How did it go?

A brief report on the July 29 Climate Action in Toronto-Davenport

More than 35 actions took place across the country. It was a weekday in the middle of the summer holidays, and it rained – and in spite of that, a small but committed group showed up at the office of Julie Dzerowicz, MP for Davenport. We talked with Julie, presented her with a symbolic fire extinguisher, and she signed the pledge, committing to do everything in her power to support her constituents’ calls for:

Some very wet demonstrators!/photo MCM

  • an immediate moratorium on new fossil fuel approvals, and a freeze on all fossil fuel expansion projects under construction – including the Trans Mountain Pipeline
  • legislation for a just transition to support workers and communities, especially Indigenous and remote communities as we move towards a 100% renewable energy future
MP Dzerowicz signs the pledge/photo MCM

It turns out that this is quite a breakthrough. I believe she is the first Liberal MP to sign this pledge, and it has been hailed by environmentalists as a milestone. I hope we can continue making progress, and that Julie can get her government to act like this is an emergency!

Certainly, they have made little progress so far, making a lot of promises, with little to no follow up. The international Climate Action Tracker rates Canada’s efforts at climate action as insufficient, and contributing to a 3 degree temperature rise, which would be catastrophic.

Luke Jones/Creative Commons licensed

I don’t think many Canadians are aware of how terrible we are. The National Post wrote recently that we have the worst climate record of any G7 country! We continue to produce a lot of highly polluting coal, and since our government bought it, we are paying to build a giant new oil pipeline from the tar sands. Here’s an update on the Trans Mountain Pipeline , and the potential danger from oil spills in these fragile ecosystems

Image Sheree Tams

After signing the pledge, MP Dzerowicz specifically encouraged us to keep coming out and making our opinions known. Our letters, emails and demonstrations support MPs and give them more credibility in advocating for more climate action. In David Suzuki’s list of the top ten things you can do to help fight climate change, number one is: Urge government to take bold, ambitious climate change now. So – we all need to get active, and support the planet!

It’s not easy being green… but we have some good options!

When I used to teach the causes of World War One, I would say that for anything this huge to happen, causation is going be massive and complicated. (See Margaret MacMillan’s book The War that Ended Peace: 784 pages, or 32 hours of audio!) The question of climate inaction is so massive and complicated that I’ll just be looking at the some of the most massive factors, focusing on the individual for now. More to come in later posts.

Why is it so hard?

For people living in poverty, there is of course a whole series of obstacles to living green. In that situation, you have to focus on survival, and feeding your kids, with no time or energy for much else. For the others, there are lots of obstacles too.

The complexity of the situation is a barrier to action in itself. It takes a lot of time and energy to understand even the basics of the environmental problems we’re facing, and no one has time to spare these days. The media are more interested in getting our attention and our money, than in giving us balanced, responsible information. Corporate interests spend a ton of money to confuse and mislead us. (Here is a quirky animated history of oil companies doing this, seen below.)

Exxon scientists realized the future effects of climate change very early on

Choosing the greenest course of action can also be extremely complex and difficult for each of us. Even if people have a good understanding of environmental issues based on solid information, they may still disagree as to what best to do since their priorities, life experiences and personal situation are all so different. But whatever the result, we do need to prioritize changing to a more sustainable lifestyle. If not us, who? If not now, when?

The pleasures of an unsustainable lifestyle

Bottom line, most of us in OECD countries have a pretty amazing lifestyle. Basically, lots of everything. No one actually wants to give this up. And our brains make it very difficult to change, thanks to cognitive biases. Outdated circuitry in our brains influences our behaviour profoundly, without us realizing it. Confirmation bias helps us ignore evidence which is contrary to our current beliefs, and grasp at anything which seems to justify our position. Loss aversion makes any loss much more painful than any similar gain. The bystander effect allows us to think that someone else will solve the problem. We have problems paying attention to distant problems, especially when the worst effects are in the future. This BBC article analyzes a bunch more ‘brain biases’. Definitely worth reading.

How we can make the change – Just show up!

Just because it’s hard doesn’t mean we can’t do it. People have succeeded against the odds in the past, and so can we. The animated Story of Change shows it can be done, looking at how peaceful change has worked in the past. Voting with our shopping dollars and living in a way consistent with our values are important things, but we need to be active and demand that governments and corporations be pro-climate too.

Time to get out on the streets and demand change

I have been on some demonstrations in the past few months, (see my pictures below). They were peaceful, showed me that other people were also concerned about things, and made me feel I was doing something concrete and visible. We need to get over the idea that regular people don’t demonstrate. They do! And the media ignore it, so people don’t feel it matters. The answer is – more people taking part.

Note the sign I’m holding, above. Here’s the full quote:

The biggest weapon people have is to try to make you think that you don’t matter. It is to say, “This doesn’t change anything.” Because if you can convince people that it doesn’t matter, then they won’t do it and people can go on as though it’s business as usual.

Alexandra Ocasio-Cortes

In spite of all these things holding us back, we really don’t have time for excuses. We all need to do whatever we can, and more. Here’s Greta:

I don’t want your hope, I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic…. And then I want you to act, I want you to act as you would in a crisis. I want you to act as if the house was on fire, because it is.

Greta Thunberg

The big thing we can all do right now is get out and be counted in Greta’s Global Climate Strike. Here is the link for the Toronto event, which is Friday, September 27th, 11:00 to 2:00 at Queen’s Park. We need to get a crowd bigger than the Raptor’s parade to show our leaders that we demand climate action! For people anywhere else in the world, check here for an event near you.

This is the image for the International Climate Change Strike, Toronto event. Click here for more info.

So let’s all plan on being there. You are needed! I will find a good place for a bunch of us to meet up, and put it out on the blog. Let’s get out there together and make some noise… Let governments and corporations know what you think. If crowds can force China to back down, then surely we can make our democratic government act on our wishes!

Where are we going with all this change?

The goal is a sustainable lifestyle where we’re not burning up the planet, and where climate change can be mitigated, facilitated by laws and policies.If you’re not familiar with it, check out The Green New Deal, a plan for climate justice in Canada.