Brian Holmes on Fri, 26 Jun 2020 00:17:12 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> What is a global energy regime shift? |
Sebastian wrote: "the basic idea - the unavoidable EU-wide bail-out must be a bold green new deal - is a reformist proposal that will build bridges between Antifa and CEOs. The state of necessity implies it" I am glad to hear you say it out loud. Here in the US, postmodern fascism does not look strong, innovative and sexy, as a few idiots thought a few years ago. Instead it looks stupid, violent and incredibly dangerous. By neglecting the least consideration of fragile lives, the government's treatment of the pandemic demonstrates what the Anthropocene really means. Namely, a slow descent into hell on earth, where all the pleasure of life and sociability gradually turns into a sinister shadow that you can't even cling to, because then the shadow itself starts to shrink and dissolve. We are experiencing that in advance of the general global trend - though not by much I guess (ask the Brazilians for example). We have also had to look into the eyes of the helicopters, the humvees, and obviously, the racist cops. All of this results from the refusal to give up an extractive/industrial past built on the sinews of slavery. The collapse of the post-WWII order has struck fear into the silicon chip of global elites. A nightmare vision reveals their virus-laden circuits twisting in the heat of crude populist flames. But they are pros, so obviously they recognize that a global crisis can be, not just the occasion to suck fictitious capital from the central banks, but also, the chance to shape a turning point in eco-technics and geohistory. Look carefully at this report from Govt. Sachs to see the strategy: "Renewable power will become the largest area of spending in the energy industry in 2021, on our estimates, surpassing upstream oil & gas for the first time in history, driven by bifurcating cost of capital (up to 20% for long-term oil projects, down to 3-5% for renewables). Rising capital markets engagement in climate change is driving this seismic shift in capital allocation, charging an implied carbon price of US$40-80/ton for new hydrocarbon developments, on our estimates. Concerns around affordability and manufacturing cost competitiveness may, however, delay the development of carbon markets (today's average global carbon price is only US$3/ton), similar to the aftermath of previous recessions. We believe this would lead to a two-speed de-carbonisation process, with fiscal and monetary stimulus accelerating clean tech investments already at scale (e.g., renewables), while nascent sequestration technologies with carbon pricing as the main revenue line may struggle. Voluntary credit markets could fill in some of the policy gaps, particularly in nature-based solutions, but ultimately we believe carbon pricing is necessary to foster broad clean tech innovation and achieve cost-efficient net zero carbon." ( https://bit.ly/3i4oMvZ) So, the investors want, not only huge injections of cash into the energy sector ("fiscal and monetary stimulus"), but also government intervention into the markets. Yet they realize that the latter is anything but certain - after all, they fought it tooth and nail just one crisis ago. As Trump's political formula collapses, old Republican power players like George Schultz, whom Max Herman mentions, will come out in favor of the carbonomics formula. Deficit spending and carbon pricing are necessary but far from sufficient. All that would produce is a transformation of Big Oil into Big Energy. The question for radical and progressive movements is what we can get out of the coming remake of the entire public sector. Decades of organizing and of struggle, in the streets, in workplaces and institutions, in NGOs and in local governments are now on the line, not just in the US but around the world. What we want is not Big Energy. What we want is a change in everyday life that can only be got from a transformation of the state. The capitalist state will not just collapse, you cannot just walk away from it, and Black Lives Matter will not be a reality because of protests alone, no matter how massive or welcome they may be. Today Keith Ellison, who is the Minnesota prosecutor going after George Floyd's killers, filed suit against the American Petroleum Institute, Exxon Mobil Corp and Koch Industries for "a decades-long campaign to deceive the public about climate change." ( https://reut.rs/2YARVYh) This suit is aimed directly at the push to drive new pipelines through Minnesota, and thereby put more deadly Tar Sands carbon into the atmosphere, while despoiling Indigenous lands and sickening everyone in multiple dimensions. This is part of the struggle against racism, it's obvious. It's also part of the struggle for an egalitarian society that meets basic needs and expands life chances for everyone. The three entities being charged all have power at the global level. In addition to their own armed forces they have benefited enormously from their preeminent influence over the corrupt regulatory institutions and the racist police. A change can only occur when radical movements expose core issues, create new leadership and convince enough of the mainstream to take control. An election is a crucial step in that process, but only the first one. The left can dream about a revolution - or it can take this one. But the transformation of the cultural-political economy will need more sustained effort than fever dreams. Which is basically the alternative. onward, Brian # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: