As
I became aware of the problems facing humanity going through school
in the early 70's Paul
Ehrlich was the name. He is currently touring New Zealand. He
probably counts as as an optimist; he gives humanity a 10% chance of
survival.
The
long fight to preserve planet Earth
American
scientist Paul Ehrlich tells Andrew Stone why little has changed in
half a century
26
October, 2013
So,
will it end with a whimper or a bang? Paul Ehrlich, the American
scientist who first scared the pants off the world with his alarmist
1968 book, The Population Bomb,
is ringing the bell again about the fate of the planet. Back in New
Zealand for a lecture tour with the doomsday label "Avoiding
Global Collapse", Ehrlich argues the show could become messy -
and sooner than most of us would wish.
Earth,
he says, has too many people consuming too many things and imposing
far too much stress on land and water that only unprecedented
cultural change provides any hope of averting catastrophe.
"I
think the odds of avoiding collapse are about 10 per cent,"
Ehrlich said. "But I'm prepared to work hard to make it 11 per
cent, because I've got great-grandchildren."
One
of his colleagues at Stanford University in California puts the
chances at a gloomy 1 per cent. "He's willing to work really
hard to make it 1.1 per cent."
At
81, Ehrlich is still in the field, working on endangered species, the
preservation of genetic resources and a deep understanding of natural
butterfly populations. With his wife Anne, who is 79, he has been
cranking out books about the environment, ecology and the heavy
footprint of humanity for more than half a century.
His
perspective has barely shifted in that time, though he does admit
that he would not write his most famous book - The
Population Bomb
- the way it was put together back in the 60s. For a start, Anne's
name would be on the cover as joint author. "They said you'd do
better with a single author. I was young then."
He
would do away, too, with three hair-raising scenarios which, though
couched as possibilities and predictions set out, as the book
declared, "the kind of disasters that will occur as mankind
slips into the famine decades".
Flicking
through a faded hardback edition of his ground-breaking book, dug out
of the Auckland Public Library basement, Ehrlich quickly finds the
never-to-be repeated scenarios at page 62 of the slim best-seller.
"There
are a lot of things we wouldn't write today," he observes. "Show
me a scientist who would write exactly the same thing he wrote 45
years ago."
He
continues, with a broad smile: "If I could see into the future,
Anne and I would be living on Bora Bora with a big wine cellar and
beach boys for her" (at this point Anne tells him, 'Oh, stop
it') "and young girls for me, because we would have bought low
and sold high."
The
Weekend Herald
spent an hour with the Ehrlichs at Auckland Airport. They had come
from Sydney and were heading down to Hamilton. Back in Australia,
they left raging bushfires behind - a cue for Ehrlich to launch into
the impact of climate change. He says despite the outlook becoming
"grimmer and grimmer", he gets no sense of urgency from
Prime Minister John Key or his Australian counterpart Tony Abbott to
deal with global warming and rising sea-levels.
"Look
around us," Ehrlich remarks from the relative discomfort of a
plastic chair in a busy fast-food shop. "Auckland Airport is
going to be under water one day."
As
certain as that? "The timing is uncertain and I don't know the
altitude of the airport. But we're here beside the sea and unless we
build huge dykes to keep it out, then the waters are going to rise."
Besides
threats to coastal areas, Ehrlich contends New Zealand is in line for
a hit on its agriculture. Our farming systems emerged during a period
of climate stability. But land-based enterprises added to greenhouse
gas emissions, which in turn were connected to climate disruption.
Food production was threatened by increasingly severe storms,
droughts, heat waves and floods while the fossil fuel foundation on
which agriculture was based for fertilisers, farm machinery and
transport systems had to change if the worst impacts of climate
upheaval were to be avoided. Ehrlich cautions that making political
change is incredibly hard: "We've proved in the States that
telling people what the science of climate change says does not alter
behaviour."
He
recalls an argument he once had with former Washington
Post
executive editor Ben Bradlee over "the media's view that the
truth always lies in the middle and the habit of bringing one or two
people with no credentials to counter what the best climate
scientists in the world have to say.
"That
continues to this day and no one knows what to do about it. As a
scientist, I have to maintain credibility with other scientists. If
get out there and start lying, I am cooked. But it doesn't matter if
any number of experts appear in the Murdoch press denying the truth
about climate change."
Ehrlich
says he's had a hammering from critics over the years since The
Population Bomb
appeared. The book opened with the bald statement: "The battle
to feed all humanity is over" and went on to predict hundreds of
millions of deaths from starvation in the 1970s. Today, he says, of
the planet's seven billion people, around a billion are hungry or
malnourished.
Over
four decades, somewhere in the order of 200 million to 400 million
people have died from starvation or disease. He wasn't, he says,
wrong about that.
But
he did come famously unstuck with a bet he took with Julian Simon, a
freemarket economist who argued that Earth could cope with more
rather then fewer people. In 1980 they bet on the future price of a
basket of metals. If the cost rose over a decade, reflecting scarcity
in a crowded planet, Ehrlich would win. If it fell - indicating great
strides in triumph of human ingenuity - Simon would come up trumps.
"Simon
was running round saying the ecologist won't bet. Well, finally we
thought we may lose the bet but what the hell, we'll shut him up for
10 years."
Ehrlich
lost the bet and, he concedes, some credibility. He maintains that
the commodities market was in a slump at decade's end, which tilted
the odds towards Simon. "Another two years and we'd have won."
The
memory seems to rankle with Ehrlich, who asserts that if he had
published claims like Simon had made - the libertarian was an early
sceptic on global warming - he would have been drummed out of the
Royal Society and fired by Stanford.
Ehrlich
is using a Royal Society paper he and Anne wrote last year on whether
a global civilisation collapse can be avoided as the basis for his
lecture tour. He contends that existing political structures do not
lend themselves to making sacrifices for future generations, but
somehow moulds have to be broken for "monumental" change to
occur.
Ehrlich
warns we don't have the luxury of time, and feels one of the hardest
tasks will be persuading the rich countries - including New Zealand -
to dial back rapidly on consumption while convincing the developing
world that not everyone can be a wealthy American. What cannot wait,
he insists, is a shift away from fossil fuels and lightening our
carbon footprint.
"People
seem to think if they can't get a new iPad every few weeks, then
they're not really content. But there's no evidence that happiness
increases with GDP." There is, though, plenty of evidence of
mounting and potentially irreversible environmental and social costs
to never-ending consumption.
In
New Zealand's case, with its maritime history, it ought to be pushing
for sail-powered ships to get its goods to far-off markets.
"There's
a guy here - John Key - who talks about growing your way out of this
or that ... you're growing your way into trouble, not out of it."
And
he is dismissive of New Zealand's environmental credentials, saying
"you're the record-breaker for destroying biodiversity".
To
support his assertion, he points to imports of palm oil feed which
have driven the dairy industry's rapid expansion. Supplies come from
Southeast Asia, where plantations have sprung up after the removal of
tropical rainforests.
Given
the odds he quotes of the whole show going pear-shaped (10 per cent
), Ehrlich ponders the suggestion that, with all the evidence he
marshalls in his collapse forecast, it seems a tough ask to avoid
that outcome. He refers to Stephen Emmott's recent book, 10
Billion,
which argues in frightening prose that Earth is hurtling towards that
number of people this century.
Says
Ehrlich, again with a chuckle, "His next-to-last line is: 'I
think we're f*****'. I reckon it's a pretty clear summary. We don't
have to be but we seemed to be aimed in that direction."
Paul
Ralph Ehrlich (born May 29, 1932) is an American biologist and
educator who is the Bing Professor of Population Studies in the
department of Biological Sciences at Stanford University and
president of Stanford's Center for Conservation Biology. By training
he is an entomologist specializing in Lepidoptera (butterflies), and
published a landmark paper, about the evolution of plants and
insects. He is also a prominent ecologist and demographer. Ehrlich
is best known for his dire warnings about population growthand
limited resources
Prof.
Ehrlich was interviewed by Chris Laidlaw on Radio NZ
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