By Paul Driessen
Saturday, February 14, 2015
College students who support divestment of fossil fuel
stocks are passionate about their cause. Just look at their word choices.
Though they could never function even one week without hydrocarbon energy, they
call fossil-fuel companies “rogue entities,” assert that oil, coal and natural
gas interests have the “political process in shackles,” and believe most of the
world’s known fossil fuel resources must “stay in the ground” to avoid
“catastrophic global warming.”
Their over-heated hysteria over climate change is fanned
by groups like 350.org and college professors who rehash doom-and-gloom
forecasts about rising seas, dying species and other cataclysms that they
insist can be remedied only by terminating fossil fuel use and investments in
fossil fuel companies.
But in their lemming-like rush to glom onto claims that
human carbon dioxide emissions will destroy life as we know it, they reveal an
abysmal understanding of true science, our planet’s turbulent climate history,
creative free markets, and what academia once proudly espoused: open, robust
debate.
Of course, deceptive information is exceedingly useful to
community organizers and agitators, particularly those who occupy Oval Offices,
endowed chairs, government regulatory agencies and Big Green war rooms – and
want to “fundamentally transform” the United States. Bombarding impressionable
students with such intellectually dishonest drivel is equally useful … and
detestable.
Just as bad, too many students devote their time and
energy to divestment campaigns, when they should be learning and applying
critical-thinking and ethical skills. Honest analysis reveals that divestment
will have negligible to zero effects on atmospheric carbon dioxide levels,
climate change or energy company stock prices, even if every university in the
country gave in to the students’ anti-fossil fuel pleas.
Indeed, college and university endowments are not large
enough to create even a ripple in fossil fuel investments. A recent Bloomberg
analysis found that university endowments have about $400 billion invested in
stocks; the National Association of College and University Business Officers
puts the figure at $456 billion. Of that, only about 2.1% was invested in
fossil fuel stocks in 2010-2011. That is a pittance in the overall stock
market, which was valued at some $18 trillion in 2012 and now is much larger.
In fact, it amounts to only about 0.05% or a nickel out of every $100 – and any
fossil fuel stocks sold by an endowment would be purchased by another investor
almost immediately.
Moreover, fossil fuel stocks historically have been good
investments for schools. A Sonecon study found that endowment investments in
oil and natural gas equities in 2010-2011 provided returns of a whopping 52.8%
– nearly twice the returns from all other U.S. publicly traded stocks, real
estate securities and foreign equities. This fact is not lost on university
presidents, who have a fiduciary duty to grow their endowments, to pay for
student scholarships, new and remodeled facilities, and other expenditures that
further their educational objectives.
American University trustees voted against divestment in
November 2014, saying AU financial advisers “could not provide assurance that
the effect of divestment would not be insignificant.” Actually, a recent
Compass Lexecon analysis found that an investment portfolio totally divested
from fossil fuels lost 70 basis points and cost significantly more every year
in management fees to keep them “fossil-free.”
When asked whether he would sell University of Colorado
fossil fuel stocks, President Bruce Benson said flatly, “I’m not going to do
that.” Similarly, Harvard University President Drew Faust rejected demands for
divestment and reminded proponents that Harvard “exists to serve an academic
mission.” Harvard must be “very wary of steps intended to instrumentalize our
endowment in ways that would appear to position the University as a political
actor, rather than an academic institution,” she stated.
Just as importantly, the world’s largest energy companies
dwarf the likes of ExxonMobil and other U.S. firms – but are owned by foreign
governments and are not publicly traded. Caterwauling college kids at Stanford,
Swarthmore and elsewhere will not cause companies to abandon what they do best:
develop and produce fossil fuel energy for people who need them for jobs,
living standards, health and welfare.
That raises this discussion’s most critical point, which
is generally brushed aside by divestment advocates. These campaigns are part of
a global anti-hydrocarbon crusade that would inflict enormous harm on working
class families, and even worse consequences on Earth’s most destitute citizens.
In 2012, coal, oil and natural gas supplied 87 percent of
the world’s energy, Worldwatch Institute figures show. Further, despite the
Obama Administration’s war on coal, International Energy Agency data reveal
that global coal usage is rising and by 2017 will likely supplant oil as the
dominant energy resource.
Fossil fuel companies and their shareholders know
traditional forms of energy will continue to power the world for the
foreseeable future, because there are no viable alternatives. Solar, wind and
other energy resources cannot supply enough energy to meet the world’s needs;
they are not price competitive without huge subsidies; and they require fossil
fuels and millions of acres to manufacture, install and operate.
Nor is it sufficient to claim anti-fossil fuel demands
are well-intended, when the real-world consequences are so readily apparent and
so easily predicted. In developed nations they cost jobs and degrade living
standards, health, welfare and life spans. In poor countries they perpetuate
electricity deprivation, unsafe water, disease, squalid environmental conditions,
inability to adapt to climate changes, and early death.
To inject these vital ethical considerations and counter
climate cataclysm concerns, students at a number of colleges and universities
have launched Collegians For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACTcampus) chapters to
promote free markets, less government intervention and regulation, and better
lives for more people. Their motto is “scientific truth without the spin.”
The University of Minnesota chapter proclaims that
“Western values of competition, progress, freedom and stewardship can and do
offer the best hope for protecting not only the Earth and its wildlife, but
even more importantly its people.” These sound science and “stewardship of
creation” principles should guide discussions, debates and decisions on all
campuses. So should accurate information about climate change.
Divestment activists often claim that climate science is
settled. Far from it. The supposed connection between carbon dioxide and
planetary temperature is far from proven. Indeed, contrary to alarmist
forecasts and computer models, Earth’s temperature has not budged for 18 years,
the United States has not been struck by a Category 3-5 hurricane for a record
nine years, “extreme weather events” have not become more frequent or severe
during the past 100 years, and other “crises” have not materialized.
Nevertheless, both NOAA and NASA, perpetual purveyors of
scary climate headlines, have again used ground-based data to pronounce that
2014 was the hottest year on record. These temperature reports “are
ridiculous,” say experts like Dr. Tim Ball, historical climatologist and former
professor at the University of Winnipeg, Manitoba. The measurements are taken
mostly in always warmer urban areas, the raw data have been “adjusted,”
“homogenized” and manipulated, and the alleged year-to-year differences are
measured in hundredths of a degree – a mere fraction of their margin of error!
Moreover, it is impossible to get accurate average global
temperatures based on ground stations, because the data do not exist, Dr. Ball
notes. “There are virtually no data for 70 percent of Earth’s surface that is
oceans, and practically no data for the 19 percent of land area that are
mountains, 20 percent that are desert, 20 percent boreal forest, 20 percent
grasslands, and 6 percent tropical rain forest.” So NASA “just invents data”
for these areas.
Unfortunately, instead of facts, campus politics will
likely drive divestment demands this weekend (February 13-14), when college
students plan to demonstrate, hold sit-ins and organize flash mobs for Global
Divestment Day. In many ways, to quote Macbeth, it will be “a tale told by an
idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” But for many people, the
consequences could be dire – or even deadly.
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