“Paris didn’t mark the beginning of the fight to save the planet — it marked the moment the world decided to sell the illusion of salvation instead.”
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Ten years on: has the Paris climate deal delivered? | DW News
The Paris Illusion: Ten Years Later, the World Is Still Burning — Only the PR Has Changed
Ten years after its signing, the Paris Agreement is being hailed as a turning point in humanity’s war against climate chaos. Leaders will soon fly — in private jets, of course — to a city in the Brazilian Amazon to negotiate its “next phase,” surrounded by devastation that makes a mockery of the whole ritual.
They’ll call it progress. But what if the story of Paris — the world’s supposed climate miracle — has been carefully polished into one of the most successful greenwashing campaigns in history?
The Myth of “Before and After Paris”
The establishment loves neat narratives. “Before Paris” was the era of confusion and denial; “after Paris” the dawn of hope, technology, and global unity. But the line dividing those two worlds is far blurrier — and far bloodier — than anyone admits.
The truth is that Paris didn’t fix the climate crisis. It rebranded it.
The Agreement’s biggest innovation wasn’t scientific or technological. It was psychological: the creation of the illusion that collective declarations could substitute for enforcement, that optimism could stand in for obligation, that momentum itself could replace measurable progress.
No penalties. No legal teeth. No global regulator. Just faith — the idea that belief in a “transition” would somehow generate it.
Flattening Emissions — or Flatlining Truth?
The boosters will tell you global greenhouse emissions are “flattening.” They’ll leave out that atmospheric CO₂ hit a record 425 parts per million this year — the highest level in 15 million years. That the oceans are heating at rates climate models didn’t predict until mid-century. That 2025’s wildfire season began before winter ended.
We are not flattening emissions. We are flattening accountability.
The U.S. — still the world’s second-largest emitter — is skipping the Brazil talks altogether, led by a political faction that treats climate science like a religious war. Europe, supposedly the last bastion of green virtue, just reopened coal plants and backtracked on vehicle emissions standards under pressure from farmers and automakers.
And the developing world? Still waiting for the $100 billion annual climate fund Paris promised. It never arrived.
The Faith in “Inevitability”
The architects of Paris insist that the Agreement’s power lies in belief: that if enough nations, investors, and citizens are convinced the clean transition is “inevitable,” the world will pivot by sheer psychological gravity.
But inevitability is not a mechanism — it’s marketing.
The transition may indeed be unstoppable now, but not because of Paris. It’s because of physics, economics, and geopolitics — forces far less noble than the rhetoric of “global unity.” Fossil fuels are dying, yes, but they’re being killed by profit shifts, Chinese dominance, and resource exhaustion, not moral awakening.
The “inevitable” transition is a war of extraction, not salvation.
The Solar Surge — and Its Shadow
The raw numbers are dazzling: solar capacity exploding from 225 gigawatts in 2015 to nearly 2,000 gigawatts a decade later. Electric vehicles up 3,300%. Renewable energy now 92% of new power added in 2024.
But the question is not how much clean power we’ve built. It’s what it’s built on.
Those solar panels? Four out of five are made in one country — China — in a supply chain riddled with forced labor, rare earth mining, and coal-based manufacturing. Those EVs? Dependent on lithium, cobalt, and nickel mines that are poisoning Indigenous land in Chile, the Congo, and Indonesia.
“Clean energy” is not clean when it’s built on sacrifice zones. It’s just outsourced pollution.
The Primary Energy Lie
We’re told fossil fuels still account for 80% of the world’s energy. Analysts now argue that “primary energy” statistics exaggerate the fossil share because electricity is more efficient — a comforting mathematical sleight of hand that converts systemic waste into perceived success.
But when an accounting trick becomes a narrative tool, it’s propaganda.
Yes, electric systems waste less heat than combustion engines. But the global energy economy is still overwhelmingly powered by oil, gas, and coal — all subsidized by more than $7 trillion in direct and indirect government support annually. Fossil fuels aren’t fading. They’re being financially embalmed, kept alive by state policy.
The Rise of the Electrostate
The great irony of the post-Paris decade is that the torch of the “green revolution” was not carried by the Western democracies that authored the Agreement, but by the same industrial powerhouse they love to demonize: China.
China now produces 80% of the world’s solar panels, 70% of its EVs, and more than half of its clean tech patents. It’s exporting entire renewable infrastructures across Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.
And what of the West? It outsourced its emissions, called it progress, and now cries “ecological cold war” as it realizes who owns the factories.
This is not a global energy transition. It’s a global power transition.
The Western Delusion
Europe’s “Green Deal” was supposed to prove that capitalism could decarbonize itself. Instead, it has shown the opposite: that market-based climate solutions reproduce inequality, dependence, and delay.
Carbon markets enriched speculators. “Net zero” became a corporate branding exercise. Energy companies bought offsets instead of shutting down operations. Every major oil and gas firm that signed onto “Paris alignment” has since expanded drilling.
The fossil fuel lobby didn’t lose. It rebranded as “transition leadership.”
The Clean Revolution That Isn’t
The phrase “too cheap to contain and too big to ignore” captures both the promise and the peril of this new era. Clean tech is, indeed, too cheap to stop — but it’s also too cheap to protect. Oversupply, trade wars, and exploitative mining have created a new cycle of boom and bust.
This is not a revolution of liberation. It’s a reconfiguration of empire — electrons instead of oil, but the same geopolitical logic. The same dependence on extraction, on cheap labor, on the illusion of endless growth.
If anything, Paris succeeded in transforming the climate crisis into a commodity class. The carbon market became the new derivatives market. The climate summit became the new Davos.
The Canadian Contradiction
Few countries embody this schizophrenia like Canada — a self-proclaimed climate leader whose economy still revolves around oil, gas, and tar sands. Ottawa now funds both clean tech subsidies and pipeline expansions in the same budget. It calls this “balanced.”
But the balance is a mirage. A nation cannot stand with one foot on a glacier and the other in a bitumen pit forever.
At some point — and that point is coming fast — the “too cheap to contain” revolution will collapse that middle ground. Nations will either become clean producers or stranded petro-states.
The Verdict: Paris Was Never the Plan. It Was the Pause.
The Paris Agreement did not save the planet. It bought time — not to act, but to adjust the narrative. It allowed governments and corporations to keep operating the same extractive systems under the banner of “progress.”
The tragedy is not that Paris failed. It’s that we believed it succeeded.
The planet doesn’t negotiate with optimism. It negotiates with thermodynamics, and those talks are going very badly.
As the next summit convenes in the burning Amazon, it’s worth asking one forbidden question:
What if the world didn’t miss its “last best chance” to save the planet at Paris — but surrendered it there?
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