On the 21st October Harry Cockburn of the The Independent reported on a conversation with David Attenborough and Greta Thunberg at the virtual Wildscreen Film Festival. Attenborough has recently released A Life on Planet Earth.
Sir David was speaking alongside Ms Thunberg at Wildscreen, a virtual film festival on wildlife being held in Bristol. Speaking from his home in London, he praised the teenager and said her campaigning had made other young people demand action to halt the climate crisis. “If there is any sign of hope, and there is to be truthful compared to what there was 25 years ago, it’s because of what you’ve done and what you’ve done for young people,” he said. “Young people around the world are really, really going for it now because of you.The world owes you a lot and I hope you are not paying too high a price for it, and it looks from what you are saying that you are managing to survive alright.”
He said that his television work and Ms Thunberg’s campaigning had helped to shape public opinion and demand politicians take action. “We have to understand that if we are going to do something it is going to cost taxes and we are going to have to give up as well as take,” he said. “In the end it has to be a political decision to save the world. There has to be give and take between nations and the electorate. “If you’re faced with a crisis of the proportion of the epidemic they’re facing, it’s difficult to lift your eyes from immediate problems. But we have to do that, we really, really have to do that and I think the future of the world depends on it.”
Ms Thunberg, who was speaking from her home in Sweden, voiced her frustration at how her fame often meant people are talking about her instead of about the issues she has raised through her activism. Speaking about the climate crisis she said: “It just escalated so much, and it feels like instead of focusing on the actual fire, we were spending all our time debating about the fire alarm.”“It takes away focus from the climate process. “All we are trying to do is raise public awareness and create public opinion. It is after all public opinion which runs the free world and that is one of the biggest sources of hope right now. “If enough people become aware and if enough people put enough pressure on people in power and the elected officials then they will have to do something because the politicians job is to get elected and to do as the voters ask.”
Ms Thunberg also praised Sir David, saying when he speaks, everybody listens. “When I saw your new film, I was positively surprised how it connected all these issues, like the climate crisis, loss of biodiversity, loss of soil and over-fishing,” she said. “We fail today so much to connect these issues. These are all symptoms of one big sustainability and environmental crisis; we can’t just tackle one.”
This offers a chance for us to write to papers and local media as well as The Independent to state the benefits of Carbon Fee and Dividend. We can point out that this July Greta Thunberg (20/8/20) stated that two years had been wasted since her first climate strike. CCL believes that politicians have feared short term pain but needn’t, as there is a carbon pricing policy which would facilitate the move to zero emissions without losing votes or hurting the less well off. Climate Income (aka Carbon Fee and Dividend, CFD) is a policy championed internationally by various Citizens Climate Lobbies, with growing support among scientists, economists and think tanks. It has already been adopted in Canada and Switzerland and is well regarded by both parties in the US.
CFD proposes an escalating fee on all import or extraction of fossil fuels, thus incentivising greener technologies without the need for punitive tariffs. The proceeds are shared equally between all citizens as a quarterly dividend, helping to offset the interim rising cost of fossil fuels. Wealthier consumers are encouraged to green their choices, and investors are given a clear message about the direction of travel. CFD would speed up the current market led move to renewables and divestment. Our leaders cannot waste any more time in inaction. We cannot waste any time avoiding the realpolitik that is a bedrock for any coming change. Instead, we can count ourselves lucky that there is a solution that is both highly effective and politically possible.
There is further information about the benefits of CFD in the policy section of the website, and advice on writing to the media in the Action section. Good luck!