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Hon Václav Klaus is
President of the Czech Republic.
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Guest Forum
Speech by Hon
Václav
Klaus, President of the Czech Republic
2009 International
Conference on Climate Change, New York, March 7, 2009
No
Progress in the Climate Change Debate
When preparing my today's
remarks, I took into my hands - looking for an inspiration -
my last year's speech here, at the Heartland Institute's
Conference. It did not help much. It is evident that the
climate change debate has not made any detectable progress and
that the much needed, long overdue exchange of views has not
yet started. All we see and hear are uninspiring monologues.
It reminds me of the
frustration people like me felt in the communist era. Whatever
you said, any convincing and well prepared arguments you used,
any relevant data you assembled, no reaction. It all fell into
emptiness. Nobody listened, especially "they"
did not listen. They didn't even try to argue back.
They considered you a naive, uninformed and confused person,
an eccentric, a complainer, someone not able to accept their
only truth. It is very similar now.
A few weeks ago, at the World
Economic Forum in Davos, I spent three hours at a closed
session of about sixty people - heads of states and
governments with several IPCC officials and
"experts" like Al Gore, Tony Blair and Kofi Annan.
The session was chaired by the Danish Prime Minister because
its main topic was how to prepare the new Kyoto, the December
2009 UN-Copenhagen summit.
It was a discouraging
experience. You looked around in vain to find at least one
person who would share your views. There was no one. All
the participants of the meeting took man-made global warming
for granted, were convinced of its dangerous
consequences and more or less competed in one special
discipline - whether to suggest a 20, 30, 50 or 80% CO2
emissions cut as an agreed-upon, world-wide project. It was
difficult to say anything meaningful and constructive. Among
other things I tried to turn their attention to was the
argument that they made such radical proposals even though
their own countries had not fulfilled even the relatively
modest Kyoto Protocol obligations. There was no reaction to
that. After the session, one friendly looking president of a
relatively large non-European country told me that he had
never heard anything like my views, but was interested and
wanted to hear more. I gave him my book "Blue
Planet in Green Shackles" [1]
Nevertheless, we have to
continue speaking to those people because they have a very
strong voice in popularizing the global warming alarmism and
in making decisions with far-reaching consequences. I try to
do it permanently. The politicians are, however, not alone.
They succeeded in creating incentives which led to the rise
of a very powerful rent-seeking group. Very much like
the politicians, these people are interested neither in
temperature, CO2, competing scientific hypotheses and their
testing, nor in freedom or markets. They are interested in
their businesses and their profits - made with the help of
politicians. These rent-seekers profit:
- from trading the licenses
to emit carbon dioxide;
- from constructing
unproductive wind, sun and other similar equipments able
to make only highly subsidized electric energy;
- from growing non-food
crops which produce non-carbon fuels at the expense of
producing food (with well-known side effects);
- from doing research,
writing and speaking about global warming.
It is always the same story
with the same results. On the one hand, a highly concentrated
and easily organized rent-seeking group and, on the other,
widely dispersed, and therefore politically unorganizable
individuals, the usual silent majority. I am frustrated that
the economists and other social scientists do not try to enter
the current debate. For us, in the former communist countries,
the discovery of the works of the public-choice school
scholars was a revealing experience. I somewhat naively
assumed that their views belonged to the "conventional
wisdom" in the Western world. This was not and is not
true.
How to educate and enlighten
those who make decisions? The politicians - hopefully -
sometimes look at the very condensed versions of the IPCC's
Summaries for Policymakers but these documents do not
represent science, but politics and environmental activism. It
is difficult to change their minds. They did fully
subscribe to the idea that the IPCC publications represent
"the" climate science. We know that is not
true and that there is no scientific discipline of climate
science. Climate is such a complex system that it has no
"science" of its own. There are, of course,
very respectable sciences that deal with some parts of it. And
they tell us quite persuasively that:
- there is no one
unique, unprecedented climate change just now, but
permanent climate changes. The climate system of our
planet has a significant internal variability. The past
data are in this respect quite convincing;
- the current climate
changes cannot be subsumed under the hypothesis of
anthropogenic global warming. This claim is based
exclusively on the results of experiments with the very
imperfect computer models;
- the Earth's climate
sensitivity to carbon dioxide is lower than is assumed by
the IPCC. For a doubling of carbon dioxide
concentration the global average surface temperature will
increase not more than by about 0,5 °C;
- there is no fixed
and stable relationship between measured temperature and
CO2 emissions. The believers in this hypothesis
are not able to explain why the global temperature
increased from 1918 to 1940, decreased from 1940 to 1976,
increased from 1976 to 1998 and decreased from 1998 to the
present, irrespective of the fact that the people have
been adding increasing amounts of CO2 to the atmosphere.
I would be able to continue
presenting further arguments of that kind but this is not a
field in which I do possess any comparative advantage. Perhaps
in Davos, but not here. I am, therefore, looking forward to
new ideas, arguments and data coming out of this conference.
Let me make a few short
comments from "my" fields.
I am puzzled by the
environmentalists' approach to technical progress. On the one
hand, there is a huge difference between our technology
optimism, based on our belief in secular improvements
in technology on condition the free and unregulated,
unconstrained, unmanipulated economic system makes them
possible, and environmentalists' technology skepticism
along traditional Malthusian lines. On the other hand, the
environmentalists are, at the same time technology
naivists who freely and irresponsibly operate with
miraculous technologies which have only one defect: they
have not yet been invented. This is an apparent
schizophrenia on their side. They should tell us how it really
is. I am afraid they are not so naive as they pretend to be.
They, probably, "only" do not want to reveal their
true plans and ambitions: to stop economic development and
return mankind centuries back. In that case
technologies are unimportant.
Their attack on today's
technologies is an irrational practice with fatal
consequences. As far as I know the existing and functioning
technologies had never been abandoned before they were
genuinely replaced by better ones. There arises - for the
first time in history - a threat that the old technologies
will be abandoned before new technologies become available.
This should also be explained to the politicians in
alternative "summaries for policymakers", but they
should be written by economists. We should also tell them that
there is no known and economically feasible method or
technology by which industrial economies can survive on
expensive, unreliable, clean, green, renewable energy.
Another issue which bothers
me is the exceptional absence of rational thinking as regards
intertemporal decision making, especially when time-horizons
are so long as in this case. The despotically ruling,
politically correct aprioristic moralism (based on the
disagreement with the infamous Keynes' dictum "in the
long run, we are all dead" or with the not less famous
Madame De Pompadour's maxim - "après nous le
déluge") is basically flawed. The questions which need
to be answered are serious and non-trivial. Should we make
radical decisions now? Should we tax today's generations to
benefit future generations? Should we be generously
altruistic? Should we give preference to future generations
and not to the people living in undeveloped countries today? My
answer is no. We could have made such far-reaching
decisions only on the absolutely unrealistic assumption that
we know all relevant parameters of the future economic system,
including the level of wealth and technology, and that we know
all the parameters in an adequately discounted form. The
controversy about Nicolas Stern's and Ross Garnaut's
irrationally low discount rates used in their very influential
models suggests that such transfers are not justifiable.
To conclude, it is evident
that the environmentalists don't want to change the
climate. They want to change us and our behavior.
Their ambition is to control and manipulate us. Therefore, it
should not be surprising that they recommend
"preventive", not "adaptive" policies.
Adaptation would be our voluntary behavior which is not what
they aim at. They do not want to recognize that - to quote
Nigel Lawson - "the capacity to adapt is arguably the
most fundamental characteristic of mankind" and that our
"adaptive capacity is increasing all the time with the
development of technology" [2].
The environmentalists speak
about "Saving the Planet". From what? And from whom?
One thing I know for sure: we have to save it - and us - from
them.
FOOTNOTES:
[1]
Blue Planet in Green Shackles, Competitive Enterprise
Institute,
Washington
,
DC
, May 2008. It has been published already in eight languages.
In a week from now, the Italian edition will be launched in
Milan
.
[2]Nigel
Lawson: An Appeal to Reason – A Cool Look at Global Warming,
Duckworth Overlook, London, 2008, pp 39.
Václav
Klaus
is a vocal critic of the notion that any global warming is
anthropogenic (man-caused). "Global warming is a false
myth and every serious person and scientist says so." He
has also criticized the IPCC climate panel as a group of
politicized scientists with one-sided opinions and one-sided
assignments. He has said that other top-level politicians do
not expose their doubts about global warming because "a
whip of political correctness strangles their voices."
In
addition he says "Environmentalism should belong in the
social sciences" along with other "isms" such
as communism, feminism, and liberalism. President Klaus said
that "environmentalism is a religion" and, in an
answer to the questions of the U.S. Congressmen, a
"modern counterpart of communism" that seeks to
change peoples' habits and economic systems.
In
an article for Financial Times, Klaus called ambitious
environmentalism "the biggest threat to freedom,
democracy, the market economy and prosperity", hinted
that parts of the present political and scientific debate on
the environment are suppressing freedom and democracy, and
asked for readers opposing the term "scientific
consensus", saying that "it is always achieved only
by a loud minority, never by a silent majority". He had a
Q&A session with some internet readers following the
article. He wrote that "Environmentalism, not
preservation of nature (and of environment), is a leftist
ideology.... Environmentalism is indeed a vehicle for bringing
us socialist government at the global level. Again, my life in
communism makes me oversensitive in this respect." He
reiterated these statements at a showing of Martin Durkin's The
Great Global Warming Swindle organised by his think tank
CEP in June 2007, becoming the first head of state to endorse
the film. In an interview with BBC World he called the
interviewer "absolutely arrogant" for claiming that
a scientific consensus embracing the bulk of the world had
been reached on climate change and said that he was
"absolutely certain" that people would look back in
30 years and thank him.
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