Analysis
Lomborg’s claim that climate change is 'not our most pressing problem' is subjective but his comparison of immediate death tolls (e.g., malnutrition, diseases) to climate impacts is **partially valid**—though climate change exacerbates many of these issues (e.g., food insecurity, disease spread). However, his assertion that climate mitigation yields *minimal near-term benefits* is **misleading**: investments in renewables, resilience, and pollution reduction have **documented co-benefits** (e.g., improved air quality, energy access). Further, his implication that climate spending is *disproportionate* is **deceptive by omission**: global climate finance (~$1.3 trillion/year, per CPI 2023) is dwarfed by fossil fuel subsidies (~$7 trillion/year, IMF 2023) and pales compared to healthcare or military budgets. His framing also ignores the **irreversible, compounding risks** of delayed action (IPCC AR6).
Background
Bjørn Lomborg, a political scientist, is known for **skeptical views on climate economics**, often arguing for prioritizing immediate human welfare over long-term environmental action. His **Copenhagen Consensus Center** advocates cost-benefit analyses that frequently downplay climate mitigation. The 2015 TED Talk reflects his book *Cool It* (2007), which critics argue **cherry-picks data** to undermine climate urgency. The scientific consensus (IPCC, WHO) emphasizes that climate change **multiplies threats** like poverty and disease, making mitigation and adaptation **complementary**, not competing, priorities.
Verdict summary
While Lomborg correctly highlights urgent global issues like poverty and disease, his framing of climate mitigation as yielding *minimal near-term benefits* oversimplifies its long-term necessity and misrepresents the scale of current climate spending relative to other priorities.