In 2006 the movie An Inconvenient Truth came out. It featured Al Gore and was built around a slide show he had been giving for years at that point. It highlighted Global Warming, what caused it, and the fact that if nothing was done very bad things would happen. Most of the movie was devoted to making the Global Warming case, but a short section at the end outlined how the problem could be fixed.
I thought Gore did a great job of proving his main thesis, that Global arming was a real thing, and that it presented a danger serious enough that urgent action was justified. Where he fell short was when it came to solutions. I listened to what he had to say there and thought, "we are so fucked".
It's been fifteen years. How have things changed? I regularly follow scientific developments so I was already familiar with large parts of Gore's argument. But most people don't do that. For them the movie was their first serious introduction to the issue. As such, I think its release was, to quote Churchill, "the end of the beginning" of the public's interest in, and engagement with, the subject.
There has been some good news since the movie came out. Wind turbines and solar panels existed at the time, and Gore mentioned both. But back then they were expensive, and especially in the case of wind turbines, not very efficient.
Solar panels are now more efficient and far cheaper. Wind turbines are now much more efficient and, per unit of capacity, considerably cheaper. Finally, everybody is now familiar with Global Warming. Most people now think that it is real and that it would be nice to do something about it. But that's pretty much the end of the good news.
There has been a lot written on the subject between then and now. Very recently (it came out this year), an excellent addition to the literature on the subject was added. It is a book called How to Avoid a Climate Disaster. It was written by none other than Bill Gates.
I just finished reading it. What makes this book especially valuable is that he is a numbers guy. So, he provides answers to all the important "how big" and "how much" kinds of questions. As a result, you come away with a real understanding of how significant something is or is not.
He backs up his analysis with a lot of detail. He frequently tells us that he is optimistic the problem will get solved. Given what he has to say about what will need to be done, he more than justifies labeling himself as an optimist. The book is an easy read.
He simplifies (and admits he was doing it) in order to keep what's important front and center. But he does not go down the "no numbers or math" path that many authors writing for a general audience do. He tells us what the size, scale, and difficulty of the various components are. He does this, both for the problems he discusses, and for the various solutions he investigates.
Reading this book won't provide you with the information you need to understand all aspects of all the issues in depth. But it provides a good entrée, an introduction to each issue and an explanation of how it fits in with everything else.
If you want to dive more deeply into any specific subject or aspect then you will have to go elsewhere. (Check the "Notes" section at the end of the book for where you can find more in-depth information.) If not, then be assured that he quickly moves on. You won't get mired down in any one topic. And speaking of deep dives, I can't dive even as deeply as he does, and often his "dive" is pretty shallow, and still keep this post to a manageable length.
So what I am going to do is give you the headline version of the book. I will add some commentary and leave it at that. If you want to dive more deeply, but not too deep, read the book. It is easy to read and only runs a little over 200 pages. To work.
"How big is it?", is an important question. The answer can get confusing, so he consistently uses the same yardstick. We are putting the equivalent of 51 billion tons of "carbon" into the air each year. Every bit of it causes warming in excess of the situation before the beginning of the industrial revolution.
If we want to get back to normal we need to drive that number all the way to zero. Anything less than zero and things keep warming up. If we drive it down significantly but not all the way to zero, then things continue to warm. They just warm more slowly. If we increase it, things warm even more quickly than they are now.
This is an oversimplification. Gates oversimplifies a lot. But the oversimplification is in service of the goal of KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid). The oversimplifications mean that he might not have one thing or another exactly right. But he is careful to oversimplify in a ways that get the basic idea right without getting bogged down in the details. And it is obvious that he knows much more than he is putting in the book.
It can be argued that he should have done this or that differently. But what he does conveys the important ideas accurately. And that is the important thing. I could provide a bunch of examples of places where there may be a better or different way. But I am not going to. Just imagine I had. Otherwise, the post would end up longer than the book.
Poor people contribute to Global Warming to a much smaller extent than rich people do. This means that things are going to get worse if, as Gates and I hope, these people are able to improve their situation. In spite of this, he argues that they should be supported in this. And, he argues, we have to find solutions that they can afford and that work in the less developed parts of the world.
He also spends a lot of time on economics. If something is a good idea, but costs twice as much as the bad idea, then nobody is going to change to it. He is a big believer in harnessing business. Show them a way to make a lot of money doing the right thing and they will happily do it. They will also stop throwing roadblocks in the way of doing the right thing.
And, unlike much of the business community, he is not opposed to government. He sees practical solutions as those that harness the power of ordinary people, business, and government. Later in the book he lays out the roles and duties of each.
His pro-government stand comes in spite of the experience he had when the U.S. Government sued Microsoft. As he notes, that was a very unpleasant experience. But ultimately it was one he learned from.
Global Warming is not a "one fix" problem. Making everybody drive electric cars would help. But it would leave most of the problem unsolved. The short version of his solution is:
- To avoid a climate disaster, we have to get to zero.
- We need to deploy the tools we already have, like solar and wind, faster and smarter.
- We need to create and roll out breakthrough technologies that can take us the rest of the way.
He says nice things about the Paris Accord and about something called "Mission Innovation" that I had never heard of. And that's the point, As he notes "Unfortunately, the world did little to prepare". He is talking about COVID but the same applies to Global Warming. And, as he often notes, "getting to zero [on Global Warming] will be really hard".
He spends an entire chapter on why the goal needs to be getting all the way to zero. I have already outlined the super-short version of why this is so above. If you don't already believe it then I don't think this chapter is going to convince you to change your mind.
Chapter 2 is called "This will be hard". I think that this is the one single statement about Global Warming that literally everybody agrees with. It's everything else where the disagreements lie. The thesis of the chapter name is obvious. There is, however, information in this chapter that is not obvious.
For instance, an important but less obvious concept is that "fossil fuels are like water". They are so ubiquitous that we forget how many places they crop up. Even if you fix all the problems that everybody knows about, you aren't done. You still have to fix all the other problems too.
Most people don't know how many things use fossil fuels in one way or another. He provides a much abbreviated list. He also notes that "gas", the stuff you put in your car, is cheaper than name brand bottled water like Dasani. It is also cheaper than pop at Costco, milk, and many other liquids we don't think of as being particularly expensive.
"History is not on our side", he observes. The various energy transitions humans have gone through have been critical to improvements in the quality of life. Firewood kept cave men warm. Coal fueled the industrial revolution. Petroleum fueled the twentieth century.
We want things to keep getting better. It will be hard to do that without increasing the amount of energy we collectively use. And it will be even harder for poor people to keep improving everybody's situation without also substantially increasing their energy use. It is not clear how improve everyone's situation without making Global Warming worse.
"Coal plants are not like computer chips." The point here is that computer chips (and a few other technological marvels) have gotten way better very quickly. But you can't do the same thing to a coal fired power plant, or many other parts of our energy use infrastructure. Making them a little better? Perhaps. Making them oodles better? Not possible.
Similarly, "our laws and regulations are so outdated." He is not anti-regulation. But regulations change slowly but the problem changes quickly. Potential solutions change even more quickly. This means that we are applying old regulations to new problems. Instead of being part of the solution, this makes them part of the problem.
He then deconstructs that 51 billion. He puts the components into five general categories. You have to get a certain distance into the weeds if you expect to get to zero. This is his idea of the minimum distance necessary. Here are his five categories:
- Making things (cement, steel, plastic) - 31%.
- Plugging in (electricity) - 27%.
- Growing things (plants, animals) - 19%.
- Getting around (planes, trucks, cargo ships) - 16%.
- Keeping warm and cool (heating, cooling, refrigeration) - 7%.
- How much of the 51 billion tons are we talking about?
- What's your plan for cement?
- How much power are we talking about?
- How much space do you need?
- How much is it going to cost?
- Help farmers manage the risk from more chaotic weather.
- Focus on the most vulnerable people.
- Factor Climate Change into policy decisions.
- Cities need to change the way they grow.
- We should shore up our natural defenses.
- We're going to need more drinking water than we can supply.
- Finally, to fund adaptation projects, we need to unlock new money.
- Mind the investment gap.
- Level the playing field.
- Overcome nonmarket barriers.
- Stay up to date.
- Plan for a Just Transition.
- Do the Hard Stuff Too.
- Work on Technology, Policy, and Markets at the Same Time.
- Innovation and the Law of Supply and Demand.
- Expanding the Supply of Innovation.
- Accelerating the Demand of Innovation.
- Who's on First?
- Federal Government.
- State Governments.
- Local Governments.
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