Religion,
science and blarney
By Paul Driessen
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Religion, science and blarney
"Evangelical Climate Initiative" does not represent vast majority
of evangelicals
NAE and "Who's Who" of evangelical leaders do not endorse ECI position
By Paul Driessen
Activists recently had breakfast in hoary Senate chambers and a briefing at
the National Press Club, in an attempt to convince America and the world that
the evangelical Christian community is united in concern about global warming
and the need for immediate federal action. Don't be deceived.
Just last month, the executive council of the 30-million member National Association
of Evangelicals (NAE) passed a motion saying there is "ongoing debate about
the causes and origins of global warming," and a "lack of consensus
among the evangelical community on this issue." Reverend Ted Haggard, President
of the NAE, subsequently sent a letter to leading evangelicals, assuring them
that his group was not taking a position on climate-change policy.
Haggard urged evangelicals to become involved in the debate, however. "For
too long we've allowed a liberal faction with a humanism mindset to determine
the national tenor of the discussion," he said. "It is time for Bible-believing
evangelicals, who believe that God created the Earth and we are to be its steward,
to be a voice at the table."
The February 8 breakfast meeting, hosted by Senators John McCain and Joseph
Lieberman, was intended to counter this, by introducing a new organization that
calls itself the Evangelical Climate Initiative or ECI. This small but vocal
group is lending its support to environmental activists who want to point to
the involvement of religious conservatives as further evidence that momentum
is growing across the political spectrum for immediate action to reduce what
they say is potentially catastrophic climate change.
The federal actions they have in mind would likely include mandatory emission
controls, restrictions on energy use, and/or higher energy taxes to "encourage"
conservation by driving up the costs of nearly everything.
Their assertions are contested by the vast majority of evangelicals. Even as
the ECI released its policy statement, top evangelical leaders took issue with
the new group and declared that "there should be room for Bible-believing
evangelicals to disagree about the cause and severity of global warming, and
solutions to this issue." Those leaders include Charles Colson (Prison
Fellowship Ministries), Dr. James Dobson (Focus on the Family), Dr. D. James
Kennedy (Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church), Dr. Richard Land (Southern Baptist
Convention), Dr. Richard Roberts (Oral Roberts University), Rev. Louis P. Sheldon
(Traditional Values Coalition), and Donald Wildmon (American Family Association).
They and the NAE have made it clear that mankind has "a sacred responsibility
to steward the Earth and not a license to abuse the creation of which we are
a part." But they also underscore the need to recognize the adverse impacts
that energy and environmental policies can have on the poor.
The desire to make religious and ethical concerns, sound science and economic
progress cornerstones of public policy prompted the recent formation of the
Interfaith Stewardship Alliance (ISA). This new organization also reinforces
the fact that the majority of evangelicals in the United States do not share
the ECI's viewpoint and do not embrace its policy.
"While there is a lot of debate about the causes and hazards of climate
change and how best to respond to it, there is no debate about the Bible's priority
on helping the world's poor to improve their lot," ISA national spokesperson
Dr. E. Calvin Beisner noted. "By declining to embrace anti-warming policies
that would delay economic development and access to clean air, clean water,
and reliable food and energy supplies in poor countries, we and the NAE are
putting the needs of the poor at the forefront."
The science is not settled on global warming, he and the ISA emphasize. More
than 17,000 scientists have signed the Oregon Petition, which states: "There
is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane
or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause
catastrophic heating of the Earth's atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's
climate." And the ISA has issued a report, "An Examination of the
Scientific, Ethical and Theological Implications of Climate Change Policy,"
addressing the moral, theological and scientific aspects of climate policy."
(see www.interfaithstewardship.org/pdf/ISA_Climate_Change.pdf
In that report, Dr. Roy Spencer, principal research scientist at the University
of Alabama in Huntsville and former senior climate scientist with NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center, observed: "We cannot say for certain how much the
planet may be warming, how much is due to human activities versus natural cycles,
or whether these changes in global temperature would be mostly good or mostly
bad for the majority of people." (Beisner and this author also wrote sections
of the ISA report.)
Our atmosphere and climate are so complex that meteorologists have only a rudimentary
grasp of what actually causes storms, droughts, heat waves, cold snaps and climate
conditions that have changed many times over the centuries, often dramatically.
In addition, as pointed out in the ISA paper, feedback mechanisms are poorly
understood and "only a couple percent increase in low clouds would offset
the warming effects of a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide from fossil
fuel use." All this makes climate models inherently suspect.
"We believe the embrace of mandatory greenhouse-gas emission reductions
would pose very high risks to the world's poor and low-income people, without
offsetting those risks with sufficient benefits from such a policy," Beisner
said. "We don't think that's a 'right-wing' concern, but a basic human
and indeed Christian concern."
By making energy less affordable and accessible, mandatory controls would drive
up the costs of consumer products, stifle economic growth, cost jobs, and impose
especially harmful effects on the Earth's poorest people. The Kyoto climate
treaty, for example, could cost the world community $1 trillion a year - five
times the estimated price of providing sanitation and clean drinking-water to
poor developing countries, the ISA report observes, citing various studies.
According to the US National Center for Atmospheric Research, even "full
and perfect compliance" with the Kyoto Protocol would mean the average
global temperature in 2050 would be only 0.1° F lower than it would be in
the absence of emissions controls. Its impact on minority communities in the
USA, on the other hand, could cost Black and Hispanic families 1.3 million jobs
in 2012.
A panel composed of eight of the world's most distinguished economists examined
various proposals for dealing with climate change by reducing carbon emissions.
The panel's "Copenhagen Consensus" concludes that these proposals
are "bad projects" whose "costs were likely to exceed the benefits."
Neither constant drumbeats about climate catastrophe, nor the blarney of venerable
statesmen like Senator McCain, can change these facts or the need to address
these concerns. Moreover, it would be morally wrong to focus on distant theoretical
concerns about global warming - while ignoring the real, immediate and often
life-or-death dangers faced by our poorest citizens.
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Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Congress of Racial Equality
and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power · Black Death (www.Eco-Imperialism.com)
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