2015 earth day
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Wednesday, April 22 is Earth Day. To hear the experts like Usher and
Al Gore tell the story, the planet is in a miserable state. We're
running out of our natural resources, we're overpopulating the globe and
running out of room, the air that we breathe is becoming toxic, the
oceans are rising and soon major coastal cities will be underwater, and
the Earth is, of course, heating up, except when it is cooling down.
This is perhaps the single greatest misinformation campaign in world
history. Virtually none of these claims are even close to the truth --
except for the fact that our climate is always changing as it has for
hundreds of thousands of years.
Since the first Earth Day back in
the 1970s, the environmentalists -- those who worship the creation
rather than the Creator have issued one false prediction of Armageddon
after another and yet despite the fact that their batting average is
zero, the media and our schools keep parroting their declinism as if
they were oracles not shysters.
Here are the factual realities we should be celebrating on Earth Day.
1. Natural resources are more abundant and affordable today than ever before in history. Short
term (sometimes decades-long) the price of most natural resources --
from cocoa to cotton to coal -- is cheaper today in real terms than 50,
100, or 500 years ago. This has happened even as the world's population
has nearly tripled. Technology has far outpaced depletion of the earth's
resources.
2. Energy -- the master resource -- is super-abundant.
Remember when people like Stanford biologist Paul R. Ehrlich warned
nearly 50 years ago (and Barack Obama just three years ago) that we were
running out of oil and gas? Today, thanks to fracking ushering in a new
age of oil and gas, the United States has hundreds of years of
petroleum at its disposal and at least an estimated 290 years of coal.
Keep in mind, this may be a low-ball estimate; since 2000, the Energy
Information Administration's estimates of recoverable reserves have
actually increased by more than 7 percent.
We're not running out of energy, we are running into it.
3. Our air and water are cleaner. Since the late 1970s,
pollutants in the air have plunged. Lead pollution plunged by more than
90 percent, carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide by more than 50 percent,
with ozone and nitrogen dioxide declining as well. This means that
emissions per capita have declined even as the economy in terms of real
GDP nearly tripled. By nearly every standard measure, it is much, much,
much cleaner today in the United States than 50 or even 100 years ago.
The air is so clean now that the EPA worries about carbon dioxide --
which isn't even a pollutant. (And, by the way, carbon emissions are
falling too, thanks to fracking.). One hundred years ago, about one in
four deaths in the U.S. was due to contaminants in drinking water. But
from 1971-2002, fewer than 3 people per year in the U.S. were documented
to have died from water contamination.
4. There is no Malthusian nightmare of overpopulation. Birth
rates have fallen by about one-half around the world over the last 50
years. Developed countries are having too few kids, not too many. Even
with a population of 7.3 billion people, average incomes, especially in
poor countries, have surged over the last forty years. The number of
people in abject poverty fell by almost one billion from 1981 to 2011,
even as global population increased by more than 1.5 billion.
5. Global per capita food production is 40 percent higher today than as recently as 1950. In
most nations the nutrition problem today is obesity -- too many
calories consumed -- not hunger. The number of famines and related
deaths over the last 100 years has fallen in half. More than 12 million
lives on average were lost each decade from the 1920s-1960s to famine.
Since then, fewer than 4 million lives on average per decade were lost.
Tragically, these famines are often caused by political corruption --
not nature. Furthermore, the price of food has fallen steadily in the
U.S. And most nations steadily for 200 years.
6. The rate of death and physical destruction from natural
disasters or severe weather changes has plummeted over the last 50 to
100 years. Loss of life from hurricanes, floods, hurricanes, heat,
droughts, and so on is at or near record lows. This is because we have
much better advance warning systems, our infrastructure is much more
durable, and we have inventions like air conditioning, to adapt to
weather changes. We are constantly discovering new ways to harness and
even tame nature.
Earth Day should be a day of joy and celebration that life on this bountiful planet is better than anytime in human history.
The state of the planet has never been in such fine shape by almost
every objective measure. The Chicken Littles are as wrong today as they
were 50 years ago. This is very good news for those who believe that one
of our primary missions as human beings is to make life better over
time and to leave our planet better off for future generations.
Happy Earth Day.
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