Though, I may not agree with some of its assertions, I found this article to be thought provoking.
Climate Change and Capitalism: A Political Marxist View.https://www.resilience.org/stories/2019-07-11/climate-change-and-capitalism-a-political-marxist-view/I found the opening most interesting:
Viewed from the perspective of geological history, our current climatic and economic conditions are unusual. For most of the last 60 million years, the climate has been wildly unstable. It was only 10,000 years ago that it settled into its current stable state, and within this period that the Holocene emerged, during which human societies shifted their relationship with nature though agriculture, and then creating complex settled socio-economic forms, including capitalism.
From my perspective, the climate is changing; it has always been changing; it has never stopped changing. The climate is dynamic and subject to forces beyond our knowledge and understanding - Solar, Volcanic, Astronomic, Magnetic, etc. There are natural cycles that may span hundreds, thousands, or millions of years.
My beef with Big Climate Change is that it's foundation is that mankind is the singular cause of global climate change. As such, Big Climate Change advocates that a class of unelected, self-annointed political and academic elites take command and control of society and economy. But, have they ever considered that they may be wrong or only partially correct?
Mankind has become the dominant species (for now) on Earth because its ability to evolve, to adapt, and to modify its environment. The Klamath Reclamation Project (
https://anderstomlinson.com/tule-lake/farming/reclamation/) is a prime example. It reclaimed desert for agriculture. Now there's drought and insufficient precipitation to provide water to all parties that want it.
Do we de-industrialize and become less economically competitive in the hopes that this will make it rain again in Northern California / Southern Oregon for now and for always? Do we abandon the Project and let the desert reclaim the land? Or do we adapt? Do we look to history and geology for a better understanding of drought and precipitation history in the region? Do we innovate and invest - build more reservoirs, build desalination plants, build waste water treatment and purification plants, improve water use efficiency standards, possibly diversify into crops that are less water intensive?
The Global Climate Change approach to mis-identifying and not solving "problems" causes harm and dislocation among the unwashed masses while concentrating power and wealth in the unelected, self-annointed elitist class that is accountable to only itself.
Though a democratic, capitalist approach built upon innovation, investment, and competition may not make it rain, it may lead to better sustainable adaptations or provide opporunities to the dislocated unwashed masses.
Big Climate Change is too Stalinist for my liking, and history proved Stalin wrong.
