With the holiday season on the wane, 'tis once again the season for fictitious global-warming scares. New Jersey Sierra Club director Jeff Tittel's latest foray into the fictitious world of global warming make-believe ("State's plan to curb global warming tepid," Dec. 26 op-ed) would make even Pinocchio blush.
2009
In last Thursday’s Green Bay Press Gazette, environmentalist Dan Kohler and state Rep. Andy Jorgensen claim that Wisconsin consumers already are saving $200 million a year, thanks to the Doyle administration’s energy policies (Repower America and rebuild state’s economy,” 13/31/2008). Yet they fail to cite this assertion, and I seriously doubt its veracity.
For one thing, they attribute some of these supposed savings to a state requirement to generate 10% of Wisconsin’s electricity with renewables like solar and wind power. But alternative energy is more expensive than conventional energy. How does forcing consumers to use expensive energy reduce their utility bills?
Kohler and Jorgenson suggest that the rest of the $200 million comes from Wisconsin’s Focus on Energy program, an educational outreach designed to teach businesses how to save money with energy efficiency. Yet no such claims are made on the Focus on Energy website.
Perhaps they took credit for the decline in energy use as a result of the economic downturn. Of course, that would be misleading. Then again, fake facts are the only way to defend the claim that we can all get rich by fighting climate change.
Last year’s doozy is almost as good as this year’s but not quite. In June Senator Barbara Boxer, who chairs the Environment and Public Works Committee, told reporters during the Senate debate on the Lieberman-Warner America's Climate Security Act:
"This bill, in fact, will lead us to a strong economy, with the creation of millions of new jobs."
Partner in crime Senator Harry Reid elaborated:
“The Boxer-Warner-Lieberman bill is also about creating a new and powerful economic engine. It is about creating hundreds of thousands, even millions of high-paying, permanent and sustainable jobs in America… Hundreds of thousands of new jobs in renewable energy have already been created by foresighted investors who see the need for clean energy that doesn't contribute to global warming. Millions more jobs can be created with the enactment of a strong cap-and-trade system.”
The Office of Management and Budget countered, saying the bill would impose economic costs of $10 trillion through 2050 primarily by boosting energy prices and would slash annual household disposable income by nearly $1,400 per household in 2030 and as much as $4,400 in 2050. "This would make S. 3036 by far the single most expensive regulatory bill in our nation's history," OMB said.
The Heritage Foundation calculated job losses under the Act would exceed 500,000 before 2030, even using the most favorable assumptions. And the National Association of Manufacturers predicted that more than 4 million jobs could be lost by 2030.
Talking about the “millions” of jobs that would be created and forgetting to mention the many more millions that would be destroyed truly takes the cake.
I commented in the last issue (19th December) on President-elect Barack Obama’s choices of John P. Holdren for White House science adviser and Jane Lubchenco for administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. I would like to say a bit more about the bizarre choice of Dr. Holdren.
Holdren holds the Teresa and John Heinz professorship at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, shared a Nobel Peace Prize in 1995 for his leading involvement with the Pugwash nuclear disarmament conferences, earned a Ph. D. in physics from Stanford University, won a MacArthur Foundation “genius” fellowship, has served as president and chairman of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and has published hundreds of articles and books. He has spent most of his career on areas and issues outside of physics, especially on energy and ecology policy.
Wow! That sounds great, doesn’t it? A man of high accomplishment, wide interests, and long involvement in public policy. Unfortunately, Holdren is also a lifelong doomster and close associate of Paul Ehrlich, who has promoted one nutty cause after another. Ehrlich called Holdren “one of the best scientists in the world,” and his recommendation alone should disqualify Holdren for any position of public trust.
There is something in Western civilization that regularly produces people proclaiming that the end of the world is nigh and that they are the leaders with the knowledge to prevent it. The threat is that people will actually believe these charlatans and sign up to remake the world according to their ideas. Holdren has moved from one looming disaster to another. What remains constant is that the disaster requires radical political action, which always includes massive increases in government.
His latest cause is what he calls global “climate disruption.” He regularly makes outlandish claims about the disastrous disruptions that are already occurring and the even more disastrous disruptions that are about to occur. And from these wild claims, which are not supported in the scientific literature, he jumps immediately to policy prescriptions. In short, the threat posed by global warming to civilization requires that we tear down civilization and rebuild it in a way more pleasing to the tastes of people like Holdren.
In my view, the Senate should not confirm John P. Holdren to be the White House science adviser and chairman of the Office of Science and Technology Policy.