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Roots of Copenhagen Failure: Nature Does Not Recognize Nations

The Copenhagen climate summit was not just a failure to achieve meaningful results to avert climate change, it was also a failure for national actors to find solutions to supranational problems, according Tällberg Foundation Chairman Bo Ekman. Indeed, the summit was likely to fail from the beginning not simply because national self-interest often trumps global common interest, but because the structure of the world order is not designed to solve environmental problems that know no national boundary. Such a criticism could extend to other global problems as well, such as the financial crisis or biodiversity. What is missing is a world view that comprehends the interconnected nature of most problems plus an image of how the world should be structured to allow for peaceful co-existence amid relentless globalization. What is missing, according to Ekman, is an understanding of how humanity can live peacefully within nature. – YaleGlobal

Roots of Copenhagen Failure: Nature Does Not Recognize Nations

The current world order is incapable of solving global problems
Bo Ekman
YaleGlobal, 24 March 2010
Flaws in the current world order: Nature doesn’t compromise

STOCKHOLM: On the evening of December 18, 2009, an increasingly shaky world order came to the end of the road. Seventeen years of climate negotiations – via Kyoto – had collapsed. The photographs documented the leaders’ despair, tormented by their inability to deliver the deal they knew the world needed. The so-called “deal” reached by the US and five developing nations was a fig leaf to cover the collapse – an impossible political solution to a geophysical problem. Unless the interconnected, systemic nature of the challenge we face is recognized, there will be no turning back from the disaster.

In my view, the Copenhagen process had no chance of success. If historian Barbara Tuchman were alive today she would have added another chapter to her book, "The March of Folly," on humanity’s capacity for collective follies throughout history. Copenhagen provides yet more evidence that the current constitutional regimes are incapable of resolving global problems. The financial crisis showed this, as did the failure of the biodiversity conference, Doha trade round and the whole host of issues.

Unless the interconnected, systemic nature of the challenge we face is recognized, there will be no turning back from the disaster.

The world today works as tightly interwoven, interactive and trans-boundary systems with power organized piecemeal, split among individual nations, emerging through historical accidents and political developments. The continual struggle of nations to assert their own interests ends up hurting common interest. We presume that conflicts are to be resolved in negotiations, which are ultimately based on sovereignty postulates. It was the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 that gave birth to the order built on the principle of national sovereignty. But no world order lasts forever. Its legitimacy lasts only as long as it delivers a balance of power, growth, and is good at solving problems. The current regime, formulated after World War II, has proved ineffective as globalization moved some of the prerequisites for solutions to the supranational level.

In no other area is this clearer than on the environment and climate change. The biosphere is itself a planetary, adaptive, interactive, constantly changing and self-regulating system. It is an indivisible whole. Nature does not logically divide into nations. You cannot fix the seas alone, the forests on their own or the atmospheric CO2 balance, or the interaction between biodiversity and ecosystem productivity on their own.

Nature does not logically divide into nations.

The negotiating process on climate issue, shaped by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), had the impossible task of finding a solution to an extremely complex geophysical and ecological problem by getting 192 nations to agree, based on everyone's own national interests, goals, means and to share responsibilities for actions for years to come. But had 192 nations reached the "perfect agreement," it would have lacked the financial supervisory authority, or powers of enforcement over those nations in case of their non-compliance. Instead the negotiators tried to solve the wrong problem: to reach the political compromises which would primarily secure the hegemonic interests of the major powers. But to avert climate change, actions must be taken based on the ecological system conditions, not according to the relative bargaining power of nation.

In fact all of the UN environmental conferences and conventions have demonstrated the ineffectiveness of the current approach to solving global systemic problems. Kyoto became a paper tiger, torn apart by short-sighted lack of mutual solidarity among nations. Of some 500 international agreements, only a handful are followed to the letter. A nearby example for Sweden is the Baltic Sea, a drainage basin fed by the waters of fourteen countries. Four international treaties are in force to protect the sea from oxygen depletion caused by runoff from agriculture and pollutants from shipping and other sources, though with mixed result from the late intervention.

The problem is more fundamental. For a couple of centuries, science and learning have been characterized by a reductionist method. Man has sought to know more about increasingly narrower and fragmented phenomenon. That’s why we say that the devil is in the details. But the financial crisis and environmental crisis revealed that the real devil is in the system. Most important is to understand the whole picture, how things are interconnected. It is only then that we can shape or repair the system for safety and resilience.

But the financial crisis and environmental crisis revealed that the real devil is in the system.

It is thus an absurdity that leaders should rely on their very own national scientific advisers. Ecosystems are not national, but a large part of the research is. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) consisting of thousands of scientists from all over the world (set up in 1988) was a promising initiative. But its scientific credibility has been questioned along with its political neutrality. The recent decision by the United Nations and IPCC to establish an independent review by the Netherlands-based group of fifteen national academies, the InterAcademy Council, is a welcome attempt to restore the panel’s scientific integrity. This international scientific review will likely uncover a number of deletions from the original Summary for Policymakers at the insistence of non-scientist governmental officials. But it should also show the recent sensationalized irregularities in the 2007 report, such as the conclusions on the Tibetan glaciers that did not source back to peer-reviewed research, were discovered by IPCC scientists themselves, an indication of a well-functioning, ongoing scientific inquiry.

The reality of an interconnected and interdependent world has rendered current constitutional maps outmoded. The world does not have the mechanisms needed to solve today's major challenges. Therein lies the growing danger for conflicts and war. In the field of economics, the financial crisis showed that current institutions and regulatory frameworks were not sufficient to predict or manage the financial risks that the intensification of global dependencies had created. The political grouping, the G8, became the G20. But it is an informal grouping, not rooted in democratic foundations, comprised of the twenty most important industrial and emerging-market countries. The G20 does not have close contact with an electorate or local opinion. The G20 also sees the problem only from one, but of course, very important point of view, namely to foster cooperation on global economic stability and to strengthen the international financial architecture.

The reality of an interconnected and interdependent world has rendered current constitutional maps outmoded.

National boundaries inevitably set limits for political solidarity. If the world were a single country, it could never operate politically with the gaps, inequalities, exploitation of man and nature which are today’s reality. The international system's imperfection in relation to today's reality is at the heart of tomorrow's conflicts. This came to the surface in Copenhagen.

President Roosevelt convened his closest confidants the week after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, on December 7, 1941. He asked them to begin thinking immediately about how the world should be structured for peaceful coexistence in the peace to come. He took a pro-active responsibility for the future. Therefore, the debacle in Copenhagen should be taken for what it actually is, the collapse of already bygone institutions and mechanisms to reach agreement. The world now needs new configurations that secure economic growth, social stability and ecological re-stabilization in a relentlessly, globalizing world. The task is enormous. And one that no nation can do alone.The important question to ask is not what went wrong in Copenhagen, but how a democratically grounded order will be formed in this new world. It is time for answers to the question: How on earth can we live together with nature?

Bo Ekman is Founder and Chairman Tällberg Foundation. This essay is translated and adapted from the piece first published in Dagens Nyheter.

Rights:Copyright © 2010 Yale Center for the Study of Globalization

Comments on this Article

29 March 2010
difficult to speak with people who think that second law of thermodinamic is "propaganda scheme"...and what other ? Galileo a subversive, Darwin an atheist, Einstein a jew?
-luigi portioli , rome italy
26 March 2010
Just printed and skimmed through your article from YaleGlobal online, titled; Roots of Copenhagen Failure; Nature Does Not Recognize Nations.
I agree with your headline. But that is just about the extent of which I believe your article touched on the problems with the various nations on earth to agree on what should be done with regard to Global Warming.
Now let me explain a bit further. I'm an elderly retiree. For more than 5 years I have been much involved in research on this topic. I'm quite adept with numbers. My long experience working with numbers has taught me to look for the "meat" of a batch of numbers, not just look at them without understanding what they mean.
By research, I mean the downloading from the internet, long-time ACTUAL Annual Average Temperature data from hundreds and hundreds of Official Weather Reporting Locations. Because I live in the US and speak or write only English, I must admit that the majority of my data has come from US locations.
DURING THE LAST 100+ YEARS, THERE HAS BEEN NO SIGNIFICANT WARMING OF OUR CLIMATE. So first of all with regard to the Copenhagen meeting, there was not a d... thing for them to do. When there is no significant warming for that long a period, then there is nothing to agree on, nor nothing to do to stop something which isn't happening.
Hopefully, your space will allow me to provide enough data to demonstrate what I'm trying to tell you.
In case I get stopped before I get my "story" typed, you may contact me at my e-mail address:
gwisahoax@mowisp.net
In early 2005 I downloaded these sort of data from over 200 US locations, plus from about 100 locations in Canada, Greenland, Iceland, the UK, Denmark and Norway. Lest you think the US data is abnormal - which frankly it is - slightly, because the evidence of warming from most or all of the 20th century was SLIGHTLY MORE than for the more northerly nations mentioned in the above listing. In other words, the far north locations had even less warming (in fact of the far north locations had cooled during the last 2/3rds of the 20th century.
Well so far, so good, still have space.
In late 2008 I downloaded data from all 100 years of the 20th century, from 268 Official Weather Reporting Locations, from the US, and in addition from what I had downloaded in early 2005, had another 19 of those locations which had all years of the 20th century (1900-1999), from the above mentioned locations in the more northern locations. A total of 287 locations. And our climate has cooled during the last 15 years. So where is the warming?
What did I learn?
I ran a regression analysis on each location, in fact 3 such regressions on each of the 287 locations.
Using Year as "X" and Annual Average Temperature as "Y". This this is a time tested technique to determine the direction and rate of change - in this case the rate and direction of temperature change during the 100 years, 1900-1999. The summary of the results are shown below. All of the
data representing rate and direction of temperature change are shown as degrees F., per century.
Average of all 287 locations:
1900-1999 +0.82
1900-1933 +3.21
1934-1999 +0.08 This representa a total warming of approximately 0.05 F., for the entire
period of 1934-1999. I maintain this is NOT SIGNIFICANT!
The portion of the locations from Greenland, Iceland, the UK, Denmark and Norway, were as follows:
5 2 4 2 6
Greenland Iceland UK Denmark Norway
Locations Locations Locations Locations Locations
------------- -------------- ------------- -------------- --------------
Average per nation:
1900-1999 +0.43 +0.72 +1.23 +0.84 +1.09
1900-1933 +12.39 +6.26 +0.68 +1.88 +3.78
1934-1999 -3.74 -1.75 +0.84 -0.41 0.00
Where is all the warming for the last decades of the 20th century???
Now I wish to tell you why it is that I am so interested in this topic. Over 50 years ago, I had the unfortunate experience of being cheated out of a significant amount of money by A CONFIDENCE MAN!!!! That sad experience taught me what to look and listen for when a Confidence Man/Woman is trying to take advantage of people. The signals they give off are unmistakenable.
Every one of the main proponents of the Whole Global Warming story are CONFIDENCE MEN/WOMEN!!! Three of the most prominent such persons are Dr, Rajendra Pachauri of the IPCC committee, Al Gore, who has earned the title of the World's Greatest Liar, and Barack Obama.
These three men can only properly be described as WORLD CLASS CRIMINALS!!!!
There are a whole bunch of similar, just not as famous indifividuals, who are trying to get rich or powerful, or both, on this Confidence Scheme, called Global Warming.
In my humble opinion, the claims for GW are: THE GREATEST PROPAGANDA SCHEME THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN.
Thank God there was no agreement at Copenhagen.
I would appreciate hearing from you.
-Wayne Byerly , Nixa, MO USA

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