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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Environment
Adam Morton

‘Despair is a luxury we can’t afford’: David Suzuki on fighting for action on the climate crisis

David Suzuki
‘Look, mother nature is making it undeniable that climate change has kicked in. The consequences are going to be enormous,’ says David Suzuki. Photograph: Supplied

David Suzuki is in an office, shirt unbuttoned, sunglasses on, a bookshelf over his left shoulder overflowing with a mess of boxes, bottles and binders, some barely hanging on to the top shelf. We’re speaking via video between his family cabin on an island off the Canadian west coast and my barely-more-organised home office in southern Tasmania. But the celebrated science broadcaster and environmental activist is considering something else.

“Maybe I can just give you an idea of what I’m looking out at,” he says, turning his laptop so I can see what he sees: a beautiful bay in late afternoon sun. My response is involuntary: “Oh, wow.”

“Yeah,” he says, slipping into the narrator’s role. “Those are a series of islands. The mountains way behind are the mainland – British Columbia.

“It had been my hope to retire here, but I moved my wife’s mother and dad in with us in Vancouver, oh, 40 years ago. They lived with us for 35 years and in the last years of their life they were really too frail for us to move up to this cabin. So we just spend all our summers here and as often as we can get up here.”

Some time has opened up in Suzuki’s schedule since April when he retired from The Nature of Things, the Canadian documentary series he hosted for 43 years. Though he recently celebrated his 87th birthday, he would pass for a generation younger and remains busy and as motivated as ever.

His focus remains unchanged: the world, and how we’re stuffing it up. Later in the interview, he summarises: “Look, mother nature is making it undeniable that climate change has kicked in. The consequences are going to be enormous.”

We’re speaking in early July, before the record heatwaves that exacerbated wildfires across the Mediterranean and set a new benchmark for the hottest month record, but after his country has already been burning for weeks. The “literally off the charts” fires have burned across more than 10m hectares, breaking the previous record set in 1989, forcing more than 120,000 people from their homes and releasing smoke that choked cities across the border in the US. Suzuki wasn’t surprised.

“It’s been coming for quite a while,” he says. “In British Columbia, of course, we have forest fires, but the fires have been coming on a more regular basis, more intense, bigger and the fire season is starting earlier and lasting longer. So we’ve known about the impact.

“And being a coastal province of British Columbia, we’re seeing the impact of the warming oceans, just in terms of the new animals being seen in these waters … and we’re seeing our salmon suffering tremendously because they’re quite sensitive to warm temperature, and they’re being hammered. But the problem in Canada is that we are really held hostage to our oil province, Alberta, which has a total commitment to the fossil fuel industry. It’s a petro state.

“It’s undeniable for Canada – we’re a northern country, and as a northern country we’re warming far more quickly than, say, the United States. We’re warming at, I think, four times the global average. The impact in the Arctic is absolutely devastating, and for over 30 years, the Inuit have been telling us the ice is changing. It’s not forming as quickly as always, it’s disappearing much faster. The potential for ice free Arctic Ocean is coming and the warnings have been coming all this time. But the denial, you know, is just enormous.”

Suzuki is angered by missed opportunities and weak politicians. He gives an example that others have also made – the contrast between the extraordinary and rapid response to the Covid-19 crisis and the comparatively slow burn rollout in most places in response to the climate crisis.

“I just want to remind you in 2019, when Greta [Thunberg] had galvanised millions of people to march on the streets. I was in Montreal when she came to Canada the first time and we marched with 500,000 people, and then a few months later, she came to Vancouver. We had 160,000 Vancouverites marching with Greta. The west coast of North America was on fire and the continent of Australia was on fire. You know, that was the moment,” he says. “And then of course, Covid hit, and we locked down then in March of 2020.

“The amazing thing to me was that for years, people like me would go to Ottawa, begging for a few million dollars for public transit, for insulating houses, for the good things that have to be done. And the reaction was ‘oh well, you know, that’s too much money, we don’t have the money’. Covid hits and suddenly, not tens of millions, not hundreds of millions, we spent over $300bn. Where the hell did that money come from? They just cranked it out. And that’s the response we need on climate.”

Suzuki’s current push is twofold. At an organisational level, the David Suzuki Foundation, the charity he co-founded in 1991 with his wife, Tara Cullis, is focused on combating the idea that natural gas, and particularly liquified natural gas, is a clean fuel and part of the solution to the climate crisis. It is running a campaign under the banner “stop LNG from fuelling climate chaos”. It applies more broadly, but the foundation is particularly focused on fracking – the process of pumping chemically loaded water underground to break down shale and release gas.

Much like Australia, Canada is in the middle of an argument over the role of gas that often ignores the vast greenhouse gas emissions the industry releases. This discussion only occasionally reflects on the warning two years ago from the head of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol – that the world should not be opening new coal plants or oil and gas fields if it is serious about meeting the goals set in the 2015 Paris agreement.

Suzuki, as usual, is to the point. He describes fracking as “the dumbest way I can imagine to get energy. It’s crazy,” he says. “The amount of water that’s being basically removed from use, and the leakage of the methane in these wells is massive.

“We’ve done a calculation that says the carbon footprint of frack gas is worse than the carbon footprint of coal. And yet, it’s being peddled in Canada, as a transition fuel. You know, ‘it’s not as bad as oil and coal, and so we’ve got to go to LNG. But frack gas is not a transition fuel, and so we’ve got to oppose it.”

At a personal level, he continues to push for the Canadian government to declare a climate emergency and follow through on the logical ramifications of that. He is particularly focused on the Canadian environment and climate change minister, Steven Guilbeault, a former Greenpeace director.

“We’ve got the best environment minister we’ve ever had, he was arrested with Greenpeace, he’s been a campaigner for years, and he’s held hostage by politics,” he says.

“He’s got to resign and tell the world why, in the way that [UK international environment journalist] Zac Goldsmith in Britain now has resigned and said, ‘look our government isn’t serious about it’. This is what we need – the ministers to get up and say, ‘look, politics is killing us, we can’t do anything because we’re held hostage by politics’.”

Amid the gloom, Suzuki sees cause to keep fighting. He traces humanity’s plight back to the Renaissance, when he says we lost the idea that we are embedded as a strand of nature dependent on everything around us – plants, animals, air, water, soil and sunlight – and instead placed ourselves at the top of a pyramid with everything else beneath us. He says this idea has only strengthened since the Industrial Revolution, but can be reversed.

“We’ve always tried to justify what we’re doing by saying it’s not going to destroy the economy, so we’re all operating within this pyramid idea. That’s been the fundamental failure, I think, of environmentalists, including me – that we haven’t been able to get across the idea that the systems we’ve developed are themselves limited and responsible for the destruction,” he says. “We’ve got to break out of that, and stop elevating the economy, our politics, our legal systems, as if they come before anything else.”

It is easy for this to sound hopeless. Suzuki cites the scientific consensus that reverberations from what’s already been done will continue for centuries, if not longer, even if emissions stop immediately. He expects the future response will probably include a shift towards self-sufficient local communities, disconnected from the global economy and focused on survival.

But he isn’t interested in hopelessness, and stresses “we don’t know enough to say it’s too late”.

All action now makes a difference.

“I say despair is a luxury we can’t afford any longer,” he says when asked how he remains positive. “If you care at all about your children or grandchildren, then it seems to me you have no choice but to try. My hope is that trying shows that we believe there is a different possibility – that we can make a difference.

“But hope without action – if we say, ‘well, shit, there’s nothing I can do, but something will happen’ – that’s giving up. We can’t afford to do that.”

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