Friday, July 24, 2009

Climate Extremism

I enjoy Bjørn Lomborg's reasoning. I've read two of his books: The Skeptical Environmentalist and Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming. I found both reasonable and thoughtful. He doesn't deny global warming, but he points out that you need to put it in context and do an appropriate cost-benefit analysis in determining the way forward.

Here's a bit from an article he published in Project Syndicate:
The Nobel laureate in economics Paul Krugman goes further. After the narrow passage of the Waxman-Markey climate-change bill in the United States House of Representatives, Krugman said that there was no justification for a vote against it. He called virtually all of the members who voted against it, “climate deniers” who were committing “treason against the planet.”

Krugman said that the “irresponsibility and immorality” of the representatives’ democratic viewpoints were “unforgivable” and a “betrayal.” He thus accused almost half of the democratically elected members of the House, from both parties, of treason for holding the views that they do – thereby essentially negating democracy.

Less well-known pundits make similar points, suggesting that people with “incorrect” views on global warming should face Nuremburg-style trials or be tried for crimes against humanity. There is clearly a trend. The climate threat is so great – and democracies are doing so little about it – that people conclude that maybe democracy is part of the problem, and that perhaps people ought not to be allowed to express heterodox opinions on such an important topic.

This is scary, although not without historical precedent. Much of the American McCarthyism of the 1940’s and 1950’s was driven by the same burning faith in the righteousness of the mission – a faith that saw fundamental rights abrogated. We would be well served to go down a different path.

Gore and others often argue that if the science of climate change concludes that CO2 emissions are harmful, it follows that we should stop those harmful emissions – and that we are morally obliged to do so. But this misses half the story. We could just as well point out that since science tells us that speeding cars kill many people, we should cut speed limits to almost nothing. We do no such thing, because we recognize that the costs of high-speed cars must be weighed against the benefits of a mobile society.

Indeed, nobody emits CO2 for fun. CO2 emissions result from other, generally beneficial acts, such as burning coal to keep warm, burning kerosene to cook, or burning gas to transport people. The benefits of fossil fuels must be weighed against the costs of global warming.

Gore and Hansen want a moratorium on coal-fired power plants, but neglect the fact that the hundreds of new power plants that will be opened in China and India in the coming years could lift a billion people out of poverty. Negating this outcome through a moratorium is clearly no unmitigated good.

Likewise, reasonable people can differ on their interpretation of the Waxman-Markey bill. Even if we set aside its masses of pork-barrel spending, and analyses that show it may allow more emissions in the US for the first decades, there are more fundamental problems with this legislation.

At a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars annually, it will have virtually no impact on climate change. If all of the bill’s many provisions were entirely fulfilled, economic models show that it would reduce the temperature by the end of the century by 0.11°C (0.2°F) – reducing warming by less than 4%.

Even if every Kyoto-obligated country passed its own, duplicate Waxman-Markey bills – which is implausible and would incur significantly higher costs – the global reduction would amount to just 0.22°C (0.35°F) by the end of this century. The reduction in global temperature would not be measurable in a hundred years, yet the cost would be significant and payable now.

Is it really treason against the planet to express some skepticism about whether this is the right way forward? Is it treason to question throwing huge sums of money at a policy that will do virtually no good in a hundred years? Is it unreasonable to point out that the inevitable creation of trade barriers that will ensue from Waxman-Markey could eventually cost the world ten times more than the damage climate change could ever have wrought?

Today’s focus on ineffective and costly climate policies shows poor judgment. But I would never want to shut down discussion about these issues – whether it is with Gore, Hansen, or Krugman. Everybody involved in this discussion should spend more time building and acknowledging good arguments, and less time telling others what they cannot say. Wanting to shut down the discussion is simply treason against reason.
He comes across as the voice of reason in comparison to the strident moral purists who say "my way or the highway!". He's right. We need democratic discussion. We need to consider alternatives and look at costs. And, to my mind, we need to look at what investing in technology might buy us. Like they say "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure". I would say "a dollar into technological innovation is worth a couple of hundred thousand on enforcing restrictions". We need to be imaginative. Not puritanical.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

I find your view on this very reasonable. I started to write earlier to say this and saw some shiny thing that I had to investigate. I just ran across the articles by James Fallows and wondered; what say you? I will link to his first essay for other readers that may not follow his writing.

Unknown said...

Have you read these posts? I thought the second part was quite interesting and shed a lot of warmth on the whole issue.

RYviewpoint said...

Yes, Thomas, I read the material you linked to. It shows that there are lots of views out there. Richard Muller is a smart guy. There is a post about Muller from Brad DeLong who also teaches at UC Berkeley and DeLong says Muller now supports the hockey stick. Here is a what I believe is Muller's latest thinking.

I'm not a specialist. I read stuff by people more specialized than me and I find many viewpoints. What's the "right" viewpoint? My answer: we will maybe know in 20 years.

From a 2004 article in MIT's Technology Review magazine, here's Muller at his best in questioning the hockey stick:

In the scientific and political debate over global warming, the latest wrong piece may be the hockey stick, the famous plot (shown below), published by University of Massachusetts geoscientist Michael Mann and colleagues. This plot purports to show that we are now experiencing the warmest climate in a millennium, and that the earth, after remaining cool for centuries during the medieval era, suddenly began to heat up about 100 years ago--just at the time that the burning of coal and oil led to an increase in atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide.

I talked about this at length in my December 2003 column. Unfortunately, discussion of this plot has been so polluted by political and activist frenzy that it is hard to dig into it to reach the science. My earlier column was largely a plea to let science proceed unmolested. Unfortunately, the very importance of the issue has made careful science difficult to pursue.


I buy that. The science is muddied by politics. Mann in 2008 published an update and claims that the hockey stick is vindicated.

What I do know is that there are a number of reputable scientists who, in varying degrees, are skeptics.

My objections are not that I don't acknowledge greenhouse gases or a greenhouse effect. My objections are over how solid the modelling of climate is at this time.

I do know that global warming fanatics want to de-industrialize. I think that is the wrong approach. I'm for innovating our way around any potential problem by a big investment in science and technology, not cap-and-trade or carbon taxes or carbon emissions limits.

One important driver of my concern is that I see a lot of the fanatics who want to restrict economic growth for the poor while they aren't offering to give up their carbon-heavy lifestyles. They object to China and India industrializing and they want the middle and lower classes in America to "economize" but they do this while they jet around and leave their houses floodlit to show off (specifically Al Gore is guilty of this).

I was especially struck by the preface (or first chapter?) of Tim Flannery's The Weather Makers where he says he got his epiphany about global warming at 40,000 feet over India at night seeing all the open fires in the tens of thousands of villages. He then went on to fly around the world to "research" his book and attend conferences.

This is nuts. His one jet flight generated more greenhouse gases than several thousand Indian peasants would create during the same time. Flannery wants to forbid industry and energy development to them because it with threaten the environment, but I don't see him giving up his itch to be a frequent flyer spewing greenhouse gases at an extravagant rate. This is pure hypocrisy.

Too often the rich have panaceas that simply require the poor to tighten their belts while the rich party on. Nuts.

I'm pessimistic that we will get the rich to become ascetics, so the only maneuver I see to deal with potential global warming is a lot of money spent on science and technology. That's my bottom line.