Jason Hickel Profile picture
Sep 5 11 tweets 4 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
We've all seen these charts. They go viral on social media every few months, with claims that "green growth is happening".

Is green growth really happening? We assess this question empirically in a new article out today in The Lancet Planetary Health: 🧵 thelancet.com/journals/lanpl…
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First, CO2-GDP decoupling is not news. We have known about it for a long time. It's been happening in some countries since the 1990s, even in trade-adjusted terms. It is the predictable and expected result of transitioning to lower-carbon energy sources.
But decoupling does not necessarily mean "green growth". Scientists have indicated that to qualify as "green", decoupling needs to deliver emissions reductions fast enough to meet the Paris Agreement objectives. It's all a question of speed.

So, we tested this.
We identified 11 high-income countries that achieved absolute decoupling of GDP from trade-adjusted emissions between 2013 and 2019. We assessed whether the decoupling is consistent with a 50% chance of 1.5C or "well below 2C", given an equitable allocation of the carbon budget.
We found that, at the achieved rates, these countries would on average take more than 220 years to reduce their emissions by 95%, emitting 27 times their remaining 1.5C fair-shares in the process.

There is nothing "green" about this. It is a recipe for disaster. Image
Indeed, narratives that celebrate decoupling achievements in high-income countries as "green growth" are misleading and represent a form of greenwashing. Much faster mitigation is needed. Image
To meet their 1.5C fair-shares alongside continued growth (i.e., to achieve "green growth"), decoupling rates would on average need to increase by a factor of ten by 2025. This is unlikely to be achievable given the unique physical constraints of a growth-oriented scenario. Image
Things are a bit easier with a target of 1.7C ("well below 2C"), but all 11 countries still fall far short of Paris-compliant emission reductions, and the necessary decoupling rates for "green growth" still seem out of reach. And remember, these are the best-performing countries. Image
So what can high-income countries do to achieve faster emission reductions? In the Discussion section, we show how post-growth mitigation policies can *accelerate* decoupling and decarbonization much faster than what can be achieved in a growth-oriented scenario.
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Btw, note that for lower-income countries it's a very different calculus! Image
The piece is free to read here. Also, a big congratulations to my brilliant co-author @JefimVogel. thelancet.com/journals/lanpl…

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More from @jasonhickel

Sep 4
I'm excited to share this new article, "The double objective of democratic ecosocialism", published today in Monthly Review.

"This is not a time for mild reformism, tweaking around the edges of a failing system. This is a time for revolutionary change." monthlyreview.org/2023/09/01/the…
We face a double crisis in the 21st c. It is an ecological crisis but also a social crisis: several billion people are deprived of access to basic goods and services. Deprivation is most extreme in the periphery — due to imperialist dynamics — but is also widespread in the core.
No political program that promises to resolve the ecological crisis can hope to succeed if it does not also simultaneously resolve the social crisis. Attempting to address one without the other will give rise to monsters. Indeed, monsters are already emerging.
Read 18 tweets
Aug 31
We have a new paper out, led by the brilliant Mengyu Li. This work makes it possible to model degrowth scenarios on an established IAM, for inclusion in the IPCC scenario database. This is a big step, but there's also much more to be done: 🧵 tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108…
The paper modifies the MESSAGEix IAM, and shows that post-growth and degrowth approaches are potentially quite powerful as climate mitigation pathways.

But our approach does not yet fully capture degrowth as defined in the literature. Several problems arise:
First, degrowth does not propose to reduce *all* production and consumption but rather energy/carbon-intensive and socially less-necessary forms of production and consumption. This cannot be captured by simply reducing the level of GDP. We need sectoral differentiation.
Read 8 tweets
Aug 24
Degrowth climate mitigation strategies (scaling down less-necessary forms of production, cutting the purchasing power of the rich, UPS and a JG) offer several major advantages that can mean the difference between succeeding on the Paris Agreement or failing. 🧵
First, and most obviously, reducing less-necessary production means you are directly reducing emissions *in addition to* any emission reductions achieved through efficiency improvements and renewable energy rollout.
Second, it also reduces total energy demand, which means you can decarbonize the energy system *more quickly* (because getting to 100% RE requires less extraction and production for RE infrastructure rollout, and btw also contributes fewer emissions in the process).
Read 10 tweets
Aug 22
Even Western media outlets acknowledge the government in Niger has strong popular support. France needs to close its military bases. The EU and US need to cease their threats. The people of Niger have the right to control their own currency and resources for national development.
France relies on Niger for 20% of the uranium that powers its national grid, while in Niger more than 80% of people do not have access to electricity. Niger has been purposefully underdeveloped to ensure a steady flow of cheap resources to France.
Western hand-wringing about "democracy" rings hollow given that France and other Western powers have intervened repeatedly over the past six decades to prevent real democracy and economic independence in West Africa. This on Francafrique from The Divide:
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Read 4 tweets
Aug 20
This week in 1953, US and British agents orchestrated a coup that overthrew Mohammed Mossadegh, the popular progressive leader of Iran, because he sought to restore national control over the country's oil reserves. Image
It was the original sin that permanently poisoned US-Iran relations. It was also one of the first in a long series of Western-backed coups against progressive and socialist leaders across the global South.
In fact, just a few weeks after crushing Mossadegh's government, British forces toppled the elected government of Guyana, deposed the popular Cheddi Jagan, and occupied the country for seven years. Image
Read 4 tweets
Aug 9
Bizarre that people continue to posit this false dichotomy. We can and must do both. Yes, embrace technological improvement. Also ban private jets, transition to rail networks where possible, and reduce less-necessary flights.
A 20% reduction is great, and we need more innovations like this. But it will also rather quickly be wiped out by the scale effect of projected growth in aviation - we have to take this seriously. https://t.co/TKfyrD1LlNclimateactiontracker.org/sectors/aviati…
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The same holds for the rest of the transport sector. As this recent paper in Nature makes clear: yes we need efficient EVs... but we also need to scale down the automobile industry at the same time. nature.com/articles/s4146…
Read 8 tweets

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