The news reports from the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow this month followed a predictable pattern. World leaders took to the stage one after the other, each of them issuing dire warnings about imminent climate disaster and concluding with urgent calls to action: It's not too late…but we must act now!
This message feels tired, its urgency attenuated from decades of repetition. "Now" was once the 1970s, with the birth of the modern environmental movement; "now" was the Kyoto Protocol and its carbon-reduction commitments of the 1990s; "now" was Paris 2015. Now, some believe, is now too late: The tipping point has come. We're at the apex of the curve, on the verge of an unstoppable cascade that will irreversibly alter the systems governing the natural world. It's too late. And if we, as a society, copped to that fact, we'd all benefit immensely.
Deep Adaptation has attracted a worldwide following: The founding document was downloaded more than a half million times, according to Bendell, and forums have solidified a base of participants, from students to psychologists to scholars. Recently, more than 500 scholars signed an open letter espousing the main tenets of Deep Adaptation, and urging policymakers to "engage openly with the risk of disruption and even collapse of our societies."
As an author who delved into climate-change science for my book "Deep Salt Water," I'm compelled by the sober and dispassionate honesty of Deep Adaptation. I find Bendell's scientific conclusions convincing, even though many experts disagree with them. I'm also heartened by his framework: Solutions can't be found unless the problem is posed correctly. Where I diverge from Deep Adaptation is in its emphasis on societal collapse. Where Bendell sees a sort of fait accompli, I see accumulating evidence that, despite the imminent climate crisis, technology will bolster the pillars that uphold society.
I discovered Deep Adaptation after reading a preprint study about climate anxiety among youth. The study — submitted to Lancet Planetary Health but yet to undergo peer review — surveyed 10,000 people aged 16 to 25, from 10 countries. It revealed a population riddled by fear and angered by the betrayal they ascribe to people in power. The authors of the study are part of a burgeoning community of psychologists who specialize in dealing with climate anxiety.
These psychologists urge their colleagues to recognize climate-related grief and fear as a rational response to actual events, not as a manifestation of an underlying psychopathology such as anxiety or depression. Despite offering a necessary forum to youth in distress, this therapy continues to promote the idea that climate catastrophe can be avoided, or at least reduced. As Caroline Hickman, a co-author of the youth climate anxiety study and a lecturer at the University of Bath, tweeted last month: "Between apocalyptic thinking and naive misplaced optimism is radical hope. Things are bad, AND we can change the end of this story."
To me, that message is disingenuous, if not unintentionally cruel. How can youth be supported if their anxieties are initially validated, only to be amplified as climate commitments are broken by leaders, and disasters keep coming?
The Deep Adaptation movement creates a better framework, arguing that people build psychological resilience by contemplating four guiding questions:
What do we most value that we want to keep and how? That's a question of resilience. What could we let go of so as not to make matters worse? That's a question of relinquishment. What could we bring back to help us with these difficult times? That's a question of restoration. With what and whom shall we make peace as we awaken to our common mortality? That's a question of reconciliation.
Through this framework, Bendell succeeds in distilling a terrifying future into a series of questions that invite people into conversation. By doing so, he gives us a language to speak the unthinkable.
Bendell's 2018 manifesto, which laid the foundation for the movement, has been sharply criticized on scientific and moral grounds. The most comprehensive critique argues that Bendell misinterprets the predictions of climate models, ignores important caveats, and adopts a "doomist" narrative that, the critics say, will lead to despair and inaction, exacerbating existing inequalities and sapping energy from the fight for climate justice. Bendell accepted some of these criticisms, making a few corrections and updates to his original manuscript. But he countered others, holding steadfast to the broader principles motivating Deep Adaptation. (The New York Times reported that Bendell's original manuscript was "submitted to and rejected by a peer-reviewed sustainability journal.")
In my assessment, the political context tips the scale in favor of Bendell's view: Even if, on a purely scientific level, we could stop the feedback loops already set in motion, our political, economic, and governance structures have proven incapable of proactively responding with measures commensurate to the threat.
Despite its significant contribution to the thinking about climate change, Deep Adaptation contains a weakness at its core: the premise that climate change will lead to society's collapse, defined as "the uneven ending of normal modes of sustenance, shelter, security, pleasure, identity, and meaning," Bendell writes.
Blinded by utopian visions, Bendell seems to overlook the advancements, in science and technology and other realms, that are capable of upholding society. In sectors such as energy, water, materials science, and agriculture, basic science and innovative technology are spawning new realities that could stabilize societies, even amid horrific shifts in the natural world. Some of this technology, including large-scale nuclear fusion reactors and smaller nuclear batteries, will reduce carbon emissions. Other technologies, especially those developed with synthetic biology, may help us adapt to a warming planet by, for example, improving crop yields and revolutionizing manufacturing. By seizing a power once reserved for nature — the power to direct evolution — scientists can tackle some of the very problems humans have created through their consumption of fossil fuels.
None of these developments is a panacea. None will stop catastrophic climate change. None prefigure a world I want to live in. Yet they all refute the idea of societal collapse.
Bendell's failure to recognize the promise of technology is a tremendous loss for policymakers, activists, psychotherapists, and industry. We currently lack a framework for discussing the work needed to prepare for climate change. That work pertains not only to physical infrastructure but to psychology and ethics — especially as it regards the predicted mass migration of people whose homelands will no longer be habitable.
In my view, Deep Adaptation is perfectly poised to facilitate this difficult conversation — if it eases its focus on societal collapse. Bendell's framework encourages us to "make sense of our situation in ways that discourage defensive or violent approaches and encourage more kind, wise, and accountable responses."
This type of thinking is lucid, productive, and necessary. I'll hold it more fiercely than any vapid statement coming from Glasgow.
Marianne Apostolides is an award-winning author of seven books, most recently the novel "I Can't Get You Out of My Mind."
This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.
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