“Mother Earth is angry!” says Nancy Pelosi in my newest video.
“The debate is over around climate change!” says California Governor Gavin Newsom, smirking, strangely.
They’re eager to blame climate change for the wildfires in their state. I’m surprised they didn’t say it causes COVID-19, too.
Newsom, ridiculously, says wildfires are another reason to get more electric cars on the road. I wonder if he even knows that electricity for such cars comes from natural gas.
“This catastrophizing around climate change is just a huge distraction,” says environmentalist Michael Shellenberger, author of the new bestseller, “Apocalypse Never,”
Shellenberger says: “Climate change is real, but it’s not the end of the world. It’s not our most serious environmental problem.”
California warmed 3 degrees over the past 50 years, but that’s not the main cause of California’s fires, no matter how often politicians and the media say it is.
Why do they keep saying it?
“If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail,” says Shellenberger. “Every weather event you blame on climate change.”
What actually is to blame, as usual, are stupid government policies.
Forests are supposed to burn. If there aren’t small fires, debris from dead trees, and plants accumulate. That provides fuel for big, deadlier fires, that are more likely to burn out of control.
But for years, governments and environmentalists put out every small fire they could, while also fighting logging.
Megafires could have been avoided if forests had just been better managed.
An example is the Shaver Lake forest, managed by Southern California Edison. The company thinned that forest, creating fire breaks with selective logging.
When the wildfires reached Shaver Lake, they diminished into low-intensity “surface fire.” That protected the bigger, older trees.
Forests in America’s west were supposed to burn more often, says Shellenberger. “When Europeans came, they reported California being very smoky and on fire during the summers. And Native Americans burned huge amounts of land.”
“So, for the past years, it’s been unnaturally un-smoky?” I ask.
“It’s what a lot of forest ecosystems require,” answers Shellenberger. “We haven’t had enough fires for maybe 100 years.”
But it’s hard to convince governments to allow small fires when politicians demand that every fire be put out, and the media call every fire a disaster.
Recently, wildfires hit the ancient redwoods in Big Basin State Park (pictured). Politicians and East Coast environmental reporters worried about the redwoods disappearing.
But of course, they didn’t.
“Redwood trees and other old growth, the bark is very thick, it’s fire-resistant,” says Shellenberger.
The politicians didn’t know that. “They’re still standing!” giggled an astonished Newsom after the fire passed.
But “it was exactly what you would expect,” says Shellenberger. “Journalists go, ‘Wow. What a surprise! The ancient redwoods didn’t burn down!’ Nobody’s more alienated from the natural environment, and nobody’s more apocalyptic than environmental journalists.”
Well, maybe politicians.
For years, they and environmentalists increased the risk of big fires by opposing the thinning of forests.
The town of Berry Creek, California, tried to get permits to legally clear their forest. For two years, regulators delayed approval. This year, fires destroyed the town.
Forest Service ecologist Hugh Safford wishes they would “get away from the tree-hugging mentality. It’s the classic ‘not seeing the forest for the trees.'”
This year’s wildfires finally persuaded politicians to allow more people to cut trees down.
“There’s actually widespread agreement on this, says Shellenberger. “The governor of California and President Trump recently signed an agreement to clear much more area. Even the Sierra Club, which opposed the thinning of forests, has now changed its tune.”
It’s about time.
Politicians and environmentalists, eager to raise money, cite climate change, and blame fossil fuels for problem after problem.
While climate change is a problem, Shellenberger points out, “the number of deaths from natural disasters declined 90% over the last hundred years. A small change in temperature is not the difference between normalcy and catastrophe.”
John Stossel is the author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”
Read more at Townhall
Is poor forest management the primary culprit in recent conflagrations?
The premier authority on climate, the IPCC, concludes millions of lives are at stake if we move even 0.5 degrees C past a 1.5 deg further increase in global temperatures (the ice age resulted from a mere 4 deg C cooling; small global temperature changes have big effects).
So, it is simply wishful thinking behind Shellenberger’s claim that “A small change in temperature is not the difference between normalcy and catastrophe.” That’s just wrong.
Should we re-manage forests? A knotty problem, but OK, yet that’s not nearly enough as enlightened policy. Consider that unmanaged forests in the Amazon, Indonesian Rain Forests and Siberia had succumbed to bizarre record-breaking high temperatures and the ghastly record-breaking fires that followed, not the result of poor management.
We use dry wood to start fires, right? The West’s long-term drought, decreased snowpack, warmer winters, and hundreds of millions of beetle-killed trees created dry vegetation and ‘set the table’ for all-time record fires and their incalculable loss.
Unlike Trump, Mr. Stossel doesn’t deny climate change, but his enthusiasms are elsewhere. Elections and one-sided policies have consequences.
Sep 9, 2020 Record Fast Climate Change
The 56 degree drop in afternoon temperature from Monday to Tuesday here in Cheyenne, Wyoming this week was the largest on record. CO2 seems to be having difficulty trapping heat.
https://youtu.be/6W67AaS8VDk
Stossel has hitt he nail on the head again i have read his book GIVE ME A BREAK