Climate Change Critic Changes Mind
Bjorn Lomborg: Sceptical environmentalist changed his mind
Bjørn Lomborg: $100bn a year needed to fight climate change
Exclusive 'Sceptical environmentalist' and critic of climate scientists to declare global warming a chief concern facing world
• Climate change voice who changed his tune
· Juliette Jowit
· guardian.co.uk, Monday 30 August 2010 20.17 BST
The world's most high-profile climate change sceptic is to declare that global warming is "undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today" and "a challenge humanity must confront", in an apparent U-turn that will give a huge boost to the embattled environmental lobby.
Bjørn Lomborg, the self-styled "sceptical environmentalist" once compared to Adolf Hitler by the UN's climate chief, is famous for attacking climate scientists, campaigners, the media and others for exaggerating the rate of global warming and its effects on humans, and the costly waste of policies to stop the problem.
But in a new book to be published next month, Lomborg will call for tens of billions of dollars a year to be invested in tackling climate change. "Investing $100bn annually would mean that we could essentially resolve the climate change problem by the end of this century," the book concludes.
Examining eight methods to reduce or stop global warming, Lomborg and his fellow economists recommend pouring money into researching and developing clean energy sources such as wind, wave, solar and nuclear power, and more work on climate engineering ideas such as "cloud whitening" to reflect the sun's heat back into the outer atmosphere.
In a Guardian interview, he said he would finance investment through a tax on carbon emissions that would also raise $50bn to mitigate the effect of climate change, for example by building better sea defences, and $100bn for global healthcare.
His declaration about the importance of action on climate change comes at a crucial point in the debate, with international efforts to agree a global deal on emissions stalled amid a resurgence in scepticism caused by rows over the reliability of the scientific evidence for global warming.
The fallout from those rows continued yesterday when Rajendra Pachauri, head of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, came under new pressure to step down after an independent review of the panel's work called for tighter term limits for its senior executives and greater transparency in its workings. The IPCC has come under fire in recent months following revelations of inaccuracies in the last assessment of global warming, provided to governments in 2007 – for which it won the Nobel peace prize with former the US vice-president Al Gore. The mistakes, including a claim that the Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035, prompted a review of the IPCC's processes and procedures by the InterAcademy Council (IAC), an organisation of world science bodies.
The IAC said the IPCC needed to be as transparent as possible in how it worked, how it selected people to participate in assessments and its choice of scientific information to assess.
Although Pachauri once compared Lomborg to Hitler, he has now given an unlikely endorsement to the new book, Smart Solutions to Climate Change. In a quote for the launch, Pachauri said: "This book provides not only a reservoir of information on the reality of human-induced climate change, but raises vital questions and examines viable options on what can be done."
Lomborg denies he has performed a volte face, pointing out that even in his first book he accepted the existence of man-made global warming. "The point I've always been making is it's not the end of the world," he told the Guardian. "That's why we should be measuring up to what everybody else says, which is we should be spending our money well."
But he said the crucial turning point in his argument was the Copenhagen Consensus project, in which a group of economists were asked to consider how best to spend $50bn. The first results, in 2004, put global warming near the bottom of the list, arguing instead for policies such as fighting malaria and HIV/Aids. But a repeat analysis in 2008 included new ideas for reducing the temperature rise, some of which emerged about halfway up the ranking. Lomborg said he then decided to consider a much wider variety of policies to reduce global warming, "so it wouldn't end up at the bottom".
The difference was made by examining not just the dominant international policy to cut carbon emissions, but also seven other "solutions" including more investment in technology, climate engineering, and planting more trees and reducing soot and methane, also significant contributors to climate change, said Lomborg.
"If the world is going to spend hundreds of millions to treat climate, where could you get the most bang for your buck?" was the question posed, he added.After the analyses, five economists were asked to rank the 15 possible policies which emerged. Current policies to cut carbon emissions through taxes - of which Lomborg has long been critical - were ranked largely at the bottom of four of the lists. At the top were more direct public investment in research and development rather than spending money on low carbon energy now, and climate engineering.
Lomborg acknowledged trust was a problem when committing to long term R&D, but said politicians were already reneging on promises to cut emissions, and spending on R&D would be easier to monitor. Although many believe private companies are better at R&D than governments, Lomborg said low carbon energy was a special case comparable to massive public investment in computers from the 1950s, which later precpitated the commercial IT revolution.
Lomborg also admitted climate engineering could cause "really bad stuff" to happen, but argued if it could be a cheap and quick way to reduce the worst impacts of climate change and thus there was an "obligation to at least look at it".
He added: "This is not about 'we have all got to live with less, wear hair-shirts and cut our carbon emissions'. It's about technologies, about realising there's a vast array of solutions."
Despite his change of tack, however, Lomborg is likely to continue to have trenchant critics. Writing for today's Guardian, Howard Friel, author of the book The Lomborg Deception, said: "If Lomborg were really looking for smart solutions, he would push for an end to perpetual and brutal war, which diverts scarce resources from nearly everything that Lomborg legitimately says needs more money."
• This article was amended on 31st August 2010 to remove an accidental duplication of the quote from Rajendra Pachauri.
· guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limite
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Former Skeptic Offers Ideas On Climate Change
Former Skeptic Offers Ideas On Climate Change
by Dan Charles
September 3, 2010
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All Things Considered
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September 3, 2010
Bjorn Lomborg, the controversial Danish economist, has pushed his way back into the global warming debate with a book that proposes "smart solutions" to climate change. Those promised solutions rely heavily on R&D aimed at making clean energy cheap, rather than attempts to shut down dirty energy sources. Lomborg says his views haven't changed, but more people are willing to listen to him because international negotiations on limiting greenhouse emissions have accomplished so little.
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MELISSA BLOCK, host:
Bjorn Lomborg, a controversial Danish economist, has pushed his way back into the global warming debate. He's done it with a book promoting what he calls smart solutions to climate change. The book has raised eyebrows because Lomborg - who's often considered a climate change skeptic - now supports a tax on greenhouse gas emissions.
But as NPR's Dan Charles reports, Lomborg is still making environmentalists very angry.
DAN CHARLES: Bjorn Lomborg made a big splash almost 10 years ago with a book called "The Skeptical Environmentalist." He was skeptical, for example, about evidence that humans were warming up the globe. He says those doubts got resolved.
Mr. BJORN LOMBORG (Author): I've said for many years: Global warming is real. It's man-made, and it is an important problem.
CHARLES: Yet Lomborg still believes there's no point trying to solve the problem by shutting down power plants or getting people out of their cars. It's not cost-effective. He cites an economic model which estimates the effect of using a big tax on coal and gas to drive down carbon dioxide emissions.
According to this model, you'd need a huge tax if you want to cut those emissions enough to keep temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius, compared to preindustrial levels. The tax would be a hundred dollars per ton of carbon dioxide now, going up to $4,000 a ton a century from now.
Lomborg says no one will tolerate this - the costs far outweigh the benefits.
Mr. LOMBORG: For every dollar spent, mainly in GDP loss, you will avoid a couple of cents of climate damage.
CHARLES: So those U.N.-sponsored negotiations aimed at limiting CO2 emissions are a futile exercise, Lomborg says, and more and more people realize this. They're searching for a different approach.
Mr. LOMBORG: I think we do need to shake up our negotiators and start talking about are there other ways that we could potentially do this?
CHARLES: His latest book is full of these other ways. Actually, Lomborg only wrote the conclusion. Various experts wrote sections putting forward different ideas, and a panel of top economists, including three Nobel laureates, picked those they liked most. They didn't like the tax. But they did like some geoengineering ideas: cooling the globe by launching clouds of sulfur particles into the stratosphere, for instance, or spraying ocean water into the air to make more clouds.
And the best way forward, Lomborg says, is to pour money into research, so that down the road, it won't cost a thing to shut down those coal-burning power plants.
Mr. LOMBORG: Essentially, you make solar panels and all the other green energy technologies so cheap that everyone wants to buy them.
CHARLES: The money to pay for that R&D - a hundred billion dollars per year -would come from a global tax on coal, oil and gas, but just a small tax - $7 per ton of carbon dioxide.
Jonathan Lash, who's head of the World Resources Institute in Washington, D.C., is not impressed.
Mr. JONATHAN LASH (President, World Resources Institute): It sounds like someone who did not think we should do anything about climate change now finding reasons why we shouldn't do very much.
CHARLES: The problem is urgent, Lash says. The warming we've seen so far amounts to just 8/10ths of 1 degree Celsius - much more is coming.
Mr. LASH: Siberia's burning, Pakistan is underwater, there's record heat in the United States. It just isn't the time to offer research as a substitute for action.
CHARLES: Lash also says Lomborg's claims about the disastrous impact of taxing fossil fuels are way off the mark. So I called the researcher who did those calculations for Lomborg's book, Richard Tol, at the Economic and Research Institute in Dublin, Ireland.
And Tol says Lomborg is only telling part of the story. It's true, he says, bringing global warming to a screeching halt just by taxing fossil fuels would be enormously expensive. But his model shows that a more modest carbon tax could be cost-effective.
Dr. RICHARD TOL (Research Professor, Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin): If you reduce emissions by a little bit, it's fairly cheap.
CHARLES: And those first cuts in carbon dioxide emissions bring the biggest benefits, because they prevent the most extreme warming.
Dr. TOL: If you avoid the worst hit of climate change, it's going to bring a lot of benefits, but the benefits of reducing it further gets smaller and smaller and smaller.
CHARLES: Also, says Tol, much of that new clean technology that Lomborg hopes for may not appear without a carbon tax. Green technologies already exist, but they won't take over until dirty energy gets more expensive.
Dan Charles, NPR News, Washington.