Analyse
The transatlantic slave trade and colonial extraction (e.g., sugar, cotton, minerals) undeniably generated wealth that fueled European industrialization, as documented by historians like Eric Williams (*Capitalism and Slavery*). However, attributing *current* greenhouse gas emissions—primarily post-1950 (per IPCC AR6)—*exclusively* to the Industrial Revolution (1760–1840) is an overgeneralization. While historical emissions contribute to cumulative climate impacts, modern fossil fuel use (e.g., by Global North nations post-WWII) drives contemporary warming. The 'double jeopardy' framing conflates moral arguments for reparations with legal/climate-finance mechanisms, which remain unresolved in UNFCCC negotiations.
Achtergrond
Barbados, represented by Mottley, was a British colony built on sugar plantations worked by enslaved Africans until 1834. The Industrial Revolution relied on colonial resources and slave labor, but today’s climate debt discussions (e.g., Loss and Damage Fund) focus on *post-industrial* emissions. The IPCC notes that ~50% of cumulative CO₂ since 1750 was emitted after 1990, complicating direct historical accountability.
Samenvatting verdict
Mottley’s claim about the historical exploitation of enslaved and colonized peoples financing the Industrial Revolution is broadly accurate, but the direct link to *current* climate reparations oversimplifies complex economic and geopolitical dynamics.