By Peter Hannaford on 2.27.08 @ 12:07AM
Enviros play their "endangered" card again.
It hasn't happened yet, but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
is flirting with the idea of declaring the polar bear a
"threatened" species under the Endangered Species Act. Ardent
environmentalists are pushing hard for this, bringing back field
reports and videos of emaciated polar bears and brandishing a U.S.
Geological Survey that claims that Alaskan polar bears could be
gone -- pfft -- by 2050.
Why the alarm? Polar ice floes, on which the bears depend for
fishing and breeding, are declining.
Last summer saw what is said to be the largest shrinkage of sea
ice on record. The cause, of course, is said to be global warming.
If the polar bear is declared "threatened," this could trigger a
number of restrictions on activities that produce carbon emissions
in the "lower forty-eight" states -- a persistent objective of the
more extreme environmentalists. To get to that point, several
groups, including the Natural Resources Defense Council, filed suit
to put the bears into the "threatened" category.
The environmentalists' concern for polar bears is touching, but
the furry creatures are only a stalking horse for their real
objective: stopping the construction of a natural gas pipeline from
Alaska to the Lower Forty-Eight in order to tap the 35 trillion
cubic feet of proven natural gas reserves in the North Slope. Stop
the pipeline and you reduce the nation's ability to keep its
economy running at current levels. The polar bear is serving the
same purpose as the Northern spotted owl, which was a "stalking
horse" used to nearly bring the harvesting of timber to an end in
the Pacific Northwest.
Is the polar bear population really declining? The U.S.
Geological Survey puts out conflicting reports. Its 2002 survey of
wildlife in the Arctic Refuge Coastal Plain said the polar bear
population "may now be near historic highs." On the other hand, a
2006 study in the Beaufort Sea area counted 1,526 bears, compared
with 1,800 in 1986.
The predictions of polar bear extinction come, as such things
do, from speculative computer models which are only as good as the
assumptions that are loaded into them. Many scientists disagree
with the output:
"They are not going extinct....It is just silly to predict the
demise of polar bars in 25 years based on media-assisted hysteria,"
says Dr. Mitchell Taylor, a Canadian biologist and director of
wildlife research for the Arctic Government of Nunavit.
"There is no evidence to suggest that the polar bear or its food
supply is in danger of disappearing entirely with increased Arctic
warming, regardless of the dire fairy-tale scenarios predicted by
computer models,"' says Dr. Susan Crockford, evolutionary biologist
and paleozoologist at the University of Victoria in Canada.
"I think climate change is happening, but as far as the polar
bear disappearing is concerned, I have never been more convinced
that this is just scare-mongering," according to Nigel Marven,
naturalist, zoologist and botanist who spent three months last year
filming polar bears in Canada's Arctic.
Noting that we are entering a geologic "interglacial" period,
Dr. Olafur Ingolfsson, a University of Iceland professor who has
conducted extensive field work in both the Arctic and Antarctic,
recently said, "...the polar bear was a morphologically distinct
species at least 100,000 years (ago), and this basically means that
the polar bear has already survived one interglacial period."
There are many more such comments, but these suffice to cast
serious doubt on the claims of the extreme environmentalists that
the polar bear will soon become extinct if we don't stop modern
society in its tracks. Everyone wants clean air and water, but very
few people -- beyond the extreme environmentalists -- share this
objective. What the general public needs to remember is that, with
environmentalists, the stated objective often is not the real
one.
topics:
Environment, Global Warming, Alaska