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Monday, March 31, 2008
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Tanks for Nothing
by Ed Feulner
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


The drive from Washington, D.C., to Philadelphia isn’t long, but it’s certainly becoming expensive. On a recent weekend it cost me $65 to fill up the tank on Interstate 95. If gas continues its march toward $4 per gallon, there’s no telling how much the trip could cost.

It was a worthwhile investment, though. My granddaughters were thrilled to visit the zoo, where they spent time studying polar bears.

The bears are thriving. They can live for 40 years in the zoo. Wild polar bears, meanwhile, live around 30 years, and are also doing well. There are an estimated 20,000-25,000 wild polar bears today, up from an estimated 8,000-10,000 in the late 1960s.

Yet many environmentalists are pressuring the Department of the Interior to list the bear as an endangered species. As the price of gas shows us, though, the real endangered species these days is the American motorist. And, if environmentalists succeed, that problem will only worsen.

New oil and natural gas production in Alaska and in its surrounding waters would immediately be put at risk if the polar bear is listed as “endangered.” There would be virtually no chance to open up even a small portion of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), an area estimated to contain 10 billion barrels of oil. That’s enough to replace what we’ll import from Saudi Arabia over the next 15 years.

Our government is also leasing oil and gas rights in a vast area off Northwest Alaska estimated to contain 15 billion barrels of oil and 76 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. It’s already conducted extensive studies that show energy exploration in this area would harm no bears. In fact, the leases specifically set aside areas believed to be habitat for polar bears. However, an endangered-species listing would put this highly promising source of domestic oil and gas off limits.

Unfortunately, new energy exploration isn’t the only activity that would run afoul of a polar-bear endangerment listing. Environmentalists want to use fears about global warming to limit our country’s energy use. Otherwise, they warn, the polar bear’s icy habitat could become a watery grave.

According to a 2006 study from the Pew Center for Climate Change, “the nation needs to cut carbon-dioxide emissions from electricity generation by more than 80 percent during the next 50 years to slow the impact of global warming.” Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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frog
just where in the capitalist agenda is there anything for a sudanese farmer? I actually have no idea what you were talking about up there.

Are you suggesting that a hotter planet will be good for the sudanese farmer. I sort of doubt that but who knows?

Show me where the poor african benefits from exploitation of the environment for profit. As the "poor" indians of the amazon jungle what stinking swamps of spilled crude benefit their children. But you will certainly say it's a liberal conspiracy that they want to sue for health care and compensation for their loss of life and habitat.

Have you heart the word Inchoate? look it up. I literally have no idea what you were talking about.

Let me try again, something to do with "its okay if hundreds of millions of acres of homes, farmland and peoples livelihoods are destroyed because we really don't need to worry about rising ocean levels - because a sudanese farmer might get anti-biotics as a result." Is that it? Oh, its because I can put up a solar collector, that makes him poor. I should send my solar collector money to the Janjueed, so they can distribute it to the farmers.

Just one question: why did you write so many words to say nothing.

Or have you already dodged out without looking back?

Trughes: one last rejoinder
Your so hung up on an ideology you miss the whole point-- which is that humanity is what's important. You claim to be so concerned for the welfare of others but you don't seem to realize that your good fortune of living in a modern society with wealth and abundance gives you options that 90% of the people of this planet do not enjoy. Tell the starving dirt farmer in sub-Saharan Africa who'd probably like to have access to electricity, running water, sanitation or healthcare among other blessings of modern society that it's too bad for him and his family; that he's not welcome to a better life because in order to have what we enjoy would require the cutting of trees, the mining of minerals, the building of facilities for manufacturing and commerce along with the expenditure of energy to bring it all about that you profess to distain but gobble up willingly to provide you with the standard of living you couldn't live without. According to you, he and several billion people like him are screwed because you have the good fortune of having a choice to put a solar collector on your roof and declare yourself a great humanitarian and savior of the planet. The endangered Furbish's Lousewort wild herb is saved, but the dirt farmers young son dies from a parasite infection from the lack of clean drinking water.

So don't hand me this holier-then-thou crap friend. Try looking through the small end of the binoculars; your myopic view of the world might change.

BTW: If the oceans rise, the people living at the shore will get tired of having their feet wet an will move inland before they drown.

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