The U.N. Honors Environmental Uselessness
By: Rachel Marsden
The United Nations’ environmental agency recently named its “environmental 
heroes”. Judging by the results, the formula for anyone interested in being a 
“hero” in the eyes of the U.N. is to apply Herculean effort in a sufficiently 
misdirected manner, so as to best reflect the organization’s values. 
Let’s have a look at a few of the winners:
First, there’s the British woman who plans to row across the Pacific Ocean and 
walk from London to Copenhagen, having already rowed across the Atlantic. 
According to a U.N news release, she wants to “encourage people to walk more, 
drive less.” What a quaint idea -- returning to our roots, when we used to run 
or row between villages or countries. If I could take months off from working, I 
might consider it. Then I could reclaim marathon titles from all the people 
whose countries boast untouched environmental beauty but no running water.
Environmental ideology has always been at odds with economic productivity: If 
people are ditching modern transportation and walking around everywhere, then 
they’re wasting valuable work production time. If a cap-and-trade air-trading 
system is implemented, then companies will be forced to reduce output to save 
money (or pass the cost to the consumer). If someone is standing out on the 
sidewalk handing out brochures to save the rainforest, then he’s not filling 
orders at McDonalds. Get the idea? Of course there are exceptions -- many 
corporations create products out of recyclable materials -- but they’re not (a) 
sufficiently wasting their time, or (b) approaching the task from a 
self-sacrificial financial position, making them unlikely to be getting any 
recognition from the United Nations anytime soon. Only martyrs need apply.
Meanwhile, the U.N. frets in a recent news release about humans in impoverished 
countries surviving weather patterns (aka “global warming”): “In coming decades, 
climate change will motivate or force millions of people to leave their homes in 
search of viable livelihoods and safety.”
Well, that’s why we have private industry creating opportunity and solutions 
where none exist. That’s how we got modern electrical air conditioning, for 
example. Not coincidentally, that isn’t a U.N. invention, either.
The second “environmental hero” -- the young David de Rothschild of England’s 
Rothschild banking family -- apparently plans to blow part of his trust fund on 
taking a catamaran made out of plastic bottles on a joyride across the Atlantic, 
sailing past the drowning polar bears and choking dolphins. Hopefully the boat 
won’t also feature an environment-raping propeller.
I’m not sure where precisely the heroism lies in this feat, except perhaps in 
risking life and limb courting danger on the high seas using only 
environmentally hazardous materials. This is a common theme among those seen as 
leaders or “heroes” of the environmentalist movement. If they’re not floating 
down polluted rivers to “raise awareness,” then they’re clinging to (or lying 
under) massive trees as they fall to the ground. Often the only difference 
between these people and, say, someone with their lips wrapped around a 
vehicular exhaust pipe is a little grant money.
Then, there’s the group of environmental heroes in California that wants to suck 
plastic garbage out of the ocean and transform it into diesel fuel. While this 
group is only beginning to embark on some reconnaissance ocean-sweeping trips 
this summer to explore their idea, NASA already has astronauts drinking their 
own recycled urine in space. I’d say the pee drinkers have the edge this year. 
But again, NASA is probably a bit too big and successful a brand for the U.N.’s 
tastes. Sometimes the U.N. likes to combine their two favourite jokes of 
environmental and foreign policy inaction into one: They recently encouraged 
Russia to make their 2014 Olympic games environmentally friendly -- making them 
sign an agreement promising to stick with the plan at risk of a strong 
tongue-lashing. I’m sure the U.N.’s friends at Amnesty International will be 
happy to know there’s nothing left to clean up in Russia except the scenery. 
The U.N. excels at the art of accomplishing nothing while making the public feel 
great about it. And if you have the ability to convey that sentiment to the 
average person, you too could be a U.N. hero.
 
COPYRIGHT 2009 GRAND CENTRAL POLITICAL