How Capitalism Saved the Whales
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| by James S. Robbins |
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It is an article of faith among environmentalists
that the ills of the world can be traced to
economic and technological development,
especially since the industrial revolution. The
changes that took place in the late 18th and early
19th centuries, such as harnessing new sources of
energy (moving from water to coal power, for
example), the development of the factory system,
and the human population explosion, they say, led
directly to the current problems with waste disposal,
air and water pollution, overcrowding, and
misused resources, not to mention global warming,
ozone depletion, acid rain, and other highly
speculative developments.
Fixation on doomsaying can cause environmentalists
to forget that the negative consequences of
industrialization are minute compared to the positive
developments of the industrial age. People
are healthier, live longer, and are more productive
than ever before in history. But defenders of industrialism
can go even further to show that in many
cases technological progress has benefited the
environment. This is vividly demonstrated in the
case of one of the most emotion-laden symbols of
environmentalism, the whales.
At the dawn of the industrial age, whales were
an important natural resource which humans had
been exploiting for centuries. Whales were especially
valued for their oil, which was used primarily
as fuel for lamps. It was also used for heating, for
lubrication, soap, paint and varnish manufacturing,
and the processing of textiles and rope. The
Japanese among others had long acquired a taste
for whale meat. Regular whale oil ("train oil") was
extracted from the blubber which encased the
whale's body. But the best oil was spermaceti,
found only in the nose of the sperm whale. If
exposed to air it would congeal, and was used for
smokeless candles, regarded as the finest quality
candles ever made.
The sperm whale also sometimes produced
ambergris, a sticky substance from the intestines
used in the manufacture of perfume. Baleen, the
bony, plankton-straining ribs in the mouths of
most whales (excepting the sperm whale), was
lightweight and had good tensile qualities. It was
used for a variety of things, including corset stays,
umbrella ribs, fishing rods, buggy whips, carriage
springs, and skirt hoops. Bones from the body
were generally used as fertilizer.
Whaling was a major industry in the 19th century,
and the United States was the pre-eminent
whaling nation. According to tradition, American
commercial whaling began in 1712 in New
England. Whaling expanded through the 18th
century, but was disrupted by the American Revolution
and the Napoleonic Wars. In 1815 came
peace and rapid growth in the industry. By 1833
there were 392 American whaling vessels. By
1846 there were 735 whalers, comprising 80 percent
of the whaling fleet of the entire world. Each
year whaling produced 4-5 million gallons of
sperm oil, 6-10 million gallons of train oil, and 1.6-
5.6 million pounds of bone. The price of train oil
rose from 35 cents per gallon in 1825 to 95 cents
in 1855.
Though large, whaling was not a robust industry.
Even with rising prices, profit margins were always
slim, and one in ten ships typically lost money on a
voyage. In 1858, a very poor year, 64 percent failed
to make a profit. But whalers could always count
on an increasing demand for their products, as
populations grew and markets expanded accordingly.
Had the whaling industry matched the 300
percent population growth from 1850 to 1900,
many species of whale would have been extinct
long ago.
The Role of Technology
in Saving the Whales
Yet, the American whaling industry peaked in
the 1850s. The reason for its decline was not
because of public awareness of the evils of whaling,
it was not because of consciousness-raising
efforts by pioneer environmentalists, and it definitely
was not because of legislation. The whales
were saved because of the march of technology.
The first step that led to saving the whales was
made by Dr. Abraham Gesner, a Canadian geologist.
In 1849, he devised a method whereby
kerosene could be distilled from petroleum.
Petroleum had previously been considered either
a nuisance, or a miracle cure (an idea originating
with Native Americans). Earlier coal-gas methods
had been used for lighting since the 1820s, but they
were prohibitively expensive. Gesner's kerosene
was cheap, easy to produce, could be burned in
existing lamps, and did not produce an offensive
odor as did most whale oil. It could be stored indefinitely,
unlike whale oil, which would eventually
spoil. The American petroleum boom began in the
1850s. By the end of the decade there were 30
kerosene plants operating in the United States.
The cheaper, more efficient fuel began to drive
whale oil out of the market.
The man most responsible for the commercial
success of kerosene was John D. Rockefeller. In
1865, at the age of 25, he went into partnership
with Samuel Andrews, the part-owner of a Cleveland
refinery. Rockefeller had sensed that too
much capital was being invested in finding and
extracting oil, and not enough was being invested
in its processing. Backed by investors, he set up a
network of kerosene distilleries which would later
develop into Standard Oil.
As kerosene became generally available
throughout the country, the demand for whale oil
dropped precipitously. The 735-ship fleet of 1846
had shrunk to 39 by 1876. The price of sperm oil
reached its high of $1.77 per gallon in 1856; by 1896
it sold for 40 cents. Yet it could not keep pace with
the price of refined petroleum, which dropped
from 59 cents per gallon in 1865 to a fraction over
seven cents in 1895.
Rockefeller, too, would eventually find himself
having to adapt to the changing market. A new
invention soon snuffed out both flame-based lighting
systems. In 1879 Thomas A. Edison began
marketing the incandescent light bulb he had
invented the previous year. Arc-light technologies
had existed since the turn of the century, but it was
Edison who devised the modern, commercially
feasible light bulb, which produced an even light,
burned longer and brighter than oil or kerosene,
and was much safer than an open flame. As the
country was electrified, whale oil and kerosene
were both driven from the illumination market.
American whaling might have expired then, but
for the vagaries of fashion. The peripheral market
in baleen and whalebone suddenly exploded as
more women began to wear corsets, bustles, and
other garments that relied for their shape upon the
pliant material. From 32 cents per pound in 1870,
whalebone rose to $1.12 in 1875, and $3.25 in 1878,
reaching $5.00 at the turn of the century. Whalebone
constituted 80 percent of the value of a bowhead
-sperm whales were given a respite because
of their lack of baleen. But by 1908, this market
crashed as well. Spring steel replaced whalebone
in women's fashions, and as automobiles supplanted
horse-drawn carriages, demand for whalebone
buggy whips and wagon suspensions collapsed.
A few American whalers stayed in business,
but their time had passed. The last American
whaler left port in 1924, and grounded on Cuttyhunk
Island the next day.*
Stopping technology in its tracks in the 1850s
would have doomed the whales. But suppose
whaling had been outlawed then, as it is now? The
immediate effect would have been a dramatic
decline in quality of life. Would kerosene and electric
lamps have come on the scene any faster, in
reaction to the sudden surge in demand for substitutes
? Maybe-but at the cost of the spirit of innovation
which brought the inventions on the scene
in the first place. A government which can squelch
one endeavor, such as whaling, can outlaw any
enterprise. The unpredictability and capriciousness
of the state is the true enemy of innovation.
Gesner, Rockefeller and Edison had no intention
of saving the whales. Their primary motivation
was to make a profit. If the government fosters an
atmosphere in which innovation and profit making
potential are subject to whims of bureaucrats,
lawyers and politicians, and not based in the abilities
of creative people to find innovative solutions
to public needs, innovators will not set their minds
to the task, and no state whip can force them to do
so. In its time, killing whales was rational, goaloriented
activity, fulfilling human needs. It was
not "mindless slaughter" for fun or sport. And the
decline of whaling was also rational; human needs
remained, even increased-but human ingenuity
had found better ways to meet those needs. The
whale industry declined-not because of concern
for the whales, not because of legislation, but
because they were no longer a necessary resource.
The whales were not the only beneficiaries of
the technological advancements of the 19th century.
The Galapagos tortoise was driven almost
to extinction because the islands were in the center
of a major whaling area, and sailors killed the
tortoises for fresh meat. In northern climes,
whalers sometimes killed blubber-rich arctic seals
to augment their oil stores. Both of these animals
were saved by the decline of whaling. Oil-drilling
in Pennsylvania restored many lakes which had
been contaminated by natural petroleum leaks.
These were all unintended consequences; but the
fact that technological development under capitalism
manages to produce such consequences consistently
argues in favor of the system.
Humans are problem solvers, and the human
mind should not be prevented from doing what
only it can do. Creative solutions are superior to
state restrictions because they strike at the
causes of problems, not their effects. Furthermore,
just as creative action produces unintentional
positive consequences, restricting
innovation multiplies negative effects. No one,
especially government agencies or neo-Luddites,
can anticipate the indirect or unintended favorable
consequences of technological innovation.
This is why Abraham Gesner, John D. Rockefeller
and Thomas Edison saved more whales
than Green Peace ever will.
Despite the extinction of American whaling, the whales were
not yet safe. The whaling mantle passed to other countries, notably
Norway, Japan, and the Soviet Union. Critics of technological
development can point to other inventions which kept whaling on
the margins of profitability, notably the rocket harpoon, and the
harpoon cannon. The process of hydrogenation gave whale oil new
markets in soap and margarine. A by-product of whale oil is glycerine,
used in manufacturing explosives, and the two World Wars
guaranteed a market. The Japanese took increasing numbers of
whales for food, and the Soviets used them for animal fodder and
fertilizer By the middle of the 2Oth century whaling had revived.
The second cycle of whaling was more destructive than the first
in absolute number; but it never equalled the per capita whale consumption
of the previous century. Had per-capita rates of the 1850s
continued unabated, the total would have been three times that
number in the American market alone.
The situation would have been worse for less numerous species.
In the first two decades of the 19th century, American whalers
killed right whales at an average of almost 15,000 per year When
whaling dropped off at the end of the century, there were only
about 50,000 right whales left alive.
James S. Robbins, who has a Ph.D. from the Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy, is an assistant editor of
Liberty magazine and has written for The Wall Street
Journal.