Monday, March 11, 2019
Apocalypse not
On its opinion page the other day, The Wall Street
Journal reprinted without comment an ample excerpt from an
Associated Press dispatch dated June 29, 1989. The story was headlined
“U.N. Predicts Disaster if Global Warming Not Checked,” and while most
30-year-old news accounts are unmistakably archaic, this one wouldn’t
seem out of place if it ran in the paper tomorrow with nothing changed
but a date or two:
UNITED NATIONS — A senior U.N. environmental official
says entire nations could be wiped off the face of the Earth by rising
sea levels if the global warming trend is not reversed by the year 2000.
Coastal flooding and crop failures would create an
exodus of “eco-refugees,” threatening political chaos, said Noel Brown,
director of the New York office of the U.N. Environment Program, or UNEP.
He said governments have a 10-year window of
opportunity to solve the greenhouse effect before it goes beyond human
control.
As the warming melts polar icecaps, ocean levels will
rise by up to three feet, enough to cover the Maldives and other flat
island nations, Brown told the Associated Press in an interview on
Wednesday.
Coastal regions will be inundated; one-sixth of Bangladesh
could be flooded, displacing a fourth of its 90 million people. A fifth
of Egypt’s arable land in the Nile Delta would be flooded, cutting off
its food supply, according to a joint UNEP and U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency study. . . .
Sound familiar? Of course it does. It sounds like any
of a thousand-and-one predictions of climate change, mass death, global
starvation, and other varieties of impending doom that have been forecast
by environmental alarmists for the past half-century or more.
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From Paul Ehrlich declaring that the 1970s would bring
famines in which “hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to
death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now,” to Al Gore
warning in 2008 that the entire Arctic polar ice cap “may well be
completely gone in five years,” to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez asserting in January
that “the world is going to end in 12 years if we don’t address climate
change,” fearmongers keep telling us that the end of human existence as
we know it is only a few years away. These apocalyptic forecasts are
invariably terrifying, earnest, and adamant. They are always said to be
grounded in scientific clarity. They are unfailingly held out as a
mandate for immediate and sweeping change at which no reasonable person
would balk.
And none of them has ever come to pass.
As a college student in the 1970s, I had to read
lengthy excerpts from the 1972 jeremiad, The Limits to Growth ,
which warned that life on earth and industrial development were on an
inevitable collision course, and that it was only a matter of time until
the planet ran out of mineral resources, food, and breathable air. To be
fair, the authors did hedge their scary scenarios with acknowledgements
of “mankind’s ingenuity and social flexibility,” and they suggested that
the most alarming outcomes were still a century away. Plainly, though,
they would have regarded it as inconceivable that 50 years later, despite
an increase in global population and industrialization, human beings
worldwide would be enjoying greater wealth, better nutrition, improved
health, and longer lives. Yet that is just what has happened.
Even in the 1970s there was much alarmist talk of
climate change — but the change most often forecast was global cooling.
“There are specialists who say that a new ice age is on the way,” reported The New York Times on May 21,
1975. That Times article, as George F. Will showed in a
citation-studded 2009 column , was no
outlier:
Although some disputed that the “cooling trend” could
result in “a return to another ice age” (the Times, Sept. 14, 1975),
others anticipated “a full-blown 10,000-year ice age” involving
“extensive Northern Hemisphere glaciation” (Science News, March 1, 1975,
and Science magazine, Dec. 10, 1976, respectively). The “continued rapid
cooling of the Earth” (Global Ecology, 1971) meant that “a new ice age
must now stand alongside nuclear war as a likely source of wholesale
death and misery” (International Wildlife, July 1975). “The world's
climatologists are agreed” that we must “prepare for the next ice age”
(Science Digest, February 1973). Because of “ominous signs” that “the
Earth's climate seems to be cooling down,” meteorologists were “almost
unanimous” that “the trend will reduce agricultural productivity for the
rest of the century,” perhaps triggering catastrophic famines (Newsweek
cover story, “The Cooling World ,”
April 28, 1975). Armadillos were fleeing south from Nebraska,
heat-seeking snails were retreating from Central European forests, the
North Atlantic was “cooling down about as fast as an ocean can cool,”
glaciers had “begun to advance” and “growing seasons in England and
Scandinavia are getting shorter” (Christian Science Monitor, Aug. 27,
1974).
Today, of course, the panic-mongering over climate
change swings in the other direction. Where once we were told that the “rapid advance of some glaciers”
would make much of Alaska, Iceland, and Canada uninhabitable, the worry
now is that two-thirds of the Himalayan glaciers will melt,
with devastating effects on life in India, China, and Pakistan.
“Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past,”reported The Independent in 2000. The story
quoted a climate scientist’s lament that within a few years, “children
just aren’t going to know what snow is.”
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In his bestselling 1968 book "The
Population Bomb," Paul Ehrlich asserted that within a few
years, “hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death
in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now." It never happened.
What has been true of climate doomsaying has been true
of every other kind as well. Ecologists were convinced that the growth in
numbers of people would trigger a “population bomb” of mass starvation
and a worldwide “die-off.” Would-be Cassandras warned fervently that
resource depletion, especially “peak oil,” would force a drastic rollback
of modern industry and transportation.
Let’s accept for the sake of argument that all these
dreadful prophecies are made with utter sincerity. Let’s disregard the
fact that they always seem to be accompanied by calls for vastly expanded
government power and reduced individual freedom. Let’s assume it is only
by coincidence that most of this “apocalypse now” rhetoric comes from the
political left, with its affinity for top-down, command-and-control
solutions.
Even so, shouldn’t there come a point at which the
alarmists acknowledge their nearly unbroken record of faulty predictions?
Shouldn’t an Ehrlich or a Gore feel obliged to concede that the deadline
by which they said mankind would fall off the cliff has come and gone,
and make a good-faith effort to explain why human society continues, stronger,
richer, healthier, and safer than ever? Shouldn’t the mainstream media
and the educational establishment reconsider the wisdom of repeating
every ominous and cataclysmic environmental prognosis as if its truth
cannot possibly be doubted?
If a financial adviser or TV meteorologist or sports
analyst proved as consistently wrong as
climate alarmists have proved, everyone would take their latest
prediction with more than a grain or two of salt. Doesn’t it make sense
to do the same when confronted with yet another terrifying environmental
forecast? Yes, it is always possible that all those false alarms are
being followed, this time, by a real one. But maybe, just maybe, a touch
of skepticism would be prudent .
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