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Time to dial down this climate change panic

Religious cults in the Middle Ages used similar fiery language and their target was familiar

November 4, 2021 11:53
Welby.jpg
Interview The Most Reverend Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, about people being able to identify with the Queen losing her husband Prince Philip, as people have lost loved ones during Coronavirus pandemic (BBC News 10pm Bulletin - 16/04/2021 - AEXZ288W)
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Having told the BBC that world leaders would be “cursed” if they failed to make a deal to curb emissions at the Glasgow UN climate conference, Cop26, and that this would lead to a “genocide on an infinitely greater scale” than the Holocaust, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, apologised “for the offence caused to Jews” — though only after being criticised by the editor of this newspaper, among others.

Welcome as this was, it leaves a troubling question: how on earth did Welby come to use such language in the first place? He wasn’t the only one. On Tuesday, the Met Office warned of “Lucifer summers” every year by 2100 if emissions are unchecked. Boris Johnson claimed the world was at “one minute to midnight”, leaving delegates with the job of defusing a “doomsday machine”. Sir David Attenborough evoked almost biblical imagery, saying that after witnessing a “terrible decline” in his lifetime, those coming after must be given the means to see “a wonderful recovery”.

As an event, Cop26 seems unlikely to amount to much. The intransigent refusal of China to bring forward the date when it will stop increasing its coal output and building more coal-fired power stations from 2030 has seen to that. But after several years of intensification, it has seen climate rhetoric reach new extremes. Climate change has been replaced by “climate catastrophe” and “climate emergency” — and to suggest otherwise is to invite the Twitter mob to accuse one of being a “denier”. The result is that humanity — which overall is richer, better-fed, longer-lived, better-educated and blessed with more opportunities than at any previous time — is being urged to hate itself, and contemplate its progress though a prism of terror and guilt. The more prosperous we are, the more we must beat ourselves up.

Climate change, in other words, is now cast as an impending apocalypse. In this, there are drawbacks. The first is an increase in “climate anxiety”, especially among the young; and a growing campaign against having kids — something that must delight Sir David, a patron of the neo-Malthusian group Population Matters, who has said it is “barmy” to send famine victims “bags of flour”. This is especially unfortunate given that many demographers consider world population is likely to peak at less than 9 billion in about 30 years, and then decline.