The Honor of Being Mugged by Climate Censors
I believe in global warming but
also in responsible policies to address it. That can get you in trouble.
By Bjorn Lomborg in the Wall Street Journal
Opponents of free debate are
celebrating. Last week, under pressure from some climate-change activists, the
University of Western Australia canceled its contract to host a planned
research center, Australia Consensus, intended to apply economic cost-benefit
analysis to development projects—giving policy makers a tool to ensure their
aid budgets are spent wisely.
The new center in Perth was to be a
collaboration with a think tank I run, Copenhagen Consensus, which for a decade
has conducted similar research. Working with more than 100 economists,
including seven Nobel laureates, we have produced research that measures the
social and economic benefits of a wide range of policies, such as fighting
malaria, reducing malnutrition, cutting air pollution, improving education and
tackling climate change.
Therein lay the problem. This kind
of comparison can upset those who are committed to advocating less effective
investments, particularly poor responses to climate change.
Copenhagen Consensus research shows
that policy makers considering climate change have practical solutions. Cutting
fossil-fuel subsidies is a great idea. Each year $550 billion is wasted, mostly by developing nations, on subsidies that
mainly help the rich. A dramatic increase in spending on green-energy R&D
is needed, as innovation will drive down the price of green energy to the point
that it can outcompete fossil fuels. A well-crafted carbon tax would help too.
But our analyses also show that
Kyoto-style approaches—poorly designed EU climate policies, or the pledge to
hold warming to two degrees Celsius—are costly and ineffective. There are much
better ways we could spend money to help the planet.
That conclusion draws the ire of
some climate-change activists. When the collaboration between Copenhagen
Consensus and the University of Western Australia was announced, the Australian
Climate Council, led by paleontologist Tim Flannery, called it “an insult to
the scientific community.” Making up facts, the Climate Council warned
supporters that I think “we shouldn’t take any steps to mitigate climate
change.” This set the tone for the ensuing attacks.
A Sydney Morning Herald columnist
wrote that I had produced “anti climate change” work: a documentary, called
“Cool It,” exploring the smartest solutions to climate change. In this
columnist’s topsy-turvy world, one need never even question the science of
global warming to be “anti climate change.”
Under pressure, the university
canceled its contract with the Australian government to host the new research
center. The UWA’s vice chancellor said he believed the center would have
delivered “robust, evidence-based knowledge and advice” but that “the scale of
the strong and passionate emotional reaction was one that the university did not
predict.”
A small but loud group of opponents
deliberately ignored the Copenhagen Consensus’s endorsement of smart climate
policies. They also ignored that most of our research has nothing to do with
climate. The bulk of our papers focus on health, education, nutrition and the
many other areas where relatively small investments can help millions.
Philanthropists, donors and policy
makers must prioritize development goals. What Copenhagen Consensus does is
ensure that such parties understand the price tags and potential outcomes for
each option.
This work has shown that some aid
projects do phenomenally well: For instance, providing contraception to the 215
million women across the globe who lack access to it would reduce maternal
mortality and boost growth, producing $120 in social benefits for each dollar spent.
Other policies have lower
multipliers. Getting sanitation to the poorest half of the world, for example,
would produce only $3 of benefits for each dollar spent. This is worthy, but for a government
with a limited development budget, it probably isn’t the first place to spend
money.
We should focus resources where they
will do the most good—not where they will make us feel the most
good. The United Nations is setting 169 global development targets for the next
15 years. These are laudable aims, but together they’re a laundry list:
reduce arms trafficking; finance sustainable forest management; achieve
universal access to drinking water; halve deaths and injuries from traffic
accidents; increase market access for “small-scale artisanal fishers.”
Studies by Copenhagen Consensus show
that if the U.N. focused on only 19 of the most efficient projects, each dollar
of development spending would do four times more good.
There is a strong sense among some
climate-change activists, however, that global warming should not be subject to
such comparison. Thus it is easier for them to use emotional labels like
“climate denier” than to acknowledge our entire volume of research on aid,
development, environmental and health spending, simply because in one specific
area, current climate policy, some findings don’t line up with their unyielding
views.
“Australia’s culture of open debate
is increasingly sick,” Tim Wilson, Australia’s human rights commissioner, wrote Monday. “Outrage, confected or otherwise, is a popular tool to
condemn your opponents because it avoids the need to actually debate ideas.”
An 88-year-old UWA fellow said he
had never seen anything like this at the university. “People have been rejected
on account of insufficient abilities but not because they do not have the right
type of view,” Prof. Hank Greenway told the Australian.
What is the lesson for young
academics? Avoid producing research that could produce politically difficult
answers. Steer clear of results that others might find contentious. Consider
where your study could take you, and don’t go there if it means upsetting the
status quo.
The Australian government remains
committed to Australia Consensus, and I am still enthusiastic about working
with academics to build a research center that will be judged on its actual
output, improving global efforts on aid and development.
Our research will continue to go
where the economic evidence leads, rather than where idealism might make us
want to end up. Facts must never, ever be seen as an unwelcome contribution to
policy debate.
Mr. Lomborg, director of the
Copenhagen Consensus Center, is the author of “The Skeptical Environmentalist”
(Cambridge Press, 2001) and “Cool It” (Knopf, 2007).
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