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We’ve just had the best decade in human history. Seriously.

The Tradition

HR King
Apr 23, 2002
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Let nobody tell you that the second decade of the 21st century has been a bad time. We are living through the greatest improvement in human living standards in history. Extreme poverty has fallen below 10 percent of the world’s population for the first time. It was 60 percent when I was born. Global inequality has been plunging as Africa and Asia experience faster economic growth than Europe and North America; child mortality has fallen to record low levels; famine virtually went extinct; malaria, polio and heart disease are all in decline.

Little of this made the news, because good news is no news. But I’ve been watching it all closely. Ever since I wrote The Rational Optimist in 2010, I’ve been faced with ‘what about…’ questions: what about the great recession, the euro crisis, Syria, Ukraine, Donald Trump? How can I possibly say that things are getting better, given all that? The answer is: because bad things happen while the world still gets better. Yet get better it does, and it has done so over the course of this decade at a rate that has astonished even starry-eyed me.

Perhaps one of the least fashionable predictions I made nine years ago was that ‘the ecological footprint of human activity is probably shrinking’ and ‘we are getting more sustainable, not less, in the way we use the planet’. That is to say: our population and economy would grow, but we’d learn how to reduce what we take from the planet. And so it has proved. An MIT scientist, Andrew McAfee, recently documented this in a book called More from Less, showing how some nations are beginning to use less stuff: less metal, less water, less land. Not just in proportion to productivity: less stuff overall.

This does not quite fit with what the Extinction Rebellion lot are telling us. But the next time you hear Sir David Attenborough say: ‘Anyone who thinks that you can have infinite growth on a planet with finite resources is either a madman or an economist’, ask him this: ‘But what if economic growth means using less stuff, not more?’ For example, a normal drink can today contains 13 grams of aluminum, much of it recycled. In 1959, it contained 85 grams. Substituting the former for the latter is a contribution to economic growth, but it reduces the resources consumed per drink.

As for Britain, our consumption of ‘stuff’ probably peaked around the turn of the century — an achievement that has gone almost entirely unnoticed. But the evidence is there. In 2011 Chris Goodall, an investor in electric vehicles, published research showing that the UK was now using not just relatively less ‘stuff’ every year, but absolutely less. Events have since vindicated his thesis. The quantity of all resources consumed per person in Britain (domestic extraction of biomass, metals, minerals and fossil fuels, plus imports minus exports) fell by a third between 2000 and 2017, from 13.7 tons to 9.4 tons. That’s a faster decline than the increase in the number of people, so it means fewer resources consumed overall.

If this doesn’t seem to make sense, then think about your own home. Cell phones have the computing power of room-sized computers of the 1970s. I use mine instead of a camera, radio, torch, compass, map, calendar, watch, CD player, newspaper and pack of cards. LED light bulbs consume about a quarter as much electricity as incandescent bulbs for the same light. Modern buildings generally contain less steel and more of it is recycled. Offices are not yet paperless, but they use much less paper.

Even in cases when the use of stuff is not falling, it is rising more slowly than expected. For instance, experts in the 1970s forecast how much water the world would consume in the year 2000. In fact, the total usage that year was half as much as predicted. Not because there were fewer humans, but because human inventiveness allowed more efficient irrigation for agriculture, the biggest user of water.

Until recently, most economists assumed that these improvements were almost always in vain, because of rebound effects: if you cut the cost of something, people would just use more of it. Make lights less energy-hungry and people leave them on for longer. This is known as the Jevons paradox, after the 19th-century economist William Stanley Jevons, who first described it. But Andrew McAfee argues that the Jevons paradox doesn’t hold up. Suppose you switch from incandescent to LED bulbs in your house and save about three-quarters of your electricity bill for lighting. You might leave more lights on for longer, but surely not four times as long.

Efficiencies in agriculture mean the world is now approaching ‘peak farmland’ — despite the growing number of people and their demand for more and better food, the productivity of agriculture is rising so fast that human needs can be supplied by a shrinking amount of land. In 2012, Jesse Ausubel of Rockefeller University and his colleagues argued that, thanks to modern technology, we use 65 percent less land to produce a given quantity of food compared with 50 years ago. By 2050, it’s estimated that an area the size of India will have been released from the plough and the cow.

Land-sparing is the reason that forests are expanding, especially in rich countries. In 2006 Ausubel worked out that no reasonably wealthy country had a falling stock of forest, in terms of both tree density and acreage. Large animals are returning in abundance in rich countries; populations of wolves, deer, beavers, lynx, seals, sea eagles and bald eagles are all increasing; and now even tiger numbers are slowly climbing.

Perhaps the most surprising statistic is that Britain is using steadily less energy. John Constable of the Global Warming Policy Forum points out that although the UK’s economy has almost trebled in size since 1970, and our population is up by 20 percent, total primary inland energy consumption has actually fallen by almost 10 percent. Much of that decline has happened in recent years. This is not necessarily good news, Constable argues: although the improving energy efficiency of light bulbs, airplanes and cars is part of the story, it also means we are importing more embedded energy in products, having driven much of our steel, aluminum and chemical industries abroad with some of the highest energy prices for industry in the world.

In fact, all this energy-saving might cause problems. Innovation requires experiments (most of which fail). Experiments require energy. So cheap energy is crucial — as shown by the industrial revolution. Thus, energy may be the one resource that a prospering population should be using more of. Fortunately, it is now possible that nuclear fusion will one day deliver energy in minimalist form, using very little fuel and land.

Since its inception, the environmental movement has been obsessed by finite resources. The two books that kicked off the green industry in the early 1970s, The Limits to Growth in America and Blueprint for Survival in Britain, both lamented the imminent exhaustion of metals, minerals and fuels. The Limits to Growth predicted that if growth continued, the world would run out of gold, mercury, silver, tin, zinc, copper and lead well before 2000. School textbooks soon echoed these claims.

This caused the economist Julian Simon to challenge the ecologist Paul Ehrlich to a bet that a basket of five metals (chosen by Ehrlich) would cost less in 1990 than in 1980. The Stone Age did not end for lack of stone, Simon said, arguing that we would find substitutes if metals grew scarce. Simon won the bet easily, although Ehrlich wrote the check with reluctance, sniping that ‘the one thing we’ll never run out of is imbeciles’. To this day none of those metals has significantly risen in price or fallen in volume of reserves, let alone run out. (One of my treasured possessions is the Julian Simon award I won in 2012, made from the five metals.)

A modern irony is that many green policies advocated now would actually reverse the trend towards using less stuff. A wind farm requires far more concrete and steel than an equivalent system based on gas. Environmental opposition to nuclear power has hindered the generating system that needs the least land, least fuel and least steel or concrete per megawatt. Burning wood instead of coal in power stations means the exploitation of more land, the eviction of more woodpeckers — and even higher emissions. Organic farming uses more land than conventional. Technology has put us on a path to a cleaner, greener planet. We don’t need to veer off in a new direction. If we do, we risk retarding progress.

As we enter the third decade of this century, I’ll make a prediction: by the end of it, we will see less poverty, less child mortality, less land devoted to agriculture in the world. There will be more tigers, whales, forests and nature reserves. Britons will be richer, and each of us will use fewer resources. The global political future may be uncertain, but the environmental and technological trends are pretty clear — and pointing in the right direction.

https://spectator.us/just-best-decade-human-history-seriously/
 
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Not for the planet and for life on it. That's beyond question. This idiot simply doesn't know what he's talking about.

Climate change scepticism
Ridley has long argued for a "lukewarm" view of climate change and against renewable energy policies that he considers damaging to the economy as well as the environment. In a report for the Global Warming Policy Foundation in 2013 he wrote:

I have written about climate change and energy policy for more than 25 years. I have come to the conclusion that current energy and climate policy is probably more dangerous, both economically and ecologically, than climate change itself. This is not the same as arguing that climate has not changed or that mankind is not partly responsible. That the climate has changed because of man-made carbon dioxide I fully accept. What I do not accept is that the change is or will be damaging, or that current policy would prevent it.[56]

Ridley has consistently argued that the evidence suggests that carbon dioxide emissions are currently doing more good than harm, largely because of the CO2 fertilisation effect, which boosts crop growth and the growth of forests and wild vegetation, and that the best evidence suggests this will continue to be the case for many decades. In 2015 he wrote about a report by the independent scientist Indur Goklany as follows:

As Goklany demonstrates, the assessments used by policy makers have overestimated warming so far, underestimated the direct benefits of carbon dioxide, overestimated the harms from climate change, and underestimated the human capacity to adapt.[57]

In 2014, a Wall Street Journal op-ed written by Ridley was sharply challenged by Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University's Earth Institute. Sachs termed "absurd" Ridley's characterization of a paper in Science magazine by two scientists Xianyao Chen and Ka-Kit Tung. Sachs cited the data from the Science article to rebut Ridley's contentions, and stated that the "paper's conclusions are the very opposite of Ridley's".[58][59] Ridley replied that 'it is ludicrous, nasty and false to accuse me of lying or "totally misrepresenting the science..I have asked Mr. Sachs to withdraw the charges more than once now on Twitter. He has refused to do so ...."'[60]

He gave the 2016 Global Warming Policy Foundation annual lecture on "Global warming versus global greening", in which he said:

I published an article in the Wall Street Journal in January 2013 on these various lines of evidence, including Myneni's satellite analysis, pointing to the increase in green vegetation. This was probably the very first article in the mainstream media on the satellite evidence for global greening.[61]

Ridleys views on climate change have been criticised by Friends of the Earth because he has connections to the coal industry. He is the owner of land in the north east of England on which the Shotton Surface coal mine operates, and receives payments for the mine. In 2016 he was accused of lobbying for the coal industry.[62] This was summarily dismissed by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards.[63]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Ridley
 
Fascinating. Two things:

1. It can be persuasively argued that the scientific advances cited in the article were prompted by pressure from the environmental extremists. In other words, we wouldn't have the recycled aluminum cans if people hadn't been yammering about the need to recycle. For example, the air quality in Los Angeles would be like Peking's if people hadn't forced the state to do something about it, starting back in the '50s.

2. Having said that, the mistake the yammering class makes too often is assuming these advances won't/can't occur. The example is watching the tide come in, measuring carefully the depth every 5 minutes, and after an hour, announcing that in six months, Omaha will be under water.

One of the reasons I often cite Paul Ehrlich as an examplel is that his book, "The Population Bomb" was a huge best-seller in '68 and taken very seriously at the time of publication. So was Ehrlich -- even though his predictions were ridiculous. He wrote that there would be mass famine in a few short years, and he was careful to say that it would happen no matter what was done, because it was too late to avoid it.

Specifically: "The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now. At this late date nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate."

Another reason I cite Ehrlich is because of the bet he made with a professor of business, Julian Simon. Simon offered to bet that any raw material (that wasn't government regulated) would cost less in the future than it did then, adjusted for infnlaltion. Ehrlich picked five metals -- chrommium, copper, nickel, tin and tungsten.

They agreed to bet that if the aggregate cost of the five metals was greater in ten years, Simon would pay Ehrlich the difference, and if the cost was less, Ehrlich would pay Simon.

Not only was the agregate cost lower, but the cost of each individual metal was lower, and by quite a bit. The aggregate cost was $1,000
when the bet was made and less than $500 when it was settled.

The final reason I cite Ehrlich is that for some reason, he maintains the only problem with his book was that it was too optimistic, and he STILL is cited as an expert on just about anything relating too the world ending day after tomorrow.
 
Fascinating. Two things:

1. It can be persuasively argued that the scientific advances cited in the article were prompted by pressure from the environmental extremists. In other words, we wouldn't have the recycled aluminum cans if people hadn't been yammering about the need to recycle. For example, the air quality in Los Angeles would be like Peking's if people hadn't forced the state to do something about it, starting back in the '50s.

2. Having said that, the mistake the yammering class makes too often is assuming these advances won't/can't occur. The example is watching the tide come in, measuring carefully the depth every 5 minutes, and after an hour, announcing that in six months, Omaha will be under water.

One of the reasons I often cite Paul Ehrlich as an examplel is that his book, "The Population Bomb" was a huge best-seller in '68 and taken very seriously at the time of publication. So was Ehrlich -- even though his predictions were ridiculous. He wrote that there would be mass famine in a few short years, and he was careful to say that it would happen no matter what was done, because it was too late to avoid it.

Specifically: "The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now. At this late date nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate."

Another reason I cite Ehrlich is because of the bet he made with a professor of business, Julian Simon. Simon offered to bet that any raw material (that wasn't government regulated) would cost less in the future than it did then, adjusted for infnlaltion. Ehrlich picked five metals -- chrommium, copper, nickel, tin and tungsten.

They agreed to bet that if the aggregate cost of the five metals was greater in ten years, Simon would pay Ehrlich the difference, and if the cost was less, Ehrlich would pay Simon.

Not only was the agregate cost lower, but the cost of each individual metal was lower, and by quite a bit. The aggregate cost was $1,000
when the bet was made and less than $500 when it was settled.

The final reason I cite Ehrlich is that for some reason, he maintains the only problem with his book was that it was too optimistic, and he STILL is cited as an expert on just about anything relating too the world ending day after tomorrow.

Can anybody tell me what in the world this has to do with the topic at hand? Seems like a giant deflection to me.
 
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How many decades could this statement be made over the last 200 years? Would it be over 80%? Imagine if we just stopped trying to improve in 1850....

I agree the news is outrageously negative and this is an important perspective to have but it’s also not a reason to celebrate
 
How many decades could this statement be made over the last 200 years? Would it be over 80%? Imagine if we just stopped trying to improve in 1850....

I agree the news is outrageously negative and this is an important perspective to have but it’s also not a reason to celebrate
The coverage of the economy has been laughable.
 
How many decades could this statement be made over the last 200 years? Would it be over 80%? Imagine if we just stopped trying to improve in 1850....

I agree the news is outrageously negative and this is an important perspective to have but it’s also not a reason to celebrate

There have been some really bad setback decades over the past 200 years....
 
There have been some really bad setback decades over the past 200 years....

80% might be high... it’s be an interesting analysis. I was born in 85 - I can say with some confidence that globally each decade has been better than any in history in terms of civil rights, education,poverty, obviously technology and any other big picture elements
 
80% might be high... it’s be an interesting analysis. I was born in 85 - I can say with some confidence that globally each decade has been better than any in history in terms of civil rights, education,poverty, obviously technology and any other big picture elements

"Civil rights" is a double-edged sword. We're currently debating on whether refusing to call a non-binary gendered person by their preferred pronoun is worthy of monetary damages. Not sure that's making "humanity" better.
 
"Civil rights" is a double-edged sword. We're currently debating on whether refusing to call a non-binary gendered person by their preferred pronoun is worthy of monetary damages. Not sure that's making "humanity" better.

No it’s not. At a minimum it’s pretty inefficient

But if that’s the key civil rights issue of this decade I think it suggests we’re doing well. We certainly haven’t gotten worse.
 
I just want to know why my fuking internet is so expensive

Because there's no true competition. And the GOP is trying to exacerbate the problem by gutting net-neutrality.

Both parties are responsible for the lack of competition, though.
 
How about sitting drinking coffee in the morning and ordering something from your couch and it's on your front porch the next day.
 
least fuel and least steel or concrete per megawatt

No one ever considers the megawatt to steel and concrete ratio. Earliar I was buying a stereo and I asked the rep what the megawatt to concrete and steel ratio of the unit was and he had no idea what I was talking about. I said you know what never mind the stereo I'll buy a gas powered one because it will have a good megawatt to steel and concrete ratio.
 
Because I post the truth and you post wingnut lies.
No, you are a zilch with no life and no original thought. I know it sucks. Don't worry. Your parents (most likely your mom) are disappointed too. However, you do get a few likes from time to time from others in your situation. Take solace in that. It's the best it's going to be.
 
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