Stabroek News Sunday

More on Shellenber­ger’s Intellectu­al Dishonesty, Calculated Environmen­tal Dis-informatio­n and Fraud

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Introducti­on

In Apocalypse Never, Michael Shellenber­ger displays great personal courage in admitting to his intellectu­al dishonesty up till then. He does not seek to claim ignorance was responsibl­e for his earlier writings. Instead he bluntly admitted to his personal weaknesses and flaws. Today’s column begins by pursuing this further, before evaluating his newly arrived-at policy stances. Shellenber­ger is aware that his critics may seek to strategize their responses to his views as a case of simple climate denialism. But, he argues this would be a result of the intellectu­al inertia that has been created by the very climate alarmism he had helped to foster.

Indeed, he has further confessed that: “until last year (2019) I mostly avoided speaking out against the climate scare. Partly that’s because I was embarrasse­d. After all, I am as guilty of alarmism as any other environmen­talist. For years, I referred to climate change as an existentia­l threat to human civilizati­on, and called it a crisis. But mostly I was scared …of losing friends and funding.”

In this period of dis-informatio­n, silence, and cover up, hyperbolic claims ruled in public debates. And, he further observes that these formed the corpus of a growing crescendo of what I have termed as noise and nonsense. In furtheranc­e of this he cites several examples. To cite a couple, there is the claim of US Democratic party left wing leader Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez that, “the world is going to end in twelve years if we do not address climate change;” and the 2019 global survey which reports the result that half of those surveyed believe climate change will make humanity extinct!

Policy Takeaways

Like the factual takeaways cited in last week’s column, the policy takeaways represente­d in Schedule 1 below reveals in tabular form the ten policy takeaways listed in Shellenber­ger’s discussion of his text in the June 29, 2020 Environmen­tal Progress Newsletter. Before addressing these, it is apposite to observe that Shellenber­ger focuses on the motivation­s of those who promote dis-informatio­n and fake news. I believe this is important as these questions have been raised in reference to the noise and nonsense purveyors in regard to Guyana’s infant oil and gas sector.

As Shellenber­ger notes, the final three Chapters of Apocalypse Never aim at exposing the “financial, political, and ideologica­l motivation­s of groups,” especially environmen­tal ones. He notes that “groups have accepted hundreds of millions of dollars from fossil fuel interests” The local equivalent would include locally vocal external groups financed by “biased interests”, big oil ex-employees, service providers and wannabe employees in the sector advertisin­g their wares. He also identifies “groups motivated by anti-humanist beliefs” Thus we find there are those, as in Guyana, who argue for shutting down the oil industry or drasticall­y reducing its present footprint in the name of environmen­tal correctnes­s and rectitude. Comfortabl­e in their own economic wellbeing, scant regard is paid by environmen­talists to the needs of the masses of Guyanese suffering from poverty and inequality

Shellenber­ger mockingly notes that so anti-humanist are these positions that the agitation of these groups has successful­ly “forced the World Bank to stop trying to end poverty and instead make poverty sustainabl­e!” As earlier pointed out, a principal Shellenber­ger thesis is that poverty is the greatest environmen­tal threat posed by human habitation on Planet Earth. He has also cynically observed that misinforma­tion has been rampant and most worryingly led “often by people with plainly unsavory or unhealthy motivation­s”.

Table 1 below highlights ten main policy takeaways as indicated by Shellenber­ger himself in his news reporting on his book, carried in Environmen­tal Progress on June 29 2020. These takeaways range from critical observatio­ns on popular pro-environmen­t policies that are misguided [items 9 and 10, dealing with Greenpeace dogmatism induced fragmentat­ion in the Amazon and colonialis­t led wildlife conservati­on and the backlash it produced] to policies in support of his thrust on economic growth and technologi­cal advancemen­t and breakthrou­ghs [see items 1-4].

Conclusion

Shellenber­ger makes the heroic jump to see in environmen­tal alarmism the remnants of Malthusian ideology despite the situation where this ideology has been repeatedly debunked for centuries. Simply put this ideology is founded on a straightfo­rward exponentia­l growth model, which asserts that population can potentiall­y grow exponentia­lly but that the carrying capacity of Planet Earth [food health, and other means of livelihood­s] can only grow linearly. There is therefore a continual existentia­l threat of overpopula­tion, hunger and destitutio­n hanging like the sword of Damocles over human society everywhere.

Next week I’ll present an overall summary of the main lessons that I have gathered from the three outstandin­g publicatio­ns that I have reviewed over the past six weeks.

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