Radically Non-Ideal Climate Politics and the Obligation to at Least Vote Green

Aaron Maltais
2013 Environmental Values  
Obligations to reduce one's green house gas emissions appear to be difficult to justify prior to large-scale collective action because an individual's emissions have virtually no impact on the environmental problem. However, I show that individuals' emissions choices raise the question of whether or not they can be justified as fair use of what remains of a safe global emissions budget. This is true both before and after major mitigation efforts are in place. Nevertheless, it remains difficult
more » ... o establish an obligation to reduce personal emissions because it appears unlikely that governments will in fact maintain safe emissions budgets. The result, I claim, is that under current conditions we lack outcome, fairness, promotional, virtue or duty based grounds for seeing personal emissions reductions as morally obligatory. KEYWORDS Individual obligations, global warming, emissions, non-ideal, fairness. 'Had he been informed by an indisputable authority that the end of the world was to be finally accomplished by a catastrophic disturbance of the atmosphere, he would have assimilated the information under the simple idea of dirty weather, and no other, because he had no experience of cataclysms, and belief does not necessarily imply comprehension.' Joseph Conrad, Typhoon.
doi:10.3197/096327113x13745164553798 fatcat:qqyfjfmktbgathrk5otnl7zifa