New York Post

NO, WE’RE NOT FACING CLIMATE APOCALYPSE

- BJORN LOMBORG Bjorn Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus.

THE recent UN climate summit in Glasgow was predictabl­y branded our “last chance” to tackle the “climate catastroph­e” and “save humanity.” Like many others, US climate envoy John Kerry warned us that we have only nine years left to avert most of “catastroph­ic” global warming. But almost every climate summit has been branded the last chance. Setting artificial deadlines to get attention is one of the most common environmen­tal tactics. We have been told for a half-century that time has almost run out.

This message is not only spectacula­rly wrong but leads to panic and poor policies.

Two years ago, Britain’s Prince Charles announced that we had just 18 months to fix climate change. It wasn’t his first attempt at deadline-setting. Ten years earlier, he told an audience that he “had calculated that we have just 96 months left to save the world.”

In 2004, a major UK newspaper told us that without drastic action, climate change would destroy civilizati­on by 2020. By that time, it foretold, major European cities would be sunk beneath rising seas,

Britain would be plunged into a “Siberian” climate as the Gulf Stream shut down, and mega-droughts and famines would lead to widespread rioting and nuclear war. Not quite what happened last year.

And these prediction­s have been failing for decades. In 1989, the UN’s

Environmen­t Program head declared we had just three years to

“win — or lose — the climate struggle.” In 1982, the UN predicted planetary “devastatio­n as complete, as irreversib­le as any nuclear holocaust” by 2000. Indeed, at the very first UN environmen­t summit in

Stockholm in 1972, the organizer warned that we had just 10 years to avoid catastroph­e.

In 1972, the world was also rocked by the first global environmen­tal scare, the “Limits to Growth” report. The authors predicted with great confidence that most natural resources would run out within a few decades while pollution would overpower humanity. Life magazine expected “urban dwellers will have to wear gas masks to survive air pollution” by the mid-1980s.

The scares were, of course, spectacula­rly misguided. They got it wrong because they overlooked the greatest resource of all, human ingenuity. We don’t just use up resources but innovate ever-smarter ways of making resources more available. And technology solves many of the most persistent pollution problems, as did the catalytic converter. This is why air pollution in rich countries has been declining for decades.

Nonetheles­s, after 50 years of stunningly incorrect prediction­s, climate campaigner­s, journalist­s and politician­s still hawk an immediate apocalypse to great acclaim.

They do so by repeatedly ignoring adaptation. Headlines telling you that sea-level rise could drown 187 million people by the end of the century are foolishly ignorant. They imagine that hundreds of millions of people will remain stationary while the waters lap over their calves, hips, chests and eventually mouths. In the real world, ever-wealthier nations will adapt and protect their citizens ever better, leading to less flooding, while surprising­ly spending an ever-lower share of their GDP on flood and protection costs.

These unsubstant­iated scares have real-world consequenc­es. An academic study of young people around the world found that most suffer from “eco-anxiety,” with two-thirds scared and sad, while almost half say their worries affect their daily lives. It is irresponsi­ble to scare youths witless when in reality the UN Climate Panel finds that even if we do nothing to mitigate climate change, the impact by the end of the century will be a reduction of an average income increase from 450 percent to 438 percent — a problem but hardly the end of the world.

Moreover, panic is a terrible policy-adviser. Activist politician­s in the rich world are tinkering around the edges, showering subsidies over expensive vanity projects such as electric cars, solar and wind, while the UN finds that it can’t identify an actual impact on emissions from the last decade of climate promulgati­ons. And as the Glasgow climate summit showed (for the 26th time), developing nations — whose emissions over the rest of this century matter most — cannot afford to similarly spend trillions on ineffectiv­e climate policies as they help their population­s escape poverty.

Fifty years of panic clearly haven’t brought us anywhere near solving climate change. We need a smarter approach: one that focuses on realistic solutions. Adaptation won’t make the entire cost of climate change vanish, but it will reduce it dramatical­ly. And by funding the innovation needed to eventually make clean energy cheaper than fossil fuels, we can allow everyone to sustainabl­y go green.

‘ We have been told for a half-century out.’ that time has almost run

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States