Four reasons why we need an ecosocialist future

November 6, 2024
Issue 
Ecosocialism supports workersā€™ campaigns for better wages and conditions because taking real action on the climate would also help deliver jobs in the housing, transport and energy sectors. Image: Isaac Nellist

The Rising Tide Ā ofĀ theĀ worldā€™sĀ largestĀ coalĀ port is set to be the largest mass protest against the climate emergency this year.

Last year was the hottest on record and it looks likely that this year will beĀ . The world is on track to warm more than 3Ā°C above pre-industrial levels, meaning mass environmental destruction, more intense weather events, food and water shortages. This will displace more than 1 billion people.

·”³¦“Ē²õ“Ē³¦¾±²¹±ō¾±²õ³ŁĢżĀ believes the problem is that we donā€™t control our own productive capacities, but that the problemĀ ā€œcan be very easily solved and very quicklyā€.

Socialist Alliance believes society needs to be radically restructured around the needs of people and ecology, not profits.

Here are reasons why we need ecosocialism.

1. Capitalism is an ecosystem-destroyer

The drive for ever-growing profits prevents any significant effort to address the climate crisis.

Despite the lower cost of renewable energy, public funds are still being pumped into destructive fossil fuel projects and, as a result, those corporations are making huge profits.

Governments, including Australiaā€™s, continue to provide significant subsidiesĀ ā€”Ā 7% of global gross domestic productĀ ā€”Ā to fossil fuel corporations.

At the same time, the capitalistsā€™Ā pursuit of profit drives the destruction of vital ecosystems and increases toxic waste and species extinction.

Some believe inĀ ā€œgreen capitalismā€, arguing that the rapid development of renewable energy systems and otherĀ ā€œgreenā€Ā technologies, such as electric cars, is the solution.

But leaving the urgently-needed transition to big business simply allows fossil fuel giants to squeeze as much profit from known reserves, even as they invest in renewables.

Any system based on the never-ending drive for profits is not a solution to the climate crisis.

2. Oppressive power relations are not sustainable

The ecological disaster is playing out along colonial lines. The richest countries are responsible for about 90% of all emissions that are driving the climate breakdown. Meanwhile, the Global South suffers 80ā€“90% of the economic costs and damages and 99% of deaths inflicted by climate breakdown.

The Global North owes an estimated $192 trillion in climate reparations to the Global South. The latter also need control of their own resources, labour and land, if they are to withstand the climate emergency.

However, to maintain their economic dominance, the United States and, to a lesser extent Australia, spend trillions on militarisation andĀ ā€œdefenceā€.

Australia is pumping at least $368 billion into the AUKUS nuclear submarine program, with universities encouraging subjects to help weapons and defence industries.

Making Australia a so-calledĀ ā€œā€Ā ā€”Ā Laborā€™s re-election promiseĀ ā€”Ā is all about helping private companies manipulate Australiaā€™s natural advantages to sell energy to Asia.

A big injection of public funding into ecologically sustainable public housing, public renewables andĀ Ā would be a better way to ensure a climate-safe future.

This would reduce emissions while providing urgently needed homes for the millions struggling with housing security.

Tackling the climate crisis means tackling inequality, including liberating people from oppressive social inequalities such as racism, misogyny and other forms of bigotry.

It means supporting First Nations-led campaigns for justice, sovereignty and land rights.

3. Workers have the power to change the system

As capital becomes concentrated in the hands of a few, they can appear too powerful to challenge.

But, as Karl Marx explained inĀ ,Ā ā€œCapital is not a thing, but a social relation between personsā€.

It is the power to force others to work for the profit of the owners of capital. Workers have the power, collectively, toĀ pull the plug on this power.

The workersā€™ movement is weak, as union densities have dropped to an all-time low.

The Australian Council of Trade Unions is also helping to smash the most militant unionĀ ā€”Ā the Construction Forestry Mining and Employees Union.

Ecosocialism supports workersā€™Ā campaigns for better wages and conditions because taking real action on the climate would also help deliver jobs in the housing, transport and energy sectors.

As Jess SpearĀ Ā the Ecosocialism 2024 conference:Ā ā€œWe are not just ecosocialists when we are campaigning about the environment and socialists the rest of the time. We are ecosocialists when we are trade unionists and housing activists.ā€

The Rising Tide blockade is an opportunity to build the networks and solidarity between environmental and workersā€™Ā movements that are needed to build this better world.

4. Liberation from wage slavery opens the road to a better world

Restructuring society around our needs, instead of profits, would mean radically shortening work hours and scrappingĀ ā€œbullshit jobsā€.

Vast technological change has not liberated workers, as was once hoped, but simply boosted profits.

Long after winning the eight-hour workday, many are working longer hours, often with two, three or more jobs.

Many of these jobs serve only to boost profits, and donā€™t benefit society in any meaningful way.

ScrappingĀ ā€œbullshit jobsā€Ā and reducing work hoursĀ ā€”Ā without reducing payĀ ā€”Ā would mean more social and leisure time for workers.

We need to free up the time, energy and creativity of the majority to build and run the new structures of people power needed to democratically restructure society around the needs of people and the planet.

Unless we build this new peopleā€™s power, the corporate profiteers will destroy our future.

[Find out more about theĀ . Isaac Nellist is a member of the Socialist Alliance National Executive.]

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