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Wednesday 19 November 2025 5:37 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 19 November 2025 1:05 pm

COP30 must move beyond doomsday narrative

By: Bjørn Lomborg

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Green campaigners insist that emissions cuts must come first for the poor – when what they really need are jobs, food, medicine and an escape from poverty, writes Bjorn Lomborg

With the United Nations climate summit, COP30, now in full swing in the humid jungle city of Belém, Brazil, Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates has cut through the noise with a blunt truth: these UN climate gatherings must zero in on lifting human lives, rather than fixating solely on slashing emissions or dialling down global temperatures. It’s a perspective that’s long overdue yet seems so obvious.

For billions of people in the developing world, tackling immediate challenges like poverty and disease outweighs chasing distant temperature goals. My think tank, Copenhagen Consensus, has long argued that the real question for policy-makers is: what is the smartest way to do the most good with limited resources?

Every year, more than 7.5m people in poorer countries die from illnesses that can be very cheaply prevented or managed. Smart investments in health, nutrition, and education could every year save over 4m people, while also building growth and resilience for the future. In much of the world, parents are not kept awake by concern about achieving a 0.1°C temperature reduction in a century. They worry whether their children will survive a bout with malaria or get a decent education. As Gates points out, “the biggest problems are poverty and disease, just as they always have been”.

Gates’s common-sense message is at the crest of a growing global shift in thinking. For years, no difference could be tolerated from dogmatic climate conformism. Making drastic emissions cuts at any cost was the paramount policy goal. This extremist message was repeated ad nauseum by the United Nations secretary-general, endless politicians and an army of hectoring celebrities. Anyone questioning the supremacy of the climate threat or expressing scepticism at the costly policies was derided as a “climate denier”.

Suddenly, pragmatism and nuanced thinking are back in fashion. Democrat Senator Chris Coons of Delaware declared that climate is “not a top three issue right now”. Canada’s Liberal prime minister – who warned a decade ago that potential climate catastrophe meant fossil fuel reserves could be “unburnable” – is fast-tracking the construction of an LNG export terminal and promising to “transform our country into an energy superpower.” Even the green- leaning British and German governments are newly talking about the need to inject some economics into climate and energy policy.

Climate change is not the end of the world

It is time to move beyond the doomsday narratives that have dominated the climate discussion. Climate change is a real problem, but it is not the end of the world. Unaddressed, climate economics shows that it might shave 2-3 per cent off global GDP by 2100 – meaning we’ll be 435 per cent richer instead of 450 per cent. Climate is one issue among many, not an apocalypse that eclipses everything else.

Still, the same old activists are repeating their well-trodden arguments. First, the notion that climate spending is not crowding out efforts to tackle poverty. This idea is being pushed by climate professor Michael Oppenheimer, who claims Gates sets up a “false dichotomy”.

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Yet, anyone living in the real world knows that money can’t be spent twice. By their own proud admission, the world’s multilateral development banks – international organizations funded largely by taxpayers to help the world’s poorest countries – devoted an astonishing $137bn to climate financing in 2024. That is money spent on climate that won’t be spent on preventing disease and hunger.

Globally, we have spent over $14 trillion on climate policies. Last year alone, the cost exceeded $2 trillion. Again, it is money spent on climate policy that cannot be spent on basic education and maternal healthcare.

Then there is the alarmist claim from climate professor Michael Mann that “there is no greater threat to developing nations than the climate crisis.” This patronizing argument suggests that climate campaigners in ivory towers know far better than those from the Global South. In real life, Africans from 39 nations rank climate as their 31st most important problem of 34 – far behind education, jobs, health and roads. The greatest challenges are pretty obvious if you live in poverty, where disease and hunger claim lives daily.

Green campaigners insist that emissions cuts must come first for the poor – when what they really need are jobs, food, medicine and an escape from poverty. Bill Gates is right to push back and say: prioritize what delivers the greatest benefit.

A welfare-first climate summit would see prosperity as a top defense against climate impacts, building resilience. For maximum impact, policy-makers should drop the fixation on expensive, ineffective net-zero targets. Instead, they should emphasise adaptation and invest in R&D to drive green-energy breakthroughs.

As the COP30 climate summit winds on in Belém, the real path forward lies in the common-sense idea of directing limited funds to ending today’s preventable deaths and fuelling growth, making societies stronger, also against future warming. That’s how this talkfest could truly put people first.

Bjorn Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus, a visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution and author of False Alarm and Best Things First

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