Hamilton Journal News

Don’t listen when climate alarmists say sky is falling

- Marc A. Thiessen Mark Thiessen writes for The Washington Post.

At the Glasgow climate conference, President Joe Biden declared climate change an “existentia­l threat to human existence as we know it.” No, it’s not. Climate change is not a meteor hurtling toward Earth to destroy humanity. Rather, it is a chronic, manageable condition humanity can live with.

So argues Bjorn Lomborg, author of the book “False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor, and Fails to Fix the Planet.” “Fundamenta­lly, we’ve got to stop the alarmists,” he tells me. A recent poll found almost half of young Americans believe “humanity is doomed” because of climate change. This is not true. “Climate change is a problem, but not the end of the world,” Lomborg says. In fact, “things are a lot better than you think.”

For example, he points to estimates that climate change will increase deaths from malnutriti­on. (The World Health Organizati­on, for example, predicts 95,000 more deaths due to child malnutriti­on by 2030.) That is true, he says. But it is also true that malnutriti­on has plummeted over the past three decades, and is expected to continue plummeting in the next three.

Climate change doesn’t reverse this progress against deaths from malnutriti­on, Lomborg argues, “it makes progress go slightly less fast.” But if the Glasgow climate conference leads to the adoption of much stronger climate measures, he says, that will slow developmen­t. A global carbon tax, for example, could increase the number of people in poverty around the world by as much as 80 million, causing far more malnutriti­on deaths than climate change.

Or take deaths from climate-related disasters. In the 1920s, Lomborg wrote in an August op-ed, natural disasters killed almost half a million people per year on average.

But “in the last full decade, the 2010s, only 18,000 people died every year” — a reduction of

96% even as the global population quadrupled. In 2021, he says, the number of disaster deaths will be just about 6,000. That’s because better infrastruc­ture does more to save lives than cutting emissions. The key to preventing disaster-related deaths is to help more people afford to live in sturdy homes instead of under corrugated roofs.

What about temperatur­e-related deaths? It is true, Lomborg says, that we are seeing more heat waves today, but we are also seeing fewer cold waves. According a recent study in the Lancet, over the past two decades, there were 490,000 heat-related deaths worldwide, compared to 4.6 million cold-related deaths. While about 116,000 more people died from heat last year because of climate change, roughly 283,000 fewer people died from cold — which, he calculates, means global warming saved about 166,000 thousands of lives.

What about rising sea levels? Lomborg points to a Washington Post editorial that warns rising oceans could “make 187 million people homeless” by 2100. That is true only if you assume humanity does nothing during the next 79 years to adapt.

But even if we do nothing to reduce emissions, the world will not end.

The way to address climate change is to unleash the free market to increase prosperity and innovation. But climate alarmists are using false claims of doom to scare people into adopting policies that will have the opposite effect. That makes no sense.

The first step to rational solutions is to push back on the panic and recognize Biden is wrong — climate change does not threaten human existence.

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