Naomi Klein: Guns Beat Green: The Market Has Spoken

2007-12-15

Richard Moore

____________________
According to Lloyd, despite all the government incentives,
the really big money is turning away from clean energy
technologies and banking instead on gadgets promising to
seal wealthy countries and individuals into high-tech
fortresses. Key growth areas in venture capitalism are
private security firms selling surveillance gear and
privatized emergency response. Put simply, in the world of
venture capitalism, there has been a race going on between
greens on the one hand and guns and garrisons on the
other--and the guns are winning. 
____________________

--------------------------------------------------------
Original source URL:
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20071217/klein

lookout by Naomi Klein
Guns Beat Green: The Market Has Spoken
[from the December 17, 2007 issue]

Anyone tired of lousy news from the markets should talk to Douglas Lloyd, 
director of Venture Business Research, a company that tracks trends in venture 
capitalism. "I expect investment activity in this sector to remain buoyant," he 
said recently. His bouncy mood was inspired by the money gushing into private 
security and defense companies. He added, "I also see this as a more attractive 
sector, as many do, than clean energy."

Got that? If you are looking for a sure bet in a new growth market, sell solar, 
buy surveillance; forget wind, buy weapons.

This observation--coming from an executive trusted by such clients as Goldman 
Sachs and Marsh & McLennan--deserves particular attention in the run-up to the 
United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali at the beginning of December. 
There, world environment ministers are supposed to come up with the global pact 
that will replace Kyoto.

The Bush Administration, still roadblocking firm caps on emissions, wants to let
the market solve the crisis. "We're on the threshold of dramatic technological 
breakthroughs," Bush assured the world last January, adding, "We'll leave it to 
the market to decide the mix of fuels that most effectively and efficiently meet
this goal."

The idea that capitalism can save us from climate catastrophe has powerful 
appeal. It gives politicians an excuse to subsidize corporations rather than 
regulate them, and it neatly avoids a discussion about how the core market logic
of endless growth landed us here in the first place.

The market, however, appears to have other ideas about how to meet the 
challenges of an increasingly disaster-prone world. According to Lloyd, despite 
all the government incentives, the really big money is turning away from clean 
energy technologies and banking instead on gadgets promising to seal wealthy 
countries and individuals into high-tech fortresses. Key growth areas in venture
capitalism are private security firms selling surveillance gear and privatized 
emergency response. Put simply, in the world of venture capitalism, there has 
been a race going on between greens on the one hand and guns and garrisons on 
the other--and the guns are winning.

According to Venture Business Research, in 2006 North American and European 
companies developing green technology and those focused on "homeland security" 
and weaponry were neck and neck in the contest for new investment: green tech 
received $3.5 billion, and so did the guns and garrisons sector. But this year 
garrisons have suddenly leapt ahead. The greens have received $4.2 billion, 
while the garrisons have nearly doubled their money, collecting $6 billion in 
new investment funds. And 2007 isn't over yet.

This trend has nothing to do with real supply and demand, since the demand for 
clean energy technology could not be higher. With oil reaching $100 a barrel, it
is clear that we badly need green alternatives, both as consumers and as a 
species. The latest report from the Nobel Prize-winning UN Intergovernmental 
Panel on Climate Change was characterized by Time magazine as "a final warning 
to humanity," while a new Oxfam report makes it clear that the recent wave of 
natural disasters is no fluke: over the past two decades, the number of extreme 
weather events has quadrupled. Conversely, 2007 has seen no major terrorist 
events in North America or Europe, there are hints of a US troop drawdown in 
Iraq and, despite the relentless propaganda, there is no imminent threat from 
Iran.

So why is "homeland security," not green energy, the hot new sector? Perhaps 
because there are two distinct business models that can respond to our climate 
and energy crisis. We can develop policies and technologies to get us off this 
disastrous course. Or we can develop policies and technologies to protect us 
from those we have enraged through resource wars and displaced through climate 
change, while simultaneously shielding ourselves from the worst of both war and 
weather. (The ultimate expression of this second option is Hummer's new TV ads: 
the gas-guzzler is seen carrying its cargo to safety in various disaster zones, 
followed by the slogan "HOPE: Hummer Owners Prepared for Emergencies." It's a 
bit like the Marlboro man doing grief counseling in a cancer ward.) In short, we
can choose to fix, or we can choose to fortress. Environmental activists and 
scientists have been yelling for the fix. The homeland security sector, on the 
other hand, believes the future lies in fortresses.

Though 9/11 launched this new economy, many of the original counterterrorism 
technologies are being retrofitted as privatized emergency response during 
natural disasters--Blackwater pitching itself as the new Red Cross, firefighters
working for insurance giants (see my last column, "Rapture Rescue 911"). By far 
the biggest market is the fortressing of Europe and North America--Halliburton's
contract to build detention centers for an unspecified immigration influx, 
Boeing's "virtual" border fence, biometric ID cards. The primary target for 
these technologies is not terrorists but immigrants, an increasing number of 
whom have been displaced by extreme weather events like the recent floods in 
Tabasco, Mexico, or the cyclone in Bangladesh. As climate change creates more 
landlessness, the market in fortresses will increase dramatically.

Of course, there is still money to be made from going green; but there is much 
more green--at least in the short term--to be made from selling escape and 
protection. As Lloyd explains, "The failure rate of security businesses is much 
lower than clean-tech ones and, as important, the capital investment required to
build a successful security business is also much lower." In other words, 
solving real problems is hard, but turning a profit from those problems is easy.

Bush wants to leave our climate crisis to the ingenuity of the market. Well, the
market has spoken: it will not take us off this disastrous course. In fact, the 
smart money is betting that we will stay on it.
-- 

--------------------------------------------------------
Posting archives: 
http://cyberjournal.org/show_archives/?lists=newslog

Escaping the Matrix website: http://escapingthematrix.org/
cyberjournal website: http://cyberjournal.org

How We the People can change the world:
http://governourselves.blogspot.com/

Community Democracy Framework: 
http://cyberjournal.org/DemocracyFramework.html

Moderator: •••@••.•••  (comments welcome)