​What natural disasters should teach us

Hurricanes, landslides and other disasters show Africans why we need fossil fuels

Steven Lyazi

I express my deepest sympathies to the people in the Caribbean and United States who have been impacted by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria. The loss of life was tragic but has thankfully been much lower than in many previous storms. Buildings are stronger, people get warned in time to get out, and they have vehicles to get to safer places until the storms pass.

I also send my sincere sympathies to my fellow Ugandans who have been affected by terrible landslides in eastern Uganda, near Kenya. Natural disasters often strike us hard. Sometimes it is long droughts that dry up our crops and kill many cattle. This year it is torrential rains and landslides.

This time we were lucky. The collapsing hillsides destroyed three villages, but thankfully it was daytime and people were outside. They lost their homes, cattle and ripened crops, but not their families. A horrendous mudslide in the same mountainous area in 2010 buried 350 parents and children under 40 feet of mud and rock.

People there have been cutting down trees for decades – for fuel, lumber and to grow crops. Now no roots hold the hills together when it rains. More cracks have appeared in the hills, so more slides are likely. But people don’t want to leave their lands, and they’re not planting new trees either.

Some people are ignoring all this history and the human roles in causing these “natural” disasters. They are blaming the rains and mudslides on global warming, climate change and the fossil fuels that modern industrialized countries burn to provide modern homes, travels and living standards.

These false claims are intended to divert us from real problems. They are intended to justify demands and campaigns that Ugandans and other Africans should rely on a few wind turbines and solar panels and should never use oil, natural gas or coal to provide cheap, reliable and plentiful energy so that we can live more like Americans or Europeans.

These people want to become our Jesus, and save us from “global warming disasters,” by keeping us poor and at the mercy of Mother Nature. Former vice president Mr. Al Gore said manmade global warming has increased the number and strength of tornadoes and hurricanes, Mount Kilimanjaro’s glacier would disappear by 2016, and Arctic summers would be ice-free as soon as 2014.

None of this happened. So he just changed the year when the disasters will hit. Mr. Gore declares in his film that “it is right to save humanity.” Yes, it is and I support that with no argument.

But I would suggest that he and his friends begin by injecting their own billions of dollars into fossil fuels and nuclear energy to create jobs around the world, help us build modern homes, uplift economies so that people can live a self-sustainable life, and get rid of the diseases that are killing us.

He needs to stop trying to scare us by spreading false gospels about mankind and fossil fuels. He needs to stop trying to save humanity from movie disasters, when we face real disasters. He needs to stop making us rely on renewable energy, while he continues to have many big homes, drive around in big cars and fly in private jets all over the world.

Just in the last 25 years, fossil fuels have helped over 1.5 billion people in developing nations get electricity and escape deprivation, starvation, and lung and intestinal diseases that used to kill them and their children. But Africa, India and Asia still have vast regions that need to be electrified. More than a billion people in those regions still do not enjoy the wonderful blessings that electricity brings.

These places need more coal, gas and nuclear power plants. Thankfully they are building them, no matter what Mr. Gore and his radical friends say. Mr. Gore and his friends have fancy homes with every modern technology that electricity can bring. They have cars and modern hospitals.

My family in Kampala has a few of these things – a few lights and a radio, small stove and not even a little refrigerator. I just got a used computer that a friend sent me from the United States. Someday we would like a television and a normal sized refrigerator, like what we see in Europe and the States. Can we dream that someday we will have air conditioning?

Can the people in eastern Uganda dream of a time when they can rebuild their homes with more than mud and sticks? And actually have electricity, lights, refrigerators and stoves?

Radical Al Gore, renewable energy cheerleaders and climate activists have sweet homes and nice cars, jets and trains to take them anywhere they want to go 24/7. They cannot even come close to understanding how it feels to live in darkness, drink dirty water, and have no medicine except herbs and the grace of God when they get sick from malaria and other diseases they have never even heard of. They cannot imagine not being able to have a cold drink or hot coffee when they want one.

But they tell us we should be happy to enjoy the tiny improvements we might get from wind and solar power, as an “acceptable” and “preferred” and “sustainable” alternative to really better lives.

I have said this in my past articles, and I will still say it again. In Sub-Saharan Africa, nearly 700 million people still cook with wood, charcoal and animal dung, Hundreds of millions get horribly sick every year – and thousands die every year from lung and intestinal diseases, because we have to breathe smoke from open fires and don’t have refrigeration, clean water and safe food. Hundreds of millions are starving and malnourished, and try to survive on a few dollars a day.

Mr. Al Gore, how many dollars do you “survive” on per day? How many homes and refrigerators do you have? Can your refrigerators hold more than a few vegetables and a few bottles of milk or water?

To use the words of Rabbi Daniel Lapin, our impoverished masses simply want to take their rightful, God-given places among Earth’s healthy and prosperous people. Instead, we are being told “that wouldn’t be sustainable.” We are being told that improving our health, living standards and life spans is less important than avoiding the forthcoming climate cataclysm that Mr. Gore and his movies and computer models say will happen if we Africans modernize with fossil fuels.

These claims – and the false solutions to make-believe problems sometime in our future – ignore the real disasters and deaths that face us right now, every day of the year. They are intended to divert us from the better lives and sweet homes we dream of. They are intended to make Mr. Gore and his friends and the radical cheerleaders feel like they are saving Africans and our planet, while in reality they are killing millions of us every year.

Right this very minute, climate alarmists are blaming hurricanes and landside on fossil fuels. While they enjoy fancy homes, cozy beds and sofas, heating and air conditioning that keep them comfortable all year round, televisions and Alexa music, air travel whenever they want to go somewhere – they tell us Africans we should be happy and content with our “simple lives.” They tell us we should keep our oil, gas, coal and nuclear energy underground and untouched.

This is disgraceful. It is unacceptable. We will no longer tolerate it.

Alexander King was the co-founder of the Club of Rome, which wrote The Limits to Growth book. During World War II, he organized production of a new insecticide and gave it the name DDT. The chemical saved the lives of thousands of Allied troops in the Far East. It was also used to stop typhus epidemics in Europe after the war.

But later on he said: “My own doubts came when DDT was introduced for civilian use. In Guyana, within two years, it had almost eliminated malaria, but at the same time the birth rate had doubled. So my chief quarrel with DDT, in hindsight, is that it has greatly added to the population problem. Of course, I can’t play God on that one.”

But King and his followers did play God. They got DDT banned and even blocked its use in preventing malaria for decades. Millions of African parents and children died. Now his descendants want to keep us from using fossil fuels. Where is the justice and humanity in any of this?

Steven Lyazi is a student and worker in Kampala, Uganda. He served as special assistant to Congress of Racial Equality-Uganda director Cyril Boynes, until Mr. Boynes’ death in January 2015. He plans to attend college and help his country and Africa get the energy and other modern technologies they need.

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Roger
September 29, 2017 12:04 pm

I have long wondered why, let’s say, over the last 400 years, there has been no one from the African continent who has come to the fore in any discipline, e.g. Engineering, science of any kind toward the development of the natives of that continent, a supremely rich area of our World in resources.
Why has it taken so long from the “western” interlopers to rub off! Why did it need this to happen?
Tribal ways of life continue and those who have come to the west to learn and train, have not returned to develop their homelands and people’s.
Just thoughts.

Sweet Old Bob
Reply to  Roger
September 29, 2017 2:04 pm

“Tribal ways of life continue and those who have come to the west to learn and train, have not returned to develop their homelands and people’s ” .
I think that answers your question . It isn’t that they don’t care , it is just too hard to overcome the inertia of the culture . It was that way 60 years ago , and not enough has changed yet….
Hopefully I will live long enough to see this change .
There are some encouraging signs . There are some very intelligent people there .
Waiting for that tipping point .

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Roger
September 29, 2017 10:02 pm

Roger, add this material thought:
Swaziland hosts the world’s oldest mine, more than 40,000 years of continuous mining of iron. Why did it take the Europeans so long to catch on?
Iron tools were made by the tribe living in Melville Koppies in Johannesburg for a long time, wiped out during the Mfecane, to the last artisan, in the 1820’s. We don’t even know their name.
Iron tools were produced in Swaziland in the Zombodze area into the 20th Century from local ore mined at Ngwenya’ above Mbabane. When the open pit mine was established they found many ancient underground tunnel complexes. The locals like the Mnisi and Mkhatshwa clans were mining underground and producing iron tools long before first contact with Europeans.
I purchased in Monrovia traditional iron money produced locally in the forest somewhere, made from locally manufactured stainless steel, produced using what I call ‘mystical’ memorized methods, meaning the invention was made so long ago they forgot how, but know how to replicate it by recitation and formula.
Add this medical thought:
When it comes to compounded medicines, Africans are leaders. There is a very effective medicine in Ghana made with six ingredients. Western scientists agree it is efficacious. Their molecular investigations confirmed that it has no ‘active ingredient’. It just works. That is the future of medicine, not the past.
Add this governance thought:
Africans have highly developed methods of consultation that put Westerners to shame.
Add this social thought:
The San people have overcome jealousy and envy, living free of it. Elsewhere, in northern Canada there are Inuit who have overcome anger, leading the planet in social development.
Just because something is unwritten in Europe doesn’t mean diddly-squat.

Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo
October 2, 2017 10:44 am

Crispin in Waterloo September 29, 2017 at 10:02 pm wrote:
“…The San people have overcome jealousy and envy, living free of it. Elsewhere, in northern Canada there are Inuit who have overcome anger, leading the planet in social development….”
All of your statements are very interesting.They deserve some reference links, as much as they deserve serious contemplation.
Happily, none of these predecessors of our current civilization seem to have developed nuclear or chemical toxins in sufficient quantities to derail the continued viability of the species.
Still, the fact that their legacy amounts to largely neglected fragments buried here and there or barely kept alive by oral transmission suggests what would happen to our civilization’s heard-earned knowledge following a collapse of the current world order.
We could expect to follow in the same path as previous degenerate civilizations. Practicioners of medicine would become outright shamans, would-be researchers would become heretics. Orthodoxy would be enforced with an iron hand, as it was by the Inquisition, but more efficiently. And humanity would sink once again into a brutal existence in which curiosity and experimentation is restricted to improving methods of domination and and repression.
But this time humanity would have to run the gauntlet of new toxins that we have strewn throughout our environment without the help of true scientific expertise or instrumentation. I don’t think our species would survive long under these conditions. But if it did, it would probably only be possible by reversion to a primitive subsistence level, likely losing the essential tool of written language, for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years.
That’s probably why the super-rich (who are such largely because of their privileged access to reliable information) are keen to book passage to other planets for astronomical sums and at great personal risk.

September 29, 2017 1:17 pm

CTM, thanks for finding and posting this outstanding essay. One thing to assert this basic irrefutable truth from the comfort of one of Fort Lauderdale’s most luxurious oceanfront condo properties. Quite another to hear it directly from Kampala. I will be sending locked versions to many of the usual warmunist suspects, starting with Katherine Hayhoe, Bill McKibbon, the Vatican, and the head of the World Bank.

F. Leghorn
September 29, 2017 2:13 pm

Absolute truth. Absolute eloquence. I am praying for you.

crackers345
September 29, 2017 2:27 pm

if Puerto Rico and Uganda has rooftop
or community solar, they’d likely be up and
running already. the fossil fuel
infrastructure is totally destroyed, and
will take months to rebuild. and it
requires continuous shipment of
FFs to PR and Uganda. it’s hardly
a versatile fuel source.

Reply to  crackers345
September 29, 2017 2:53 pm

All they’d have to do is go find or dig up their roof and plug it back in!

Reply to  Gunga Din
September 29, 2017 2:56 pm
Reply to  Gunga Din
September 29, 2017 3:11 pm

Plus many.

1saveenergy
Reply to  crackers345
September 29, 2017 4:17 pm

crackers
“if Puerto Rico and Uganda has rooftop or community solar, they’d likely be up and running already.”
You make a good point about the resilience of renewables – here’s proof of how tough they really are –
9-22-17 Puerto Rico Storm Damage:
Windfarm – Solar farm (0:40) – Cellular Structures (0:35 & 1:18) …All Totally Destroyed

You are not a complete idiot…there are still a few bits missing.

MarkW
Reply to  crackers345
September 29, 2017 5:31 pm

It’s the grid that’s down, not the plants.
Rooftops are for the most part, gone.
It doesn’t matter what type of imaginary solar you come up with, it still won’t be working after a storm like that.

Mark
Reply to  crackers345
September 30, 2017 9:33 am

Wind and solar should be competitive in places that have to import coal, oil, and gas, and probably should be incorporated into the power mix. They are certainly no panacea, though; many rooftop solar installations would have been just that much more debris flying around, and wind/solar farms would be subject to the same infrastructure shortcomings as ff plants.

rwisrael
September 29, 2017 2:48 pm

Since a major cause of the hurricanes that devastated the Caribbean has been the use of fossil fuels, any further use of such fuels should be eschewed in the rebuilding efforts.

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  rwisrael
September 29, 2017 3:07 pm

Sorry, you forgot your /sarc tag.

Reply to  rwisrael
September 29, 2017 3:10 pm

Interesting purely emotional but devoid of meteorology science assertion, if not /sarc. Now prove it. SREX, nope. ACE, nope. Landfallings, nope. MSM histwria, yup but doesn’t count.
Read Thermodynamics of work created by temp differences, not temp. Then Lindzen on the consequences of supposed polar amplification. Then NHC on windshear versus sea temp impacts on hurricane formation.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  rwisrael
September 29, 2017 10:10 pm

Major cause?
Please post some proof here. Wild assertions do not constitute evidence.

September 29, 2017 9:34 pm

“The loss of life was tragic but has thankfully been much lower than in many previous storms. Buildings are stronger, people get warned in time to get out, and they have vehicles to get to safer places until the storms pass.”
This plaint ignores what’s happened and worse, what’s about to happen, in Puerto Rico, and what is likely to happen more and more frequently throughout the world, as our flimsy house of cards collapses under the weight of overpopulation, centralization, and just in time distribution.
Puerto Rico isn’t benefitting from the coal, the gasoline, the diesel, the food, or the water that the USA has in abundance. It’s been massively deprived of all of these essentials of modern life, plus the key one, electricity, for more than a week. Why? Because its house of cards was built without any redundancy. It lost everything in one fell swoop, and now we are watching a train wreck involving three million people in slow motion.
Now imagine a similar situation in Manhattan, or on the island of Montreal, and dozens of other overpopulated parts of the world that have become dependent on a continuous supply of electricity, fuel, and food transported by fragile conduits. The writer’s homeland would likely fare much better in such conditions.
Overpopulation is the key element in such disasters. National leaders in the West have forgotten the story of the seven fat and the seven thin cows. The developed world is living on the edge, and when it gives way, the way to recovery may be blocked by a sea of corpses. Massive mining, damming, oil production, fishing and farming operations can all be wiped out by existing natural forces. And people will die under the sheer weight of their numbers, because a quick return to hunting and foraging has long ago become impossible.
Unlimited expansion is something Nature doesn’t tolerate. What comes up must come down. Lemmings and jackrabbits can survive this as a group. They don’t have nuclear power plants, dams, and other infrastructure that must be constantly maintained…

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  otropogo
September 29, 2017 10:13 pm

Some people are sheep. Some are lemmings. It’s better to be a fox.

Reply to  otropogo
September 29, 2017 11:07 pm

Overpopulation is the key element in such disasters.

Otropogo. One of the worst of your phrases quoted above, but cannot believe you wrote all that down for real, in the public domain, in any context, but here, now. The International Court of Justice has dealt with cases like this. Did you produce that all on your own or are you quoting Mein Kampf, Year Zero or the little red Purge manual? Or did you forget sarc tag at the end?
Doubtfully it made either side of the debate feel comfortable. Care to clarify what you aim at?

Reply to  jaakkokateenkorva
September 30, 2017 8:13 am

jaakkokateenkorva September 29, 2017 at 11:07 pm wrote:
“..cannot believe you wrote all that down for real, in the public domain, in any context, but here, now. The International Court of Justice has dealt with cases like this.”
I’m having trouble making sense of your comment. Are you saying my post constitutes a crime against humanity?
As for your question, I have never read any of the three texts you refer to and have no idea what “sarc tag” means.
If you had a substantial question I would be happy to clarify. But I have no interest in making anyone feel comfortable about a growing and unaddressed threat to civilization, if not the human species. Nor am I impressed that you “cannot believe” the evidence of your own eyes.
Please try to be coherent and relevant. I would suggest you begin by reading the posts you quote carefully before responding.

Reply to  jaakkokateenkorva
September 30, 2017 12:55 pm

otropogo. As I understand Steven’s writing, he’s asking for an equal opportunity only. Not for cAGW compensation. Not for charity. An equal opportunity is an honest, fair and, in cAGW twisted world, an increasingly rare request. I respect it. It isn’t a plaint ignoring conditions in a tropical island with annual hurricane season.
In my opinion politics in Manhattan, Montreal, Washington DC, Brussels etc shouldn’t be his concern. But as it is now, it is. Not by his choice or the choice of his compatriots. It is imposed in many way. It shouldn’t be this way. In my opinion Steven is right. Any anger or frustration he might feel is understandable and, thus, I offer him my understanding and support with means at my disposal.
For these reasons addressing ‘overpopulation’ in this context puzzling at best. You seem to mean urbanisation and perhaps have a better idea than repeating Year Zero etc. These ideas would get the value and appreciation they deserve under a different topic. Hoping you agree, I apologise if my initial abruptness offended you.

September 29, 2017 11:41 pm

Thank you Steven Lyazi. I enjoyed your previous post at WUWT. And, with notable exceptions, join most of the subsequent comments.
Climate alarmist choices are disgraceful and unacceptable in my opinion. In the words of their most prominent figurehead Obama: ‘Planet Will Boil Over’ If Young Africans Are Allowed Cars, Air-Conditioning, Big Houses’. This is enough for me to conclude at least Obama intentionally aimed/aims to subdue Africans.
But climate alarmists have decided to do other things too. They have chosen to fight against
a) Anthropogenic – covers entire humanity.
b) Skepticism – the foundation of modern science.
c) Carbon – the building block of all known life on Earth.
And climate alarmists have chosen to protect:
i) Arctic, Antarctic, Greenland glaciers, mountain tops and the hottest deserts – without residents.
ii) The largest land-based carnivore on this planet – the polar bear – known to prey on human.
They even spend scarce public resources to develop a concept of ‘cost of carbon’ – the cost of life itself. How much more fundamentally wrong could their choices possibly be? I haven’t, don’t and won’t tolerate it. But, however wrong alarmists may be, I defend their rights as members of the humanity. They are free to believe whatever they want, but remain accountable for their own choices and actions. Like we all are.

Reply to  jaakkokateenkorva
September 29, 2017 11:42 pm

Corr typo: I enjoyed also your previous post at WUWT.

L
September 30, 2017 1:18 am

Dittos to all above praising Steven Lyazi. And kudos to most comments above, many others very thought provoking, if not very convincing.
Just for thought: Perhaps we ended the era of colonialism too soon. A number of European nations got involved with African colonization in the 19thC, some were better at it than others. The Portuguese were terrible, the Belgians the worst; Spain was little involved and Italy was very late and left with only Arab- inhabited deserts to play with.
Britain and France did respectable work in the places they developed and exploited for natural resources while inevitably building the only infrastructure these countries have ever experienced. Unfortunately, in most cases the development was largely confined to the chief city or port, usually the same place.
The other decent player in this game of forced development was Germany. Unlike in Britain and France, colonial expansion was not a goal of the government, but rather capitalism. Accordingly, the four German colonies in Africa- today’s names- Togo, Cameroun, Namibia, and Tanzania, are instructive cases in what might have been. Also countries not much in the news.
Consider that the two major railroads in Tanzania were both in service before 1914, and only the branch to Lake Victoria was added by the British after 1919. Those railroads were built, maintained and manned by Africans under civilian German leadership.
Namibia, a vast land with few people had dark days in the beginning, genocide even, but eventually emerged as perhaps the most stable nation on the continent. And it has an outstanding rail network.
This is where we were in 1914 when World War I ended Western Civilization as we understand it and introduced the leftist notions that have prevailed largely since and given us Stalin, Hitler, Mao, etc.

September 30, 2017 3:07 am

comment imagecomment image

September 30, 2017 3:59 am

A very good article, thank you Mr. Lyazi.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/09/23/the-evils-of-climate-enthusiasm/#comment-2618246
[excerpt]
“It is the obligation of responsible, competent professionals to blow-the-whistle on this (global warming) sc@m, and to encourage the availability of cheap, reliable, abundant energy systems for humanity. This is especially true for the elderly and the poor worldwide, and for the struggling peoples of the developing world.”

Mickey Reno
September 30, 2017 5:55 am

I’m sorry, but snot-nosed children living in the economically developed first world know better than you do what you need. They’ve been praised by their Progressive teachers all their lives for “feeling” and “caring” about Africa. And they’re listening to Bono sing, all the time, even if he is old enough to be their grandfather. Surely, you wouldn’t dispute their righteous intentions to control the natural world with their superior feelings, would you?

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