49,999,999 to Go
by Pater
Tenebrarum
Back in April 2011, the UN
engaged in what Anthony Watts referred to as 'bureaucratic idiocy at its
finest'. It all started with Gavin Atkins asking a fair enough question: “What happened with the climate refugees?”
“In 2005, the United Nations
Environment Programme predicted that climate change would create 50 million
climate refugees by 2010. These people, it was said, would flee a range of
disasters including sea level rise, increases in the numbers and severity of
hurricanes, and disruption to food production.
The UNEP even provided a handy
map. The map shows us the places most at risk including the very sensitive low
lying islands of the Pacific and Caribbean.
It so happens that just a few
of these islands and other places most at risk have since had censuses, so it
should be possible for us now to get some idea of the devastating impact
climate change is having on their populations. Let’s have a look at the
evidence:
Bahamas:
Nassau, The Bahamas – The 2010
national statistics recorded that the population growth increased to 353,658
persons in The Bahamas. The population change figure increased by 50,047
persons during the last 10 years.
St Lucia:
The island-nation of Saint
Lucia recorded an overall household population increase of 5 percent from May
2001 to May 2010 based on estimates derived from a complete enumeration of the
population of Saint Lucia during the conduct of the recently completed 2010
Population and Housing Census.
Seychelles:
Population 2002, 81755
Population 2010, 88311
Solomon Islands:
The latest Solomon Islands
population has surpassed half a million – that’s according to the latest census
results.
It’s been a decade since the
last census report, and in that time the population has leaped 100-thousand.
Meanwhile, far from being
places where people are fleeing, no fewer than the top six of the very fastest
growing cities in China, Shenzzen, Dongguan, Foshan, Zhuhai, Puning and
Jinjiang, are absolutely smack bang within the shaded areas identified as being
likely sources of climate refugees.
Similarly, many of the fastest
growing cities in the United States also appear within or close to the areas
identified by the UNEP as at risk of having climate refugees.
More censuses are due to come
in this year, and we await the results for Bangladesh and the Maldives -said to
be places most at risk -with interest.
However, a very cursory look
at the first available evidence seems to show that the places identified by the
UNEP as most at risk of having climate refugees are not only not losing people,
they are actually among the fastest growing regions in the world.”
(emphasis added)
Oops! After that monumental
blunder, you would normally expect the UN to do something along the lines of
publishing a press release that could be saying something like: “We hereby
concede that we were completely wrong about 'climate refugees'. We apologize
for having unnecessarily contributed to the hysteria and panic over climate
change”.
So what did the UN do?
It simply 'disappeared' the
site containing its 2005 claims – when clicking on the link, browsers suddenly
displayed a '404' error message instead. Then it dispatched one of its
employees to comment on Gavin Atkins' article as follows: