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March 23, 2007

Jonathan Rauch on climate change

Jonathan Rauch's latest column is now online at Reason:

Climate change, then, is a reason to do more of what makes sense anyway: reduce coastal vulnerability and strengthen homes to minimize hurricane damage, improve public health and develop drugs to fight malaria, and so on. There is nothing radical about any of this. No rethinking of capitalism is required.

Given how neatly adaptation dovetails with the sustainability agenda, and given its immense potential to relieve whatever human suffering that global warming causes, one might think environmentalists would tout it to the skies. Some do, but many seem to believe that reducing harm distracts from the real job, which is to reduce emissions. In a blog post last year (at gristmill.org), an environmentalist named David Roberts made the point with startling candor. "In an ideal, abstract policy debate, sure, I'd say we should boost our attention to adaptation," he wrote. "But in the current political situation, I don't want to provide any ammunition for the moral cretins who are squirming frantically to avoid policies that might impact their corporate donors."

This is like denigrating HIV treatment and blocking condom distribution in order to discourage promiscuity. And it is every bit as callous and irresponsible. Where climate change is concerned, the truth — and this truth really is inconvenient, or at least sad — is that too many activists and politicians mistake panic for virtue.

Posted by Nicholas at March 23, 2007 09:54 AM
Comments
Good point Johnathan. I agree that adaptation has to be done hand-in-hand with the whole range of things we must do to slow global warming. My fear is that none of the plans on the table anywhere in the world equate to peaking world emissions by 2015-2020 or reducing them 90% by 2050. Environmentalists are waking up to fact that the science is evolving much faster than they can react and that they themselves need to change their approaches and solutions to fit a rapidly changing reality. The global climate change movement is a big ship that takes too long to turn. On a related point, if any of your readers are interested in the federal C30 committee to ammend the Clean Air Act, they should checkout www.adoptanmp.ca. It's a way for people to connect with members on the committee so they can tell them what they think. Posted by: Ruth Edwards at March 23, 2007 10:07 AM


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