only be hand-cut with a license from the Crown Estate, with strict guidelines on preserving the plant. The hand harvester must cut the kelp above the meristem ensuring that the holdfast, stipe, and a large part of the frond remain intact to allow the kelp to regenerate.  They must record invertebrate by-catch, and community structure must be monitored to ensure no changes in assemblage of structure.

Marine Biopolymers want to tow a large-toothed dredge in strips through kelp beds ripping the entire plant up by the holdfast (killing it), then throw the holdfast over the side to ‘facilitate survival’ of invertebrates. 

Assuming any invertebrates survive this treatment, where are they meant to go when chucked back over the side? Their habitat is gone, the other invertebrates are not going to ‘budge up’ and make room for them, that’s not how biology works.   

Kelp is long-lived and the holdfast and stipe are a vital part of the habitat, supporting other seaweeds, and hundreds of species of invertebrate that feed fish, including cod, seatrout, and wrasse, lobster, crab, otters, birds, seals, and us.  

So much employment of coastal Scotland is reliant upon a healthy coastal ecosystem: fisheries and eco-tourism would all be jeopardised by the destruction of kelp beds. We can’t peddle Scotland to tourists as a beautiful pristine environment, whilst committing ecocide under the waves at the same time.

Moreover, climate change is happening.  Its effects, such as increasing acidity and rougher seas are already being measured in our oceans.  Kelp sequesters significant amounts of carbon, buffers acidity, and acts as a storm barrier for coasts.   

Endangering biodiversity

The Scottish Governments ‘Wild Seaweed Harvesting Consultation’ from November 2017 references papers which highlight the many unknowns associated with kelp dredging. 

L.hyperborea is only classed as having a ‘moderate’ recovery potential. One study showed that it did not re-grow at all, whilst another tells of places where sea urchins have taken over due to the absence of predators (they went with the kelp) allowing them to over graze and inhibit kelp regeneration.

The only thing we know for a fact is that removing the kelp would most definitely reduce an incredible habitat along with everything that relies on it, and it would remove one of the few barriers to ocean acidification.

Virgin kelp beds can be looked on in the same way as virgin terrestrial forest. At the moment the beds are pristine, they have been evolving for thousands of years; that is not the sort of habitat that can recover in the short term.

Even if the L. hyperboreais dredged and returns to harvestable size within 5 or 6 years (which is not a given) there is no evidence that original communities ever return, and of course they never well if the area is re dredged every time it gets big enough to make it worth the dredgers time. The new habitat would be more homogeneous than before with plants of the same age. Homogeneity is the enemy of biodiversity.  Biodiversity is what supports our coastal fisheries and life. 

Sustainable solutions

There is a growing demand for seaweed products, but it doesn’t need to be from dredged kelp. 

Scottish waters are an ideal environment for farming kelp which could create real sustainable employment in coastal communities without jeopardising the ecosystem.  The Scottish Association for Marine Science have proven that kelp can be farmed at their test sites near Oban, and there are successful kelp farms in the Faeroes, and Rathlin Island between Scotland and Ireland.  

There are an increasing numbers of successful small businesses doing well selling seaweed as food where the emphasis is on sustainability.  

If alginate companies are finding it hard to farm the kelp that they need, then work needs to be done to identify how to overcome whatever obstacles they are encountering. Marine Biopolymers may be able to get more alginate more quickly by ripping up wild L.hyperborea, but so what?  It is not theirs to take. 

The importance of this habitat is so great that allowing dredging at any level is to set a dangerous precedent where short term profit comes above a healthy coastal environment.  The kelp forests and the life that they support belong to all of us and should never be dredged up for a fast profit for one company.  

To open the door to this proposal would normalise dredging. Businesses always want to expand, and other alginate companies would want a slice of the pie.  The door to kelp dredging must be slammed shut now.

This Author 

Ailsa McLellan has a background in marine science and over 18 years of experience working in inshore fisheries management.  She currently runs an oyster farm with her husband, and has been diversifying into seaweed. She is a member of the Scottish Seaweed Industry Association. Find her on Twitter @AilsaMcL. For more information see the report by Ecology and Evolution, and visit the ‘Stop Mechanical Kelp Dredging’ Facebook page