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How Polar Bears Might Block A Florida Power Plant

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Published: May 13, 2008

Protecting the environment is a noble cause, although the consequences can be costly.

In August 1973, a biologist found a humble fish called the snail darter in the Little Tennessee River. It was thought this species would be pushed to extinction if the Tennessee Valley Authority finished its Tellico Dam.

The snail darter became a celebrity as environmentalists used the Endangered Species Act to halt the project. It took six years and an act of Congress to complete the dam.

Since then, the snail darter has been the poster child of endangered species litigation. The fish, which subsequently was found in other Tennessee waters, established the conventional wisdom about the interaction between endangered species and development. Someone discovers a rare species in a local area. It is declared endangered, and local projects are blocked.

If things go the right way this week, the local nature of this issue might change. An endangered species could have an effect on economic activity everywhere in the United States. U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken recently ordered the Interior Department to decide by Thursday whether polar bears should be listed under provisions of the act. There is a strong chance that the polar bear will be declared "threatened." If so, then everything about the economics of endangered species will be turned on its head.

Why is the polar bear in trouble? The main risk is that global warming will melt ice in the Arctic. Polar bears, biologists say, need ice to live.

Species Hunts On Ice

The dependence on ice results from the bear's evolution as a predator. They mostly eat seals and capture them by lurking around on the ice. They can't outswim a seal, but they can pounce on one when the seal slides onto an ice floe.

They are so good at hunting on the ice, and so bad at surviving without it, that bears that live in areas that have summer ice melts tend to go without food during the iceless times. So it is reasonable to think that global warming would, if it melted the ice caps, be a threat to polar bears.

This week's probable decision is debatable, to say the least. One problem is that the beast, which is notoriously hard to count, exists in vast numbers throughout the Arctic. Opinions even differ as to whether its population is increasing or decreasing.

Scientific Counts Disagree

For example, University of Pennsylvania Professor J. Scott Armstrong told Science Daily that "the polar bear populations have been increasing rapidly in recent decades due to hunting restrictions."

Others, such as biologists Ian Stirling and Andrew Derocher, see troubling signs of decline in specific subpopulations that live in regions more affected by ice melts.

The truth is, as noted by my American Enterprise Institute colleague Kenneth Green in a recent article, "Is the Polar Bear Endangered, or Just Conveniently Charismatic?" we just don't have the data to assess what is happening.

"Polar bear populations are difficult to measure, in part because they travel so much, are sparsely populated, and live far from people," he writes. Even aerial surveys and mark-and-recapture studies, which are the best tools to estimate population changes, offer ambiguous results.

If the polar bear is to be declared threatened it must be because the Interior Department accepts the forecasts of continued global warming, and a reduction in Arctic ice.

There are two reasons that decision, if it is made, will be momentous.

•The first is the possible wide geographic reach of the global warming argument. The snail darter almost killed a dam. The polar bear could, in theory, stop everything.

Suppose someone wants to build a coal-burning power plant in Florida. Environmentalists might challenge the construction on the grounds that the plant will emit greenhouse gases leading to global warming and an increased threat to polar bears.

It is hard to say how such challenges would play out. My guess is it would heighten pressure on the United States to adopt a carbon tax or a cap-and-trade emissions program.

•The second impact of this ruling is that it will likely end all Arctic exploration for oil and gas, at least in the United States. Given surging world demand for oil, increased supply is the only thing standing between us and $200-a-barrel oil.

These restrictions will have a large cost. "The U.S. Geological Survey and the Norwegian company StatoilHydro estimate that the Arctic holds as much as one-quarter of the world's remaining undiscovered oil and gas deposits," Scott Borgerson, an international affairs fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote in the March-April issue of Foreign Affairs. "Some Arctic wildcatters believe this estimate could increase substantially as more is learned about the region's geology."

Many biologists think global warming is a serious threat to the polar bear. If that leads to the polar bear being listed as threatened this week, then the world you live in will have fundamentally changed.

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