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Debating degrowth

In a landscape often paralyzed by forced optimism, Break-Down refuses to look away from the stark reality of climate backsliding, arguing that the only viable path forward requires dismantling the very economic engine driving the crisis. This inaugural newsletter doesn't just round up news; it posits that the concept of "degrowth" has finally pierced the mainstream, not as a fringe fantasy, but as a necessary anti-capitalist strategy that the establishment is now desperate to attack.

The Cost of Forced Hope

The editors open with a brutal assessment of the last five years, noting that while liberal climate politics made minor gains, they were easily rolled over by a "renewed onslaught from both the right and from the resilience of capital." The piece argues that the prevailing strategy of coddled optimism has failed, quoting Adrienne Buller and Geoff Mann: "things are bad, and they are for the moment getting worse, but the exhortation to suppress this truth in the interests of coddled 'hope' and forced optimism has been one of the least compelling aspects of (some parts) of the climate movement." This refusal to sugarcoat the situation is the publication's strongest asset; it validates the exhaustion many feel while redirecting that energy toward structural analysis rather than despair.

Debating degrowth

Yet, the editors identify a surprising shift: the idea of degrowth is no longer confined to the radical left. It has appeared in BBC specials, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's Sixth Assessment Report, and even in the furious denunciations of right-wing economists. As Break-Down notes, "there's no denying that the idea has penetrated the mainstream." This penetration is significant because it signals that the debate has moved from whether we must reduce consumption to how we will manage the political fallout of doing so.

The exhortation to suppress this truth in the interests of coddled 'hope' and forced optimism has been one of the least compelling aspects of the climate movement.

The Banana Paradox and the Limits of Reform

The newsletter's curation of external voices sharpens the argument by highlighting the physical impossibility of simply "greening" existing capitalist supply chains. Casey Williams, writing in the New York Review of Books, provides a vivid example of why technical fixes fail. Break-Down reports Williams' observation that "capitalism hardly organizes production in neutral ways: the profit imperative encourages the development of 'productive forces' that cannot necessarily satisfy social needs in an ecologically rational fashion."

The piece uses the example of industrial banana farming to illustrate a critical point: "using colossal amounts of insecticides to produce ever-increasing quantities of genetically identical bananas may be good business, but today's banana plantations could not simply be seized by workers and made to serve an ecologically conscious socialism." The argument here is that the infrastructure of modern capitalism is so deeply optimized for waste and profit that it cannot be repurposed for sustainability. What is needed, Williams suggests, is "a totally different way of producing bananas—and probably far fewer of them." This reframes the solution from efficiency to reduction, a distinction that often gets lost in policy circles.

Critics might argue that this perspective underestimates the potential for rapid technological innovation in agriculture to reduce chemical use without shrinking production. However, the piece counters that the imperative of infinite growth on a finite planet makes such innovation insufficient on its own.

Legal Victories and Regulatory Retreats

While the movement gains intellectual ground, the political landscape remains a battlefield of contradictory signals. On one front, the International Court of Justice issued a watershed ruling requiring high-emitting nations to limit warming to 1.5 degrees or face reparations. Harj Narulla, representing the Solomon Islands, called it "the most significant climate decision ever issued by a court," a victory that Break-Down rightly frames as a clear statement that "the status quo isn't sufficient."

Conversely, the executive branch in the United States is actively dismantling the legal basis for climate action. The newsletter details how the Environmental Protection Agency, under Administrator Lee Zeldin, plans to revoke the scientific determination that greenhouse gases from cars significantly contribute to climate change. The agency intends to argue that regulating these emissions would cause harm by leading to "higher prices and fewer choices for car buyers." This juxtaposition creates a tense narrative: international courts are establishing liability while domestic regulators are eroding the scientific consensus required to prove it.

The New Arctic and the Regressive Future

The physical reality of the crisis is accelerating faster than many models predicted. Researchers in Svalbard, the Norwegian archipelago home to the world's northernmost permanent settlement, have documented "startling changes to the winter climate" that signal a "new Arctic." Break-Down highlights their findings in Nature Communications, noting that while winter warming events were once seen as anomalies, they are now reshaping landscapes and triggering cascading effects on permafrost thaw. The editors reflect on the urgency, asking if "we have been too cautious with our climate warnings."

In a stark contrast to this environmental urgency, the newsletter critiques the vision of the American right, which is pushing for a "Reindustrialize 2025" conference in Detroit. The piece describes the vision presented there as "queasily fascistic," driven by a desire to restore military power through industrial might. Advait Arun, quoted in the newsletter, cuts through the rhetoric: "The future, like the past, amounts to nothing more than work and war. It's worse than bad—god, it's boring." This critique exposes the hollowness of a vision that equates national strength with the expansion of destructive industries, ignoring the ecological collapse that would render such power meaningless.

The future, like the past, amounts to nothing more than work and war. It's worse than bad—god, it's boring.

Degrowth as a Gateway

The centerpiece of the newsletter is an interview with Jason Hickel, reflecting on the five years since his book Less is More was published. Hickel argues that the backlash against degrowth is not about semantics but about the fundamental challenge it poses to capitalism. He states, "Degrowth is an anti-capitalist position, firmly rooted in ecosocialist analysis," and notes that it is being attacked because "it calls for overcoming capitalist control over the means of production."

Hickel suggests that the concept serves as a crucial entry point for broader political change, stating, "Degrowth is a gateway into socialist thought for the 21st century." This framing is powerful because it moves the conversation beyond the fear of economic contraction and toward the promise of democratizing production to ensure human well-being. The piece argues that once people start thinking about how to reduce wasteful production, they inevitably enter the terrain of socialist policy.

Critics might contend that this "gateway" approach is too theoretical for a political moment defined by immediate economic anxiety, where voters are more concerned with inflation than with abstract notions of degrowth. However, Hickel's point is that the current economic model is already failing to provide well-being, making the alternative increasingly attractive.

Bottom Line

Break-Down's debut issue succeeds by refusing to separate the climate crisis from the economic system that drives it, offering a clear-eyed analysis that rejects both toxic optimism and regressive industrial fantasies. The strongest part of the argument is the demonstration that degrowth is no longer a fringe idea but a central fault line in global politics, while its vulnerability lies in the immense political difficulty of translating this theoretical framework into immediate policy without triggering a severe economic backlash. Readers should watch for how the legal victories in international courts will hold up against the regulatory rollbacks in the United States, as this clash will define the next decade of climate action.

Deep Dives

Explore these related deep dives:

  • Degrowth

    The article centers on a retrospective interview with Jason Hickel about degrowth and its trajectory since 2020. Understanding the intellectual history, key theorists, and critiques of degrowth as an economic concept would provide essential context for readers engaging with this debate.

  • Svalbard

    The article discusses alarming climate research from Svalbard showing a 'new Arctic' emerging from winter warming events. Understanding this unique archipelago's geography, extreme environment, and role as a climate research hub enriches the reader's grasp of why these findings matter.

  • Eco-socialism

    The newsletter explicitly positions itself as pursuing 'ecosocialist hegemony' and discusses tensions between ecosocialist thinkers like Hickel/Saito and eco-modernists like Matthew Huber. Understanding ecosocialism's theoretical foundations and political program would contextualize this intra-left debate.

Sources

Debating degrowth

by Various · Break-Down · Read full article

Welcome to the *first* newsletter from the BREAK–DOWN!

Fresh from our expansion out of the digital realm and into the physical with our first print issue, Right Turn (available here!), we’re now pushing ever further with our 4d strategy for ecosocialist hegemony: by launching a substack.

The aim of this newsletter is to bring you the best new writing on capitalism and the climate crisis every fortnight. Expect original essays from our writers and contributors, analysis from the BREAK-DOWN’s editors, round-ups of the best new research and writing from elsewhere, and more.

With that in mind, our first offering brings you an interview with Jason Hickel, providing something of a retrospective on where the climate movement in the Global North stands now, and how far it has come in the five years since his landmark book, Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World, was published. Much has changed in that time, of course, chief among them the ways in which we work and organise as a result of the pandemic. In the case of the climate, these years have been largely defined by stasis or, with depressing frequency, backsliding.

Our first issue was in many ways a stocktake of this backsliding, analysing how the minor advances that liberal climate politics achieved over the past decade or two have so easily been rolled over by a renewed onslaught from both the right and from the resilience of capital. As Adrienne Buller and Geoff Mann noted in the issue’s introduction, “things are bad, and they are for the moment getting worse, but the exhortation to suppress this truth in the interests of coddled ‘hope’ and forced optimism has been one of the least compelling aspects of (some parts) of the climate movement.” There is power in confronting the forces of reaction with clear eyes.

Yet there have also been green shoots. Among these has been the growing awareness, and even acceptance (however critical) of the idea of degrowth—and not just on the ecologically-minded left. From recent BBC special features on whether degrowth can “save the world” to mentions of degrowth in the IPCC’s Sixth Annual Report, and even in its increasingly frequent denunciation by right-wing press and celebrity economists, there’s no denying that the idea has penetrated the mainstream.

For that, alongside the hugely popular work of Kohei Saito, Jason Hickel can take much of the credit. His book, Less ...