Global Warming Is Not a Threat But the Environmentalist Response
to It Is
(Enlarged Version)
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
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This is
a more complete version of an article with the same title that previously
appeared on this web site.
Global Warming
Does Not Imply a Carbon Cap
Early this
winter, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released
the summary of its latest report on global warming. It’s most trumpeted
finding was that the existence of global warming is now "unequivocal."
Although such
anecdotal evidence as January’s snowfall
in Tucson, Arizona and freezing weather in Southern
California, and February’s more than 100-inch snowfall in upstate
New York, might suggest otherwise, global warming may indeed
be a fact. It may also be a fact that it is a by-product of industrial
civilization (despite two ice ages having apparently occurred in
the face of carbon levels in the atmosphere 16
times greater than that of today, millions of years before mankind’s
appearance on earth).
If global warming
and mankind’s responsibility for it really are facts, does anything
automatically follow from them? Does it follow that there is a need
to limit and/or reduce carbon emissions and the use of the fossil
fuels – oil, coal, and natural gas – that gives rise to the emissions?
The need for such limitation and/or rollback is the usual assumption.
Nevertheless,
the truth is that nothing whatever follows from these facts. Before
any implication for action can be present, additional information
is required.
One essential
piece of information is the comparative valuation attached to
retaining industrial civilization versus avoiding global warming.
If one values the benefits provided by industrial civilization above
the avoidance of the losses alleged to result from global warming,
it follows that nothing should be done to stop global warming that
destroys or undermines industrial civilization. That is, it follows
that global warming should simply be accepted as a byproduct of
economic progress and that life should go on as normal in the face
of it.
(Of course,
there are projections of unlikely but nevertheless possible extreme
global warming in the face of which conditions would be intolerable.
However, as I explain below, to deal with such a possibility, it
is necessary merely to find a different method of cooling the earth
than that of curtailing the use of fossil fuels.…)
In fact, if
it comes, global warming, in the projected likely range, will bring
major benefits to much of the world. Central Canada and large
portions of Siberia will become similar in climate to New England
today. So too, perhaps, will portions of Greenland. The disappearance
of Arctic ice in summer time, will shorten important shipping routes
by thousands of miles. Growing seasons in the North Temperate Zone
will be longer. Plant life in general will flourish because of the
presence of more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Strangely,
these facts are rarely mentioned. Instead, attention is devoted
almost exclusively to the negatives associated with global warming,
above all to the prospect of rising sea levels, which the report
projects to be between 7 and 23 inches by the year 2100, a range,
incidentally, that by itself does not entail major coastal flooding.
(There are, however, projections of a rise in sea levels of 20 feet
or more over the course of the remainder of the present millennium.)
Yes, rising
sea levels may cause some islands and coastal areas to become submerged
under water and require that large numbers of people settle in other
areas. Surely, however, the course of a century, let alone a millennium,
should provide ample opportunity for this to occur without any necessary
loss of life.
Indeed, a very
useful project for the UN’s panel to undertake in preparation for
its next report would be a plan by which the portion of the world
not threatened with rising sea levels would accept the people who
are so threatened. In other words, instead of responding to global
warming with government controls, in the form of limitations on
the emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, an alternative
response would be devised that would be a solution in terms of greater
freedom of migration.
In addition,
the process of adaptation here in the United States would be helped
by making all areas determined to be likely victims of coastal flooding
in the years ahead ineligible for any form of governmental aid,
insurance, or disaster relief after the expiration of a reasonable
grace period. That would spur relocation to safer areas in advance
of much of any future flooding.
What Depends
on Industrial Civilization and Man-Made Power
As the result
of industrial civilization, not only do billions more people survive,
but in the advanced countries they do so on a level far exceeding
that of kings and emperors in all previous ages – on a level that
just a few generations ago would have been regarded as possible
only in a world of science fiction. With the turn of a key, the
push of a pedal, and the touch of a steering wheel, they drive along
highways in wondrous machines at seventy miles an hour. With the
flick of a switch, they light a room in the middle of darkness.
With the touch of a button, they watch events taking place ten thousand
miles away. With the touch of a few other buttons, they talk to
other people across town or across the world. They even fly through
the air at six hundred miles per hour, forty thousand feet up, watching
movies and sipping martinis in air-conditioned comfort as they do
so. In the United States, most people can have all this, and spacious
homes or apartments, carpeted and fully furnished, with indoor plumbing,
central heating, air conditioning, refrigerators, freezers, and
gas or electric stoves, and also personal libraries of hundreds
of books, compact disks, and DVDs; they can have all this, as well
as long life and good health – as the result of working forty hours
a week.
The achievement
of this marvelous state of affairs has been made possible by the
use of ever improved machinery and equipment, which has been the
focal point of scientific and technological progress. The use of
this ever improved machinery and equipment is what has enabled human
beings to accomplish ever greater results with the application of
less and less muscular exertion.
Now inseparably
connected with the use of ever improved machinery and equipment
has been the increasing use of man-made power, which is the
distinguishing characteristic of industrial civilization and of
the Industrial Revolution, which marked its beginning. To the relatively
feeble muscles of draft animals and the still more feeble muscles
of human beings, and to the relatively small amounts of useable
power available from nature in the form of wind and falling water,
industrial civilization has added man-made power. It did so first
in the form of steam generated from the combustion of coal, and
later in the form of internal combustion based on petroleum, and
electric power based on the burning of any fossil fuel or on atomic
energy.
This man-made
power, and the energy released by its use, is an equally essential
basis of all of the economic improvements achieved over the last
two hundred years. It is what enables us to use the improved machines
and equipment and is indispensable to our ability to produce the
improved machines and equipment in the first place. Its application
is what enables us human beings to accomplish with our arms and
hands, in merely pushing the buttons and pulling the levers of machines,
the amazing productive results we do accomplish. To the feeble powers
of our arms and hands is added the enormously greater power released
by energy in the form of steam, internal combustion, electricity,
or radiation. In this way, energy use, the productivity of labor,
and the standard of living are inseparably connected, with the two
last entirely dependent on the first.
Thus, it is
not surprising, for example, that the United States enjoys the world’s
highest standard of living. This is a direct result of the fact
that the United States has the world’s highest energy consumption
per capita. The United States, more than any other country, is the
country where intelligent human beings have arranged for motor-driven
machinery to accomplish results for them. All further substantial
increases in the productivity of labor and standard of living, both
here in the United States and across the world, will be equally
dependent on man-made power and the growing use of energy it makes
possible. Our ability to accomplish more and more with the same
limited muscular powers of our limbs will depend entirely on our
ability to augment them further and further with the aid of still
more such energy.*
A Free-Market
Response to Global Warming
Even if global
warming is a fact, the free citizens of an industrial civilization
will have no great difficulty in coping with it – that is, of course,
if their ability to use energy and to produce is not crippled by
the environmental movement and by government controls otherwise
inspired. The seeming difficulties of coping with global warming,
or any other large-scale change, arise only when the problem is
viewed from the perspective of government central planners.
It would be
too great a problem for government bureaucrats to handle (as is
the production even of an adequate supply of wheat or nails, as
the experience of the whole socialist world has so eloquently shown).
But it would certainly not be too great a problem for tens and hundreds
of millions of free, thinking individuals living under capitalism
to solve. It would be solved by means of each individual being free
to decide how best to cope with the particular aspects of global
warming that affected him.
Individuals
would decide, on the basis of profit-and loss calculations, what
changes they needed to make in their businesses and in their personal
lives, in order best to adjust to the situation. They would decide
where it was now relatively more desirable to own land, locate farms
and businesses, and live and work, and where it was relatively less
desirable, and what new comparative advantages each location had
for the production of which goods. Factories, stores, and houses
all need replacement sooner or later. In the face of a change in
the relative desirability of different locations, the pattern of
replacement would be different. Perhaps some replacements would
have to be made sooner than otherwise. To be sure, some land values
would fall and others would rise. Whatever happened individuals
would respond in a way that minimized their losses and maximized
their possible gains. The essential thing they would require is
the freedom to serve their self-interests by buying land and moving
their businesses to the areas rendered relatively more attractive,
and the freedom to seek employment and buy or rent housing in those
areas.
Given this
freedom, the totality of the problem would be overcome. This is
because, under capitalism, the actions of the individuals, and the
thinking and planning behind those actions, are coordinated and
harmonized by the price system (as many former central planners
of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have come to learn).
As a result, the problem would be solved in exactly the same way
that tens and hundreds of millions of free individuals have solved
greater problems than global warming, such as redesigning the economic
system to deal with the replacement of the horse by the automobile,
the settlement of the American West, and the release of the far
greater part of the labor of the economic system from agriculture
to industry.**
Emissions
Caps Mean Impoverishment
The environmental
movement does not value industrial civilization. It fears and hates
it. It does not value human life, which it regards merely as one
of earth’s "biota," of no greater value than any other
life form, such as spotted owls or snail darters. To it, the loss
of industrial civilization is of no great consequence. It is a boon.
But to everyone
else, it would be an immeasurable catastrophe: the end of further
economic progress and the onset of economic retrogression, with
no necessary stopping point. Today’s already widespread economic
stagnation is the faintest harbinger of the conditions that would
follow.
A regime of
emissions caps means that all technological advances requiring an
increase in the total consumption of man-made power would be impossible
to implement. At the same time, any increase in population would
mean a reduction in the amount of man-made power available per capita.
(Greater production of atomic power, which produces no emissions
of any kind, would be an exception. But it is opposed by the environmentalists
even more fiercely than is additional power derived from fossil
fuels.)
To gauge the
consequences, simply imagine such caps having been imposed a generation
or two ago. If that had happened, where would the power have come
from to produce and operate all of the new and additional products
we take for granted that have appeared over these years? Products
such as color television sets and commercial jets, computers and
cell phones, CDs and DVDs, lasers and MRIs, satellites and space
ships? Indeed, the increase in population that has taken place over
this period would have sharply reduced the standard of living, because
the latter would have been forced to rest on the foundation of the
much lower per capita man-made power of an earlier generation.
Now add to
this the effects of successive reductions in the production
of man-made power compelled by the imposition of progressively lower
ceilings on greenhouse-gas emissions, ceilings as low as 75 or even
40 percent of today’s levels. (These ceilings have been advocated
by Britain’s Stern Report and by the United Nations Intergovernmental
Panel, respectively.) Inasmuch as these ceilings would be global
ceilings, any increase in greenhouse-gas emissions taking place
in countries such as China and India would be possible only at the
expense of even further reductions in the United States, whose energy
consumption is the envy of the world.
All of the
rising clamor for energy caps is an invitation to the American people
to put themselves in chains. It is an attempt to lure them along
a path thousands of times more deadly than any military misadventure,
and one from which escape might be impossible.
Already, led
by French President Jacques Chirac, forces are gathering to make
non-compliance with emissions caps an international crime. According
to an Associated Press report of February
5, 2007, "Forty-Five nations joined France in calling for
a new environmental body to slow global warming and protect the
planet, a body that potentially could have policing powers to punish
violators."
Given such
developments, it is absolutely vital that the United States never
enter into any international treaty in which it agrees to caps on
greenhouse-gas emissions.
An Answer
to the Hellfire-and-Brimstone Version of Global Warming
In previous
centuries it was common for Religion to threaten those whose way
of life was not to its satisfaction, with the prospect of hellfire
and brimstone in the afterlife. Substitute for the afterlife, life
on earth in centuries to come, and it is possible to see that environmentalism
and the rest of the left are now doing essentially the same thing.
They hate the American way of life because of its comfort and luxury.
And to frighten people into abandoning it, they are threatening
them with a global-warming version of hellfire and brimstone.
This is not
yet so open and explicit as to be obvious to everyone. Nevertheless,
it is clearly present. It is hinted at in allusions to the possibility
of temperature increases beyond the UN report’s projected range
of 3.5 to 8 degrees Fahrenheit. For example, according to The
New York Times, "the report says there is a
more than a 1-in-10 chance of much greater warming, a risk that
many experts say is far too high to ignore."
Environmentalist
threats of hellfire and brimstone can be expected to become more
blatant and shrill if the movement’s present efforts to frighten
the people of the United States into supporting its program appear
to be insufficient. Hellfire and brimstone is the environmentalists’
ultimate threat.
Thus, let us
assume that it were true that global warming might proceed to such
an extent as to cause temperature and/or sea-level increases so
great as to be simply intolerable or, indeed, literally to roast
and boil the earth. Even so, it would still not follow that industrial
civilization should be abandoned or in any way compromised. In that
case, all that would be necessary is to seek out a different
means of deliberately cooling the earth.
It should be
realized that the environmentalists’ policy of reducing greenhouse-gas
emissions is itself a policy of cooling the earth. But it is surely
among the most stupid and self-destructive such policies as it is
possible to imagine. What it claims is that if we destroy the energy
base needed to produce and operate the construction equipment required
to build strong, well-made, comfortable houses for hundreds of millions
of people, we shall be safer from hurricanes and floods than if
we retain and enlarge that energy base. It claims that if we destroy
our capacity to produce and operate refrigerators and air conditioners,
we shall be better protected from hot weather than if we retain
and enlarge that capacity. It claims that if we destroy our capacity
to produce and operate tractors and harvesters, to can and freeze
food, to build and operate hospitals and produce medicines, we shall
secure our food supply and our health better than if we retain and
enlarge that capacity. This is the meaning of the claim that retaining
this capacity will bring highly destructive global warming, while
destroying it will avoid such global warming.***
There are rational
ways of cooling the earth if that is what should actually be necessary,
ways that would take advantage of the vast energy base of the modern
world and of the still greater energy base that can be present in
the future if it is not aborted by the kind of policies urged by
the environmentalists.…
Once people
begin to put their minds to the problem, it is possible that a variety
of effective and relatively low-cost solutions for global warming
will be found. The two essential parameters of such a solution would
be the recognition of the existence of possibly excessive global
warming, on the one side, and unswerving loyalty to the value of
the American standard of living and the American way of life, on
the other. That is, more fundamentally, unswerving loyalty to the
values of individual freedom, continuing economic progress, and
the maintenance and further development of industrial civilization
and its foundation of man-made power.
Global warming
is not a threat. But environmentalism’s response to it is.
It claims to
want to act in the name of avoiding the risk of alleged dreadful
dangers lying decades and centuries in the future. But its means
of avoiding those alleged dangers is to rush ahead today to cripple
industrial civilization by means of crippling its essential foundation
of man-made power. In so doing, it gives no consideration whatever
to the risks of this. Nor does it give any consideration
to any possible alternatives to this policy. It contents itself
with offering to the public what is virtually merely the hope and
prayer of the timely discovery of radically new alternative technologies
to replace the ones it seeks to destroy. Such pie in the sky is
a nothing but a lie, intended to prevent people from recognizing
the plunge in their standard of living that will result if the environmentalists’
program is enacted.
If the economic
progress of the last two hundred years or more is to continue, if
its existing benefits are to be maintained, the people of the United
States, and hopefully of the rest of the world as well, must turn
their backs on environmentalism. They must recognize it for the
profoundly destructive, misanthropic philosophy that it is.
They
must solve any possible problem of global warming on the foundation
of industrial civilization, not on a foundation of its ruins.
Notes
*The last five
paragraphs, with slight adaptation, are an excerpt from pp. 77 and
78 of my book Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics.
**The last
four paragraphs, with slight adaptation, are an excerpt from pp.
88 and 89 of Capitalism.
*** The examples
in this paragraph are adapted from p. 88 of Capitalism.
May
30, 2007
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
This
article is copyright © 2007, by George Reisman. Permission
is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute it electronically
and in print, other than as part of a book and provided that mention
of the author’s web site www.capitalism.net
is included. (Email
notification is requested.)
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