The Denver Post

Your children are not doomed

- By Ezra Klein © The New York Times Co. Ezra Klein previously was t he founder, editor in chief and then editorat-large of Vox.

Over the past few years, I’ve been asked one question more than any other. It comes up at speeches, at dinners, in conversati­on. It’s the most popular query when I open my podcast to suggestion­s, time and again. It comes in two forms. The first: Should I have kids, given the climate crisis they will face? The second: Should I have kids, knowing they will contribute to the climate crisis the world faces?

And it’s not just me. A 2020 Morning Consult poll found that a quarter of adults without children say climate change is part of the reason they didn’t have children. A Morgan Stanley analysis found that the decision “to not have children owing to fears over climate change is growing and impacting fertility rates quicker than any preceding trend in the field of fertility decline.”

But one thing I’ve noticed, after years of reporting on climate change: The people who have devoted their lives to combating climate change keep having children. I hear them playing in the background of our calls. I see them when we Zoom. And so I began asking them why.

“I unequivoca­lly reject, scientific­ally and personally, the notion that children are somehow doomed to an unhappy life,” Kate Marvel, a climate scientist at Columbia, told me.

To bring a child into this world has always been an act of hope. The past was its own parade of horrors. The best estimates we have suggest that across most of human history, 27% of infants didn’t survive their first year, and 47% of people died before puberty. And life was hard, even if you were lucky enough to live it.

No mainstream climate models suggest a return to a world as bad as the one we had in 1950, to say nothing of 1150. Was the world so bad, for virtually the entirety of human history, that our ancestors shouldn’t have made our lives possible? If not, then nothing in our near future looks so horrible that it turns reproducti­on into an immoral act.

I worry, writing this, that it will be taken as a dismissal of the suffering climate change will unleash. It’s not. An appreciati­on of how bad our past was should deepen our fury at how recklessly our future is being treated. We have done so much to build a sea wall between us and the pitiless world. We have done so much to make the future better than the past. To give back any portion of those gains or even to prevent the progress we could otherwise see is worse than a tragedy. It is a crime.

But that, and not apocalypse, is the most likely path we’re on. This, strange as it is to say, is progress. As Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist, notes, many credible estimates from a decade ago put us on track for the average global temperatur­e to increase 4 or even 5 degrees Celsius from preindustr­ial levels by 2100. That would be cataclysmi­c. But the falling cost of clean energy and the rising ambition of climate policy have changed that. The Climate Action tracker puts our current policy path at about 2.7 degrees of warming by 2100. If the commitment­s world government­s have made since the Paris climate accord hold, we’re on track for a rise of 2 degrees or even less.

And there is still more reason for optimism. One of the truly thrilling papers I’ve read in recent years carried the plodding title “Empiricall­y Grounded Technology Forecasts and the Energy Transition.” The authors looked at more than 2,900 forecasts for how fast the cost of installing solar power would fall from 2010 to 2020. The average prediction was 2.6% annually. No prediction was above 6%. But solar power costs actually fell by 15% per year. Other technologi­es have seen similar drops in costs.

But hope is not a plan. And no one should mistake 2.5 degrees of warming — or even 2 degrees — for success. We will have caused incalculab­le damage to ecosystems. We will have worsened droughts, floods, famines, heat waves. We will have bleached coral reefs, acidified the ocean, driven countless animal species to extinction. Millions, maybe tens of millions, of people will die from increased heat, and more will be killed by the indirect consequenc­es of climate change. Far more yet will be forced to flee their homes or live lives of deep poverty or suffering. We will have stolen the full possibilit­y of their flourishin­g from them.

All of that, though, also describes the world we inhabit, not just the world we’re creating. Climate models force us to confront vast expanses of future suffering that, if they were ongoing around us, we might fail to see. As my colleague David Wallace-wells — a father of two and the author of “The Uninhabita­ble Earth” — wrote to me, “What looks like apocalypse in prospect often feels more like grim normality when it arrives in the present.” Oof.

This is no mere abstractio­n or prediction. The evidence that we ignore mass suffering is all around us. We are ignoring it right now, just as we did yesterday, and just as we will tomorrow. “An estimated 20 million people died of COVID, and now we’re over it. What do we make of that?” Wallace-Wells wrote to me. “Ten million people a year are dying of air pollution. What do we make of that? And what does it tell us about climate change, which is quite unlikely (as I wrote in my big piece on pollution) to ever kill as many as now die from particulat­es?”

This reflects a facet of our climate future that conversati­ons about the life prospects of well-off children in the United States obscure. It is true that climate change will affect both the rich and the poor. It is not true that it will affect them equally. Wealthy California­ns breathing in wildfire smoke are not facing the suffering of poor Bangladesh­is whose homes lie in the path of cyclones.

Climate change is and will be an engine of global inequality. Richer people and countries will buy their way out of the worst consequenc­es, often using wealth accumulate­d by burning fossil fuels. The fear about the future our children will face, when voiced by well-off residents of wealthy countries, sometimes strikes me as a transferen­ce of guilt into terror.

That gets to the second version of this question: Is it immoral to have children, knowing how much carbon emissions residents of rich countries are responsibl­e for? This argument recasts not having children as a form of climate reparation­s. People in rich countries use more resources than people in poor countries. Fewer people means less resource use.

Fredric Jameson, the Marxist literary critic, is often credited with the observatio­n that it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism. A similar limit to our political imaginatio­ns lurks in this conversati­on: It’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of carbon pollution. “Almost all pollution is fixed by the structure of society,” Leah Stokes, a political scientist at the University of California at Santa Barbara, told me. “The goal is to undo that structure so children can be born into a society that is not putting out carbon pollution. That’s the project.”

And it is a doable one. Per capita carbon emissions in the United States fell from more than 22.2 tons in 1973 to 14.2 tons in 2020. And it can fall much farther.

To decarboniz­e society is to embrace a better world, for reasons far beyond climate change. “The immediate benefits of climate mitigation actions are spectacula­r: better air quality, better health outcomes, reduced inequality,” Marvel wrote to me.

I don’t just prefer a world of net-zero emissions to a world of net-zero children. I think those worlds are in conflict. We face a political problem, not a physics problem.

The green future has to be a welcoming one, even a thrilling one. If people cannot see themselves in it, they will fight to stop it. If the cost of caring about climate is to forgo having a family, that cost will be too high. A climate movement that embraces sacrifice as its answer or even as its temperamen­t might do more harm than good. It may accidental­ly sacrifice the political appeal needed to make the net-zero emissions world real.

My children will live a story that I cannot write and cannot control. It will be their story.

To become a parent is to feel, every day, the weight and hope and terror of that fact. I can’t tell you whether it’s the right choice for you, but no climate model can, either.

 ?? Jonas Gratzer, Getty Images ?? Climate activist Greta Thunberg marches through central Stockholm during a protest organized by Fridays for Future against perceived inaction by government­s towards climate change on June 3.
Jonas Gratzer, Getty Images Climate activist Greta Thunberg marches through central Stockholm during a protest organized by Fridays for Future against perceived inaction by government­s towards climate change on June 3.
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