“The Ministry For the Future,” by Kim Stanley Robinson, 2020
This is
a ‘fun’ book if you enjoy reading about the coming environmental
apocalypse. It’s got everything in the
style of ‘speculative fiction’ – narratives of technocrats, geo-engineering
scientists and environmental ‘terrorists’ working on the issue. It’s got explanatory chapters about different
issues – the Gini co-efficient, Antarctic glaciers, PTSD, ideology, the Jevon’s
Paradox and wet bulb death. It’s got talking photons, code, the market, carbon
dioxide and a sun. It’s got anonymous migrants and scientists and a weird romance. It’s got a seminal horrifying event – the mass
death in
The real
impression is that the narrative is not so speculative, even though it’s supposedly
set in the 2030s and 2040s. For
Robinson, not much progressed from today to the 2030s – the world still has the
same economy, political structure and social nature. The capitalist system has motored on with
nice words and no real switch regarding climate change. The biggest advance is the activism of
The FUTURE COMETH
The key
character is an Irish technocrat at the Ministry for the Future in
And
yet, LA is flooded by monsoon rains.
Planes get blown out of the sky by drone swarms, then cargo ships sink
by torpedo, as the Children of Kali attack. Environmental destroyers die
in their beds. The Davos men are
kidnapped for a time. Shrimp slaves rebel.
Water is pumped from under glaciers.
A world-wide environmental digital currency is proposed, Keynes’ dream.
Migrants are lodged in camps, and some are normalized. Taps run dry.
A purely public internet is created and maybe a world shadow government. More Parisian yellow-vests follow the
examples of the
Los Angeles Flooded - only safety is on the overpasses |
FINANCE Saves the DAY?
The crucial event for the Ministry of the Future is getting the world’s central bankers to agree to ‘go long on the environment’ and back a digital currency that would be created to sequester or limit carbon with a guaranteed bottom price, backed by 100-year bonds issued by the central bankers. The idea is to buy out the fossil fuel companies first of all. The Chinese back the proposal; then they all do. But the neo-liberal plan fails at first, with the Ministry and Murphy now in the cross-hairs of either new environmental guerrillas or petro-states.
Reading the book is a compendium of environmental conundrums and proposed solutions that we know all too well. The point of reading it is to see what solution Robinson comes up with – if there is one or many. The book verbally leans to ‘post-capitalism’ in its slant, praising Vandana Shiva, regenerative agriculture, the “euthanasia of the rentier class,” internationalism and the violent nationalization of mines worked by slaves, turning them into worker cooperatives. Someone even advocates 'democratic communism.' But really a world-wide social-democratic solution is its axis. It gives credence to geo-engineering, market solutions, MMT, pure tech fixes, central bankers and doom. It seems the bankers will save us!
In a way, this is one long semi-left-wing, semi-fictive think piece, but it reads quickly for the most part, even though its almost 600 pages. I will not tell you the ending, so buy the book!
Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 14 year archive: “Catastrophism,” "Ecological Revolution," "The Monkey Wrench Gang," "Planet of the Humans," "The Robbery of Nature," "A Redder Shade of Green," "Stop Tar Sands Oil," "Green is the New Red” "This Changes Everything – Capitalism Versus the Climate"(Klein), “The Sixth Extinction,” "Seaspiracy" or the word ‘environmentalism.’
And I bought it at May Day Books!
Red Frog
September 18, 2021
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