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Terrifying Visions of the Future

The United Nations' latest report on the state of the planet reminds us just how badly the environment is faring, and warns that governments are still failing to recognise the seriousness of major environmental issues. Perhaps this confirms that it takes more than statistics to make real the unkind future we risk handing down to our children.

Cormac McCarthy's book The Road, which conjures a terrifying future in which the world has lost its biosphere, offers a compelling vision of what all those numbers might really mean. America has been laid to waste, an ashen scabland of charred forests and abandoned cities. A man and his young son are left to wander its cauterized terrain, seeking what vestiges of food can be found – ancient cans of apricots and runner beans in decaying supermarkets – on a journey to the coast. The man is haunted by memories of a prosperous, abundant America now left in charred ruins around him. The dead are everywhere, dangerous gangs of cannibals roam the land, while the long concrete sweeps of the interstate exchanges stand "like the ruins of a vast funhouse against the distant murk".

It is a terrifying vision of a world that has lost its biosphere. Nothing lives - no birds, no trees, no crops. No hope remains. It doesn't rain. The father and his son are mostly, aside from some chance fearful encounters, alone - and it is only by freakish accident that they remain alive.

"Just below the high gap in the mountains they stood and looked out over the great gulf to the south where the country as far as they could see was burned away, the blackened shapes of rock standing out of the shoals of ash and billows of ash rising up and blowing downcountry through the waste."

In this narrative Man, also a relic of the land's past abundance, is left to scavenge on the remains of his previous manufactured accomplishments. The natural world is destroyed, but upon it he must continue, somehow, to gain sustenance from that which he once created, until that, too, is gone. The cause of this fate is not revealed, leaving the reader to contend with her own fears of what could precipitate such a level of destruction. Nuclear war? The burning fires of a climate hotter than humans have seen before? Chemical poisoning?

Cormac McCarthy's The Road won the Pulitzer Prize in 2007, and environmental activist George Monbiot has just called it "the most important environmental book ever written". Indeed, there is much in The Road that resembles what some predict will soon befall our society, left to contend with the combined effects of species loss, climate change and energy scarcity.  

John Michael Greer predicts that an age of 'salvage societies' will accompany the time of scarcity industrialism, in which such things as girders, pipes, auto frames, and sheet steel - billions of tonnes of the stuff all over what is now the industrial world - will become valuable sources of metal, enough to keep the deindustrial cultures of the future supplied for some time.

James Howard Kunstler, in his book The Long Emergency, likewise wonders what will become of America's vast suburbs – what he has called the 'geography of nowhere', with its 'tragic landscape of highway strips, parking lots, housing tracts, and mega-malls' – when the oil runs out. Arable land, taken over by rumper rooms and swimming pools, will be desperately needed when it becomes no longer economical to transport food produce over long distances.

Swallowing the import of all the ugly-looking graphs and ominous-sounding numbers that describe impending environmental catastrophes may be something of a habitual reflex action for audiences, as they turn the page to the next news item. This week, the UN's Environment Program released its latest Global Environmental Outlook report, warning that population growth, unsustainable patterns of consumption, species extinction, water crises, overfishing, and climate change are being met with "a remarkable lack of urgency".

Monbiot thinks the level of inaction may indicate a deep level of apathy, suggesting that a "hardening of interests, a shutting down of concern, is taking place among the people of the rich world." That may be so. But likewise, it may take more than reports full of numbers to make real the unkind circumstances we risk handing down to our children. Read The Road, and just imagine.

Words: Sarah Barns

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Two victories in a single month. Amid the encircling economic gloom, it's hard to believe we deserve such good news. First, of course, Barack Obama's election win. And now Iraq's unexpected deal with the American government for the occupation to end at last.

Debated by the Iraqi parliament today, the agreement has been virtually ignored in many left-liberal circles as well as by most of the mainstream American media. We are so inured to thinking that the US will always get its way in Iraq, thanks to its enormous investment of troops and treasure, that any potentially contrary development is dismissed. The US has agreed to leave Iraq. "You must be joking," comes the response. "Why would they build 14 mega-bases if they didn't intend to stay for decades?" The US is allowing Iraqi courts jurisdiction over crimes committed by American troops. "Give me a break. You can't believe that," I hear the sneer.

Well, look at the agreement's text. It is remarkable for the number and scope of the concessions that the Iraqi government has managed to get from the Bush administration. They amount to a series of U-turns that spell the complete defeat of the neoconservative plan to turn Iraq into a pro-western ally and a platform from which to project US power across the Middle East.

The title gives the game away - Agreement on the Withdrawal of United States Forces from Iraq and the Organisation of Their Activities during Their Temporary Presence in Iraq. Remember how Bush (and his ally, Gordon Brown) constantly rejected any "artificial timetables" for pulling out the troops. Everything had to be "conditions-based", meaning that no dates could be given in advance since all depended on whether Iraq's own forces were ready to fill the gap. It was an elastic formula that allowed Washington to delay a withdrawal for ever.

That has gone by the board. The agreement stipulates that "all US forces shall withdraw from all Iraqi territory no later than December 31 2011". More remarkably, all combat troops will leave Iraqi towns and villages and go back to base by the end of June next year. Pause for a moment and take that in. Six years and three months after the invasion, Iraqi streets will be a US-free zone again.

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