December 4, 2005

THEN REALITY DAWNED ON THE REALITY-BASED:

On Climate Change, a Change of Thinking (ANDREW C. REVKIN, 12/04/05, NY Times)

A major reason the optimism over Kyoto has eroded so rapidly is that its major requirement - that 38 participating industrialized countries cut their greenhouse emissions below 1990 levels by the year 2012 - was seen as just a first step toward increasingly aggressive cuts.

But in the years after the protocol was announced, developing countries, including the fast-growing giants China and India, have held firm on their insistence that they would accept no emissions cuts, even though they are likely to be the world's dominant source of greenhouse gases in coming years.

Their refusal helped fuel strong opposition to the treaty in the United States Senate and its eventual rejection by President Bush.

But the current stalemate is not just because of the inadequacies of the protocol. It is also a response to the world's ballooning energy appetite, which, largely because of economic growth in China, has exceeded almost everyone's expectations. And there are still no viable alternatives to fossil fuels, the main source of greenhouse gases.

Then, too, there is a growing recognition of the economic costs incurred by signing on to the Kyoto Protocol.

As Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain, a proponent of emissions targets, said in a statement on Nov. 1: "The blunt truth about the politics of climate change is that no country will want to sacrifice its economy in order to meet this challenge."

This is as true, in different ways, in developed nations with high unemployment, like Germany and France, as it is in Russia, which said last week that it may have spot energy shortages this winter.

Some veterans of climate diplomacy and science now say that perhaps the entire architecture of the climate treaty process might be flawed. ,/blockquote>
Expect major editorials in the MSM about how W was right all along and they were wrong, no?

Posted by Orrin Judd at December 4, 2005 8:38 AM
Comments

Thanks for the heads up oj. I'll ask Captain Kirk to mark his calendar to look for those editorials on Star Date 3452.

Posted by: erp at December 4, 2005 8:52 AM

"Their refusal helped fuel strong opposition to the treaty in the United States Senate and its eventual rejection by President Bush."

Nice way for the Times to brush over who was president when the Senate initially rejected the treaty.

Posted by: Ed Driscoll at December 4, 2005 10:15 AM

"...there is a growing recognition of the economic costs incurred ..."

I'd like to laugh a big ol' belly laugh at these pinheads, but ultimately it's just sad.

Posted by: Bruce Cleaver at December 4, 2005 11:36 AM

"The blunt truth about the politics of climate change is that no country will want to sacrifice its economy in order to meet this challenge."

The more burning question is why anybody thought these nations WOULD willingly sacrifice their economies.

Posted by: John Barrett Jr. at December 4, 2005 11:43 AM

Why not just settle for a global tax on oil and let the UN administer it as the "OIL for Graft" program?

Posted by: Genecis at December 4, 2005 12:19 PM

And Scientific American will be apologizing to Bjorn Lomborg.

Posted by: Bob Hawkins at December 4, 2005 1:10 PM

OJ: if you had not used the last word in your tag line, it would have been the funniest thing you ever wrote. It wasn't bad, but commedy is a timing thing.

Posted by: Robert Schwartz at December 4, 2005 4:13 PM
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