There is no vaccine to guide us out of the climate crisis.
Ruth Greenspan Bell for Environmental Health News
As we gradually work our way out of the pandemic with the development and distribution of vaccines, what does our evolving success tell us about the possibilities of resolving the climate change crisis?
Has
this crisis been a warm-up on what to do—and not do—in the face of a global
climate emergency? The answer is both yes and no.
Yes,
because humans have many tools at their disposal to solve complex tests. But
no, because the challenges and the menu of solutions are quite different
between these two existential challenges.
It even might be dangerous to boost this tempting analogy. Equating the two, given what we know now about defeating COVID-19, might encourage the idea of easy technological solutions. If we go down that path, we diminish our chances of realistically grappling with climate's complexity.
Belief in technological
fixes, particularly silver bullets, might dissipate the energy we need to get
to work and avoids the breadth of the challenge ahead.
Paths forward exist
As
dramatic and devastating as it is, COVID-19 involves one virus (now mutating)
that is causing illness and death. The solution is the vaccine. Fortunately,
researchers were exploring vaccine methods in the aftermath of the 2003 SARS
pandemic that proved fruitful for COVID-19.
The
analogue to the almost two decades of work including pre-clinical animal
testing that laid the foundation for the vaccine in record time is that we've
known for a long time what is needed to stop the discharge of greenhouse gases
into the atmosphere and how to adapt.
There have been multiple fully coherent plans to decarbonize the economy. Significant research has been underway for decades identifying and, to some extent, implementing a wide variety of technologies, some as substitutes for fossil fuels, and others that reduce our reliance on energy or make it go farther.
We've gathered experience with a variety of regulatory programs including
regional systems of emissions trading and the various painfully developed
regulations that would nudge and guide society toward more efficient cars,
appliances, and power-generation. Despite attacks on these by the Trump
Administration, they remain achievable options and the launching point for
more.
There
is also a broad base of support for acting on this threat from important actors
in society who have come to understand how climate change destabilizes their
work. Multiple corporations have expressed support for decarbonization.
Military leaders have accepted climate change as a threat multiplier that makes
their jobs much more difficult.
And
there is no lack of planning for the inevitable damage from the changes already
taking place. Cities and states have been busy for some time thinking about
water level rise and weather-related disaster preparation.
In
some ways, all this work is similarly off-the-shelf as was the virus research
into the spike protein. It puts residents of planet Earth ready to move forward
toward making their existence here safer.
Delivering
solutions
But the better analogy, and warning sign, if there is one, is not to the development of the vaccine but to its delivery. Delivery of a vaccine requires infrastructure, commitment, funding of multiple actors and coordination at many levels of society.
It requires a federal government committed to action, not
just wishful thinking. The early hitches in delivery laid bare many of the
inequities that allow well-to-do people with access to computers, the internet,
and other resources to be vaccinated while poorer people have difficulty even
getting into line.
If
we look at addressing the climate challenge as an all-of-government job; if we
commit the funding and the political will; if we don't kid ourselves with
delusions of quick fixes, and if business walks the walk, and doesn't just
talk, we have a chance.
There is no way to make up lost time; the four years of Trump denial built dangerously on the period before that where Congress never acted. The Arctic is melting and the Antarctic is in danger – just one example but a very big one for current and future weather, and, in turn, for our ability to provide for ourselves.
Even if we were completely to stop using fossil fuels today, the
loading process in the atmosphere makes it very unlikely we can reverse warming
trends very soon.
The
COVID-19 experience is a guide, a useful one, but not a template. Just because
answers are available, indeed well-known and vetted, doesn't mean they are
easily adopted or applied. The test for the Biden Administration, as it is for COVID-19,
is finding the commitments among winners and unhappy losers to put the stuff on
the shelf to work.
Ruth
Greenspan Bell is a Public Policy Scholar at Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars and a founder of The Environmental Protection Network.