Switch to energy-efficient light bulbs, wash your clothes in cold water, eat less meat, recycle more, and buy an electric car: we are being bombarded with instructions from climate campaigners, environmentalists, and the media about the everyday steps we all must take to tackle climate change. Unfortunately, these appeals trivialise the challenge of global warming, and divert our attention from the huge technological and policy changes that are needed to combat it.
For example, the British nature-documentary presenter and environmental campaigner David Attenborough was once asked what he as an individual would do to fight climate change. He promised to unplug his phone charger when it was not in use.
Attenborough’s heart is no doubt in the right place. But even if he consistently unplugs his charger for a year, the resulting reduction in carbon-dioxide emissions will be equivalent to less than one-half of one-thousandth of the average person’s annual CO2 emissions in the United Kingdom. Moreover, charging accounts for less than 1% of a phone’s energy needs; the other 99% is required to manufacture the handset and operate data centers and cell towers. Almost everywhere, these processes are heavily reliant on fossil fuels.
Attenborough is far from alone in believing that small gestures can have a meaningful impact on the climate. In fact, even much larger-sounding commitments deliver only limited reductions in CO2 emissions. For example, environmental activists emphasise the need to give up eating meat and driving fossil-fuel-powered cars. But, although I am a vegetarian and do not own a car, I believe we need to be honest about what such choices can achieve.
Going vegetarian actually is quite difficult: one large US survey indicates that 84% of people fail, most of them in less than a year. But a systematic peer-reviewed study has shown that even if they succeed, a vegetarian diet reduces individual CO2 emissions by the equivalent of 540 kilograms – or just 4.3% of the emissions of the average inhabitant of a developed country. Furthermore, there is a “rebound effect,” as money saved on cheaper vegetarian food is spent on goods and services that cause additional greenhouse-gas emissions. Once we account for this, going entirely vegetarian reduces a person’s total emissions by only 2%.
Likewise, electric cars are branded as environmentally friendly, but generating the electricity they require almost always involves burning fossil fuels. Moreover, producing energy-intensive batteries for these cars invariably generates significant CO2 emissions. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), an electric car with a range of 400 kilometers (249 miles) has a huge carbon deficit when it hits the road, and will start saving emissions only after being driven 60,000 kilometers. Yet, almost everywhere, people use an electric car as a second car, and drive it shorter distances than equivalent gasoline vehicles.
Despite subsidies of about $10,000 per car, battery-powered electric cars represent less than one-third of 1% of the world’s one billion vehicles. The IEA estimates that with sustained political pressure and subsidies, electric cars could account for 15% of the much larger global fleet in 2040, but notes that this increase in share will reduce global CO2 emissions by just 1%.
As IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol has said, “If you think you can save the climate with electric cars, you’re completely wrong.” In 2018, electric cars saved 40 million tons of CO2 worldwide, equivalent to reducing global temperatures by just 0.000018°C – or a little more than a hundred-thousandth of a degree Celsius – by the end of the century.
Individual actions to tackle climate change, even when added together, achieve so little because cheap and reliable energy underpins human prosperity. Fossil fuels currently meet 81% of our global energy needs. And even if every promised climate policy in the 2015 Paris climate agreement is achieved by 2040, they will still deliver 74% of the total.
We already spend $129 billion per year subsidising solar and wind energy to try to entice more people to use today’s inefficient technology, yet these sources meet just 1.1% of our global energy needs. The IEA estimates that by 2040 – after we have spent a whopping $3.5 trillion on additional subsidies – solar and wind will still meet less than 5% of our needs.
That’s pitiful. Significantly cutting CO2 emissions without reducing economic growth will require far more than individual actions. It is absurd for middle-class citizens in advanced economies to tell themselves that eating less steak or commuting in a Toyota Prius will rein in rising temperatures. To tackle global warming, we must make collective changes on an unprecedented scale.
By all means, anyone who wants to go vegetarian or buy an electric car should do so, for sound reasons such as killing fewer animals or reducing household energy bills. But such decisions will not solve the problem of global warming.
The one individual action that citizens could take that would make a difference would be to demand a vast increase in spending on green-energy research and development, so that these energy sources eventually become cheap enough to outcompete fossil fuels. That is the real way to help fight climate change.
Bjørn Lomborg, a visiting professor at the Copenhagen Business School, is Director of the Copenhagen Consensus Center. His books include The Skeptical Environmentalist, Cool It, How to Spend $75 Billion to Make the World a Better Place, The Nobel Laureates’ Guide to the Smartest Targets for the World, and, most recently, Prioritizing Development. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019, and published here with permission.
26 Comments
... I am picturing you , hurtling down the main south road in one of your EVs ... munching a vegan burger out of a paper bag ... with your transexual PNG partner holding the baby....
And it does my dear old Gummy heart alotta good in this festive season to imagine that ... the happy typical Kiwi family ... together for Christmas .... ahhhhhh.... beautiful...
Articles that use numbers are persuasive. However he is missing the point that people like to be involved. We see climate change as important and he suggests we leave it to our politicans to fund research. Sensible economics but bad psychology. So I do pick up litter.
The numbers matter; it is all too easy to think your actions are virtueous when in reality we are being counter-productive.
Is little NZ however determined our govt and taxpayers, likely to fund sufficient research to solve climate change? Not likely but we have no chance if we don't try. If Rutherford could split the atom then Kiwis can at least try.
... here's one point , just one of many .... we can lobby the Greens to stop blocking GE/GM research in NZ ..
A promising ryegrass , GE bred here , has to be trialled in the US because of the Greens ... even though that grass was specifically bred to cause markedly less methane production by livestock which eat it ..
Methane has been turned into a boogeyman GBH, it's nothing of the sort, in fact it's quite innocuous.
Read/see this:
The Methane Big Lie
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_6LsoiyVTII
In this video, I take on Potholer's unsupportable claims about methane, and explain why the United Nations is trying to demonize this harmless trace gas. References here : https://realclimatescience.com/2019/0...
Also:
Volcanoes and glaciers combine as powerful methane producers
https://phys.org/news/2018-11-volcanoes-glaciers-combine-powerful-metha…
Large amounts of the potent greenhouse gas methane are being released from an Icelandic glacier, scientists have discovered.
A study of Sólheimajökull glacier, which flows from the active, ice-covered volcano Katla, shows that up to 41 tonnes of methane is being released through melt-waters every day during the summer months.
This is roughly equivalent to the methane produced by more than 136,000 belching cows.
What Lomberg is saying, is if you want people to do something, come up with a solution that makes that action the easiest to do financially.
And in the present context, these cheaper solutions are also to be more environmentally friendly.
At present the solution is to tax people into submission, and then subsidise the alternative, the irony of this of course the very money for the subsidy is coming from the behaviour you are trying to get rid of, so there is a point where if you tax too much, then you kill of your income stream for your subsidies, This is why these incentives never work.
One of the simplest options for any NZ Govt. would be to build all social housing as Passive Housing.
This would achieve a number of things.
It would save a huge amount of energy on the operational side, improve people's health and well being in those groups that traditionally have poor outcomes, leave more money in their pocket due to less spend on power, etc.
And send a signal to the rest of the industry that is the way to go. After all who is going to continue to put up with the present shoddy standard when people living in social housing are living in better quality housing than you are.
It would also transform NZ's construction economy from a 'build poor and then repair to continue the cycle', to a quality 'build once, build right' one, ie more environmentally friendly.
Plus it would also result in a type of house construction that could cope better with changing climatic conditions.
Meanwhile in the real world, we had Nationals 9 years of doing nothing, and the Labours Kiwibuild.
Lomborg has been a spinmeister forever.
Kevin McCloud rightly called him 'ludicrous'. And I reckon those who need to believe such a spinner, need to question their core need to believe.
In this case, he is conflating 'cheap' with 'energy'- and I've lost count of how many time I've pointed out here, that it is energy which underwrites money, not the other way around. The only way we managed the last 200 years of exponential growth, was by tapping into an already-there source of potential energy. There isn't an available replacement, in EOREI terms. So both the CC worriers and the kick-the-can lot (like ludicrous Lomborg) are in trouble - as per the Fed moves.
Existing society is intensely energy-requiring (look around you, Aucklanders on your freeways) and cannot be continued. Time we went for Plan B, before the inevitable collapse. The question of Lomborg is how he thinks he will be immune, or whether he really needs to believe in growth forever.
But, but, but, I thought coal had a far higher energy return on energy invested than any other fossil fuel and nearly every other fuel to boot, with only hydro and offshore wind beating it? So we should be building more coal powered stations and bigger, taller offshore wind towers.
I find PDK's focus on energy return on energy invested is far more thought provoking and useful than teenage hysteria about excess plant food gases warming the planet ever so slightly. Where are the vineyards in North East England? Er, they disappeared 500 years ago. The industrial revolution started at the coldest point in the last 500 years.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421513003856
https://www.carbonbrief.org/energy-return-on-investment-which-fuels-win
PDK - you often make sense. Lomberg is not the favourite of those who are most alarmed by climate change. So I read his article carefully. I could find some very nit-picking criticisms and I'm sure someone better informed could argue some of those numbers but my conclusion was he made sense.
Your coment is little more than changing the subject to your theory about energy underpinning money precisely (rather like the old gold standard) and cheap abuse - if the contents of his article are ludicrous explain why.
Take the first point: unplugging your phone charger - (a) is it totally trivial and distracting from an important issue or (b) priming the public pschologically to start making more serious sacrifices. Or is it your preferred (c) we are all doomed whatever we do in which case why bother telling us.
It's him that conflated cheap with energy.
I'm telling you that without energy, no work. without work (labour being less than 1% of global work, and labour is largely fossil-fuel-fed) nothing produced. So no underwrite for money. Money is therefore a bet on future energy being available, to do the future work, to....
He's running it upside-down. We've spent 200 years building a totally unsustainable set of infrastructure - plus an unsustainable global population - using the best bang-for-buck (because we spent nothing accumulating it) energy source there will ever be.
That source is finite, we used the bes first, and we're about half-way through. If it wasn't for the temporary fracturing of rock in a few prime locations, we'd have collapsed already. Yet we still have media channeling folk who talk of energy 'getting cheaper'?
Spare me.
Malthusians have spent 200 years running around in their tin foil hats , shrieking that the end is nigh ... that we're doomed , DOOMED I tell ye ...
.. inspite of that , this crazy old world just keeps trucking along ... delivering better life outcomes : food , health , education , entertainment , infant survival , travel .... unprecedentedly better ... and the next 10 years , even betterer ...
No it doesn't. There are more in abject poverty now, and in hunger, than the total planetary population of 100 years ago. And the stock of resources has never been more depleted, nor has it been of worse quality.
You seem to be a tad fearful. Obviously intelligent, but just as obviously needing to hide from entirely-ascertainable truths. Heck, I'm even betting you read a lot of Lomborg......... eh, 'GBH'?
And don't forget that these so-called scientists fiddle with the figures!
Australian Government Bureau of Meteorology, BOM, is making 'the present seem warmer' by 'cooling the past'
Changes in technology and adjustments of historical temperatures by the Bureau of meteorology has made "the present seem warmer" says climate scientist and author Jennifer Marohasy.
An old record has been ignored by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology because it was recorded on a Sunday, and the record keeper at that time should not have been going in on a Sunday.
You cannot make this stuff up.
.. recently there was a petition signed by 33000 scientists worldwide that climate change is real , and that we must stop it now ...
You can't argue against that : sealed and delivered... more so that 2000 of those scientists were signed as Mickey Mouse ...
.. if you can't trust Disneyland who can you trust !
The Lomborg approach. What those MM-signers did was what Lomborg specialises in. You can't beat the science, so you obfuscate. Discredit petitions by joining them, argue for continuance continually while acknowledging that there is a real problem (but avoiding to mention that continuance IS the problem.
As a large body of scientists pointed out, population growth is the biggest risk that contributes to practically all of the problems that we face.
https://populationmatters.org/news/2017/11/14/time-running-out-15000-sc…
My rule of thumb is Pollution and resource usage is directly proportional to the population and their standard of living divided by their efficiency of usage. We are increasing the first two as fast as we can go and only trying rather ineffectively address the latter. No wonder we are going backward at a large rate of knots. No matter how good we may get to be at improving our efficiency, growth in the population and their standard of living will swamp our efforts.
A friend of mine was at the United Nations and questioned what is being done about the impending population growth disaster and was told in hushed terms that discussion of this is forbidden. God help us.
It should be obvious to anyone that population growth is the real problem and yet NOBODY in the political sphere will even mention it, yet alone put in a plan to try and control it. While humans think its their basic right to have kids whenever they feel like it, be it in the middle of a war, the middle of a famine we are ultimately doomed into having control being forced on us by the resources of the planet. The world population now needs to be in DECLINE and then kept at a sustainable level or its all going to end quite suddenly and really really badly at some point in the not so distant future.
Good comments both.
Here's the granddaddy of system science on the current state of play:
https://www.peakprosperity.com/dennis-meadows-the-limits-to-growth/
Just finished listening to it, well worth the time. Couldn't agree more with it but unfortunately as it points out there is simply not a big enough consensus for change and now its to late anyway. Really its like being a Cancer patient refusing Chemo treatment, you avoid the treatment because its pointless and just enjoy the time you have left on this planet.
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