Carbon
Dioxide: The Anti-Poverty Gas
by Tom Hanson
by
Tom Hanson
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Every issue
of National Geographic has pictures that show the sad state
of humankind. All-natural humans in their all-natural habitats look
like miserable creatures, living in dirt-floored mud huts with indoor
campfires, not a bar of soap in sight. A thousand years ago, everyone
on the planet was living like this. We can thank our lucky stars
that we were born in the industrialized west, because wherever industry
doesn’t exist, poverty does – something to remember when the climate-activists
call for ninety-percent reductions in human carbon dioxide emissions.
A well-known
dilemma exists for those who wish to simultaneously reduce poverty
and carbon emissions. To illustrate, I found estimates of per capita
GDP
and per capita carbon
dioxide production and plotted one against the other. Carbon-spewing
industrialization, it turns out, is the antidote to poverty.

There are no
prosperous countries that have low carbon dioxide emissions, no
poor countries that have high emissions, and the higher the per-capita
carbon dioxide emitted, the higher the expected GDP. None of this
is a surprise since the machinery of production harnesses energy
that is mainly produced by burning coal, oil, and gas. People who
want to alleviate poverty should advocate more energy consumption,
not less, and environmentalists intent on reducing carbon emissions
should own up to the poverty that they implicitly promote.
Nothing has
improved the lot of humankind more than industrialization. Compared
with our all-natural brethren, life in the industrialized world
is defined by an abundance of life’s necessities. Through the consumption
of energy, machines have become our slaves, harvesting our food,
washing our clothes, moving us about town – generally saving us
time and effort that we can then use to pursue even greater happiness.
I cannot find fault with any of this. But environmentalists can.
The way they
see it, fishing and farming, manufacturing and mining, retail and
refining are all unsustainable activities. Obviously, there is nothing
physical on earth that can grow without limit. Economic growth compounds
like any bank account, and given a positive interest rate and enough
time, it tends toward very large numbers. No question, if there
were one human per square yard, we would be at the limit of sustainability.
Where we are now is not.
Some of those
people who are concerned about carbon, yet who still have sympathy
for humans, have tried to reconcile their positions. Sustainable
development plans
from environmentalist organizations have made weak statements like,
"[t]here is a growing agreement amongst policy makers that
energy and poverty are linked," as though the authors fear
being ridiculed by their comrades if they were to state this relationship
as a fact. Their so-called sustainable solutions, however, are embarrassments.
For instance, that same document calls for giving efficient stoves
and lighting to the world’s poorest two-billion people. Of course,
the only places that have the capacity to build all these stoves
and lighting systems are those coal-burning industrial nations.
The irony is completely lost on them. Where do they think wealth
comes from? The impoverished won’t stop being poor once they have
a stove and a few lightbulbs – industry alone will save them, and
no serious industry can be powered using a few solar panels or a
micro-hydroelectric generator. It’s essential to think about much
bigger energy sources than that.
While environmentalists
think industry is ugly and exploitative, the benefits are so obvious
that they have little success in tearing it down directly. Attacking
energy is the sneaky strategy – energy and industry are inseparable,
so an attack on one is an attack against both. We have no issues
with energy, climate-activists say, it’s carbon dioxide that’s the
problem. When coal, oil, and gas make up eighty-five percent of
the energy used in the US,
and similarly high proportions throughout the rest of the industrialized
world, if they have problems with carbon dioxide, they have problems
with almost all the energy we use. Plus, there is the rhetoric of
environmentalists about river-destroying hydroelectric plants, bird-killing
windmills, and waste-producing nuclear plants that reveals how,
for hard-core believers, carbon-free energy is no good either.
It’s hard to
get the industrialized countries to change their ways, so environmentalists
want developing countries to do the impossible and grow without
carbon – Ailun
Yang, the Greenpeace China Climate and Energy Campaign Manager
said, "China has to decouple its economic development from
the consumption of polluting fossil fuels," Thankfully, China
has other plans – an article
published late in 2004 states that 562 coal-fired power plants will
be completed in the country by 2012, a move certain to increase
the production and prosperity of the country’s people.
Energy-fueled
production is the only way human efforts can be multiplied to provide
a high standard of living. Empirically, no country has yet figured
out how to be prosperous without emitting a lot of carbon dioxide.
My guess is that the impoverished of this world would gladly trade
the anti-carbon movement’s vision of hell – a world with warmer
weather – for plenty of food and some of the goods that bring joy
to modern life. Until I see environmentalists moving into dirt-floored
mud huts, I’ll assume that deep down, they think modern industrial
living is pretty cool too.
July
14, 2007
Tom
Hanson [send him mail]
is an engineer who lives near San Francisco.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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