Pages

Friday 29 November 2013

Dealing with climate change grief


It’s fair to say I’ve been going through the stages of grief over the past number of months.

At the start of the year, climate change was the farthest thing from my mind.

“It isn’t a major issue,” I thought, because it's not generally talked about and not much was being done about it. 

But then I became aware that Sydney’s drinking water, my drinking water, was at risk from fracking – and that coal mining was already happening in our precious drinking water catchment areas.

So I started doing some research, and then began to understand the immense pressures we are putting our planet under.

Scientists armed with extensive research and knowledge are making it unequivocally clear that our climate is in a state of emergency. And that our oceans are on the brink of ecological collapse.

Grieving over this is a very strange thing. It’s a very private thing. You haven’t lost anything tangible. And it’s not something you want to openly admit, because some people will think you’ve got a screw loose. They don’t understand, or don’t want to understand, the gravity of the situation.

But what I feel is legitimate. I’m not alone in suffering from climate change grief: other people have gone through it - or are going through it - and it’s been written about by academics.

There’s a well-known model of 5 stages of grief. When it comes to the state of our planet, I’ve been through them all. Sometimes I still go back and forth between anger, depression and acceptance, or even feel a number of them at once.

1. Denial
With all my heart and soul I wanted to deny what was happening. Why wouldn’t I want to deny what it means for my kids’ future? And it was so easy to deny – politicians, most of the media and all those deniers out there make it so very easy.

2. Anger
I’ve been angry too. Angry at our politicians, angry at the media, angry at deniers, angry at the mining magnates, angry at the shareholders…angry that it’s currently so damn hard to go about my daily life without putting massive amounts of greenhouse gases into the air.

For other people, their anger is aimed at the prospect of needing to make changes to the way we live and do things. Sometimes that anger is targeted at the people who deliver the message, such as the climate scientists.

3. Bargaining
Bargaining was a good stage for me. I led myself to believe that it wouldn’t be so bad and that what I was reading – albeit from the world’s leading, highly researched and highly conservative experts – was exaggerated.

Adaptation also sounded like a great option, except that it’s not clear we’ll be able to adapt to the extreme conditions we’re currently on track for. Like denial, bargaining was a very easy phase.

4. Depression
Yes, I’ve felt depressed. And feeling such immense concern for my children’s future while the problem is generally being overlooked, downplayed and worsened made it seem all the more overwhelming and hopeless.

5. Acceptance
I’m now at the acceptance stage, but I really don’t like that expression. Yes, I understand what’s happening and understand what it means if we don’t take action. I now feel calm about the consequences if we do nothing.

But I refuse to do nothing. I refuse to simply accept it.

6. Action
Researcher Daphne Wysham says there's an important sixth stage that we all need to get to as soon as possible. She calls it ‘The Work’, but I like to call it ‘Action’.

We need to get the public, and majority of our political and business leaders, to this stage. It’s a stage of opportunity, of hope, of empowerment and of immense willpower.

It’s a stage where we start genuinely pursuing the many effective, achievable solutions there are out there – solutions which our politicians are ignoring, or even obstructing, because they’re under too much pressure from the fossil fuel industry.

My boys are very young, and unable to do anything about these challenges. By the time they have that ability, the window for effective action will have passed.

That’s why I blog. Because as difficult and unpleasant as these issues are, the only way we’re going to make a difference – and give our kids a chance – is if we all get a reality check and start taking proper, urgent action.



Image attribution: Joel Kramer


Thursday 14 November 2013

Super Typhoon Haiyan & Australia’s National Day of Climate Action



I wasn’t really sure if I should talk about Super Typhoon Haiyan in this post. 

It’s certainly not my intention to use every weather-related disaster as a promotional device for climate change action.

Moreover, scientists say that no single weather event can be blamed on climate change.

So I was going to cover something else instead.

But when I heard the impassioned speech of lead Filipino climate negotiator Yeb Sano on day one of the Warsaw climate talks, it became clear to me that this is a topic that must be given attention.

Yeb Sano’s impassioned plea and hunger strike

Sano opened the UN climate talks this week with a plea for urgent action.

In an emotional speech, he rightfully pointed out that typhoons such as Haiyan and its impacts represent a sobering reminder that we cannot afford to procrastinate on climate action.

In solidarity with his countrymen who are struggling to find food and his brother who had not had food for three days, Sano announced that he was going on a hunger strike until “a meaningful outcome is in sight”.

Australia’s waning commitment to climate action

In contrast to Sano’s pressing call for increased commitment on climate action from the international community, Australian’s commitment is weakening.

Sadly, these are the first climate talks in 17 years where Australia has failed to send a minister to represent us.

There are also now suggestions that Australia will only remain committed to its 5% emissions reduction target, even though Australia has previously signed up to higher emissions targets if there is a commitment for stronger action by the international community. As well as damaging our credibility internationally, this would leave us further lagging behind other countries.

Sano’s plea also comes at a time when Australia’s federal government is swiftly removing, reducing and abolishing Australia’s climate change and clean energy policies and initiatives, and their associated institutions.

While I’m pleased that our federal government has pledged A$10 million of humanitarian aid in the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan, the extent of the destruction is so great that this amount will barely cover a fraction of a bill which will run into billions of dollars. 

The reality is that Australia must also focus on real, urgent climate action. By allowing the world to get warmer, we enable storms to become more destructive.

For although there have been no conclusive scientific studies finding that storms are getting more frequent or stronger in the Pacific Ocean, much of the devastation in typhoons comes with the related storm surge. Since climate change is already raising sea levels, the risk for severe inundation is also increasing.

In fact, the sea level in the eastern Philippines is rising at one of the fastest rates worldwide  a fact that made coastal flooding from Haiyan worse, and likely contributed to the death toll.

Australia’s National Day of Climate Action, Sunday 17 November

Sano’s opening speech in Warsaw this week echoes his sentiment 11 months ago at the Doha climate talks. At those talks he made a similar plea in the wake of Typhoon Bohpa, which left more than a thousand people dead and hundreds of thousands homeless, asking:

"If not us, then who? If not now, then when?"

Sano’s question is a very poignant one, relevant to each and every one of us. And we must be comfortable with the answer.

It seems to me that we are coming to a defining point in history. It is a point that our children will look back on, and ask what we did to halt the climate emergency.

This Sunday, 17 November 2013, is Australia’s National Day of Climate Action. Come and be part of the campaign for climate change action. Join myself, and thousands of people from all over Australia, in demanding real, urgent action on climate change.

Useful links:

Further information on Australia’s National Day of Climate Action:

Yeb Sano’s powerful speech can be viewed at the following link:


Image attribution: DVIDSHUB