| Destroying biodiversity |
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| Written by Paul Driessen cfact.org |
| Thursday, 15 July 2010 12:05 |
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The greatest threat to species is not modern technology - but environmentalists. Thus, while not recanting predictions of disastrous climate change, environmental activists and the United Nations are already launching a new campaign. The real threat to the planet, they now assert, is the impact of modern energy technologies and civilization on biodiversity. The case for saving species, they insist, is even “more powerful” than the need to address climate change. They seek to preserve biodiversity by controlling people’s energy use, economic activities and population - through new regulations and taxes under the auspices of the United Nations and global treaties. These efforts, they claim, will generate benefits “worth $4-5 trillion per year” (based on questionable studies and computer models that underscore the intrinsic value of species and biodiversity). To accept these claims, one would have to ignore the sordid history of Climategate and the UN The greatest threats to the world’s species are misguided environmental and anti-technology policies. Among the policies adversely impacting biodiversity are these. * Intense opposition to coal, gas, nuclear and hydroelectric plants for generating the electricity that two China and India are self-financing hundreds of power projects, to avoid conditions placed by wealthy * Steadfast promotion of expensive, unreliable wind and solar power. Wind turbines slice up birds and Con Ed had to generate some 13,500 megawatts to meet New York City’s air conditioning and other Now multiply that habitat demand times the world’s biggest cities, and calculate the biodiversity impact. No wonder the wind industry wants exemptions from endangered species rules and environmental impact studies that hyper-regulate fossil fuel and nuclear companies. No wonder Senator Diane Feinstein has introduced legislation to prohibit solar installations in the super-sunny Mojave Desert, where developers want to install millions of acres of photovoltaic panels. * Equally passionate advocacy for biofuels, especially ethanol. Every 7 billion gallons of corn-based And yet, President Obama told a Ghanaian audience in July 2009 that malnourished Africa should forego even gas-fired electricity generators in favor of wind, solar and biofuel power. The continent and its arid, nutrient-depleted soils already cannot feed their populations adequately, and the President wants them to divert cropland and wildlife habitats to biofuels. Meanwhile, environmental activists continue to ... * Oppose biotechnology, genetically engineered crops and even hybrid seeds. These specialized crops survive better during droughts, increase farm family incomes, improve nutrition, and reduce the need for insecticides. They offer the best hope for growing more biofuel crops on less acreage. The New York Times says we can ill afford “not to make the best use of genetic engineering.” If we And yet, environmentalists and EU bureaucrats threaten African nations with punitive boycotts if they * Environmentalists also oppose timber cutting and even tree thinning and mechanized fire suppression on vast acreage of US national forests. Too often the result is fiery conflagrations that incinerate trees, wildlife, soil and streams, causing extensive erosion and long-term habitat loss. * Topping it off, the Environmental Protection Agency’s recent endangerment decision, low-carbon fuel It is bad enough that “biodiversity stabilization” is a reprise of past government-environmentalist eco- The far greater problem is that the UN, EPA, “mainstream media” and political establishment are We now have an opportunity to make Earth a better place for people and the natural world. We need to reject this agenda, demand sound science and solid evidence that a treat exists, and recognize that modern technology actually offers the best hope for protecting the diversity of species. |