...the cost of climate policies is already falling
most heavily on today’s poor. Subsidies for renewable energy have
raised costs of heating and transport disproportionately for the
poor. Subsidies for biofuels have raised food prices by diverting
food into fuel, tipping millions into malnutrition and killing about 190,000 people a year. The
refusal of many rich countries to fund aid for coal-fired
electricity in Africa and Asia rather than renewable projects (and
in passing I declare a financial interest in coal mining) leaves more than a billion people without
access to electricity and contributes to 3.5 million deaths a year
from indoor air pollution caused by cooking over open fires of wood
and dung.
Greens think these harms are a price worth paying to stop the
warming. They want (other) people to bear such sacrifices today so
that the people of 2100, who will be up to seven times as rich, do
not have to face the prospect of living in a world that is perhaps
0.8 - 1.2 degrees warmer. And this is the moral high ground?
It is not just climate change. The opposition to genetically
modified food is mostly a middle and upper class obsession, but the
people who would benefit from such foods are often poor people.
Golden rice, for example, could prevent the deaths of hundreds of
thousands of people a year from vitamin A deficiency, but has been
stymied for 15 years by opposition organized by western green
groups, especially Greenpeace. They are entitled to think that this
philanthropic project is a bad idea, but they are buying their
reassurance at the expense of the poor’s health.
Other examples are organic farming and renewable energy, both of
which require more land than the conventional alternatives. Most
conservationists now recognize that “sustainable intensification”
is a key ingredient of environmental protection – that is, using as
little land as possible to grow crops and make energy, so as to
spare more land for nature. Fortunately, this plan also means
cheaper food and cheaper energy so it helps the poor. By all means
go organic and use wind power if you insist, but don’t pretend
there is anything morally superior about it.
Matt Ridley, in The Times (firewalled) and his blog
here
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