Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I was reading an interview with Adrian Bejan (worth taking a look at), and I got to musing about his comments regarding the relationship between energy use and per capita income. So I pulled up GapMinder, the world’s best online visualization software. Here’s a first cut at the relationship between energy and income.
Figure 1. Energy use per person (tons of oil equivalent, TOE) versus average income, by country. Colors show geographical regions. Size of the circle indicates population. The US is the large yellow circle at the top right. Canada is the overlapping yellow circle. China is the large red circle, India the large light blue circle. Here’s a link to the live Gapminder graph so you can experiment with it yourself.
Clearly, other than a few outliers, the relationship between energy use and income is quite straightforward. You can’t have one without the other. Well, that’s not quite true, you can have energy without income. You can have (relatively) high energy use without having the corresponding income, plenty of Africa is in that boat. But the reverse is not true—you can’t have high income without high energy use. You need the energy to make the income.
Now, James Hansen is the NASA guy who is leading the charge to stop all forms of cheap energy. Coal is bad, terrible stuff in his world. He calls trains of coal “death trains”. He wants to deny cheap energy to all of those folks in the bottom half of the graph above. Well, actually, he wants to deny access to cheap energy to everyone, but where it hurts is the bottom half of the graph. For example, the World Bank and other international funding agencies, at the urging of folks like Hansen, have been turning down loans for coal plants in developing countries.
But as you can see, if you deny energy to those folks, that is the same as denying them development. Because when there’s less energy, there’s less income. The two go hand in hand. So what James Hansen is advising is that we should take money from the poor … actually he wants to deny them cheap energy, but that means denying them income and the development that accompanies it.
A look at the history of some of the countries is instructive in that regard, to see how the income and the energy use have changed over time. Figure 2 shows the history of some selected countries.
Figure 2. A history of selected countries. Colors now show crude birth rate (births per thousand)
Now, this is showing something very interesting. It may reveal why Hansen thinks he’s doing good. Notice that for countries where people make below say $20,000 of annual income, the only way up is up and to the right … which means that the only way to increase income is to increase energy use. Look at India and China and Brazil and Spain and the Netherlands as examples. (Note also that crude birth rate is tied to increasing income, and that the crude birth rate in the US has dropped by about half since 1960.)
Above that annual income level of ~ $20,000, however something different happens. The countries start to substitute increased energy efficiency for increased energy use. This is reflected in the vertical movement of say the US, where the 2011 per capita energy use is exactly the same as the 1968 per capita energy use. And Canada is using the same energy per person as in 1977 … so let’s take a closer look at the upper right section of the chart. Figure 3 shows an enlargement of just the top right of the chart, displaying more countries.
Figure 3. A closeup of Figure 2, showing more countries. Start date is 1968 for clarity.
Now, this is interesting. Many, perhaps most of these countries show vertical or near vertical movement during the last twenty years or so. And the recent economic crash has caused people to be more conservative about energy use, squeezing more dollars out per ton of oil equivalent.
But that only happens up at the high end of the income spectrum, where people are making above about twenty or even twenty-five thousand dollars per year. You need to have really good technology to make that one work, to produce more income without using more energy. You need to be in what is called a “developed” nation.
When people think “development”, they often think “bulldozers”. But they should think “energy efficiency”, because that is the hallmark of each technological advance—it squeezes more stuff out of less energy. But you have to be in an industrialized, modern society to take advantage of that opportunity.
So this may be the reason for Hansen’s attitude toward energy use. He may not know that most of the world is not in the situation of the US. This may be the reason the he claims that we should curtail energy use by all means possible. He may not see that while the US and industrialized countries can get away with that, in part because we waste a lot of energy and have a lot of both money and technology, the poor and even the less well off of the world have little energy or money to waste.
For those poorer countries and individuals, which make up the overwhelming bulk of the world’s population, a reduction in energy use means a reduction in the standard of living. And the part Hansen and his adherents don’t seem to get is that for most of the world, the standard of living is “barely” … as in barely making ends meet.
As is usual in this world, the situation of the rich and the poor is different, and in this case the break line is high. Twenty grand of income per year is the line dividing those who can take advantage of technology to get more income with the same energy, and the rest, which is most of the world. Most of the world are still among those who must use more energy to increase their income. They don’t have the option the US and the developed nations have. They must increase energy use to increase income.
And when you start jacking up energy prices and discouraging the use of cheap energy sources around the planet, as Hansen and his adherents are doing, the poorest of the poor get shafted. James Hansen is making lots and lots of money. He’s comfortably in the top 1% of the world’s population by income, and he obviously doesn’t give much thought to the rest. We know this because if he thought about the poor he’d realize that while he is mouthing platitudes about how he’s doing his agitation and advocacy for his grandchildren’s world in fifty years, what he’s doing is shafting the poor today in the name of his grandchildren. Of course Hansen is not the first rich white guy to do that, so I suppose I really shouldn’t be surprised, but still …
Increased energy prices, often in the form of taxes and “cap-and-trade” and “renewable standards”, are THE WORLDS MOST REGRESSIVE TAX. Hansen proposes taxing the living daylights out of the poor, but he won’t feel the pain. He can stand a doubling of the gas prices, no problem. But when electricity and gas prices double around the planet, POOR PEOPLE DIE … and Hansen just keeps rolling, he has quarter-million-dollar awards from his friends and a fat government salary and a princely retirement pension you and I paid for, he could care less about increased energy prices. He’s one of the 1%, why should he pay attention to the poor?
Forgive the shouting, but the damn hypocrisy is infuriating, and I’m sick of being nice about it. James Hansen and Michael Mann and Gavin Schmidt and Phil Jones and Peter Gleick and the rest of the un-indicted co-conspirators are a bunch of rich arrogant 1%er jerkwagons who don’t care in the slightest about the poor. Not only that, but they’ve given the finger to the rest of the climate scientists and to the scientific establishment, most of whom have said nothing in protest, and far too many of whom have approved of their malfeasance.
Their patented combination of insolent arrogance and shabby science would be bad enough if that was all they were doing … but they are hurting poor people right now. Their policies are causing harder times for the poor today, as we speak … and they mouth platitudes about how they are saving the poor from some danger they won’t see for fifty years?
If you ask the poor whether they’d rather get shafted for sure today, or possibly get shafted in fifty years, I know what they’d tell you. To me, hurting the poor today under the rubric of saving them in half a century from an unsubstantiated and fanciful danger is moral dishonesty of the first order.
So let me say to all of you folks who claim the world is using too much energy, you have the stick by the wrong end. The world needs to use MORE energy, not less, because there is no other way to get the poor out of poverty. It can’t be done without cheap energy. We need to use more energy to lift people out of bone-crushing poverty, not use less and condemn them to brutal lives. And to do that, energy needs to be cheaper, not more expensive.
Let me be crystal clear, and speak directly to Hansen and other global warming alarmists. Any one of you who pushes for more expensive energy is hurting and impoverishing and killing the poor today. Whether through taxes or cap-and-trade or renewable subsidies or blocking drilling or any other way, increasing energy costs represent a highly regressive tax of the worst kind. And there is no escape at the bottom end, quite the opposite. The poorer you are, the harder it bites.
So please, don’t give us the holier-than-thou high moral ground stance. Spare us the “we’re noble because we are saving the world” BS. When a poor single mother of three living outside Las Vegas has her gas costs double, she has little choice other than to cut out some other essential item, food or doctor visits or whatever … because her budget doesn’t have any of the non-essential items that James Hansen’s budget contains, and she needs the gas to get to work, that’s not optional.
For her, all her money goes to essentials— so if gas costs go up, her kids get less of what they need. You’re not saving the world, far from it. You’re taking food out of kids’ mouths.
You are causing pain and suffering to the poor and acting like your excrement has no odor … but at least there is some good news. People are no longer buying your story. People are realizing that if someone argues for expensive energy, they are anti-human, anti-development, and most of all, without compassion for the poor. They are willing to put the most damaging, regressive, destructive tax imaginable on the poorest people of the planet.
Now those of you advocating for higher energy prices, after reading this, you might still fool the media about what you are doing to the poor. And it’s possible for you to not mention to your co-workers about the real results of your actions. And you could still deceive your friends about the question of the poor, or even your wife or husband.
But by god, you can no longer fool yourself about it. As of now, you know that agitating for more expensive energy for any reason hurts the poor. What you do with that information is up to you … but you can’t ignore it, it will haunt you at 3 AM, and hopefully, it will make you think about the less fortunate folk of our planet and seriously reconsider your actions. Because here’s the deal. Even if CO2 will damage the poor in 50 years, hurting the poor now only makes it worse. If you think there is a problem, then look for a no-regrets solution.
Because if you truly care about the poor, and you are afraid CO2 will increase the bad weather and harm the poor fifty years from now, you owe it to them to find a different response to your fears of CO2, a response that doesn’t hurt the poor today.
w.
Willis
good stuff. Here in the UK energy policy is run by the LibDems. My MP is Nick Clegg, the leader of that party. He is completely impervious to reason. His mind is closed. He is going to save our grandchildren from the non-existent problem of climate change come what may. In earlier exchanges he asked that we agree to disagree, the inference being he does not want to hear form me. But hear from me he does and he will. The point is and the point these people must understand is that there will be no excuses. They will not be able to say ‘but nobody told me.’ So I say to everyone tell your congressman tell your senator tell your MP and keep telling them. They are doing evil. And there are to be no excuses. Tell them and don’t stop telling them till they start to listen.
By the way, keeping people energy poor and therefore poor will do nothing to reduce fertility. The wealthier people become the less children they have. Take a peek at Mexico.
I’m one of those poor people, at under 10k a year. And yes these policies hurt… electricity goes up every January for the past 3 years; we can no longer afford the electricity to run heat, and even without heat the added expense has forced me to give up my cell phone (internet will be next). Can no longer afford gas to go to the cheap grocery stores; food is getting so expensive we can barely afford to eat anyway. Can’t afford the (dangerous) prescription ‘alternatives’ to the cheap, OTC epinephrine (CFC propelled) asthma inhaler the greenies banned; forced to experiment trying to mix the contents of epi-pens in e-cigarettes. There are no jobs around here, literally, not a single one posted in the local paper; can’t afford to move, don’t know where to go if I could. Things are beginning to get very, very difficult.
Thanks for yet another excellent article, Willis!
Willis,
When you speak I listen because I know you have travelled widely and have lived and worked in developing nations. You know how they live at grass roots. I don’t mean visiting a top class hotel in the Maldives or a Kenya all-inclusive.
Were I live the power used to go out a LOT. Once I ordered 2 steel doors to be made for me. What should have taken 3 days took 2 weeks!!! due to an unbelievable stretch of power outages. The fabricator goes without my full payment for a needless 11 days. That’s 11 days lost. There are so many other examples of how productivity comes to a standstill due to lack of electricity, and very HIGH tariff electricity at that. This, among many other reasons, is why I despise hypocritical Warmists. I am at the receiving end of this Warmist horseshit.
I hope when this fraud is over there will be trials for crimes against humanity.
“When people think “development”, they often think “bulldozers”. But they should think “energy efficiency”, because that is the hallmark of each technological advance—it squeezes more stuff out of less energy. But you have to be in an industrialized, modern society to take advantage of that opportunity.”
*
This is such an important point. People have been taught that “development” means destruction (bulldozers), and that is so not so.
Think how much richer every individual would be today were it not for the steadily increasing destruction caused by eco-whacko policies over the last 30 years. What’s going on now is a massive crime. We have the fuels to make our world a most amazing place for everyone, with health, wealth and happiness in abundance. Yet we have this green cancer telling our children to be afraid of it.
I’s time for some civilization-saving surgery. Let’s get rid of the green cancer once and for all.
How much will Dr. James Hansen feel a doubling of electricity or gas prices compared to someone living in Cambodia? This greedy, deceptive hypocrite can take the price hike unlike the peasant with a small fridge, a few lightbulbs and his first small, second-hand auto.
Willis,
I have just finished reading your full article and I have to say it’s among your best.
One issue is population and income rise. I think it would be great if you could illustrate increased income of nations and fertility rates. I mean, why does the average woman in Bangladesh have more children than a German woman?
Well said.
I’d add 2 further points.
As FOIA points out, the climate change orthodoxy is resulting in massive redirection of energy and resources away from market driven technological innovations whose overall effect benefits everyone from the richest to the poorest, toward activities that benefit no one except (some believe) people in 50 or 100 years time, and of course crony capitalists (aka socialists).
The second point is that in the name of saving the planet, they are causing massive environmental damage, from windmills on English hill tops, to vast palm oil monoculture in SE Asia,
Both these effects result from the same cause. In a free market, all technological innovations result in producing more from less. Redirect the forces of innovation as governments have done and the result is less for all people at greater cost, including environmental costs.
Warmists think that they are going to get away with their nonsense without accountability. It’s now up to people to fight for their interests otherwise they are going to be killed by those in power. The choice is simple and its yours. Stop listening to these liars and scaremongers.
———————————
Excess winter deaths in the UK 2013
“The brutal Arctic blast has seen temperatures plummet to -13C (9F) amid what could be the coldest March for almost three decades.
Pensioner groups warned the death rate among Britain’s elderly has already soared this winter with fears it could hit 30,000 – 6,000 more than last year.”
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/383823/Deaths-up-by-30-000-in-big-freeze
Fuel poverty protest in the UK in February, 2013
http://www.independent.co.uk/money/spend-save/anger-at-decc-as-fuel-poverty-hits-millions-8497485.html
Willis, well done. I think it would be great if someone could put together a series of these kinds of stories for publication in African countries’ and other poor nations’ newspapers. This stuff is not known and understood in these places. They have been inveigled into attending the Green conferences but not knowing the ugly subtext. NGOs make presentations to these people all the time, brainwashing them into accepting no developlment.
Forgive the shouting, but the damn hypocrisy is infuriating, and I’m sick of being nice about it.
No reason to ask for forgiveness Willis. Anger is an energy as someone once said.
As you correctly point out – the biggest proponents of ‘carbon tax’ (et al) are those that it would hit least. All sounds great at some tax payer funded conference in some piss poor part of the world where one is jetted in and out of ‘the compound’ with a just a banquet and a quick speech in between.
On the up-side – I have noticed that China is taking a big interest in countries that are sick to death of the western wankfest. Give us a 25 year contract for Coal and we will build you a bunch of power stations and actually pay you for the Coal kind of interest.
That doesn’t help the ‘first world’ poor of course but it does offer hope to millions who never had any hope in the first place. China may not be everyone’s ideal but at least they are offering an alternative to ‘The West’. One where some in Africa for example may well see their lives move forward for once.
Tis late here in England and I must get to bed but you have my interest – “I’ll be back” as your old Governor was so fond of suggesting.
As always – Thanks Willis
Wamron, we can complain about high energy prices, but taking your life is being weak. Let me tell you why. There are at least 1 billion people poorer than you in this world and they have no intention of ending their lives. Did humans who entered Europe decide they were going to commit suicide as soon as they encountered an ice age because life was just too hard? You are here today because they survived – and the Neanderthals didn’t.
Don J. Easterbrook says:
March 15, 2013 at 1:41 pm
Hey, Don, good question. Actually it’s best if you look it up, because there’s four datasets (and one is from more than one source). Click on this link to go to the live file, and in small print near each of the variables it says where it came from. In this case energy use says “World Bank” and the per capita GDP says “various sources. Click on the tiny icon near the “Various sources” and it gives the data and the details on where they came from.
Regards,
w.
Chad Wozniak,
You talk of mass murder by Warmists and I agree. This is their ‘hidden’ agenda. Be in do doubt they are not stupid, they know full well where their policies will lead. They are living in denial of their sub-consistence which is to eradicate as many poor people as possible so that they and their offspring can live better in this world. They see the teeming hoards as a threat to their genetic offspring. Some people may laugh at what I have just said but focus on the word ‘sub-consistence’. It is the key.
CORRECTIONS:
You talk of mass murder by Warmists and I agree. This is their ‘hidden’ agenda. Be in no doubt they are not stupid, they know full well where their policies will lead. They are living in denial of their subconscious.
Spinifers says:
March 15, 2013 at 2:48 pm
Thank you for your eloquent and tragic statement of fact about your life.
Folks forget that the poor exist even in the midst of plenty, and that they are the primary victims of the AGW alarmists. My intention in writing this was to give a voice to folks like you and those even further down the economic ladder.
Best regards and best of luck in your life,
w.
Good night all. I will part with some Winston Churchill quotes:
@Chad Wozniak
“It was the “overwhelming judgment of science” in 1930s Germany that the Jews must go. MASS MURDER”
It is the overwhelming judgement of some people that a majority of the human population is surplus and also must go, but through the mechanism of depopulation, all the while devoted to a greenish cult that precludes the use of the energy resources available.
How will they feel when it is the “overwhelming judgement of science” that natural gas is in fact ‘natural’? That ‘fossil’ oil is continuously created at about 100 km depth in the upper mantle at 1500 C? That the methane clathrates are continuously formed by natural processes?
Will they admit they were idiots all along? No. And that is the very definition of a fanatic.
“To me, hurting the poor today under the rubric of saving them in half a century from an unsubstantiated and fanciful danger is moral dishonesty of the first order.”
We have to destroy the poor in order to “save” them?
Very good article, Willis. The graphs are chock full of information.
@Bill Mckibben
I assume you have read and are at least starting to comprehend Willis’s article.
A bicycle generator and solar still in every backyard will not solve these problems in any meaningful way.
Posting links to articles which support the current Green ideology just highlights the dichotomy of low energy access and poverty versus carbon emissions.
Thanks at least for showing us how actually stupid some people can be.
PS: Clean up your act and start doing the right thing.
…he could care less about increased energy prices.
I assume what you mean is he couldn’t care less about increased energy prices (i.e. he cares not one jot already).
“Any one of you who pushes for more expensive energy is hurting and impoverishing and killing the poor today”.
Even if they fully understood the above statement, if would not make the slightest difference to the true believers, because the staunch position they have taken is this: the longer term greater good automatically over-rides all present concerns, and this also includes death and destruction on a vast scale.
I like Richard Pipes comment about the Marxists who said: “you can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs. ” To which he replies: “… apart from the fact the people are not eggs, no omelette has been produced from the carnage”.
It didn’t make any difference when the same sort of longer term ‘ends’ position was taken by communists in Cambodia, China, and Russia for example. To them, the end justifies the means, and if this includes altering the present data to serve the long term ends, then so be it, if this means kiling vast numbers of people to serve the ends (but supposedly killing less people eventually), then so be it, if this means fudging the science to serve the ends, then so be it.
It is a tragedy in the human condition, that otherwise intelligent people sometimes get these sort of future visions of ‘ends’, which aren’t even remotely true to begin with, and cause so much death and destruction along the way.
Wow, Willis. Well said, directly. Hansen and Jones are getting the poor poorer.
Say hello to “green death”. It will haunt us for decades to come. The unintended consequences (I hope) of green policies.