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Thatcher & Global Warming: From Alarmist to Skeptic

By Robert Bradley Jr. -- April 11, 2013

“Government interventions are problematic, so intervene only when the case is fully proven.”

– Margaret Thatcher, Statecraft: Strategies for a Changing World. New York: HarperCollins, 2002, p. 453.

An Inconvenient Truth About Margaret Thatcher: She Was a Climate Hawk,” declares Will Oremus in Slate. In “The Iron Lady’s Strong Stance on Climate Change(Daily Climate, reposted at Climate Progress), author Douglas Fischer notes “how seriously [Margaret Thatcher] viewed the threat of climate change and the robustness, more than 20 years ago, of climate science and United Nations body tasked with assessing state of that science.”

True, UK Prime Minister Thatcher was the first and most important international figure to champion the cause of climate alarmism. But the above authors conveniently stop their discussion with her pronouncements in the early 1990s. For possessing an open mind, and coming to see the climate propaganda machine in action, she changed her mind quickly and completely. And  the last 20 years gave her little reason to doubt her skepticism.

Early Alarmism (1988–93)

Thatcher “broke quite new political ground,” in her words, by “speaking ominously on climate change to the Royal Society (U.K. Academy of Science) in September 1988, just several months after James Hansen’s U.S. Senate testimony on the same subject. [1]

“It is possible … we have unwittingly begun a massive experiment with the system of this climate itself,” she said. [2] This would require more, not less, government “for energy production, for fuel efficiency, for reforestation,” she concluded. [3]

Thatcher went on to found the Hadley Center for Climate Prediction and Research and gave early direction to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to elevate the issue at home and abroad. [4] She held a press conference upon the release of the first IPCC assessment (1990) and warned that “greenhouse gases … will warm the Earth’s surface with serious consequences for us all.” [5]

Thatcher, who left office in 1990, lobbied George H. W. Bush to sign the United Nations Framework Convention of Climate Change (1992), the parent document of future climate treatises. As much as she might have regretted it, the process she set into motion resulted in the ill-fated Kyoto Protocol of December 1997. [6]

In her retrospective, The Downing Street Years (1993), Thatcher, while wary of “green socialism,” described how her environmental concern expanded from stratospheric ozone to “another atmospheric threat,” man-made global warming. [7]

Why Alarmism?

What was behind Thatcher’s “conversion experience” to climate alarmism in 1988? Part of the answer was the pressure she received from her advisors John Houghton and Sir Crispin Tickell, who were in step with the emerging environmental movement. Also, global warming was an issue that provided her with enhanced international prestige.

But perhaps most important was her vigorous battle against the nationalized, unionized coal-mining sector, the leadership of which was socialistic at heart and determined to break her reform agenda.

The memories of Arthur Scargill of the National Union of Mineworkers using thuggery against strike breakers in the long months of 1984–85, and her preference for nuclear power to generate electricity, undoubtedly made her welcome an environmental issue that would help cut coal down to size.

Natural gas from the North Sea, too, was poised to replace coal and significantly reduce CO2 emission rates in electricity generation. It would have been undoubtedly different for the Prime Minister had carbon-emission reductions not been an affordable option for the U.K. [8]

Mugged by Reality: Nonalarmism

In Statecraft: Strategies for a Changing World (2002), Thatcher declared war on “the doomsters’ favorite subject … climate change.”

Here is her full reconsideration (pp. 449–50):

The doomsters’ favorite subject today is climate change. This has a number of attractions for them. First, the science is extremely obscure so they cannot easily be proved wrong. Second, we all have ideas about the weather: traditionally, the English on first acquaintance talk of little else.

Third, since clearly no plan to alter climate could be considered on anything but a global scale, it provides a marvelous excuse for worldwide, supra-national socialism. All this suggests a degree of calculation. Yet perhaps that is to miss half the point. Rather, as it was said of Hamlet that there was method in his madness, so one feels that in the case of some of the gloomier alarmists there is a large amount of madness in their method.

Indeed, the lack of any sense of proportion is what characterizes many pronouncements on the matter by otherwise sensible people. Thus President Clinton on a visit to China, which poses a serious strategic challenge to the US, confided to his host, President Jiang Zemin, that his greatest concern was the prospect that “your people may get rich like our people, and instead of riding bicycles, they will drive automobiles, and the increase in greenhouse gases will make the planet more dangerous for all.”

It would, though, be difficult to beat for apocalyptic hyperbole former Vice President Gore. Mr Gore believes: ‘The cleavage in the modern world between mind and body, man and nature, has created a new kind of addiction: I believe that our civilisation is, in effect, addicted to the consumption of the earth itself.’

And he warns: “Unless we find a way to dramatically change our civilisation and our way of thinking about the relationship between humankind and the earth, our children will inherit a wasteland.”

But why pick on the Americans? Britain’s then Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook, has observed: “There is no greater national duty than the defense of our shoreline. But the most immediate threat to it today is the encroaching sea.” Britain has found, it seems, a worthy successor to King Canute.

The fact that seasoned politicians can say such ridiculous things – and get away with it – illustrates the degree to which the new dogma about climate change has swept through the left-of-centre governing classes….

What had changed for Thatcher in less than a decade? First, she found climate science less alarming than before. Secondly, an “ugly … anti-growth, anti-capitalistic, anti-American” political agenda had emerged around the issue. [9] Harking back to her free-market roots, Thatcher forwarded her own version of the precautionary principle: “Government interventions are problematic, so intervene only when the case is fully proven.” [10]

Thatcher’s about-face can be chalked up to experience and regret about helping to create what became the anti-capitalist Kyoto Protocol (1997). Another explanation is that Thatcher’s bitter battle against the nationalized, unionized coal mining industry, which to her “symbolize[d] everything that was wrong with Britain,” was over. [11]

Conclusion

The leadership of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom from 1979 until 1990 “recast attitudes toward state and market, withdrew government from business, and dimmed the confidence in government knowledge.” [12]

Thatcher praised the free and open economy as a worthy ideal in stark contrast to Britain’s tradition of democratic socialism. One of her greatest tests was the British coal strike of 1984–85, which was broken after a year. Electricity generation and distribution were privatized in 1990, and the coal industry, which had been nationalized back in 1946, soon followed in the new light of the free market.

But in the process, Margaret Thatcher jumped too quickly on the climate issue for short-run gain. The good news is that she quickly and completely corrected herself. She got “mugged by reality,” as they say.

And so she is today a disappointment to red-green environmentalists, who preferred socialism to her privatizations. [13] “[H]er enthusiasm for green issues soon evaporated,” stated John Vidal. ”In retirement she had nothing more to say about the environment until her 2002 memoirs, when she rejected Al Gore and what she called his ‘doomist’ predictions.”

So be it for her legacy and for posterity.

————–

[1] Thatcher, Margaret. The Downing Street Years. New York: HarperCollins, 1993, p. 640.

[2] Ibid., p. 640.

[3] Ibid., p. 641.

[4] Bradley, Capitalism at Work: Business, Government, and Energy. Salem, MA: M & M Scrivener Press, 2008, p. 286.

[5] Quoted in Jeremy Leggett. The Carbon War: Global Warming at the End of the Oil Era. London: Penguin, 1999, p. 4.

[6] Bradley, Capitalism at Work, p. 286.

[7] Thatcher, The Downing Street Years, pp. 639, 640.

[8] Bradley, Capitalism at Work, p. 287–88.

[9] Thatcher, Margaret. Statecraft: Strategies for a Changing World. New York: HarperCollins, 2002, pp. 452–53.

[10] Ibid., p. 453.

[11] Thatcher, The Downing Street Years, p. 340.

[12] Yergin, Daniel, and Stanislaw, Joseph. The Commanding Heights. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998, pp. 122–23.

[13] Complained Vidal: “The free market economics that her governments espoused dramatically changed the green face of Britain. In a series of controversial privatisations, her ministers encouraged urban sprawl by approving massive out-of-town supermarket developments, deregulated or privatised the bus services, spent billions of pounds on new roads but little on rail transport, and handed ownership of water and waste to global corporations. She balked only at the railways, saying it was “a privatisation too far.”

11 Comments


  1. Margaret Thatcher und der Klimawandel |  

    […] großen Stellenwert in der nationalen und internationalen Umweltpolitik einnimmt. Tatsächlich, so schreibt Robert Bradley Jr. bei Master Resource, kam ihr die in den achtziger Jahren aufkommende Klimadebatte gerade Recht, als es darum ging die […]

    Reply

  2. Ray  

    Freeman Dyson didn’t think climatologists were very smart and didn’t believe their predictions so he was attacked and called names.
    http://www.thegwpf.org/climatologists-einsteins-successor/

    Reply

  3. Catherine Bayne  

    “The fact that seasoned politicians can say such ridiculous things – and get away with it – illustrates the degree to which the new dogma about climate change has swept through the left-of-centre governing classes….”

    A timely quote coupled with her sage advice:

    “Government interventions are problematic, so intervene only when the case is fully proven.”

    since the Liberal government in the Province of Ontario is getting set to perpetrate more CAGW evils upon us.

    http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTE4MzMy&statusId=MTc3MDg5&language=en

    The Ontario Ministry of the Environment posted on the Environmental Registry
    http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTE4MzMy&statusId=MTc3MDg5&language=en
    its discussion paper regarding “Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reductions”. Comments are accepted until April. Wind turbines feature prominently on the report cover, even though not mentioned specifically.

    The report begins as follows, “Climate change threatens the natural environment that sustains us. Governments around the world recognize this and are reducing greenhouse gas emissions to mitigate the effects of climate change and focusing on sustainable development to help industries stay competitive in the emerging low?carbon economy.” I would be happy to post comments for skeptics outside Ontario….

    Dr Ross McKitrick recently authored a report for the Fraser Institute, “”Environmental and Economic Consequences of Ontario’s Green Energy Act” (GEA), which splendidly proves the late Ms Thacher’s maxim with three conclusions:
    1 It is unlikely the Green Energy Act will yield any environmental improvements other than those that would have happened anyway under policy and technology trends established since the 1970s. Indeed, it is plausible that adding more wind power to the grid will end up increasing overall air emissions from the power generation sector.

    2 The plan implemented under the Green Energy Act is not cost effective. It is currently 10 times more costly than an alternative outlined in a confidential report to the government in 2005 that would have achieved the same environmental goals as closing the coal-fired power plants.

    The focus on wind generation is especially inefficient because production peaks when it is least needed and falls off when it is most needed. Surplus power is regularly exported at a considerable financial loss.

    Because of the unreliability of output, 7MW of rated wind energy are needed to provide a year-round replacement of 1MW of conventional power generating capacity.

    3 The Green Energy Act will not create jobs or improve economic growth in Ontario. Its overall effect will be to increase unit production costs, diminish competitiveness, cut the rate of return to capital in key sectors, reduce employment, and make households worse off.

    At the behest of Lake Superior Action Research Conservation (lsarc.ca) Dr. McKitrick recently reviewed a document prepared for the Ministry of Natural Resources “Economic Impact of the Greenwich Wind Farm” June 2012 which somehow neglected to consider any costs so could not accurately be described as a cost/benefit analysis but could be seen to be more than a tad biased. In his concluding comments Dr McKitrick said:

    “Taking into account the tragic harm this project will do to the priceless North Superior landscape and ecology, you and your colleagues are right to oppose any such projects as strongly as you possibly can. I wish you every success.”

    Indeed we continue to fight those who would trade our wilderness allure which supports local tourism for the myth of “green” energy.

    Reply

  4. Kevin Lohse  

    Nobody convinced Baroness Thatcher of anything unless they were very well briefed and very persuasive in their arguments. The svengali meme just doesn’t tie in with what we know of her.

    Yes, the Baroness did change her mind, but she was not then in a position to undo the damage she had done. If she had still been politically active, I doubt that she would have had the time to reconsider as she did, and could well have become the UK’s Al Gore – only better at it.

    I cannot imagine Maggie’s version of Gore’s film being so error-strewn. That truly is a nightmarish scenario.

    Reply

    • rbradley  

      Kevin:

      A lot of people were fooled in the 80s and 90s with the climate alarm.

      But seeing the all-pain, no-gain politics around the issue; and watching the theory get exploded by reality (the models are just about out of their error bars)… Then Climategates I, II, and III…. And now two contrived Hockey Sticks.

      Thatcher was right in the 1990s and a lot more right today. I expect more and more to leave what what is perceived to be the Climate Church.

      Reply

  5. Kevin Lohse  

    Don’t get me wrong, I agree with the general thrust of your arguments, and I revere the Baroness, being in HM forces at the time.

    By the end of Wilson/Callaghan, pay was such that junior officers with 2 children were eligible for housing benefits. Other Ranks, below Corporal found that a pay rise lifted them out of benefits in April but left them worse off until the September round of inflationary increases. Police forces were in the same boat. Maggie changed all that and the yearly round increased or maintained the pay of the uniformed public services throughout her time as PM.

    The sheer guts of her stand against the Argentine Junta endeared her to the vast majority of the uniformed branches of MOD. No other politician of that time would have had the courage and the determination to see that through. The schoolboys running the main parties at the moment just don’t cut it.

    Reply

  6. Margaret Thatcher and the cult of personality | Living In A Madhouse  

    […] “Third, since clearly no plan to alter climate could be considered on anything but a global scale, it provides a marvelous excuse for worldwide, supra-national socialism. All this suggests a degree of calculation. Yet perhaps that is to miss half the point. Rather, as it was said of Hamlet that there was method in his madness, so one feels that in the case of some of the gloomier alarmists there is a large amount of madness in their method.” (http://www.masterresource.org/2013/04/thatcher-alarmist-to-skeptic/). […]

    Reply

  7. Margaret Thatcher and the cult of personality | The Libertarian Alliance: BLOG  

    […] “Third, since clearly no plan to alter climate could be considered on anything but a global scale, it provides a marvelous excuse for worldwide, supra-national socialism. All this suggests a degree of calculation. Yet perhaps that is to miss half the point. Rather, as it was said of Hamlet that there was method in his madness, so one feels that in the case of some of the gloomier alarmists there is a large amount of madness in their method.” (http://www.masterresource.org/2013/04/thatcher-alarmist-to-skeptic/). […]

    Reply

  8. Converts to scepticism / agnosticism | The IPCC Report  

    […] Thatcher & Global Warming: From Alarmist to Skeptic for more […]

    Reply

  9. Papa Byrd  

    I fail to see where she is skeptical on climate change. She’s skeptical on how the issue is hijacked by what she considers to be bad statist forces, but that is another thing.

    Reply

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