Quote
So I’m not saying turning your lights out is a bad thing. I’m saying one
needs to do a lot, lot more.
Unquote

http://www.greenlightdhaba.org/2010/03/earth-hour-guest-post-delhi-activist.html

<http://www.greenlightdhaba.org/2010/03/earth-hour-guest-post-delhi-activist.html>FRIDAY,
MARCH 26, 2010
Earth Hour Guest Post: Delhi activist Nagraj Adve explains why he won't be
turning out the lights this
year<http://www.greenlightdhaba.org/2010/03/earth-hour-guest-post-delhi-activist.html>
Earth Hour is upon us again. “Cities across the globe”, says an ad today in
the Hindustan Times, “will switch off lights between 8.30 pm and 9.30 pm.”
Millions across the world will doubtless join in. I won’t be among them.

Don’t get me wrong. Taken by itself, I’m not against symbolic acts such as
these. For one, they take issues like climate change,  sustainability, urban
consumption, energy saving, etc. to a whole lot of people, young and old,
some of whom may possibly not have engaged with these issues before.
Actually participating in such an event helps many people engage even more
deeply. Two, by being observed across the world, it hints at the worldwide
nature of some of these problems and the recognition that these issues are
being debated all over.

Having said that, events such as these may give many the feeling that they
are doing something to save the environment when actually the direness and
urgency of the crises suggest that a lot more need to be done. When someone
is having a heart attack, one does not take a Dispirin, we rush them to
hospital and intervene to the degree necessary. Well, the Earth is having a
heart attack. How has it been manifesting itself? In climate change.  In
ongoing loss of species, at a rate so staggering that Edward Leakey and
other folks refer to it as the 6th mass extinction of species in history
(the fifth was when the dinosaurs were wiped out). In the loss of
biodiversity. In peaking oil production, which is imminent. In declining
groundwater, deepening across India. In stagnating food production. In
polluted rivers. It has been having this multi-pronged heart attack for a
while; some very respected folks talked about some aspects of it 20 years
ago, some even earlier. And what are we doing 20 years later? Turning our
lights out for an hour.

The second thing that bothers me is that the Delhi government is actively
involved in this. It promoted it last year. This year, the CM Sheila Dixit
is inaugurating the main programme at India Gate. She heads the very
government that is emitting tonnes of CO2 by spending crores on useless
events like the Commonwealth Games, that has been cutting trees to widen
roads for cars, and to build parking lots. The Indian government’s policy
for two decades has been completely directed towards higher carbon emissions
via consumption by the rich.

Governments and elites tend to play up such symbolic events to hide the
systemic nature of issues like climate change. By systemic I mean the system
of industrial capitalism, which is at its core. Unless we take that head on,
collectively, there’s no way that we are going to be able to deal with
climate change or any of the other ecological crises it engenders.

So I’m not saying turning your lights out is a bad thing. I’m saying one
needs to do a lot, lot more. (And by that I mean us better-off; the poor are
anyhow consuming less and emitting less CO2 than is their right.) At an
individual or household level, doing more would mean identifying all the
daily things that consume a lot of energy, water, etc. Taking the bus where
possible instead of an auto or car, the train instead of flying. Speed is
bad. Cutting out or minimizing the use of gadgets that consume high levels
of electricity. It may make life more boring for a while but there are no
shortcuts to cutting consumption. The elites promote shortcuts and call it
energy efficiency; it does not work.

Doing more also means doing things collectively. Now, that is not easy in
this fragmented world we live in. But there’s little option, as that is
possibly the key way large social change happens. If we want the BRT bus
corridor to extend beyond Moolchand, if you don’t want trees cut in your
neighbourhood to make way for car parks, if we all want adequate water
harvesting and cycle lanes, we need to get together and make sure it
happens. And all these things are only a start if we want to intervene in
large issues like climate change. Switching off one’s lights is nice, but we
need to do a hell of a lot more. Urgently.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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