Absurd, impractical sustainability precepts are actually a prescription for government control
Guest essay by Paul Driessen
As President Trump downgrades the relevance of Obama era climate change and anti-fossil fuel policies, many environmentalists are directing attention to “sustainable development.”
Like “dangerous manmade climate change,” sustainability reflects poor understanding of basic energy, economic, resource extraction and manufacturing principles – and a tendency to emphasize tautologies and theoretical models as an alternative to readily observable evidence in the Real World. It also involves well-intended but ill-informed people being led by ill-intended but well-informed activists who use the concept to gain greater government control over people’s lives, livelihoods and living standards.
The most common definition is that we may meet the needs of current generations only to the extent that doing so will not compromise the ability of future generations to meet their needs. Sustainability thus reflects the assertion that we are rapidly depleting finite resources, and must reduce current needs and wants so as to save raw materials for future generations.
At first blush, it sounds logical and even ethical. But it requires impossible clairvoyance.
In 1887, when the Hearthstone House became the world’s first home lit via hydroelectric power, no one did or could foresee that electricity would dominate, enhance and safeguard our lives in the myriad ways it does today. Decades later, no one anticipated pure silica fiber optic cables replacing copper wires.
No one predicted tiny cellular phones with superb digital cameras and more computing power than a 1990 desktop computer or 3-D printing or thousands of wind turbines across our fruited plains – or cadmium, rare earth metals and other raw materials suddenly required to manufacture these technological wonders.
Mankind advanced at a snail’s pace for thousands of years. As the modern fossil-fuel industrial era found its footing, progress picked up at an increasingly breathtaking pace. Today, change is exponential. As we moved from flint to copper, to bronze, iron, steel and beyond, we didn’t do so because mankind had exhausted Earth’s supplies of flint, copper, tin and so on. We did it because we innovated – invented something better, more efficient or practical. Each advance required different raw materials.
Who today can foresee what technologies future generations will have 25, 50 or 200 years from now? What raw materials they will need? How we are supposed to ensure that those families meet their needs?
Why then would we even think of empowering government to regulate today’s activities today based on the wholly unpredictable technologies, lifestyles, needs, and resource demands of distant generations? Why would we ignore or compromise the needs of current generations, to meet those totally unpredictable future needs – including the needs of today’s most impoverished, energy-deprived, malnourished people, who desperately want to improve their lives?
Moreover, we are not going to run out of resources anytime soon. A 1-kilometer fiber optic cable made from 45 pounds of silica (Earth’s most abundant element) carries thousands of times more information than an equally long RG-6 cable made from 3,600 pounds of copper, reducing demand for copper.
In 1947, the world’s proven oil reserves totaled 47 billion barrels. Over the next 70 years, we consumed hundreds of billions of barrels – and yet, in 2016 we still had at least 2,800 billion barrels of oil reserves, including oil sands, oil shales and other unconventional deposits: at least a century’s worth, plus abundant natural gas. Constantly improving technologies now let us find and produce oil and natural gas from deposits that we could not even detect, much less tap into, just a couple decades ago.
Sustainability dogma also revolves around hatred of fossil fuels, and a determination to rid the world of them, regardless of any social, economic or environmental costs of doing so. And we frequently find that supposedly green, eco-friendly and sustainable alternatives are frequently anything but.
U.S. ethanol quotas eat up 40% of the nation’s corn, cropland the size of Iowa, billions of gallons of water, and vast quantities of pesticides, fertilizers, tractor fuel and natural gas, to produce energy that drives up food prices, damages small engines and gets one-third less mileage per gallon than gasoline.
Heavily subsidized wind energy requires standby fossil fuel generators, ultra-long transmission lines and thus millions of tons of concrete, steel, copper, rare earth metals and fiberglass. The turbines create chronic health problems for people living near them and kill millions of birds and bats – to produce intermittent, wholly unreliable electricity that costs up to 250% more than coal-based electricity.
For all that, on a torrid August 2012 day, Great Britain’s 3,500 giant wind turbines generated a mere 12 megawatts of electricity: 0.032% of the 38,000 MW the country was using at the time.
The United Kingdom also subsidizes several huge anaerobic digesters, intended to convert animal manure and other farm waste into eco-friendly methane for use in generating electricity. But there is insufficient farm waste. So the digesters are fed with corn (maize), grass and rye grown on 130,000 acres (four times the size of Washington, DC), using enormous amounts of water, fertilizer – and of course diesel fuel to grow, harvest and transport the crops to the digesters. Why not just drill and frack for natural gas?
That brings us to the political arena, where the terminology is circular, malleable, infinitely elastic, the perfect tool for activists. Whatever they support is sustainable; whatever they oppose is unsustainable; and whatever mantras or protective measures they propose give them more power and control.
The Club of Rome sought to build a new movement by creating “a common enemy against whom we can unite” – allegedly looming disasters “caused by human intervention in natural processes” and requiring “changed attitudes and behavior” to avoid global calamities: global warming and resource depletion.
“Building an environmentally sustainable future requires restricting the global economy, dramatically changing human reproductive behavior, and altering values and lifestyles,” said Worldwatch Institute founder Lester Brown. “Doing this quickly requires nothing short of a revolution.”
“Current lifestyles and consumption patterns of the affluent middle class – involving high meat intake, the use of fossil fuels, electrical appliances, home and workplace air conditioning, and suburban housing – are not sustainable,” Canadian arch-environmentalist Maurice Strong declared.
“Minor shifts in policy, moderate improvements in laws and regulations, rhetoric offered in lieu of genuine change,” former Vice President Al Gore asserted – “these are all forms of appeasement, designed to satisfy the public’s desire to believe that sacrifice, struggle and a wrenching transformation of society will not be necessary.” Environmental activist Daniel Sitarz agreed, saying: “Agenda 21 proposes an array of actions intended to be implemented by every person on Earth. Effective execution of Agenda 21 will require a profound reorientation of all humans, unlike anything the world has ever experienced.”
“Sustainable development,” the National Research Council declaimed in a 2011 report, “raises questions that are not fully or directly addressed in U.S. law or policy, including how to define and control unsustainable patterns of production and consumption, and how to encourage the development of sustainable communities, biodiversity protection, clean energy, environmentally sustainable economic development, and climate change controls.” In fact, said Obama science advisor John Holdren, we cannot even talk about sustainability without talking about politics, power, and control. Especially control.
Of course, the activists, politicians and regulators feel little pain, as they enjoy salaries and perks paid by taxpayers and foundations, fly to UN and other conferences at posh 5-star resorts around the world, and implement agendas that control, redesign and transform other people’s lives.
It is We the Governed – especially working class and poor citizens – who pay the price, with the world’s poorest families paying the highest price. We can only hope the Trump Administration and Congress will dismantle and defund sustainable development, the alter ego of cataclysmic manmade climate change.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org), and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.
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How can anyone write an article like this and not mention Julian Simon, who wrote many papers and books expressing exactly this view in the 1970s. He even won a bet against Ehrlich – the Michael Mann of his generation…
Excellent point.
(Ehrlich … what a joke.)
How can one man be so wrong for so long, without being recognized as a flake?
He is recognized as such, but he has the equivalent of a government job so it doesn’t matter.
“Sustainability” is just another Trojan Horse of collectivism. It uses the tried-and-true assumptive close from sales that we have collective guilt and collective responsibility.
Griff February 9, 2017 at 8:27 am
Where on the planet would this shoddy excuse for destroying raptors and bats, both keystone species, be accepted except by “environmentalists”? I don’t care if only one of the windfarms is shredding birds, TEAR THAT ONE DOWN. One is far too many. The laws wisely don’t let the oil companies kill birds, but the “environmentalists” have gotten exclusions for bird chopping wind farms. Yer a bunch of environmental hypocrites of the finest water.
Depends on how you define “health risk”. It definitely LOWERS property values near the birdchoppers … are we to assume that that is because humans find them so health-giving and such good neighbors? The Irish beg to disagree:
Or if you don’t like courts, how about this study?
Regards,
w.
http://www.aweablog.org/when-medical-practitioners-mislead-trio-targets-family-doctors-with-bad-information/
“This is a deeply misleading article by long time anti-wind activists that may lead unwary medical practitioners to inappropriately attribute symptoms to wind turbines and possibly exacerbate pre-existing conditions. It ignores the vast majority of evidence and opinions of medical professionals in assessments worldwide that wind turbines do not cause health impacts.
The authors–Jeffrey, Krogh and Horner–do not cite the 19 reviews worldwide of the peer-reviewed evidence and anecdotal health claims that have found no evidence of harm from wind turbines to human health outside of easily mitigated noise annoyance. Most recently, the Australian state of Victoria’s Health Department released the results of their assessment and clearly state that wind turbines do not cause health impacts. [1]
They disagree with much more strongly credentialed Canadian public health professionals such as Dr. David Colby and Dr. Arlene King, to name two primary figures among the overwhelming majority. Drs. King and Colby participated in and led formal cross-disciplinary reviews of all of the peer-reviewed literature and anecdotal claims in 2009 and 2010, respectively, which found no health impacts from wind energy.”
And the Irish case is most intriguing: details are scarce and it is certainly one of a handful of cases even brought worldwide.
I strongly suspect there’s something we are not being told about it.
Many in Ontario are familiar with Drs. King and Colby and what they have based their opinions on.
Dr. Colby has also testified on behalf of a wind farm/project owner.
CBC News, July 19, 2012
Re: Dr. Arlene King
‘Top Ontario official to testify about wind power health risks’
However, she did not testify. More information on this situation on the internet.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/top-ontario-official-to-testify-about-wind-power-health-risks-1.1241356
London Freepress, Ontario, March 30, 2011
Re: Dr. David Colby
‘MOH says turbines not a health issue’
Read at:
http://www.lfpress.com/news/london/2011/03/29/17801511.html
More information online on this topic.
The Globe And Mail, Toronto, June 18, 2014
Re: Dr. Arlene King. Her contract was not extended.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/health/ontarios-top-doctor-leaves-post-after-province-declines-to-extend-her-contract/article19214627
Wellington Times, Ontario, July 27, 2012
‘The tide turns’
Scroll down to:
Re: Dr. Arlene King’s court order to testify in this case.
Ontario farm couple:
“… taking on the provincial government, as well as a consortium composed of EPCOR, an Alberta-based utility, and Samsung, a large Korean multinational …”
More at:
http://www.wellingtontimes.ca/the-tide-turns
Oh – and if you look at reports on wind turbines and bird deaths they pretty much all extrapolate from the Altamount Pass figures… Altamount is of old design and epicly badly sited: it is an outlier; sites like it are not built since the 1980s and there were only a handful then.
Have you looked at the Ontario bird & bat kills from wind turbines? These turbines are not old style Altamont turbines.
And they are located in a major migratory bird flight path.
There is a Migratory Bird Treaty that is supposed to protect migratory birds (c.1918) but is being ignored by both the U.S. and Canadian governments.
How about producing electricity from farm waste?
What a good idea…….well, seemed like a good idea at the time
The reality is often a bit different
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4078820/The-great-green-guzzler-Monster-digesters-meant-guzzle-waste-churn-eco-friendly-energy-fed-CROPS-produce-pitiful-levels-power-cost-216m-subsidies-HARM-environment.html
Folks
Step back a bit and think about the underlying issue of sustainability which is there is not enough stuff or we just can’t afford some of the basic stuff. Then the next issue is that getting that stuff or using it will destroy the planet. Take a look at EM Smith’s (Chiefio) take on this when he wrote the following back in 2009. What me worry?
https://chiefio.wordpress.com/2009/05/08/there-is-no-shortage-of-stuff/
I have done some of my own research on several of his long if not fully complete list of “things” and he has been thorough and accurate IMO. My anxiety level is way down.
Bernie
Good article, thanks. Can’t fault the logic.
The article goes like a proverb “There is the Tiger – here is the Tail”. The word “Sustainable Development was there even before the global warming outage. Climate change is not global warming – fossil fuels but this is much more. Sustainable development is multifolded activity related issue – water resources, agriculture. In the figure it shows “organic”. See below an article of mine published in the “The Hans India”, daily news paper:
http://www.thehansindia.com/posts/index/News-Analysis/2017-01-30/For-a-workable-Green-Revolution–/276832
For a workable Green Revolution
THE HANS INDIA | Jan 30,2017 , 02:12 AM IST
.
India is an agrarian country providing employment directly or indirectly to around 60 percent of the rural population. Even with heavy input subsidies, loan waivers schemes and minimum support prices, among other things, farmers’ suicides are rampant while agricultural growth remains sluggish.
Ironically, it is the middlemen who are reaping dividends. Why it is so and what is the remedy?
The traditional agriculture was a soil and climate driven farming system that encompassed animal husbandry and provided socio-economic, food and nutrient security. Those were the ‘golden days’ in the history of farming. It was an environment-friendly system and was highly successful and sustainable. No pollution, no worry about seeds and fertilizer adulteration as they used good grain as seed and compost of farmyard manure and green manure as fertilizer.
The 1960s saw “profit-driven western chemical inputs tailored-mono crop technology” that came to be known as Green Revolution Technology [GRT], increased the production substantially in terms of quantity but failed to achieve the quality of traditional agriculture. Unfortunately, our scientists get paid from public money but serve western multinational companies. It is all like the present demonetization scheme wherein government and people lost through new notes printing, importing Chinese Machines, using US Cards and losing livelihood.
On an average, around 65 percent of cultivated area is at the mercy of “rain gods”. The remaining 35 percent of the area under irrigation presents high year to year fluctuations. The present rulers are diversifying lakhs of acres for non-agriculture activities; yet our land statistics are not changing.
When GRT was introduced nobody knew that this would create an environmental catastrophe – air, water [particularly non-point source], soil and food pollution. Even the Nobel Prize awarding organization was not aware of this while conferring it to Norman Borlaug.
The traditional technology was evolved over hundreds of years’ experience of farmers and whereas the GRT was evolved over few years research farm experience with large yield gap between on farm and research station. To make it viable entered government’s input subsidy, a huge component. Around one-third of the fertilizer finds its way in to black market. In accordance with my proposal, the then UPA government initiated to pay cash subsidy directly to farmers with Aadhaar link, instead of retailers or industry. However, this subsidy does not include organic fertilizers. This needs to be addressed.
In India Bt-cotton, the Genetically Modified [GM] Seed is in use since 2002-03. The productivity has been stagnant for the past five years – in the case of GRT it is stagnated since 1984-85. With the no crop rotation and changes in climate, in the five Bt-Cotton states, the farmers’ suicides are rampant with the high investments. The 2nd Green Revolution must be farming system. To achieve this goal, governments must create a mechanism to collect traditional inventions of progressive farmers and integrate them into traditional technology to achieve the 2nd Green Revolution that safeguards the environment and provide food safety, bio-safety, food and nutrient security.
To achieve sustainable agriculture, therefore, the governments must change the policy. It must include low input costs, pollution-free quality food technology such as organic inputs under cooperative farming setup. This not only brings down the cost of production but also reduces man-hours spent on procuring basic inputs by individual farmers, improves the utilization of natural resources and thus helps to reach sustainable agriculture. Better water management plays a crucial role – diversifying through less water intensive crops under micro irrigation systems. We need crop rotation and intercropping system to reduce the risk under cash crops.
However, the success depends upon: better post-harvesting technologies including sufficient storage facilities, export facilities, transport facilities, food processing industries, better education and health care facilities, which might reduce the migration to urban centers.
(The writer is a former Chief Technical Advisor of WMO/UN)
By Dr S Jeevananda Reddy
Dr Reddy, it was noticed during the Raj, that ‘middlemen’ caused famines by hoarding for profit. As you say, the system worked otherwise and modernity should only have made it better. Electricity, communications, education by correspondence (well, literacy first); Massey in NZ has much to offer in good farming university papers etc. for instance.
I was impressed to learn a few years ago of the success and techniques of the Indiam Forest Research Institute/Service in getting huge forestry growth only noticed elsewhere by satellites. Their “getting the villages to take, and have, actual ownerhsip”.seemed to work wonders. Same as it has in all successful democracies as they build their resources. People build, not bureaucracies. I thank you for your insights.
The “sustainability” boom is built on the same fears as the old Malthusian scares about population growth.
Yet the Malthusian projections have already been defeated in the industrialized nations: Once a high living standard is reached, population growth falls to replacement levels or lower. We have the cure in our own hands. It works. We know how to do it. With lower energy costs we can also recycle more materials that are currently too expensive to reprocess. Those materials won’t go away, Earth isn’t losing them to space.
I think one of the best cures for ‘Malthusianism’ is a long intercontinental flight from, say, London to San Francisco in clear weather. The long hours spent flying at high speed over empty lands in Canada or the USA shows you just how small the worlds population is when compared to the amount of space still available. With sufficiently cheap energy we could populate those lands and even use them to grow food, especially if the globe warmed up a few degrees.
I read the last paragraph as stating the “sustainability” requirements, per government regulation, should be done away with.
Different locals enact different sustainability standards, and the “nefarious” sustainability efforts need to be squelched rather than grow to the federal level.
I don’t know anyone that I trust to make my (sustainability) decisions for me.
I can’t imagine a government mandated definition of “sustainable private anything” that could also be applied to that same government. We need a “sustainable government” as example, so we can follow.
One of the things that amazes me about the whole “sustainability” movement is the purported concern for future generations. It is about the only time you will hear the pushers speak of future people in a positive light.
Interesting how “potential people” take precedence over existing people when it comes to “sustainability”. (Usually the argument is the other way around.) Shouldn’t the Malthusians have a problem with sustaining the human population at all?
A hidden agendum indeed.
Another superb article by Mr. Paul Driessen: he is absolutely spot on.
The comments are quite interesting and it is now obvious that the eco-tards, the bedwetters and the green-piss cling-ons are in panic mode. (Many thanks Anthony for this fine article).
Another lovely day, so it is.