Productive disagreement is our best hope of tackling the climate crisis

By Eliza.Compton, 6 December, 2024
As complex communities with a social purpose, universities are ideal places to foster and model difficult discussions around prioritising investment and effort towards net zero goals, writes Nigel Ball
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Responding to staff and student pressure, many UK universities have agreed to pursue an accelerated decarbonisation timetable, well ahead of the UK government’s overall 2050 target for net zero. Some argue that these university-level targets – which in some cases are less than six years away – are too ambitious to be achieved and university administrators should never have agreed to them. That’s wrong. Responding to staff and student expectations is something that universities should do more of, not less.

University of the Arts London (UAL), where I work as director of the Social Purpose Lab, set net-zero targets in 2019, seeking to achieve net-zero energy use on campus by 2030 (known as Scopes 1 and 2 in the jargon) and for all emissions we cause by 2040 (Scope 3). 

Having made these commitments, we are having to face up to uncomfortable questions about what it will take to achieve such stretching goals. To hit our Scope 1 and 2 goals requires us to do considerable work on a multi-site campus with multiple buildings of variable heritage – a challenge shared by most universities. It is increasingly apparent that, when we made the initial commitment, we didn’t know enough about what it would take to achieve this goal. 

What is the right way to respond?

As my colleague Polly Mackenzie and I argued in a recent essay for the UPP Foundation, “a university is a community, not a corporation”. A university draws its identity and purpose from the people who study and research within it rather than from the interests of distant shareholders or the vision of a chief executive. Confronting complexity and enabling productive debate is something universities naturally excel at. If a university community collectively decides on a target, it should collectively form agreement around the key choices involved in achieving it.

To do so elevates the task from a purely operational one – how to replace old gas boilers and seal up leaky buildings – to one that confronts the intricate dilemmas that will be a feature of the decarbonisation agenda everywhere. If we are in a climate emergency, as many universities have declared, then many will argue that we should act with the urgent and extensive measures that such a situation calls for. Does that mean campuses should close for a time to allow refits, as they did in the Covid emergency? Should money be diverted from improving the student experience or pursuing impactful research towards upgrading lightbulbs and buying carbon offsets?

These trade-offs cannot be resolved by estates departments alone. Universities should face down the difficult decisions using their defining asset: the diverse and independent thinkers who form a university community.

That requires difficult discussions. Disagreement is inevitable, and not all of it will be productive. In some ways, we are well set up for this at UAL. As a university that promotes and celebrates the value of creativity, imaginative problem-solving comes naturally to many in our community. And many of our disciplines have tools to aid this thinking, such as the participatory decision-making approaches that are an important feature of modern design practice.

One of our tasks in the Social Purpose Lab is to help our community through these discussions. A perfect consensus will almost certainly be out of reach. A decision will still need to be made, and we have formal governance structures that enable that. But we believe the conversations that we expect to facilitate over the coming months and years will deepen our staff and students’ appreciation of the difficult decisions we face. Staying true to our own values while continuing to operate in a relentlessly carbon-intensive economy is a challenge we all need to overcome together.

My own hope is that the process of conducting such discussions, as well as the decisions that eventually get made, enable universities to model the wider debate that society needs to have as the climate crisis worsens over the coming decades. Universities’ pursuit of early targets will enable all the tricky trade-offs and difficult compromises that a just transition requires to play out in microcosm on campus. This will be a dress rehearsal for the same debates that are going to take place in the broader political arena, as entire societies attempt decarbonisation in the coming decades. 

It is universities’ duty to show the way.

Nigel Ball is director of the Social Purpose Lab at the University of the Arts London.

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As complex communities with a social purpose, universities are ideal places to foster and model difficult discussions around prioritising investment and effort towards net zero goals, writes Nigel Ball

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Please folks, there is no crisis in climate. Stop with trying people's mental health & facilitating Marxist compliance. There is only climate & our atmosphere is very dynamic & it can be so on long timescales or short ones. The m/o of this debate is not about climate as much as it is about redistribution of income to newer entities. These entities cannot stand on their own feet. I have no problem with no technology coming on but it must be financially sound, reasonably productive, & the benefits must outweigh the bad. The problem with renewables is they are geographic specific & simply cannot sustain the whole grid. The greens should reduce their expectations. Nothing is utopian. If they get to 30% of the grid I think that would be landmark. A multigrid is a better grid because it takes the stress of supply & demand during natural disasters & those of human tensions. And emissions will go down a little bit but you will not get this largescale change in climate. The climate is based largely on macroscopic properties due to differential heating. The differential heating effect lies in our the planet's unique orientation in space & its layered atmosphere & geomorphology. Mitigation of pollution is always a goal but you cannot get to perfect. Filtration technology certainly is improving. Instead of top-down approaches & mandates, the best action is to encourage industry to be the necessity is the mother of invention. You know the plastics industry is evolving now & the Pacific Ocean is getting cleaned up. We are now starting to look at what is added to our food & for biological methods to deal with pestilence. The huge regression is in education. Students are not being taught to reason but rather group think. Censureship rules & other views are not tolerated. This all pertains to the fact that many people do not believe in the free market but rather Marxist redistribution which has never worked--be it British or American or anything else. Scientific method has been destroyed & we are having one scandal in academia after another be it DEI, the climate stuff, the covids stuff. Just follow the money. Regarding the climate we do indeed have some macroscopic changes. You do not control it. The major disruptions have been to the jetstream & the ozone layer. Anyone in science who knew how to hypothesize would have looked to macroscopic properties first. You don't hear of these because of dangerous media & group think. But what you don't realize is the adverse ramifications of investing all of one's eggs in one's basket has the high probability of adverse circumstances. It's not some higher theory. It simply derives from a course in natural hazards. CO2 is not a natural hazard. It is a compound in the atmosphere-a trace one at that. What the world should concentrate on is mitigation of human mortality & property damage that comes with natural hazards. This involves structural material, communication improvements, evacuation routes & refuge facilities, & emergency medical mgmt.
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