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| Greenbuilding Archive for August 2002 |
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| 231 messages, last added Tue Nov 26 17:27:12 2002 |
[Date Index][Thread Index]
Bjorn Lomborg continues to be the epitome of the planet`s
latest species of homonid, Homo Consumptus. The problem is, they
want to take every other species down with them.
There is a major move afoot by many in the earth
sciences to discredit this individual for the clown he is, I can`t wait.
But then again he does serve a purpose in showing how rediculous the argument
to "DO NOTHING" is.
Steve wrote:
August 26, 2002
The Environmentalists Are Wrong
By
BJORN LOMBORG
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/26/opinion/26LOMB.html?pagewanted=print&position=top There
is no doubt that pumping out carbon dioxide from fossil fuels has increased
the global temperature. Yet too much of the debate is fixated on reducing
emissions without regard to cost... Even with renewable sources of energy
taking over, the United Nations Climate Panel still estimates a temperature
increase of four degrees to five degrees fahrenheit by the year 2100. Such
a rise is projected to have less impact in the industrialized world than
in the developing world, which tends to be in warmer regions and has an
infrastructure less able to withstand the inevitable problems... ...Despite
our intuition that we need to do something drastic about global warming,
economic analyses show that it will be far more expensive to cut carbon
dioxide emissions radically than to pay the costs of adapting to the increased
temperatures. Moreover, all current models show that the Kyoto Protocol
will have surprisingly little impact on the climate: temperature levels
projected for 2100 will be postponed for all of six years.Yet
the cost of the Kyoto Protocol will be $150 billion to $350 billion annually
(compared to $50 billion in global annual development aid). With global
warming disproportionately affecting third world countries, we have to
ask if Kyoto is the best way to help them. The answer is no. For the cost
of Kyoto for just one year we could solve the world's biggest problem:
we could provide every person in the world with clean water. This alone
would save two million lives each year and prevent 500 million from severe
disease. In fact, for the same amount Kyoto would have cost just the United
States every year, the United Nations estimates that we could provide every
person in the world with access to basic health, education, family planning
and water and sanitation services. Isn't this a better way of serving the
world?
The focus should be on development,
not sustainability. Development is not simply valuable in itself, but in
the long run it will lead the third world to become more concerned about
the environment. Only when people are rich enough to feed themselves do
they begin to think about the effect of their actions on the world around
them and on future generations. With its focus on sustainability, the developed
world ends up prioritizing the future at the expense of the present. This
is backward. In contrast, a focus on development helps people today while
creating the foundation for an even better tomorrow...
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