After
years of fraught negotiations, we have a climate accord. Just
getting 195 countries with different, often conflicting, interests to
agree was a miracle of sorts. The document breaks new ground by
aiming to hold the average temperature rise below 2C, to 1.5C, and
reaching carbon neutrality by the “second half of the century.”
The road map for how to get there is less clear. The INDCs (Intended
Nationally Determined Contributions – whew!) are not binding,
relying upon peer pressure at periodic reviews to curtail carbon
emissions even further than current pledges, which would take us down
to 3.5C, still well beyond the threshold of climate catastrophe. The
current pledges do not go into effect until 2020, though there will
be an opportunity for revising upward with a review process every
five years. This is not tough enough, fast enough.
In a
post this week at Common Dreams, Jeremy Brecher, a labor historian,
notes that the governments of the world accepted no accountability in
Paris, only going on record with a stronger common goal. Since they,
and to some degree the U.N. as well, are accountable to the vested
interests which put them in power, it is up to the people to stand up
and force them to be “accountable to the world's real owners,”
the people. In a more detailed piece,
“A Non-Violent Insurgency for Climate Protection,” Brecher argues that there is legal ground
for the people to rise up in multiple acts of civil disobedience to
force governments, who are trustees guarding the air, oceans and
forests, to abide by the laws that safeguard these critically
endangered commons in a “global law-enforcing climate insurgency.”
The foundation for this is called in the US the
public trust
doctrine, which is based upon
the Justinian code of 535 A.D., naming certain areas as res
communes, “common things”
that are not held by the state. Hence the beleaguered notion of the
commons. As Brecher puts it eloquently, “The governments of the
world may rule the world, but they don't run the world – that is
the common property of humanity.”
Fortunately, to defend that common property, an independent climate
protection movement has emerged, which Brecher dates to the mass
International Day of Climate Action in 2009, the most widespread
political action day in planetary history. This has grown in recent
years into the Blockadia movement, expertly
documented by Naomi Klein. Increasingly, these actions are designed as civil disobedience
aimed at enforcing fundamental legal and constitutional principles
that are being flouted by the authorities they are disobeying. By
calling these abuses into question, they are performing their legal
duty, planetary citizens mounting what legal scholar James Gray Pope
calls a “constitutional insurgency.” This insurgency aims to
transform the world order, which Brecher argues is more attainable
than challenging individual nation-states, and has in fact happened
more than once in our lifetimes. Crucially, Brecher notes that the
current world order, which protects the global corporations,
especially Big Fossils, is “illegitimate but mutable.”
As
law-enforcing or constitutional insurgents, activists are now
invoking the
necessity defence, which was unexpectedly
successful in the case of Friend Jay O'Hara, when he and Ken Ward
blocked a coal vessel at Brayton Point, Mass with his lobster boat (
see lead photo). Defendants who blocked an oil train in 2014 in Washington state
are mounting the same defense. We shall see what the court's
response is. Even if the courts don't accept their arguments, these
actions can “redefine what climate action is all about.” If
legal actions continue to fail, Brecher envisions civil society
tribunals chaired by senior retired judges and other respected
figures calling expert witnesses with publicly acknowledged
credentials. It's all about civil society moving into the black hole
of accountability which the current world order lacks. I am
convinced that civil society, in carefully strategized actions, their
trials managed by expert environmental lawyers, can affect the
misguided but mutable world order.
Since
governments serve as trustees of the commons, environmental lawyers
are working to utilize trust law to enforce the people's rights to
enjoying the benefits of these commons. It may seem far-fetched –
one environmental lawyer calls these kinds of challenges “hail Mary
passes” - but successful use of trust law could require fossil fuel
companies to pay damages for the colossal waste committed against the
public trust. Fair damages would pay most of what is required to
transition to a zero-carbon economy, and build the global Green Fund
to help poor nations adapt to climate change.
Governments
of the world need to be made accountable to the world's real owners.
Yes, Jeremy Brecher, according to the Justinian code. But nobody owns
the world, as the indigenous peoples will tell us. Ultimately, the
world is God's, and the building climate insurgency is about the
people rising up to return the Commons to Her. Or if you prefer, to
Gaia, the evolutionary miracle which brought this perfectly-placed
third rock to superabundant life. Earth stewardship in these
critical times means joining the insurgency to defend Gaia, with
whatever gifts we have.
Labels: civil disobedience, climate insurgency, commons law, constitutional insurgency, Delta Five, Jay OHara, Jeremy Brecher, Justinian Code, Naomi Klein, necessity defense, Paris COP 21
# posted by Robert McGahey @ 1:18 PM