The just transition ought to be more about justice than energy

Daylin Paul

In a deeply felt, hard-hitting talk, photographer Daylin Paul eloquently articulates the case for a just transition that is more about equality and prosperity than wind turbines and solar panels. He overlays powerful prose with award-winning images of the suffering that ordinary people continue to endure due to the mindset that has given us the current framework of development and progress. He contends that if we continue to let the powers that be, be, things will get worse: injustice will deepen, and millions more will suffer. He further asserts that we are likely to endure and enter a new golden era of justice, equality, and prosperity if we take responsibility. But we can’t have one without another: there is no survival without equality, no peace without justice.

Daylin Paul is an independent photographer, writer, filmmaker and climate change activist. A graduate of Rhodes University’s school of Journalism and Media Studies, he is the 2017 winner of the Ernest Cole Award for Photography for his work on coal mining and burning in the Mpumalanga highveld region, which was released as his debut monograph “Broken Land.” His photographs have appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, Foreign Policy, Financial Times, and many other publications internationally.

 
Previous
Previous

Four tipping points Africa can expect from climate change

Next
Next

Could rising CO2 levels be causing an insect apocalypse?