I’m still alive and back in Idaho. I tagged the Canadian border on July 25
and I’ve been walking back to Mexico ever since. Reaching Canada was a
nice milestone not so much because it was the halfway point of my yo-yo
hike, but more because it meant that I had completed what is known as the
Triple Crown. This simply means that I have hiked the Appalachian Trail,
Pacific Crest Trail, and CDT. It also means that I have had way too much
time on my hands.
On my way to Canada I missed the bulk of the
Southbounders because 90% of them were talking the “Anaconda Cut
Off” route while I took the official CDT route around Butte. However, I
managed to catch the tail end of the Southbound
train. For example, I ran into a dozen hikers including Garlic Man, D,
Buzz, Hawkeye, Sly, and others. I met the oldest thru-hiker, a 63-year-old
tall ex-military man named Flat Feet. His advice: “Don’t try thru-hike the
CDT if you’re over 60.”
I
met a few hiking pairs who are section hikers or flip floppers, such as
Rainman & Vicki, Gutsy & Dan, and
Hmmmm & Basmati. Meeting Basmati was special
because he is a great friend that I met on the PCT (http://FrancisTapon.com/pct/Sierra.htm).
I hope to catch him before he gets to Yellowstone and gets off the trail.
Meanwhile, the trail has been hot and dry for the last month. In fact,
local Montanans say that it’s been the “driest and hottest” July on
record. The upside is that I hardly set up my tarp in July and waking up
in the morning was easy since it is not butt-ass cold. The downside is
that there have been many wildfires that have forced me to invent new ways
through the Bob Marshall Wilderness. I confess that I illegally sneaked
through a closed trail to see the Chinese Wall—a
dramatic vertical rock wall that goes on for miles. There were no Chinese
there, but under the Chinese Wall someone
scribbled “Made in the USA.”
The most magical part of the CDT has been Glacier National Park, which has
been in the news lately because scientists expect it will be, once again,
glacier-free by 2020. Many times in history there were no glaciers in
Glacier National Park. For example, during the Thermal Maximum of the
Cenozoic (about 40-55 million years ago), there were no glaciers anywhere
on Earth, even Antarctica. Back then Antarctica had 6 foot tall penguins
and 100 foot high conifer forests.
The glaciers that exist today at Glacier National Park are a pathetic
shadow of their glory days 20,000 years ago when they were 1,500 meters
thick. These facts remind me to conclude my thoughts about climate change
that I wrote about in my previous journal entry. Today I’ll focus on
solutions.
WHAT SHOULD WE DO
ABOUT CLIMATE CHANGE?
Despite the long-term benefits of global warming, many people want to stop
it anyway. As irrational as that is, I agree it’s a worthy effort.
However, I’m not advocating major changes because I think it will make a
significant difference. Our planet will undergo wild climatic changes in
the future regardless of what we do. Why? Because it
always has.
So why do anything, especially when T-Rex (in my previous email) explained
why global warming is good for both the planet and the human race? Three
reasons:
1) CONSERVATION:
Conserving resources is just a good idea.
Why recklessly blow through our nonrenewable fossil fuels? Who knows, they
might serve a more useful purpose in 50 years than just filling up our gas
guzzling cars and making plastic. Since they’re nonrenewable, we should
make an extra effort to encourage their conservation, even if they have
nothing to do with climate change.
2) POLLUTION: Lowering
pollution is nice.
Decreasing greenhouse gases usually means decreasing pollution, which is a
negative externality that governments rarely try to recover. By fighting
climate change, we’re indirectly fighting pollution. Although we must
pollute, it would be good to charge the polluters, even if that means that
we all have to pay more for our goodies.
3) TRANSITION: Living
through the transition period will suck.
Whenever Earth’s climate has changed in the last billion years, there is a
painful transition period that is just no fun. As the climate changes,
species die on mass and death gets the upper hand over life. Whether the
planet warms or cools, ecosystems collapse and leave a vacuum. After many
years, new life that is well adapted to the new conditions, invades the
empty space, new ecosystems form, and life is flourishes again. Therefore,
while we always end up with life filling the void that the transition
period creates, it’s depressing to be around while the void gets created.
If the temps warm up this century, we’ll be part of that unlucky
generation that has to deal the transition.
So what can we do?
Education Won’t Work
It’s so sad to see so many well meaning folks trying to make people change
their behavior through education and "global warming awareness campaigns."
They encourage folks to turn down the thermostat, drive a low emission
vehicle, and stop adding CO2 to the air by holding your breath.
At best, climate change education campaigns might make 5% of the
population change. Look at the freeways. Less than 1% of the vehicles get
more than 40 miles per gallon. In the winter I never walk into a house
that makes me want to wear a jacket. Most people continue to take long
showers and baths, except the French.
Education only works when the person learning gets a direct, obvious, and
indisputable benefit. For example, AIDS education campaigns work because
if you don’t listen and change your behavior you could die. If you don’t
listen to the global warming scaremongers, you might have to unzip your
jacket in the winter.
The education campaigns about smoking, wearing a seat belt, and listening
to too much Jessica Simpson were all effective because the individual gets
a direct benefit. With climate change, the benefit is less obvious.
Why Educating People
about Global Warming Might Be a Bad Idea
While I was in Colorado I imagined the conversations at Sunday brunch:
“Hey honey, it says here in the paper that global warming could raise
temperature by two degrees by 2050.”
“That’s it? It’s so damn cold here! Can’t we do anything to raise it some
more? Let's add some more porch lights and leave them on all night.”
Folks in cold Montana might feel the same way:
“Dear, I just heard on the news that rising global temperatures could
raise the sea levels a few inches.”
“Crap! I was hoping it would go up a lot more so we’d have some oceanfront
property! I’m going off to buy myself a Hummer!”
San Francisco in 2050
Before I left on the CDT the front page of the San Francisco Chronicle
showed what areas in Bay Area would flood by 2050 if global warming
continues. Of course all the wetlands in the Peninsula would go underwater
(no humans live there), low parts of Vallejo (a minor suburb) would get
flooded, and the SF Airport would have high water. In short, the only
thing that really matters to most locals is the airport, and we could
protect that by spending a few billion dollars, which would be far less
than all the massive changes that we would have to make to slow down our
CO2 emissions.
In other words, the newspaper was trying to scare folks into action, but
nothing changed in San Francisco. We're still all exhaling the same amount
of dope we were doing last year.
If the oceanfront-dwelling, Green-Party-voting San Franciscans are
unwilling to voluntarily make big changes, imagine what the average
person in Rawlins, Wyoming will voluntarily do about climate change.
Moreover, having a Katrina-like disaster here and there makes little
difference. Increased hurricanes affect a minority of the population, so
most won’t care. I suspect that Hurricane Katrina directly impacted less
than 10% of the US population. It will take a while for enough farms to
suffer poor crop yield and raise food prices for anyone to change their
behavior voluntarily. Until the Vail and Aspen ski resorts shut down for
the winter due to low snowfall, don't expect serious action.
In conclusion, climate
change has a marketing problem.
It’s hard to get the
average person excited about a three degree jump in temperatures and a
water level rise of a few centimeters. Most will conclude that it’s really
not worth disrupting your entire life to stop that from happening. What’s
worse, it might even encourage some people to produce even more greenhouse
gases because they wish their region got warmer. It doesn’t surprise me
that nearly everyone along the cold CDT still drives a monster-sized SUV
or king-sized truck.
What Environmentalists
Should Do
Climate change is not like AIDS or drunk driving, which has an immediate
and strong personal impact; therefore, education and awareness campaigns
are a waste of time. Fewer than 5% of the population will change their
habits because they understand the greater good they are doing. The
overwhelming majority of us will still keep doing what we’re doing unless
we suffer pain. Most people don’t change unless they have to (or they get
a significant benefit).
Hence, this is what
you (or any environmentalist should do): lobby Congress to impose a stiff
Greenhouse Gas Tax.
It is the best way to change behavior. If you care about climate change,
you should beg your politicians to create a Greenhouse Gas Tax that:
-
Raises the price of
gasoline to $6.00/gallon:
We’ll still be cheaper
than England or France, but at least it would encourage most people to
switch to more economical and ecological vehicles. Few would idle their
cars for more than 20 seconds. More would move closer to their job, bike
to work, carpool, telecommute, and take public transport.
-
Triples your heating
bill: You
might wear a sweater and hat around the house.
-
Triples your
electrical bill:
You might switch off
lights, not have the porch light on all night, get a low-power
refrigerator, turn down the AC, unplug appliances you don’t use all the
time, use less hot water.
-
Makes McDonald
hamburgers and milk cost $10.
Cows emit methane, a greenhouse gas that is 21 times more potent than
carbon dioxide, so the price of cow related foods will go up; you'll
have another reason besides high saturated fat to avoid them.
-
Triple the cost of
flying.
Businesses and individuals might do more video teleconferencing if it
costs $1,500 for a cheap round-trip ticket.
While you’re lobbying, ask Congress to repeal any child tax credit.
Instead, ask Congress to impose an annual $5,000 tax per child. Each
person on the planet has an impact, so if you want to reduce impact,
discourage folks from reproducing.
What’s the matter? You don’t like all these changes? I thought you were an
environmentalist who wanted to stop global warming? Oh… not THAT badly!
J
Yup, most people are only willing to make small sacrifices, ones that they
can barely feel, like changing to compact florescent bulbs and recycling
the newspaper.
However, for those who truly care about this debate, go beg your
politician to create a Greenhouse Gas Tax. It’s the most effective way to
encourage everyone to change their behavior and to encourage innovation.
Think of the innovation that such a tax would stir up:
-
If gas was $6/gallon, car manufacturers would create cars that got 100 mpg
and our dependence on unstable oil rich regimes would go down.
-
If your heating bill tripled, we’d make buildings with better insulation
and better design that uses passive solar heating.
-
If your electrical bill tripled because your power source is coal, you’d
buy from a solar or wind powered provider to save money, or you might let
that nuclear powered plant (which doesn’t emit greenhouse gases) get built
in your backyard.
-
If hamburgers and milk cost $10, we’d try to either trap the methane that
cows expel or become vegans who eat fake meat that tastes better than the
real thing thanks to innovations in the food industry.
-
If the cost of flying tripled, high speed railways (which produce far less
CO2 than airplanes) would spring up.
-
If it became more expensive to have children, the population growth would
decrease and maybe Al Gore wouldn't have had four children.
In short, such a tax would not only discourage people from having a high
carbon footprint, but it would also encourage entrepreneurs to invent ways
to further diminish the greenhouse gases. A Greenhouse Gas Tax is the best
way to reverse global warming. Forget education; money is a far more
powerful incentive.
You could make it more likely to pass such a tax if you ask your
representative to offset the tax increase with an income tax decrease so
that it is revenue neutral. Of course, poor people will get hurt the most
by a Greenhouse Gas Tax. But hey, what’s more important, the Earth or poor
people?
Speaking of poor people, I calculated my Carbon Footprint and determined
that I have about as much impact as some dude in Botswana. I don’t own a
car or TV. I don’t have a heat or cooling bill (I live under a tarp). I
don’t take airplanes; I walk across the country instead. Since I soak my
food and I never cook it, I have no gas bill; however, I do produce a fair
amount of gas in other ways….
I
don’t expect anyone to follow my monastic way of life. On the contrary, I
expect people to continue doing what they’re doing until the price of not
changing becomes higher than the price to change.
Why Population Growth
Matters
Some people foolishly think that population growth has little to do with
the equation and that we shouldn’t try to limit it. These are usually
people who have (or want) kids and want to feel good about their decision.
Psychologists call such thinking cognitive dissonance. They hope we
can “save the environment” primarily through conservation. They’re wrong.
Here’s why: let’s imagine the impossible—let’s imagine through a variety
of means we somehow manage to get Americans to consume half the resources
per capita that we consume today and that we can keep it that way forever.
Of course, this is a ludicrous assumption since a trend line drawn from
1500 to 2007 would clearly show that we consume more and more resources
per capita, but let’s just make this wild assumption to indulge those who
think conservation is enough to solve the problem.
(See
graph of energy per capita
or
simple
graph)
What happens in just 50 years, assuming our population growth continues at
the present clip? The US population will have doubled. That means that
after a Herculean effort to slash our per capita consumption in half we’re
left consuming the same total amount of resources on an annual basis as we
were using before the militant conservation campaign. That means that
despite using half the water and half the energy, we’d be gobbling energy
at the same rate as we do today. After 50 years, we would have made zero
progress.
I’m not saying that we shouldn’t reproduce. On the contrary, that’s our
duty as our species. Genesis 1:28 states: “God said unto [Adam and Eve], ‘Be
fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have
dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over
every living thing that moveth upon the
earth.”
If you’re agnostic or an atheist, substitute the word “God” with “DNA.”
Indeed, our DNA compels our species to do just what that passage says to
do. So we’ll continue to do what living things do and spread as far as we
can. Just don’t expect our resource consumption to diminish while we
expand exponentially, no matter how great of a conservation campaign we
establish.
Oh, and that assumes that China, India, and other developing economies are
sitting still. Those regions will produce more and more greenhouse gases
until the pain of producing them is higher than the pain of not producing
them. Although we can't control them, we can increase our own pain
immediately with a Greenhouse Gas Tax. Of course we won’t, unless major
environmental disasters happen. Don’t expect any major changes until
cities start to flood, farm production collapses, and ski resorts start to
close down.
And if that fun stuff starts to happen, console yourself with my previous
email – that global warming is, in the end, probably a net good thing for
both the planet and our species. We’ll just suffer a bit in the
transition.
I
love that I can say that global warming is a good thing and if anyone says
I’m a rotten person, I respond, “OK, Mr. Environmentalist, let’s compare
your carbon footprint to mine.” That shuts people up.
Meanwhile, I'm going to shut up and start hiking back to Mexico because I
see a lynch mob coming after me right now. They're crazy Canadians
chanting, "Stop global warming! We love our permafrost and tundra!"
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