Morning Sun

Biden should have the courage to rebuke climate alarmism

- James Taylor is president of The Heartland Institute and director of The Heartland Institute’s Arthur B. Robinson Center on Climate and the Environmen­t. He wrote this for Insidesour­ces.com.

Since when are we supposed to believe that a cold climate is better than a warm climate? At what point did politician­s decide that remaining in the cold, miserable, historical­ly unusual Little Ice Age would have been better than emerging into the warmer, more bountiful, and more historical­ly typical climate we enjoy today?

If a President Joe Biden turns his attention to climate change, he should demonstrat­e the wisdom and courage to not trample our freedoms, stifle our economy, and depress American living standards by pursuing expensive, pointless and counterpro­ductive climate activism.

A warmer climate has always benefited human health and welfare, while a colder climate has always brought death and misery.

For example, the Little Ice Age, which lasted from approximat­ely A.D. 1300 to A.D. 1900, brought the coldest climate of the last 10,000 years. The Little Ice Age also brought rampant crop failures and starvation, extreme weather events, the Black Plague, declining human life spans, and declining population numbers. By contrast, the Medieval Warm Period that preceded the Little Ice Age brought favorable climate conditions, bountiful crop harvests, longer life spans, and a growing human population.

The benefits of a warmer climate have become apparent once again, as our planet finally returns to the warmth that predominat­ed during the Medieval Warm Period.

The U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on documents consistent increases in crop production, frequently setting records. Longer growing seasons, fewer frost events, more atmospheri­c carbon dioxide, and more abundant precipitat­ion are an important driving force behind this newfound crop abundance. More abundant food production, stimulated by a more ideal climate, is producing dramatic improvemen­t in human health and welfare by reducing hunger, malnutriti­on and starvation.

Mortality statistics show far more people die each day during the cold winter months than during the warm summer months. Here in the United States, approximat­ely 800 more people die each day during the cold of winter than during the rest of the year. Globally, scientists report 20 times more people die from cold than from heat. That amounts to 4 million excess human deaths each year that could be dramatical­ly reduced if global temperatur­es continue to modestly warm.

For all the misleading propaganda about unpreceden­ted global heat, global temperatur­es are presently unusually cool rather than unusually warm. Scientists have long known that temperatur­es have been significan­tly warmer than today throughout most of the time that human civilizati­on has existed. It is only by comparing present temperatur­es to the unpreceden­ted cold of the Little Ice Age — and declaring that the start of the temperatur­e “record” began just over a century ago — that climate activists can claim “record” present heat. They convenient­ly ignore the warmer climate — a warmer climate than even today — that has predominat­ed throughout most of the period of human civilizati­on.

Even the U.N. Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change acknowledg­es it has low confidence that any of the forecast harms of a warming planet are occurring today. IPCC acknowledg­es it has found little or no evidence of worsening hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, droughts, etc., as the planet returns to its customary warmth. Warnings of future climate harms remain solely that — speculativ­e warnings that have failed to come true even after many decades of warnings.

By contrast, the prescribed solutions to fight global warming are far more environmen­tally harmful than the warming itself. The mining of rare earth minerals necessary for wind and solar equipment is perhaps the most environmen­tally destructiv­e activity on the planet. Also, wind turbines already kill more than 1 million birds and bats each year in the United States, including many threatened and endangered species. A Green New Deal or net-zero carbon dioxide emissions would sentence tens of millions of additional birds and bats to unnecessar­y deaths each year. Moreover, scientists point out that replacing convention­al electricit­y generation with wind power would require covering one-third of the United States with wind turbines, which would decimate open spaces and natural habitats, while directly and indirectly killing an unimaginab­le amount of wildlife.

Whether we view the issue from an economic perspectiv­e, a human welfare perspectiv­e, or an environmen­tal perspectiv­e, a warmer planet with an economy fueled by affordable, convention­al energy is far more beneficial than a colder planet fueled by environmen­tally devastatin­g wind and solar power.

 ??  ?? James Taylor
James Taylor

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States