Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Are Polar Bears Becoming Extinct? Actually, They Are Abundant
Inside-Sources
By InsideSources.com
Published 4 years ago on
July 27, 2020

Share

new study warns that polar bears could become nearly extinct by the end of the century if we don’t enact strict climate policies. However, it relies on an exceptionally unlikely climate scenario, where stagnating global coal use will suddenly balloon sixfold over the century.

Opinion

Bjorn Lomborg
InsideSources.com 

The lead researcher calls polar bears the “poster child of climate change” and the study helps revive a particular climate scare that has gone surprisingly quiet over the past decade. In 2007, the online climate news outlet Grist predicted that polar bears would go extinct soon. They told us that models likely underestimated the decline in arctic sea ice, and told us that “when the ice goes, the polar bears will go.” They expected polar bears to be extinct by 2030 — and possibly even by today.

Grist wasn’t alone. A National Geographic videographer of a polar bear declared that with declining arctic ice, we needed to awaken to climate change and lower carbon emissions.

People Magazine promoted International Polar Bear Day to raise awareness for the animal and climate change causes. Before his death in 2007, author Kurt Vonnegut was worried that the last of the polar bears might be dying out. And Al Gore warned us of polar bears drowning in his Oscar-winning 2006 documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth.”

Such stories of the decline and possible demise of polar bears have been highly effective in galvanizing attention, engagement and action on climate change. The polar bear has been used by environment organizations for fundraising and stamps with cute polar bears have been released around the world to increase climate awareness. Yet, the numbers on polar bears tell a very different story.

Regulation of Hunting Is Helping Polar Bears

The Arctic where polar bears live is huge — about twice the size of the continental United States. That is why counting a few tens of thousands of polar bears will always be a very difficult task. Nonetheless, the international Polar Bear Specialist Group has over the past four decades done its best to estimate how many polar bears exist at any time.

When these conservationists began studying the polar bear population in the 1960s, they clearly identified that the biggest threat to polar bears was indiscriminate hunting. Not surprisingly, there was a great deal of uncertainty about the absolute number of polar bears — it was estimated at somewhere between 5,000 to 19,000. Let us use the midpoint of 12,000 polar bears in the 1960s.

Since then hunting became regulated everywhere, and by 1981 the group estimated that the midpoint of the number of polar bears had increased to almost 23,000. The group estimated the number of polar bears again in 1993, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009, and again in 2015 — which they in 2019 said was the relevant number for “now.”

The amazing, if untold, story is that the midpoint estimate has never been as high as today. The global number of polar bears stands between 22,000 and 31,000, or a midpoint of 26,500.

The simple fact is that polar bears are not going extinct. They are not becoming fewer and fewer. Since society started counting them in the 1960s, polar bears have never been more abundant.

Let’s Be Clear: Climate Change Is Real, and We Should Tackle It

This is a tremendous success story for conservation. We have seen polar bears more than double in numbers since the 1960s. Yet, this is not the story we have heard. For decades we have been told that the polar bears are dwindling and possibly going extinct by 2020. As the drastic claims have become ever more untenable by the facts, campaigners have simply mentioned polar bears less and less.

Let’s be clear: climate change is real, and we should tackle it. But we need to be smart about climate actions. Most of our expensive climate policies will have virtually no effect.

Indeed, The Guardian, a British media outlet whose stated mission is to respond to the climate crisis, decided last year to not use polar bears as much for their climate illustrations.  Similarly, Al Gore’s climate sequel a decade later just never mentioned polar bears.

Let’s be clear: climate change is real, and we should tackle it. But we need to be smart about climate actions. Most of our expensive climate policies will have virtually no effect. Current climate promises from the Paris agreement are expected to reduce temperatures by less than 0.4 degree Fahrenheit by the end of the century, according to U.N. climate models — and reports project we are not even living up to the Paris promises.

Instead, economic research clearly shows that the most effective climate policies should dramatically increase green innovation. Today, it is incredibly expensive to switch entirely to green energy on current technology. But if we innovate the price of green energy down below the price of fossil fuels, we will eventually see everyone — China, India, Africa and Latin America along with rich countries — switch.

And how to best help the polar bears? Current climate policies that will change temperatures infinitesimally in a century will help nothing. But another approach could. You rarely hear about it, but hunters each year kill  900 polar bears. If we want more polar bears, maybe we should simply stop shooting quite as many.

About the Author 

Bjorn Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus and visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. His new book is “False Alarm — How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor, and Fails to Fix the Planet.” He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

DON'T MISS

Jeffrey Sachs Warns of Looming US War With Iran

DON'T MISS

Cat House on the Kings Urgently Needs You to Donate Dollars and Adopt Your New Best Friend

DON'T MISS

The Surprising Sexual Politics of Nicole Kidman’s Kinky ‘Babygirl’

DON'T MISS

Why It’s Hard to Control What Gets Taught in Public Schools

DON'T MISS

FDA Approves Weight-Loss Drug to Treat Obstructive Sleep Apnea

DON'T MISS

In a Calendar Rarity, Hanukkah Starts This Year on Christmas Day

DON'T MISS

A Look at the $100 Billion in Disaster Relief in the Government Spending Bill

DON'T MISS

It’s Eggnog Season. The Boozy Beverage Dates Back to Medieval England but Remains a Holiday Hit

DON'T MISS

9-Year-Old Among 5 Killed in Christmas Market Attack in Germany

DON'T MISS

Biden Signs Bill That Averts Government Shutdown, and Brings a Close to Days of Washington Upheaval

UP NEXT

Cat House on the Kings Urgently Needs You to Donate Dollars and Adopt Your New Best Friend

UP NEXT

The Surprising Sexual Politics of Nicole Kidman’s Kinky ‘Babygirl’

UP NEXT

Why It’s Hard to Control What Gets Taught in Public Schools

UP NEXT

FDA Approves Weight-Loss Drug to Treat Obstructive Sleep Apnea

UP NEXT

In a Calendar Rarity, Hanukkah Starts This Year on Christmas Day

UP NEXT

A Look at the $100 Billion in Disaster Relief in the Government Spending Bill

UP NEXT

It’s Eggnog Season. The Boozy Beverage Dates Back to Medieval England but Remains a Holiday Hit

UP NEXT

9-Year-Old Among 5 Killed in Christmas Market Attack in Germany

UP NEXT

Biden Signs Bill That Averts Government Shutdown, and Brings a Close to Days of Washington Upheaval

UP NEXT

This French Bulldog Is So Fetch: Meet Toaster Strudel

Why It’s Hard to Control What Gets Taught in Public Schools

12 hours ago

FDA Approves Weight-Loss Drug to Treat Obstructive Sleep Apnea

12 hours ago

In a Calendar Rarity, Hanukkah Starts This Year on Christmas Day

13 hours ago

A Look at the $100 Billion in Disaster Relief in the Government Spending Bill

13 hours ago

It’s Eggnog Season. The Boozy Beverage Dates Back to Medieval England but Remains a Holiday Hit

13 hours ago

9-Year-Old Among 5 Killed in Christmas Market Attack in Germany

13 hours ago

Biden Signs Bill That Averts Government Shutdown, and Brings a Close to Days of Washington Upheaval

14 hours ago

This French Bulldog Is So Fetch: Meet Toaster Strudel

15 hours ago

The Fed Expects to Cut Rates More Slowly in 2025. What That Could Mean for Mortgages, Debt and More

18 hours ago

New California Voter ID Ban Puts Conservative Cities at Odds With State

19 hours ago

Jeffrey Sachs Warns of Looming US War With Iran

In a recent interview, renowned economist Jeffrey Sachs outlined his concerns about the possibility of war with Iran, framing it as the culm...

10 hours ago

10 hours ago

Jeffrey Sachs Warns of Looming US War With Iran

11 hours ago

Cat House on the Kings Urgently Needs You to Donate Dollars and Adopt Your New Best Friend

12 hours ago

The Surprising Sexual Politics of Nicole Kidman’s Kinky ‘Babygirl’

12 hours ago

Why It’s Hard to Control What Gets Taught in Public Schools

12 hours ago

FDA Approves Weight-Loss Drug to Treat Obstructive Sleep Apnea

13 hours ago

In a Calendar Rarity, Hanukkah Starts This Year on Christmas Day

13 hours ago

A Look at the $100 Billion in Disaster Relief in the Government Spending Bill

13 hours ago

It’s Eggnog Season. The Boozy Beverage Dates Back to Medieval England but Remains a Holiday Hit

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend