Greenpeace
co-founder praises global warming
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060113/BUSINESS11/601130327/1071
Posted on: Friday, January 13, 2006
By Sean Hao
Advertiser Staff Writer
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Global warming and
nuclear energy are good and the way to save forests is to use more wood.
That was the message
delivered to a biotechnology industry gathering yesterday in Waikiki. However,
it wasn't the message that was unconventional, but the messenger —
Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore. Moore said he broke with Greenpeace in the
1980s over the rise of what he called "environmental extremism," or
stands by environmental groups against issues such as genetic crop research,
genetically modified foods and nuclear energy that aren't supported by science
or logic.
Hawai'i, which is one
of the top locations nationwide for genetically modified crop research, has
become a focal point in the debate about the risks and value of such work. Friction
between environmentalists and other concerned groups and the biotech industry
surfaced most recently in relation to the use of local crops to grow industrial
and pharmaceutical compounds. Last year that opposition halted a Big Island
project planning to use algae for trial production of pharmaceutical drugs.
Zero-tolerance
standards against such research by environmental groups delay developments that
could help those with unmet basic needs, Moore said. Instead Moore called for
compromise rather than confrontation on the part of the environmentalists.
"There's no
getting away from the fact that over 6 billion people wake up each day on this
planet with real needs for food, energy and materials," he told those
attending a luncheon at a three-day Pacific Rim Summit on Industrial
Biotechnology and Bioenergy.
The event was
sponsored by the Biotechnology Industry Organization. Sponsors included Dupont,
Carghill and the state Department of Business, Economic Development and
Tourism, which spent $15,000 to support the conference.
In direct opposition
to common environmentalist positions, Moore contended that global warming and
the melting of glaciers is positive because it creates more arable land and the
use of forest products drives up demand for wood and spurs the planting of more
trees. He added that any realistic plan to reduce reliance on fossil fuels and
the emission of so-called greenhouse gases should include increased use of
nuclear energy.
Among the 300 or so
members in the audience yesterday was Henry Curtis, executive director for
environmental group Life of the Land. Curtis said he found Moore's comments
"interesting."
"He's obviously
thought about things," Curtis said. "But I don't buy a lot of his
arguments.
"I think the
movement dealing with (genetically modified organisms) is very wide. You can't
just say everybody that's against it is against it for this reason and they're
totally against it.
"Part of what
we're doing in the environmental movement is safeguarding the downsides,"
Curtis added. "We don't want to see a downside that we don't anticipate
overwhelming the system."
Reach Sean Hao at shao@honoluluadvertiser.com.