Aber Environment and Ethics

Kept and maintained by the Environment and Ethics Officer of the Guild of Students at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. All original posts and information provided here are the responsibility of the Environment and Ethics Officer, and are in no way taken to be those of UWA or the Guild of Students.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Not on guilt, but on passion

I've got a fair bit of respect for the way that Arnold Schwarzenegger has turned himself around into a credible and influential politician. I suppose it helps too that he's dragging his state, and the rest of the USA too, onto the climate bandwagon. He now makes one important point - that governments are built not on guilt, but on passion, and our challenge is to make climate change the raison d'etre of what government is really all about!

"The environmental movement must become "hip and sexy" if it is to succeed, California's Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has said.

"Speaking at a conference in Washington, he urged campaigners to focus on the positives of cutting carbon emissions rather than making people feel guilty. The movement must change its image just as he helped transform the "sketchy" reputation of bodybuilding, he said.

"California is seen as leading the way in tackling climate change in the US. The state - the sixth largest economy in the world - signed a law last year which set a target of cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by 25% by 2020. And while Mr Schwarzenegger cannot stand for president in 2008 because he is not US-born, he has made it clear he wants his views on climate change to play into the race.

"Addressing a largely student audience at Georgetown University, Mr Schwarzenegger said he was optimistic attitudes to the environment were changing. But, he said, campaigners on climate change needed to shake off the image of being "tree-huggers" and "fanatics". "Environmentalists were no fun, they were like prohibitionists at a fraternity party," he said to laughter.


"The Republican governor - the former body-builder turned film-star turned politician - invoked images of pumping iron to make his point. Weight-lifting was once considered a pursuit for weirdos, he said, carried out in dungeon-like gyms by people embarrassed to admit to doing it. But with positive marketing "it became mainstream, it became sexy, attractive, and this is exactly what has to happen with the environmental movement", he said. The same thing happened when the John Travolta film Saturday Night Fever made disco-dancing hip and sexy, he added, reaching even his little village in Austria.

"Mr Schwarzenegger, who has been criticised in the past over his fleet of Hummers, pointed out that his vehicles now run on bio-fuel and hydrogen. "We don't really want to go and take away the 'muscle' cars, the Hummers and the SUVs, because that's a formula for failure," he said. "What we have to do is make those cars more environmentally muscular." He rebuffed criticism from US carmakers, saying the fact they had to meet Californian standards on vehicle emissions would ensure they kept up with foreign competitors.


"And he urged campaigners to move away from using guilt to pressure people over greenhouse gas emissions. "Successful movements aren't built on guilt, they are built on passion," he said. He believes the environmental movement is approaching a "tipping point" where it will enter the mainstream, galvanising business and individuals.

"And California is leading the way, Mr Schwarzenegger said, especially as Republicans and Democrats are working together to pass pioneering legislation on the environment. "California is big, it's powerful and what we do in California has unbelievable impact and it has consequences," he said. "

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