The Nobel Peace
Prize was awarded
this week, in Oslo,
Norway. Al Gore
shared the prize
with the United
Nations'
Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate
Change, which
represents more than
2,500 scientists
from 130 countries.
The
solemn ceremony took
place as the United
States is blocking
meaningful progress
at the U.N. Climate
Change Conference in
Bali, Indonesia, and
the Republicans in
the U.S. Senate have
derailed the energy
bill passed by the
House of
Representatives,
which would have
accelerated the
adoption of
renewable energy
sources at the
expense of big-oil
and coal
corporations.
Gore
set the stage: "So,
today, we dumped
another 70 million
tons of
global-warming
pollution into the
thin shell of
atmosphere
surrounding our
planet, as if it
were an open sewer.
And tomorrow, we
will dump a slightly
larger amount, with
the cumulative
concentrations now
trapping more and
more heat from the
sun.
"As a
result, the Earth
has a fever. And the
fever is rising. The
experts have told us
it is not a passing
affliction that will
heal by itself. We
asked for a second
opinion. And a
third. And a fourth.
And the consistent
conclusion, restated
with increasing
alarm, is that
something basic is
wrong. We are what
is wrong, and we
must make it right."
He
went on: "Last Sept.
21, as the Northern
Hemisphere tilted
away from the sun,
scientists reported
with unprecedented
distress that the
north polar ice cap
is 'falling off a
cliff.' One study
estimated that it
could be completely
gone during summer
in less than 22
years.
"Another new study,
to be presented by
U.S. Navy
researchers later
this week, warns it
could happen in as
little as seven
years. Seven years
from now."
How
will climate-change
skeptics explain
that one? (Already,
big business is
celebrating the
break-up of the
polar ice cap, as a
northern sea route
from the Atlantic to
the Pacific is
opening, creating a
cheaper route for
more needless
shipping.)
It is
hard to imagine the
north pole, the
storied, frozen
expanse of ice and
snow, completely
gone in just a few
years. Lost as well
will be the vast
store of
archeological data
trapped in the ice:
Thousands of years
of the Earth's
climate history are
told in the layers
of ice that descend
for miles there.
Scientists are just
now learning how to
read and interpret
the history. The
great meltdown will
surely have
catastrophic effects
on the ecosystem in
the north, with
species like the
polar bear already
edging toward
extinction.
Rajendra Pachauri,
an Indian scientist,
accepted for the
IPCC. He is a
careful scientist
with the political
finesse to chair the
work of the IPCC
despite the enduring
antagonism of the
United States. He
pointed to the
disproportionate
effect of climate
change on the
world's poor:
"The
impacts of climate
change on some of
the poorest and the
most vulnerable
communities in the
world could prove
extremely unsettling
... in terms of:
access to clean
water, access to
sufficient food,
stable health
conditions,
ecosystem resources,
security of
settlements."
Pachauri predicts
water wars and mass
migrations.
"Migration, usually
temporary and often
from rural to urban
areas, is a common
response to
calamities such as
floods and famines."
Gore
invoked the memory
of Mohandas Gandhi,
saying he "awakened
the largest
democracy on earth
and forged a shared
resolve with what he
called 'Satyagraha'
-- or 'truth force.'
In every land, the
truth -- once known
-- has the power to
set us free."
Satyagraha, as
Gandhi practiced it,
is the disciplined
application of
nonviolent
resistance, which is
exactly what Ted
Glick is doing back
in Washington, D.C.
Glick
heads up the Climate
Emergency Council.
On his 99th day of a
liquids-only fast,
the day after the
Nobel ceremony, he
joined with 20
people in the office
of Senate Minority
Leader Mitch
McConnell for a
sit-in. The Senate
Republicans are now
blocking a federal
energy bill that
would create funding
for the development
of renewable energy
sources in the U.S.,
while stripping away
billions of dollars
worth of tax breaks
for big oil and
coal.
Glick
told me: "We have to
be willing to go to
jail. Al Gore,
himself, a couple of
months ago talked
about how young
people need to be
sitting in in front
of the coal plants
to prevent coal
plants from being
built. That's true.
Young people need to
be doing that.
"Middle-age people
need to be doing
that. Older people
need to be doing
that. And Al Gore
needs to be doing
that. Let's get
serious about this
crisis."
While
Glick was sitting
in, news reports
began to circulate
about Republican
presidential
candidate Rudolph
Giuliani's law
firm's lobbying
activities against
the energy bill.
According to
Bloomberg News,
Bracewell & Giuliani
LLP was hired by
energy giant
Southern Co. to
defeat the bill. At
a $1,000-a-plate
fundraiser last
August, addressing
members of the coal
industry, Giuliani
said, "We have to
increase our
reliance on coal."
As
Giuliani's coffers
get fat with money
from big oil, gas
and coal, Glick has
lost more than 40
pounds, and the
Earth's temperature
continues to rise.
Amy
Goodman is the host
of “Democracy Now!,”
a daily
international
TV/radio news hour
airing on 650
stations in North
America, including
at 6 a.m. and 9 a.m.
weekdays on local
station 88.1 KFCF
FM.