Summary: We face unprecedented environmental challenges in the next 50 years. Exaggerated warnings by greens, often wildly inaccurate, reduce our ability to cope with likely problems. Hysterical single-issue advocacy groups are part of the problem, not the solution.

Here is an essential perspective to know on the 48th anniversary of a valuable but ultimately botched idea.

By Ronald Bailey in Reason, May 2000.

“The planet’s future has never looked better. Here’s why.”

The environment in the developed nations has improved since the first Earth Day in 1970, but the damage in most developing nations has been severe or worse. We are wrecking the oceans. As the rest of the world industrializes and the population grows to 10 (or 12 billion), there will be more damage.

Bailey concludes with a prediction. I believe he is probably wrong about 2030. But his optimism will probably prove right about 2060, and almost certainly right about 2090.

“… {In 2030} as many developing countries become wealthier, they will start to pass through the environmental-transition thresholds for various pollutants, and their air and water quality will begin to improve. Certainly air and water quality in the United States, Europe, Japan, and other developed countries will be even better than it is today. Enormous progress will be made on the medical front, and diseases like AIDS and malaria may well be finally conquered. As for climate change, concern may be abating because the world’s energy production mix is shifting toward natural gas and nuclear power. There is always the possibility that a technological breakthrough – say, cheap, efficient, non-polluting fuel cells – could radically reshape the energy sector. In any case a richer world will be much better able to cope with any environmental problems that might crop up.

“One final prediction, of which I’m most absolutely certain: There will be a disproportionately influential group of doomsters predicting that the future–and the present – never looked so bleak.”

The core of Bailey’s essay is the description of Leftists’ many failed predictions. Most of these had little or no analytical foundation when they were made. Earth Day inaugurated the modern era of Big Exaggerations for the News Media as a path to career success for green activists.

Using fear to pushing the public to change public policy

“If current trends continue by the year 2000 the United Kingdom will simply be a small group of impoverished islands, inhabited by some 70 million hungry people, of little or no concern to the other 5-7 billion inhabitants of a sick world. …If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000.” — Paul R. Ehrlich speaking in London at the Institute of Biology. Reported by Bernard Dixon in the New Scientist: “In Praise of Prophets.”

Ehrlich also predicted worldwide plague, thermonuclear war, death of the seas, “rocketing” death rates, and ecological catastrophe. Dixon reported that “the audience loved it and gasped for more”. Just like today, as we applaud and cry for more doomster stories about the climate Armageddon.

After decades of this, Earth Day has becomes a doomster festival, as St. Patrick’s Day is for the Irish (but less fun). Parties, predictions of doom, and two-minute hates against the complacent majority.

These scare tactics have accomplished nothing. The great laws regulating air and water pollution were enacted in the 1960s, before these tactics became widespread. The EPA was created in 1970. These stories seemed powerful because they extrapolated past trends into the future, ignoring countermeasures that had already been started. Just as today’s climate doomsters ignore the replacement of coal by cleaner sources and the even better sources under development (details here).

Now for the bad news

“Nobody believes a liar…even when he is telling the truth!”

— Conclusion to Aesop’s “The Boy Who Cried Wolf.“

For four decades activists have screamed predictions of certain doom. The Boomers have lived long enough to see most of them proven false: nuclear war, famine from overpopulation, devastation from polluted air and water (doom by 2017!), peak oil, the bee-pocalypse, and many others.

The result: Doom Fatigue – a pervasive disbelief in experts and their warnings. This is different from rational skepticism. Too many false warnings. Too many shrill and self-serving warnings. The daily bombardment of doomsday warnings leaves people feeling helpless, with the natural result of ignoring all warnings. Worse, their shock value decreases with each round, so the next generation of doomster warnings must be more vivid, more extreme, and more exciting.

A better way

There are many possible shockwaves. But preparation for a shockwave is expensive. There is not enough money in the world to prepare for all of them. Many studies have shown the people have little grasp of these kinds of issue, and less understanding of the relevant statistics (i.e., probability and risk). So we allocate resources to shockwave scenarios based on irrational factors.

Activists’ access to influence elite opinion and journalists. Activists’ ability to raise funds for publicity campaigns. The appeal of their shockwave with the public.

Risk management is a vital skill for the 21st century world. Fortunately, there is a better way to do this.

A modest suggestion

“Apocalyptic and misanthropic environmental narratives …contributed to widespread resignation and cynicism. So far, they have fallen short of mobilizing enough people to bring about real political change. ” — Journalist Andy Revkin in the NYT.

We need to prioritize our preventive efforts, spending what we can afford to most effectively prevent and mitigate shockwaves. First, we must understand the full universe of such shockwaves. Otherwise they are just a series of nightmares, with no rational response possible.

We should commission a group to collect as many shockwave scenarios as possible, and produce a brief analysis of each. Then apply a common analytical framework to rate them in terms of probability and impact. This would allow a rational public policy discussion.

Survival in the 21st century might depend on how well we manage shockwaves. For more about this see The first step to protecting the world from its many dangers.

Doing this well would make future Earth Days into celebrations of success and re-dedication to more successes in the future.

For More Information

If you liked this post, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. For more information see posts about pollution, about doomsters, about shockwaves, about the precautionary principle, and the keys to understanding climate change, and especially these …

Leftists’ amnesia about their past predictions

The 1968 preface of Ehrlich’s 1971 book The Population Bomb summarizes his forecast (also see Wikipedia).

“The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now. At this late date nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate.”

The Left gives their new predictions of doom with no awareness of their past failed predictions. Before we panic, see the Left’s past warnings. And their false claims and exaggerations.

They still do it. Remember the ludicrous “30,000 extinctions every year” stories? The stories about the super-hurricanes coming after 2005 (we got a 12 year long “drought”) and the super-extraordinary 2017 hurricane season (that wasn’t). The long-ago predictions about the End of Snow. And some of the many other predictions about climate change that proved to be false.

Leftists’ amnesia about these predictions does not mean that we should forget them.