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Cost of climate policies outweighs their effects on climate change

5 pointsby etamponi10 months ago

2 comments

Bostonian10 months ago
The paper is by Bjorn Lomborg. A July 31 WSJ opinion piece by him, &quot;Bears, Dead Coral and Other Climate Fictions: Activists’ tales of doom never pan out, but they leave us poorly informed and feed bad policy.&quot; is at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;qeyYB" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;qeyYB</a>.<p>&#x27;Today, killer heat waves are the new climate horror story. In July President Biden claimed “extreme heat is the No. 1 weather-related killer in the United States.”<p>He is wrong by a factor of 25. While extreme heat kills nearly 6,000 Americans each year, cold kills 152,000, of which 12,000 die from extreme cold. Even including deaths from moderate heat, the toll comes to less than 10,000. Despite rising temperatures, age-standardized extreme-heat deaths have actually declined in the U.S. by almost 10% a decade and globally by even more, largely because the world is growing more prosperous. That allows more people to afford air-conditioners and other technology that protects them from the heat.<p>The petrified tone of heat-wave coverage twists policy illogically. Whether from heat or cold, the most sensible way to save people from temperature-related deaths would be to ensure access to cheap, reliable electricity. That way, it wouldn’t be only the rich who could afford to keep safe from blistering or frigid weather. Unfortunately, much of climate policy makes affordable energy all the harder to obtain.<p>Activists do the world a massive disservice by refusing to acknowledge facts that challenge their intensely doom-ridden worldview. There is ample evidence that man-made emissions cause changes in climate, and climate economics generally finds that the costs of these effects outweigh the benefits. But the net result is nowhere near catastrophic. The costs of all the extreme policies campaigners push for are much worse. All told, politicians across the world are now spending more than $2 trillion annually—far more than the estimated cost from climate change that these policies prevent each year.&#x27;
ZeroGravitas10 months ago
He used to get written up as if he was a serious voice in The Economist and now he&#x27;s teaming up with Jordan Peterson.<p>I guess that&#x27;s at least some progress in our collective information immune system rejecting his calculated BS on climate change.