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Another climate conference...
Another farce!

Stephen Rigney

Held on the Indonesian island of Bali, December's Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) conference was yet another huge failure in a long line of conferences addressing the issues of climate change and global warming. 

The conference, sponsored by the United Nations, was host to over 10,000 diplomats, scientists and lobbyists from 189 countries, yet was once again unable to offer any solutions or make any real decisions.

Typically, at a conference supposedly aimed at introducing cuts in carbon emissions, the two week long event was estimated to have been responsible for the release of nearly 100,000 tons of CO2 emissions, comparable with the annual emmissions of Chad.  The IPCC's own recommendation of cutting industrialised nations’ emissions by 25-40% by 2020 and international emissions by the same amount by 2050, was resolutely ignored as the United States threatened to withdraw from the conference if binding targets were established. The Bali statement remained incredibly vague as to what exactly the outcome of the conference was and what steps would actually be taken to challenge climate change, agreeing on “reduction objectives” and “quantified emission reduction” which are empty phrases without any concrete targets.

The Bali conference was another farce and a smokescreen to give the impression that capitalist governments are genuinely concerned about the environment.  The lack of any concrete targets being established clearly shows that what's at stake for them is not the environment, but economics and specifically, the effects that carbon emission reduction would have on the profits of industry at home. 

The necessary research and development for creating low-emission industry and production techniques would cost billions, which capitalism is not willing to pay if it will damage its short-term profits.  While some of the more far-sighted European governments and a number of European businesses have attempted to “lead” the way in demanding binding targets, this has been entirely done to support their own interests in enlarging the $60bn European Trading Scheme. 

The ETS is the largest carbon trading market in the world and has become a highly lucrative business since the introduction of carbon trading schemes under the Kyoto Protocol, which allow less industrialised nations to sell their “excess” carbon credits to the more advanced nations, allowing them to avoid cutting emissions by buying more credits. The vultures of Shell Oil, British Airways and the European banks, amongst others, were present at the Bali conference for this reason alone.

While the spectre of depleting oil resources has forced the multinational energy companies into developing renewable forms of energy, the struggle has been to develop patents over this technology to corner a share of the market, rather than to offer an alternative to fossil fuels.

The  production of bio-fuel crops, mainly in the developing world, has been heralded as big business' committment to the environment, yet has had the gross effect of increasing food and milk prices for some of the world's poorest people, as production switches from food production to bio-fuel. 

The anarchic structure of capitalism and its drive for profits inherently creates these contradictions and offers no solutions to them.  To really address the crisis that faces the planet, it isn’t enough to merely tamper with the current system. We need a co-ordinated socialist plan to deal not just with climate change, but also with the whole of industry, removing unnecessary wastage and investing in renewable technology for the benefit of ordinary working people and not for the interests of profit.


Fingal
Free recycling? Not anymore!

Cllr. Clare Daly

Fingal waste collection is in crisis! No sooner was the ink dry on the Council’s controversial decision to introduce a standard €110 per household recycling tax, along with the existing €8 per tag, than private operators Greenstar announced their decision to enter the fray and undercut them!

It gives the Socialist Party no pleasure to state that all of the warnings outlined by the Fingal Anti-Bin Tax Campaign, when the charge was introduced, have been absolutely vindicated.

Council officials and pro-bin tax councillors waged war against us at that time saying that failing to bring in the bin tax would undermine the bin service, paving the way for privatisation and the loss of Council jobs. They even went so far as to organise meetings of bin workers to tell them we were threatening their jobs. The reality that we pointed out then, was that introducing a charge was the first step towards privatisation by transforming a public service into a commodity to be profited from. This was the experience of every other Council and now it is happening across Dublin, with Fingal being the latest area to be hit.

With private operators taking the more lucrative routes, while the Council is left servicing householders who are in receipt of waivers, or the more isolated lower density areas, the whole viability of the Council service will be undermined. This is turn will force the Council out and give the private operator free rein to do what they like. It is a disaster created by all of the main political parties who supported the introduction of the bin tax.

This was never about the environment. Remember their propaganda - “You only pay for what you throw away!” and “Remember Your Green Bin Is Free!” Not so – every house will now be levied €110 for “environmental services”. Failure to pay this annual charge will result in the Council refusing to collect all of your bins.

We have paid for essential Council services through our central taxation, but the government has failed to hand that money over to the local authorities. Charges such as bin tax are ways of making up the shortfall, by having us pay double.

Meanwhile, as more waste is recycled, more is produced, as nothing is done to tackle waste at source. The whole situation is a debacle for the environment, for Council services, and for Council jobs and conditions. The only solution is the withdrawal of the bin tax and adequate government funding.

Socialist Party reps will be convening meetings on the issue in all areas when the bills are sent out.


Tolka Valley
Re-route the pipe, save the valley

Cllr. Ruth Coppinger

The Socialist Party has assisted the greater Blanchardstown community in demanding a rerouting of a major sewage pipe proposal which would ruin the Tolka Valley Park, a natural park along the river. In November a successful public meeting coordinated an effective community response to the Council’s public consultation on the project.

Speakers from the Dublin 15 Environment Group and the Tolka River Environmental Alliance (TREA) joined Cllr Ruth Coppinger in outlining the importance of the Tolka Valley to the local community.

A notable feature was the attendance of young teenagers who had  gathered petitions in their schools and delivered leaflets in their estates. These young people are among over 350 youth who fish the river and are involved in environmental projects with the TREA. The potential for disillusionment and more anti-social activities if the river and park are damaged was pointed out.

Blanchardstown youth workers, Tolka anglers, the Blanchardstown Tidy Towns Group and Mulhuddart residents most affected, endorsed the call for a routing of the 2-metre pipe away from the river at key stretches. Rare wildlife in the Park includes orchids and woodlands, as well as protected bats and kingfishers.

A clear alternative route along roadway exists, but Fingal County Council has to be pressured to listen to the community. There is a scandalous lack of open space in Blanchardstown and this is the only opened park, developed with taxpayers’ money and great voluntary effort only in the last three years.

The campaign now has to be taken directly to the elected representatives, who have thus far ignored this important issue. National publicity and protests will have to be considered, taking the issue right into the local elections next year if necessary.