Commentators

Rain (AM and PM) 16° London Hi 16°C / Lo 10°C

Dominic Lawson: As they tackle climate change, governments are starving the people they set out to help

Friday, 11 April 2008

The law of unintended consequences has claimed many millions of victims over the centuries; the first decade of the 21st century is now demonstrating that governments have not lost the knack of destroying the livelihoods of the very people they purport to help.

On a brief visit to Britain, the head of the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) yesterday told us of his desperate concern over rising food prices, especially in the developing world. Antonio Guterres singled out for special blame the biofuels business, which he said was having an, "unexpected very negative impact on the availability of food".

Unexpected? How could it not have been anticipated that the turning over of millions of acres of farmland to the production of fuel for cars rather than humans would not have had this effect? To be fair to Mr Guterres, the governments of the developed world showed no outward signs of anticipating this inevitable consequence, so seduced were they by the idea of a "renewable" alternative to fossil fuels; it would, they claimed, simultaneously reduce our political dependency on Middle Eastern oil and save the lives of millions in the Third World who would otherwise perish through climate change.

The first part of that equation was especially attractive to President George W Bush. Following the collapse of his policy to "democratise" the Middle East, he promulgated laws which mandated the turning over of about a third of the US corn belt into the production of ethanol. Since ethanol is dramatically less efficient than dead dinosaurs as a way of powering engines, this has also involved vast subsidies – as much as $25bn a year, according to some estimates.

Don't, by the way, expect this to change after Bush leaves the White House. Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John McCain all support this grotesque policy – as they have taken great care to point out when electioneering in Iowa, the Saudi Arabia of ethanol production.

They, rather more than Mr Bush, have tended to justify this monumental bribe as part of a policy to "reduce climate change". In this they are much closer to the governments of the European Union, which is collectively committed to a mad plan to generate a third of our fuel from crops, as part of its attempt to conform to Kyoto treaty obligations. It is especially mad, because recent research has suggested that most biofuel production, especially when it involves the uprooting of vast tracts of forest, is much more environmentally damaging than the burning of fossil fuels.

Gordon Brown has now called for a review of the consequences of this policy for world food production and distribution, to the irritation of the President of the European Commission, who (somewhat bizarrely) sticks to the view that it has no significant consequences for food prices.

Yet one can also understand Jose Manuel Barroso's feelings: it makes the EU look ridiculous to say that it will examine the consequences of a policy – after rather than before the member governments agreed to implement it.

Barroso is obviously right in thinking that the switch to biofuels is not the only influence driving up food prices in the developing world. Increasing demand for agricultural products also plays its part.

In this respect, the developing world can do something to help itself, even against the background of bizarre policies by Western governments.

As the World Bank has pointed out, Sub-Saharan countries impose an average tax of 34 per cent on food traded within their own region, money which comes straight out of the pockets of their own people to fund who knows what. In India, agricultural imports face a tariff of over 60 per cent.

So it's not just the United States which punishes its consumers in order to keep indigenous landowners happy.

Nevertheless, there is something revolting in the West's claims to be acting in the interests of the Southern Hemisphere – the alleged future victims of climate change – while the chosen policy itself threatens to starve millions of the very same people. What other conclusion can one come to, when even African countries are being urged by Europe to turn scarce farmland over to biofuel production?

The advocates of this policy can only justify it – or at least attempt to do so – by falling back on the mantra that the planet is imminently at risk as a result of man-made climate change. But is it, really? You don't have to be a so-called "climate change denier" to find this claim preposterous.

Listen, for example, to Professor Mike Hulme, the immensely respected founder of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and a linchpin of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In a debate on BBC radio earlier this week he said: "There are many people – including some scientists – who present climate change as an existential threat to the planet and to human civilisation. That is not what the science itself is telling us."

Yet it is precisely the claim that man-made climate change is "an existential threat to the planet" which is used to justify such vastly expensive – and possibly murderous – policies as a world-wide switch to "renewable" crop-based fuels.

It is true that many others who hold this view, aware of the terrible consequences of biofuel production, argue instead that we should stop driving cars altogether. There are two practical problems with this proposition. First, even if everyone in Britain took the decision to throw away their car keys, it would not have more than a microscopic effect on global temperatures; second, does anyone seriously think that the populations of India and China will be prepared to forgo the pleasures of independent travel and freedom of movement which have been enjoyed for so long in the developed world and which they are only now beginning to realise for themselves?

Above all, the inhabitants of the developing world will rightly have nothing but contempt for us if we continue to pursue a policy of global food destruction and tell them that we are doing it for their own long-term good. John Maynard Keynes once dismissed a policy based on claims of long-term benefits with the sardonic observation that, "In the long term we are all dead".

How much more absurd it is to advance a policy which could see many of its supposed beneficiaries dead – in the short term.

There has been nothing like it since Mao Zedong told the farmers of China to turn over their land to steel production – the so-called Great Leap Forward. That led to the starvation of 30 million people. It was a policy much admired in the West at the time – that is, until its unintended consequences became widely known.

It is democracies which are behind the policy of turning farmland into gas stations. So no one is being forced to do it. It is all being done with bribes – politely described as subsidies, or "tax rebates". That doesn't make it any the less stupid – or wicked.

d.lawson@independent.co.uk

Interesting? Click here to explore further

Well, now that the whole drive to cut carbon footprints is causing such devastating and immediate problems, perhaps those amongst the third world aid organisations who have been part of the 'Man Made Global Warming' scam will admit to the lie and change policy FAST.

Dispite the actual science behind the claim that CO2 emissions cause a quantifiable rise in global temprature being exceedingly weak, the theory was jumped on as a simple way to end 'capitalism', by stopping the basic mechanisms that drive industry in its tracks.

Why 'development' agencies took sides with the anti development agenda in the first place reveals more about the stilted notions of western middle class than what the poorest nations actually need to concentrate on.

So many millions of people facing immediate starvation as a direct result of 'phase one' of the drive to cut dependence on fossil fuels is too high a price to pay for leftist politics (again), These realities should over-ride the concerns and embarrasment of those involved in aid for the third world who have been involved in the scam up to now, allowing them to admit that their policies in these areas have been wrong, that the alliences have been corrupting and that they are changing tack with immediate effect.

To continue with the 'man made global warming' folly may indeed bring down the ediface of capitalism in the west some time in the distant future, but billions of the worlds poorest will feel the impacts first. Even if 'global warming' where true, my guess is that the mad policies being called for to 'control' it will cause many more problems than doing nothing but adapt.

Posted by Tony Siebenthaler | 13.04.08, 11:24 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Don't forget that Europeans' irrational hatred of high-tech genetically enhanced seeds also contributes to the problem. Yet another was the smug "greenie" luddites are making a bad situation worse and hurting the poor.

Posted by Peter Grynch | 12.04.08, 17:15 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Is it really right that Third world people have the right to demand a set aside of American acreage as dedicated to growing thier huge family food? When they do have many more children than makes any sense to us Westerners is it really our duty to farm them enough for substance eating - and then do the same for thier children's children? Where would you have it end? Should starving breeders in third world countries be our pets; to feed and care for? If so you will soon get as many as you can feed.

9.2 billion coming soon! this should be a wake up call.

Posted by kris | 12.04.08, 04:41 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

it seems as though the world is fated towards a catastrophe of some kind, based around climate change and energy depletion and food shortage. its as though nature , some law of consequences, is forcing us into a position where the consequences of climate change and all surrounding issues will hit us to such an extent we will have to change the way we live on this planet. there are some who believe and have evidence that technologies are being hidden from us, the disclosure project is an example, Steven Greer. do we have to get to such a stage of abject world need when these technologies will be force out of the closet of government secrecy I wonder?

Posted by nick | 12.04.08, 02:39 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Professor Hulme is something of an enigma. As founder of the Tyndall Centre he has promoted the global warming agenda, whilst knowing scientific knowledge is very uncertain and climate models have major sources of erropr. Within the last twelve months he appears to have recanted from his original position and now talks of "climate porn". I wonder if this why he is no longer Tyndall Director and is now replaced by a committed former IPCC chairman. He gives me the impression of someone who has let the genie, (of climate hysteria), out of the bottle and is trying desperately to get it back in again.

The Tyndall Centre is the driving force behind the idea of carbon credit cards for individuals, air travel taxation and 60-80% reductions in UK emissions. It was heavily involved in writing the Stern Review and produced a very dramatic climate report for the Environment Agency for the year 3000. They work closely with environmental NGO's and Greenpeace are on their scientific advisory board.

Posted by DennisA | 11.04.08, 22:12 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Nigel,

You seem perversely blasé about the likely impact of climate change. Certainly the widespread use of farmland to produce biofuels is a bad thing. But the impact of climate change in the long run is likely to be far worse.

Unless we in the developed world are prepared to adopt a more frugal lifestyle then there will be pressure to find alternatives to oil - whatever the cost. Witness also the proposals for more coal power stations.

What is needed to forestall catastrophic changes in the climate is actually a subtraction of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, not just a lessening of emissions. See for instance http://folkegunther.blogspot.com/ and holon.se.

Please do some good by promoting sustainable practices, rather than posturing Canute-like against the seriousness of climate change.

Posted by Mark Downing | 11.04.08, 20:54 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

It is obscene and immoral to take food from the mouths of starving people to feed the tanks of giant SUV's. All biofuel production from food crops or from land usable for food crop production should be halted immediately.

Posted by Novathecat | 11.04.08, 14:01 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

The problem is that we in the West look for profits first, second and third. Consequences come nowhere. Agribusiness sees a great opportunity in biofuels, and speculators are making a killing out of rising commodity prices. They have no interest in the future.

Dominic rightly points out that much of the increase in prices is caused by rising standards of living for thr previously exploited. If everyone on earth enjoyed the same standard of living as even a "poor" family in the UK, obviously resources would not be sufficient.

It is true that climate change will probably not affect the over 40/50s, but it will affect future generations. In what way, we don't know. There are, in fact, several interrelated issues, of which climate change is long-term. If we are to see any sort of reasonable future for today's children, we must look at al of them together, and take action - which will mean we cannot carry on with our extravagent and wasteful lifestyles.

Posted by nova | 11.04.08, 12:22 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Well said Dominic. At last those who have a different message than the IPCC are getting their points of view in the public arena.
Well done The Independant for publishing this article.

Posted by Roger | 11.04.08, 11:50 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Dominic, you don't seem to realise that the small amount of climate change we have already experienced may also be responsible for the rise in food prices.

Australia, the world's largest producer of wheat, is experiencing the worst droughts in recorded history. Little wonder the price of wheat has doubled.

So no, biofuels are not the answer, but ignoring climate change as you seem to want to do will only partly relieve food prices for a short time.

Posted by Philip Makowski | 11.04.08, 07:51 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

Columnist Comments

dominic_lawson

Dominic Lawson: He appears to have robotic self-discipline...

... but inside, Brown is a ferment of emotion

matthew_norman

Matthew Norman: These petty buffoons who ruled over us

How monstrously trivial things have become

joan_bakewell

Joan Bakewell: No wonder the toffs are back with a vengeance

Bling is back and I'm glad to be one of the blingers


Most popular in Opinion