Ditch Kyoto - do some real work...
Lynne Kiesling at
Knowledge Problem points out an interesting article regarding the costs of the Kyoto Treaty and points to some other ideas:
bq.
Save the World, Ignore Global Warming
In Sunday's Telegraph
Bjorn Lomborg had a commentary on climate change policy that is well worth a careful read and consideration.
Global warming has become the obsession of our time. From governments and campaigners meeting for the climate summit in Buenos Aires right now we hear the incessant admonition: making global warming our first priority is the moral test of our age.
Yet they are wrong. Global warming is real and caused by CO2. The trouble is that the climate models show we can do very little about the warming. Even if everyone (including the United States) did Kyoto and stuck to it throughout the century, the change would be almost immeasurable, postponing warming by just six years in 2100.
bq. He then goes on to discuss the
prioritization of issues that the participants in the Copenhagen Consensus meetings in the spring established.
The Copenhagen Consensus gives us great hope because it shows us that there are so many good things we can do. For $27 billion we could prevent 28 million people from getting HIV. For $12 billion we could cut malaria cases by more than a billion a year. Instead of helping richer people inefficiently far into the future, we can do immense good right now.
We live in a world with limited resources, where we struggle to solve just some of its challenges. This means that caring more about some issues end up meaning caring less about others. If we have a moral obligation, it is to spend each dollar doing the most good that we possibly can.
So in a curious way, global warming really is the moral test of our time, but not in the way its proponents imagined. We need to stop our obsession with global warming, and start dealing with the many more pressing issues in the world, where we can do most good first and quickest.
So true. The Kyoto is a band-aid trying to stop a naturally occurring phenomenon at an incredible price for developed nations and it ignores the major polluters China and India (because they are developing). If these same nations that are hyping the cause of man-made global warming (which is trivial at best) turned their attention to
some real problems they could have a wonderful effect -- take a look at Malaria (kills about 1.5 million people per year), Polio (which is staging a recurrence in Africa), they could radically curb AIDS (more free drugs to victims + education). Makes me want to bash some heads!
Posted by DaveH at December 13, 2004 8:18 PM