
On June 24, Lord Mayor Clover Moore called on the City of Sydney council to declare a climate emergency. The motion passed unanimously, and Sydney joined a snowballing list of councils globally that have made similar declarations.
But as the dust of the federal election settles and a sleepy giant begins to stir in the Galilee Basin, what will be the significance of Sydney council鈥檚 words?
The language surrounding climate has changed over the last year or so.聽鈥淓mergency鈥, 鈥渃risis鈥 and 鈥渂reakdown鈥 are now being used by activists, politicians and even the media. While it might seem like the 鈥渆mergency鈥 has came out of nowhere, groups and individuals have been campaigning for governments to mobilise resources in response to climate change for years.
In the late 2000s, a grassroots network of journalists, academics, psychologists and activists began discussing climate change in emergency terms. They developed models of what an emergency response would look like, based on the work of organisations like the聽听补苍诲听.
The term 鈥渃limate emergency鈥 was popularised in the 2008 book聽Climate Code Red: The Case for Emergency Action, in which authors David Spratt and Philip Sutton argued for the need to devote as much of the world鈥檚 economic capacity as possible to avert a climatic and ecological catastrophe.
Strong language was used to communicate the scale and pace of the system change they felt was needed. But it was ignored by mainstream environmental organisations and most politicians.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been fighting a discourse battle, which is about changing the language from soft targets and weak incremental goals to 鈥榯his is really serious and we need massive change and we need it now鈥,鈥 said Adrian Whitehead, one of the early campaigners.
The groups went various ways, some founding the Save the Planet party, others focused on raising awareness. After years of lobbying federal and state governments, which seemed utterly incapable of acknowledging the gravity of climate change, the activists changed tack: if higher levels of government wouldn鈥檛 share their appreciation of the urgency, maybe councils would.
In 2016, as the Great Barrier Reef stewed and average global temperatures soared, they ran a campaign targeting the Darebin City Council in northern Melbourne.
Whitehead and Bryony Edwards stood for council, spreading the emergency message via presentations and leafleting. Other climate groups lobbied candidates to support a climate emergency declaration.聽
While neither Whitehead nor Edwards were elected, they continued to push the newly-elected councillors to declare an emergency. Then, at the Darebin council鈥檚 first meeting on December 5, 2016, history was made. Since then, more than 600 jurisdictions across 13 countries have done the same.
聽Commitment to action needed
What is a climate emergency declaration and why is it important? It is a public declaration of the climate emergency, signalling a recognition that current approaches to climate change mitigation are inadequate and that unprecedented steps need to be taken at all levels of government.
Ideally, it is accompanied by a strong commitment to action. Most climate emergency groups support a target of聽.
In 鈥渆mergency鈥 mode, a council is able to direct discretionary funds towards implementing policies that address the emergency, including building bike paths and providing solar panels for low-income households.
There are valid concerns that hastily granting states emergency powers will聽听补苍诲听. However, you could also argue that 30 years of inaction has exacerbated social and environmental injustice, especially for those in poor countries.
Climate change聽is聽鈥渢he great moral challenge of our generation鈥 and, as noted by the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 鈥渢here is no documented historical precedent鈥 for the action required to effectively address it.
Calling it what it is 鈥 an emergency 鈥 is a strong step forward.
How do you get your council to make a declaration?聽In the case of Sydney鈥檚 Inner West Council, just ask. Reid Pierce, a founding member of Extinction Rebellion鈥檚 Sydney chapter, was preparing for a long campaign but, after asking a Green councillor and a lot of 鈥渂ehind the scenes calling, emailing and pushing councillors to do the right thing鈥, the motion passed unanimously in early May. Reid has also been invited to work with the CEO on council鈥檚 implementation of an emergency response.
Reid then jumped into the City of Sydney campaign with councillors who were 鈥渕uch more hands-on in making sure their declaration is different from all others鈥.
Moore explicitly called on the Morrison coalition government to re-establish a carbon price and establish a 鈥淛ust Transition Authority鈥 to assist those employed in the fossil fuel industries to find alternative employment.
Why now?
For some, the 10-year timeframes for achieving zero emissions may seem ludicrously ambitious. But when reports of聽聽come on the heels of reports of the聽, it is worth considering how we got to this point聽without聽the groundswell of dissent we see today.
For decades, climate advocacy organisations said hope was more motivational than fear and that聽.聽This caution, along with scientific and journalistic reticence and聽,聽obscured the urgency.
Until recently.
In 2017, the messaging debate came to a head when聽聽in which he explored the near-term, worst-case climate change scenarios, which were alarming.
In 2018, an emboldened IPCC聽聽outlining just how much more dangerous a 2掳Celsius rise above pre-industrial levels (the long-term limit of the Paris Agreement) would be as opposed to 1.5掳Celsius. The IPCC warned we only had 12 years to limit catastrophic warming; the scientists had unmuzzled themselves.
Winds of climate change
聽(TCM), a separate initiative in the United States, partly influenced by Climate Code Red and proposals developed in Australia, which was launched in 2014 called for a society-wide mobilisation of resources at a WWII-scale to decarbonise the economy within a 10-year time frame.
While it succeeded in getting a climate mobilisation resolution into the Democratic Party鈥檚 platform聽聽in 2016, President Donald Trump immediately proceeded to聽聽(reminiscent of Tony Abbott鈥檚 rollbacks following his election).
Climate emergency advocates in Australia, particularly Philip Sutton, brought their US counterparts up to speed with their piecemeal local-government strategy. After seeing the success in Darebin, TCM adopted the same approach and, soon, councils across the US were doing the same.
More recently, TCM encouraged the Democratic Party鈥檚 Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to introduce a climate emergency declaration to Congress, and she went on to champion the聽.
Then, last year, the language and tactics of the climate movement exploded into the public sphere. In August 2018, Greta Thunberg gave school a miss and sat on the steps of the Swedish Parliament with a hand-painted sign which read 鈥淪kolstrejk f枚r klimatet鈥 (school strike for the climate).
The following October, Extinction Rebellion rallied for the first time in Parliament Square in London, announcing a 鈥淒eclaration of Rebellion鈥 against the British government.
Thunberg鈥檚 protest galvanised a generation that had grown up with a future buried in uncertainty. Likewise, Extinction Rebellion鈥檚 simple and direct demands resonated with people all over the world: the movement grew rapidly.
The ensuing mass school strikes and acts of colourful civil disobedience drew international attention to the climate emergency and the world started discussing climate change.
In Britain, more than 100 councils, representing roughly 50% of the population, have now made climate emergency declarations.
Following the original success in Darebin, Whitehead and Edwards established聽,聽an online resource for campaigners and councils alike. They travelled to Europe and Britain to witness the burgeoning movement, and to meet councillors, environmental organisations, think tanks, Extinction Rebellion and school strike networks to reiterate that the original spirit of a climate emergency declaration was about mobilisation and emergency action.
Today as we stand against the edge of a cliff, behind us a fire of our own making and in front of us the hopeful unknown, there are encouraging signs.
In the past few months parliaments, including Britain, Scotland, Wales, Ireland and Canada, have declared a climate emergency.聽聽did so last week. Climate change is set to be a聽.
What does this mean for Australia which has just re-elected a government that is incapable of enacting effective climate policies?
It means there鈥檚 a lot of work to do.
Australia is a wealthy country, endowed with abundant renewable resources and, according to聽聽there is overwhelming popular support for the government to make the rapid energy transition.
We don鈥檛 have time for complacency or despair.
[To start a climate emergency campaign in your council, detailed guides can be found at聽.]