Don’t be fooled by Western environmentalists (and their parrots)

SEPT 8 – A few days ago Christian Aid put a full-page advert in a London newspaper. They asked readers to urge Gordon Brown to call the European Union to cut domestic carbon emission by 40 per cent by 2020, and ensure developing countries have all the resources necessary to reduce emissions, develop cleanly and adapt to climate change.

The advert was published in preparation for the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December 2009. Several NGOs, including Christian Aid, have already started their campaigns in the run-up to the summit.

“Green” campaigns such as this one may look good superficially. After all, surely we all want to look after our planet. But examined more closely, there are traps that could create unnecessary hurdles for developing countries like Malaysia to prosper.

Let’s take the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act as an example. The legislation puts a cap on American carbon emission, and allows emission quotas to be traded.

By creating something similar to a cap-and-trade system, they hope to incentivise innovation, new technologies and improvements in energy efficiencies. Ultimately the aim is to reduce carbon emission – allegedly the mother of all evil when it comes to climate change.

There are already signs that regulations like this will eventually become yet another tool to mask trade protectionism.

Speaking in Shanghai in July, Gary Locke, the American Commerce Secretary suggested that Americans should pay for the carbon content of goods they consume, including imported goods. Effectively he was calling for a carbon import tax on every single country that exports to America.

Import duties, under the guise of “green” taxes, will increase the cost of international trade, ultimately damaging economic growth in developing countries that exports to America, like us. The United States is Malaysia’s second biggest export partner.

Jairam Ramesh, India’s environment minister, said that he will not sign any treaty in Copenhagen that forces a curb of carbon emission in the Third World. We are lucky to have a figure in the developing world like Ramesh. He knows how climate change activism in and by Western countries can damage growth in developing countries. Malaysia needs to learn from his boldness.

Let us not be fooled by the doom-glorifying environmentalists. Many of them are simply following what Western green activists say, ignoring science as well as the importance of growth and development in our own country.

Deepak Lal, a renowned scholar and professor of international development at the University of California, denounces the “hypocrisy and immorality” of the West in twisting the arms of developing countries, especially China and India, to curb carbon emission.

According to Lal, “until technological advances can allow alternative green energy sources to compete with the fossil fuels … a call to put any curbs on carbon emissions is in fact to condemn their billions to continuing poverty.”

It is murderous for Western countries, influenced by Green activists, to force us to support treaties that prevent us from experiencing the same industrialisation that they have experienced, or make the cost of our industrialisation more expensive through green taxes that they like so much.

Do they expect us to live in “green” forests and travel in uncomfortable vehicles while they live in their lavishly decorated houses and travel in gas-guzzling SUVs and private jets?

And as to the Green activists, we should know that their anti-carbon emission campaigns are based on disputed arguments. Their theory that we are facing global warming resulting directly from carbon emission caused by human activities is increasingly discredited by new scientific discoveries.

The works of cosmoclimatologists like Professor Henrik Svensmark, director of the Centre for Sun-Climate Research at the Danish Space Research Institute, deserve further investigation if we want to go into the scientific debates on this matter.

We must be careful when dealing with Western, or Western-influenced, green campaigners. By all means listen to what they have to say. But we must take it with a pinch of salt. We should not let them impose their belief in the carbon emission theory on us, let alone make legislations that will prevent us from improving our standard of living.

We certainly should not let their green protectionist agenda prevent us from achieving the prosperity and economic growth that we deserve.

Green campaigners, including in Malaysia, will double their efforts in the run up to the Copenhagen Summit in December. Soon they will be urging Malaysia to support a Copenhagen treaty to curb the level of carbon we emit. When that happens, I hope our government will stand up for what is best for Malaysia.

We must not let our country be cowed by America and Europe. And we must not be influenced by local green activists parroting Western environmentalists without realising the harm they cause to our prosperity.

Wan Saiful Wan Jan is director general of Malaysia Think Tank (www.WauBebas.org)

 

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