James
Lovelock: 'Saving the planet is a foolish, romantic extravagance'
31
May, 2015
Jim
Lovelock, environmentalist, scientist, and celebrated proposer of the
Gaia hypothesis, has always taken the long view of Earth's future. So
it feels appropriate that he should have retired to a coastguard's
cottage perched above Chesil Beach on Dorset's Jurassic Coast – so
called because 180 million years of geological history lie exposed
along its cliffs and coves.
This shoreline is
constantly eroding. In the winter storms of 2013, Lovelock's cottage
was cut off for four days when the road leading to it was washed into
the sea – not that Lovelock, whose latest book is entitled A Rough
Ride to the Future, needed any reminder of the precariousness of our
world. A decade ago, he predicted that billions would be wiped out by
floods, drought and famine by 2040. He is more circumspect about that
date these days, but he has not changed his underlying belief that
the consequences of global warming will catch up with us eventually.
His conviction that humans are incapable of reversing them – and
that it is in any case too late to try – is also unaltered. In the
week when the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change reported
that the world is still miles off meeting its 2030 carbon emission
targets, Lovelock cannot easily be dismissed.
There are other
doomsayers. What makes this one so unusual is his confounding
cheerfulness about the approaching apocalypse. His optimism rests on
his faith in Gaia – his revolutionary theory, first formulated in
the 1970s, that our planet is not just a rock but a complex,
self-regulating organism geared to the long-term sustenance of life.
This means, among other things, that if there are too many people for
the Earth to support, Gaia – Earth – will find a way to get rid
of the excess, and carry on.
Lovelock's concern is
less with the survival of humanity than with the continuation of life
itself. Against that imperative, the decimation of nations is almost
inconsequential to him. "You know, I look with a great deal of
equanimity on some sort of happening – not too rapid – that
reduces our population down to about a billion," he says, five
minutes into our meeting. "I think the Earth would be happier
... A population in England of five or 10 million? Yes, I think that
sounds about right." To him, even the prospect of nuclear
holocaust has its upside. "The civilisations of the northern
hemisphere would be utterly destroyed, no doubt about it," he
says, "but it would give life elsewhere a chance to recover. I
think actually that Gaia might heave a sigh of relief."
He is driven, at least in
part, by a deep affinity for the English countryside. When he warns
that sea levels are rising three times faster than the first
climatology models predicted, and that this threatens "an awful
lot of land north of Cambridge that is one or two meters below sea
level", you sense that he really cares about that landscape's
fate. No doubt he inherited this affection, along perhaps with a
certain independence of spirit and thought, from his father. Born in
West Berkshire in 1872, Lovelock senior grew up as a
"hunter-gatherer" in support of his impoverished family,
until, aged 14, he was caught poaching and imprisoned in Reading for
six months. "I am very proud of that first part of my father's
life," he says.
Like others of his
generation, Lovelock mourns the changes to the countryside wrought by
the post-War agricultural revolution. As a young man in the 1930s, he
recalls, he cycled from Kent to the West Country, when England was
"unbelievably beautiful". "It all looks very green and
pleasant around here," he adds, waving at the gentle downland
beyond his kitchen window, "but it's nothing compared to what it
used to be".
Like Gaia, he has
evidently developed certain stratagems for the sustenance of life.
One would not guess from his appearance that he will be 96 this year.
With his American wife Sandy, who is 20 years his junior, he still
walks to the village shops each Saturday, a round-trip of six miles;
and his intellectual vigour is so unimpaired that conversing with him
soon makes the head spin.
""While the 2011 Japan earthquake caused devastation,
Lovelock observes that "zero" have died of radiation from
FukushimaThe Asahi Shimbun via Getty
He contends that the end
of the world as we know it began in 1712, the year the Devonshire
blacksmith Thomas Newcomen invented the coal-powered steam engine. It
was the first time that stored solar energy had been harnessed in any
serious way, with effects that now "grip us and our world in a
series of unstoppable events. We are like the sorcerer's apprentice,
trapped in the consequences of our meddling". Newcomen's
discovery set in train more than just the era of industrial
development. It also marked the start of a new geological epoch, the
"Anthropocene", the most significant characteristic of
which, Lovelock believes, has been the emergence of "an entirely
new form of evolution" that is one million times faster than the
old process of Darwinian natural selection.
He points out that for
half a century now, computing power has roughly doubled every two
years – a trajectory of growth known as Moore's Law – and that
computers are already capable of many actions far beyond what humans
can do. In his scariest scenario, which sounds disturbingly close to
the premise of the Arnie Schwarzenegger Terminator movies, he warns
that computers could morph into an autarkic life form powerful enough
to "destroy us, our carbon life forms, and inherit the Earth".
Luckily he thinks this outcome unlikely, and in the end has no fear
of the Rise of the Machines. "Computers are entirely rational
creations. But true intelligence, the ability to create and to
invent, is intuitive – and you can't do rational intuition."
On the other hand, his
preferred prediction for humanity is scarcely less disturbing. He
foresees the evolution of a man-machine hybrid by a process of
endosymbiosis that, he argues, has already begun. "I am already
endosymbiotic. I'm fitted with a pacemaker. It runs on a 10-year
lithium battery, but the next generation will have its own power
supply drawn from the body. I'm already worried about being hacked
... Fairly soon, I think, the internet is going to be fully embedded
in our bodies."
Looking further still
into the future, he says that life on Earth, based as it presently is
on carbon, cannot last beyond 100 million years, because by then it
will be too hot. The evolution of a different life form based on some
more heat-resistant element – such as electronic silicon – could
potentially extend life by another 500 million or even a billion
years.
But first, of course,
mankind has to survive the immediate global warming crisis. Lovelock
is a famously outspoken critic of the green energy revolution,
especially wind power, which he describes as "an absolute scam.
A great big German scam". The purveyors of wind turbines and
solar panels, he says, are like 18th-century doctors trying to cure
serious diseases with leeches and mercury. Instead he wants us to
embrace nuclear fission, a completely clean energy source that he
regards as a "gift". The Western world's prejudice against
nuclear – underscored earlier this year when the number of reactors
in the US dipped below a hundred for the first time in decades – is
"tragic".
"What gets my goat
are the lies peddled about Fukushima [the Japanese nuclear reactor
disaster of 2011]. Do you know how many people died of radiation?
Zero. Not one – although there were 50-odd suicides among people
driven to it by fear. Nuclear energy is actually 10 times safer, per
GigaWatt hour of production, than wind power. Yet France and Germany
responded to Fukushima by temporarily shutting down their entire
nuclear industries. It makes no sense." The reason, he thinks,
is public ignorance, combined with a form of green politics that
amounts to a "new religion – the same force that drives
jihadists in Syria". It is, he agrees, a paradox that the new
accessibility of information brought about by the internet revolution
has intensified, not diminished, the old battle between science and
superstition. "There's a campaign in our village to stop a new
mobile phone mast. The electromagnetic radiation it will emit is
trivial. It's comparable to a household television. Yet the
campaigners say it can give you cancer. This is about fear – not
facts."
With one or two
exceptions such as Margaret Thatcher and Germany's Angela Merkel,
both of whom studied chemistry, he thinks our leaders are just as
bad. "If you talk to any politician, American or British or
European, they are absolutely blind on matters of science," he
says. He reserves special ire for Tony Blair, "the really mad
prime minister" who, swayed by green ideology and the Campaign
for Nuclear Disarmament, passed legislation subsidising the renewable
energy sector, which made fresh investment in the nuclear industry
almost impossible. (This, he argues, is one reason why the heating
costs of an average house in the UK are up to 10 times greater than
in America, which, overall, has a colder climate. For many years, he
asserts, the Lovelocks wintered in St Louis, Missouri, purely in
order to avoid British heating bills.)
But even a wholesale
switch to nuclear power, in his view, would come too late to solve
humanity's principal problem, which is overpopulation. The old
post-war goal of sustainable development, he says, has become an
oxymoron and should be abandoned in favour of a strategy of
sustainable retreat. He is scathing about the very idea of "saving
the planet", which he calls "the foolish extravagance of
romantic Northern ideologues". The vast sums of money being
invested in renewable energy would be much better spent on strategies
designed to help us survive and adapt, such as flood defences.
Above all, he thinks that
we should embrace the ongoing global shift towards urban living. It
would, he insists, be far easier and more economic to regulate the
climate of cities than our current strategy of attempting to control
the temperature of an entire planet. The regions beyond the cities
would then be left to Gaia to regulate for herself. It seems a sci-fi
fantasy, rather like Mega-City One from the pages of Judge Dredd, a
post-apocalypse megalopolis shielded from the "Cursed Earth"
beyond by massive boundary walls. But, in fact, the concept is not so
futuristic. Noah, arguably, had a similar idea when he built the ark.
It is certainly not a new
concept to Lovelock, who wrote a paper for the oil multinational,
Shell, as far back as 1966 in which he predicted that the cities of
the future would become much denser, and that Shell would be making
plenty of money out of "the avoidance of ecological disaster".
The fictional Mega-City One held 800 million citizens, and
incorporated the entire eastern seaboard of the United States.
Lovelock points that the average population density of England is
higher than that of greater Boston. His 1966 paper, which was
recently reprinted by Shell, no longer looks as fantastical as it
once did.
Singapore, he suggests,
shows us how a city can succeed in an overheated climate. The trend
there for building underground, as well as in places like Japan and
even London (albeit for different reasons), might be part of the same
process of adaptation. Architectural practices from the past might
also offer clues to a sustainable retreat in the future. The streets
of the medieval Dalmatian island town of Korcula, for instance,
follow a unique herringbone plan designed to capture and channel the
prevailing, cooling sea breeze.
Nature offers models for
future city architecture, too. Lovelock is much taken at the moment
with termites. Their mounds, he says, are built like the cities of
the future might be. Like Korcula, they are oriented towards the
prevailing wind. They also tend to lean towards the zenith of the
sun, to minimise exposure to its rays at the hottest time of the day
– a stratagem that perhaps has its analogue in a recent suggestion
by the Scottish nationalist politician Rob Gibson, who wants all new
housing estates to be orientated towards the south in order to
maximise the efficiency of rooftop solar panels.
(In London, meanwhile,
the architects NBBJ recently proposed building the world's first
"shadowless skyscraper" by building two towers – one to
block out the sun, the other to reflect light down into the shadow of
the first).
More interesting still, a
recent paper in Science magazine has shown that termite mounds, once
thought to be a sign of encroaching desertification, may actually
have the ability to stabilise or even reverse the effects of climate
change by trapping rainfall. "Termites are very Gaian,"
Lovelock enthuses. "There are these wonderful pictures of little
plants growing up between the termite cities. You could look at that
as a nice future for humans."
So does Lovelock really
think that humanity could end up mimicking social insects? A
dumbed-down world inhabited by worker drones might be environmentally
efficient, but what about the surrender of privacy that would imply;
isn't the sublimation of individuality too high a price to pay? How
could such a society ever throw up a Beethoven, a Shakespeare, or an
Einstein? "That's true, and of course it depends how far down
this track we choose to go," says Lovelock, "but do you
think that evolution, as a process, gives two hoots about any of
that?"
This is, to be sure, a
reductive view of human existence. A man in the twilight of his
years, as Lovelock is, might feel a sense of futility. Instead he
maintains a steady wonder at what he calls "the ineffable: a
lovely word, don't you think?" while apparently seeking no
earthly legacy beyond a modest hope that he will be remembered as
having been consistent in his arguments.
As a man of science, he
remains agnostic on the subject of God. And yet, he says, "I am
beginning to swing round, to think more and more, that there's
something in Barrow and Tipler's cosmic-anthropic principle – the
idea that the universe was set up in such a way that the formation of
intelligent life on some planet somewhere was inevitable ... The more
you look at the universe, the more puzzling it is that all the
figures are just right for the appearance on this planet of people
like us."
For the time being our
species may be, as he has written, "scared and confused, like a
colony of red ants exposed when we lift the garden slab that is the
lid of their nest". But he is also content to be one of those
ants, because he sees a kind of beauty in that confusion – and
perhaps even some sort of grand design. "Humanity may be as
important to Earth, to Gaia, as the first photo-synthesisers,"
he thinks. "We are the first species to harvest information ...
that is something very special."
Above all he is convinced
that mankind can recover itself – and in this he may be a product
of his vanishing generation. Some years ago, at a lecture in
Edinburgh, I heard him reminisce how marvellously the British nation
had pulled together when threatened by Nazi invasion, but that it had
taken that existential threat to make them do so. When the climate
crisis finally breaks, he believes, the world's differences will
again be put aside – and our species, for all its present idiocies,
will pull together in a way that will astonish the cynics among us.
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