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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
2008 International
Conference on Climate Change, New York, March 4, 2008
From
Climate Alarmism to Climate Realism
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Mr. Chairman, ladies and
gentlemen,
I would like first of all to thank the organizers of this
important conference for making it possible and also for
inviting one politically incorrect politician from Central
Europe to come and speak here. This meeting will undoubtedly
make a significant contribution to the moving away from the
irrational climate alarmism to the much needed climate
realism.
I know it is difficult to say anything interesting after two
days of speeches and discussions here. If I am not wrong, I am
the only speaker from a former communist country and I have to
use this as a comparative – paradoxically – advantage.
Each one of us has his or her experiences, prejudices and
preferences. The ones that I have are – quite inevitably –
connected with the fact that I have spent most of my life
under the communist regime. A week ago, I gave a speech at an
official gathering at the Prague Castle commemorating the 60th
anniversary of the 1948 communist putsch in the former
Czechoslovakia. One of the arguments of my speech there,
quoted in all the leading newspapers in the country the next
morning, went as follows: “Future dangers will not come from
the same source. The ideology will be different. Its essence
will, nevertheless, be identical – the attractive, pathetic,
at first sight noble idea that transcends the individual in
the name of the common good, and the enormous self-confidence
on the side of its proponents about their right to sacrifice
the man and his freedom in order to make this idea reality.”
What I had in mind was, of course, environmentalism and its
currently strongest version, climate alarmism.
This fear of mine is the driving force behind my active
involvement in the Climate Change Debate and behind my being
the only head of state who in September 2007 at the UN Climate
Change Conference, only a few blocks away from here, openly
and explicitly challenged the current global warming hysteria.
My central argument was – in a condensed form – formulated
in the subtitle of my recently published book devoted to this
topic which asks: “What is Endangered: Climate or
Freedom?” My answer is clear and resolute: “it is our
freedom.” I may also add “and our prosperity.”
What frustrates me is the feeling that everything has already
been said and published, that all rational arguments have been
used, yet it still does not help. Global warming alarmism is
marching on. We have to therefore concentrate (here and
elsewhere) not only on adding new arguments to the already
existing ones, but also on the winning of additional
supporters of our views. The insurmountable problem as I see
it lies in the political populism of its exponents and in
their unwillingness to listen to arguments. They – in spite
of their public roles – maximize their own private utility
function where utility is not any public good but their own
private good – power, prestige, carrier, income, etc. It is
difficult to motivate them differently. The only way out is to
make the domain of their power over our lives much more
limited. But this will be a different discussion.
We have to repeatedly deal with the simple questions that have
been many times discussed here and elsewhere:
1) Is there a statistically significant global warming?
2) If so, is it man-made?
3) If we decide to stop it, is there anything a man can do
about it?
4) Should an eventual moderate temperature increase bother us?
We have our answers to these questions and are fortunate to
have many well-known and respected experts here who have made
important contributions in answering them. Yet, I am not sure
this is enough. People tend to blindly believe in the IPCC’s
conclusions (especially in the easier to understand
formulations presented in the “Summaries for
Policymakers”) despite the fact that from the very
beginning, the IPCC has been a political rather than a
scientific undertaking.
Many politicians, media commentators, public intellectuals,
bureaucrats in more and more influential international
organizations not only accept them but use them without
qualifications which exist even in the IPCC documents. There
are sometimes unexpected and for me unexplainable believers in
these views. Few days ago, I have come across a lecture given
by a very respected German economist (H. W. Sinn, “Global
Warming: The Neglected Supply Side, in: The EEAG Report,
CESifo, Munich, 2008) who is in his other writings very
critical of the German interventionist economic policies and
etatist institutions. His acceptance of the “conventional
IPCC wisdom” (perhaps unwisdom) is striking. His words:
- “the scientific evidence is overwhelming”;
- “the facts are undeniable”;
- “the temperature is extremely sensitive to even small
variations in greenhouse gas concentration”;
- “if greenhouse gases were absent from the atmosphere,
average temperature of the Earth’s surface would be -6°C.
With the greenhouse gases, the present average temperature is
+15°C. Therefore, the impact of CO2 is enormous”;
- he was even surprised that “in spite of all the measures
taken, emissions have accelerated in recent years. This poses
a puzzle for economic theory!” he said.
To make it less of a puzzle, let me make two brief comments.
As an economist, I have to start by stressing the obvious.
Carbon dioxide emissions do not fall from heaven. Their volume
(ECO2) is a function of GDP per capita (which means of the
size of economic activity, SEA), of the number of people (POP)
and of the emissions intensity (EI), which is the amount of
CO2 emissions per dollar of GDP. This is usually expressed in
a simple relationship which is, of course, a tautological
identity:
ECO2= EI x SEA x POP
but with some assumption about causality it can be turned into
a structural equation. What this relationship tells is simple:
If we really want to decrease ECO2 (which most of us assembled
here today probably do not consider necessary), we have to
either stop the economic growth and thus block further rise in
the standard of living, or stop the population growth, or make
miracles with the emissions intensity.
I am afraid there are people who want to stop the economic
growth, the rise in the standard of living (though not their
own) and the ability of man to use the expanding wealth,
science and technology for solving the actual pressing
problems of mankind, especially of the developing countries.
This ambition goes very much against the past human experience
which has always been connected with a strong motivation to go
ahead and to better human conditions. There is no reason to
make the, from above orchestrated, change just now –
especially with arguments based on such an incomplete and
faulty science as is demonstrated by the IPCC. Human wants are
unlimited and should stay so. Asceticism is a respectable
individual attitude but should not be forcefully imposed upon
the rest of us.
I am also afraid that the same people, imprisoned in the
Malthusian tenets and in their own megalomaniac ambitions,
want to regulate and constrain the demographic development,
which is something only the totalitarian regimes have until
now dared to think about or experiment with. Without resisting
it we would find ourselves on the slippery “road to
serfdom.” The freedom to have children without regulation
and control is one of the undisputable human rights and we
have to say very loudly that we do respect it and will do so
in the future as well.
There are people among the global warming alarmists who would
protest against being included in any of these categories, but
who do call for a radical decrease in carbon dioxide
emissions. It can be achieved only by means of a radical
decline in the emissions intensity. This is surprising because
we probably believe in technical progress more than our
opponents. We know, however, that such revolutions in economic
efficiency (and emissions intensity is part of it) have never
been realized in the past and will not happen in the future
either. To expect anything like that is a non-serious
speculation.
I recently looked at the European CO2 emissions data covering
the period 1990-2005, which means the Kyoto Protocol era. My
conclusion is that in spite of many opposite statements the
very robust relationship between CO2 emissions and the rate of
economic growth can’t be disputed, at least in a relevant
and meaningful time horizon. You don’t need huge computer
models to very easily distinguish three different types of
countries in Europe:
- the EU less developed countries – Greece, Ireland,
Portugal and Spain – which during this very period tried to
catch up with the economic performance of the more developed
EU countries. Their rapid economic growth led to the increase
of their CO2 emissions in 15 years (in which they signed
Kyoto) by 53%;
- the European post-communist countries which after the fall
of communism went through a fundamental, voluntarily
unorganizable transformation shake-out and an inevitable
radical economic restructuring with the heavy industry
disappearing (not stagnating or retreating) practically over
night. Their GDP drastically declined. These countries
decreased their CO2 emissions in the same period by 32%;
- the “normal” EU, slow-growing if not stagnating
countries (excluding Germany where it’s difficult to
eliminate the impact of the fact that the East German economy
almost ceased to exist in that period) increased their CO2
emissions by 4%.
The huge differences in these three figures – +53%, -32% and
+4% – are almost fascinating. And yet, there is a dream
among European politicians to reduce CO2 emissions for the
entire EU by 30 per cent in the next 13 years (compared to the
1990 level). What does it mean? Do they assume that all
countries would undergo a similar economic shock as was
experienced by the Central and Eastern European countries
after the fall of communism? Now in the whole of Europe? Do
they assume that European economically weaker countries would
stop their catching-up process? Or do they intend to organize
a decrease in the number of people living in Europe? Or do
they expect a miracle in the development of the emissions/GDP
ratio, which would require a technological revolution of
unheard-of proportions? With the help of a – from Brussels
organized – scientific and technological revolution?
What I see in Europe (and in the U.S. and other countries as
well) is a powerful combination of irresponsibility, of
wishful thinking, of implicit believing in some form of
Malthusianism, of cynical approach of those who themselves are
sufficiently well-off, together with the strong belief in the
possibility of changing the economic nature of things through
a radical political project.
This brings me to politics. As a politician who personally
experienced communist central planning of all kinds of human
activities, I feel obliged to bring back the already almost
forgotten arguments used in the famous plan-versus-market
debate in the 1930s in economic theory (between Mises and
Hayek on the one side and Lange and Lerner on the other), the
arguments we had been using for decades – till the moment of
the fall of communism. Then they were quickly forgotten. The
innocence with which climate alarmists and their
fellow-travelers in politics and media now present and justify
their ambitions to mastermind human society belongs to the
same “fatal conceit.” To my great despair, this is not
sufficiently challenged neither in the field of social
sciences, nor in the field of climatology. Especially the
social sciences are suspiciously silent.
The climate alarmists believe in their own omnipotency, in
knowing better than millions of rationally behaving men and
women what is right or wrong, in their own ability to assembly
all relevant data into their Central Climate Change Regulatory
Office (CCCRO) equipped with huge supercomputers, in the
possibility to give adequate instructions to hundreds of
millions of individuals and institutions and in the
non-existence of an incentive problem (and the resulting
compliance or non-compliance of those who are supposed to
follow these instructions).
We have to restart the discussion about the very nature of
government and about the relationship between the individual
and society. Now it concerns the whole mankind, not just the
citizens of one particular country. To discuss this means to
look at the canonically structured theoretical discussion
about socialism (or communism) and to learn the uncompromising
lesson from the inevitable collapse of communism 18 years ago.
It is not about climatology. It is about freedom. This should
be the main message of our conference.
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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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