-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

The profits of doom
Matt Ridley celebrates Bjorn Lomborg, the environmentalist
brave enough to tell the truth — that the end is not nigh

At the Christmas cabaret in the politics department of Aarhus University
in Denmark last year, the cast members joined together at the end to sing
a song about one of the associate professors. ‘Bjorn, when will you come
back?’ went the refrain. ‘Don’t just get lost out in the world.’ (It was
better in Danish.)

Bjorn Lomborg — young, blond, piano-playing, but basically a statistics
nerd — may not be back soon. He has just succeeded Monsanto as the
official chief villain of the world environmental movement. In January
Scientific American devoted 11 pages to an unattractive attempt to
attack his work. He had a pie thrown in his face when he spoke in
Oxford last September.

The great and the good of greendom are competing to find epithets for
him: ‘Wilful ignorance, selective quotations, destructive campaigning,’
says E.O. Wilson, guru of biodiversity. ‘Lacks even a preliminary
understanding of the science in question,’ says Norman Myers, guru of
extinction. His book is ‘nothing more than a diatribe’, says Lester Brown,
serial predictor of imminent global famine. Stephen Schneider, high priest
of global warming, even berates Cambridge University Press for
publishing it.

What can this mild statistician have said to annoy these great men so? In
1996 he published an obscure but brilliant article on game theory, which
earned him an invitation to a conference on ‘computable economics’ in
Los Angeles (and an offer of a job at the University of California). While
browsing in a bookshop there he came across a profile in Wired
magazine of the late Julian Simon, an economist, who claimed, with
graphs, that on most measures the environment was improving, not
getting worse. Irritated, Lomborg went back to Denmark and set his
students the exercise of finding the flaw in Simon’s statistics.

They could find none. So Lomborg wrote The Skeptical Environmentalist,
which not only endorses most of Simon’s claims, but also goes further,
providing an immense compendium of factual evidence that the litany of
environmental gloom we hear is mostly either exaggerated (species
extinction, global warming) or wrong (population, air and water pollution,
natural resources, food and hunger, health and life-expectancy, waste,
forest loss).

You might think that environmentalists would welcome such news.
Having argued that we should find a way to live sustainably on the planet,
they ought to be pleased that population growth is falling faster (in
percentage and absolute terms) than anybody predicted even ten years
ago; that per-capita food production is rising rapidly, even in the
developing world; that all measures of air pollution are falling almost
everywhere; that oil, gas and minerals are not running out nearly as fast
as was predicted in the 1970s; and so on.

Instead they are beside themselves with fury. It cannot be Lomborg’s
politics that annoy them. He is leftish, concerned about world poverty,
and no fan of big business. It cannot be his recommendations: in favour
of renewable energy and worried about the pollution that is getting
worse. Vegetarian, he rides a bicycle and approves of Denmark’s
punitive car taxes. His sin — his heresy — is to be optimistic.

This is very threatening to lots of people’s livelihoods. The environmental
movement raises most of its funds through direct mail, paid advertising
and news coverage. A steady supply of peril is essential fuel for all three.
H.L. Mencken said, ‘The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the
populace alarmed — and hence clamorous to be led to safety — by
menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.’

For instance, remember acid rain in the 1980s and sperm counts in the
1990s? ‘There is no evidence of a general or unusual decline of forests in
the United States or Canada due to acid rain,’ concluded the official
independent study of the subject. Sperm counts are not falling. If you do
not believe me, look up the statistics. Lomborg did.

The media, too, prefer pessimism. When the United Nations panel on
global warming produced new estimates of the rise in temperature by
2100, they gave a range of 1.4 to 5.8°C. CNN, CBS, Time and the New
York Times all quoted only the high figure and omitted the low one.

An increasing number of scientists have vested interests in pessimism,
too. The study of global warming has brought them fame, funds, speaking
fees and room service. Lomborg’s crime is to rain on their parade.

In the Scientific American critique, four leading environmental scientists
lambasted Lomborg. The magazine refused Lomborg the right to reply in
the same issue, refused to post his response on its website immediately,
and threatened him for infringement of copyright when he tried to
reproduce their articles, with his responses, on his own website.

Yet the Scientific American articles are devastating not to Lomborg, but
to his critics. Again and again, before insulting him, the critics concede,
through gritted teeth, that he has got his facts right. In two cases,
Stephen Schneider accuses Lomborg of misquoting sources and promptly
does so himself. In the first case, Schneider’s response ‘completely
misunderstands what we have done’, according to Richard Lindzen, the
original author of work on the ‘iris effect’ and upper-level cirrus clouds.
In the second, Eigil Friis-Christensen says that Schneider ‘makes three
unsubstantiated statements regarding our studies on the effect of cosmic
rays on global cloud cover’. Result: there are worse howlers in
Schneider’s short article than in Lomborg’s whole book.

By the end of 11 pages, the Scientific American critics have found two
certain errors in Lomborg’s work. In one he uses the word ‘catalyse’
instead of ‘electrolyse’. In the other he refers to 20 per cent of energy
use, when he means 20 per cent of electricity generation. You get the
drift.

What the affair reveals is how much environmentalists are now the
establishment, accustomed to doing the criticising, not being criticised.
The editor of Scientific American, apparently without irony, condemns
Lomborg for his ‘presumption’ in challenging ‘investigators who have
devoted their lives’ to the subject, as if seniority defined truth.

Lomborg is also criticised for his effrontery in challenging the widely
accepted figure that 40,000 species become extinct every year. The
number was first used in 1979 by the British scientist Norman Myers.
Yet what was the evidence for it? Here is what Myers actually said: ‘Let
us suppose that, as a consequence of this manhandling of the natural
environments, the final one-quarter of this century witnesses the
elimination of one million species, a far from unlikely prospect. This
would work out, during the course of 25 years, at an average rate of
40,000 species per year.’ That’s it. No data at all; just a circular
assumption: if 40,000 species go extinct a year, then 40,000 species go
extinct a year. QED.

Now look where this little trick of arithmetic has got Myers. He
describes himself thus: ‘Norman Myers is an Honorary Visiting Fellow of
Oxford University. He has served as visiting professor at universities
from Harvard to Stanford, and is a foreign member of the US National
Academy of Sciences. He works as an independent scientist, undertaking
research projects for the US National Research Council, the World Bank
and United Nations agencies. He has received the UNEP environment
prize, the Volvo environment prize and, most recently, the 2001 Blue
Planet prize.’ (Myers’s share of the Volvo prize was worth $130,000;
Lomborg does not own a car.)

Lomborg does not deny that species are becoming extinct at an
unnaturally high rate, but he cites a far from conservative calculation that
this rate may reach about 0.7 per cent in 50 years, not the 25 to 75 per
cent implied by Myers, and calls it ‘not a catastrophe but a problem —
one of many that mankind still needs to solve’. Greens are trying to
portray Lomborg as a sort of Pollyanna Pangloss with her head in the
sand. But Lomborg does not dispute the need to save the planet, only the
assertion that this is impossibly difficult and the particular priorities
foisted
on us by the big environmental pressure groups.

Forty years ago this year, Rachel Carson, in her book Silent Spring,
alerted a complacent world to the dangers posed by pesticides. Vilified
by the chemical industry, Carson was already dying of cancer when the
book was published. In the intervening years the environmental
movement has turned from David into Goliath. With huge advertising
budgets and ready access to the media, it can dominate the news, terrify
multinational companies and expect to be invited to policy discussions at
the highest levels. It is the bully now.

Consider the treatment meted out to Julian Simon for having the temerity
to be right. In 1990 Simon won $576.07 in settlement of a wager from the
environmentalist Paul Ehrlich. Simon had bet him that the prices of
metals would fall during the 1980s and Ehrlich accepted ‘Simon’s
astonishing offer before other greedy people jump in’.

When, a decade later, Simon won easily, Ehrlich refused a rematch and
called Simon an imbecile in a speech. Ehrlich, who, in contrast, won a
‘genius award’ from the MacArthur Foundation, is the man who argued
in 1967 that with the world on the brink of starvation the West ‘should no
longer send emergency aid to countries such as India where sober
analysis shows a hopeless imbalance between food production and
population’. Since then India has doubled its population, more than
doubled its food production, increased its cultivated land acreage by only
5 per cent and begun to export food. Hopeless?

The pessimists argue that Lomborg’s good news might lead to
complacency. But Ehrlich’s counsel of despair is far more dangerous.
Many people now work to improve the environment at a local level with
optimism that they can make the world a better place. To be constantly
told by the big pressure groups that all is doom and gloom is no help.
There is something rotten in the state of environmentalism. It lies not just
in the petty factual dishonesty that is rife within the movement —
Stephen Schneider once said, ‘We have to offer up scary scenarios,
make simplified, dramatic statements and make little mention of any
doubts we might have’ — but in the very philosophy that lies at the heart
of greenery: the belief in constraint and retreat.

If six billion people have both more food and more forest than their three
billion parents did; if the prices of copper, wheat and natural gas are
going down, not up; if there are 20 times more carcinogens in three cups
of organic coffee than in daily dietary exposure to the worst pesticide
both before and after the DDT ban; if renewable resources such as
whales are more easily exhausted than non-renewables such as coal; if
lower infant mortality leads to falling populations, not rising ones, then
perhaps we need to think differently about what sustainability means.
Perhaps the most sustainable thing we can do is develop new technology,
increase trade and spread affluence.

Nor will it do to claim that these successes have come from green
pressure. The reason so many environmental trends are benign is not
because of legislation, let alone protest. Apart from the ozone layer and
city smogs, where campaigns probably did accelerate change, most
improvements have been brought about more by innovation, development
and growth than by government action. If six billion people went back to
nature, nature would be in desperate trouble.

The most arresting statistic that Lomborg produces is this. It is well
known that meeting the Kyoto treaty on carbon-dioxide reduction will
delay global warming by six years at most by 2100. Yet the annual cost
of that treaty, in each year of the century, will be the same as the cost —
once — of installing clean drinking water and sanitation for every human
being on the planet. Priorities, anyone?

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