Let’s start with a disclaimer. The views expressed in what follows are mine and don’t represent anyone’s position.
The attendance at the Campaign Against Climate Change (CACC) conference at the weekend was significantly down on last year – by 30-40% depending on whose estimate you listen to. This is more than a blip. The largest climate march was in Britain was in 2006 and they have been smaller in subsequent years – almost in inverse proportion to the amount of serious media coverage of the issue. A paradox is that the CACC trade union conference earlier this year nearly matched this weekend’s event for numbers. A difference is that most of the people at that event were there because they had been motivated by their union or another organisation while last weekend’s conference had more the feel of a collection of individuals.
There is a clause in CACC’s mission statement which says; “The CCC aims to bring together as many people as possible who support our broad aims of pushing for urgent action on climate and reducing global emissions. The CCC does not therefore campaign on the important but more detailed questions of how best to achieve these emission reductions and recognises that supporters will have different and deeply held views on these issues.” A desire to avoid very detailed discussions on which energy source is superior to another is understandable but in practice what happens is that by avoiding any detailed discussion of specific proposals, steps and demands that the campaign can make it is led into an impasse.
Australians have more reason than many to be worried about the impact of climate change. They are after all conducting a mining operation on the continent’s water supply. However the Walk Against Warming in November 2007 had 115 000 participants. That’s the equivalent of well over 500 000 in Britain. The Climate Movement of Australia was demanding tangible measures, in particular radically higher renewable energy targets and better public transport.
Contrast this to clause 3 in CACC’s mission statement which says; “the CCC seeks a global solution to a global problem and aims to push for an international emissions reductions treaty that is both effective in preventing the catastrophic destabilisation of global climate and equitable in the means of so doing…The CCC aims to campaign against those with the greatest responsibility for preventing or delaying the progress we urgently need towards an international climate treaty.”
Two consequences flow from this approach. The first is an utterly laudable desire to draw attention to the American way of life as a contributor to global warming often deflects the campaign from placing demands on the British government. The second is that the slogan “What do we want? An international emissions reductions treaty! When do we want it? Now!” lacks the pulling power of demands around cheap, clean reliable public transport or taking the railways back into public ownership. Admittedly climate change demonstrations in Australia don’t involve walking in freezing December downpours through London but it does seem apparent that focusing the demonstrations on achievable demands and situating the movement in its international context has resulted in the Australian movement growing bigger, faster and more consistently than the British campaign.
Reflecting on the conference it seemed to me that it lacked an opportunity for participants to think through the implications of the different approaches. Jonathan Neale commented that everyone who was there had a basic grasp of the science (very basic in my case) and knows just how serious and urgent the threat is. So in some respects there was not so much need for a series of plenary speakers to throw light on that but a real necessity to allow a chance for a strategic reassessment of how the movement can broaden and in particular what groups of people it needs to start reaching out to. The trade union conference showed that there is real potential to build the movement strongly in the unions and with the social and political weight that they can provide help it become the real mass movement that the situation demands.





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