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Grace O'Sullivan

Grace O'Sullivan You wait for one Climate Action Bill, then two come along

MEP Grace O’Sullivan gives a broad welcome to Ireland’s Climate Action Bill and the EU’s Climate Law, both on the table this week.

WHEN I FIRST stood on the Antarctic ice in 1986 and visited again in 1989, it was starting to become evident that the effects of global warming were a growing threat to humanity.

All around me were spectacular, huge icebergs, but unbeknownst to us, they were melting and the resulting impacts on wildlife and habitats would soon be sounding warning bells.

Jump on three decades and in the intervening years I have despaired for the future of the planet. So it’s with some relief and a sense of guarded optimism and hope, that I say – it’s been quite the week for climate action!

A glimmer of hope

With the Climate Action Bill launched last week in the Dáil and the most ambitious ever Climate Law passed in the European Parliament on Thursday, for the first time in many years I’m feeling a cautious sense of hope.

I’ve been an environmental activist since my early teens; throughout my twenties and thirties when I worked with Greenpeace for twenty years (10 of those years at sea); and on through my forties and into my fifties as my work as a field ecologist continued to be focussed on what is the single biggest threat to face humanity over the past three decades and beyond.

Grace with penguins Ice is melting so fast in Antarctica that it es expected to raise sea levels by 2.5 metres. (Nature.com) Grace O'Sullivan MEP Grace O'Sullivan MEP

It was this existential threat that prompted me to move into politics. I felt my work as an activist needed to be expanded into the political arena.

I believed, and I continue to believe, that meaningful, impactful action on this life-threatening unfolding catastrophe can only come about with the support of ‘the powers that be.’

Over three decades after I first set foot on the continent of Antarctica, those earlier warnings have spiralled to the point where the planet is now in an emergency situation.

We’re on the brink of collapsing into an irreversible wipe-out of life on planet earth. That’s life in all its forms, including  – animal life, plant life, insect life, marine life and, most alarmingly, human life.

When I first got actively involved in climate activism, some of the terms that even children are familiar with now were not widely known or understood. It was the 1980s and the phrases climate change and global warming were largely brushed aside.

In those days, and indeed for the following decades, activism and concern in this area were largely considered the paranoid fixations of over-sensitive hippies.

While in recent years, awareness around the impacts of climate change has grown exponentially, we’ve been lagging behind on meaningful climate action. This despite the scientific evidence highlighting the effects of global warming and repeated warnings that excessive greenhouse gas emissions and the knock-on effects on climate and weather could lead to a total wipe-out of life on earth if unchecked.

A mountain to climb

I’m still very, very worried about the current state of the planet and the monumental hard work and system change that needs to happen if we are to save this dear earth of ours.

I will have a quiet celebration myself, to mark this historic week in the fight against climate change. The dual news around national and EU legislation on climate is a positive step in the right direction.

It’s a pivotal moment and these past days have been emotional ones for me and any celebration will be understated and overshadowed by the knowledge that there is still much to be done and the work starts now.

For the European Climate Law to be enacted it needs to be passed by the European Council. With support on climate legislation emanating from the European Council and widespread public pressure, I am optimistic and hopeful that the heads of state of the 27 members of the European Union will see fit to respond positively to the will of the rapidly growing public consensus, backed by irrefutable scientific evidence, that we are at the most important turning point in the history of the modern world.   

The double news of such decisive progress on national and European legislation is not to be scoffed at. I’m not being flippant when I say – you wait 35 years for a bus and along comes two! I’m acutely aware though, of the need for even further ambition in the fight to save the planet from the ravages of the climate emergency we are in though.

We are on borrowed time if we are to have any hope of avoiding an irreversible wipe-out of life on our planet.

As a mother of three daughters, I know I’m not alone in the anxiety I feel for my children’s futures, and the overwhelming sense of responsibility I feel around my commitments to doing everything I can possibly do to play my part in securing the future safety and recovery of our planet, our lifeline.

National and international legally binding commitments lend weight to our fight against time and help to ensure that every decision we make as individuals, as organisations and as nations is benchmarked against the goal of climate neutrality.

Legislation on climate action has the potential to massively change people’s lives. It has the potential to enhance the quality of life and improve the way we work and live.

By introducing legislation in Ireland that has come about after a process involving cross-party engagement, and enhanced by Thursday’s successful vote on the European Climate Law, we put ourselves in a strong position as we progress the fight against climate change.

In recent years Ireland has been described as laggards when it comes to climate action. Next year I hope to mark the sixth anniversary of the Paris Agreement as a proud citizen and public representative of an Ireland that can proudly be called a leader, as we move towards becoming climate neutral.

Grace O’Sullivan is Green MEP for Ireland South, a peace and climate & social justice activist and ecologist. She is Green Party Ireland spokesperson on the Marine.

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28 Comments
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    Mute Valthebear
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:08 AM

    Tax, tax, tax

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    Mute Brendan Cooney
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:12 AM

    @Valthebear: denial, denial, denial.

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    Mute Lad
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:51 AM

    @Valthebear: Are you saying climate change is a conspiracy to tax people more?

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    Mute Valthebear
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:40 AM

    @Brendan Cooney: more phony middle class guilt trip alarmism. Huge strides in recent years have been made in protecting the environment.

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    Mute Valthebear
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:41 AM

    @Brendan Cooney: denying what? Green party alarmism to make you feel good?

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    Mute Brendan Cooney
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    Oct 9th 2020, 9:25 AM

    @Valthebear: Unfortunatly the scientific evidence says your wrong. I wish it was the case but it’s not happening. Time to admit the truth?

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    Mute Canyon
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    Oct 9th 2020, 9:46 AM

    @Lad: no but while small fry like us pay tax the huge polluting countries don’t….pointless exercise if China, US, Russia, India etc don’t play ball.

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    Mute Joe_X
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    Oct 9th 2020, 10:37 AM

    @Canyon: But that power is in our hands. When buying a product, look at where it is from. If possible, bycott the more polluting countries.

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    Mute Valthebear
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    Oct 9th 2020, 10:19 PM

    @Brendan Cooney: no, the scientific evidence doesn’t. Don’t confuse science with ideology.

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    Mute Adam Conroy
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:55 AM

    “We are on borrowed time if we hope to avoid an irreversible wipeout of life on this planet”.

    Oh come on. Can we drop the melodrama. It’s amazing that this rhetoric is taken seriously.

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    Mute Manus Carlisle
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    Oct 9th 2020, 12:05 PM

    @Adam Conroy: Nothing melodramatic about it. One quarter of all mammals on earth are now endangered. Species are becoming extinct at a significantly faster rate than for millions of years before. We are currently experiencing the sixth mass extinction event on Earth.

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    Mute Brendan Cooney
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:11 AM

    Too little, way too late. Legislation is one thing but the public and major emitters are still in denial and that is where the change begins. Anyways, with the thawing of the permafrost in the tundra accelerating, game over.

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    Mute Will
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:33 AM

    @Brendan Cooney: If it is ‘game over’ as you say, why do you waste your time berating people on this site when it comes to climate issues. Are you just a cantankerous old man who likes shaking his fist at clouds?
    Even the most pessimistic climate experts do not consider it ‘game over’ yet and I doubt very much you are an expert in the field.
    Public attitudes are changing and have changed considerably in recent years. The next generation are very well clued in to what’s happening and what needs to happen to turn things around.
    As an oldie you can surrender if you like but those coming next don’t have that choice.
    Remember, our generation is largely responsible for the pollution and habitat loss of the last 50 years or so. We have no right to throw our hands in the air and give up now.

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    Mute MentalAsAnything
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:58 AM

    Eamonn Ryan is happy to see ridiculous taxes imposed, before the Green party are wiped out in 5 years time

    57
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    Mute Monty Donotno
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:00 AM

    Watched Attenborough’s latest documentary on Netflix last night. Palpable that we are heading for disaster in terms of habitability of the planet. Biodiversity the key variable, but running out of time to restore ecosystems that feed into keeping our climate stable.

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:33 AM

    @Monty Donotno: Australia s coal fields 30 billion a year to burn for electricity

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:29 AM

    The world is OVERPOPULATED it’s so bloody simple

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    Mute John Smith
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    Oct 9th 2020, 12:12 PM

    @Gerard Heery: Is it time to start the PURGE?

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Oct 9th 2020, 2:56 PM

    @John Smith: not purge but for start if you have more than two childers the childers allowance is cut drastically

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    Mute Valthebear
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    Oct 9th 2020, 10:21 PM

    @Gerard Heery: nah, it’s not

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    Mute DCforChange
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:23 AM

    People worrying about changing habits & their standard of living staying the same or dropping a little. Using an increase in tax to justify the fact they don’t care about the natural world. It’s about time people changed their habits to help the planet & the ones who can afford extra tax should pay a bit more. Use the money to clean up our rivers & plant native forests etc.

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:31 AM

    @DCforChange: as if Ireland’s is causing the worlds climate crisis

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    Mute Patrick Trench
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:49 AM

    good article and hope we see some real action soon. Need money for walking and cycling and wonder why diesel cars were not phased out in bill.

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    Mute Adam Conroy
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    Oct 9th 2020, 7:57 AM

    @Patrick Trench: because you can’t suddenly phase out a mode of transport than many people rely on.

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    Mute Emer Caffrey
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    Oct 9th 2020, 8:10 AM

    An excellent MEP who has spent her time grafting for preservation of the natural world we live within as well as being a voice for awareness of the crucial issues and forging change in Brussels

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    Mute Valthebear
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    Oct 9th 2020, 10:20 PM

    @Emer Caffrey: Green party canvasser?

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    Mute leartius
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    Oct 9th 2020, 1:52 PM

    Its just another tax grab when countries like Germany will continue to mine coal until at least 2038. America has walked away completely. With India, Pakistan and china getting a free hand until 2032. While 2/3 of this small island pay carbon taxes to pay bonuses to advisers and prop up the waste creased by successive governments.
    Back in 2008 all the greens wanted was more wind turbines. construction of which caused environment disasters leading to bog land running into rivers. Now these energy projects subsidized through our electricity bills are being brought up by multinationals like amazon to power data centres and avoid paying carbon taxes to revenue.

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    Mute James Mccartan
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    Oct 9th 2020, 9:36 AM

    If the Irish Government did not get so much money from tax on oil it would happen much faster.

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