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A few more comments to John Quiggin on climate, libertarian principles and the enclosure of the commons

November 4th, 2009 No comments

I note first that I am reminded by a pithy comment from someone else that, despite the length of my previous post addressing John Quiggin`s post on libertarian delusion, sometimes less is more.

Writes commenter “ABOM”, in a comment made elsewhere and linked back in to Quiggin`s thread (done for the purported reason that Quiggin was deleting some of ABOM`s comments) (emphasis added):

I found it ironic that JQ (an economist) was using a scientific
hypothesis (climate change) as a litmus test to determine whether
Austrians were “serious” economists.
JQ (1) assumes he knows about
climate science
(he doesn’t) (2) assumes anyone who questions climate
science is mad
(they may not be) (3) thinks anyone who questions the
govt’s solutions to the “problem” is also mad
(even if you accept the
science, govt may not be the answer – raising interest rates to their
‘natural’ level and a simple “depression” in consumption may be a
simpler solution) (4) isn’t allowing an open debate (he keeps censoring
me for some bizarre reason) and (5) to top it off accuses Austrians of
being part time scientists – when he is the King of Part Time Amateur
Science …

Being verbose, this and a review of Quiggin`s post prompts me to write more.

I`m not sure I agree with ABOM`s initial comment; while Quiggin might be implicitly using Austrian`s behavior regarding climate change to question whether they are “serious” economists, more straightforwardly he`s questioning why on climate they seem not to care to show it.

I failed to address the following points from John:

1.   ” it seems clear that, if mainstream climate science is correct,
neither anarcho-capitalism nor paleolibertarianism can be sustained.
The problem with anarcho-capitalism and other views where property
rights are supposed to emerge, and be defended, spontaneously, and
without a state is obvious. If states do not create systems of rights
to carbon emissions, the only alternatives are to do nothing, and let
global ecosystems collapse, or to posit that every person on the planet
has right to coerce any other person not to emit CO2 into the
atmosphere.”

First, the alternatives to states creating systems of rights
to carbon emissions (or imposing carbon taxes, funding energy alternatives etc.) are NOT simply to do nothing, or to assume that all individuals will be left to try to coerce everyone else. While I agree that an-caps typically do not stress the desirability of undoing statist actions that feed into the climate problem, of course this is something which can and should be done, as I have tried to point out. And there are many voluntary and organized responses now underway that address climate change: organizations that cater to people (and firms) who want to track and lower their carbon footprint or buy offsets, firms that are competing to monitor and control their carbon footprint, both to lower costs and to stay ahead of competitors in the marketplace for consumer favor, voluntary corporate-oriented carbon trading/offset programs underway, insurance companies and others projecting and publicizing risks, etc.

Ancaps and other libertarians may be wrong, but they essentially conclude that the large information and transaction costs that society faces in dealing with climate change cannot be overcome by fiat, which clearly is not simple. Using government typically brings a whole host of problems. Viz., the knowledge problem, rent-seeking and -farming, bureaucratic mal-incentives, & enforcement.

    2.   “For paleolibertarians, the fact that property rights must
    be produced by a new global agreement, rather than being the inherited
    ‘peculiar institutions’ of particular societies seems equally
    problematic.”

    Yes. But there`s also  the problem of justice in the original
    allocation. Why should the new property rights in the atmosphere be allocated to corporations, as opposed to citizens?

    3.   “For more moderate libertarians, who accept in principle that
    property rights are derived from the state, I think the problem is more
    that the creation of a large new class of property rights brings them
    face to face with features of their model that are generally buried in
    a near-mythical past.

    “To start with, there’s the problem of justice in the original
    allocation. Until now, people [in] developed countries have been
    appropriating the assimilative capacity of the atmosphere as if there
    was always “enough and as good” left over. Now that it’s obvious this
    isn’t true, we need to go back and start from scratch, and this process
    may involve offsetting compensation which effectively reassigns some
    existing property rights.”

    I don`t think moderate libertarians so much “accept in principle that
    property rights are derived from the state,” as they recognize that the state has codified, circumscribed and enforces such rights. Right now, there are simply NO “existing property rights” regarding climate, other than the shared right to exhaust CO2 (and other GHGs) into the atmosphere, and to engage in other activities that alter albedo. Starting from scratch in the sense you use it, especially the “compensation” aspect, means governments taking property from some and giving it to others

    4.   “Then there is the problem that the emissions rights we are talking
    about are, typically time-limited and conditional. But if rights
    created now by modern states have this property, it seems reasonable to
    suppose that this has always been true, and therefore that existing
    property rights may also be subject to state claims of eminent domain.”

    “Property rights” are essentially a portfolio of formal and informal institutions that communities have devised, over long periods of trial and error. Most such “rights” – whether informal or state-recognized – are time-limited and conditional. That states have always and continue to alter, and take, property rights tells us nothing about the justice or efficacy of such actions – and you might have noticed that Elinor Ostrom and the progressives (some of whom I quoted in my prior post) who want to “take back the commons” argue very strongly about both.

    Where our fisheries are collapsing, they are doing so chiefly because our governments have trampled native rights or community-developed practices in favor of bureaucratic management and the resulting tragedy of the commons. While the solution in such cases appears to be the re-creation of property rights that give fishermen a stake in preserving the resource they rely upon, such situations are hardly akin to the worldwide creation of CO2 emission rights, which present much more severe difficulties in allocating and enforcing.

    John Quiggin plays Pin-the-tail-on-the-Donkey with "Libertarians and delusionism"

    November 3rd, 2009 No comments

    John Quiggin, a left-leaning Australian economist and professor at the University of Queensland, has noted my recent post on the penchant for bloggers
    and readers at the Mises Blog to attack climate science – are “almost universally committed to delusional views on climate science“, as he puts it – though these are not words fairly put into my mouth.  Like me, though, Quiggin wonders why wonders why libertarians focus on climate science at the near-exclusion of policy discussions, since (1) he sees “plenty of political opportunities to use climate change to attack subsidies and other existing interventions” and (2) he supposes that the environmental movement`s widespread shift “from profound suspicion
    of markets to enthusiastic support for market-based policies such as
    carbon taxes and cap and trade” seems like a big win for libertarians.

    Quiggin previously commented on “Libertarians and global warming” last June; this seems to be a follow up.

    Quiggins posits that Austrians/libertarians exhibit a “near-universal rejection of mainstream climate science,” and asserts that:

    we can draw one of only three conclusions
    (a) Austrians/libertarians are characterized by delusional belief in
    their own intellectual superiority, to the point where they think they
    can produce an analysis of complex scientific problems superior to that
    of actual scientists, in their spare time and with limited or no
    scientific training in the relevant disciplines, reaching a startling
    degree of unanimity for self-described “sceptics”
    (b) Austrians/libertarians don’t understand their own theory and
    falsely believe that, if mainstream climate science is right, their own
    views must be wrong
    (c) Austrians/libertarians do understand their own theory and correctly
    believe that, if mainstream climate science is right, their own views
    must be wrong

    John concludes:

    “Overall, though I, think that acceptance of the reality of climate
    change would be good for libertarianism as a political movement. It
    would kill off the most extreme and unappealing kinds of a priori
    logic-chopping, while promoting an appreciation of Hayekian arguments
    about the power of market mechanisms. And the very fact of uncertainty
    about climate change is a reminder of the fatality of conceits of
    perfect knowledge.”

    While John asks a good question and reveals some appreciation of markets, it`s clear that he is still pretty much groping in the dark when it comes to understanding libertarians` concerns about climate policy, indeed, even as to libertarian aims and concerns generally. He also overlooks various cognitive/psychological factors that appear to be at play. Naturally, I appreciate the opportunity for discussion.

    1. Before addressing his three possible conclusions, let me note that while “market-based policies such as
    carbon taxes and cap and trade” may seem to John “like a big win for libertarians”, this is most definitely NOT the case for most libertarians in the context of climate change, as these “market-based policies” represent an enormous expansion of government that libertarians feel very strongly, based on past experience, will be profoundly porky, counterproductive and costly. In the face of the fight for favor in Washington and the choice of opaque cap-and-trade over a more open rebated carbon tax and other deregulatory options, there is good reason to believe that libertarians are right.

    2. Regarding conclusion (a), let me first note that John reveals the self-same “conceit of perfect knowledge” that he accuses Austrians/libertarians of having: the “acceptance of reality of climate change” would undoubtedly be good for everyone, but just what is that reality, and how can a layman of any stripe confirm himself that climate is changing and that man is responsible? The very fact that this “reality” is nearly impossible to confirm personally (even over the course of a lifetime) means that even those whom John considers as having “accepted reality” have basically just adopted a frame of reference, on the basis of the consistency of the AGW frame with other previously established mental frames, a reliance on authority, peer-group acceptance, etc.

    “Reality” in this case inevitably, for most people, has very large personal and social components; accordingly, both “acceptance” and “skepticism” of it may look like a group belief, which may help to explain why it is possible to perceive “a startling
    degree of unanimity” of views on climate science, the contents of such views varying by group.

    As for Austrians/libertarians, while I don`t think it is fair to conclude they (we) are characterized by delusional belief in
    their own intellectual superiority, but that many do have a belief, not so much in the superiority of their intellect, but in the correctness of their views on political science and economics (this is common in other groups, of course). This may affect their views on climate science, for several reasons that I have noted to John previously, and may be related for some of them to his conclusions (b) and (c).

    3. Concerning conclusions (b) and (c), these are both over-generalizations; libertarians are a heterogenous bunch. But if I may generalize myself, to me there appears no conflict whatsoever between Austrian views, which are primarily about interpersonal relations and the role of government, and climate science. “Mainstream science” has nothing to do with these views, so if Austrians are wrong about “mainstream climate science”, this does not imply that any Austrian views
    must be wrong. So Quiggins` (c) is wrong.

    Quiggins`(b) – that Austrians may not understand their own theory and
    may falsely believe that, if mainstream climate science is right, their own
    views must be wrong – may be right for some Austrians, but certainly not generally. Rather, what I suspect is going on is much more ordinary, as I previously noted to Quiggin as a comment on his related June post; that I need to repeat myself indicates that maybe John is having cognitive difficulties of his own (emphasis added):

    John, thanks for this piece. As a libertarian who believes that
    climate change IS a problem, I share some of your puzzlement and have
    done considerable commenting
    on this issue [see this long list]. Allow me to offer a few thoughts on various factors at
    work in the general libertarian resistance to taking government action
    on climate change:

    – As Chris Horner noted in your linked
    piece, many libertarians see “global warming [as] the bottomless well
    of excuses for the relentless growth of Big Government.”  Even those who
    agree that is AGW
    is a serious problem are worried, for good reason, that government
    approaches to climate change will be a train wreck – in other words,
    that the government “cure” will be worse than the problem.


    Libertarians have in general drifted quite far from environmentalists.
    Even though they still share a mistrust of big government,
    environmentalists generally believe that MORE
    government is the answer, while ignoring all of the problems associated
    with inefficient bureaucratic management (witness the crashing of many
    managed fisheries in the US), the manipulation of such managment to
    benefit bureaucratic interests, special interests and insiders
    (wildfire fighting budgets, fossil fuel and hard rock mining, etc.) and
    the resultant and inescapable politicization of all disputes due to the
    absence of private markets. Libertarians see that socialized property
    rights regimes can be just as “tragedy of the commons” ruinous as cases
    where community or private solutions have not yet developed, and have
    concluded that, without privatization, government involvement
    inevitably expands. Thus, libertarians often see environmentalists as
    simply another group fighting to expand government, and are hostile as
    a result.

    Libertarians are as subject to reflexive, partisan
    position-taking as any one else. Because they are reflexively opposed
    to government action, they find it easier to operate from a position of
    skepticism in trying to bat down AGW scientific and economic arguments (and to slam the motives of those arguing that AGW
    must be addressed by government) than to open-mindedly review the
    evidence.
    This is a shame( but human), because it blunts the libertarian
    message in explaining what libertarians understand very well – that
    environmental problems arise when property rights over resources are
    not clearly defined or enforceable, and also when governments
    (mis)manage resources.

    I`ve discussed a number of times how we all easily fall into partisan cognitive traps, as summarized here.

    A related piece of the dynamic is that some libertarians may feel that if they agree that AGW may be a problem, that this will be taken – wrongly – by others in the political arena as a conclusion that the libertarian message is no longer relevant.

    4. Some support for these points can be seen in Edwin Dolan`s 2006 paper, “Science, Public Policy and Global Warming: Rethinking the Market Liberal Position” (Cato), in which Dolan suggests that many libertarian climate skeptics are acting quite as
    if they are “conservatives” of the type condemned by Friedrich Hayek
    Dolan cites Hayek’s 1960 essay, “Why I am Not a Conservative” (1960),
    in which Hayek identified the following traits that distinguish
    conservatism from market liberalism:

    • Habitual resistance to change, hence the term “conservative.”
    • Lack of understanding of spontaneous order as a guiding principle of economic life.
    • Use of state authority to protect established privileges against the forces of economic change.
    • Claim to superior wisdom based on self-arrogated superior quality in place of rational argument.
    • A propensity to reject scientific knowledge because of dislike of the consequences that seem to follow from it.

    Further support is provided by Jonathan Adler, a libertarian law professor at Case Western who focusses on resource issues, and who has concluded that climate change is a serious concern, and that man is contributing to it. His February 2008 post, “Climate Change, Cumulative Evidence, and Ideology” (and the comment thread) is instructive:

    “Almost every time I post something on climate
    change policy, the comment thread quickly devolves into a debate over
    the existence of antrhopogenic global warming at all. (See, for
    instance, this post
    on “conservative” approaches to climate change policy.) I have largely
    refused to engage in these discussions because I find them quite
    unproductive. The same arguments are repeated ad nauseum, and no one is
    convinced (if anyone even listens to what the other side is saying). …

    “Given my strong libertarian leanings, it would certainly be
    ideologically convenient if the evidence for a human contribution to
    climate change were less strong. Alas, I believe the preponderance of
    evidence strongly supports the claim that anthropogenic emissions are
    having an effect on the global climate, and that effect will increase
    as greenhouse gases accumulate in the atmosphere. While I reject most
    apocalyptic scenarios as unfounded or unduly speculative, I am
    convinced that the human contribution to climate change will cause or
    exacerbate significant problems in at least some parts of the world.
    For instance, even a relatively modest warming over the coming decades
    is very likely to have a meaningful effect on the timing and
    distribution of precipitation and evaporation rates, which will, in
    turn, have a substantial impact on freshwater supplies. That we do not
    know with any precision the when, where, and how much does not change
    the fact that we are quite certain that such changes will occur.

    “So-called climate “skeptics” make many valid points about the
    weakness or unreliability of many individual arguments and studies on
    climate. They also point out how policy advocates routinely exaggerate
    the implications of various studies or the likely consequences of even
    the most robust climate predictions. Economists and others have also
    done important work questioning whether climate risks justify extreme
    mitigation measures. But none of this changes the fact that the
    cumulative evidence for a human contribution to present and future
    climate changes, when taken as a whole, is quite strong. In this
    regard, I think it is worth quoting something Ilya wrote below about
    the nature of evidence in his post about 12 Angry Men”:

    People
    often dismiss individual arguments and evidence against their preferred
    position without considering the cumulative weight of the other side’s
    points. It’s a very easy fallacy to fall into. But the beginning of
    wisdom is to at least be aware of the problem.

    “The “divide
    and conquer” strategy of dissecting each piece of evidence
    independently can make for effective advocacy, but it is not a good way
    to find the truth”

    I  noted the following in response to Adler:

    I think that there are many Austrians who understand WHY there might
    be a climate change problem to which man contributes, as the atmosphere
    is an open-access resource, in which there are no clear or
    enforceable property rights that rein in externalities or that give
    parties with differing preferences an ability to engage in meaingful
    transactions that reflect those preferences. 

    But, flawed human beings that we are, we have difficulty truly
    keeping our minds open (subconscious dismissal of inconsistent data is
    a cognitive rule) and we easily fall into tribal modes of conflict that
    provide us with great satisfaction in disagreeing with those evil
    “others” while circling the wagons
    (and counting coup) with our
    brothers in arms.

    Sadly, this is very much in evidence in the thread to your own post.

    5. I have pulled together a post that indicates that a number of libertarians are trying to engage in good faith on climate change, and which may also serve as a good introduction for interested readers to libertarian thinking on environmental issues.

    6. Finally, let me note that many of the problems that concern libertarians also concern progressives, chief of these being the negative effects of state actions on communities, development and on open-access (and hitherto local, indigenous-managed) commons.  This is the same concern that the Nobel Prize committee expressed when extending the prize in Economics to Elinor Ostrom, signalling their desire for a change in international aid policy.

    You might find these remarks by Nicholas Hildyard, Larry Lohmann, Sarah Sexton and Simon Fairlie in “Reclaiming the Commons” (1995) to be pertinent; domestic cap-and-trade is an enclosure of the atmospheric commons, for the benefit of firms receiving grants of permits and costs flowing regressively to energy consumers, and internationally represents a vast expansion of state authority and bureaucracies, with attendant enclosure of local resources:

    The creation of empires and states, business conglomerates and
    civic dictatorships — whether in pre-colonial times or in the modern
    era — has only been possible through dismantling the commons and
    harnessing the fragments, deprived of their old significance, to build
    up new economic and social patterns that are responsive to the
    interests of a dominant minority. The modern nation state has been
    built only by stripping power and control from commons regimes and
    creating structures of governance from which the great mass of humanity
    (particularly women) are excluded. Likewise, the market economy has
    expanded primarily by enabling state and commercial interests to gain
    control of territory that has traditionally been used and cherished by
    others, and by transforming that territory – together with the people
    themselves – into expendable “resources” for exploitation. By enclosing
    forests, the state and private enterprise have torn them out of fabrics
    of peasant subsistence; by providing local leaders with an outside
    power base, unaccountable to local people, they have undermined village
    checks and balances; by stimulating demand for cash goods, they have
    impelled villagers to seek an ever wider range of things to sell. Such
    a policy was as determinedly pursued by the courts of Aztec Mexico, the
    feudal lords of West Africa, and the factory owners of Lancashire and
    the British Rail as it is today by the International Monetary Fund or
    Coca-Cola Inc.

    Only in this way has it been possible to convert peasants into
    labour for a global economy, replace traditional with modern
    agriculture, and free up the commons for the industrial economy.
    Similarly, only by atomizing tasks and separating workers from the
    moral authority, crafts and natural surroundings created by their
    communities has it been possible to transform them into modern,
    universal individuals susceptible to “management”. In short, only by
    deliberately taking apart local cultures and reassembling them in new
    forms has it been possible to open them up to global trade.[FN L.
    Lohmann, ‘Resisting Green Globalism’ in W. Sachs (ed), Global Ecology:
    Conflicts and Contradictions, Zed Books, London and New Jersey, 1993.]

    To achieve that “condition of economic progress”, millions have
    been marginalized as a calculated act of policy, their commons
    dismantled and degraded, their cultures denigrated and devalued and
    their own worth reduced to their value as labour. Seen from this
    perspective, many of the processes that now go under the rubric of
    “nation-building”, “economic growth”, and “progress” are first ad
    foremost processes of expropriation, exclusion, denial and
    dispossession. In a word, of “enclosure”.

    Because history’s best-known examples of enclosure involved the
    fencing in of common pasture, enclosure is often reduced to a synonym
    for “expropriation”. But enclosure involves more than land and fences,
    and implies more than simply privatization or takeover by the state. It
    is a compound process which affects nature and culture, home and
    market, production and consumption, germination and harvest, birth,
    sickness and death. It is a process to which no aspect of life or
    culture is immune. ..,

    Enclosure tears people and their lands, forests, crafts,
    technologies and cosmologies out of the cultural framework in which
    they are embedded and tries to force them into a new framework which
    reflects and reinforces the values and interests of newly-dominant
    groups. Any pieces which will not fit into the new framework are
    devalued and discarded. In the modern age, the architecture of this new
    framework is determined by market forces, science, state and corporate
    bureaucracies, patriarchal forms of social organization, and ideologies
    of environmental and social management.

    Land, for example, once it is integrated into a framework of
    fences, roads and property laws, is “disembedded” from local fabrics of
    self-reliance and redefined as “property” or “real estate”. Forests are
    divided into rigidly defined precincts – mining concessions, logging
    concessions, wildlife corridors and national parks – and transformed
    from providers of water, game, wood and vegetables into scarce
    exploitable economic resources. Today they are on the point of being
    enclosed still further as the dominant industrial culture seeks to
    convert them into yet another set of components of the industrial
    system, redefining them as “sinks” to absorb industrial carbon dioxide
    and as pools of “biodiversity”. Air is being enclosed as economists
    seek to transform it into a marketable “waste sink”; and genetic
    material by subjecting it to laws which convert it into the
    “intellectual property” of private interests.

    People too are enclosed as they are fitted into a new society where
    they must sell their labour, learn clock-time and accustom themselves
    to a life of production and consumption; groups of people are redefined
    as “populations’, quantifiable entities whose size must be adjusted to
    take pressure off resources required for the global economy. …

    enclosure transforms the environment into a “resource” for national or
    global production – into so many chips that can be cashed in as
    commodities, handed out as political favours and otherwise used to
    accrue power. …

    Enclosure thus cordons off those aspects of the environment that are
    deemed “useful” to the encloser — whether grass for sheep in 16th
    century England or stands of timber for logging in modern-say Sarawak
    — and defines them, and them alone, as valuable. A street becomes a
    conduit for vehicles; a wetland, a field to be drained; flowing water,
    a wasted asset to be harnessed for energy or agriculture. Instead of
    being a source of multiple benefits, the environment becomes a
    one-dimensional asset to be exploited for a single purpose – that
    purpose reflecting the interests of the encloser, and the priorities of
    the wider political economy in which the encloser operates….

    Enclosure opens the way for the bureaucratization and enclosure of
    knowledge itself. It accords power to those who master the language of
    the new professionals and who are versed in its etiquette and its
    social nuances, which are inaccessible to those who have not been to
    school or to university, who do not have professional qualifications,
    who cannot operate computers, who cannot fathom the apparent mysteries
    of a cost-benefit analysis, or who refuse to adopt the forceful tones
    of an increasingly “masculine” world.

    In that respect, as Illich notes, “enclosure is as much in the
    interest of professionals and of state bureaucrats as it is in the
    interests of capitalists.” For as local ways of knowing and doing are
    devalued or appropriated, and as vernacular forms of governance are
    eroded, so state and professional bodies are able to insert themselves
    within the commons, taking over areas of life that were previously
    under the control of individuals, households and the community.
    Enclosure “allows the bureaucrat to define the local community as
    impotent to provide for its own survival.”[FN I Illich, ‘Silence is a
    Commons’, The Coevolution Quarterly, Winter 1983.] It invites the
    professional to come to the “rescue” of those whose own knowledge is
    deemed inferior to that of the encloser.

    Enclosure is thus a change in the networks of power which enmesh
    the environment, production, distribution, the political process,
    knowledge, research and the law. It reduces the control of local people
    over community affairs. Whether female or male, a person’s influence
    and ability to make a living depends increasingly on becoming absorbed
    into the new policy created by enclosure, on accepting — willingly or
    unwillingly — a new role as a consumer, a worker, a client or an
    administrator, on playing the game according to new rules. The way is
    thus cleared for cajoling people into the mainstream, be it through
    programmes to bring women “into development”, to entice smallholders
    “into the market” or to foster paid employment.[FN P. Simmons, ‘Women
    in Development’, The Ecologist, Vol. 22, No.1, 1992, pp.16-21.]

    Those who remain on the margins of the new mainstream, either by
    choice or because that is where society has pushed them, are not only
    deemed to have little value: they are perceived as a threat. Thus it is
    the landless, the poor, the dispossessed who are blamed for forest
    destruction; their poverty which is held responsible for
    “overpopulation”; their protests which are classed as subversive and a
    threat to political stability. And because they are perceived as a
    threat, they become objects to be controlled, the legitimate subjects
    of yet further enclosure. …

    People who would oppose dams, logging, the redevelopment of their
    neighbourhoods or the pollution of their rivers are often left few
    means of expressing or arguing their case unless they are prepared to
    engage in a debate framed by the languages of cost-benefit analysis,
    reductionist science, utilitarianism, male domination — and,
    increasingly, English. Not only are these languages in which many local
    objection — such as that which holds ancestral community rights to a
    particular place to have precedence over the imperatives of “national
    development” — appear disreputable. They are also languages whose use
    allows enclosers to eavesdrop on, “correct” and dominate the
    conversations of the enclosed. …

    Because they hold themselves to be speaking a universal language,
    the modern enclosers who work for development agencies and governments
    feel no qualms in presuming to speak for the enclosed. They assume
    reflexively that they understand their predicament as well as or better
    than the enclosed do themselves. It is this tacit assumption that
    legitimizes enclosure in the encloser’s mind – and it is an assumption
    that cannot be countered simply by transferring what are
    conventionbally assumed to be the trappings of power from one group to
    another….

    A space for the commons cannot be created by economists,
    development planners, legislators, “empowerment” specialists or other
    paternalistic outsiders. To place the future in the hands of such
    individuals would be to maintain the webs of power that are currently
    stifling commons regimes. One cannot legislate the commons into
    existence; nor can the commons be reclaimed simply by adopting “green
    techniques” such as organic agriculture, alternative energy strategies
    or better public transport — necessary and desirable though such
    techniques often are. Rather, commons regimes emerge through ordinary
    people’s day-to-day resistance to enclosure, and through their efforts
    to regain livelihoods and the mutual support, responsibility and trust
    that sustain the commons.

    That is not to say that one can ignore policy-makers or
    policy-making. The depredations of transnational corporations,
    international bureaucracies and national governments cannot be allowed
    to go unchallenged. But movements for social change have a
    responsibility to ensure that in seeking solutions, they do not remove
    the initiative from those who are defending their commons or attempting
    to regenerate common regimes — a responsibility they should take
    seriously.

    Might there be good reason NOT to rush into a vast expansion of government world-wide?

     

    A libertarian immodestly summarizes a few modest climate policy proposals

    November 3rd, 2009 No comments

    [Folks, I hope you do a better job than I do at saving draft posts before they`re finalized; I just lost alot of work. This will necessarily be shorter.]

    I have on numerous occasions tried to point out, to posters on the Mises
    Blog who have addressed climate issues, the stunning unproductive approach. Rather than simply reiterating my criticisms, let me get started with a
    list of policy changes that I think libertarians can and should be
    championing in response to the climate policy proposals of others.

    The incessant calls for – and criticism of –
    government climate change policies and government subsidies and mandates for “green/clean power” both ignore root
    causes and potential common ground.  As a result, both sides of the
    debate are largely talking past each other, one talking about why there
    is a pressing need for government policy to address climate change
    concerns,
    while the other is concerned chiefly about the likelihood of
    heavy-handed mis-regulation and wasted resources. This leaves the
    middle ground unexplored.

    There are plenty of root causes for the calls for legislative
    and regulatory mandates in favor of climate policies and clean / green / renewable power,
    such as:

    • concerns about climate change,
    • the political deal in favor of dirty coal and older power plants under the Clean Air Act, 
    • the enduring role of the federal and state governments in owning
      vast coal and oil & gas fields and relying on the royalties, which it do not go to
      citizens but into the General Pork Pool, with an unhealthy cut to states), 
    • the unwillingness of state courts, in the face of the political
      power of the energy and power industries, to protect persons and private property from
      pollution and environmental disruption created by federally-licensed energy and power projects,
    • the deep involvement of the government in developing, encouraging and regulating nuclear power, and
    • the
      frustration of consumer demand for green energy, and the inefficient
      and inaccurate pricing and supply of electricity
      , resulting from the
      grant by states of public utility monopolies and the regulation of the pricing
      and investments by utilities, which greatly restricts the freedom of power
      markets, from the ability of consumers to choose their provider, to the
      freedom of utilities to determine what infrastructure to invest in, to
      even simple information as to the cost of power as it varies by time of day and season, and the amount of electricity that consumers use by time of day or appliance.

    So what is a good libertarian to suggest? This seems rather straight-forward, once one doffs his partisan, do-battle-with-evil-green-fascist-commies armor and puts on his thinking cap.

    From my earlier comment to Stephan Kinsella:

    As Rob Bradley once reluctantly acknowledged to me, in the halcyon days before he banned me from the “free-market” Master Resource blog, “a
    free-market approach is not about “do nothing” but implementing a whole
    new energy approach to remove myriad regulation and subsidies that have
    built up over a century or more.”
    But unfortunately the wheels of this principled concern have never hit the ground at MR [my persistence in
    pointing this out it, and in questioning whether his blog was a front for
    fossil fuel interests, apparently earned me the boot
    ].

    As I have noted in a litany of posts at my blog, pro-freedom regulatory changes might include:

    • accelerating cleaner power investments by eliminating corporate
      income taxes or allowing immediate depreciation of capital investment
      (which would make new investments more attractive),
    • eliminating antitrust immunity for public utility monopolies (to
      increase competition, allow consumer choice, peak pricing and “smart metering” that will
      rapidly push efficiency gains),
    • ending Clean Air Act handouts to the worst utilities (or otherwise
      unwinding burdensome regulations and moving to lighter and more
      common-law dependent approaches),
    • ending energy subsidies generally (including federal liability caps for nuclear power (and allowing states to license),
    • speeding economic growth and adaptation in the poorer countries
      most threatened by climate change by rolling back domestic agricultural
      corporate welfare programs
      (ethanol and sugar), and
    • if there is to be any type of carbon pricing at all, insisting that it is a per capita, fully-rebated carbon tax
      (puts the revenues in the hands of those with the best claim to it,
      eliminates regressive impact and price volatility, least new
      bureaucracy, most transparent, and least susceptible to pork).

    Other policy changes could also be put
    on the table, such as an insistence that government resource management
    be improved by requiring that half of all royalties be rebated to
    citizens
    (with a slice to the administering agency).

    I`m not the only one – other libertarian climate proposals are here:

    Several libertarians have recently been urging constructive libertarian approaches to climate change:

    These discussions and exchanges of view are also worthy of note:

    • The Cato Institute has dedicated its entire August 2008 monthly issue of Cato Unbound, its online forum, to discussing policy responses to ongoing climate change.  The issue, entitled “Keeping Our Cool: What to Do about Global Warming“, contains essays from and several rounds of discussion between Cato Institute author Indur Goklany; climate scientist Joseph J. Romm, a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress; and Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus, the co-founders of The Breakthrough Institute.  My extended comments are here.

    • Debate at Reason, October 2007, Ron Bailey, Science Correspondent at Reason, Fred L. Smith, Jr., President and Founder of
      CEI, and Lynne Kiesling, Senior Lecturer in Economics at
      Northwestern University, and former director of economic policy at the
      Reason Foundation.
    • Reason Foundation, Global Warming and Potential Policy Solutions September 7th, 2006 (Reason’s Shikha Dalmia, George Mason University Department of Economics
      Chair Don Boudreaux, and the International Policy Network’s
      Julian Morris)

    Finally, I have collected here some Austrian-based papers on environmental issues that are worthy of note:

    Environmental Markets?  Links to Austrians

    One such paper is the following: Terry L. Anderson and J. Bishop Grewell, Property Rights Solutions for the Global Commons: Bottom-Up or Top-Down?

    The Road Not Taken IV: My other hysterical comments on climate science & how Austrians hamstring themselves

    November 2nd, 2009 2 comments

    In my initial post, on how Austrians strive for a self-comforting irrelevancy on climate change, I copied my chief comment to Stephan Kinsella.

    I copy below my other posts and some of the remarks I was responding to on Stephan`s thread, including the one that I was unable to post – for some reason I am trying to figure out (but that Stephan tells me was not a result of moderation by him; I note my full apology, as stated in my update to my preceding post):

    • TokyoTom

      fundamentalist: “I love the responses from the GW hysteria crowd.
      They have nothing to offer but ad hominem attacks and appeals to
      authority.”

      Am I excluded from the “hysteria” crowd, Roger? Because if I`m in,
      you seem to have entirely missed my post, and my point, as to the
      consistency of your arguments with Austrian principles and the
      effectiveness of approaches like yours in dealing with the rest of the
      world – including all of the deluded and others who are engaged in bad
      faith.

      Published: October 30, 2009 9:44 AM

    • Stephan Kinsella
      [Note: this is the comment to which I responded with the remarks copied on my preceding post]

      “Tokyo” asked me to respond to his post but it’s so rambling I am
      not sure what to respond to. To me this is very simple. I think we are
      in an interglacial period. It’s going to start getting cooler
      eventually, unless by then we have enough technology and freedom (no
      offense, Tokyo) to stop it. If there is global warming maybe it can
      delay the coming ice age by a few centuries.

      If there were really global warming why not just use “nuclear
      winter” to cool things down? You don’t see the envirotards advocating that! 🙂 (see Greenpeace to advocate nuking the earth?)

      In any event as I see it there are several issues. Is it warming?
      Can we know it? Do we know it? Are we causing it? Can we stop it?
      Should we stop it?

      It seem to me we do not know that it’s warming; if it is, it’s
      probably not caused by Man; and if it is, there’s probably nothing we
      can do to stop it except effectively destroy mankind; there’s no reason
      to stop it since it won’t even be all bad, and in fact would be overall
      good. I do not trust the envirotards, who hate industrialism and love
      the state, and seek anything to stop capitalism and to give the state
      an excuse to increase regulations and taxes; why anyone thinks these
      watermelons really know what the temperature will be in 10, 100, 1000
      years, when we can’t even get accurate weather forecasts a week out, is
      beyond me.

      That said, I’ll take the watermelons seriously when they start
      advocating nuclear power. Until then, they reveal themselves to be
      anti-industry, anti-man, techo-illiterates. (See Green nukes; Nuclear spring?.)

      Published: October 30, 2009 10:03 AM

    • TokyoTom

      [my prior version ran off without my permission; this is a re-draft]

      It seems like I can lead a horse to water, but I can`t make him think,

      We all have our own maps of reality and our own calculus as to what
      government policies are desirable and when, but as for me, the status
      quo needs changing, and the desire of a wide range of people – be they
      deluded, evil, conniving or whatnot – to do something on the climate
      front seems like a great opportunity to get freedom-enhancing measures
      on the table and to achieve some of MY preferences, chiefly because
      they help to advance the professed green agenda. [To clarify, I didn`t mean that I want to advance “the green agenda”, but that the pro-freedom policy suggestions I have raised should be attainable because greens and others might see that they also serve THEIR agendas.]

      I see no reason to sit at home or simply scoff or fling poo from the
      sidelines, and let what I see as a bad situation get worse. There`s
      very little in that for practically anyone here – except of course
      those who like coal pollution, public utilities, corporate income
      taxes, big ag corporate welfare, political fights over government-owned
      resources, energy subsidies and over-regulation, etc. (and those folks
      aren`t sitting at home, believe me).

      I can keep on questioning everyone`s sanity or bona fides, or I can
      argue strongly for BETTER policies, that advance shared aims.

      Does Austrian thinking simply lack a practical political arm, other
      than those few who have signed up to support special interests?

      Ramblin` Tom

      Published: October 30, 2009 11:51 AM

    • TokyoTom

      Stephan, if I may, I am appalled and offended by your shallow and
      fundamentally dishonest engagement here. That there are a string of
      others who have preceded you in this regard is no excuse.

      You: (i) post without significant comment a one-page letter from a
      scientist – as if the letter itself is vindication, victory or a
      roadmap for how we should seek to engage the views and preferences of
      others,

      (ii) refuse to answer my straightforward questions (both above and
      at my cross-linked post, which you visited) on how we engage others in
      the very active ongoing political debate, in a manner that actually
      defends and advances our policy agenda, and (putting aside the
      insulting and disingenuous “Tokyo asked me to respond” and “it’s so
      rambling I am not sure what to respond to”); and

      (iii) then proceed to present your own view of the science, the
      motives and sanity “watermelons” (as if they`re running the show), a
      few helpful, free-market libertarian “solutions”, like open-air
      explosion of nuclear weapons to bring about a “nuclear winter” effect!

      And my attempt to bring your focus back to the question of how we
      actually deal with others in the POLITICAL bargaining that is, after
      all, underway is met with silence – other than your faithful report
      back from your trusty climate physicist expert policy guru friend about
      …. science (all being essentially irrelevant to my question, not
      merely the cute little folksy demonstration about how the troubling
      melting and thinning of Antarctic ice sheets actually now underway
      simply CAN`T be occurring, but also a further failure to address the
      very rapid ocean acidification our CO2 emissions are producing)!

      Maybe it`s me, but I find this type of insincere and shallow
      engagement on such a serious issue to be a shameful discredit to the
      Mises Blog (even if it does cater to those who prefer to think that the
      big to do about climate – which may very well result in a mass of
      ill-considered, costly and counterproductive
      legislation – is really groundless and so can simply be ignored, aside from a bit of internal fulminations here).

      If you are not actually interested in discussing policy on a serious issue, then consider refraining from posting on it.

      Maybe it`s not my position to expect better, but I do.

      Sincerely,

      Tom

      Roy Cordato (linked at my name) said this:

      “The starting point for all Austrian welfare economics is the goal
      seeking individual and the ability of actors to formulate and execute
      plans within the context of their goals. … [S]ocial welfare or
      efficiency problems arise because of interpersonal conflict. [C] that
      similarly cannot be resolved by the market process, gives rise to
      catallactic inefficiency by preventing useful information from being
      captured by prices.”

      “Environmental problems are brought to light as striking at the
      heart of the efficiency problem as typically seen by Austrians, that
      is, they generate human conflict and disrupt inter- and intra-personal
      plan formulation and execution.”

      “The focus of the Austrian approach to environmental economics is
      conflict resolution. The purpose of focusing on issues related to
      property rights is to describe the source of the conflict and to
      identify possible ways of resolving it.”

      “If a pollution problem exists then its solution must be found in
      either a clearer definition of property rights to the relevant
      resources or in the stricter enforcement of rights that already exist.
      This has been the approach taken to environmental problems by nearly
      all Austrians who have addressed these kinds of issues (see Mises 1998;
      Rothbard 1982; Lewin 1982; Cordato 1997). This shifts the perspective
      on pollution from one of “market failure” where the free market is seen
      as failing to generate an efficient outcome, to legal failure where the
      market process is prevented from proceeding efficiently because the
      necessary institutional framework, clearly defined and enforced
      property rights, is not in place.”

      Published: October 31, 2009 1:00 PM

    • TokyoTom

      Bala:

      “Did rising temperatures cause an increase in atmospheric carbon-dioxide concentration”.

      This is a great, basic question; I`d love to answer it (actually, I
      already did, though a bit indirectly), but you see, I`m one of the
      nasty obfuscating members of the socialist hysterical crowd, so I
      really should defer to others here who have better ideological and
      scientific stature here (and who hate ad hominems and love reason),
      such as fundamentalist, or perhaps even our confident lead poster,
      Stephan Kinsella (who has nothing to offer on the question of how
      libertarians should engage with others on the political front), or even
      our humble physicist climate system authority, Dr. Hayden.

      Gentlemen, take it away.

      Published: October 31, 2009 11:31 AM

    • TokyoTom

      I`m sorry I don`t have time now to respond in more detail to those
      who have commented in response to mine, but let me note that not one of
      you has troubled to actually respond to my challenge, which was based
      on Austrian concepts of conflict resolution, understanding of
      rent-seeking embedded in the status quo, and the recognition that the
      present debate on climate, energy and environmental issues presents
      opportunities to actually advance an Austrian agenda.

      In my view, we can either try to improve our lot, by seeking items
      such as those I laid out previously or condemn ourselves to irrelevancy
      by standing by and letting the big boys and the Baptists in their
      coalition hammer out something worse from our Congresscritters.

      For this, the correctness of our own views of climate science
      matters little – nothing, in fact, unless we are willing to DO
      something about it, by engaging with OTHERS who have DIFFERENT views.

      For those who have too much trouble remembering the legal/regulatory changes that I suggested, here they are:

      [pro-freedom regulatory changes might include:

      * accelerating cleaner power investments by eliminating corporate
      income taxes or allowing immediate amortization of capital investment,
      * eliminating antitrust immunity for public utility monopolies (to
      allow consumer choice, peak pricing and “smart metering” that will
      rapidly push efficiency gains),
      * ending Clean Air Act handouts to the worst utilities (or otherwise
      unwinding burdensome regulations and moving to lighter and more
      common-law dependent approaches),
      * ending energy subsidies generally (including federal liability caps for nuclear power (and allowing states to license),
      * speeding economic growth and adaptation in the poorer countries most
      threatened by climate change by rolling back domestic agricultural
      corporate welfare programs (ethanol and sugar), and
      * if there is to be any type of carbon pricing at all, insisting that
      it is a per capita, fully-rebated carbon tax (puts the revenues in the
      hands of those with the best claim to it, eliminates regressive impact
      and price volatility, least new bureaucracy, most transparent, and
      least susceptible to pork).

      Other policy changes could also be put on the table, such as an
      insistence that government resource management be improved by requiring
      that half of all royalties be rebated to citizens (with a slice to the
      administering agency).]

      Many others come to mind.

      Well, what`s it going to be? Relevancy, or a tribal exercise in disengaged and smug self-satisfaction?

      Published: October 31, 2009 12:37 PM

    • TokyoTom

      1. Christopher and mpolzkill:

      Thanks for the favor of your comments.

      I was asking if Austrians never seek to practically engage others on
      questions of policy; the first of you brings up Ron Paul, but one man
      is not a policy, nor are his sole efforts a policy program; the other
      of you suggests succession from the U, which is hardly an effort at
      pragmatic engagement with anybody over a particular issue. (BTW, here
      is Ron Paul`s climate program.)

      I can see some engagement by libertarians on this issue, but such
      seeds either (i) die when they fall on the rocky ground of the Mises
      Blog or (ii) represent work by people paid to criticize one side of the
      debate, and consistently ignore problems with the definitely
      non-libertarian status quo.

      Why libertarians do not see any opportunity here for a positive
      agenda? Do they prefer to be taken as implicit supporters of the
      government interventions that underlie most enviros` complaints?

      2. fundamentalist:

      “I don’t see anyone doing that except the GW hysterical crowd.
      Honest scientists like Hayden try to present evidence and reason so
      that we can have a real debate, and the hysterical crowd flings poo
      from the sidelines.”

      Thanks for your direct comment (even as you lace it and others with
      ad homs), but can`t you see you also are missing my point? Are you NOT
      interested in trying to cut deals that would, say:

      * accelerate cleaner power investments by eliminating corporate
      income taxes or allowing immediate amortization of capital investment,
      * eliminate antitrust immunity for public utility monopolies (to allow
      consumer choice, peak pricing and “smart metering” that will rapidly
      push efficiency gains),
      * end Clean Air Act handouts to the worst utilities (or otherwise
      unwinding burdensome regulations and moving to lighter and more
      common-law dependent approaches),
      * end energy subsidies generally (including federal liability caps for nuclear power (and allowing states to license),
      * speed economic growth and adaptation in the poorer countries most
      threatened by climate change by rolling back domestic agricultural
      corporate welfare programs (ethanol and sugar),
      * insist that government resource management be improved by requiring that half of all royalties be rebated to citizens,
      * end federal subsidies to development on barrier islands, etc. or
      * improve adaptability by deregulating and privatizing roads and other “public” infrastructure?

      Or is it more productive to NOT deal with those whom you hate, and
      stand by while special interests cut deals that widen and deepen the
      federal trough?

      TT

      Published: November 1, 2009 2:21 AM

    • TokyoTom

      Allow me to outline here a few responses to the arguments raised by
      Dr. Hayden, even as I do not pretend to be an expert (and, to be
      pedantic, even though they are largely irrelevant to the question of
      whether Austrians wish to take advantage of the opportunity presented
      by the many scientists and others who have differing views, to roll
      back alot of costly, counterproductive and unfair regulation).

      1. Models: Dr. Hayden disingenuously casts aside what modern physics
      tells us about how God plays dice with the universe (via random,
      unpredictible behavior throughout the universe), and the limits of
      human knowledge (including the ability to measure all inputs affecting
      climate, including all of our own), and essentially asks us to wait
      until our knowledge is perfect, and our ability to capture and
      number-crunch all information relevant to the Earth`s climate
      (including changing solar and cosmic ray inputs and ocean behavior)
      before any of us, or our imperfect governments, can take any action on
      climate.

      Physical and practical impossibility aside, is this how any human or
      any human organization structures its decisions? Narrowly, Dr. Hayden
      is of course right that “the science is not settled”, but so what?

      2. Was there a tipping point 300 million years ago (or whenever it was when CO2 levels reached 8000 ppm) ?
      Dr. Hayden plays with language, suggesting that a “tipping point” means
      something irreversible over hundreds of millions of years, when it`s
      very clear that there have in the past been numerous abrupt changes in
      climate (some taking place in as little as a few years, with a general
      return to prior values sometimes taking very long periods of time) and
      that scientists today are talking about tipping points that may be reached in human lifetimes.
      Will we lose all mountain glaciers? Will the Arctic become ice-free in
      winter? Will thawing release sufficient methane from tundras and seabed
      clathrates to push the climate even more forcibly than CO2? Are we set
      to lose glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica, regardless of what we do?
      Will we dry out the Amazon basin, and interrupt the Asian monsoon?
      There is plenty of concern and evidence that these things are real
      possibilities.

      3. “Global-warming alarmists tell us that the rising CO2 concentration is (A) anthropogenic and (B) leading to global warming.”

      But you never tell us whether you, too, Dr. Hayden, are an
      “alarmist”. Further down you acknowledge that “Nobody doubts that CO2
      has some greenhouse effect” admitting (B) (though not that it may be
      the chief factor), but as far as (A) goes, you only acknowledge that
      “CO2 concentration is increasing”. Care to make yourself an alarmist by
      admitting what cannot be denied – that man is responsible for rising
      CO2 concentrations? Or you prefer play with laymen`s ignorance by
      irresponsibly suggesting that rising CO2 is now due to warming oceans
      and not man`s activities?

      – “CO2 concentration has risen and fallen in the past with no help from mankind.”

      Yes, but what relevance is this now, when man is undeniably not simply “helping” but clearly responsible?

      – “The present rise began in the 1700s, long before humans could have made a meaningful contribution.”

      So? Does the fact that CO2 fluctuates naturally do to things other
      than man`s activities mean humans` massive releases of CO2 have NOT
      made a “meaningful contribution”? It`s very clear that the Industrial Revolution caused a dramatic rise in CO2. Surely you don`t disagree?

      – “Alarmists have failed to ask, let alone answer, what the CO2
      level would be today if we had never burned any fuels. They simply
      assume that it would be the “pre-industrial” value.”

      “Alarmists” of course is simply an unhelpful ad hom; and as for the rest, concerned scientists and laymen clearly note how CO2 has fluctuated prior to the Industrial Revolution.

      There undoubtedly many clueless laymen, just as there are some
      clueless scientists, so your sweeping statement may be narrowly
      accurate.

      But in the big picture, it is clear that man has had a drastic
      impact on CO2 levels – so what, precisely, is your point, except to
      confuse the issue?

      – “The solubility of CO2 in water decreases as water warms, and
      increases as water cools. The warming of the earth since the Little Ice
      Age has thus caused the oceans to emit CO2 into the atmosphere.”

      Sure, but this doesn`t mean man hasn`t been the dominant contributor to atmospheric CO2.

      Further, of course, warming oceans CEASED to release CO2 at the
      point that atmospheric CO2 started to make the oceans more acidic.

      – “The historical record shows that climate changes precede CO2
      changes. How, then, can one conclude that CO2 is responsible for the
      current warming?”

      The lag in the historical record BEFORE man simply shows that CO2,
      which has an acknowledged warming effect, was a warming reinforcer and
      not an initiator. This does NOT, of course, suggest that massive CO2
      releases by man magically have NO effect.

      4. Assuming that we ARE changing climate, is that a bad thing?

      – “A warmer world is a better world.” Maybe, but are there NO costs,
      losses or damages in moving to one? And do those people and communities
      who bear these costs or kinda like things as they are have any choice,
      much less defendable property rights?

      – “The higher the CO2 levels, the more vibrant is the biosphere, as
      numerous experiments in greenhouses have shown. … Those huge
      dinosaurs could not exist anywhere on the earth today because the land
      is not productive enough. CO2 is plant food, pure and simple.”

      I see; this is not a question of fossil fuel interests homesteading
      the sky (or being given license by govt) and so being entitled to shift
      risks and costs on us, but them beneficiently bestowing gifts on
      mankind – or dinosaurs, as Dr. Hayden may prefer! Wonderful gifts that
      cannot be returned for centuries or millenia! Yippee!

      [This is only scratching the surface of the letter, but I`m afraid I need to run for now.]

      Published: November 1, 2009 4:51 AM

    • TokyoTom [Note: my original post contained some bolding that went haywire and bolded most of the post; I`ve fixed that.]

      Okay, here`s a few more unconsidered thoughts to show how hysterical
      I am, am hooked on religion, hate mankind, [want to] return us to the Middle Ages
      and otherwise take over the world:

      – “Look at weather-related death rates in winter and in summer, and the case is overwhelming that warmer is better.”

      Sure, for If only it were so simple. The increase in AVERAGE global
      temps that we`ve experienced so far has meant little warming of the
      oceans (a vast thermal sink), and has shown up at higher latitudes,
      where we have seen a very marked warming and ongoing thawing, a shift
      of tropic zones away from the equator, disruption of rainfall patterns
      and stress on tropical ecosystems; all of this is considered to be just
      the beginning of a wide range of climate effects that have not yet been
      fully manifested for GHG and albedo changes so far,. much less to
      further increases in GHGs.

      – “CO2 is plant food, pure and simple.”

      It IS a “pure and simple” plant food, but your rhetoric implies much
      more – essentially that CO2 is NOTHING BUT plant food, and large
      releases of it have no effect on climate. And this, as you well know,
      is NOT a “pure and simple” matter.

      – “CO2 is not pollution by any reasonable definition.”

      You mean not by your reasonable definition, or under
      historical standards. But what IS “pollution”, but a social construct
      to describe the outputs of human activity that some of us have found to
      be damaging to our persons, property or other things that we value?
      Were CFCs released by refrigeration equipment “pollution” before we
      discovered that they damage the ozone layer?

      Scientists may be qualified to measure particular outputs and their
      consequences, but otherwise have no special insights into what others
      value.

      – “A warmer world begets more precipitation.”

      Sure, as warmer air generally holds more water – which in turn has a
      warming effect, let`s not forget. But as for the water itself, climate
      change leads to more severe rain events in some places but to droughts
      in others. And let`s not forget that a warmer world means that mountain
      snows don`t last until spring and summer as they once did, leaving
      streams and forests drier, and adversely affecting agriculture that
      relies on such water.

      – “All computer models predict a smaller temperature gradient
      between the poles and the equator. Necessarily, this would mean fewer
      and less violent storms.”

      Not so fast; this doesn`t hold for rain events or tornadoes.
      Further, independent paths of research indicate that while the North
      Atlantic may end up with fewer hurricanes, warming is likely to make them more intense.

      – How, pray, will a putative few degrees of warming melt all the ice
      and inundate Florida, as is claimed by the warming alarmists?

      First, note again the Dr.`s use of a strawman; no one is expect an
      imminent melt of “ALL” the ice. But significant melting and thinning of
      coastal ice IS occurring, and not merely on the West Antactic
      peninsula, which the good Dr. would realize if he`d trouble himself to
      compare his simple mental model, of reality with FACTS. As previously
      noted, coast ice sheets are plugs that slow the flow of glaciers from
      the interior. As these plugs are removed, the glaciers flow more
      quickly, via that exotic phenomenon we call “gravity”. I`ve already
      addressed this above, with links.

      – “If the waters around it warm up, they create more precipitation.”

      Yes, but does the new precipitation balance the ice being melted?
      Actual, detailed observations tell us that, despite your absolute
      certainty, that we are seeing increasing net mass losses far inland,
      not merely in Greenland but also in Antarctica. Your religious-like
      faith in your own superior understanding doesn`t make the facts go away.

      – “The ocean’s pH is not rising. It is falling, ever so slightly.
      Obviously your respondent has not the faintest clue as to how pH is
      defined. (BTW, the oceans are basic, not acidic.)”

      Yes, the good Dr. catches my mistake – pH is falling rather
      remarkably (from basic towards acidic) – but he too hastily skates past
      the main point, which is that this is due to increased atmospheric
      levels of CO2, which prove that the oceans are NOT actually releasing
      CO2 (or they`d be becoming more basic).

      I provided links in this last year here:
      http://blog.mises.org/archives/007931.asp#c192563

      Here`s more:
      http://www.scienceprogress.org/2008/06/our-dying-oceans/
      http://docs.google.com/gview?a=v&q=cache:y_W6vseUrykJ:www.tos.org/oceanography/issues/issue_archive/issue_pdfs/20_2/20.2_caldeira.pdf+caldeira+ocean+ph&hl=en&gl=jp&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESgEEoFLf7xd9QTyol2TYYmXKPxXFqMq5Nr1IPdGd_yEbV3zIxPi-4Rmhb6d-IQ-r4BPwBqzyhF6GZQw_ka1Eh3Ynn0lYlP7p974IYMHIdLMVE90nWJ81GHAfcdTrUJTNk7W8Man&sig=AFQjCNGg6Idq6GQ5gyrddlXRD8R98NQ_dQ

      From the Plymouth Marine Laboratory (UK) :

      “Until recently, it was believed that the oceans contained so much
      disolved carbonate and bicarbonate ions that any extra would have
      little effect. In fact this absorbtion was generally acknowledged a
      valuable process in protecting the planet from the worst effects of
      rising temperatures and climate change. However, in 2003 a paper was
      published in Nature (vol 425) which suggested that the increases in
      atmospheric CO2, occurring over the last 200 years, has actually
      increased the acidity of the oceans by 0.1 of a pH unit.The pH scale is logarithmic and this change represents a 30% increase in the concentration of H+ ions.

      “However, atmospheric concentrations of CO2 have been
      higher during previous times in Earths history and these high CO2
      periods didn’t cause ocean pH to change. The difference now is that the
      rate at which CO2 concentrations are increasing, is 100 times greater
      than the natural fluctuations seen over recent millennia. Consequently,
      the processes that ultimately balance the carbon cycle are unable to
      react quickly enough and ocean pH is affected. About half of all
      released CO2 is absorbed by the oceans but even if we stop all
      emmissions today, the CO2 already in the atmosphere has been predicted
      to decrease ocean pH by a further 0.5 unit.”

      From
      Wikipedia”>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_acidification”>Wikipedia:

      “Dissolving CO2 in seawater also increases the hydrogen ion (H+)
      concentration in the ocean, and thus decreases ocean pH. Caldeira and
      Wickett (2003)[1] placed the rate and magnitude of modern ocean
      acidification changes in the context of probable historical changes
      during the last 300 million years.

      Since the industrial revolution began, it is estimated that
      surface ocean pH has dropped by slightly less than 0.1 units (on the
      logarithmic scale of pH; approximately a 25% increase in H+), and it is
      estimated that it will drop by a further 0.3 to 0.5 units by 2100 as
      the oceans absorb more anthropogenic CO2.[1][2][9] These changes are
      predicted to continue rapidly as the oceans take up more anthropogenic
      CO2 from the atmosphere, the degree of change to ocean chemistry, for
      example ocean pH, will depend on the mitigation and emissions pathways
      society takes.[10] Note that, although the ocean is acidifying, its pH
      is still greater than 7 (that of neutral water), so the ocean could
      also be described as becoming less basic.”

      “The term global warming has given way to the term climate
      change, because the former is not supported by the data. The latter
      term, climate change, admits of all kinds of illogical attributions. If
      it warms up, that’s climate change. If it cools down, ditto. Any change
      whatsoever can be said by alarmists to be proof of climate change.”

      Wonderful observation, except for the fact that IT`S WRONG; the
      change instead being deliberately led by Republicans; leading
      Republican pollster/ spinmeister Frank Luntz in 2002 pushed Republicans
      to move the public discussion away from “global warming” to “climate
      change”, because, as Luntz wrote,

      “’Climate change’ is less frightening than ‘global warming.’
      … While global warming has catastrophic connotations attached to it,
      climate change suggests a more controllable and less emotional
      challenge”.

      Of course there IS the inconvenient fact that “climate change” is
      actually more accurate than simple “global warming”, but who cares
      about accuracy anyway, right Dr.?

      – “the earth has handily survived many millions of years when CO2
      levels were MUCH higher than at present, without passing the dreaded
      tipping point.”

      I already addressed above the point that while the Dr. seems to
      what to recreate the Cretaceous, the better for dinosaurs, most of us
      seem rather to like the Earth that we actually inherited and that the
      rest of current Creation is adapted for. He is obviously a physicist
      and not a biologist, and doesn`t seem to give any thought to the
      rapidity of the scale at which we are conducting our little
      terraforming experiment, and te challenges the pace of those changes
      are posing to ecosystems.

      – “To put it fairly but bluntly, the global-warming alarmists
      have relied on a pathetic version of science in which computer models
      take precedence over data, and numerical averages of computer outputs
      are believed to be able to predict the future climate. It would be a
      travesty if the EPA were to countenance such nonsense.”

      To put it bluntly, this is largely rubbish; there is a tremendous
      and growing amount of climate change DATA. You just make it your habit
      not to let facts get in the way of your own opinions. I would be a
      travesty if we continue to countenance posts such as yours, questions
      of relevance to Austrian purposes aside.

      – “I don’t do politics”

      Fine; I can see why that would not be your forte. But what`s very
      puzzling is that you seem to think that climate science IS your forte,
      when all you`ve show is a shocking level of arrogant ignorance.

      – “I don’t pretend to be an economic theorist.”

      And on a blog dedicated to Austrian economists, just why, one
      wonders, do the “giants” in our Mises world keep filling the Blog pages
      with post such as this, which are, on their very face, IRRELEVANT, to
      the question of how Austrians wish to address the preferences of other,
      the misuses of government and the management of unowned common
      resources.

      – “he only difference between the Republicans and the Democrats
      is, in practical terms, their rhetoric. I don’t pretend to be an
      economic theorist.

      – “But the notion that we can run an industrialized giant on
      chicken manure and sunbeams doesn’t even pass the giggle test. Except
      in Washington.”

      At long last, you say something something intelligible. Except
      Washington spends trillions on nonsense at the drop of a hat, if you
      haven`t noticed recent events.

      Published: November 1, 2009 10:02 AM

    • TokyoTom

      Sorry if I`ve been a bit intemperate; that I`m rushed doesn`t excuse it.

      Dr. Hayden, you are entirely welcome to your own opinion and your
      own mental map of reality, but not to your own facts. As to your
      opinion and mental map, they are by your own admittance uninformed as
      to matters of economics and political science, but I must confess that
      I find your understanding of climate science to be seriously wanting.

      Given these, I fail to see what you offer here, other than a
      convenient, if very thin, cover for others here who don`t want to
      think, or to fight to make the world (or our own government) better.

      Sincerely,

      Tom

      Published: November 1, 2009 10:11 AM

    • TokyoTom

      Bala, I appreciate your polite persistence; I`m sorry I haven`t responded yet, but I`ll get to you.

      Please note that my time is both limited and my own (though indeed
      others have claims on it), and I have no obligation to spend any of it
      responding to your importunings regarding climate science, which are
      now shading into impertinence.

      Feel free to draw whatever conclusions you wish, but a fair reader might note that:

      – my priorities may (unsurprisingly) differ from yours,
      – my chief points (and Austrian principles as to how to engage with others) have nothing to do with climate science per se,
      – I explicitly make no pretense of being a scientist or climate expert, and
      – in any case, there is no simple course to understanding reality; we
      are all forced to make decisions as to how much energy to devote to
      puzzling things out on our own (and overcoming what we know of our own
      subconscious cognitive filters) versus outsourcing this effort to
      others (by accepting things without deliberation, “on faith” as it
      were).

      Others who have been around longer will know that I`ve also devoted
      what they might consider an unreasonable amount of my time over the
      past few years, “hysterical” trying to help others work through climate
      science (and policy) issues.

      TT

      Published: November 1, 2009 8:46 PM

    • TokyoTom

      mpolzkill:

      – “Tom, believing you live in a Republic with 300,000,000 people is a delusion which heads off all actual pragmatism.”

      This is not a delusion I have, but in any case it`s not at all clear
      that this or any other delusion “heads off all actual pragmatism”.

      – “Until there is actual representation, everything said by we
      proles is literally hot air (unless it’s happens to coincide with
      whatever benefits the regime).”

      I use “our government” simply as shorthand for what you call “the
      regime”, but perhaps may be more accurately described as a multicentric
      mess.

      In any case, the painstaking efforts of LVMI to grow the Mises
      website, and the welcome reception of and contribution to those efforts
      by everyone here – yourself included – belies both your near-nihilistic
      cynicism and your conclusion, as to virtually every topic discussed
      here. Words are deeds, though they be more or less frivolous, weighty,
      insightful or consequential.

      If the other Mises bloggers agreed with you as to the possible
      efficacy of their words, either generally or on this particular topic,
      they simply wouldn`t bother to post.

      However, I share your concern about efficiacy, which is why I
      criticize posts such these (whether by Stephan, George Reisman, Sean
      Corrigan, Walter Block, or Jeffrey Tucker), which are, by and large,
      more of a circle jerk than an effort to engage.

      – “thank you for being respectful”

      My pleasure, but you hardly need to thank me; this is a community, after all.

      – “even though you mistakenly think I’m a nut.

      In this case, it is you who are mistaken (not that you ARE a nut, but that you think I think you are).

      Tom

      Published: November 1, 2009 9:35 PM

     

    This is last version of the comment that I tried to post several times:

    method fan:

    [my first attempt apparently failed to post, so apologies if this shows up twice]

    – “You are insofar wrong, that not only this “data” is analysed but it is also used to “predict” the future of reality by using it in simulations!”

    You miss my criticism of Dr. Hayden`s refusal to examine facts about ongoing melting in Antarctica, but of course I do NOT disagree with you that current and paleo data can be used to “predict” the future.

    But of course a scientific understanding of the world, and information – in this case, both about the past and current trends of climate inputs – certainly can give us useful information about what the future may hold in store for us.

    “There is no sound experimental proof that human activity-emitted carbon dioxide is the cause for some sort of global warming.”

    Nicely phrased; there of course plenty of experimental proof that carbon dioxide is an atmospheric warming agent, but no experimental proof that it is “the” cause for any global warming.

    While we are now running such a global experiment – one that started centuries ago and will not be played out for centuries hence and is, for all intents and purposes irreversible – and thus cannot, in the Popperian sense, even be considered an “experiment”.

    Whether our ramping up of the experiment is prudent or principled are entirely different questions, and properly the subject of much discussion.

    – “These guesses remind one of the idea that rain dances are the cause for rain.”

    I`m tempted to make a comeback, but surely you realize your flip comparison is entirely inapropos.

    Here`s hoping for more sincere discourse.

    TT

    [Update- apology] The Road Not Taken III: Stephan Kinsella plugs his ears on the Austrians` obstinate, willful irrelevancy in the climate debate?

    November 2nd, 2009 5 comments

    [Note: Stephan Kinsella tells me he has NOT put my posts on his thread on moderation.  I believe him, and so (even as I fail to understand why I was unable to post a particular comment after a number of attempts), as noted I would in my original post, I withdraw my charge that he put my comments on moderation, and offer my sincere apology to Stephan (and to LvMI readers) for my mistake and for the offense that I imagine I may have caused to his sense of fair play. I am happy to do this, though of course I deeply regret my mistake.

    Stephan, I`m sorry. I take your word that the conclusion I jumped to was wrong.

    I am still trying to puzzle through what happened; below I have restored an edited version of my prior post, with the unjustifed portions deleted.

    Meanwhile, the discussion continues at the Mises Blog, at the above thread.]

     

    In my preceding post I commented on Austrian (dis)engagement on climate issues, as exemplified by Stephan Kinsella`s Mises Blog post, “Physicist Howard Hayden’s one-letter disproof of global warming claims”.

    [clip]

    Instead of the usual cheerful message LvMI provides when comments
    are accepted (“Confirmation…  Your comment has been submitted!)”, my
    attempts  to comment are now met with the message, “Thank you for commenting.  Your comment has been received and held for approval by the blog owner.”

    While there are times that this message is automatically served up
    for technical reasons, such as not providing proper email address
    (i.e., by accidently typing in “.comh” instead of “.com”) or providing
    too many links (which may trigger a spamblocking feature), this [seemed to me] to be fairly clearly NOT one of those occasions – I had just successfully
    posted a couple of comments that included links, and my “failed” post
    included my usual email address (properly formatted, as I can confirm
    simply by backing up) and no links.

    [clip]

    I copy below the comment that I
    [had supposed] turned his playful non-responsiveness (see his comment to my prior post) into stony silence/silencing:

    • Published: October 31, 2009 1:00 PM
    • TokyoTom

      Stephan, if I may, I am appalled and offended by your shallow and
      fundamentally dishonest engagement here. That there are a string of
      others who have preceded you in this regard is no excuse.

      You: (i) post without significant comment a one-page letter from a
      scientist – as if the letter itself is vindication, victory or a
      roadmap for how we should seek to engage the views and preferences of
      others,

      (ii) refuse to answer my straightforward questions (both above and
      at my cross-linked post, which you visited) on how we engage others in
      the very active ongoing political debate, in a manner that actually
      defends and advances our policy agenda, (putting aside the
      insulting and disingenuous “Tokyo asked me to respond” and “it’s so
      rambling I am not sure what to respond to”); and

      (iii) then proceed to present your own view of the science, the
      motives and sanity “watermelons” (as if they`re running the show), a
      few helpful, free-market libertarian “solutions”, like open-air
      explosion of nuclear weapons to bring about a “nuclear winter” effect!

      And my attempt to bring your focus back to the question of how we
      actually deal with others in the POLITICAL bargaining that is, after
      all, underway is met with silence – other than your faithful report
      back from your trusty climate physicist expert policy guru friend about
      …. science (all being essentially irrelevant to my question, not
      merely the cute little folksy demonstration about how the troubling
      melting and thinning of Antarctic ice sheets actually now underway
      simply CAN`T be occurring, but also a further failure to address the
      very rapid ocean acidification our CO2 emissions are producing)!

      Maybe it`s me, but I find this type of insincere and shallow
      engagement on such a serious issue to be a shameful discredit to the
      Mises Blog (even if it does cater to those who prefer to think that the
      big to do about climate – which may very well result in a mass of
      ill-considered, costly and counterproductive legislation – is really
      groundless and so can simply be ignored, aside from a bit of internal
      fulminations here).

      If you are not actually interested in discussing policy on a serious issue, then consider refraining from posting on it.

      Maybe it`s not my position to expect better, but I do.

      Sincerely,

      Tom

    • [Note: I had intended to excise the following from my comment,
      but it`s just as well that it slipped in, as it serves to illustrate
      what productive Austrian approaches to climate issues might look like.
      I`ve added a link to Roy Cordato.]

      Roy Cordato (linked at my name) said this:

      “The starting point for all Austrian welfare economics is the goal
      seeking individual and the ability of actors to formulate and execute
      plans within the context of their goals. … [S]ocial welfare or
      efficiency problems arise because of interpersonal conflict. [C] that
      similarly cannot be resolved by the market process, gives rise to
      catallactic inefficiency by preventing useful information from being
      captured by prices.”

      “Environmental problems are brought to light as striking at the
      heart of the efficiency problem as typically seen by Austrians, that
      is, they generate human conflict and disrupt inter- and intra-personal
      plan formulation and execution.”

      “The focus of the Austrian approach to environmental economics is
      conflict resolution. The purpose of focusing on issues related to
      property rights is to describe the source of the conflict and to
      identify possible ways of resolving it.”

      “If a pollution problem exists then its solution must be found in
      either a clearer definition of property rights to the relevant
      resources or in the stricter enforcement of rights that already exist.
      This has been the approach taken to environmental problems by nearly
      all Austrians who have addressed these kinds of issues (see Mises 1998;
      Rothbard 1982; Lewin 1982; Cordato 1997). This shifts the perspective
      on pollution from one of “market failure” where the free market is seen
      as failing to generate an efficient outcome, to legal failure where the
      market process is prevented from proceeding efficiently because the
      necessary institutional framework, clearly defined and enforced
      property rights, is not in place.”

      The Road Not Taken III: Stephan Kinsella plugs his ears on the Austrians` obstinate, willful irrelevancy in the climate debate

    The Road Not Taken II: Austrians strive for a self-comforting irrelevancy on climate change, the greatest commons problem / rent-seeking game of our age

    October 30th, 2009 3 comments

    [Update: Readers may wish to note the latest developments, as I note in these follow-up posts.]

    Stephan Kinsella – whom I have engaged before on the ramifications of the decidedly non-libertarian state grant of limited liabiility to corporations – has a new post up on the Mises Blog on global warming;  his first on this subject, as far as I know.

    The post is surprisingly short, and consists of a simple introduction by Stephan a copy of letter to the EPA (which he has appended) that one Howard Hayden, a retired physicist, one whom Stephan assures us is “a staunch advocate of sound energy policy” – whatever that means (hey, me too!) – submitted in connection with the EPA`s Supreme Court-mandated consideration of whether to regulate CO2 and other greenhouse gases. Stephan also refers to Dr. Hayden`s letter as a “one-letter disproof of global warming claims.”

    I welcome Stephan to this discussion, which has taken place at the Mises Blog in fits and starts over the past few years. However, the absence of any commentary by Stephan leaves me scratching my head. Where`s the beef? Are this person`s scientific views on climate so convincing or obviously correct, and are the policy implication so straightforward, and correct, that we should all “get it” and agree, without any commentary by Stephan? Or Is Stephan simply playing with our credulity, and his own?

    In any case, given both (1) the focus of Austrian economics on productively addressing conflicts between people with conflicting preferences (and the frequently negative role that governments play in resource tussles, generally to the benefit of entrenched insiders and to government itself) and (2) the recent Nobel prize award to Elinor Ostrom regarding the ways that humans work together successfully or not) to address common resources, I am simply disappointed. Is this all that Stephan has to offer?

    Observing that Stephan fits within a grand tradition at Mises of shallow thought on climate and other “environmental” issues, I felt compelled to post a few thoughts at Stephan`s post, which I copy below:

     

    Stephan:

    Thanks for bringing your post to my attention.

    My short response? Remember “Thank you, Prof. Block, for feeding our confirmation biases“?

    But since I can`t resist doing what nobody else seems inclined to – I suppose it is, after all, why you invited me to this feast – let me make a few comments on matters that would apparently not otherwise occur to you or to the rest of the community.

    The fact that most of the contents of Dr. Hayden`s letter is confused twaddle that has been explained in detail countless times (and personally by me, ad nauseum, to the extreme annoyance of most of the blog over the years 2006-2008) aside, it puzzles me that you and others prefer to treat the pages of the Mises Blog as a forum to dismiss – through drive-by postings like this (a la Walter Block) of a particular piece of “skepticism” that caught your fancy – extremely widespread scientific views (held by EVERY major national academy of science, including China and India), rather than engaging in a discussion of preferences, institutions and policies.

    As I`ve asked Jeffrey Tucker previously, is science the forte of the Mises Blog, or its readers?

    Even if those who believe that man`s rising emissions of CO2 have nothing to do with an observably rapidly changing world and pose no threat whatsoever – and that those who disagree are all deluded and/or evil – turn out, after we play our little massive and irreversible game with the Earth for another few centuries, to be absolutely right, is engaging with them by dismissing their concerns an approach that holds even the slightest prospect of success?

    It`s as if Austrians were determined to ignore their own principles, stampede themselves into irrelevancy, and to make sure that we get the WORST policy outcomes possible.

    Why not, if you think others all wrong, deluded or evil, play along with their game, and actually seek policy changes that might not only address the expressed concerns of others in a meaningful way, while also advancing a libertarian, freedom-seeking agenda?

    As I have noted in a litany of posts at my blog, most recently one addressed to Bob Murphy, such pro-freedom regulatory changes might include:

    • accelerating cleaner power investments by eliminating corporate income taxes or allowing immediate amortization of capital investment,
    • eliminating antitrust immunity for public utility monopolies (to allow consumer choice, peak pricing and “smart metering” that will rapidly push efficiency gains),
    • ending Clean Air Act handouts to the worst utilities (or otherwise unwinding burdensome regulations and moving to lighter and more common-law dependent approaches),
    • ending energy subsidies generally (including federal liability caps for nuclear power (and allowing states to license),
    • speeding economic growth and adaptation in the poorer countries most threatened by climate change by rolling back domestic agricultural corporate welfare programs (ethanol and sugar), and
    • if there is to be any type of carbon pricing at all, insisting that it is a per capita, fully-rebated carbon tax (puts the revenues in the hands of those with the best claim to it, eliminates regressive impact and price volatility, least new bureaucracy, most transparent, and least susceptible to pork).

    Other policy changes could also be put on the table, such as an insistence that government resource management be improved by requiring that half of all royalties be rebated to citizens (with a slice to the administering agency).

    As Rob Bradley once reluctantly acknowledged to me (in the halcyon days before he banned me from the “free-market” Master Resource blog), “a free-market approach is not about “do nothing” but implementing a whole new energy approach to remove myriad regulation and subsidies that have built up over a century or more.” But unfortunately the wheels of this principled concern have never hit the ground at MR [persistently pointing this out it, and questioning whether his blog was a front for fossil fuel interests, appears to be what earned me the boot].

    There have been occasional   libertarian  climate  proposals floated over the past few years, but they have never graced the Mises Blog, instead falling gently to the ground unnoticed – apparently, except for me – like the proverbial unstrained koala tea of Mercy.

    Austrians seem to act as if the love of reason requires a surrender of it in favor of the comforting distraction of a self-satisfied echo chamber of a type that would warm the cockles of any like-minded religious “alarmist” cult.

    Then of course, we have our own  home-grown libertarians who are happy to participate actively in the debate (with many excellent points, naturally), but carefully skirt for the purposes of maximum effectiveness (and felicitously, for their own consciences) the fact that their views are funded by the dirtiest class of rent-seekers. Plus we have a few who are happy to regurgitate for us “heroic” “grassroots” efforts that are transparent corporate PR ploys.

    Finally, since no one else seems to be remotely interesting in scratching the surface of Dr. Hayden`s letter, here is what a little due diligence turns up:

    – sure, the solubility of CO2 in water decreases as water warms, and increases as water cools. Some skeptics use this to suggest that rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations are due not to man, but to a naturally warming. That`s why it`s so interesting that, despite a warming ocean, ocean pH is rising [oops, I meant pH is “falling”, as I`ve noted in a previous comment about rapidly changing ocean pH]  because dissolved CO2 is also rising (because man`s CO2 emissions are forcing more CO2 to be dissolved in water).

    – You ask sarcastically, if the melting point of ice is 0 ºC in Antarctica, just as it is everywhere else, how will a putative few degrees of warming melt all the ice and inundate Florida, as is claimed by the warming alarmists? The answer is, simply, that (1) the warming oceans melt and undermine the coastal ice, and (2) as coastal buttresses are removed, gravity brings the continental ice down more rapidly. This process is well underway and apparently accelerating, as described in a study just published in Nature. Note also that not all of Antarctica lies precisely at the South Pole, and that some parts are melting directly as the atmosphere warms.

    – finally, not all men are dinosaurs, nor is the rest of extant Creation (save birds, of course). Why should we feel comforted by the fact that we may, in the blink of an eye in geologic time (decades/centuries), be terra-forming the Earth for creatures that no longer exist, while stressing it for the rest of Creation? Do we have no right of preference in climate or in the life we share the Earth with, or have the investors in fossil fuel firms homesteaded the right to modify environmental matters willy nilly, come what may?

    Thanks for providing the soapbox, Stephan.

    Tom

    I note that Stephan closes his introduction to Dr. Hayden`s letter with the following:

    “I love Hayden’s email sign-off, “People will do anything to save the world … except take a course in science.””

    Would that problems of governance of shared resources were so easy as taking a science course! Then ALL of us Austrians, and not merely our leading lights at the Mises Blog, could simply pack up and go home, and leave everything to a few philosopher-king scientists!

    Food, water, agrotech & climate change: More "NeoMalthusian" charlatans, this time at National Geographic

    May 20th, 2009 1 comment

    [note: my title has a bit of snark, designed to point out the emptiness of some anti-Enviro scare-mongering.]

    A reader of my previous post  –  regarding Ron Bailey`s review of the concerns that “famine-monger” Lester Brown recently wrote about at Scientific American  – points me to a similar article, this time the feature article in the June issue of National Geographic.  The article, entitled “The Global Food Crisis; The End of Plenty”, is worth a read.

    I look forward to Ron Bailey`s further comments; in the meanwhile I post a few excerpts below (with emphasis added):

    “Agricultural productivity growth is only one to two percent a year,” warned Joachim von Braun, director general of the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington, D.C., at the height of the crisis. “This is too low to meet population growth and increased demand.”

    …. Such agflation hits the poorest billion people on the planet the hardest, since they typically spend 50 to 70 percent of their income on food. Even though prices have fallen with the imploding world economy, they are still near record highs, and the underlying problems of low stockpiles, rising population, and flattening yield growth remain. Climate change—with its hotter growing seasons and increasing water scarcity—is projected to reduce future harvests in much of the world, raising the specter of what some scientists are now calling a perpetual food crisis. [page 2]

    Yet with world population spiraling toward nine billion by mid-century, these experts [from the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research,  a group of world-renowned agricultural research centers that helped more than double the world’s average yields of corn, rice, and wheat between the mid-1950s and the mid-1990s, an achievement so staggering it was dubbed the green revolution] now say we need a repeat performance, doubling current food production by 2030.

    In other words, we need another green revolution. And we need it in half the time.

     

    Ever since our ancestors gave up hunting and gathering for plowing and planting some 12,000 years ago, our numbers have marched in lock step with our agricultural prowess. [page 3]

    The industrial revolution and plowing up of the English commons dramatically increased the amount of food in England, sweeping Malthus into the dustbin of the Victorian era. But it was the green revolution that truly made the reverend the laughingstock of modern economists. From 1950 to today the world has experienced the largest population growth in human history. After Malthus’s time, six billion people were added to the planet’s dinner tables. Yet thanks to improved methods of grain production, most of those people were fed. We’d finally shed Malthusian limits for good.

    Or so we thought. [page 4]

    Today, though, the miracle of the green revolution is over in Punjab: Yield growth has essentially flattened since the mid-1990s. Overirrigation has led to steep drops in the water table, now tapped by 1.3 million tube wells, while thousands of hectares of productive land have been lost to salinization and waterlogged soils. Forty years of intensive irrigation, fertilization, and pesticides have not been kind to the loamy gray fields of Punjab. Nor, in some cases, to the people themselves. [page 6]

    But researchers have found pesticides in the Punjabi farmers’ blood, their water table, their vegetables, even their wives’ breast milk. So many people take the train from the Malwa region to the cancer hospital in Bikaner that it’s now called the Cancer Express. The government is concerned enough to spend millions on reverse-osmosis water-treatment plants for the worst affected villages.[page 7]

    Africa is the continent where Homo sapiens was born, and with its worn-out soils, fitful rain, and rising population, it could very well offer a glimpse of our species’ future. For numerous reasons—lack of infrastructure, corruption, inaccessible markets—the green revolution never made it here. Agricultural production per capita actually declined in sub-Saharan Africa between 1970 and 2000, while the population soared, leaving an average ten-million-ton annual food deficit. It’s now home to more than a quarter of the world’s hungriest people.[page 8]

    But is a reprise of the green revolution—with the traditional package of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, and irrigation, supercharged by genetically engineered seeds—really the answer to the world’s food crisis? Last year a massive study called the “International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development” concluded that the immense production increases brought about by science and technology in the past 30 years have failed to improve food access for many of the world’s poor. The six-year study, initiated by the World Bank and the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization and involving some 400 agricultural experts from around the globe, called for a paradigm shift in agriculture toward more sustainable and ecologically friendly practices that would benefit the world’s 900 million small farmers, not just agribusiness. [page 10]

    So far, genetic breakthroughs that would free green revolution crops from their heavy dependence on irrigation and fertilizer have proved elusive. Engineering plants that can fix their own nitrogen or are resistant to drought “has proven a lot harder than they thought,” says Pollan. Monsanto‘s Fraley predicts his company will have drought-tolerant corn in the U.S. market by 2012. But the increased yields promised during drought years are only 6 to 10 percent above those of standard drought-hammered crops.

    And so a shift has already begun to small, underfunded projects scattered across Africa and Asia. Some call it agroecology, others sustainable agriculture, but the underlying idea is revolutionary: that we must stop focusing on simply maximizing grain yields at any cost and consider the environmental and social impacts of food production. Vandana Shiva is a nuclear physicist turned agroecologist who is India’s harshest critic of the green revolution. “I call it monocultures of the mind,” she says. “They just look at yields of wheat and rice, but overall the food basket is going down. There were 250 kinds of crops in Punjab before the green revolution.” Shiva argues that small-scale, biologically diverse farms can produce more food with fewer petroleum-based inputs. Her research has shown that using compost instead of natural-gas-derived fertilizer increases organic matter in the soil, sequestering carbon and holding moisture—two key advantages for farmers facing climate change. “If you are talking about solving the food crisis, these are the methods you need,” adds Shiva.

    In northern Malawi one project is getting many of the same results as the Millennium Villages project, at a fraction of the cost. [page 11]

    Canadian researchers found that after eight years, the children of more than 7,000 families involved in the project showed significant weight increases, making a pretty good case that soil health and community health are connected in Malawi.

    Which is why the project’s research coordinator, Rachel Bezner Kerr, is alarmed that big-money foundations are pushing for a new green revolution in Africa. “I find it deeply disturbing,” she says. “It’s getting farmers to rely on expensive inputs produced from afar that are making money for big companies rather than on agroecological methods for using local resources and skills. I don’t think that’s the solution.”

    Regardless of which model prevails—agriculture as a diverse ecological art, as a high-tech industry, or some combination of the two—the challenge of putting enough food in nine billion mouths by 2050 is daunting. Two billion people already live in the driest parts of the globe, and climate change is projected to slash yields in these regions even further. No matter how great their yield potential, plants still need water to grow. And in the not too distant future, every year could be a drought year for much of the globe.

    New climate studies show that extreme heat waves, such as the one that withered crops and killed thousands in western Europe in 2003, are very likely to become common in the tropics and subtropics by century’s end. Himalayan glaciers that now provide water for hundreds of millions of people, livestock, and farmland in China and India are melting faster and could vanish completely by 2035. In the worst-case scenario, yields for some grains could decline by 10 to 15 percent in South Asia by 2030. Projections for southern Africa are even more dire. In a region already racked by water scarcity and food insecurity, the all-important corn harvest could drop by 30 percent—47 percent in the worst-case scenario. All the while the population clock keeps ticking, with a net of 2.5 more mouths to feed born every second. That amounts to 4,500 more mouths in the time it takes you to read this article.

    Which leads us, inevitably, back to Malthus. [page 12]

    ***

    Now, can we discuss these issues without calling each other names?

     

    Ron Bailey and the triumph of Reason? Neo-Mathusians and other "charlatans" exposed!

    May 19th, 2009 2 comments

    Last year around this time I criticized Reason science correspondent Ron Bailey, for a rather empty post trumpteting dark warnings of “green fascism” in the wake of last year`s grain shortages.  This year Ron is back, with a new post out (“Never Right But Never in Doubt“) in which he attempts to make light of the concerns that “Famine-monger Lester Brown” recently outlined in the May 2009 Scientific American Magazine (“Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization?“).  While Ron has dressed up his act a bit this time, the old reflexive enviro-bashing remains, along with an inclination to dodge the hard questions that Brown raises.  Instead, we are left to wonder, has Scientific American been taken over by the green fascists?

    Disappointingly, Ron`s latest attempt to bring down Lester Brown also disappoints – not because Ron doesn`t have fair criticisms to make, but because he can never bring himself to engage on the fair concerns of Lester Brown and the editors of Scientific American on issues of population, unmanaged commons and the environment.  Instead of throwing light on the areas of institutional failure that underlay the concerns of “green fascists”, “famime-mongers” and neo-Malthusians, Ron likes rhetoric, and closes by calling Brown an “old charlatan”.

    Does Brown deserve all of this rhetoric?  No, even while it is perfectly appropriate to disagree with some of his analysis.

    Let me set the stage for my review of Ron`s latest piece by citing some of my comments on his prieceding post:

    Ron, I’m surprised that you would go to the effort of spreading rather thin hype about “Green fascism” without bothering to explore from a libertarian perspective whether the Green fascists have grounds for concern, what the institutional underpinnings of environmental and “overpopulation” problems might be, or what our own connections to those problems are.

    It’s rather simple, really: we see both cleaner environments and the demographic shift in relatively wealthy nations that protect property rights, as families and other economic actors are largely forced to bear their own costs, which provide incentives to keep both pollution and families under control.

    Where populations are still growing rapidly – and environmental degradation continues apace – are societies that do not protect property rights, so that economic actors do not internalize all costs, and families to a significant degree face a free-for-all over resources that are not effectively owned or protected.

    “Development” thus presents many aspects of a “tragedy of the commons”, a tragedy that we feed with our own consumer, commercial and industrial demand, which is sourced from assets that are not clearly owned, but are simply up for grabs – whether we are talking about the strip-mining of the oceans, the replacement of the Amazon and SE Asian tropical forests with soybeans and palm oil/biofuel plantations, or industrial and commercial enterprises that don’t bear the costs of their pollution (or of the power plants supplying their electricity).

    The “Green fascists” see the destruction at the end of the chains of demand that we in the West pull and the destruction resulting from population growth that is unchecked by the pricing signals from effective ownership, and they are rightly concerned. That they fail to understand the institutional underpinnings is of course to be regretted, but it is a failure that can be remedied by a little education.

    That you chose not to use your knowledge of the dynamics of “tragedy of the commons” to educate but instead to decry “Green fascists” is a similar failure, and one that I hope you will regret and try to remedy.

    As it is, it seems as if you enjoy the emotional rewards of partisan struggle more than really exercising your noggin or making a contribution to directing attention to where solutions to where real problems might lie – in improved property tights protection and governance in the developing world.

    Care to contribute, or just to raise an alarum about the evil greenies?

    Regards,

    Tom

    In his latest post, Ron summarizes Brown as “argu[ing] that the world’s food economy is being undermined by a troika of growing environmental calamities: falling water tables, eroding soils, and rising temperatures.”  But even this miscasts Brown, who except for concerns about the over-pumping of the Ogallala aquifer in the high plains of the US Midwest, is clearly focussed mainly not on threats to agriculture in the developed nations, but in the developing ones.  Puzzlingly, Bailey largely agrees with some of the principal areas that Brown points to as reasons for concern, but brushes them off without real discussion or apparent justitication, mainly by telling us how things are no so bad in the developed nations.

    First, regarding water, Brown mentions both obvious unstatainability of agriculture as is in places with rapidly falling water tables (particularly China and India) and where the melting of mountain glaciers means lower water supplies during the summer (including China).  Bailey shows off his understanding of the underlying dynamic of an unowned aquifer and the failure to price water correctly, but assumes, without aparent foundation, that water pricing policies will be adjusted without before any agricultural disruptions occur:

    “It is true that water tables are falling in many parts of the world as farmers drain aquifers in India, China, and the United States. Part of the problem is that water for irrigation is often subsidized by governments who encourage farmers to waste it. However, the proper pricing of water will rectify that by encouraging farmers to transition to drip irrigation, switch from thirsty crops like rice to dryland ones like wheat, and help crop breeders to develop more drought-tolerant crop varieties.”

    Who`s going to make sure that water subsidies will be ended and that water will be “properly priced”?  It doesn`t happen by magic, Ron.

    Next, Ron attacks Brown on soil erosion – by conceding the point in developing nations but then presenting a red herring by switching focus to developed nations:

    “To be sure, soil erosion is a problem for poor countries whose subsistence farmers have no secure property rights. However, one 1995 study concluded that soil erosion would reduce U.S. agriculture production by 3 percent over the next 100 years. “

    The developing world is rife with problems of unsecure land tenure – heck, Zimbabwe is crashing as we speak for that very reason – but instead of enaging on this, we hear that everything is peachy in the US.

    Finally, we turn to Brown`s fear of the effects of man-made global warming on agriculture.  Here, too, Bailey completely ignores the developing world in favor of looking only at the US.  Even in our case, Ron first notes that there is “an ongoing debate among experts”, but concedes that  some researchers have concluded that the impact of global warming on U.S. agriculture is “likely to be strongly negative.”  But by pointing to biotechnology research in making crops more heat and drought tolerant as a basis for optimism at home, Ron has essentially conceded that Brown (and the scientists and those funding them) have a basis for concern.

    Further, Bailey notes that he agrees with Brown on two points:

    “Brown is right about two things in his Scientific American article: the U.S. should stop subsidizing bioethanol production (turning food into fuel) and countries everywhere should stop banning food exports in a misguided effort to lower local prices.”

    But rather welcoming Brown`s correct analysis on these points – notwithstanding Bailey`s prior warning that Brown and others were sure to call not for freer agricultural markets but for “green fascism”  –  Bailey can`t resist dissing Brown:  “Of course these policy prescriptions have been made by far more knowledgeable and trustworthy commentators than Brown.”

    But despite this evidently weak dismissal of Brown`s concerns on the merits raised in the Scientific American article, Bailey somehow feels justified in completely dissing Brown.  Why?  While it is true that (1) advances in agronomy to date have expanded food supplies to meet the demands of a burgeoning world population (so Brown`s population “bomb” has yet to explode) and (2) Brown lost a famous bet with economist Julian Simon over future commodity prices, how are we doing on the institutional and environmental front in the developing world?  

    – are we continuing to wipe out the ocean`s fisheries (which lies behind the Somali shift to piracy), to change ocean chemistry, and to replace important estuaries with shrimp farms?

    – are we destroying “public” tropical forests (wrested from natives) and convert them to soybeans and oil palms, despite a long desire by the West to protect their inhabitants and wildlife?

    – how sustainable is agriculture in China?

    – aren`t we facing continued pressures from population in the developing world to convert wild lands to marginal agriculture?

    – how are we doing with water supplies, water tenure and water pricing?

    – aren`t we facing continued problems with insecure land tenure?

    As I noted recently in comments on the Real Climate thread on tragedies of the common, where markets are unchecked by property rights (and consumer pressure, regulation, trade agreements), they are very effective machines of destruction.

    It`s a lack of understanding of this that makes market conservatives right / enviros wrong on SMALL issues (such as Brown`s bet with Julian Simon on commodity prices), but wrong on the BIG ones. Those ranting about “neo-Malthusians seeking to destroy civilization” are simply ignoring or are blind to how consumer and other markets are destroying unowned, unmanaged Nature around the world.

    These are the types of problems that have long troubled Lester Brown – and I think Ron Bailey as well.  In any case, Bailey should recognize all of them as problems that stem from a lack of clear and enforceable property rights, in some cases driven by government theft or incompetence.  So why does Bailey feel that the most constructive approach to persuasion is to abjure the elucidation of underlying problems, facilely dismiss concerns and to attack Brown`s motives, by calling him an “old charlatan”?

    Disappointing.

    But this is the type of engagement that we continue to see from “libertarians” and conservatives (such as Robert Bradley and George Will), who seem to reflexively regard enviros as the “enemy”, as opposed to the lack of property rights or the underlying statism that gives rise to the problems that bother the enviros.  Thus we see not a triumph of reason, but of partisan hostility and mudflinging, sometimes as a mask for support for status quo rent-seekers.

    It`s all enough to make an inquiring mind ask, will the real charlatans please stand up?  Or sit down?  Or start living up to the principles they say they espouse?

    Enviro-Trek IV: In which your intrepid reporter boldly discusses "tragedy of the commons" and "property" with corrupted climate scientists and AGW co-religionists!

    May 18th, 2009 No comments

     

    Further to my prior posts, here are my more recent comments over at the remarkable RealClimate thread started by climate scientist Gavin Schmidt, to specifically discuss the “tragedy of the commons” paradigm in the context of domestic and international wrngling over climate policy:

     

    544:  TokyoTom Says: 

    530: “our temporary endowment of hydrocarbons … [is] currently almost a monoculture and it has developed a set of entrenched players who feel very threatened when confronted with the possibility that consumers may have a choice about where to plug in their toasters.”

    Doug, you`ve correctly identified that SOMEONE feels threatened about where people plug in their toasters, but it ain`t the fossil fuel industry. but the so-called “public utilties”, which are NOT owned by fossil fuel producers, and have persuaded states to give them local monopolies and to wall them off from competition, in exchange for regulation of how rates are set.

    Consumers get screwed all around, since they can`t purchase power from whom they want, by type of generating source, by time of day (peak v. off-peak), largely can`t easily monitor their own use, have limited ability to put back power to the utility, and because the utilities have no incentive to invest in long-range transmission (which would allow greater competition among generators) unless the local regulator is willing to allow cost recovery.

    As the whole pent up demand for green energy is caused by the state/local grants of monopoly, perhaps environmentalists, rather than pushing for more government involvement, might consider asking for and end to public utility monopolies:

    http://mises.org/daily/2264

     

    545:  TokyoTom Says: 

    #438: “But Rene isn’t talking about incorporating private ownership as part of a management strategy, but rather selling off the resources and getting rid of any collective from-above management strategy altogether, from forbidding government managers from setting goals (for instance, sustainability) at all.

    When these schemes work it is typically due to some sort of collective mechanism above and beyond the whim of the individual owner of a fishery or other stock.”

    dhogaza, you persist in finding an enemy in every friend. Nowhere has Rene (or I) advocated ANY form of privatization scheme, much less insisted on one that eliminates all government oversight (which of course, for as long as governments exist, is impossible anyway). In any case, in all of the cases where open-access-type resources are centrally managed, we can only expect gradual steps away from that, as politicians like to maintain their positions as gatekeepers for favors and we rarely see bureaucrats volunteer to lighten their own oversight purview.

    “We have exceptions where individual owners put long-term sustainabiliity and non-economic values as a priority (I mentioned Gilchrist lumber here in Oregon as an example). But these are notable precisely because they’re *exceptions*.”

    I understand your concern about the timeframes in which humans act, but there is an irreducible difficulty in fashioning institutions with longer-term views, as they are all populated by people. Even resources in the hands of governments are subject to human whim, such as Cheney`s allocation of scarce water in Oregon in ways that favored Republican farmers over salmon, Native Americans and fishermen, and Bush`s widescale gas leasing in the Front Range, against the opposition of ranchers and hunters.

    Further, you and others keep forgetting that many private owners lead the way in environmental protection; many state parks have their roots in privately preserved land that, in order to avoid the tax man, were subsequently handed over to the state. The Nature Conservancy (which represents its individual members) protects valuable parcels not by seeking government regulation, but by buying them (or conservation easements) outright.

    Another problem you point to is that of conflicts between community interests and the interests of individual owner and interloping buyers (individuals or firms). It seems to me that the greatest problem relates not to the ownership of property, but to the willingness of giant corporations to listen to the communities in which they operate. Some do a better job than others, but I do think that the problems with corporations also has its roots in gifts by governments to relatively wealthy investors:http://mises.org/Community/blogs/tokyotom/search.aspx?q=limited. Many large firms are run in order to put money first in the pockets of executives, with employees and investors next, under circumstances that encourage risk-taking rather than truly conservative behavior (as can be seen from the financial crisis).

     

    547:  TokyoTom Says: 

    #408: “The “climate commons” are the biggest ones of all. They cannot be contained, users cannot be easily left out. Even market-based solutions demand an international enforceable regulation to forbid, tax or at least know who´s emmitting how much, and who has to pay to whom for what.”

    Alexandre, thanks for your comments; I largely agree.

    The fact that the atmosphere is a global commons means no government can act effectively alone; that`s why Gavin`s metaphor of the multi-party international negotiations as a tragedy of the commons is apt. It`s also why fear of government “fiat” is rather misdirected, as in essence all major emmitting governments (and their chief constitutencies) have to reach a COMMON agreement. The situation is much like ranchers reaching terms of use on a range, and fishermen agreeing how to manage a fishery:

    http://mises.org/Community/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2008/07/14/are-pigovian-taxes-coasean-if-they-are-not-fixed-by-one-government-but-rather-the-product-of-negotiations-among-many.aspx

     

    550:  TokyoTom Says: 

    #484: “Tosh, to put it bluntly. The ratio of greenwash to real change is vast. Moreover, only retail businesses are subject to any significant consumer pressure even to undertake greenwashing. It has been legislation and in some cases international agreements that have mitigated damage from food adulteration, lead in fuel and paint, acid rain, and ozone-destroying chemicals.”

    Nick, “tosh”? Now I`m really offended! ;)

    I never argued that consumer pressure was by itself adequate in all cases. Presumably you agree that consumer pressure has proven to be useful, even as you downplay it. The fact of greenwashing is itself an indication that consumer opinion matters, even as people remain susceptibly to deception – which is why there remain entrepreneurial opportunities for certification organizations. consumer reporting, etc.

    I would love to see some consumer boycotts of unsustainbly caught bluefin, in order to lead the way for regulatory/treaty changes that I certainly agree are needed, and the role of moral suasion and struggle for the moral high ground is not to be denied on the climate change issue (which is why Gore in some ways is a self-hamstrung figure – the man wouldn`t know a hairshirt if it hit him in the face).

     

    608:  TokyoTom Says: 

    #419: Missed this:

    “Slavery was brought up because of the idiotic contention posted that owning something means you take good care of it. And, BTW, some Libertarian philosophers have touted “voluntary slavery” as a solution to unemployment. You see, you have a property right in yourself, so you also have the right to sell it.”

    Barton, I don`t speak for Rene, but I think the chief point is the largely uncontroversial contention that people are more likely to take better care of things that they own, relative to the possessions of others or things that nobody owns. Feel free to quibble about the failures of property rights, but are we completely disagreeing on the big picture and what drives the “tragedy of the commons”?

    As for slavery, surely you can recognize that what those libertarians are discussing are still voluntary transactions between consenting person, not the theft and enslavement of others by violence and force. They are just not the same.

    As to the former, do you have any idea about the ways that many of our forefathers funded their expensive passage to the young colonies/US? Ever hear of “indentured servitude”?

     

    Bureacrash and Al Gore: Is CEI on a problem-solving, "libertarian" mission, or just another cynical supporter of statist beneficiaries of status quo?

    May 15th, 2009 No comments

    CEI funds, staffs and supports the relatively young, growing and interesting Bureaucrash” grassroots libertarian social action site, by which CEI tries to tap into some of the discontent with government that has bloomed over the Bush presidency.  I`ve opened an account there and cross-posted some of my blog posts.

    I received the attached by email from Bureaucrash:

    A message to all members of Bureaucrash Social

    Crashers,

    Be sure to visit http://cei.org/1984
    to see how politicians and bureaucrats are trying to turn 2009 into
    1984 by taking control of the entire economy via energy policies.  CEI
    has produced a video showing that Al Gore and those like him are really
    just Big Brother in green clothes.

    You can write your Congressman today and make your voice heard by clicking on the “Write Your Congressman” link on the page.

    In liberty,

    Cord Blomquist

    Visit Bureaucrash Social at: http://social.bureaucrash.com

    I responded directly at the Bureaucrassh post (which may be accessible only to those who have registered); I copy my response below

    Cord, I think CEI has been playing a counter-productive role for quite some time, and is still doing so.

    Rather than taking the lead in (1) finding property-rights based or related approaches to blindingly obvious commons problems
    – caused either by open-access without property or by government
    regulation and favoritism/kleptocracy – in important local, regional
    and global resources (tropical deforestation (theft of native title),
    the atmosphere (AGW and pollution in US, China & India) and oceans
    (crashing fisheries, dead zones & rising pH), or (2) calling for
    deregulation to enhance competition, consumer choice and efficiency in
    the “public utility” sector, CEI has played a denialist, delayist and ad hom game, all in ways quite contrary to libertarian principles
    – principles that seek ways to resolve problems by enhancing the
    ability of people to express their preferences through market
    transactions.

    This is puzzling, since there are many topics on which libertarians can
    productively engage with enviros, who are starting to see the merit of
    property rights approaches to fisheries, and whose frustration on power
    issues is readily understandable, as Lew Rockwell has noted: The Real Cause of Blackouts

    Given CEI`s unproductive and in-your-face approach to environmentalists, despite all of obvious problems and unexplored ground, one is tempted to wonder whether CEI`s purpose is not to achieve any positive action, but
    – by talking about how environmentalists are always wrong and by
    talking a great game about market principles while steadily ignoring
    the way that government has long been used to benefit particular
    special interests –simply to defend the status quo, which obviously
    is NOT based on pure free markets, but massive governmental
    intervention that benefits particular firms and investors.