EDITORIAL: Prosperity improves our environment
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[July 28, 2008]

EDITORIAL: Prosperity improves our environment

(Northwest Florida Daily News (Fort Walton Beach) (KRT) Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) Jul. 28--Here's good news that may have escaped attention. The environment worldwide is getting better and better, largely because of economic growth, efficiency and innovation. So says the 2008 Index of Leading Environmental Indicators, an annual report on worldwide air and water quality and climate change by the Pacific Research Institute, a free-market think tank.


While government regulation plays a "central role" in improving the environment, PRI says, it would be ineffective were it not for affluence and technological advances. That may be why PRI also warns that imposing drastic measures to curb man-made greenhouse gas emissions could roll back the very economic and technological gains essential to improving the environment.

For example, to reach the goal set by some global-warming alarmists -- an 80 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 -- the United States would have to revert to a per-capita emission rate last seen in 1910. Considering the nation's population will increase to 420 million by 2050, the per-capita rate would have to roll back even more, to a level "not seen in the nation since 1875."


For perspective, "unless there is a genuine breakthrough in carbon-free electricity," PRI concludes, "households will not be able to use enough electricity to run a water heater without exceeding" the percapita emission limit.

The only countries with greenhouse gas emissions that low "are desperately poor nations, such as Haiti and Somalia," wrote Steven F. Hayward, PRI's senior fellow of environmental studies. "Automobile fuel consumption will have to fall by more than 80 percent."

Concludes PRI: "The 80 percent reduction target is unrealistic at any price."

Given the option of continued innovation and technological advances inherent in economic growth versus economy-retarding limits on greenhouse gas emissions, it seems clear to us which one is preferable. Swedish environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg has made the same case for years.

In arriving at the "Copenhagen Consensus" in 2006, Mr. Lomborg asked 24 U.N. ambassadors from nations including China, India and the United States to set priorities for solutions to the world's greatest challenges. "They looked at what spending money to combat climate change and other major problems could achieve," Mr. Lomborg wrote in The Wall Street Journal. "They found that the world should prioritize the need for better health, nutrition, water, sanitation and education, long before we turn our attention to the costly mitigation of global warning."

The PRI study underscores this truism. Wealthy nations can afford to clean up the environment. Poor nations have their hands full just feeding people. The more money diverted from economic growth -- and, worse yet, money frittered away on counterproductive curbs on economic growth -- the worse the environmental consequences.

Here's another item that may have escaped attention. U.S. greenhouse gas emissions declined by 1.5 percent in 2006, a first for a non-recession year. PRI says it's likely the United States was the only industrialized nation to experience a reduction.

Whether one believes greenhouse gases pose an environmental threat, the greater point is that the United States is capable of such a reduction because of its economic, technological and innovative advances. Blindly imposing government mandates without regard to their effect on the economy, technology and innovation will do little except inhibit prosperity and move the nation closer to the model of Haiti and Somalia.

As Mr. Lomborg has written: "We all want a better world. But we must not let ourselves be swept up in making a bad investment, simply because we have been scared by sensationalist headlines."

To see more of the Northwest Florida Daily News or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.nwfdailynews.com.

Copyright (c) 2008, Northwest Florida Daily News, Fort Walton Beach
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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