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Joe Biden’s Climate Denialism

In anticipation of the virtual Leaders Summit on Climate, a two-day global gathering of more than 40 world leaders, President Joe Biden declared that the United States had a “moral imperative” to adopt an “ambitious” goal of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions by 50% from 2005 levels by 2030 and 100% by 2050.

Such an effort, if we were serious about it, would entail massive destruction of wealth, a surrender of our international trade advantages, the creation of a hugely intrusive state-run bureaucracy at home, the inhibition of free markets that have helped make the world a cleaner place and a precipitous drop in the living standards of most citizens — especially the poor.

Of course, it should be said that those who oppose the expansion of fracking and nuclear energy — most elected Democrats, it seems — aren’t even remotely serious about “tackling” carbon emissions, anyway. Around 80% of American energy is generated by fossil fuels and nuclear right now. Around 20% is generated by “renewables” — predominantly wind and hydropower (which is unavailable in most places). Only around 2% of our portfolio consists of inefficient and unreliable solar power — this, even after decades of subsidies and mandates.

It’s always funny to hear people speak about solar panels as if they were some sort of cutting-edge technology. The discovery of the photovoltaic effect goes back to 1888. President Jimmy Carter declared a national “Sun Day” in 1978 and put 30 solar panels atop the White House. One of those panels is now on display at the Science and Technology Museum in China — not only the top producer of solar panels and carbon emissions but also the nation that would most benefit from the United States’ unilateral economic capitulation.

To reach Biden’s goal, the United States would need to envelop most of the nation in panels and windmills and then rely on enormous Gaian prayer circles — may she grant us sunshine and gale-force winds. We would be compelled to eliminate most air travel and cars — making new ones produces lots of carbon emissions — and retrofit every home, factory, warehouse and building in America to utilize this type of energy. We would need to dramatically cut back on our meat and dairy intake as well.

“The signs are unmistakable, the science undeniable,” Biden claimed. “Cost of inaction keeps mounting.” Now, I realize that people repeat these contentions with religious zeal, but the evidence is extraordinarily weak. For one thing, there is action. Market innovations keep creating efficiencies all the time. For another, we live in the healthiest, most equitable, most prosperous, most safe and most peaceful era in human existence. Affordable fossil fuels have done more to eliminate poverty than all the redistributionist programs ever concocted. By nearly every quantifiable measure, the environment is also in better shape now than it was 20, 30 or even 50 years ago. A lot of that is grounded by an economy that relies on affordable energy. Also, though every weather-related event is framed in a cataclysmic way, not that long ago, being killed by the climate was serious concern for most people. Today, it is incredibly rare.

Progressives, however, regularly maintain that we are facing an existential crisis. One might point out that science’s predictive abilities on climate have been atrocious. But really, these days, “science” is nothing but a cudgel to push leftist policy prescriptions with little consideration for tradeoffs, reality, or morality.

The Malthusian fanaticism that’s been normalized in our political rhetoric is also denialism. “Science,” as the media and political class now practice it, has become little more than a means of generating apprehension and fear about progress. It is the denial of the modern technology and competitive markets which continue to allow human beings to adapt to organic and anthropogenic changes in the environment. Even people who mimic doomsday rhetoric seem to understand this intuitively. The average American says they are willing to spend up to $177 a year to avoid climate change, not the approximately $177,000,000 per person it would cost to set arbitrary dates to get rid of a carbon-energy economy.

The choice we’re given now pits a thriving open economy against an economy weighed down by centralized (and unratified) worldwide climate-change treaties such as the Paris climate agreement that put little burden on growing economies such as China and India, and all of it on you.

What does that burden look like? After shutting down a large chunk of its economy in 2020, and spending trillions to keep those affected afloat and avert a depression, the United States emissions only fell by 13%. Imagine what 50% might entail. When confronted with these nagging specifics, we often hear how these are aspirational goals. Why would we aspire to make life worse for billions of people?

 

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David Harsanyi
David Harsanyi
David Harsanyi is a senior editor at The Federalist, a nationally syndicated columnist through Creators Syndicate, a Happy Warrior columnist at National Review and author of four books. Harsanyi is a former national political columnist and editorial board member at The Denver Post and editor of Human Events.

5 COMMENTS

  1. Yes, it is EASY to be aspirational. IMPLEMENTATION of those lofty goals is always the challenge. So, if you really want to “aspire,” then why not just mandate that we will “Openly Defy Gravity by 2035?” That slogan is just about as achievable as the Biden climate agenda…

  2. I like your comment.

    Note that the United States, which had withdrawn from the Paris climate accord, has been and is doing better than the proposed carbon-dioxide reduction goals, and the other nations have all been doing worse than promised. Technological change–in this case, improvements in hydraulic fracturing technology which allowed a huge increase in U.S. production of natural gas, which is low in CO2 emissions–fosters improvements in the environment at this point in human technological development. In addition to which, CO2 is in fact essential to life, and higher volumes of it benefit plant growth greatly (up to a limit far beyond what human emissions could ever make possible). See http://climatechangereconsidered.org/climate-change-reconsidered-ii-biological-impacts/.

    • I spent over 36 years in the domestic (onshore) oil & gas industry, about 2/3rds of that tenure in regulatory & compliance. I am a lifelong conservationist & outdoorsman who NEVER woke up one day trying to do anything but PROTECT the environment and follow the rules. The vast majority of my industry colleagues had similar dispositions. I am a PROUD industry retiree who offers no apology for my commitment to operational excellence in every organization I had the privilege to work with responsibly extracting a resource that is VITAL to modern civilization. Unlike unaccountable environmental “activists,” I signed my name to hundreds of legal documents/filings & testified many times under OATH on matters of the day, many of those carrying civil (and criminal) penalties for ANY misrepresentations or material misstatements. A rather HIGH BAR compared to industry detractors. It has saddened me how the oil & gas industry has basically allowed the environmental extremists to systematically VILLIFY energy production through a LARGELY false narrative and a “phony high ground” that is largely enabled by a complicit (activist) media. With all the misinformation in the media, no surprise (to me) that we are not having a thoughtful, well informed national debate on climate & energy. When ideologues are driving the conversation, you can’t expect rational results. Unfortunately, all this will most likely end badly. Aspiration & “whim” are ultimately NO SUBSTITUTE for energy imperatives. Too bad the right questions are not being asked before the lights go out…

      • I agree fully, Mr. Verret. Well-said. Spreading the truth through the fog of ideological warfare is our mission.

  3. Well, I’ll offer you a resource. If anyone at Heartland (ever) wants to exchange notes on energy & environmental matters, you can find me on LinkedIn. I think I have a unique background & insight that is compelling. Somehow, the discussion needs to change. Sensible folks need a voice…

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