Global Warming and Car Insurance
To commemorate the opening of An Inconvenient Truth (hopefully coming to a theatre near you), here's a little something for you to consider, especially if you are a bit uncertain about climate change.
People buy car insurance. Sometimes they get it because the government says they have to have it. Sometimes it’s because the bank won't give them a car loan if they don't have it. But mostly it's because they recognise that life has a way of being unpredictable and they want to be sure that they can get things repaired when life decides that what you really need it a new tail light.
That’s fine, you say, but what does it have to do with global warming. Well, people buy car insurance on the chance that there will be a problem; an accident, a fire, a theft, a reckless 15 year-old son in a gravel carpark. They don’t know if they are going to actually have a problem, but they believe that there is a good chance they will and they know that the consequences if they don’t have coverage could be pretty serious – loss of car, loss of job and in the case of personal injury and the resulting liability, loss of house. So they get coverage. Which is called sanity.
It’s time that we applied some similar common sense to climate change. Evidence continues to mount that the Earth’s average temperature is rising, some would even say that there is irrefutable evidence not only that this is happening, but that humanity has a very strong hand in making it happen. And we have a pretty good idea that the outcome will not be pleasant if it continues unabated.
Some issues are so important, in that they have terrible and far-reaching consequences that you have to treat them with much more caution than other more mundane thing. That’s also common sense. Climate change is one of these issues.
So it’s time to look at getting some global warming insurance. If you think that a possible car accident is worth a little caution, surely the potential devastation that climate change could wreak on the entire planet is worth considerably more prudence. It might not be as bad as we fear, it might be worse than can possibly imagine, but with the stakes this high, the sane approach is to err of the side of too much caution.
So buy a solar hot water heater, change your light globes to fluorescent ones and send a letter to you local duly elected representative to suggest that they go and see An Inconvenient Truth. It about time to buy yourself some global warming insurance.
People buy car insurance. Sometimes they get it because the government says they have to have it. Sometimes it’s because the bank won't give them a car loan if they don't have it. But mostly it's because they recognise that life has a way of being unpredictable and they want to be sure that they can get things repaired when life decides that what you really need it a new tail light.
That’s fine, you say, but what does it have to do with global warming. Well, people buy car insurance on the chance that there will be a problem; an accident, a fire, a theft, a reckless 15 year-old son in a gravel carpark. They don’t know if they are going to actually have a problem, but they believe that there is a good chance they will and they know that the consequences if they don’t have coverage could be pretty serious – loss of car, loss of job and in the case of personal injury and the resulting liability, loss of house. So they get coverage. Which is called sanity.
It’s time that we applied some similar common sense to climate change. Evidence continues to mount that the Earth’s average temperature is rising, some would even say that there is irrefutable evidence not only that this is happening, but that humanity has a very strong hand in making it happen. And we have a pretty good idea that the outcome will not be pleasant if it continues unabated.
Some issues are so important, in that they have terrible and far-reaching consequences that you have to treat them with much more caution than other more mundane thing. That’s also common sense. Climate change is one of these issues.
So it’s time to look at getting some global warming insurance. If you think that a possible car accident is worth a little caution, surely the potential devastation that climate change could wreak on the entire planet is worth considerably more prudence. It might not be as bad as we fear, it might be worse than can possibly imagine, but with the stakes this high, the sane approach is to err of the side of too much caution.
So buy a solar hot water heater, change your light globes to fluorescent ones and send a letter to you local duly elected representative to suggest that they go and see An Inconvenient Truth. It about time to buy yourself some global warming insurance.

