Transition Reflections from Copenhagen: Naresh Giangrande blogs from COP15

December 11, 2009

NOTE: Images in this archived article have been removed.


Image Removed

The road from here. Copenhagen 10.12.09

Klimaforum the people’s conference has started slowly. Maybe a 1000-2000 of us in many different locations feeling our way into perhaps the defining moment of our life and times which this conference represents and reflect the hopes an fears of our generation in a way that no other I have even been to does. There is a tension and an intensity that I have never felt before. Even though the first day felt a bit like a party conference, people wandering in and out of speeches that went on too long.

The mood is subdued and quiet, and focussed on the positive and the possibilities of going forward from here. I am sure many know this is the alternative conference. This conference sits alongside the main COP15 conference at the Bella centre about 4 km away from where we the people are meeting. My impression so far is that not many here expect that the UN conference will bring about any treaty at all or one that will get anywhere near to making the world safe from climate change.

We had dinner with Miguel (I dare not give his full name as his speech was filled with story after story of environmental leaders disappearing or being tortured) from Mexico City who is an anti car and de-growth activist. He wondered if we should be relying on scientists at all to tell us that we have to change our way of life, why can we not rely on our common sense? Why can’t we rely on our own senses to see that the world has to change drastically?

I agree with his sentiment; however there are several problems with this. The overwhelming scientific view is that we have to change our way of life and fast. This lends weight to what many greens have been saying for years, and makes the case for change in our systems of life from desirable to imperative . This is what the science is saying. Without that science we would not be at the point where the sorts of changes to our way of living that the Transition Town movement is advocating would be being taken seriously. We know we are at the brink and one way or another this crisis will be resolved in the next decade or less.

Common sense, the sort of common sense that sees a global system that is creating greater and greater inequality, sees that this is unsustainable. The common sense that looks at a whole range of non renewable resources and does the maths to see that no amount of efficiency or substitutability will render the current system sustainable. The same goes for species and habitat loss. We know it can’t continue and each conundrum on its own is a common sense case for change. But without the scientific back up no change will be forthcoming, al least not in the direction we hope for or in the time scale that might make a sustainable world possible.

So we are dependent on the science to get the powerful in our world to create the changes necessary to ensure life on earth continues, otherwise they won’t be listening and will be carrying creating more and more growth and more and more destruction. That’s the argument for listening to the science and that is the position we find ourselves. Armed as George Monbiot says with peer reviewed science we fight for a sustainable world.

But the sense of this conference so far is that even with the science the rich and powerful are not listening. A good example was told to us by our hosts Jette and Bjarne . The Danes have had a neo liberal government for the last 6 years, and despite the appearance of a very environmentally aware people from the outside not a single wind turbine has been installed in the last 6 years. They have undermined the green agenda until in the last 2 years when the possibility of green jobs and export industries have got their attention and now they embrace the green agenda again (I suspect as a result of realising about peak oil but I can’t say for sure). In other words only the possibility of another form of business growth, made them engage with green technology. But they by having growth as an imperative, is cannot be sustainable.

This leads to an uncomfortable conclusion, and one which Bill McKibben of 350.org came to, that there will be no treaty to protect us against climate change. It is just too politically unrealistic. That means that if we are to create a resilient world it will be down to us, civil society to create it. It will be down to non governmental organisations, campaigners, and activists, permaculturalists and organic gardeners.

I have had the first day getting used to this idea and letting it settle. It is an uncomfortable place, full of despair and loss and hope and fear and anger and positive we can do it all bundled together. I feel a bit like a child who’s parents won’t protect him; bewildered, lost and alone. And still there is hope in me and this conference that i may be wrong and the Cavalry will arrive at the last minute and a good agreement will be reached.

So where do we go from here? Even though I feel pained right now, I can’t give up hope on the larger political process, or in science. The Transition town movement feels an even more critical piece in the creation of a sustainable world. Another group in Sri Lanka is using a similar protocol to the Transition movement; the Sarvodaya movement. They started in one village and have grown to over 15,000, yes thousand. One of the most interesting pieces that have emerged from their process is the new economic zone that has been created of all these villages trading with one another. It is something that I have been wondering about Transition, and it’s happening! At least we are not alone. I have seen very few other social change organisations able to articulate a positive way forward and then able to carry it out here at Klimaforum yet. The economists, who I have heard are starting to get a feel for what a post growth, resilient economy might be like; but not yet how we might get there. We had our first Transition workshop here at Klimaforum. Sophy Banks spoke to a packed audience of 450 and put the Transition model in front of them. She was on a platform with Tim Jackson who’s latest book ‘ Prosperity without growth’ has caused a stir.

Many people here have said to me, “Go on doing what you are doing. Keep doing Transition.” As difficult as it may seem if we are going to create a sustainable world we will have to do it garden by garden and solar panel by solar panel. In making a resilient world at each step we withdraw a little from the globalised industrial growth system. As we become more self reliant and resilient in our own lives and in our communities we become less dependent on the globalised system and our beliefs shift as well. We realise that our globalised systems wants us to be dependent for everything that we depend on for life. Sophy and I often talk on our Training of two conveyor belts. The one is the belt we are all on the globalised system. And when you start Transition then you put your foot, maybe slowly at first on another conveyor belt going in the opposite direction. Or maybe you hop onto this Transition conveyor belt and then hop back onto the globalised one; you can’t stay too long with a foot on both! But gradually we spend more and more time on the Transition conveyor. As we decrease our dependency on the globalised system then life takes a new form, a flavour of peace.

Peace takes many forms but it is built with those actions that are in alignment with how the earth world works for all of life. These life principles that govern all the rest of life of earth are the closed loop systems that Permaculture makes clear and which our grandfathers and grandmothers knew and took for granted.

I wish I am able to paint a picture of hope and optimism in this first report from Copenhagen and that by coming here I would find hope and become more optimistic, but I have been disappointed so far. My hope, my optimism springs from my home, Totnes and all the other Transition initiatives. It springs from the desire and that is apparent here at the people’s conference to create a sustainable world. I feel no hope yet from COP 15. The road from here takes me home.

Naresh Giangrande

Naresh Giangrande

Naresh is co-founder of Transition Town Totnes, the first Transition Town, and of Transition Training, Naresh has been involved in designing, running and evolving many of the events, groups, and trainings that have been at the heart of the enormously successful Transition project. He has delivered the hundreds of Transition Trainings to thousands of participants in twenty countries worldwide.


Tags: Building Community, Culture & Behavior, Media & Communications, Politics