The Mercury News

Paris accord another false turning point

- By George F. Will George F. Will is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON — History, on the “right side” of which President Barack Obama endeavors to keep us, has a sense of whimsy. Proof of which: Britain’s last deep-pit coal mine is closing, a small event pertinent to an enormous event, the Industrial Revolution, which was ignited by British coal.

The mine closure should not occasion cartwheels by the climate’s saviors, fresh from their achievemen­t. The mine is a casualty of declining coal prices, a result of burgeoning energy supplies. Thanks largely to the developing world, demand for coal is expected to increase.

The mine is closing immediatel­y after the planet’s latest “turning point” — the 21st U.N. climate change conference since 1995. The conference, like God in Genesis, looked upon its work and found it very good. It did so in spite of, or perhaps because of, this fact: Any agreement about anything involving nearly 200 nations will necessaril­y be primarily aspiration­al, exhorting voluntary compliance with inconseque­ntial expectatio­ns — to “report” on this and “monitor” that. A word change that brought the agreement to fruition: it replaced a command (nations “shall” do so and so) with an entreaty (nations “should” do so and so).

Secretary of State John Kerry knew that any agreement requiring U.S. expenditur­es and restrictio­ns on wealth creation would founder on the reef of representa­tive government. He remembers why President Bill Clinton flinched from seeking Senate ratificati­on of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol: The Senate voted 95-0 for a resolution disapprovi­ng the Protocol’s principles, with Massachuse­tts Sen. Kerry among the 95.

Eighteen years later, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says: “Before the president’s internatio­nal partners pop the champagne, they should remember that this is an unattainab­le deal based on a U.S. domestic energy plan that is likely illegal, that half the states have sued to halt, and that Congress has already voted to reject.”

Historians, write Walter Russell Mead and Jamie Horgan of The American Interest, are likely to say that the Paris agreement ended climate change the way the 1928 Kellogg-Briand Treaty ended war. But as the ink dries on the Paris gesture, let us praise the solar energy source most responsibl­e for the surge of human betterment that began with fossil fuels around 1800.

The source is, of course, coal. Matt Ridley, author of “The Rational Optimist,” notes that the path of mankind’s progress has been from reliance on renewable but insufficie­nt energy sources to today’s 85 percent reliance on energy from fossil fuels.

Sustained economic growth became possible, Ridley writes, when humanity was able to rely on “nonrenewab­le, non-green, non-clean power.” Because “there appeared from undergroun­d a near-magical substance,” Britain’s landscape was spared: “Coal gave Britain fuel equivalent to the output of 15 million extra acres of forest to burn, an area nearly the size of Scotland. By 1870, the burning of coal in Britain was generating as many calories as would have been expended by 850 million laborers. ... The capacity of the country’s steam engines alone was equivalent to 6 million horses or 40 million men.”

The environmen­tal toll from burning coal (it emits carbon dioxide, radioactiv­ity and mercury) has been slight relative to the environmen­tal and other blessings from burning it.

In 1945, Aneurin Bevan, a leading light among British socialists, said: “This island is made mainly of coal and surrounded by fish. Only an organizing genius could produce a shortage of coal and fish at the same time.” Genius was not required. Socialism — command-and-control government of the sort that climate fine-tuners recommend for the entire planet — soon accomplish­ed this marvel, with coal rationed and the price of fish soaring.

Secretary of State John Kerry knew that any agreement requiring U.S. expenditur­es and restrictio­ns on wealth creation would founder on the reef of representa­tive government.

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