Wasted ‘Climate Change’
Cash Could Save Lives Instead
A million people die of malaria every year. It is easily and cheaply prevented by using DDT, for a fraction of the dollars spent on the fantasy of global warming. But DDT has been banned in many countries, and no doubt many of the same scientists who prattle on about the menace of global warming decades from now endorse the ban of a substance that can save human lives today. Al Gore has saved exactly zero human lives by scaremongering about the UFO that is global warming — in the years since he won the Nobel Prize he could have contributed to saving 4-5 million humans, mostly kids. Bad science, bad economics, opportunity to make a real contribution lost.
By TOM HARRIS AND
ROBERT M. CARTER
When it comes to
climate change, our leaders would do well to follow Buddhist advice: when
struck by an arrow, first remove it before seeking out your assailant.
Otherwise, you will die.
But most governments and charitable foundations today
do exactly the opposite. They try so hard to appease climate activists — who
seem more concerned about the possible plight of people yet to be born than
those suffering today — that millions of people have been abandoned to misery
and early death in the poorest parts of the world.
The Canadian government is providing what might appear
to be a generous $142 million to help victims of drought and famine in East
Africa. Australia has also committed over $103 million. That is certainly far
more money than either China or Saudi Arabia — the latter situated just across
the Red Sea from the disaster area — are contributing. But it pales in
comparison with what Canada and Australia are paying to fulfill their entirely
voluntary Copenhagen Accord climate change commitments. Australia committed
$599 million and Canada $1.2 billion between 2010 and 2012.
Both nations have already donated the first third of
this commitment, an amount that is almost exactly the current shortfall in the
international Horn of Africa Drought fund, a deficit that may lead to the
deaths of hundreds of thousands of people if it is not rectified.
The Copenhagen Accord specified that contributions
should be split 50-50 between helping people adapt to climate change and
stopping (or “mitigating”) climate change. Australia is generally following
this formula, but 90% of Canada’s first $400 million donation is dedicated
entirely to mitigation.
This undue focus on mitigation of a hypothetical
human-caused dangerous warming that has yet even to be measured comes at the
expense of the urgent needs of the world’s most vulnerable peoples. For
example, ClimateWorks Foundation — an American climate activist group that has
donated millions to Al Gore’s Alliance for Climate Protection — received over
$500 million from charitable foundations when they launched in 2008. This was
twice as much as foundations contributed to the World Health Organization, and
over seven times as much as they donated to UNICEF in that year.
Over the last two decades ending in 2009, the U.S.
government spent a total of $68 billion for climate science research and
climate-related technology development. Worldwide, it is estimated that Western
countries alone are pouring at least $10 billion annually (2009) into global
warming related research and policy formulation.
There are untold amounts being spent by corporations
around the world on greenhouse gas reduction schemes, the costs of which are
passed almost entirely on to consumers.
On October 27, the Climate Policy Initiative issued a report showing that at least $97 billion per year is being
provided to “climate finance.” Tragically, just $4.4 billion — about 5% — of
the total is going to help countries and communities adapt to climate change.
All the while, aid agencies remain drastically
underfunded, even in the midst of East Africa’s worst famine in decades.
Developing countries are pressured by eco-activists, media, and the UN to
enable impractical “climate-friendly” energy policies that even developed
nations cannot afford. At the same time, millions of the world’s poor lack
access to electricity, running water, and basic sanitation.
And what is the world getting in return for this
sacrifice? If the science being relied upon by the governments and the UN were
correct, and all the countries of the world that have emission reduction
targets under the Kyoto Protocol actually met their targets, then 0.05 degrees
Celsius of warming might end up being prevented by 2050. In other words,
trillions of dollars of expenditure will be wasted for an impact on climate
that is not even measurable.
Clearly, the time has long since passed to take an
entirely different approach to the climate hazard issue. We need to pull out
the arrow, address the real wound, and leave learning more about the possible
assailant to another day.
Despite the demonstrated failure of the hypothesis of
dangerous human-caused global warming, a very real climate problem does exist.
It is the ongoing risk associated with natural climatic variations. This
includes short-term events such as floods and cyclones, intermediate scale
events such as drought, and longer-term warming and cooling trends.
That such climate change is natural does not imply it
is benign or gentle. Coming out of the last glacial period, during which sea
levels were over 100 meters lower than today and kilometer-thick ice sheets
made Canada, the northern U.S., and northern Eurasia uninhabitable, warming and
cooling many times faster than our 20th century changes occurred. Even as
recently as the 1920s, the “average annual temperature” rose between 2 and 4
degrees Celsius (and by as much as 6 degrees C in winter) in less than ten
years at weather stations in Greenland.
Such natural changes have serious impact on human
societies. From the demise of the robust Greenland Vikings to the sudden
disappearance of the powerful pre-Incan civilizations of the Moche and the
Tiwanaku, history is littered with examples of what happens when societies are
unprepared for or unable to adapt to climate change.
Even when civilizations do not completely collapse due
to extreme climate and weather changes, great calamities often ensue. Witness
the extreme hardship and famine in Europe during the most severe phases of the
1250-1875 Little Ice Age, and similarly in the 1930s Dust Bowl event in
America. Or how about the 1998 ice storm that paralyzed much of Eastern Canada
and the Northeastern United States?
We need to prepare for such events by hardening
society’s infrastructure through activities such as burying electricity
transmission lines underground. Had this been the norm, the freak October
snowstorm that just hit the northeast U.S. would not have caused widespread
power outages.
Similarly there is a need to “waterproof” southeastern
Australia, which can be expected to experience irregular drought periods in the
future naturally — quite irrespective of speculative human causation. This
could be accomplished through pumping fresh water into the Murray Darling Basin
from northern rivers, by recycling of waste water, by the construction of new
dam reservoirs or desalinization plants, and by the prevention of water waste
through evaporation and leakage from irrigation systems.
There is no question that climate change adaptation
measures can be expensive. But unlike today’s completely futile and even more
expensive attempts to stop the world’s climate from changing, expenditure on
preparation for and adaptation to dangerous climatic events will pass on a more
robust and wealthy society to future generations.
And perhaps some of the billions of dollars that we
choose not to squander on futile mitigation measures can instead be committed
to helping populations already living at the edge of survival.
For the cast-iron reality is that all countries need
to have available to them the financial resources to cope with the natural
climatic hazards that nature will inevitably continue to throw at us all.