Pablo Solon: 'Green economy' versus the rights of nature

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Humanity is at the edge of a cliff. Instead of recognizing that nature is our home and that we must respect the rights of all members of Earth’s community, transnational corporations are promoting more capitalism under the misleadingname of “green economy.”

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by Pablo Solón

Pablo Solon is the former ambassador for the Plurinational State of Bolivia to the United Nations. This translation is by Climate & Capitalism; a somewhat different translation was published on Hoy es todavía, on June 7, 2012. 

AT THE CROSSROADS BETWEEN GREEN ECONOMY AND RIGHTS OF NATURE

Almost one thousand dolphins are lying dead on the beach. Another five thousand pelicans have also been found dead. What is the cause of this massacre? There are different explanations. Some argue that it was the offshore oil exploration while others say that these birds are dying because anchovy, their main food, has disappeared as a result of the sudden heating of coastal waters due to climate change.

Whatever the explanation, the fact is that during the past months, the coasts off Peru have become the silent witness of what the capitalist system is doing to Nature.

In the period from 1970 to 2008, the Earth System has lost 30% of its biodiversity. In tropical areas, the loss has even been as high as 60%. This is not happening by accident. This is the result of an economic system that treats nature as a thing, as just a source of resources. For capitalists, nature is mainly an object to possess, exploit, transform and  especially to profit from.

Green economy is about cheating nature while making profit out of it

Humanity is at the edge of a cliff. Instead of recognizing that nature is our home and that we must respect the rights of all members of Earth’s community, transnational corporations are promoting more capitalism under the misleading name of “green economy.”

According to them, the mistake of capitalism that led us to this current multiple crises is that the free market had not gone far enough. And so with the “green economy,” capitalism is going to fully incorporate nature as part of  capital. They are identifying specific functions of ecosystems and biodiversity that can be priced and then brought into a global market as “Natural Capital.”

In a report of EcosystemMarketplace.com, we can read a brutally frank description of what they are after when they speak of Green Economy:

“Given their enormous impact on our daily lives, it’s astounding that we don’t pay more attention, or dollars, to ecosystem services. Ecosystems provide trillions of dollars in clean water, flood protection, fertile lands, clean air, pollination, disease control – to mention just a few. These services are essential to maintaining livable conditions and are delivered by the world’s largest utilities. Far larger in value and scale than any electric, gas, or water utility could possibly dream of. And the infrastructure, or hard assets, that generate these services are simply: healthy ecosystems.

So how do we secure this enormously valuable infrastructure and its services? The same way we would electricity, potable water, or natural gas. We pay for it.”

In simple terms, they will no longer just privatize material goods that can be taken from nature, such as wood from a forest. Instead, they want to go beyond that and privatize the functions and processes of nature, label them environmental services, put a price on them and bring them into the market. Already in the same report, they have estimated values for these environmental services for the years 2014, 2020 and beyond.

To illustrate, look at the leading example of “green economy,” the program called REDD (Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation). REDD’s purpose is to isolate one function of forests, their ability to capture and store carbon, and then measure how much CO2 it can capture. Once they have estimated the value of the potential carbon storage of the forest, carbon credits are issued and sold to rich countries and big corporations who use them as offsets, to buy and sell polluting permits in the carbon markets.

The new commodities of the REDD market will be financial papers or carbon credits, that will account for a certain amount of CO2 that a forest has not decreased in it’s storage. For example, if Indonesia has a deforestation rate of 1.700,000 hectares per year and then next year instead of destroying this amount, they only deforest 1.500,000 hectares, they will be able to sell in the REDD market, the carbon credits for the amount of CO2 that is stored by the 200.000 hectares that was not deforested.

In essence, REDD provides a monetary incentive for not deforesting. However, this incentive has a doubly perverse effect.

First, the company of a country that buys those carbon credits will be able to keep polluting and releasing to the atmosphere that amount of CO2 they paid for. In other words, carbon credits are polluting permits for the rich.

Second, only countries that reduce their deforestation will be able to put carbon credits in the REDD market. So if a region doesn’t have deforestation, and has always preserved its forest, they will not be able to sell any carbon credits from reduction of deforestation. So what is happening now, for example, in some parts of Brazil, is that in order to be prepared for REDD, trees are being cut with the purpose of increasing the deforestation, so that, tomorrow, the reduction of the “deforestation” will be higher and the amount of carbon credits that can go into the market will be bigger.

The whole system is about cheating nature while making profit from it.

This is just one face of “green economy” for forests. Imagine what will happen if and when the same logic is applied to biodiversity, water, soil, agriculture, oceans, fishery and so on. Add to this the proposal to perform geo-engineering and other new technologies in order to further the exploitation, tampering and disruption of nature.

This will open the door to the development of a new speculative market.

This will allow some banks, corporations, brokers and intermediaries to make a lot of profit for a number of years until their financial bubble explodes as can be seen with past speculative markets. More importantly, though, this market also has a real deadline, because there are limits to exploiting the Earth system: passing those limits means devastating our home.

In order to promote such an assault on nature, the capitalists have first labeled their greed economy as “green economy.” Second, they have promoted the view that because of multiple global crises, cash strapped governments do not have the public money to take care of Nature and that the only way to get the billons of dollars needed for the preservation of water, forests, biodiversity, agriculture and others is through private investment.

The future of Nature relies on the private sector, but the private sector will not invest the billions of dollars that they accumulated by exploiting labor and nature’s wealth, without incentives. And so, governments need to offer them this new business of making profit from the processes and functions of nature.

Most promoters of “green economy” are very straightforward on this: if there is no pricing of some functions of nature, new market mechanisms and guarantees for their profit … the private sector will not invest in ecosystem services and biodiversity.

“We cannot command nature except by obeying her”

The “green economy” will be absolutely destructive because it is premised on the principle that the transfusion of the rules of market will save nature. As the philosopher Francis Bacon has said, we cannot command nature except by obeying her.

Instead of putting a price on Nature, we need to recognize that humans are part of Nature and that Nature is not a thing to possess or a mere supplier of resources. The Earth is a living system, it is our home and it is a community of interdependent beings and parts of one whole system.

Nature has its own rules that govern its integrity, interrelationships, reproduction and transformation and these rules have worked for millions of years. States and society must respect and assure that rules of nature prevail and are not disrupted. This means we need to recognize that our Mother Earth has also rights.

Scientists have been telling us that we are all part of an Earth System that includes the atmosphere, the biosphere, the lithosphere, and the hydrosphere. We humans are just one element of the biosphere. So why would it be that only we humans have rights and all the rest are just materials for human life?

To speak of equilibrium in our Earth system is to speak of rights for all parts of the system. These rights are not identical for all beings or parts of the Earth System, since not all the elements are identical. But to think that only humans should enjoy privileges while other living things are simply objects is the worst mistake.

Why should we only respect the laws of human beings and not those of nature? Why do we call the person who kills his neighbor a criminal, but not he who extinguishes a species or contaminates a river? Why do we judge the life of human beings with parameters different from those that guide the life of the system as a whole if all of us, absolutely all of us, rely on the life of the Earth System?

There is a contradiction in recognizing only rights of humans while all the rest of the Earth system is reduced to a business opportunity in the “green economy.”

Decades ago, to talk about slaves having the same rights as everyone else seemed like the same heresy that it is now to talk about glaciers, or dolphins, or rivers, or trees, or orangutans as having rights.

In an interdependent system in which human beings are only one component of the whole, it is not possible to only recognize the rights of the human part without instigating an imbalance in the system. To guarantee human rights and to restore harmony with nature, it is necessary to effectively recognize and apply the rights of Nature.

Nature cannot be submitted to the wills of markets or a laboratory. The answer for the future lies not in scientific inventions that try to cheat nature but in our capacity to listen to nature. Science and technology are capable of everything including destroying the world itself. It is time to stop geo-engineering and all artificial manipulation of the climate, biodiversity and seeds. Humans are not gods.

The capitalist system is out of control. Like a virus its going to kill the body that feeds it… it is damaging the Earth System in ways that will make human life as we know it impossible.

We need to overthrow capitalism and develop a system that is based on the Community of the Earth.

1 Comment

  • An interesting way of looking at the problem of so called “natural” or “green’ capitalism.  I think Solon is absolutely right that there is no reconciling the market with nature.  He does an excellent job of showing why this is not possible.  However, although Solon does make the argument that we are a part of nature his argument is inconsistent.  To speak of nature having rights sounds profound but in practice it will always be people that will have to fight for those rights and I would argue that is because it is not an abstract nature that has the rights but real human beings within nature.  The “rights of nature” are in fact human rights because it is only human beings that can assert them.  Without a conscious will to assert them, rights do not really exist.  To suggest otherwise is to render a right meaningless. 

    To speak of nature as if it were an entity with consciousness and interests of it’s own may accord well with spiritual beliefs but I think it’s important to recognize that if there is a consciousness in nature we are it (excluding of course whatever conscious beings may exist in other parts of the universe).  This doesn’t mean that the spiritual beliefs and historic practices of indigenous peoples cannot inform the ecosocialist movement but I think we need to recognize that a materialist understanding of nature is essential if we are ever going to achieve an ecologically integrated system of production.  Solon gets part way to this understanding before retreating into arguments that treat nature as a separate entity from humanity.  He recognizes that capitalism is a system that exploits not only the earth but also the vast majority of human beings and does call for its overthrow but his argument leaves the door open to reformism and deep ecology because he sees the liberation of humanity as coming about through our subjugation to Nature’s laws.  What if governments did enact laws and empower regulatory agencies to defend the “rights” of nature and force us all to live by nature’s laws, supposedly for our own good?  In fact living by Nature’s laws would be barbaric.  Would we allow natural selection to become the driving force in human and social evolution?  In that context, human rights would disappear.  Giving a pair of glasses to a blind person would be illegal.  Distributing medicine to save the lives of millions of AIDS sufferers would become a kind of organized crime.  If anything, what capitalism has shown us is that left unchecked, blind natural laws will eventually lead to nature destroying itself.  We are a part of nature.  When we destroy nature we destroy ourselves; we are nature destroying itself.  The blind hand of the market is very much in accordance with natural selection, which is precisely the problem.  The problem is not an excess of human rights or humanity’s domination over nature but in fact the suppression of human rights and the suppression of human consciousness.  That is what class society is by definition.

    Any truly ecological perspective must place human consciousness at the heart of the world ecosystem, not as its subject but as its agency.  Humanity has two choices.  Either we cease to exist and probably take the rest of life on earth with us or we become the mind of nature, the brain in Gaia that through scientific investigation becomes fully conscious, self-aware and self-regulating of ourselves as a planetary ecosystem.  That is only possible with socialist revolution that places democratic power in the hands of producers and overcomes our alienation from nature, our labor, ourselves and each other.