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Real Climate Morality
by Paul Driessen
Our planet is again warming slightly, and the weather keeps taking
unexpected turns. Many scientists say this is hardly unprecedented,
cause
for alarm, or proof that humans are now the dominant factor in climate
change. Others disagree strongly, and point to every snowstorm,
hurricane,
deluge or drought as proof that urgent action is needed to avoid
imminent
climate catastrophe.
Britain's Royal Society wants ExxonMobil to further squelch debate, by
ending its funding of researchers who say natural forces are the primary
factor in climate change. (The Society didn't mention the $250,000 award
that scientist James Hansen received from Teresa Heinz-Kerry for
insisting
that humans are the cause.) Others have threatened climate alarmism
skeptics with "Nuremberg-style war crimes trials."
"Socially responsible" investor services refuse to recommend
corporations
they deem insufficiently sensitive on climate change. Companies have
brought climate activists into their board rooms, lobbied Congress for
climate and ethanol legislation, and retooled to produce new product
lines
they hope will boost tax subsidies, profits and favorable PR. Meanwhile,
headlines hype every scary scenario.
Asserting "the science is settled" ignores the debate that still rages.
Proclaiming that "climate change is real" ignores Earth's constant,
natural warming, cooling and weather anomalies. Most important, our
current knowledge simply does not justify imposing inhumane policies on
the world's poorest citizens.
Four times, mile-thick ice sheets smothered Europe and North America. A
thousand years ago, Vikings raised crops and cattle in Greenland, while
Britons grew grapes in England. Four centuries later, the Norsemen were
frozen out, Europe was gripped in a Little Ice Age, and priests
performed
exorcisms on glaciers advancing toward Swiss villages. The globe warmed
in
1850-1940, cooled for the next 35 years, then warmed slightly again.
Detroit experienced six snowstorms in April 1868, frosts in August 1869,
a
98-degree heat wave in June 1874, and ice-free lakes in January 1877.
Wisconsin's record high of 114 degrees F in July 1936 was followed five
years later by a record July low of 46. In 1980, five years after
Newsweek's "new little ice age" cover story, Washington, DC endured 67
days above 90 degrees.
Studies by National Academy of Sciences, NOAA, Danish and other
scientists
raise additional inconvenient truths that contradict catastrophic
climate
change hypotheses and computer models. The Southern Hemisphere has not
warmed in the past 25 years. The "hockey stick" temperature graph (which
claimed 1990-2000 was the hottest decade in 1000 years) broke under
scrutiny.
The sun's radiant heat and cosmic ray levels affect planetary warming
and
cooling and cloud formation more strongly than most climate alarmists
and
models acknowledge. Contrary to 2005 assertions and predictions,
interior
Greenland and Antarctica are gaining ice mass, not losing it; Gulf
Stream
circulation has not slowed; and the US is yet to be hit by a major
hurricane in 2006.
All in all, nothing suggests that predominantly human influences have
suddenly supplanted the natural forces that clearly caused climate and
weather cycles in past centuries. Yet, many still demand immediate
action
to prevent future climate change. Few appreciate how costly (and futile)
such actions would be.
Government and private studies calculate that the Kyoto Protocol would
cost the US up to $348 billion in 2012, and average American families
would pay an extra $2,700 annually for energy and consumer goods. In US
minority communities, concludes another, the climate treaty would
destroy
1.3 million jobs and "substantially affect" standards of living.
Globally, Kyoto carries a $1 trillion annual price tag, in regulatory
bills, higher energy costs and lost productivity, according to economist
Bjorn Lomborg. That's several times what it would cost to provide the
world with clean drinking water and sanitation - which would prevent
millions of deaths annually from intestinal diseases.
Over 2 billion of the Earth's citizens - including 95% of Africans -
still
do not have electricity. That means no lights, refrigerators, stoves,
radios, televisions or computers; no modern homes, hospitals, schools,
offices or factories. Instead, people breathe polluted smoke from wood
and
dung fires, and die by the millions from lung diseases.
The world should be rushing to their aid. Instead, in the name of
preventing hypothetical climate change, environmentalists and rich
countries oppose fossil fuel power plants in poor countries. To "protect
wild rivers," they obstruct hydroelectric projects. On the ground that
it
is "inherently dangerous," they resist nuclear power. In short, they are
telling a third of the world's people:
"You cannot have modern, healthy, industrialized societies. Your only
option is trivial amounts of expensive, unreliable electricity from wind
and solar. To safeguard the world from speculative risks that we are
concerned about, you must endure life-threatening dangers that
perpetuate
poverty, disease and childhood death in your destitute nations."
To top it off, just as thousands of delegates and activist are about to
board CO2-emitting jetliners to attend the 2006 global warming confab in
Kenya, the European Union has proposed taxes on imports from China,
India
and other poor nations that are exempt from Kyoto. The EU claims the
exemption gives poor countries an "unfair trade advantage" over EU
countries that are struggling to meet even their initial treaty
commitments. (Some have increased CO2 emissions by 20-50% since 1990,
despite signing the treaty.)
Others are blaming malaria and malnutrition on climate change, to
deflect
well-founded charges that their callous opposition to insecticides and
biotechnology is killing more African babies.
For nearly everyone - especially the world's poor - it will be all pain,
and no gain. Even perfect compliance with the Kyoto Protocol would
result
in Earth's temperature being only 0.2 degrees F less by 2050 than if we
did little or nothing. Assuming humans really are the culprits, actually
controlling theoretical global temperature increases would require 40
Kyoto treaties - each one imposing greater government control over
energy
use and prices, emissions, and housing, transportation, heating, cooling
and manufacturing decisions.
Alarmists demand that we handcuff modern economies, to promote solutions
that won't solve a problem which extensive evidence suggests is
moderate,
manageable and primarily natural in origin.
Infinitely worse, they use faulty models, extreme what-if scenarios and
exaggerated fears of climate cataclysm to justify depriving Earth's most
impoverished citizens of electricity, water purification and other
modern
technologies that would improve and save countless lives.
That is unconscionable and immoral. It is the real climate change
catastrophe.
Truly ethical and socially responsible policies would foster robust
debate
about costs, benefits, models and every other aspect of climate change -
and ensure rapid technological and economic advancement (including
modern
pollution controls) in Third World countries.
They would leave critical development decisions to the real
stakeholders:
not climate alarmists - but those who must live with the consequences of
decisions that affect their access to energy, health, hope, opportunity
and prosperity.
Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Congress of Racial
Equality
and Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow, and author of
Eco-Imperialism:
Green power Black death (www.Eco-Imperialism.com) CORE will host a November 29
program at the United Nations on how climate change policies might affect
industrialization, families and communities in developing nations.

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