30 Years of Environmental Progress: Is It Time at Last to Be Optimistic?

    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e
    e e
    good
    morning I’m Matthew ketti director of
    domestic policy here at the American
    Enterprise Institute and it’s my
    pleasure to welcome you all to this
    event 30 years of environmental progress
    is it time at last to be
    optimistic in
    1968 Paul and Anne erck published the
    population bomb the book repurposed the
    ideas of 18th century Economist Thomas
    malus to argue that population growth
    would soon outpace agricultural growth
    leading to widespread famine and other
    social and ecological crisis
    these ideas took hold of the American
    Environmental movement which adopted a
    broadly pessimistic view of our planet’s
    future the erck predictions did not come
    to pass but alarmism over the effect of
    population growth on the environment as
    well as resource scarcity endures among
    many on the left in recent years the
    notion that Americans should stop having
    children to protect the environment has
    been promoted widely by academics
    journalists and other public figures
    according to analysts at Morgan Stanley
    the movement to not have children owing
    to fears over climate change is growing
    and impacting fertility rates quicker
    than any preceding Trend in the field of
    fertility
    decline despite these anxieties
    available data on environmental Trends
    makes it clear that we’ve made enormous
    progress in environmental issues over
    the last 30 years both within the United
    States and around the
    world we are here this Earth Day then to
    explore what that progress has looked
    like how Environ mental data should
    shape future public policy decisions and
    why we and ask and answer why we should
    be optimistic about America’s
    environmental future our speakers this
    morning are Steph F Hayward and Roger
    pilki Jr from 2002 to 20 2012 Stephen
    was a fellow here at AEI where he
    authored an annual report on
    environmental Trends and controversies
    titled the index of leading
    environmental indicators the index
    analyzed and summarized Overlook
    government data on the environment most
    of which demonstrated substantial
    environmental progress over the last
    generation in 2010 Steven published mere
    environmentalism a Biblical perspective
    on humans and the natural world which
    explored the philosophical
    presuppositions of the modern
    environmentalist movement and this
    morning’s discussion will expand on many
    of Steven’s themes and evidence uh
    contained in that work today Steven
    Hayward is a resident scholar at the
    University of California Berkeley’s
    Institute of government studies and a
    fellow of the law and public policy
    program at breley law he’s also a
    professor at Pepperdine University a
    popular blogger at powerlineblog.com
    he’s written a number of books on the
    history of the American conservative
    movement of particular interest to me
    including the two volume age of Reagan
    excellent book and another excellent
    book patriotism is not enough Harry jafa
    Walter Burns and the arguments that
    reshaped American conservatism Roger py
    Jr meanwhile is a non-resident senior
    fellow here at Ai and a professor in the
    College of artarts and Sciences at the
    University of Colorado Boulder his work
    explores Science and Technology policy
    with a particular focus on energy and
    climate and the politicization of
    science he writes the popular substack
    the honest broker which we are happy to
    host on the AI homepage these days in
    addition to the substack platform and is
    the author of several books including
    the rightful place of science disasters
    and climate change and the climate fix
    what scientists and politicians won’t
    tell you about global warming
    Steven Hayward will begin this morning
    with a presentation on leading
    environmental indicators Roger will then
    offer some
    remarks on climate change in particular
    which tends to overshadow other
    environmental issues in public discourse
    and afterwards Stephen and Roger will
    discuss what we have learned about the
    environment in recent years and how the
    environmental movement should proceed
    we’ll then open the floor to audience
    Q&A if you’re watching online and I know
    many of you are please submit any
    questions you may have to guide Denton
    ai.org that is Guy guy. Denton d n t n
    ai.org or send a question via X Twitter
    using hash environmental progress and
    with that please join me in welcoming
    Stephen F hward back to
    AI the first one going
    there oh oh green button there it is
    green button Happ happy Earth Day
    everybody uh it uh it used to be a big
    deal you know there often was a lot of
    media coverage for it and a lot of times
    significant public events a big rally
    out here on the mall or festivals in
    American cities on college campuses and
    now it passes kind of quietly and
    therein I think lies a tale although
    it’s a tale with a very large asterisk
    which I’ll come to at the very end uh
    and you may be able to guess about it
    but I’ll just leave it at that uh if you
    and my point is is that uh we now have
    arrived at a moment for environmental
    optimism broadly speaking not just in
    the United States and Wealthy industrial
    countries but increasingly around the
    world I think uh if you cast your mind
    back to you know 35 40 years ago uh you
    may remember every January the world
    watch Institute would put out their
    state of the World Report uh and it
    always got a lot of press uh and of
    course it was all you Lester Brown was
    the chief instigator of this and he was
    one of the prominent figures of
    environmentalism in the 70s and ‘ 80s
    into the ’90s and this is just one
    report of many you could point to but it
    got a lot of press and it was always
    everything’s terrible uh the world is
    doomed is very malthusian uh in its
    Outlook uh and this was reflected in
    public opinion uh back in those days the
    Worland group dick Worland was Ronald
    Reagan’s pollster used to do an annual
    poll every other year on the environment
    and found that uh you know large
    majorities of Americans thought
    Environmental Quality in America was
    getting worse uh the rer people which
    also that the rer pole doesn’t exist
    anymore there it is um uh I had the
    question the next 10 years will be the
    last decade what this you know we only
    have 10 years left to do something is a
    been a Trope of environmental discourse
    since the first Earth Day in
    1970 54 years ago and we’re still here
    with 10year countdowns uh so it it
    clearly was reflected uh in uh public
    Consciousness and and of course everyone
    knows the headlines I mean these are
    some old ones but everyone remembers all
    the headlines about everything’s
    terrible and we’re all going to uh we’re
    all going to
    die one of the first markers I think of
    the beginning of a slow change can be
    traced back to or or like I like to
    start with this this is an ad from The
    New York Times from David Brower also
    one of the great figures of
    environmentalism in the six from the ‘
    50s really to the ’90s he was the
    longtime head of the sier club when it
    changed from being a hiking and concer
    conservation organization to a
    politically active organization and this
    was a full page ad in the New York Times
    and you can see the headline economics
    is a form of brain damage this is only
    half the ad by the way it was a full
    page which I think even then cost
    $50,000 to place and what it said was it
    was a letter to the Clinton
    Administration please please don’t use
    this cost benefit analysis that the
    Reagan Administration and the Bush
    Administration have used for all these
    years to stop sensible environmental
    regulation and not only did the Clinton
    administration not take that advice and
    kept using the cost benefit formulas
    that had developed during the Reagan
    years but when Barack Obama came into
    office in 2009 uh he installed as head
    of the of regulatory analysis at to OMB
    uh a unit that actually had been started
    by ai’s previous president Chris De Muth
    way back in the Reagan years he
    appointed Cass sunstein to run that
    operation and and Cass sunstein is you
    know really smart Center left thinker
    but devoted to the idea that cost
    benefit analysis makes good sense there
    was some grumbling from environmental
    groups about that appointment but uh it
    got nowhere and then the idea of cost
    benefit analysis went
    mainstream in particular 2009 uh had
    Richard ravez uh and his co-author
    William Livermore and then they sort of
    you know Center left or conventional
    environmental thinkers I think they
    published a very serious book saying
    I’ll paraphrase it this way let’s not
    leave cost benefit analysis to those
    libertarian right-wing Fanatics we ought
    to embrace it too because it makes good
    sense and so the point is is I don’t
    think very many environmentalists today
    would use that slogan environmentalism
    is a form of brain damage um
    environmental economics is now pretty
    mainstream even if often poorly done I’m
    tempted to just use that old Dr Johnson
    line that uh it’s not that it’s done
    well like uh you know women preaching or
    dogs standing on their hind legs if you
    know that famous old quote uh from
    Samuel Johnson um now it was around that
    time in the early 990s that I woke up
    one day and saw that William Bennett had
    made this great public sensation with
    his index of leading cultural indicators
    it was about 35 pages long uh simple
    charts and graphs of Time series about
    all kinds of bad stuff happening it was
    teenage pregnancy and crime rates and
    test scores and Drug dependency and
    Welfare
    dependency and Russ limbo picked up on
    it and eventually became a book but it
    was this huge sensation and that’s when
    the light bulb went off in my head
    knowing a bit about air quality
    statistics in California where I grew up
    with really bad smog in La um I got to
    thinking you know the same kind of
    treatment in the US would show Mostly
    Improvement not on everything but on a
    lot of big things uh and so I thought
    I’m just going to copy that format um
    and then for several years as Matt
    mentioned I put out an annual report it
    VAR between 50 and 70 Pages you wanted
    to keep it short enough that someone
    could actually get through it but have
    enough substance to it to actually say
    something uh and uh it it did very well
    with the media I’ll give a couple of
    examples but it never was quite the
    sensation of Bill Bennett’s report
    because as I put it once to Bill his
    report was about sex drugs and rock and
    roll and mine was about polychlorinated
    by fennels who do you think’s going to
    get more press attention right uh but it
    was about that same time I wasn’t the
    only person thinking this I remember in
    1995 Greg Easterbrook came out with his
    monumentally large book a moment on the
    earth and the subtitle uh is the coming
    age of environmental
    optimism and I think Greg was just 15
    years too early his book got Savaged by
    environmentalists for some reason the
    environmental defense fund uh took a
    such a disliking to it that they set up
    an early website this was still the
    early days of the internet nitpicking
    you know factual claims and and uh
    statistics that could be contested an
    error here and there uh but the sweeping
    point was the entire book should be
    discredited uh because Easter Brook had
    written in the book uh environmental
    commentary is so fog Bound in woe that
    few people realize measurable
    improvements have been made in almost
    every area he just couldn’t say that
    then or not without attracting
    widespread scorn The Economist magazine
    at the time observed that suggesting the
    environment as a cause for optimism is
    beyond the pale of respectable
    discourse well within a few years you
    began to see the media taking notice I
    remember in 2000 after I talked to the
    editorial board at USA Today they talked
    about hidden environmental gains they
    were hidden in plain sight just you need
    to look up the data uh but of course you
    know USA today’s format was always to
    have a point Counterpoint so Fred crup
    showed up to say empty pleasure yeah
    some things improve but things are still
    terrible uh a lot of environmentalists
    can’t take yes for an
    answer um now the other thing at the
    time that I made a not really a stink
    about but you know the United States
    still does not have a bureau of
    environmental statistics to go along
    with the Bureau of Justice statistics
    the Bureau of Labor Statistics the
    Bureau of Education
    statistics uh meanwhile almost all of
    our European peer Nations have a bureau
    of environmental statistics and produce
    uh annual reports on environmental
    Trends and conditions in their countries
    and we haven’t that did finally change
    with the EPA around
    2006 they now have on their website that
    of course it’s huge and sprawling and
    it’s hard to find things but they have a
    report on the environment that um pulls
    together the data on environmental
    problems not just the ones that are
    under EPA jurisdiction but from other uh
    cabinet agencies and uh other regulatory
    agencies in the government and you know
    One-Stop shopping and nowadays you can
    download the data sets in Excel if you
    want to analyze them I mean when I first
    started out 30 years ago I had to do it
    the oldfashioned way I had to go to the
    EPA region 9 library in San Francisco
    and look up printed reports and enter
    the numbers in an extel spreadsheet the
    oldfashioned way by hand so it took a
    long time but now all the data is
    available uh for anyone uh to uh look at
    um so that’s a step forward but we still
    don’t have a bureau of environmental
    statistics or any consistent reporting
    uh
    format tell a little story about that uh
    I team up for several years uh in the
    auts with Paul portney the longtime
    president of resources for the future
    recommending that we ought to have a
    bureau of environmental statistics and
    we testify a couple times before the
    some house committee on government
    Administration and environmentalists
    would show up to oppose the
    idea and you know I can be cynical about
    it uh but one one of the persons who
    spoke against it one day said well we we
    don’t trust the Bush Administration to
    do it fairly and straightforwardly
    which I thought odd because it was the
    bush om that had put out a big thick
    report about how massive the health
    benefits of the Clean Air Act were I
    think they may have overestimated them
    but apparently this was lost on
    environmentalists who thought you
    couldn’t trust the the bush om under
    John Graham who was always a fairly
    tough on regulatory analysis person
    reaching that conclusion but that’s
    where we
    are um the EPA started putting out this
    lovely chart every year which could be
    summarized Under The Heading of
    decoupling showing the that you can have
    lots of economic growth population
    growth vehicle miles traveled and
    falling conventional air pollution and
    here in the last few years falling
    carbon dioxide emissions at the same
    time I’ll come back to that point
    because I think it’s an important one uh
    today I’m just going to go very quickly
    over a very few highlights uh uh uh
    today uh we see that the air pollution
    the conventional six main air pollution
    pollutants of the Clean Air Act era uh
    have all Fallen well below the national
    standards which we keep lowering every
    so often um and now it’s not uniform of
    course there are some stubborn Pockets
    like a couple of parts of Los Angeles
    um but when I was a kid growing up in
    the 70s in the LA area uh LA and I’m out
    in San Gabriel Valley two miles from the
    mountains most of which I could never
    see most of the year today you can see
    them all the time uh but in those days
    uh we violated the old 1hour ozone
    standard about 200 100 days a year and
    most of the LA Bas and now doesn’t
    violate the old one hour standard even
    one day a year again except with a
    couple of those pockets of Riverside San
    berardino and Santa carita Valley but
    even on their worst days uh their peak
    level of ozone the worst of them is uh
    uh is less than half of what an average
    day was in Los Angeles in the
    1970s and a lot of this is the story of
    automobiles well here’s total Vol
    organic compounds that’s one of the
    precursors to O Zone and you know that’s
    the decline curve from 1970 to now uh I
    like to point out that uh it’s really an
    automobile story I like to say the real
    heroes of the Clean Air Act are not so
    much environmental lawyers and judges or
    even EPA issuing mandates those all play
    a role uh but the real heroes were the
    engineers who wore pocket protectors who
    figured out how to redesign our entire
    combustion systems for autos and lots of
    other things uh the same story is true
    of nitrogen oxide emissions both totally
    and from
    automobiles uh and then uh okay let’s
    pause there I I can say a lot about the
    um too fi I could say a lot more about
    the whole uh conventional air pollution
    story and power plants and coal and all
    the rest of that but it is true that not
    everything has improved or things that
    have improved have stalled out uh for a
    long time from the ‘ 50s to 7s we were
    losing a lot of wetlands we reversed
    that by uh the beginning of the new
    century and then in the last few years
    we sort of backsliding a little bit and
    of course not all wetlands are created
    equal and so you know the sort of
    subcategories are important as they are
    in so many things um another area where
    we have made no progress at all would be
    hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico which
    really is a story of runoff from the
    huge Mississippi River
    Basin here you can implicate conflicting
    environmental policies we’d like to get
    the um uh area of hypoxia and nutrient
    rth down but we’re also saying let’s
    have a ton of corn ethanol which is
    exactly the wrong thing to do if you’re
    really trying to control a a runoff in
    the Mississippi Basin uh I’ve got some
    old data showing that the general trend
    of nitrate loadings has been going up a
    lot of that very choppy variation really
    does depend on how much rainfall there
    is in a year in the Mississippi Basin a
    light rainfall year will have less a
    heavy rain fall year will have more but
    nonetheless we’re not having a lot of
    great progress there I’m going to skip
    over that that just shows you that’s our
    Trends have been flat on um nitrogen
    loadings into the Gulf other areas have
    shown better uh performance like the
    Chesapeake Bay nearby here Long Island
    Sound a Puget Sound I think although I
    haven’t looked at Puget Sound data for
    quite a long time now
    um let’s see page two
    here another interesting effort to do
    serious environmental analysis happened
    in 2006 when the hind Center uh did the
    state of the nation’s ecosystems this
    was an extraordinary project involving
    about over a hundred scientists of
    various Specialties and of course one
    problem is what’s an ecosystem they had
    worked very hard to Define different
    kinds of ecosystems in different scales
    an ecosystem can be as small as a petri
    dish or as large as the whole country uh
    and they developed about 120 indicators
    of ecosystem condition and what they
    found was they only had decent data for
    about
    half others there was some data but gaps
    and so they could only draw conclusions
    about a few of the different uh uh
    ecosystem conditions they thought were
    important uh and of that you know about
    25% of them showed Improvement others
    just too much uncertainty but above all
    the pro the uh the process of doing this
    took several years we actually hosted
    Robin Ali the project direct director
    for this project here at AI when this
    report came out along with Tom Lovejoy
    from Princeton and some of the other
    leaders of it it was so labor intensive
    that they didn’t keep the project up
    unfortunately but it’s the kind of
    intensive investigation you’ve seen a
    lot more of as Environmental Studies has
    matured in the last 20 30
    years
    um other people are starting to get into
    the game and I think maybe the Turning
    Point toward environmental optimism
    started with bjor Lor’s book in 2000
    2000 I think it came out
    2001 and of course it was very
    controversial and you may remember that
    some Danish scientific committee
    formerly charged lomborg with scientific
    dishonesty and I read the report and I
    couldn’t find a single factual claim
    disputed although there were many
    factual claims in the book you could
    dispute or Hasty conclusions and so
    forth and they ended up retracting that
    finding but that shows you how
    politicized the matter still was uh but
    that was just the beginning by 2005 we
    have Jack Hollander
    of a Meritus physicist from UC Berkeley
    who described to me by the way that he
    got in the environment back in his days
    as a Bobby Kennedy liberal this began to
    be a sign that environmental thought was
    now environmental optimism was not only
    growing but was more bipartisan it
    wasn’t limited to contrarians like
    Julian Simon or AI Ben wattenberg who
    used to talk a lot about environmental
    progress during his many years here uh
    the one that especially jumped out of me
    was Seymour G uh not very well-known
    person so a professor of Public Health
    at the University of Pittsburgh and he
    told the story of how he was at a
    conference one day of Public Health
    experts and a speaker said well of
    course you know air pollution is falling
    almost everywhere and he said we all
    looked around each other none of us had
    ever heard this we didn’t believe it uh
    we’d never seen it reported anywhere and
    that’s when he decided Well I’m going to
    look into this and similar uh uh um um
    similar Trends and that’s where he came
    out with the surprising look at the real
    state of our planet um and we had
    Seymour here at AI to talk about this
    book because whenever a book like this
    came out from some unexpected quarter I
    thought that person needs some attention
    um and
    then I think other notable figures Hans
    rosling who was a good friend the late
    Hans rosling he died a few years ago too
    early good friend of Nick abat here um
    and uh he’s a demographer covers a lot
    of the Waterfront but environment was
    one of the issues he liked to talk about
    and if you’ve never ever seen his Gap
    minder website not just his but he was
    one of the designers of Gap minder it’s
    this wonderfully interactive site where
    you can plug in from any databases for
    individual countries or uh and and
    countless variables and then generate
    these really wonderful animated graphics
    whenever I teach the subject I make
    students learn how to use Gap minder and
    do various research projects I think
    it’s a fabulous uh
    resource um Hannah Richie uh is just out
    with his brand new book I haven’t gotten
    into it yet not the end of the
    world uh and you know a this is the kind
    of optimism that as you know the
    economist said at the time of Greg
    easterbrook’s book was just simply not
    allowed and now you see more and more
    quote unquote mainstream books like this
    Hannah is part of this terrific project
    out of Oxford run by Max Roser called
    our world in data if you don’t know it
    or haven’t seen it you absolutely must
    it does a whole lot of things too but it
    does environmental issues on a global
    scale extremely well
    uh there’s also down the street from us
    our friends at the KO Institute have
    their project on human progress it again
    covers the entire Waterfront but energy
    environment is prominent among them and
    then I want to mention uh uh Ted Nord
    house and Michael selberg’s book from
    almost 20 years ago a breakthrough and
    Ted’s going to be here tonight actually
    along with Roger to talk about another
    aspect of the climate change story uh
    but this began uh a self-conscious New
    Movement called ecomodernism
    and to make a long story short look up
    ecomodernist Manifesto online it is
    explicitly anti-
    malthusian explicitly Pro
    technology uh and optimistic about the
    future uh and I think it’s one of the
    something I you I never would have
    expected this even 10 years ago uh with
    a body of serious opinion behind it
    mentioned one other book that I think is
    a turning point Matt mentioned you know
    the population bomb in 1968 which
    curiously corresponded with the peak of
    fertility rates around the world and
    that’s when they started falling an
    interesting bit of timing for that
    famous book Matthew Connelly a historian
    at Columbia University published this
    book around 2010 I think and it is a
    lacerating criticism not just of sort of
    the erck outlook on population but
    especially he’s very critical of in
    particular the uh Planned Parenthood
    International and their birth control
    efforts around the world which were
    often quite coercive and even in some
    cases violent uh and you can’t read that
    book without thinking and the title
    really has it right a fatal
    misconception this is wrongly thought
    about again an unthinkable book from
    Harvard University press uh as recently
    maybe as 1990 uh but there you have
    it finally the old malthusianism does
    Die Hard there is a reaction has grown
    to the EC modernists and there’s now a
    self style degrowth movement and I
    haven’t quite got my hands around it
    because when you ask some of the people
    on Twitter which is where we conduct all
    important conversations these days right
    uh what they mean by D growth they’ll
    it’s often confusing and contradictory
    they’ll say we don’t actually mean
    negative growth just some different kind
    of growth you know it’s uh you know
    we’re back to sustainable development
    which was the big phrase 20 some years
    ago but kind of fallen out of fashion
    because it was so
    watery uh but uh so that going to go on
    they never quite go away uh the way I
    put it is uh the old malthusian
    environmentalists are like people who’ve
    been to alcoholics who’ve been to a
    12-step program they determin to get
    sober and abandon malus and then they
    walk by a well-lit malthusian Tavern and
    go on a bender so that’s always going to
    be around so where are we now with
    public opinion you know I began showing
    you that 30 years ago had majorities of
    Americans thinking conditions were
    getting
    worse uh and that we were running out of
    time here’s the latest series from
    Gallop uh Gallup by the way more and
    more pollsters aren’t even asking about
    the environment Much Anymore um it used
    to be that people who do the exit pole
    Consortium for elections you know they
    offer you seven or eight issues you know
    the economy crime terrorism whatever
    they used to ask about is the
    environment one of your top two issues I
    think they quit Carlin Bowman may
    remember I think they quit asking that
    question after 2002 because the number
    of Voters who selected the environment
    as a top two issue is below 2% in other
    words below the margin of error uh uh
    but this one is kind of fun because what
    you’ll see is uh you know large
    majorities here at the green line and we
    think things are getting worse and then
    suddenly in 2009 that Gap Narrows and
    the number of people who think the
    environment is getting better takes a
    conspicuous
    jump ah Barack Obama was elected and I
    hate to be cynical about it but people
    apparently took literally that grandiose
    pronouncement that this will be the
    moment history records when the sea Lev
    sto Rising just because we elected
    him um okay so I I think it’s not news
    that a partisan division on the
    environment has opened up and been
    around for a very long time but oops I
    didn’t want to do that just yet um I
    want the I want the laser that one so it
    stayed that way through the Obama years
    bounces up a little when Trump comes in
    and very ostentatiously takes us out of
    the Paris climate Accord and so forth uh
    and then Joe Biden arrives here three
    years ago and I keep doing that wrong
    and you’ll see that the uh um the the
    number of uh people goes down and Gallup
    supposition in the latest poll is that
    it you know it just replex the Democrat
    Republican divide and Democrats and uh
    you know people inclined toward the
    environment are more suspicious when
    there’s a Republican president and less
    so when there’s a Democrat except then
    you see this last little tale at the end
    here
    while Biden’s still in office what’s
    going on here well Gallup speculates
    looking at their cross tabs that that
    increase you’re seeing there is actually
    coming from
    Republicans they don’t really explain
    why and what but and I have a lot of
    thoughts about what that actually means
    and M not mean exactly what you think it
    means but it is kind of interesting and
    not expected and actually might be a
    reason for optimism in the long term for
    ways that would take me a while to
    explain but what I want to do is get to
    my asterisk the big asterisk of course
    is climate
    change
    and my proposition is that climate
    change has eaten environmentalism alive
    and the reason I say that is if you
    bring up any of the other problems that
    deserve observation serious policy work
    you know water quality of every kind a
    loss of habitat area um you toxic
    exposure and so forth uh what you often
    hear is climate CH it doesn’t matter if
    things have gotten better climate change
    is going to stop all that and make
    everything
    worse and therefore the solution to
    Conventional air pollution habitat
    destruction Forest loss whatever is we
    have to get rid of fossil fuels and you
    know we have to solve if we solve
    climate change will solve everything
    else uh which seems quite wrong-headed
    to me but to cover that part of the
    Waterfront I want to defer now to Roger
    Peli thank
    you and I guess I’ll just sit down over
    here I don’t know if we use the same one
    or not we’ll see we’ll
    see all right well good morning hello
    everybody online um I’ll tell a quick
    story about Steve it’s great to be here
    with Steve and sit here a decade ago
    about Steve was on spent a year at the
    University of Colorado Boulder and I
    think he had the latitude to choose what
    department he sat in so he choose to sat
    sit in my department Environmental
    Studies Department I remember when it
    was wrapping up his his year he told me
    he said when I first came I was worried
    that I’d come to an Environmental
    Studies Department in Boulder Colorado
    and it would be politics this politics
    that politics this he said when I went
    to the faculty meetings it was who gets
    what office who has what teaching load
    assignments and it was just boring and
    yeah we’re academics we know how that
    goes it’s not like that everywhere
    anymore um so my talk is is is going to
    be shorter narrower and deeper than
    Steve’s uh I’m going to talk about
    climate change first I want to show this
    is me um marching in Earth Day uh parade
    uh near as I can tell it’s like 1973 um
    you can see from my smile I was an
    environmental Optimist back then also
    um all right so let me start with uh
    John krey and um as everyone knows uh
    John KY has been a longtime Advocate on
    climate change and I’m going to posit
    these two statements that he made just
    two years apart almost to the day um he
    said uh in 2021 current Curr we’re we’re
    as we’re talking we are regrettably on
    course to hit somewhere between 3 4° at
    the current rate he’s talking about
    projected global average temperature
    rise to
    2100 but then just two years later
    obviously the same sort of speech um
    there was a change made we’re currently
    heading towards something like 2.4 or
    2.5 degrees of warming on the planet
    again to 2100 um for global average
    temperature rise that’s a change of a
    significant amount from 3 or 4 degrees
    to 2.4 degre um and so it’d be fair to
    ask you know what changed and let me say
    all props to John kery um he’s
    accurately reflecting the science here
    when many people still have not um if
    you ask Mr Cary what changed um he said
    just recently we’re heading towards
    about 2.5 degrees right now when I took
    this job on we were headed towards four
    degre well that’s not EX exactly correct
    um and so what I want to do is tell you
    why perspectives have changed like
    reflected here by by Mr kry um I call it
    the best kept secret in climate science
    um everyone in and around climate
    science knows everything I’m going to
    tell you right now most people do
    not all right this is a spaghetti
    diagram and let me just take a moment to
    explain it to you um these are carbon
    dioxide emissions from burning fossil
    fuel
    and the black line here is history and
    all of this spaghetti this colorful
    spaghetti are projections that were
    developed um really starting about 20
    years ago for how the future might play
    out under different scenarios climate
    Science is based on scenarios of the
    future um which are Super complicated
    they have aspects of the economics of
    population growth of energy consumption
    energy production land use and on and on
    um this figure shows about 12200
    scenarios that were developed in the
    literature um back then and obviously
    the world um scientists cannot deal with
    1200 scenarios we had to simplify so at
    the time this is 2005 they said all
    right let’s pick four scenarios and
    that’ll be the focus of our research and
    these have these names they’re called
    rcps details aren’t so important but
    they said at the time well let’s have a
    high one we got to have a high one let’s
    have a low one that’s the blue one down
    there the 2.6 then they said let’s have
    two in the middle they didn’t want one
    in the middle because they said every ‘s
    going to focus on that one um so let’s
    have two in the middle and it turns out
    at that
    time this High one RCP 8.5 um for a lot
    of reasons was designated business as
    usual this is where the world is
    heading you can see or maybe you can’t
    see here’s the temperature rise of 2100
    here it’s 3.2 to 5.4 deges C this is
    where John KY got that 3 4° cel that he
    was repeating again in
    2021 so what has
    changed all right so what I’m doing here
    on this graph is I’ve taken um every one
    of these spaghetti
    scenarios and this is with my colleagues
    Matt Burgess and uh at Colorado and
    Justin Richie at British Columbia um
    this is recently published for anybody
    who wants a copy um it’s wonderful
    reading um we took each of those
    scenarios and we just plotted them on
    this graph this is total fossil fuel
    carbon dioxide emissions all added up to
    2100 on the x-axis and then on the
    vertical axis is temperature change to
    2100 so as pretty much everyone
    understands the increased carbon dioxide
    your increased temperature um it’s not
    exactly linear but it’s pretty darn
    close so you have the extreme scenarios
    out here the less extreme down here
    consistent with the Paris
    agreement the intergovernmental panel on
    climate change in in its in its doing
    its job it says um when we use emission
    scenarios they have to be plausible they
    have to be capable of occurring in the
    real world so I use this green oval and
    I drew a circle around all these because
    these are the 205 to 2010 scenarios that
    were developed because the ipcc put it
    into their database we can conclude they
    thought they were all plausible so what
    I and my colleagues did is we said all
    right a lot of time has passed since
    2005 this was a couple years ago um we
    know what has happened with emissions so
    we can compare the real world to what
    the emission scenarios
    actually put forward the other thing we
    can do is that the the energy system
    modelers like the International Energy
    agency and some of the fossil fuel
    companies and the US Energy Information
    agency they produce short-term energy
    outlooks these are updated every year
    not every couple decades like these
    scenarios um and so they’re the best
    view into what’s going to happen next
    year the year after the next 5 years the
    next 10 years and so we asked a question
    of this big body of 1200 scenarios which
    one survived the test of a reality and B
    where we think we’re headed today rather
    than
    2005 here’s the
    answer all of the
    scenarios that survive the test of
    reality and the test of near-term
    projections um SI between 2 and
    3° and in our study the plausible
    scenarios were centered on 2.2 de uh
    Celsius Changed by
    2100 um this narrowing of expectations
    is perfectly normal it happens in
    research if you have long-term scenarios
    as time goes on some of them will
    survive and some of them will fall out
    uh economists know this anyone who deals
    with data and projections knows the
    future is a difficult place to to
    predict and it it doesn’t always evolve
    as we
    think so let me go back to the Spaghetti
    diagram if we if we apply this test of
    plausibility we find that these very
    extreme scenarios um are implausible in
    fact this business as usual RCP
    8.5 is already
    falsified and just to give you a sense
    of how ridiculous it is it assumes that
    the world is going to build something
    like 30,000 new Coal Fired power plants
    by
    2100 there’s about 6,000 in the world
    right now um sure some countries are
    building more India and China in
    particular but many countries are going
    off of coal particularly in the European
    Union um here in the United States where
    we’re on track to be out of the coal
    business in the early 2030s and so once
    we look at these plausible
    scenarios um based on where we sit today
    the world looks a lot
    different and let me say this is not a
    unique view just to me and my colleagues
    um we happen to be one of many
    researchers around the world this is a
    figure that’s put together uh by Zeke
    housea um very helpfully and it’s in
    time order um of publication you can’t
    see it but it starts in 2019 goes to
    2021 here’s our study this with this
    gray bar between two and three degrees
    and these uh different Publications have
    different projections of temperature out
    to 2100 assuming different policy paths
    and so on but one of the things that you
    can see is that 5° is way up here 4
    degrees is here there’s no more studies
    in there so when John krey was saying
    that it looks like the world is heading
    for something like 2.4 2.5 degrees by
    2100 he was accurately reflecting the
    state of scientific understandings now
    now if you go to the major media if you
    go to the Biden administration’s
    projections on the costs of climate
    change under the social cost of carbon
    you’re going to find that old extreme
    scenario RCP 8.5 dominates public
    discussion so there is an enormous
    dissonance out there the old outdated
    scenario the climate apocalypse scenario
    still has a firm hold on public
    discourse it has a firm hold in the
    media and it appears almost all the time
    in policy uh J John krey is interesting
    because he stands kind of alone out
    there um among policy makers and
    politicians
    and accurately reflecting the
    science the Ia came out in 2023 and I
    I’m pretty sure this is where John car’s
    2.4 degrees came from and you see it
    slices right through all these studies
    um this is the new scientific consensus
    on climate
    change I mentioned that everybody knows
    about this so last summer in Reading
    England uh about 50 of the world’s
    scenario experts that create the
    scenarios that inform the ipcc
    they gathered at a workshop to create um
    abstract art no they didn’t um they they
    they gathered at the workshop to develop
    the next generation of scenarios um and
    this is a big problem for climate
    research and climate policy because once
    scenarios are created they last for 20
    years and I can tell you the scenarios
    that we create this year are going to be
    out of date in a couple years um and so
    there needs to be some rethinking we
    need to be more like the the energy
    system modelers and update scenarios
    every year anyway they came up with uh a
    proposal for a new set of scenarios they
    took these extreme scenarios and they
    put them in this this hatched uh
    projection here they call it the
    emissions World avoided um we could have
    a debate whether it’s the world avoided
    or were just plain wrong um what I did
    is I took this this graphic and I tried
    to turn it less into abstract art and
    more into something consistent with what
    I just showed you so up here we have
    there’s that RCP 8.5 you can see between
    four and 5° this is where we thought we
    were headed this new abstract art set of
    scenarios doesn’t even touch it doesn’t
    come close to it the the the climate
    science Community um is well aware of
    this there is going to be a profound
    Reckoning in public discourse and
    discussions when the world
    realizes that where we’re
    headed is lower than what just a few
    years ago was called a success story on
    climate
    change so let me just conclude and I
    look forward to having a discussion with
    everyone um climate change is real it is
    a problem um but in recent years our
    understandings of how future emissions
    uh are going to evolve uh has changed
    and the good news it’s become much less
    extreme and that’s good news and we
    should be able to comment on that good
    news um while at the same time
    recognizing there’s a lot of work left
    to do uh here how you can find me for
    any questions or comments and I look
    forward to chatting with you thank
    [Applause]
    you do we want to go straight to
    questions or I don’t I mean know what do
    you want to do I don’t care you one I
    mean let’s let’s go to questions they’ve
    heard a lot from
    us yeah see we’ve got some online
    ones we let Mike handle the the mic
    we got someone over here I think yeah
    okay here we go guys’s got the mic G’s
    got a mic working mic right okay my name
    is Joe Freeman and I have two La
    questions oh because I grew up in the
    San Fernando Valley in the 50s oh yeah
    when we burned trash in the backyard
    right yes so question number one when
    did LA stop being smogs Ville or at
    least not as much of one as it was okay
    and question number two has anyone done
    any long range studies of long range
    health effects on those of us who grew
    up in smugs Ville yeah great question so
    I mean the LA Story is a a a it didn’t
    happen overnight it happened very slowly
    uh I used to have the data memorized of
    when things peaked which was the late
    60s early 70s but things didn’t really
    start dropping substantially till the
    late ‘ 80s into the ’90s and then really
    started going down fast by the year 2000
    and since then um one of the things
    about the Clean Air Act generally is
    that uh it was it was well understood I
    think as early as the 50s that Los
    Angeles had a big problem with carbon
    monoxide you at that time you know ozone
    photochemical smog wasn’t that well
    understood believe it or not and in some
    small respects still isn’t that’s a long
    story but uh but then once the Clean Air
    Act passed we started monitoring the
    whole country we were we were surprised
    to discover that Milwaukee and other
    places that were never as bad as La also
    had elevated levels of carbon monoxide
    okay
    um there have been some studies that the
    lanet did one on asthma in around
    2002 that I I thought was kind of mixed
    and there’s another study recently I
    can’t remember the citation but um I
    guess what I’d say is uh I mean I
    certainly remember as a kid you couldn’t
    play outside in the afternoon in the
    summer CU your lungs would just burn and
    hurt and I you know I grew up in a
    wealthy suburb everybody had these
    glorious swiming pools you couldn’t go
    swimming cuz you you within 15 minutes
    you would be gasping for breath and you
    be was in pain right and uh uh and you
    know I was a track athlete in the 70s
    and I can’t believe they let us run know
    it’s unbelievable uh to look back on
    that now
    um that’s a really I mean that’s an
    intricate question I think that the uh
    the there’s a range of opinion on that
    I’ve seen a few studies thought that the
    health effects were overestimated at
    that were more resilient than we might
    think it’s like people that quit smoking
    their health
    improves I’m I’m s of agnostic about
    that there’s unquestionably health
    benefits especially from getting lead
    out of the air but that’s also a
    national story um but uh I you know I
    think we’re still waiting for long-term
    data about LA from you know people our
    age and also the younger cohort coming
    up are they going to have lower
    incidents of asthma and you know other
    respiratory diseases and lifespans I
    think we don’t know yet I’m convinced
    the sign will be positive very strongly
    though was it uh
    Mark
    Mark Mark Mills with the national Center
    for Energy analytics uh gentlemen uh
    would you speculate on on what form and
    when the Reckoning will happen because I
    think this is uh relevant to both of
    your
    views do you want to go first or yeah
    sure I’ll be happy to you know this is
    one of those where uh
    um things change in underlying
    scientific understandings and it can
    take a really long time for that to
    percolate um into the future so I I will
    go back to the the the population bomb
    that was mentioned a number of times you
    know you don’t hear people you can find
    them but you don’t hear it um pronounced
    like it was in the 1960s 1970s about the
    population crisis and so we might say
    Well when did the Reckoning happen on
    the population crisis and the reality I
    think is it never did we just kind of
    moved on and other issues like climate
    change took took its place I think it’s
    conceivable that that in my children’s
    generation climate change will still be
    there it’ll be around as an issue um but
    it’ll be a lot like how we think about
    population today yeah population matters
    it’s important um population policies
    don’t exist as population policies um
    but we talk about health we talk about
    education we talk about women’s rights
    which are all relevant to population so
    I do think that there’s uh you know my
    leading candidate is that um new
    understandings quietly replace the old
    without people saying uh oh we were
    wrong about that no one I mean Paul
    Erick was just on 60 Minutes last year
    talking about the same things that he
    that he used to talk about um I have
    noticed I have noticed that as as this
    new understanding does start to be
    discussed and it has been discussed to
    some degree the the the story line
    is we’re being successful on climate
    policy all of the decisions we made the
    Paris agreement have led us to bend the
    curve um and that’s another talk in more
    detail I don’t think it has yet I think
    the the real story is that we adopted as
    the leading scenario a flawed scenario
    and it defeats the whole purpose of
    scenario planning right scenario
    planning is based on the Assumption we
    don’t know the future need to consider a
    wide range and so we bet on one that was
    politically convenient for alarmist
    narratives um but not particularly
    realistic quickly share your view on
    that one one cave none of the other
    scenarios became P at roughly a trillion
    dollars a year of spending programs the
    spending programs in place in U EU and
    us so we have this massive enti Ms and
    direct spending and mandates and
    subsidies that are unprecedent we didn’t
    have them for population
    control oh well well I mean as as you
    know Matthew Connelly says in his book
    fatal misconception um which I also
    recommend there was a lot of bad things
    done in the name of population policy
    for a long time um and you know I’m I’m
    very much of the view view is that good
    or bad policy doesn’t emerge from
    scientific understandings and so um one
    of the things that that I’m pretty sure
    of is that that politics is
    self-correcting maybe in some cases on a
    faster time scale than is science um and
    as we see as people feel the
    consequences of higher pric energy
    whether they’re in France or Nigeria or
    the United States they they they lash
    out I mean you can see Farmers you know
    taking action in Europe just um just in
    the most recent months so I I do think
    that um you know there’s one thing that
    I’ve written about um in my book The
    Climate fix it’s called The Iron law of
    climate which is that people respond to
    economics and they don’t like higher
    price energy so um if if the subsidies
    that are put in place whether in the
    United States or Europe do not lead to
    accelerated economic growth better per
    capita standards of living obvious
    improvements better Technologies and so
    on those policies won’t sustained now is
    it true that those policies could have
    some inefficiencies and have some
    problems in the in the shorter term
    absolutely um I don’t think that’s
    unique to climate or environmental
    issues uh actually yeah my answer is
    substantially the same I don’t think you
    ever get a reckoning on just about
    anything but you do see those slow
    changes and the population one is a good
    comparison um like the emissions
    forecast Roger points to uh I used to
    Ben wattenberg put me on this 20 years
    ago it used to be that the UN population
    agency would do every year or every
    other year uh you know Century long
    predictions of population growth rates
    and they have a high case middle and low
    one and over the last 25 years or so uh
    the highest case is now lower than what
    the lowest case used to be so year by
    year that changes and you you know now
    it’s not unusual to see the New York
    Times saying is a a birth dir Ben
    wattenberg again was on to this 25 years
    ago saying our big problem is going to
    be too low of fertility rates well now
    that isn’t a proposition entertained by
    the New York Times so I think the the
    way I think of it is um
    uh oh I’ll mention about the politics in
    a minute is um I think what will happen
    by degrees is that climate change like
    many other environmental issues will
    become a normal issue it won’t go away
    but it won’t be this extraordinary you
    know the climate crisis is now so the AP
    style book says use climate crisis and
    your news stories about climate Okay um
    the population one politics a little
    different but I had a student asked me
    about this recently uh and I thought
    well this is unusual cuz that’s like you
    know a question from my student days
    just you know around the time of the
    boow war it seems like now U Back In
    little known episode back around 1970 or
    71 when you know the first Earth Day is
    happening and all the new NEPA and all
    the legislation is booming on the scene
    uh Nelson Rockefeller persuaded Nixon
    that you need to have a population
    policy so Nixon set up I think it might
    have been a formal presidential
    commission like the grace commission and
    others that happened now and then should
    the United States have a population
    policy to limit population growth and
    what it would be like so they commission
    some papers they have some meetings and
    somebody raised their hand one day and
    said you realize that if we have a
    population policy in this country it
    will disproportionately affect
    minorities because they have the highest
    fertility rates and that commission was
    never heard from again it just quietly
    disappeared and now does you you can you
    have to work really hard to find this
    right so that kind of is a certain echo
    of current policies right uh our current
    you know political currents um and so
    you know that last point that that poll
    I showed that showed this uptick that
    the Galla people lyd Assad thinks is
    actually Republicans that in my mind is
    kind of a hopeful sign in the sense I’m
    just saying that it might mean that
    environmentalism environmental issues
    including climate will start to reset a
    normal and something looks more normal
    that like you like education healthc
    care we fight like cats and dogs over
    that but the point is both parties do
    fight about it in ways of trying to look
    for Solutions and playing the game and
    just one last anecdote I you know
    remember oh gosh almost 30 years ago now
    I get invited to the Republican National
    committee’s meeting of Team 100 that was
    their $100,000 donors or as today RNC
    would say small
    donors right uh and I give a talk on the
    environment I sort of go through sort of
    these bunch of people said oh that’s all
    very interesting but why are we talking
    about their issue and that’s when my
    head hits the table go you you know no
    that’s not okay you get the point uh
    should when the two parties compete for
    an issue that’s when we make the most
    policy progress even though nobody’s
    happy about it at any take a
    moment
    ah uh JP Hogan it’s a few questions in
    one
    but on the sci in 2006 they started
    doing the EU EU and the US did a lot of
    cutting of
    CO2 tyrannically I guess but um so we
    had the reductions while then China
    India increased so we had a flipping of
    the daily greenhouse effect for one side
    of the northern hemisphere to the other
    that is almost a man-made climate change
    from the cuts so I wasn’t sure where
    your science is I was always annoyed
    that they weren’t like controlling their
    Solutions and checking the science on
    whether their Solutions were causing
    problems you have studies on where that
    flipping has caused weather
    changes
    um that’s um so that would be the first
    question um
    I’ll leave it to that for
    now yeah I mean on the science of
    climate change and the the effects of of
    carbon dioxide Cuts I mean the the
    answer is that if you take a look at the
    the historical record of carbon dioxide
    accumulating in the atmosphere and it is
    the whole atmosphere not where it’s
    produced um it’s been going up up up up
    there’s a seasonal cycle um if you take
    a look at the data um there has been
    actions taken but the global rate of
    decarbonization which is carbon dioxide
    per unit of GDP
    um has been pretty much linear for the
    last 50 years so carbon dioxide
    emissions have not peaked they’re not
    going down um in some places they are
    going down as you say correctly the
    United States um so it’s it’s peaking
    emissions in 2005 um and it’s gone down
    since then but largely due to the
    deployment of Renewables solar and wind
    but also um probably more significantly
    natural gas from fracking um has
    displaced coal um in Europe it’s been
    similar um the biggest advance in um in
    carbon free energy was actually
    deployment was in France in the 1980s
    with nuclear power so um there are
    predictions the International Energy
    agency thinks we’re going to Peak all
    the fossil fuels by 2030 um we will see
    but as of this moment there’s no reason
    to expect that climate policies as
    climate policy focused on emissions have
    any discernable influence on the climate
    system
    um a while ago I met a NASA engineer and
    he said oh well the CO2 isn’t escaping
    what came to mind was well did it used
    to go through an ozone hole
    so where’re having heard an stist say
    well it isn’t escaping how did it used
    to
    escape um and was is was was an ozone
    hole helping CO2 Escape where it built
    up yeah I mean the short answer is is no
    um the CO2 when it’s emitted um for
    purposes of human society and the
    climate system uh CO2 is in the
    atmosphere for for not forever but from
    a policy standpoint it might as well be
    so thank
    you ruy has
    a ruy to Shara um what I’m curious about
    and what I worry about is not that I
    think these you know sort of the media
    model can go down to like 2.4 degrees or
    2.3 degrees and that could be a more
    widespread understanding but it’s it’s
    not clear to me this have any effect on
    the climate debate at all because you
    know there’s a built-in you know button
    that can be pushed on this issue
    constantly which is weather right the
    weather attribution industry is like
    incredibly powerful it Gemini this huge
    section to the Democratic party massive
    interest groups there’s foundations
    putting hundreds of billions and what do
    they have to point to at this point they
    can always point to the weather there’s
    always something going on and there and
    the dialogue at this point and in the
    sort of overall immedia completely
    impervious to what the actual underlying
    findings from the ipcc are in these
    weather trends and weather events as you
    written about in your blog and in other
    places so I guess I I just saying I’m
    not sure that you know a bit more common
    sense and what the models really say is
    actually going to have that much effect
    and that the real problem is you know
    the weather attribution thing there’s
    always going to be something going on
    like the O the ocean look at how hot
    it’s been this last year you’re
    unbelievable this is so extreme we’re
    all about to blow up so what do you do
    about that I mean I know you’re going to
    address it maybe later today but I won’t
    be here so I wanted to ask if you’re
    here at six o’clock tonight right it’s a
    great question and of course you’re
    absolutely right I mean one of the other
    responses to this changing perspectives
    um that is out there is that that
    Advocates the the Lang the apocalyptic
    language they used to use to describe
    four or 5° C is recal and said oh my
    gosh it’s at 2 Celsius now okay um the
    the weather attribution industry so so
    that’s a technical term but that means
    something happened can we pin it on a
    cause and usually the cause is emissions
    of greenhouse gases um it’s really
    interesting because the the science of
    so-called attribution has departed from
    the you know the so-called gold standard
    of the intergovernmental panel on
    climate change for a long time now um
    the the ipcc has been
    um pretty stalwart and and I have a lot
    of respect for them have called things
    straight on extreme weather um most of
    the policy world the advocacy world the
    journalistic world has decided to ignore
    the ipcc um so there’s been people to
    fill that Gap there’s a new industry of
    of weather attribution um there’s good
    work by people like Niko stair Hans Von
    Storch um Mike Hume um who have looked
    at how we think of climate going back 50
    years and it turns out there’s there’s
    really I mean we have a different media
    media ecosystem now but there’s really
    not that’s changed in how we see
    portense in the weather um it used to be
    you know drought follows the plow from
    the time that the uh we were colonizing
    the American West um the idea that when
    you farm it it brings drought and we’re
    causing it it’s it’s our fault um so I
    don’t know that that ever goes away um
    and there uh um every time every time
    there’s a weather event um anywhere in
    the world and extreme weather is
    actually normal on planet Earth so you
    actually have to go into the statistics
    to identify changes it’s pinned right
    now on human cause climate change um and
    I fully expect that to continue that’ll
    be a tool of advocacy um going forward
    and smart climate and energy policies
    are going to have to be put in place in
    that context because it’s I don’t think
    it’s going to go away yeah you know ruy
    I have I for the longest time and still
    to a certain extent tried to resist
    making the comparison to a lot of
    environmental activism to religion I
    just that I prefer to stick with the
    data and you know po right and the
    objective realities of the world uh and
    not traffic in what can quickly become a
    just of O over generalization it’s
    getting harder and harder all the time
    uh because well give a couple of
    anecdotes uh um people often ask me why
    are PR years why are environmentalists
    so gloomy say because it makes them
    happy
    I actually kind of believe this it’s you
    know it’s a secular apocalypse without
    the promise of redemption but then
    equally obvious is there is very much
    the the the you know the Heretics Vibe
    about it right I mean so you know I
    wrote an article I was a cover story for
    the Weekly Standard one that still
    existed about Jay facon a republican
    made his money in electronics wants to
    do something on climate but he didn’t
    subscribe to the party line so Tom Styer
    had to damn him in the New York Times
    it’s like no here’s a person who’s
    halfway with you but he a ha and Tom
    Styer who made Rogers life miserable
    behind the scenes as we know so there’s
    this demand for absolute Conformity to
    uh I hate to say a religious Orthodoxy
    and I don’t know if that’s ever going to
    end or not um and I you know that that
    seems to me as a sociological matter is
    very much evident and it drives a lot of
    the a lot of the trends Roger pointed to
    and I think it’s a shame and it’s going
    to go away it’s some maybe it’ll be
    something new right so actually it was
    uh Brett Stevens The Wall Street Journal
    and he was still there said climate
    change may go away someday what
    something must replace it and my nominee
    was you may every once while hear a
    story of the news about how the polar
    magnetic poles are weakening or moving a
    bit and if they actually collapse it is
    a apparently a really big Calamity for
    the planet and uh surely they will
    figure out a way to blame it on human
    activity you know the electricity Grid
    or something um hasn’t happened yet but
    that would be my nominee for what will
    replace it for people who really like
    apocalyptic thinking cuz I think human
    beings may be hardwired for some element
    of eschatology and apocalyptic thinking
    and once conventional religion starts to
    erode as it’s been doing for 200 years
    what replaces it well let me let me add
    to that um I do a lot of work with uh
    Folks at insurance and reinsurance and
    I’ve noticed in the last few years um
    not out in public and and not in the um
    in in the discussions out in in front of
    people but these are folks who who who
    make and lose money based on their bets
    on the weather yeah and one of the
    things that um I’ve seen is more realism
    in the closed door discussions over
    Trends in weather so for example I was
    at Lloyds of London last fall um we were
    at a chadam house rule event um and the
    the head of uh of disasters and I can
    violate chadam rule because it was
    published in the financial times later
    um she said she said you know we believe
    in climate change we think it’s real
    it’s serious but we haven’t seen its
    effect on our portfolio management um
    and so that was headlined in the
    financial times a couple months later
    where the financial times says head of
    Lloyds of London you know you know
    private meeting says exactly that um I
    do think if you’re someone who manages
    risk that’s related to accurately
    understanding climate and weather trends
    um people are starting to realize you
    can’t get caught up in the hype in the
    public discussions so I think it’s
    perfectly reasonable to expect we may
    have a a two- paath dialogue going on
    there’s the public dialogue and you know
    as you say it’s you know if you know
    it’s it’s cold today that’s climate
    change I mean it’s it’s fine it’s part
    of the the the spirit of the times um
    but I think for people who make
    decisions where they have to know you
    know I’m putting in you know $100
    million worth of Agricultural Product
    this year I have to have a good
    understanding of Elo linia those sort of
    decisions will necessarily be grounded
    in reality just add just quickly I saw a
    headline yesterday I’ll try and find it
    for you I foret it was Reuters or
    somewhere and it said uh insurance
    companies charging higher premiums for
    climate risk and making huge profits I
    thought I wonder if they connect
    the why okay you get the idea yeah
    there’s
    the excuse me thank you um Gan Prince
    from London with apologies for being
    late complications with airplanes and
    things two brief comments and then a
    question if I may the comment first to
    You Stephen um and all of this is to do
    with framing and the nature of the
    moment we’re currently
    in yes I I think you’re absolutely on
    the money will the apocalyptic religion
    analogy is more than an analogy but
    there’s another which is closely
    associated which is bankruptcy and
    typically people who are going bankrupt
    are the last people who know they’re
    going bankrupt and as you know the
    saying goes when you go bankrupt you go
    bankrupt slowly first and then suddenly
    right so there is a collapse
    Dynamic uh about these sorts
    belief
    structures specifically if they’re
    misframing the nature of the problem the
    second is to the question that was asked
    over here which is about what happened
    last year Well Mother Nature as I’m sure
    everybody in the room knows is sometimes
    Bountiful to us and she’s just given us
    This Magnificent worked example of what
    produces global warming and it wasn’t
    systemic it was a weather event it was a
    combination of HTH the volcano which
    increased the water vapor in the
    atmosphere by
    10% uh it was a big alino and it was a
    solar maximum you don’t need more
    stressors to produce what happened
    during last year and I by the way in
    London and in the groups which I’m in
    I’ve noticed a
    significant early movement beginning
    which is that there is a mouse of Doubt
    creeping into the minds even of the most
    uh fanatical that
    firstly they’re not breaking through
    with the public and secondly maybe
    actually there is a big difference
    between climate and weather and with all
    due respect I think that you were Roger
    in one or two of those answers eliding
    the two and I think maybe here’s my
    question maybe it’s time for us to be a
    bit more severe with ourselves and
    systematically to
    divide climate which is a wicked problem
    and weather which is a much more bounded
    problem uh this is where we all came in
    25 years ago and I I live not very far
    away from the Met Office and I do
    occasionally interact with them and
    that’s the seat of the religion in my
    country uh and I do notice the mouse of
    Doubt is beginning to creep also because
    of course why are we in this mess it’s
    because of the misapplication of weather
    models to to to climate as we all know
    so what last year showed
    us supports what we know from the
    long-term record which is that there is
    a relationship between CO2 and
    temperature except it doesn’t actually
    work the right way around because the
    temperature goes up before the CO2 goes
    up this suggest that it’s not really
    that causal and so we have to I would
    suggest start to ask ourselves
    fundamental questions which some of us
    began 20 odd years ago and then they
    became completely taboo because that
    meant that you were a denier and you
    were a this and a that and you are you
    an apostate the religious analogy is
    correct we and I merely report I mean
    there is I’ve been in discussions in the
    last 6 months which I’ve not been in for
    the last 20 years people are beginning
    to realize that climate change as an
    issue which is about to be inscribed by
    my next government and will bankrupt the
    country if they do it this actually is
    going to bankrupt us back to my first
    observation so are we given our
    responsibilities and an organization
    like this which is to be ahead of the
    curve is it time now to take a deep
    breath and to consider whether we’ve
    been too uh genuflecting to the general
    framing because of the fear of all of
    those accusations which are out there
    maybe it’s time for us to go back
    climate the movie is quite helpful in
    this regard isn’t it
    so so for a long time and Gwyn it’s
    great to see you welcome to Washington
    um for a long time I I’ve argued that
    arguments over climate science
    um are probably the least productive way
    we can address issues of energy policy
    and climate policy um people are can
    have legitimate views here or there um
    the core understandings of the
    intergovernmental panel on climate
    change have accurately reflected the
    core understandings of the climate
    Community going back 30 years and these
    haven’t changed and this is this is
    something that I think um we should
    really take note of um is that climate
    science doesn’t turn on a dime we don’t
    change our understandings today tomorrow
    um we’ve known what we’ve known for a
    long time um but we also know that if we
    don’t have uh low price energy expanding
    energy access in parts of the world
    energy security pretty much everywhere
    um we’re not going to make good
    decisions about energy so um the other
    thing to understand is that the world
    has been decarbonizing for a century and
    so when we talk about mitigation policy
    and climate policy what we’re talking
    about is accelerating a trend that’s
    well been in place we will achieve
    absolutely nothing on energy policy by
    arguing finer points of climate science
    I you know call me up after the hundreds
    of studies are are published on the
    hunga Tanga volcano and tell me what
    they find my views on adapting to
    extreme weather or mitigating climate
    change are not going to change based on
    any of those studies or any 100 of those
    studies so I mean I appreciate that that
    there there’s interest in these topics
    but for me um finer details of climate
    science as as they are you know hi Dad
    um are are are are not where the action
    is yeah I um I I’ll profess admit to
    being negligent I’ve quit following
    climate science intensively I used to
    try and read large chunks of the what I
    thought were the most relevant chapters
    of the ipcc reports that came out over a
    few years and they’re you know they’re
    difficult for a non-sp specialist and I
    think even for a specialist I mean I’m
    like you I’m sort of amazed they’re able
    to put together a report of that size at
    all uh and I agree that they mostly play
    it straight I actually I think the
    scientists who do the main chapters do
    play it straight and then it’s the
    summaries that’s where okay when the
    Mischief enters um and the energy
    question is much more important because
    we’re doing that and that’s also a
    little more approachable for the lay
    person so uh I think so I’m going to tie
    two things together here I mean I’m only
    following British politics from afar but
    my perception is is that the Net Zero
    Pledge of the Tor government is one of
    the things that’s gotten into such deep
    trouble in heading for Landslide Wipeout
    after a landslide Triumph four years ago
    that’s a real case study of political
    incompetence across the board but I I
    keep hearing it Net Zero is one part of
    it and here and there I’ll read stories
    of the labor party exploiting this and
    it’s not clear to me I maybe right that
    the labor party will be just as
    committed to uh you know General Net
    Zero goal more so you
    think really okay but then then I read
    ruy the other day I actually haven’t
    read your latest piece it’s in my
    reading queue about what it why Liberals
    are going to embrace energy real right
    uh I my again I’m Lo to make predictions
    too but I think we’re going to look back
    on especially in this country I think
    we’re going to conclude that we’re
    overdoing it with wind and solar now um
    that it was high price to pay for not
    that great of improvements I think but
    we’ll you know we’ll just have to see
    I’ll say the last thing um one thing I
    never expected to see well two things
    that are related two things I never
    thought I’d see in California
    specifically and more broadly are more
    and more you might call oldfashioned
    mainstream environmentalists saying we
    made a mistake on nuclear power 40 years
    ago uh and then second in California is
    uh which invented sort of anti-growth
    land use policies 50 years ago there’s
    now a very left-wing uh dominated What’s
    called the yimi movement and they yes in
    my backyard and these are people who are
    typical leftwing organizing efforts and
    energy and all the rest of that are
    saying good grief we’ve got to get rid
    of a lot of land use and housing
    regulations they’re just strangling
    affordable housing I never thought I’d
    see that yet we have both of those
    things happening that’s a little bit of
    reason for optimism I think let me uh
    I’m going to comment on ru’s piece on
    why Liberals are going to be energy
    realists with a real world example
    picking up on this and and addressing
    this point so I live in Boulder Colorado
    wonderful place um probably one of the
    most liberal places yeah on this
    continent um so about two weeks ago um
    there was a forecasted Windstorm and
    just several years ago there was a big
    fire burned a thousand houses uh just
    outside of ER and so the local power
    provider Excel Energy um who has fears
    of liability said okay you don’t want
    any fires from power lines down we’re
    going to shut down the the electricity
    in Boulder and they shut it down for two
    days and everyone I know everyone I
    spoke to the response was this is
    unacceptable this this is not going to
    happen and huge complaints we had a
    conver a lot of energy realists were
    born that weekend um so the reality is
    and and again I think politics is going
    to be
    self-correcting the UK is an example
    Germany’s an example there may be uh
    some significant short-term damage done
    but people are not going to sit by and
    let their economies go bankrupt it’s
    just not it’s just not going to happen
    um and so if there are
    disastrous policies or
    politicians Liz trust for example and
    there are consequences economically you
    will see a backlash um the frustrating
    thing thing of course is that democracy
    is very blunt instrument and that
    correction can take a long time and it’s
    it’s not precise this is why I think
    policy matters and and I know it’s not
    popular in an era of politics but this
    is why you know Eggheads and wonks need
    to have good ideas good plans in place
    so when that moment comes when people
    are dissatisfied it’s not let’s just put
    the other political party in power
    somebody needs to have the good ideas
    and so I think um this is why I’m I
    focus you know kind of like a laser on
    energy rather than on climate because I
    don’t think we have Smart Energy
    policies just waiting on the Shelf to
    hand to to policy makers when that
    moment opens up and we have a chance to
    change policy
    course my question is about whether we
    need to open the
    APT car
    has this is a slightly broader question
    but U there’s been a lot of push back
    against ESG do you think it’s basically
    just gone underground in Corporate
    America the environmental part of
    it um yes I say underground I mean these
    things tend to reinvent themselves so uh
    uh again back around 2000 the big
    enthusiasm for corporations was the
    triple bottom line well that was just
    the early version of ESG it was you know
    I I forget what the three parts were but
    it was just ordinary profit but the two
    other ones were you know doing good and
    it’s exactly the same as ESG but it it
    didn’t you know there’s a there was a uh
    environmental sustainability index as
    part of the Dow Jones which I think
    still exists but no one pays much
    attention to it so when ASG came along
    uh I thought oh it’s the same thing with
    with the new label and there’s been a
    very Swift backlash to it as you’ve seen
    and so it’ll still be around you know
    your public affairs uh and environmental
    uh uh compliance uh uh you know units
    and big corporations there
    you they’re sort of down with the
    underlying ideas behind them so I don’t
    know if it will come back as prominently
    with a big flashy label um but it’s
    still going to be around um but it is
    kind of interesting how quickly that
    whole light slogan got a black eye it
    used to take longer for these things to
    cycle through and get a backlash and now
    it happened pretty
    fast so it’s really funny there’s um
    actually saw CH this the other day that
    an earnings calls that all the big
    companies do quarterly uh mentions of
    ESG have just plummeted in the last two
    years have used to be you know a lot of
    them that just just dived and well never
    heard of it right and you know even
    Larry fank at Black Rock says we don’t
    use that term anymore so there you
    go so we have any online
    questions oh you got to look okay cuz
    there’s you know it’s Roger’s father
    maybe watching I don’t know you said hi
    Dad I hope so yeah who knows I always
    had mixed be the only one
    I don’t know
    um problem with I revisit these things
    is I I get optimistic and then I get
    pessimistic again at the same time when
    I think about optimism makes you
    pessimistic it could work that way right
    yeah by the way my recollection of your
    department was not just the usual
    bureaucratic stuff but I was actually
    sincerely impressed that it was not
    politicized I mean everyone there was
    mostly pretty left or far left but they
    were serious about the issues and it
    wasn’t and I thought that was a good
    that was a my mind a sign of Health yeah
    we had a healthy very healthy
    Department listening asks two related
    questions one is what’s the best way for
    the to make inroads into the Biden
    Administration I think this is directed
    at e Roger but probably applicable to
    both to make inroads into the Biden
    Administration for applying the results
    of the latest studies on climate do you
    agree that it’s likely that the old
    scenario implications will continue to
    be applied until after the presidential
    election
    to help the president mobilize his base
    yeah boy if I had if I knew how to make
    inroads into the Biden Administration
    I’d probably have a different job than I
    have now um I I mean this is the The
    Perennial problem of of trying to get
    good policy analysis into Political
    processes um the Biden Administration is
    is very quickly painting itself into a
    corner on climate um it it has its
    social cost of carbon calculations the
    EPA regular L uses um another
    methodology that depend upon um this
    most extreme scenario RCP 8.5 um the
    Biden administration’s National Climate
    assessment which unfortunately is run
    out of the Executive Office of the
    President um has in its last two
    iterations so going back it was under
    Trump also it identified this extreme
    scenario this is the one that we’re
    headed towards and then this less
    extreme scenario as the 4.5 scenario
    this is policy success U now if you go
    to the framework convention on climate
    change and look at their annual report
    you’ll see that the real world
    trajectory is undershooting the success
    story so let me repeat that the real
    world in terms of emissions is
    undershooting the Biden Administration
    success story now this creates a
    situation how do you emerge from that
    how do you come to the public and say
    Hey you know that scenario we told you
    was success just just two years ago oh
    we’re beating that now
    we’re we’re well ahead that’s a real
    hard message to get to put out because
    you look like uh you’re either being
    disingenuous or you didn’t set the right
    target to begin with so um I do think
    and all right then the second part is
    that the emissions reductions promises
    commitments targets of the inflation
    reduction act um something like 50 to
    52% by 2030 or 2035 um the Biden
    Administration is not going to hit those
    um the Biden Administration based on its
    own Energy Information administ ation is
    uh going to have an emissions reduction
    record of
    0.7% reduction per year when it’s Target
    implies it’s going to be 89% or more um
    I wouldn’t put that out before the
    election but there’s going to be um some
    very dissatisfied disgruntled people um
    on the left in the Progressive side when
    they realize that those aren’t happening
    so for me I would go to the Biden
    Administration and say hey your
    political fortunes going forward are
    going to be compromised by the fact that
    you painted yourself in a corner on
    climate maybe you should have some
    better policies um rather than saying
    hey here’s some better policies you know
    one of the ironies of the last few years
    is I think this is still true uh that
    Coal Fired power plant retirements
    happen faster under Trump than they have
    during Biden now that’s not the whole
    story there’s probably more parts to
    that but here’s the broader point but
    one problem especially in this issue
    more so than many others is the siloing
    of the way this modern government is
    because it’s so big and
    uh so I’ve long had the perception both
    here and also with a lot of European
    governments is that you’ll have the
    people in the you know the environmental
    Advocates and people who’ve got various
    appointed jobs and then you have the
    people in the finance Ministries or in
    budget offices who actually know the
    score what it’s going to cost and what
    it’ll actually do uh and they often
    don’t talk to each other so you know if
    you go back to just give one example the
    um the Kyoto Protocol in the late
    90s uh and you know it was Larry Summers
    as treasury Secret AR who said this
    treaty is way too asymmetrical in its
    economic impact and telling the
    President Clinton privately you really
    can’t have this ratified we can’t really
    go with this thing this thing’s okay uh
    now fast forward the Trump years so
    Trump and his big tax bill what was it
    regulation 45 I forget there was this
    little feature that had a tax credit for
    lower carbon Energy Systems and they a
    like $7 a ton was the tax advantage of
    it and I thought oh wait a minute that
    means the Trump Administration just put
    a price on carbon
    I wonder if the Trump Administration
    knows that’s happening right so the
    point is is that there’s somewhat more
    continuity between you might say the
    people you never hear about people at
    the Energy Information Administration
    people in the E some of the people in
    the EPA and then the people driving
    policy for you know the a mix of reasons
    many of them political in the white
    houses and all the rest of that that’s
    an ongoing problem with both parties uh
    and you know I don’t know if we’ll ever
    make much progress on all that but
    that’s the background Dynamic is uh the
    the different ual practical real world
    differences between the two parties are
    are not as wide as you would think from
    reading the newspapers let me just
    respond to one thing St um presidents
    sitting presidents don’t close Coal
    Fired power plants right um and if you
    want to know why Coal Fired power plants
    are closing you know this decade in the
    previous decade you have to go back to
    the 1970s to to you know to Jimmy Carter
    Richard Nixon to policies put in place
    then that laid the foundation for the
    technological innovations that would be
    the fracking Revolution and I mean this
    is why Smart Energy policy is important
    because the decisions we put in place
    today are going to be powering the
    United States and the world in 2050 um
    and it’s not oh we’re going to pass a
    law today and then tomorrow we’ll see
    these changes I see we’re getting the
    the the the the hook is coming out so
    yeah well that I think we’ve exhausted
    everybody yeah g all day but that would
    be that would be bad and you got to go
    again tonight yeah yeah do all come back
    tonight for uh the more detailed part of
    it it’ll be fun I’ll be here good so
    all right well thanks everybody thank
    you
    [Applause]

    For years, American environmentalists held a largely pessimistic outlook on our planet’s future. But recently, the environmental movement has seen significant changes. Join Steven F. Hayward—a resident scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, who previously authored an AEI book on favorable environmental trends—for a presentation on how the trend data demonstrate the momentum of environmental progress in the US and around the world.

    Afterward, join Dr. Hayward and AEI’s Roger Pielke Jr. as they discuss environmental trends and the exceptional case of climate change, which overshadows almost every other environmental issue. Dr. Hayward and Dr. Pielke will explore what we have learned about the environment, what important information gaps remain, and lessons for future policy choices.

    Submit questions to Guy.Denton@aei.org or on Twitter with #EnvironmentalProgress.

    Subscribe to AEI’s YouTube Channel
    https://www.youtube.com/user/AEIVideos?sub_confirmation=1

    Like us on Facebook
    https://www.facebook.com/AEIonline

    Follow us on Twitter

    For more information
    http://www.aei.org

    AEI operates independently of any political party and does not take institutional positions on any issues. AEI scholars, fellows, and their guests frequently take positions on policy and other issues. When they do, they speak for themselves and not for AEI or its trustees or other scholars or employees.

    More information on AEI research integrity can be found here: http://www.aei.org/about/

    #aei #news #politics #government #education #livestream #live #publicopinion #societyandculture #environmentalism #climatechange #earthday

    Leave A Reply
    Share via