• stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net
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    3 months ago

    BP oil company pushed the idea that our individual carbon footprints matter so that everyone can share the blame of what the fossil fuel industry has done.

    The article discusses this, yes - along with how the carbon footprint is a good metric for individual consumption even if corporate propaganda abuses it.

    The most significant difference individuals can make is to create political and legal pressure by voting and protesting.

    I agree with you that political action is vital. I don’t agree that it’s necessarily more significant than personal action. Feminists used to say “the personal is political”, and it’s still true. How you act in private demonstrates your commitment to the values you endorse in public and gives your voice more weight when you speak your values.

    If you reduce your personal footprint, but never talk about it or encourage other people to do the same, your impact is limited to yourself. If you reduce your personal footprint, and make your actions contagious by talking about them with people you know and encouraging them to do the same, you can impact many more people, encourage them to follow your lead and reduce their footprint, and then they can encourage others to reduce their footprint, and so on and so forth.

    Limiting the damage from climate change takes collective action. And collective action requires a community, and a community requires communication.

    If you assume you are a lone individual and your personal decisions have no effect on anyone else, it’s easy to imagine reducing your personal footprint is meaningless. If you see yourself as part of a community, and by reducing your personal footprint you encourage others in your community to do the same, you can see how much larger your impact can be.

    • John Socks@socks.masto.host
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      3 months ago

      @stabby_cicada @UsernameHere I’m afraid I take the darkest view. That is that BP etc gave the public the full option to care about their carbon footprint, and the public decided not to.

      At that point why should BP or politicians force it upon them?

      Who exactly would be the “we” in that process who knows better? If it is some informed and passionate minority, that is not actually democracy.

      It is a collective action failure.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        3 months ago

        Think of it like this - companies are contaminating everything with lead, because it’s slightly cheaper for them

        People get concerned for good reason

        So some companies pay to make lead free products and sell them at a premium. They put it all over the packaging

        Other companies see this, and start putting it on their packaging, despite still having an unsafe lead content

        All of them do media campaigns and lobby the government, further confusing the issue

        People need to buy food, and are working with limited information. They don’t have the time to educate themselves over every purchase - you’d need experts dedicated to testing and compiling the data

        So, for the good of everyone (the companies included) we made that. You can go to the grocery store and buy food, confident it doesn’t contain large amounts of lead.

        People definitely care, but systematic problems can only be solved systematically

        • John Socks@socks.masto.host
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          3 months ago

          @theneverfox I just commuted across Los Angeles. I saw every sort of car, but far more gas guzzlers than hybrids or EVs. These are free choices, by people who might say “they care” or “someone should do something.”

          The person who buys a Mercedes Maybach SUV, 16 MPG, certainly has other options.

          They would probably tell you they care.

    • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      The fossil fuel industry has spent a lot of money making us dependent on them. They have been so successful that the majority of us would not be able to survive without their products whether it be to get to work, power our cities, heat our buildings, etc.

      So what’s a realistic approach to the problem:

      Getting billions of individuals to change across the planet? Which requires most of them and their families to die?

      Or

      Changing a few dozen companies?

      • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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        3 months ago

        So what’s a realistic approach to the problem:

        Getting billions of individuals to change across the planet? Which requires most of them and their families to die?

        AND

        Changing a few dozen companies.

        Changes like this don’t happen in an empty space. If you have an Eco aware consumer base it help a lot.

      • stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net
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        3 months ago

        How do you expect to change those few dozen companies?

        Especially if the majority of us really wouldn’t be able to survive without them?

        • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          By voting and protesting to get a revenue neutral carbon tax passed. Passing legislation to end our dependence on fossil fuels. Creating the political will to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for the damage they’ve done. Taking their profits and use it to fund the work needed transition everyone away from fossil fuels not just those that can afford it.

      • stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net
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        3 months ago

        Again, carbon footprint is not a BP talking point. It was a pre-existing concept that was appropriated by BP to prevent climate change legislation by shifting responsibility for climate change to individual consumers.

        And then, some years later, once corporations had more solid control of legislatures and were no longer afraid of legislation, they started using the carbon footprint idea in reverse as propaganda - they claimed individual responsibility was a myth, only legal action against corporations will help with climate change, so eat whatever you want and buy all the gas you want and buy all the corporate products you want, and don’t feel guilty about it, because it doesn’t matter.

        In reality, both individuals and corporations bear responsibility for climate change, and both of the above arguments are corporate propaganda aimed at getting you to give up, do nothing, and buy shit.

        • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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          3 months ago

          Saudi Aramco accounted for more than 4 percent of global emissions, Gazprom clocked over 3 percent and Coal India accounted for roughly 3 percent.

          Total global emissions in 2020, including land-use change, were approximately 40 Gt. This means that Australian emissions are approximately 1.2% of global emissions

          There are 26 million people in Australia. That 1.2% is obviously all Australian emissions, but let’s exaggerate and say that’s purely from individuals. That the footprint of all Australian citizens combined was 1.2% of global emissions.

          If literally all Australians then brought their personal carbon footprint to 0, it would be a reduction of less than 1/3rd of Saudi Aramco’s emissions alone.

          From 2016 to 2022, 80 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions were produced by just 57 companies.

          But I’m supposed to believe that I, with my ~ 1/26 million of a percent footprint, have an affect. You’ll have to try a lot harder to convince me of that.

            • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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              3 months ago

              I think you misread. I don’t account for 1 in 26 million of emissions. I count for 1% divided by 26 million of emissions. 1 26 millionth of a percent.

              This would be like if there was some kind of global election, and ALL Australian votes added together were worth 1.2% of the total vote.

              That means my personal vote/emissions in this scenario would be 0.000000046%

              And then there were 57 corporations whose interests were largely aligned that accounted for 80% that also got to vote.

              Imagine a school/college/workplace had votes that everyone could participate in to make changes to it. But altogether, the student/employee votes could account for at most 20% of the vote, and teacher/management accounted for 80% of the vote.

              Would you believe your vote has an affect in such an election?

              (and this isn’t even continuing the analogy to the point that there are like 200 classes/departments and yours accounts for like 1-4% assuming you’re in one of the larger ones, and there are 26 million or more people in your department, meanwhile there are 57 teachers/managers that mostly agree with each other in protecting what they want/their interests)

              • nofob@lemmy.today
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                3 months ago

                Why do you think BP produces emissions? They may be evil, but it’s not out of malice, it’s for profit. People, like the 26 million residents of Australia, pay BP to give them more fossil fuels.

                A top-down response, where governments just outlaw all extraction and burning of fossil fuels, would be a lovely, quick solution to the climate crisis. By all means, try and make that happen, but I wouldn’t hold my breath.

                One thing you can do today to make an impact is to adjust your lifestyle to give less money to the fossil fuel industry. An individual carbon footprint is small compared with a company, just like the money they give to BP is relatively small, when compared with their total profits. But when you add up all the customers, their money adds up to the revenue of the industry, and their carbon footprints add up to the footprints of the relevant companies.

                • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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                  3 months ago

                  My mum never owned a car, we walked, biked, bus’d or train’d every day of my life. Because I was used to it and don’t have a lot of money, I don’t own a car either. I don’t know what exactly you want me to do to give them less money, but what I do know is me walking everywhere every day has influenced exactly 0 people to do the same, and it’s affected global carbon emissions by such a small fraction it can barely be measured.

                  It’s not relatively small, it’s essentially non existent, and there’s no way as an individual to force others to give up their conveniences, any more than an individual can have the government ban all fossil fuels.

                  How much profit do you possibly think Australia provides to BP and other companies? How much of Australia doing business with them contributes to their global emissions? Because the fact is the entirety of Australia could return to tribalism with no modern technology and it would barely move the needle on either global profits or global emissions. Even a country that has 5% global emissions wouldn’t achieve much by going to 0. It’s near meaningless.

              • stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net
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                3 months ago

                We’re actually to the point where wanting people to consume fewer fossil fuels makes me a fossil fuel shill.

                Wow.

                The absolute state of rhetoric today.

                • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  Stop trying to play the victim. You’re literally pushing fossil fuel talking points. If you aren’t a fossil fuel shill, you’re still pushing their talking points.

        • commie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          some years later, once corporations had more solid control of legislatures and were no longer afraid of legislation, they started using the carbon footprint idea in reverse as propaganda - they claimed individual responsibility was a myth, only legal action against corporations will help with climate change, so eat whatever you want and buy all the gas you want and buy all the corporate products you want, and don’t feel guilty about it, because it doesn’t matter.

          citation needed

          • stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net
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            3 months ago

            Sure. The Google term you’re looking for is called “discourses of delay”.

            Tldr: The propagandists recognize the global consensus, that climate change is real and must be addressed, is too strong to attack directly. Instead, they work to discredit potential solutions and discourage people from acting. The hope is to delay action on climate change until fossil fuel companies run out of oil to sell.

            The four ways corporate propaganda encourages climate delay are by redirecting responsibility (“someone else should act on climate change before or instead of you”), pushing non-transformative solutions (“fossil fuels are part of the solution”), emphasizing the downsides (“requiring electric vehicles will hurt the poor worst”), and promoting doomerism (“climate change is inevitable so we may as well accept it instead of trying to fight it”).

            And here’s the thing. We need both individual and collective action to mitigate climate change.

            Arguing that only individual action can stop climate change is delayist propaganda used to discourage climate action.

            Arguing that only collective action can stop climate change and individual action is useless is also delayist propaganda used to discourage climate action.

            The propaganda takes an extreme position on both sides and encourages people to fight with another instead of unifying and acting - much like how foreign propagandists in the United States take aggressive, controversial positions on the far left and far right to worsen dissent and discourage unity.

            https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcmahon/2020/08/05/scientists-dissect-the-tactics-of-climate-delayers/

            European scientists last month catalogued what they call the “Four Discourses of Climate Delay”—arguments that facilitate continued inaction.

            1 Redirecting Responsibility

            U.S. politicians blaming India and China, Irish farmers blaming motorists, organizations blaming individuals—these common techniques evade responsibility and delay action.

            “Policy statements can become discourses of delay if they purposefully evade responsibility for mitigating climate change,” the scientists say.

            The scientists label as “individualism” the claim that individuals should take responsibility through personal action. I asked if it weren’t also a discourse of delay when activists insist that individual climate action is pointless, that only systemic action can address the problem.

            That too is a discourse of delay, replied Giulio Mattioli, a professor of transport at Dortmund University. The team considered including it under the label “structuralism,” but decided it’s not common enough to include.

            (Depends on where you are. I’d argue that’s very, very common among high consumption American activists.)

            A fascinating study about how much people have internalized these discourses of delay is here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378024000797#:~:text=Consisting of four overarching narratives,with its own emotional resonance)%2C