22/04/16 |
Happy Earth Day |
Never Trust The Doom-Mongers |
Earth Day Predictions That Were All Wrong
The
Daily Caller, 22 April 2016
Andrew
Follett
Environmentalist
truly believed and predicted that the planet was doomed during the
first Earth Day in 1970, unless drastic actions were taken to save
it. Humanity never quite got around to that drastic action, but
environmentalists still recall the first Earth Day fondly and hold
many of the predictions in high regard.
So
this Earth Day, The Daily Caller News Foundation takes a look at
predictions made by environmentalists around the original Earth Day
in 1970 to see how they've held up.
Have
any of these dire predictions come true? No, but that hasn't stopped
environmentalists from worrying. From predicting the end of
civilization to classic worries about peak oil, here are seven green
predictions that were just flat out wrong.
1. “Civilization Will End Withing 15 or 30 Years.”
Harvard
biologist Dr. George Wald warmed shortly before the first Earth Day
in 1970 that civilization would soon end “unless immediate action
is taken against problems facing mankind.” Three years before his
projection, Wald was awarded the Nobel Pize for Physiology or
Medicine.
2.“100-200
Million People Per Year Will Be Starving to Death During the Next Ten
Years.”
Stanford
Professor Dr. Paul Ehrlich declared in April 1970 that mass
starvation was imminent. His dire predictions failed to materialize
as the number of people living in poverty has significantly declined
and the amount of food per person has stead increased, despite
population growth. The world's Gross Domestic Product per person has
immeasurably increased despite increases in population.
Ehrlich
is largely responsible for this view, having co-published “The
Population Bomb” with the Sierra Club in 1968. The book made a
number of claims including that millions of humans would starve to
death in the 1970s and 1980s, mass famines would sweep England
leading to the country's demise, and the ecological destruction would
devastate the planet causing the collapse of civilization.
3.“Population
Will Inevitably and Completely Outstrip Whatever Small Increases in
Food Supplies We make.”
Paul
Ehrlich
also made the
above claim in 1970, shortly before an agricultural revolution that
caused the world's food supply to rapidly increase.
Ehrlich
has consistently failed to revise his predictions when confronted
with the fact that they did not occur, stating in 2009 that “perhaps
the most serious flaw in The Bomb was that it was much too optimistic
about the future.”
4. “ Demographers
Agree Almost Unanimously....Thirty Years From Now, the Entire World
Will Be in Famine.”
Environmentalists
in 1970 truly believed in a scientific consensus predicting global
famine due to population growth in the dev eloping world, especially
in India.
“Demographers
agree almost unanimously on the following grim timetable: by 1975
widespread famines will begin in India; these will spread by 1990 to
include all of India, Pakistan, China and tre Near East, Africa. By
the year 2000, or conceivably sooner, South and Central America will
exist under famine conditions,” Peter Gunter, a professor at North
Texas State University, said in a 1970 issues of The
Living Wilderness.
By the year 2000, thirty years from now, the entire world, with the
exception of Western Europe, North America, and Australia will be in
famine.”
India,
where the famines were supposed to begin, recently became one of the
world's largest exporters of agricultural products and food supply
per person in the country has drastically increased in recent years.
In fact, the number of people in every country listed by Gunter has
risen dramatically since 1970.
5.
In a Decade, Urban Dwellers Will Have to Wear Gas Masks to Survive
Air Pollution.”
Life
magazine stated in January 1970 that scientists had “solid
experimental and theoretical evidence” to believe that “in a
decade, urban dwellers will have to wear gas masks to survive
pollution...by 1985 air pollution will have reduced the amount of
sunlight reaching Earth by one half.”
Despite
the prediction, air quality has been improving worldwide according to
the World Health Organization. Air pollution has declined sharply in
industrialized countries. Carbon dioxide (CO2), the gas
environmentalists are worried about today, is odorless, invisible and
harmless to humans in normal amounts.
6.
“Childbearing [Will Be] a Punishable Crime Against Society, Unless
the Parents Hold a Government License.”
David
Brower, the first executive director of The Sierra Club made the
above claim and went on to say that [a]ll potential parents [should
be] required to use contraceptive chemicals, the government issuing
antidotes to citizens chose for childbearing.” Brower was also
essential in founding Friends of the Earth and the League of
Conservation Voters and much of the modern environmental movement.
Brower
believed that most environmental problems were ultimately
attributable to new technology that allowed humans to pass natural
limits on population size. He famously stated before is death in
2000 that “all technology should be assumed guilty until proven
innocent” and repeatedly advocated for mandatory birth control.
Today,
the only major government to ever get close to his vision has been
China, which ended its one-child policy last October.
On
Earth Day in 1970 ecologist Kenneth Watt famously predicted that the
world would run out oil.
Numerous
academics like Watt predicted that American oil production peaked in
1970 and would gradually decline, likely causing global economic
meltdown. However, the successful application of massive hydraulic
fracturing, or fracking, caused American oil production to come
roaring back and there is currently too much oil on the market.
American
oil and natural gas reserves are at their highest levels since 1972
and American oil production in 2014 was 80 percent higher than in
2008 thanks to fracking.
Furthermore,
the U.S. no controls the world's larges tuntaped oil reserve, the
Green River Formation in Colorado. This Formation alone contains up
to 3 trillion barrels of untapped oil shale, have of which may be
recoverable. That's five and a half times more oil than the rest of
the world's proven reserves combined.
(H/T,
Ronald Bailey at Reason and Mark Perry at the American Enterprise
Institute.)
The
above is abridged slightly from the original by the Global Warming
Policy Forum at
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/1543e91feb61af71