Climate Change, Uncertainty and Ethical Superstorms
Kunnas, J. (2021). Climate Change, Uncertainty and Ethical Superstorms. In M. Bohle, & E. Marone (Eds.), Geo-societal Narratives : Contextualising geosciences (pp. 167-178). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79028-8_12
Authors
Date
2021Copyright
© 2021 the Authors
I argue that one of the most urgent tasks of geoethics is how to deal with climate change in a just and equitable way. At worst, our current path could lead to multi-metre sea-level rise, increases in storms and climate extremes, causing devastating social disruption and economic consequences. I present some alternatives on how to handle this alarming prospect, arguing that we cannot condense our decision-making on climate change into numerical calculations, but should instead make ethical judgements. The commonly used expected utility maximation can be considered a gamble on future generations’ expense for the benefit of the current ones. Thus, from a Rawlsian perspective, we will instead choose the maximin principle, which tells us to adopt the alternative whose worst outcome is superior to the other alternatives. Justice also requires us to make amendments for past emissions. A calculation of the cumulative cost of carbon dioxide emissions shows that developed countries bear the primary responsibility for climate change. A mutual debt cancellation between developed countries’ carbon debts versus developing countries’ conventional monetary debt would solve past grievances, while unilateral measures to curb climate change would provide examples for others to follow.
...
Publisher
Palgrave MacmillanParent publication ISBN
978-3-030-79027-1Is part of publication
Geo-societal Narratives : Contextualising geosciencesKeywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/101326858
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Building up an ecologically sustainable and socially desirable post-COVID-19 future
Duflot, Rémi; Baumeister, Stefan; Burgas, Daniel; Eyvindson, Kyle; Triviño, María; Blattert, Clemens; Kuparinen, Anna; Potterf, Mária (Springer, 2021)COVID-19 crisis has emphasized how poorly prepared humanity is to cope with global disasters. However, this crisis also offers a unique opportunity to move towards a more sustainable and equitable future. Here, we identify ... -
Right to Food and Geoengineering
Kortetmäki, Teea; Oksanen, Markku (Springer, 2023)Climate change poses grave risks to food security, and mitigation and adaptation actions have so far been insufficient to lessen the risk of climate-induced violations of the right to food. Could safeguarding the right to ... -
On kallista olla köyhä : yhteiskunnalliset epäkohdat ja yhteiskuntakritiikki punkrocklyriikoissa
Laine, Ulla (2016)Tutkimuksen tehtävänä on selvittää, millaisista epäkohdista punkrockin lyriikoissa puhutaan ja millaista yhteiskuntakritiikkiä lyriikat sisältävät. Tutkimuksessa tarkastellaan lisäksi punkrockin sisällöissä tapahtuneita ... -
The good, the bad, the confusing : Finnish businesses’ perceptions on climate compensations
Hildén, Laura (2020)Yrityksiin kohdistuu ilmastonmuutoksen seurauksena lukuisia suoria ja epäsuoria riskejä. Lisäksi yritysten tärkeä rooli ilmastonmuutoksen hillinnässä on viime vuosina laajasti tunnistettu. Yrityksiltä odotetaan päästövähennyksiä ... -
Maaseudun paikka tulevaisuuden kestävässä yhteiskunnassa
Kuhmonen, Tuomas; Kuhmonen, Irene; Näyhä, Annukka (Tulevaisuuden tutkimuskeskus, Turun yliopisto, 2022)Fossiilitalous on yli satavuotisen historiansa aikana vapauttanut ihmiskunnan paikallisten luonnonvarojen kantokyvyn rajoista, mahdollistanut ennennäkemättömän talouden ja hyvinvoinnin kasvun. Samalla kiihdyttänyt ...