By Ida Auken
By 2030, your CO2 emissions
will be greatly reduced. Meat on your
dinner table will be a rare sight. Water and the air you breathe
will be cleaner and nature will be in recovery. The money in your wallet will
be spent on being with family and friends, not on buying goods. Saving the
climate involves huge change, but it could make us much happier at the same
time.
Right now, we are losing the
fight against climate change – but what would winning look like? What is life
like in a green world?
Here's one version of a
"CO-topia":
You walk out of your front
door in the morning into a green and livable city, where concrete has dwindled
and green facades and parks are spreading. If you choose to call a car, an
algorithm will calculate the smartest route for the vehicle and pick up a few
other people on the way.
Since the city council's ban
on private cars in the city, lots of new mobility services have arrived. It is
cheaper for you not to own your own car, which, in turn, reduces congestion so
you arrive at your destination more easily and quickly and don't have to spend
time looking for somewhere to park. You can also choose to travel by bike,
scooter or public transit.
The air you breathe in the
city is cleaner because there are far fewer cars on the streets and the rest
are electric –
all electricity is green in fact. There is less noise and much more space for
parks and pedestrian streets since all the parking space became available. For
lunch you can choose from dozens of exciting meals – most of them are plant-based, so you eat more
healthily and are more environmentally friendly than when lunch meant choosing
between five types of burger.
Single-use plastics are
a distant memory. You still grab a to-go coffee, but it comes in a reusable cup
that you turn in at the next coffee shop to get your deposit back. The same
system applies to plastic bottles and other take-away containers. At home, all
of your household appliances have been turned into service contracts. If your
dishwasher is about to break down, it is no longer your problem. The service
provider already knows about the problem and has sent someone to fix it. When
the machine no longer works, the provider picks up the old machine and installs
a new one.
People are trying out new
types of living arrangements with more shared functions and spaces. This means
that more people can afford to live in cities. More houses are built with wood,
which makes them nicer to live in and much better for the climate than concrete
buildings.
When you buy something, you
buy something that lasts; you buy it because you really need it and want to
take care of it. But because you buy far fewer things, you can actually afford
products of better quality and design. "Refuse, reuse, reduce,
recycle" is the new way of looking at products: if you don't need it, you
refuse; if you buy it, you will use it again and again; and in the end, you
recycle it. All packaging is made from three types of plastic or other new
materials, so recycling is easier these days.
Agriculture has changed
dramatically, as the new plant-based alternatives to meat and dairy products
have made it harder for traditional animal-based products to compete. Much of
the land formerly used to produce animal feedstock has become available. As people
in cities have started to value going into nature, tourism, hunting and angling
now offer new types of income for people living in rural areas. Forests and nature are
again spreading across the globe. People travel more in their region and by
train, so air traffic has started to decline. Most airlines have switched to
electrofuels, biofuels or electricity.
Best of all, because citizens
have stopped buying so much stuff, they have more money to spend on other
things. This new disposable income is spent on services: cleaning, gardening,
help with laundry, healthy and easy meals to cook, entertainment, experiences
and fabulous new restaurants. All of these things give the average modern
person more options and more free time to spend with their friends and
families, working out, learning new skills, playing sports or making art – you
name it and there's more time to do it.
If we consider what the future
could be, picking up the mantle against climate change may not seem so bad
after all.
Ida Auken is a member of
Parliament, Parliament of Denmark (Folketinget).
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