Are we all a little guilty of denying climate change?

Monday, April 22, 2019

It鈥檚 easy to spot traditional climate change denial. Just read the comments on social media or comments from public officials. Deniers say it鈥檚 a hoax, a cash grab or a natural process. They鈥檙e wrong.

Most data suggests that all but a handful of Canadians accept that human behaviour impacts the climate. But that doesn鈥檛 mean we鈥檙e past climate denial. According to University of 蓝莓视频 environmental humanities professor Andrew McMurry, we鈥檙e eager to accept that something bad is happening, but are in denial about what鈥檚 actually threatening us and that we need difficult transformative action to beat climate catastrophe.

鈥淥ur failure to act could be a rhetorical problem,鈥 argues the author of . McMurry, who has a background in biology and a long-held interest in conservation, examines how language, narrative and cultural tradition shape our beliefs and understanding about the environment.

And it鈥檚 never been more crucial. Nearly everything we do 鈥 the food we eat, the goods and services we rely on 鈥 produces greenhouse gases. Trying to fix this problem requires a top-down reordering of how we live, especially how we produce and consume energy.

So why aren鈥檛 we doing it?

We鈥檙e not scared enough - yet

鈥淭here鈥檚 a level of contradiction that yes, we know we need to do something, but we鈥檙e not actually doing anything. Because maybe we feel that it鈥檚 not really that scary,鈥 says McMurry.

It is scary.

Andrew McMurry
A recent report revealed that Canada is warming at twice the global rate. And while some believe a warmer climate could benefit us here in Canada, McMurry notes the impacts of climate change will be felt by the wicked, unpredictable ecological and social problems it will cause. These are big social problems that need collective solutions.

鈥淧eople imagine an incrementalism where it gets a little warmer and a little warmer, and instead of growing hard wheat up in Alberta, we can grow corn and maybe rice someday,鈥 says McMurry. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 work like that. You need predictability, you need water, you need all kinds of things to be in the right balance. That way of thinking ignores the unpredictability of climate change. It鈥檚 really climate chaos and none of it is working in our interests.鈥

鈥淐limate will increasingly play a role in every problem we face,鈥 says McMurry. For instance, there will be mass migrations of people as their countries become unlivable, thanks to unbearable temperatures, poorer growing conditions or rising sea levels. The world is already struggling to cope with immigration, and reactionary movements like populism pit groups against each other for political agendas.

鈥淵et it鈥檚 very hard to persuade folks of the need to act decisively and massively when not only their pay cheques but their whole way of life, all their hopes and dreams, depend on them not being persuaded,鈥 says McMurry. "Effective action to slow or mitigate climate change demands a reconfiguration of every aspect of our collective existence, from economy to politics to everyday life."

The false promise of human innovation

鈥淲e believe in the existence of climate change, but at the end of the day, we prefer to believe it鈥檚 not actually going to affect us adversely. We've developed a near-hardwired faith that something will come along to save the day at the 11th hour,鈥 says McMurry. 鈥淪o many of our cultural narratives take that same approach: in the end something will save us; there is some sort of game-changer out there that we don鈥檛 know about; or, no matter, we鈥檒l adapt somehow. Even the bleakest novels and films relentlessly depict humans overcoming obstacles and almost without exception end with a promise of renewed hope.鈥

It鈥檚 not just fiction 鈥 our history can be viewed through the same lens. Peace follows war, the ozone layer is repairing itself, and humans programmed their way out of the Y2K problem. While some argue that having hope is a good thing, optimism may be working against us.

鈥淎nd it鈥檚 doubly hard to persuade folks out of denialism when they have, throughout their entire lives, in a million different ways, been persuaded to believe in fantasies like the inevitability of human progress and our endless capacity to solve unsolvable problems, says McMurry. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really powerful non-motivator.鈥

Embracing the doom and gloom

If our unfailing optimism is part of the problem, then perhaps a dose of pessimism might be the antidote.

鈥淢ore than hope, perhaps what we need now is a powerful and bracing fear,鈥 says McMurry. 鈥淥ne productive possibility of a pessimistic worldview is that when you reach the end of the na茂ve hope and deceptive expectations that knee-jerk optimism provides, you start to come to grips with reality.鈥

Though McMurry considers collectively implemented solutions as crucial for real action on climate change, he also acknowledges value in grappling with it as individuals.

鈥淚 think perhaps pessimism, far from leading to despair and cynicism and a 鈥榳hatever鈥 attitude, can actually lead to bold action. Now, what you do is done because it鈥檚 the right thing to do. It aligns with your best vision of yourself. Uncertainty in the results of your efforts doesn鈥檛 mean you should stop trying.鈥


Originally published as a 蓝莓视频 Story