Itโs not often that an article about climate change becomes one of the most hotly debated issues on the internet โ especially in the midst of a controversial G20ย summit.
But that exact thing happened following the publication of a lengthy essay in New York Magazine titled โThe Uninhabitable Earth: Famine, Economic Collapse, a Sun that Cooks Us: What Climate Change Could Wreak โ Sooner Than You Think.โ
In the course of 7,200 words, author David Wallace-Wells chronicled the possible impacts of catastrophic climate change if current emissions trends are maintained, including, but certainly not limited to: mass permafrost melt and methane leaks, mass extinctions, fatal heat waves, drought and food insecurity, diseases and viruses, โrolling death smog,โ global conflict and war, economic collapse and oceanย acidification.
Slate political writer Jamelle Bouie described the essay on Twitter as โsomething that will haunt yourย nightmares.โ
Itโs a fair assessment. Reading it feels like a series of punches in the gut, triggering emotions like despair, hopelessness andย resignation.
But hereโs the thing: many climate psychologists and communicators consider those feelings to be the very opposite of what will compel people toย action.
โBased on my research on climate communications, this article is exactly what we donโt need,โ says Per Espen Stoknes, Norwegian psychologist and author of What We Think About When We Try Not to Think About Global Warming: Toward a New Psychology of Climate Action, in an interview with DeSmogย Canada.
โIt only serves to further alarm the already alarmed segment of people.ย โ
Climate Psychologists Recommends โPositivity Ratioโ ofย 3:1
Letโs get one thing out of theย way.
Critics of the New York Magazine article โ and other instances of doomsday journalism โ are not anti-science. These are all people who firmly recognize the severity of catastrophic climate change, and are certainly not petitioning for a bury-your-head-in-the-sand approach, shielding the public from the potentialย horrors.
Rather, they suggest that most people will only process such facts about climate change if itโs framed in an appropriate way that acknowledges how individuals and societies respond to potentially traumaticย threats.
โItโs really important to understand that itโs not just about facts and numbers, but having a way for people to interpret them and know thereโs something they can do,โ says Kari Marie Norgaard, associate professor of sociology and environmental studies at the University of Oregon and author of Living in Denial: Climate Change, Emotions, and Everyday Life, in an interview with DeSmogย Canada.
Stoknes notes thereโs a well-known โpositivity ratioโ for optimal engagement of a 3:1 ratio of opportunities to threats. He says the New York Magazine piece was around nine threats to every one proposedย solution.
In other words, a tripling of the ratio in the wrong direction.
Article Sticks to Hard Science, Ignoring Role of Socialย Sciences
The author of the New York Magazine article has already responded to a series of criticisms on Twitter, including on the scientific merit of some of hisย claims.
A rather revealing moment was when Wallace-Wells replied to a critique from renowned futurist Alex Steffen โ who had described the article as โone long council of despairโ โ by suggesting that โmy own feeling is that ignorance about what’s at stake is a much biggerย problem.โ
The clear implication is that Wallace-Wells assumes a confronting of ignorance about scientific facts could help compel people to action and avoid the most dangerous manifestations of climateย change.
But Daniel Aldana Cohen โ assistant professor of sociology at the University of Pennsylvania and author of the response piece in Jacobin titled โNew York Magโs Climate Disaster Porn Gets It Painfully Wrongโ โ suggests in an interview with DeSmog Canada that Wallace-Wellโs approach indicates a failure to engage with any questions about broader sociopoliticalย systems.
โI think in the politics of climate change, a narrow idea of climate science is fetishized,โ says Cohen, adding that even the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change largely fails to include social sciences in working groupย reports.
โIt feels like the most realistic, the most unvarnished truth is what the science predicts,โ he continues. โBut the thing is that in some way, climate science registers the impact of human activity, but itโs not actually an integrated account of the dynamic feedback between social and political activities and physical events in theย atmosphere.โ
In other words, Wallace-Wellsโ article sketches out a narrative of catastrophic climate change that assumes people donโt act on the knowledge of theย situation.
But in a cruel twist, by only focusing on the science without any attempt to contextualize it in society or political systems, it could well have the reverse effect by making readers feel even moreย powerless.
This isnโt a new problem: Stoknes notes that as identified by James Painter of Oxford Universityโs Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, about 80 per cent of media coverage on the last Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment report used โcatastrophe framing,โ with less than 10 per cent using โopportunityย framing.โ
โItโs not just about pointing your fingers at the climate skeptics and saying thatโs the problem,โ Norgaardย says.
โOf course, itโs a major problem. But the apathy or acquiescence of the majority of people who are aware and do care is a larger problem. Itโs about how we mobilize thoseย people.โ
If Framed Correctly, Idea of Apocalypse Can Help People Imagineย Alternatives
Stoknes argues that thinking about such a sobering subject as apocalypse or death, if done correctly, can actually help people conceptualize new ways of thinking andย being.
โThis psychological approach to the apocalypse is very important, and I found it completely absent in the article,โ he says. โIt is not about predicting a certain year in the future of linear time, when everything will be collapsing. Maybe this notion is more like a call in the here and now, calling attention to the urgent need for a deep rethink of where we are and letting go of some cherished Western notions that weโve been stuck in over the lastย century.โ
Such a sentiment is echoed by climate psychologist Renee Lertzman and author of Environmental Melancholia: Psychoanalytic Dimensions of Engagement, who emphasizes in an interview with DeSmog Canada that predictable fault lines have formed in the wake of the New York Magazineย piece.
A key factor for her is how humans actually process information that may be challenging and bring up difficult feelings. She says the consensus is that we can become โcognitively impairedโ when the brainโs limbic system becomes activated, resulting in reduced capacity to have functions for strategy, foresight, collaboration andย tolerance.
โThat goes out the window when your limbic system is activated, which arguably articles like this are going to do,โ she says. โThe best way to deal with that reality is to address how we can soothe and disarm ourย defences.โ
โWe Need to Also Be Engaged in Collective Political Action andย Solutionsโ
Thatโs certainly not going to be an easy feat. But there are plenty of initiatives out there that are embracing a bit moreย nuance.
Lertzman points to Project Drawdown โ an attempt to compile the 100 top solutions to climate change โ as a powerful initiative, although she suggests โeven that is missing the emotional taking stock of where we are.โ Cohen shouted out the work of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and Texas Tech climate scientist Katharineย Hayhoe.
But central to progressing beyond the gridlock of current climate discourse is likely via bringing it closer to the local level, where people feel they can actually influenceย things.
CBCโs new podcast 2050: Degrees of Change is a good example of this. While it paints a dramatic picture of life in B.C. under climate change, it also uses a scenario under which the world has drastically decreased greenhouse gasย emissions.
โWe wanted listeners to end off realizing this is a middle of the road scenario and things could be worse and they could be better depending on what we choose to do now,โ Johanna Wagstaffe, podcast host and CBC senior meteorologist, told DeSmog Canada.
Norgaard says engaging with issues on a local level can give people a leverage point into even greaterย engagement.
โWe really need to on the one hand be aware that itโs something we need to respond to as a collective,โ she says. โRiding your bike is great, but we need to also be engaged in collective political action and solutions. Thatโs part of what helps people to do something proactive thatโs real.โ
Image: The Banker. Underwater sculptureย and photography by Jason de Caires Taylor.
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