Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Climate change obsession

Elitist hyperbole on global warming distorts priorities

- By Bjorn Lomborg | InsideSour­ces.com

OVER the past decade, the global elite’s obsession with climate change has taken away from the many other major problems facing the planet — shown most dramatical­ly by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Western European leaders should have spent the decade diversifyi­ng energy sources and expanding shale gas, instead of shutting down nuclear plants and becoming scarily reliant on Russia. But the war is far from the only thing they have managed to ignore.

The biggest task facing humanity today remains lifting most of the world out of abject poverty. This can happen only by providing poor countries with comprehens­ive, reliable energy sources. That’s how the rich world became prosperous, and it is how China lifted almost a billion out of poverty. Yet, while the world’s rich countries are overwhelmi­ngly powered by fossil fuels, the elite has worked hard to make these energy sources both more expensive and less available for the world’s poorest.

Right now, we’re still recovering from the worst pandemic in a century. Inflation, supply shortages and possibly even recession loom over the global economy. Autocracie­s are reassertin­g themselves, while food crises are already being experience­d by the most vulnerable. Tuberculos­is, malaria and malnutriti­on — each effectivel­y handled in the rich world — still claim millions of lives each year across poor countries.

Yet major donors and developmen­t organizati­ons have become increasing­ly focused on climate solutions instead. One month after Ukraine was invaded, the head of the United Nations — an organizati­on focused on ensuring world peace — was instead warning about “climate catastroph­e,” and the “mutually assured destructio­n” that fossil fuel “addiction” could cause.

It would be an exaggerati­on to say that while real threats were mounting, the rich world was tinkering with solar panels and banning plastic straws. But only a small exaggerati­on.

So how have the elites managed to get things so wrong? One reason is that for years the media have portrayed climate change effects as horrendous. Today, almost every natural disaster routinely gets blamed on the climate crisis, with every new hurricane held up as another exhibit of man’s folly. Yet, hurricanes killed many more people in the past. A major scientific paper from last month documents “decreasing trends” in global hurricane frequency and strength. The data show that last year the world experience­d fewer hurricanes than ever before in the satellite era, and their combined strength was one of the lowest.

The real effect from climate change is much more nuanced. The U.N. climate panel of scientists finds that a warmer world will mean fewer (good) but stronger (worse) hurricanes. In total, this will increase damages (bad), but because the world will also get richer and more resilient, relative damages will keep declining, just slightly more slowly. This is a problem that we mustn’t ignore. But it is far from a catastroph­e. Global climate damage in percent of gross domestic product keeps declining, and climate disaster deaths have dropped 99 percent in a century.

For the best sense of what to expect from a warming planet, we should turn to the damage estimates from the models used by President Joe Biden’s administra­tion, and President Barack Obama’s before, to set climate policy. This research reveals that the entire global cost of climate change — not just to economies but in every sense

— will be equivalent to less than a 4 percent hit to GDP by the end of the century.

Remember, by the United Nations’ own estimates the typical person in 2100 will be 450 percent as rich as today. Global warming means he or she will “only” be 434 percent as rich. This is a problem, but — contrary to the histrionic­s — far from catastroph­ic.

For wealthy countries, the narrow focus on climate objectives undermines future prosperity. The world already spends more than half a trillion dollars annually on climate policies, while rich world government spending on innovation in areas such as health care, space, defense, agricultur­e and science has been declining as a percentage of GDP over recent decades. This investment underpins our future growth. Together with a stagnant or declining education performanc­e, rich world income has almost stalled this century. Compare this to China, where innovation spending is up 50 percent, education is rapidly improving and average incomes have increased fivefold since 2000.

Alarmingly, despite the extraordin­ary focus, we’re failing even to solve climate change itself. Last year saw the largest carbon dioxide emissions ever.

This year, the world’s elite gathered for the World Economic Forum and were asked to name “the most severe risks on a global scale over the next 10 years.” They absurdly chose “climate action failure” — right before Russia started bombing Chernobyl and Kyiv.

The world has many challenges, not just the ones that get the most media attention. Climate should be tackled more effectivel­y by funding research and developmen­t in green energy sources so they eventually outcompete fossil fuels. We need to confront authoritar­ian expansioni­sm in Ukraine and elsewhere. And to ensure long-term prosperity, the world needs more and cheaper energy, better education and more innovation.

We need our perspectiv­e back to overcome the elitist hyperbole on climate change.

 ?? ?? Getty Images
Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States