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October 30, 2009

Mr. Gore, Your Solution to Global Warming Is Wrong


"We could so easily right this wrong. At a cost of less than $400 million a year, we could permanently help almost half the world get stronger and smarter. In monetary terms, for every dollar we spend, we could do more than twenty dollars' worth of good in the world."
By Bjørn Lomborg in Esquire

The plan we are most likely to adopt to address climate change will cost far too much and do next to nothing. The fight over the science of warming is over, yes. But the debate over the solution to global warming hasn't even begun.

I. A False Choice

On a family visit to Kenya long before he became president of the United States, Barack Obama declared that he wanted to go on safari. His Kenyan half sister, Auma, chided him for being a neocolonialist.

"Why should all that land be set aside for tourists," she asked, "when it could be used for farming? These wazungu care more about one dead elephant than they do for a hundred black children." Obama had no answer to her question, he would later write in Dreams from My Father. Why are rich countries more concerned about poor nations' nature reserves than about farms that would ward off starvation?

The safari story calls to mind the current preoccupation with global warming in the Western world. The financial crisis notwithstanding, many people — including President Obama — believe that global warming is among the most urgent issues of our time, and that cutting CO2 emissions is the most virtuous thing we can do about it. In fact, many say that doing so is perhaps the greatest moral obligation of the current inhabitants of planet earth. And they frame any discussion on warming by telling us that if we don't radically alter the way we live, the worst problems of humanity — chiefly disease and hunger — will become devastatingly worse. Before long, they say — perhaps a decade if we do not act immediately — it will be too late for us.

These apocalyptic visions are not at all supported by the available evidence. And to me, the solutions prescribed by those leading the charge are akin to building more safari parks instead of farms to feed the hungry. Campaigners in rich countries are pushing politicians to spend a great fortune on an ineffective solution to climate change instead of tackling the real problems of today — or looking for better responses to warming.

President Obama and other world leaders face a clear choice. They can continue on their current path — what we might call the "Gore solution" to climate change, given that the former vice-president is the fiercest advocate of cutting CO2 emissions, whether through a carbon tax or a cap-and-trade scheme.

Or, here's the truth: There are better, more cost-effective ways to fight global warming. And if we want to fight the problems that will be made worse by global warming, the solutions have very little to do with cutting CO2 emissions.

(More...)

11 comments:

Mike said...

I´m too much of a "denier" to even see the justification for $400 million (period) to be spent on this farce, much less $400 million a year. It´s the case of the missing hockey stick to me. Plus I can´t for the life of me imagine the motivation these people have for their warming alarmism beyond the obvious political and monitary profits to be made. I really feel sorry for the gullible masses who live in fear of this silliness.

Anonymous said...

Thank you, Mike. Gullible is exactly the word. The plebes are being terrorized and flim-flammed, and nobody's listening to the grown-ups. The word "gullible" should be attached to every press release.

Unknown said...

I'm heading out to the driveway to fire up the mini van and let it run until the the tank is almost empty. Then I'll refill it and possibly run it on the driveway awhile longer. I'm going to needlessly leave lights on in my house and crank the furnace to
85. And my "carbon footprint" still won't be a tenth of Al Gore's.

Anonymous said...

Arby, if you do that, I'm gonna run out and invest in a whole bunch of Gore's carbon credits!

Wetzy said...

I still have 20 sheets of carbon paper. Are they worth anything?

Anonymous said...

Twenty sheets? I'm pretty sure you've cornered the market.

RightKlik said...

Time to go buy the new Freakonomics book..

cbullitt said...

Here's my comment, more Monckton:
http://cbullitt.wordpress.com/2009/10/30/algores-agw-halloween-treat-from-fox/

Snarky Basterd said...

Alwhore needs to consider his own mammoth "carbon footprint" before he picks up the bullhorn to shout hysteria about ours.

Anonymous said...

Note to self ... Add "carbon footprint" to Honorable Mention List for Most Odious Phrases in the English Language

T. F. Stern said...

I guess a lot of those who support the insanity which is Global industrial suicide never read or comprehended the story, The Emperor's New Clothes.