The Issue of Carbon Dioxide
During the halcyon days of forestry in New
Zealand our tree nursery’s annual production was around eight million Radiata
pine and six million Douglas fir seedlings. These numbers were static up until shortly
after the closure of state-run forestry when private forestry companies and
farmers were expected to fill the gap where state forestry left off. However the
popularity of forestry as an investment quickly changed due solely to further political
interference. First, the government changed the building rules, imposing mandatory
chemical treatment for Douglas fir timber when used in house building. This
made the longer growing rotation of the species to have no financial benefit
over Radiata pine, so plantings of Douglas fir ceased overnight. Tree nurseries
were left with unsaleable seedlings, redundant infrastructure and redundant
workers. A few years later the government saw the light and reversed the rules for
Douglas fir timber but the damage to the nursery industry was already done.
Around the same time, a new world theory
was being expounded called ‘global warming’, these days edited to ‘climate
change’. A theory that blamed carbon dioxide and created a new international commodity
called, ‘carbon credits’. Tree growers found that the trees they were growing
happened to be sequestering this carbon stuff as they grew, because wood is
about fifty percent carbon. So this airy-fairy idea of carbon credits had the
illusion of suddenly having a certain value. The UN began taxing participating counties
according to the amount of carbon they released into the atmosphere by way of
carbon dioxide. Now who in their right mind would sign up to voluntary taxes?
Anyway, little old New Zealand with its farting and belching livestock did, so was
up to pay an annual fortune as carbon tax! The government, scratching around
for funds, announced they intended to nationalise, or a better word, rob, tree
growers of their carbon credits! The immediate response was that everyone
stopped planting trees. The result was tree nurseries couldn’t sell product and
we were lucky if we sold one million seedlings per year. The outcome was that
after nearly a decade of lean planting years, the government backed down, but
the idea was carnage to the whole local forestry industry, and created a gap in
our managed, rotational forest resource. Now, nearly three decades on, the
government has decided to fund the planting of a billion trees to create jobs and
carbon credits, but failing to fully understand that for successful forest
establishment, proper planning and preparation is required.
We all know government stuff-ups are
nothing new and often lead populations in unwanted and uncalled-for directions,
which is why the polls aren’t well-attended and why there’s mistrust of politicians
and government institutions. I for one, mistrust the notion that carbon dioxide
is the cause of climate change and further, I mistrust where the huge amounts
of carbon-taxed money goes. There’s been a climate change summit recently where
two hundred countries were represented. You can bet none of those free-lunch, bums-on-seats
will be on mere labourer wages! Yet another expensive talk-fest shows how the
UN has become a financial sink-hole. There’s little evidence of carbon tax monies
being spent on third world ‘climate-effected communities’ or indeed for building
one seawall. Maybe that’s because there isn’t a need.
While being no scientist, my forestry
career dabbled in many sciences related to the business of converting
unproductive land into managed and sustainable production forests; so I’m
backed by a smattering of experience. Secondary school science taught me that the
process of photosynthesis, utilizes carbon dioxide in a process essential for all
vegetation. Also that the world’s vast fossil fuels originated as vegetation
that was lush and larger than our present vegetation, because of abundant
carbon dioxide that was in the then atmosphere. So if there is increasing
carbon dioxide these days, why is there not more corresponding vegetation
growth? Over my fifty-odd year career, I’ve see no sign of trees growing larger
than in the recent past. Anyway, a little reminder for the anti-carbon
dioxiders: if it wasn’t for carbon dioxide, how would we grow our plant-based
foods – correction any food?
When I was a lad, a man down the road
gassed himself with his car fumes. He died of carbon monoxide poisoning.
I was warned over and over not to start a lawnmower or chainsaw in an enclosed
area because of the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning. So how come
vehicles and machinery are suddenly giving off carbon dioxide? An error at the start of an equation is enough
to cause doubt about the rest put forward by human-caused climate change
advocates. Animals produce carbon dioxide and in the past, maybe there weren’t
so many humans, but imagine the lung capacity of a T-rex! Pre-human there were
massive herds of wildlife! Worrying about our belching and farting livestock
may be legitimate, but wait a tick – we’re paying carbon tax, but aren’t farts
methane? Anyway, our livestock hardly
compare to the gases that the world’s insect population let off! And we have to
remember, there’s a natural carbon dioxide cycle linked to the sea that’s been
going on for as long as there’s been sea. How do climate change advocates
propose mitigating that?
There have always been atmospheric
pollutants, well we call them that, but they are process that made the
atmosphere the way it is, and it happened to support life. These are the
volcanic explosions. Think of the gases given off during that single event over
eight months known as the Laki eruption and the resulting haze. Some eighty
four cubic kilometres of lava bubbled up. That’s a big limp of rock! What about
the awful fires in Portugal, California and Australia? They’re nothing new,
vast amounts of material billowed into the atmosphere. How do governments viz
the UN propose levying a carbon tax on wildfires? Those events produce more
‘pollutants’ that any number of motor vehicles.
I’m not denying climate change at all! Climate
changes happen, always have and always will, it’s part of Earth’s lifecycle.
But left-handed logic, (righties don’t quite understand it because there’s no
science for it) left-handed logic suggest we look up at that big, golden globe
in the sky! She has to be the driver of our climate, because just as the Earth
has its cycles, so it logical that the sun has her cycles. She doesn’t belt out
a constant radiation level year upon year, it is logical that the sun must
vary, which in turn causes Earth’s climate to vary. How inconvenient! When the
climate change faithful say the Earth temperature will rise one and a half
degrees, how can so-called experts predict when the sun is going to vary? How
would one percent of fifteen million degrees Celsius affect the temperature of
our planet? Forecasters can’t accurately predict the weather more than a week
out! To go back to the Laki episode, if you read Gilbert White’s diary, the
eight months’ worth of gases caused significant northern hemisphere climate
change, at least for a few years, the summers became much hotter and winters severely
colder. There can be no prediction when the next eruption or rock from outer space
will impact out climate, but such events will occur.
Here’s another bit of left-handed logic. What
we’ve been told about continental drift doesn’t quite cut it for me. If the present
shape of continents fit into each other so well, how do we rationalise natural coastal
erosion over billions of years? My forestry geology lessons taught me that
mountains erode forming alluvial plains over a similar same time span. Of course
the plates move, some are forced under others to be recycled into magma, while
other pressures cause mountains to rise up. Question: Have you ever experienced your car’s front
wheel being out of balance? And have you ever seen the tiny piece of lead that corrects
it? Well to spin as fast and evenly as Earth does, the planet must be well
balanced, so it’s logical that all the time it is self-balancing, which makes
it logical that there must be a number of the tools in Earth’s toolbox, climate
being but one of them, to keep equilibrium.
So, carbon dioxide is being used to
represent the dodgy man-made climate change theory, for the simple reason it’s
measurable for the purpose of raising tax revenues. Nevertheless, there’s no
doubt in my mind that humans have impacted on the world’s climate. Deforestation
is the major impact! Forests manufacture cooler, moist-laden, oxygenated air.
Forests contribute to the water cycle, they host fauna and other flora. They
represent biodiversity. Yet worldwide, indigenous forests have been and are being
harvested in a non-sustainable way over vast tracts of land. The worst examples
are in the Amazon and Congo, but Russia, Indonesia and the USA are among the culprits
too. Of course, especially in the case of the Congo and Amazon, harvesting
trees generates much needed revenue, which is why carbon tax should be dumped and
instead a levy should be put on indigenous timbers used in western upmarket
buildings to discourage their use. Aid should be directed to the Congo, Amazon
and the rest to restore forests and protect them, thus creating employment and
internal taxes for the country concerned, while maintaining a climate
equilibrium.
Important as our climate may be, our
environment is more so, and yet as a species, we have been shitting our nest! A
successful economy is reckoned to be a growing one where profits outweigh any
consideration for quality of life or ethics. There’s a tie-up between
automation, artificial intelligence and the evaporation of jobs. Yes, workers
cost a lot and can be difficult to manage but is it not important that people have
jobs? In the name of cost-efficiency, packaging plastics replaced biodegradable
materials such as paper and natural fibres, but at an awful cost to the
environment. The throw-away society leaves behind uncountable tonnes of waste
that rich countries ship off to pollute poorer countries. The wealthy have the
maxim: I can afford it, so I’ll have it. With no regard for the resources ‘it’
may consume.
I’m happy to swim against the tide,
prattling on about environmental degradation and how flora in all its forms is
one of the keys to our continued existence. We can’t rely on political acumen,
politicians dance to tunes that get them re-elected, seldom transparent, yet
most can see through them! Carbon dioxide isn’t our enemy, false
prophets are. The most important renewable and sustainable resource we have available
is forests and they need to be planted. Tomorrow is a good day to start.