There is an "ascetic instinct" (or perhaps a "survivalist instinct") in
many people that causes them to delight in going without material
comforts. Monasteries and nunneries were once full of such people --
with the Byzantine stylites perhaps the most striking example. Many
Greenies (other than Al Gore and his Hollywood pals) have that instinct
too but in the absence of strong orthodox religious committments they
have to convince themselves that the world NEEDS them to live in an
ascetic way. So their personal emotional needs lead them to press on us
all a delusional belief that the planet needs "saving".
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28 February, 2017
Years of false prophecies about polar bears have finally become unstuck
Happy International Polar Bear Day! Thriving polar bear populations have
exposed the hubris behind global warming’s most beloved icon.
In 2005, international polar bear specialists decided that future sea
ice loss due to human-caused global warming had replaced wanton
over-hunting as the primary threat to polar bear survival.
It was the first time that such future risks were used to decide a species conservation status.
In 2007, American government biologists insisted that by 2050, when
summer sea ice would cover 42% less of the Arctic than it did in 1979,
polar bears in ten populations most at risk would be wiped out.
Almost 20,000 bears would be gone by mid-century and by 2100, the species would be on the brink of extinction.
The process had already begun, the experts said, and it would only get worse.
Polar bears became a global warming icon, the preferred symbol of the consequences of burning fossil fuels.
The media, with the help of polar bear specialists and conservation
organizations, made sure we were aware of each incident that signaled
the dying of the species.
A few polar bears were reported to have drowned in a storm – expect more
and more bears to drown during long swims across open water, we were
told.
Photographers filmed a bear or two breaking through thin ice, and suggested yet another way drowning deaths could occur.
A few photos of starving bears made headlines, usually accompanied by
the suggestion that perhaps hundreds more were in the same condition.
A few incidents of cannibalism also made headlines, again with the
implication that dozens more were going unreported across the Arctic, as
polar bears became desperate with hunger.
This frenzy of dire news went on unchecked until 2007, when the first
reports on polar bear studies undertaken since 2004 were made public.
Surprisingly, the news from a new Davis Strait study wasn’t grim but encouraging.
Not until about 2013, however, as more studies were completed, did it become clear that polar bears really were thriving.
Unfortunately, the media weren’t so keen on good news: if positive
results were reported at all, the encouraging aspects were downplayed or
dismissed, often using quotes from polar bear specialists themselves.
It was as if polar bear scientists and their government funders wanted the public in the dark about the good news.
What was going on?
Summer sea ice had indeed declined – more than expected, in fact.
By 2016, it was apparent that potentially devastating ice levels had come decades sooner than experts predicted.
By September 2007 sea ice extent was about 43% less than it had been in
1979 – a magnitude of decline not expected until mid-century, and every
year after was almost as low, or lower.
Polar bears had been living through their dire sea ice future since 2007.
Yet no more drowned polar bears were documented, no more bears than
normal starved to death, no unusual spikes in cannibalism occurred, and
not a single polar bear population was wiped out.
Polar bear photos still led media stories about starving bears, sea ice
loss, and the threats of global warming but they were photos of fat,
healthy bears.
By 2015, new studies showed that several populations once thought to be declining had increased in size or remained stable.
In 2005, the official global polar bear estimate was about 22,500.
By 2015, it had risen to about 26,500 but only part of that was a real increase.
However, by early 2017, the results of two studies of bears in high-risk
regions were made public: they never made the mainstream papers, but
they changed the picture.
Polar bear numbers in one half of the Barents Sea, had increased by 42%
between 2004 and 2015, suggesting the entire population grew, by about
1100 – an increase not included in the official global estimate.
A survey of Baffin Bay bears, completed in 2013, showed that the
population had not declined by 25% as expected but increased by 36% –
adding about 750 more bears to the global total.
The formerly small population in Kane Basin more than doubled.
Now we know that between 2005 and 2015, the estimated size of polar bear
populations in the two ecoregions that experts thought would be wiped
out by years of low summer sea ice had grown by more than 3100.
The global average had risen to about thirty thousand bears, far and away the highest estimate in more than 50 years.
So why did the models devised by polar bear experts get it so wrong?
First, it appears that sea ice conditions and food abundance in early
spring have been very good for polar bears despite the decline in summer
ice extent.
Polar bears consume 8 months worth of food during early spring, which makes it the critical feeding period.
Second, it appears the experts assumed that when summer sea ice was present, polar bears ate more seals than they actually do.
Adult bearded and harp seals are virtually the only seals that rest on
the ice from about mid-May to October because most ringed seals (the
primary prey species of polar bears) have left the ice to feed.
Broken pack ice in summer leaves these adult seals many escape routes,
which means most polar bears eat very little over the summer whether
they spend those months on the sea ice or on shore.
It turns out summer is not a critical feeding season for polar bears.
Lastly, seal pups in many areas are more abundant than they were in the 1980s.
Less summer ice in the Chukchi Sea, for example, has meant more ringed
seal pups in spring for polar bears to eat because these seals do most
of their feeding in open water.
In short, the claim that summer sea ice is essential habitat for polar
bears has been scuttled by their continued health through years of low
ice coverage.
Evidence does not support the claim that loss of summer sea ice,
regardless of the cause, is a major risk for polar bear survival.
Polar bear specialists vastly underestimated the resilience of polar
bears when they modeled future survival and many of the assumptions they
made were wrong.
Thriving polar bear populations have exposed the hubris behind global
warming’s most beloved icon and “the plight of the polar bear” has
become an international joke.
Humpback whales were recently taken off the US Endangered Species List
because their population size indicated a strong recovery from past
over-hunting.
Polar bears have done the same and are not currently threatened with extinction.
A thorough external review of the polar bear status issue is now
required - not only because it’s the right thing to do but because
it may help restore public support for science and conservation.
SOURCE
DAKOTA PIPELINE ECOTERRORISTS TORCH TWO KIDS IN MASS ARSON ATTACK
If environmentalism is a religion, violence is its central tenet.
The largely white, privileged, “protesters” occupying a river bed in
North Dakota to try and stop construction of a modern energy pipeline
were told to leave this week by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Being spoiled rich kids, they didn’t take the news well. They set
fire to the camp, unleashing rampant pollution into the atmosphere and
into the very river bed they claimed they were protecting.
The arson attack also sent two kids to the hospital. A 17-year-old
girl was severely burned by environmentalists and had to be airlifted
to a hospital. A little seven-year-old boy was also burned by
environmentalists.
The environmentalists’ temper tantrum resulted in the burning-down of 20 buildings and a car.
The Dakota Pipeline protesters are hated by the very Native Americans
they claim to represent. The media narrative is the pipeline
crosses Indian lands and the movement is a Native American protest.
In reality the pipeline is hundreds of miles away from the reservation
and many tribe members despise the protesters, who consider the protests
to be nothing more than a fun “Burning Man”-style festival.
The environmentalists behind the arson attack that wounded two kids have
also tried to kill police officers on multiple occasions. They
have been caught trying to stampede wild buffalo into police and
throwing bombs at officers. One girl had her arm blown
apart. Protesters claim it was from a flash grenade thrown by
police. Police point out they do not have flash grenades, and she
was among a group of protesters lighting propane tanks on fire and
throwing them at officers.
Another environmentalist was arrested and faces charges after trying to shoot and kill police officers.
The protesters call themselves “water protectors,” but they built their
camps directly in the very river bed they claim they are
protecting. That will unleash toxic waste into the river when the
winter snows melt and water fills the river bed.
These “water protectors” have also dumped barrels of raw sewage directly
into the ground, and have abandoned around 300 cars, which will leak
oil into the ground.
That would be the very thing they claimed they were protesting.
There are now fears the environmentalists have turned the riverbed into a
toxic waste site.
Most of the environmentalists eventually left the camp, but only after
they were given free hotels and food paid for by North Dakota taxpayers.
Many of the protesters were paid to commit acts of violence and
disruption, and have no plans to pay North Dakota’s income taxes on
their illicit paychecks.
SOURCE
GIGO-based energy and climate policies
It’s like formulating public safety policies using models based on dinosaur DNA from amber
Paul Driessen
Things are never quiet on the climate front.
After calling dangerous manmade climate change a hoax and vowing to
withdraw the USA from the Paris agreement, President Trump has
apparently removed language criticizing the Paris deal from a pending
executive order initiating a rollback of anti-fossil-fuel regulations,
to help jumpstart job creation.
Meanwhile, EPA Administration Scott Pruitt says he expects quick action
to rescind the Clean Power Plan, a central component of the Obama Era’s
war on coal and hydrocarbons. The US House Committee on Science, Space
and Technology is reopening its investigation into NOAA’s mishandling or
tampering with global temperature data, for a report designed to
promote action in Paris in 2015.
Hundreds of scientists signed a letter urging President Trump to
withdraw from the UN climate agency. They warn that efforts to curtail
carbon dioxide emissions are not scientifically justified and will kill
jobs and exacerbate US and international poverty without improving the
environment or stabilizing climate.
Hundreds of other scientists told Mr. Trump he must not waver on climate
stabilization efforts or make any moves to defund government or
university climate research. Hundreds of businessmen and investors told
the President failure to build a low-carbon economy puts American
prosperity at risk.
Over in Britain, Members of Parliament say efforts to build a low-carbon
economy have led to a 58% rise in electricity prices since 2006,
sending manufacturing and jobs overseas, to countries that are under no
obligation to reduce fossil fuel use or CO2 emissions. MPs are also
angry that carefully hidden “green subsidies” will account for nearly
one-fourth of sky-high residential electricity bills by 2020.
All of this is a valuable reminder that the Climate Crisis &
Renewable Energy Industry is now a $1.5-trillion-a-year business! And
that’s just for its private sector components, the corporate
rent-seekers.
This monstrous price tag does not include the Big Green environmentalism
industry, the salaries and pensions of armies of federal, state, local,
foreign country and UN bureaucrats who create and coordinate climate
and renewable energy programs, or the far higher electricity and motor
fuel costs that businesses and families must pay, to cover the costs of
“saving people and planet from climate ravages.”
Earth’s climate is likely changing somewhere, as it has throughout
planetary and human history. Our fuel use and countless other human
activities may play a role, at least locally – but their role is dwarfed
to near irrelevance by powerful solar, oceanic, cosmic ray and other
natural forces. Moreover, real-world ice, sea level, temperature,
hurricane, drought and other observations show nothing outside historic
fluctuations. Unprecedented disasters exist only in the realm of
hypotheses, press releases and computer models.
So there is no reason to cede control over our livelihoods and living
standards to politicians, activists and bureaucrats; replace reliable,
affordable fossil fuel energy with expensive, unreliable renewables;
destroy millions of jobs in the process; and tell billions of
impoverished people they must be content with solar ovens, solar panels,
wind turbines, and health, nutrition and living standards little better
than today’s.
There is no reason to honor the document that President Obama
unilaterally signed in Paris. As Dr. Steve Allen observed in a masterful
analysis: “The decisive action promised in the treaty that is not a
treaty consists of governments, most of them run by dictators and
thieves, promising, on an honor system, to take steps of their own
choosing, to change future weather patterns, and then coming up with
ways by which they can measure their own progress and hold themselves
accountable by their own standards for the promises they have made, on
penalty of no punishment if they break their word.”
Mainly, Allen continues, the Paris con is about “taking money from
taxpayers and consumers and businesspeople and electricity ratepayers,
and giving it to crony capitalists; and taking money from people in
relatively successful countries and giving it to rich people in poor
countries, to benefit governing elites.”
India alone wants hundreds of billions of dollars in climate “adaptation
and reparation” money from industrialized nations that are supposed to
slash their fossil fuel use, CO2 emissions and economic growth, while
pouring trillions into the Green Climate Fund. Meanwhile, India, China
and other rapidly developing nations are firing up hundreds of
coal-fueled power plants, burning more oil and gas, and emitting more
CO2, to industrialize their countries and lift their people out of
abject poverty – as well they should.
So just follow the money – and power-grabbing. That is the real source
of the religious fervor, the Catechism of Climate Cataclysm, behind the
vehement denunciations of President Trump for having the gall to
threaten the global high priests who drive and profit from climate
change fear mongering.
Those forces are desperate and determined to keep their power and money
train on track. They’re ramping up indignation and cranking out
“research” to justify their demands. For example:
Expert Market (whose core expertise is helping companies compare prices
for postage meters, coffee machines and other B2B products) has just
released a study purporting to show which US states will suffer most
“from Trump’s climate change denial” and America’s “climate change
inaction.”
The total cost will be $506 billion by 2050, just for hurricane and
other real estate damages, extra energy costs, and more frequent and
severe droughts. “Vermont emerged as the state worst equipped to handle
the cost,” the study contends, while Montana, Wyoming and the Dakotas
are also “severely at risk.” California and New York are among those
best able to endure the imminent chaos.
It sounds horrific – and it’s intended to be, the better to pressure the
White House and Congress to codify and enforce the nonbinding
provisions of the Paris non-treaty, and retain Obama-era
anti-hydrocarbon energy policies. But the entire exercise is a classic
example of Garbage In/Garbage Out (GIGO) black box computer modeling,
carefully crafted to ensure the justifications required for a
predetermined political outcome, especially the monumental “nationwide
green initiatives” that Expert Market supports.
Thus, carbon dioxide will drive rapidly rising global temperatures that
will warm the planet enough to increase sea surface temperatures
dramatically – spawning more frequent, more damaging hurricanes, and
melting polar ice caps enough to raise sea levels 23 inches by 2050, the
Expert Market experts assert.
Global warming measured in hundredths of a degree over the past 19 years
will suddenly be replaced by runaway heat waves. Seas now rising at 7
inches per century will suddenly climb at ten times that rate over the
next three decades, sending storm surges far inland. Major US
land-falling hurricanes that have been absent now for eleven years will
suddenly proliferate to unprecedented levels.
How Vermont and the other top-five “worst equipped” states – all of them
inland – will be affected by any of this is anyone’s guess. But the
model says they’re at risk, so we must take drastic action now.
Soaring temperatures will increase demand for air conditioning, and thus
raise household energy costs, says Expert Market. CA, NY and other
“green” state electricity costs are already twice as high as those in
coal and gas-reliant states. Imposing wind and solar initiatives on
fossil fuel states would likely double their family and business energy
costs, but that factor is not included in its calculations.
Droughts “will become more frequent and severe” in states already
afflicted by arid conditions – assuming all the dire CO2 depredations,
and ignoring both those states’ long experience with drought cycles and
how California’s years-long drought has once again given way to abundant
rainfall.
The Expert Market study is symptomatic of the politicized assumptions
and data manipulation that have driven climate models and disaster
scenarios since the IPCC began studying manmade climate chaos.
Indeed, the entire climate chaos exercise is akin to basing public
safety policies on computer models that assume dinosaur DNA extracted
from fossilized amber will soon result in hordes of T rexes running
rampant across our land. We deserve a more honest, rational basis for
policies that govern our lives.
Via email
Take Back Al Gore's Nobel And Give It To The Fracking Industry
Climate Change: U.S. output of so-called greenhouse gases continues to
decline, a new report shows. Even so, global warming activists are
likely to be disappointed. The drop has nothing to do with their pet
cause, alternative energy.
That's right. The Environmental Protection Agency's yearly greenhouse
gas emissions report noted that after rising slightly in 2013 and 2014,
greenhouse gas output fell in 2015 — the most recent full year for which
data are available.
OK, but maybe it was a one-year fluke? Hardly.
First off, the drop was significant in size — 2.2% on an annual basis, far too big to be a fluke or statistical anomaly.
Second, as the folks at The American Interest helpfully point out, "U.S.
energy-related CO2 emissions hit a 25-year low over the first six
months of 2016, continuing the progress that the EPA says we made in
2015."
So it's continuing. More important, The Hill reminds, "The EPA
attributed the overall decline to lower carbon dioxide emissions from
burning fossil fuels, which itself came about because of less coal
consumption in favor of natural gas, warmer winter weather that
decreased heating fuel demand and lower electricity demand overall."
This continues a long-term trend for the U.S. of lower greenhouse gas
emissions. Ironically, while the U.S. was pilloried for not ratifying
the Tokyo Accord (though then-Vice President Al Gore ostentatiously
signed it, despite knowing that the Senate wouldn't ratify it) to reduce
global greenhouse gas emissions, it is the only major industrial nation
actually slashing its output.
Since the Kyoto Accord was struck in 1997, Energy Department data show,
U.S. output of greenhouse gases plunged 7.3%, even though real U.S. GDP
over that time has grown a whopping 52%. We're greener today than we
have been in decades.
Go figure.
For all this progress, we can thank the fracking business, which has
given U.S. industry and homes access to massive amounts of cheap,
relatively clean natural gas. It may yet make possible a U.S. industrial
renaissance — and bring back jobs now done overseas, not by government
trade protectionism but by pursuing free-market energy policies that
will lead to ever more energy at lower prices.
Global warming crusader Al Gore won a Nobel Prize merely for his
profit-making activities as a green activist. Here's an idea: If the
Nobel committee geniuses really want to reward those who've done the
most to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, they should give Gore's Nobel
to the U.S. fracking industry.
SOURCE
New German wind turbine destroyed by a gust of wind
It was put up in 2014 so had a life expectancy of 20 years. The
big blow was associated with a low pressure system. Other nearby
turbines were not affected
Das Sturmtief „Thomas“ ist in der Nacht von Donnerstag auf Freitag über
die Region gefegt – und hat zum Teil schwere Schäden angerichtet.
Man könnte es wohl als ironische Laune der Natur bezeichnen:
Ausgerechnet eine Windböe hat in der Nacht von Donnerstag auf Freitag
ein Windrad im Windpark Laubersreuth bei Münchberg total zerstört. Wie
von starker Hitze geschmolzen hängen die Flügel nun nach unten. „Zwei
Rotorblätter sind komplett aufgespreißelt. Ein Flügel hat sich sogar um
das Maschinenhaus gewickelt“, berichtet Sabine Scherer, deren Familie
das Grundstück an der A 9 gehört.
Erst am Morgen als sie mit ihrem Hund spazieren gehen wollte, habe
Scherer den Schaden bemerkt. Ganz im Gegensatz zu ihrer Nachbarin. Die
wurde schon in der Nacht von einem „ganz komischen Geräusch“ wach
gehalten, wie sie Scherer erzählte. „Sie dachte, gleich fliegt das Dach
davon.“ So penetrant sei der Krach gewesen.
Das zerstörte Windrad gehört der Windpark Laubersreuth GmbH & Co. KG
mit Sitz in Nordrhein-Westfalen. Warum ausgerechnet diese Anlage so
stark in Mitleidenschaft gezogen wurde, wird nun ein Gutachter klären,
sagt der Geschäftsführer Christian Struck auf Anfrage unserer Zeitung.
Denn zwei andere Windräder, die unmittelbar neben dem zerstörten stehen
und ebenfalls 140 Meter hoch sind, laufen nach wie vor einwandfrei. Die
kaputte Windkraftanlage wurde 2014 aufgestellt und ist demnach
„nagelneu“, wie Struck erklärt. Eigentlich sollte sie 20 Jahre dort
stehen.
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
27 February, 2017
Shub Niggurath on the "pause"
Shub Niggurath has been having a look at the Warmist responses to the
Rose/Bates revelations about Tom Karl's "pausebuster" paper. He
finds that the Warmist responses just dodge the issue. They say
that the overall effect of their adjustments is to REDUCE warming.
But that is only true of the whole of the period since 1880. But
neither Bates nor Rose were talking about the 1880+ period. They
were talking about the 21st century only. The Warmists are arguing
with a straw man, not the Bates/Rose revelations. That suggests
that they have no answer to the Bates/Rose revelations.
Niggurath also shows WHY the NOAA adjustments tended to reduce
temperatures overall. It is because there was rather a lot of
warming in the first half of the 20th century -- far too much to suit
global warming theory. So NOAA reduced temperatures at the far end
of the range and increased them at the recent end of the range -- in
order to get that nice picture of a generally rising trend
line. It's fakery all the way.
But nowhere is the central Rose/Bates claim addressed -- that 21st
century sea surface temperatures were unreasonably adjusted
upwards. Niggurath has all the details
here. It will be interesting to see what happens if Trump puts a real scientist in charge of NOAA.
Aggressive cuts to Obama-era green rules to start soon: EPA head
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration will begin rolling back
Obama-era environmental regulations in an "aggressive way" as soon as
next week, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency said on
Saturday - adding he understood why some Americans want to see his
agency eliminated completely.
"I think there are some regulations that in the near-term need to be
rolled back in a very aggressive way. And I think maybe next week you
may be hearing about some of those," EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt told
the Conservative Political Action summit in Washington DC.
Pruitt added the EPA's focus on combating climate change under former
President Barack Obama had cost jobs and prevented economic growth,
leading many Americans to want to see the EPA eliminated completely.
"I think its justified," he said. "I think people across this country
look at the EPA much like they look at the IRS. I hope to be able to
change that."
Pruitt was confirmed as EPA head last week. His appointment triggered an
uproar among Democratic lawmakers and environmental advocates worried
that he will gut the agency and re-open the doors to heavy industrial
pollution. He sued the EPA more than a dozen times as his states' top
attorney and has repeatedly cast doubt on the science of climate change.
But his rise to the head of the EPA has also cheered many Republicans
and business interests that expect him to cut back red tape they believe
has hampered the economy.
Pruitt mentioned three rules ushered in by Obama that could meet the
chopping block early on: the Waters of the U.S. rule outlining waterways
that have federal protections; the Clean Power Plan requiring states to
cut carbon emissions; and the U.S. Methane rule limiting emissions from
oil and gas installations on federal land.
A Trump official told Reuters late Friday that the president was
expected to sign a measure as early as Tuesday aimed at rescinding the
Waters of the U.S. rule.
Pruitt said in his comments to the CPAC summit that rule had "made
puddles and dry creek beds across this country subject to the
jurisdiction of Washington DC. That's going to change."
He also suggested longer-term structural changes were in store at the
EPA. "Long-term, asking the question on how that agency partners with
the states and how that affects the budget and how it effects the
structure is something to work on very diligently," Pruitt said.
Like Trump, he said cutting regulation could be done in a way that does not harm water or air quality.
SOURCE
500 inches and counting: Snow has clobbered California ski resorts this winter
Must be global warming
The snow is so high that it buried chairlifts and ski patrol shacks at
Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows resort in California.© Squaw Valley Alpine
Meadows resort The snow is so high that it buried chairlifts and ski
patrol shacks at Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows resort in California.
The snow amounts in California’s Sierra Nevada mountain range this
winter are difficult to wrap your head around. In many cases topping 500
inches, they are some of the highest totals in memory.
At the Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows resort, seven feet fell in just the
past week. The snow is so high that it buried chairlifts and ski patrol
shacks.
Snow blankets the Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows resort, which has been hit
with 565 inches (47 feet) of the white stuff this season
The resort has received 565 inches (47 feet) this season, including a
45-year record of 282 inches in January. On Thursday, it announced that
its ski area would remain open through July 4. Since 1962, it will mark
just the fourth instance of Independence Day skiing (the other years
were 1998, 1999, and 2011), according to a resort spokesperson.
Other ski areas in the Sierra Nevada also have seen mind-boggling amounts of snow
SOURCE
Climate Change ‘Lunacy’ Called a Gift to Conservatives
For conservatives, the “lunacy,” “wrongness,” and “criminality” of
climate change theories is the gift that keeps on giving, the executive
editor of the London branch of Breitbart News Service said Thursday
during a panel discussion at the Conservative Political Action
Conference.
Three major strands characterize the climate change movement, James
Delingpole said during the CPAC panel, sponsored by E&E Legal
Institute and titled “Fake Climate News Camouflaging an Anti-Capitalist
Agenda.”
Delingpole identified these three strands as a sort of religious view
that sees man “as a cancer and blight to the planet,” a “follow the
money” component in which well-placed individuals “make money off scams”
at public expense, and a political component that exists, he said,
because “the left has always wanted to find scientific justification to
tax and regulate us and control our lives.”
Joining Delingpole were Steve Milloy, a lawyer and author who founded
the website JunkScience.com, and Tony Heller, who has written under the
pseudonym Steven Goddard at the blog Real Science, which he founded.
John Fund, a columnist for National Review, acted as moderator.
When he was on a panel at the Aspen Ideas Festival in 2008, Fund
recalled, he noticed that activists there were substituting the words
“climate change” for “global warming.”
He asked audience members to explain the change, and it turned out to be
“a very uncomfortable question,” Fund said. “If you ask a question
innocently enough, the truth comes out.”
Since the planet isn’t always warming, environmental activists found
that they had more flexibility to advance their agenda under the more
generic label of “climate change,” he said.
Looking to the future of energy policy, Thursday’s CPAC panelists said
they found cause for encouragement with the Trump administration.
Milloy credited President Donald Trump for a professed willingness to
“abolish the EPA” and for recognizing the Environmental Protection
Agency has committed “regulatory overreach.” He said he anticipates the
Trump administration will “turn loose the American energy industry.”
Environmental activists have made a concerted effort to circulate “fake
climate news” in recent years, but the technique is not exactly new,
Heller said.
The 1692 witch trials in Salem, Massachusetts, may have been brought on in part by a spell of cold weather, he suggested.
Citizens blamed alleged witches for lower-than-average temperatures, according to some news reports.
Panelists also discussed the “climategate scandal” involving emails
leaked to the internet from the University of East Anglia in Great
Britain in 2009. The emails showed that some university researchers
appeared willing to manipulate scientific data to exaggerate global
warming.
Such manipulation of scientific data is often at the root of “fake news,” panelists agreed.
CPAC, the largest annual national gathering of conservative activists,
runs from Wednesday to Saturday at the Gaylord National Resort and
Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, just outside Washington.
SOURCE
More Warmist prophecy in Australia
Summer is already past its peak so where is the bleaching?
The Great Barrier Reef could be struck by its worst-ever blast of coral bleaching as early as this year, experts have warned.
Sea temperatures around the reef near Queensland, Australia, have
reached a year-long high, putting coral at risk of extreme heat stress,
according to a UN report.
The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority warned that the reef is
more at risk now than it was just before its previous worst-ever
bleaching last year, when a quarter of all coral was killed off.
It said a 'lack of planning' for climate change was to blame.
The report, which was presented to the UN on Friday, said that
'unprecedented severe bleaching and mortality of corals in 2016 in the
Great Barrier Reef is a game changer'.
The vast coral reef is under pressure from agricultural run-off, the crown-of-thorns starfish, development and climate change.
Last year swathes of coral succumbed to devastating bleaching, due to
warming sea temperatures, and the reef's caretakers have warned it faces
a fresh onslaught in the coming months.
Canberra updated the UN's World Heritage committee on its 'Reef 2050'
rescue plan in December, insisting the site was 'not dying' and laying
out a strategy for incremental improvements to the site.
But an independent report commissioned by the committee concluded that
the government had little chance of meeting its own targets in the
coming years, adding that the 'unprecedented' bleaching and coral
die-off in 2016 was 'a game changer'.
'Given the severity of the damage and the slow trajectory of recovery,
the overarching vision of the 2050 Plan... is no longer attainable for
at least the next two decades,' the report said.
Shallow-water corals in the north of the 1,400-mile (2,300-kilometre)
long reef were affected, although central and southern areas escaped
with less damage.
The government has pledged more than £1.2 billion (US$1.5 billion) to
protect the reef over the next decade, but researchers noted a lack of
available funding, with many of the plan's actions under-resourced.
The latest assessment comes after the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Authority warned the Queensland State government of an 'elevated and
imminent risk' of mass-bleaching this year, the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation reported.
With heavy use of coal-fired power and a relatively small population of
24 million, Australia is considered one of the world's worst per capita
greenhouse gas polluters.
Researchers highlighted that the government's rescue plan does not do
enough to address climate change, noting that 'new coal mines pose a
serious threat' to the reef's heritage area.
While the plan has a strong focus on improving water quality,
environmental groups too have been critical of the government for
inactivity on global warming.
'These independent experts have given UNESCO a far more accurate
assessment of progress than the rose-coloured-glasses version released
by the Australian and Queensland Governments late last year,' said World
Wildlife Fund Australia head of oceans Richard Leck.
But Environment Minister Josh Frydenberg told the ABC the government had
been 'very successful to date' in implementing the reef's 2050 plan.
'Climate change is the number one threat to the reef together with water
quality issues,' he said, citing the government's ratification of the
Paris agreement, the world's first universal climate pact, as part of
the 'broader' efforts to reduce stress on the reef.
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
26 February, 2017
Dakota Access oil pipeline camp cleared of protesters
Authorities on Thursday cleared a protest camp where opponents of the
Dakota Access oil pipeline had gathered for the better part of a year,
searching tents and huts and arresting three dozen holdouts who had
defied a government order to leave.
It took 3½ hours for about 220 officers and 18 National Guard members to
methodically search the protesters’ temporary homes and arrest people,
including a man who climbed atop a building and stayed there for more
than an hour before surrendering.
Native Americans who oppose the $3.8 billion pipeline established the
Oceti Sakowin camp last April on federal land near the Standing Rock
Indian Reservation to draw attention to their concerns that the project
will hurt the environment and sacred sites — a charge that Dallas-based
pipeline developer Energy Transfer Partners disputes. The camp gained
increased attention starting in August after its population had grown
and authorities made their first arrests. At its height, the camp
included thousands of people, but the numbers had dwindled during the
winter and as the fight over the pipeline moved into the courts.
The Army Corps of Engineers said it needed to clear the camp ahead of
spring flooding, and had ordered everyone to leave by 2 p.m. Wednesday.
The agency said it was concerned about protesters’ safety and about the
environmental effects of tents, cars, garbage, and other items in the
camp being washed into nearby rivers.
Most protesters left peacefully Wednesday when authorities closed the
camp, but some stayed overnight in defiance of the government order.
As police in full riot gear worked to arrest the stragglers Thursday,
cleanup crews began razing buildings on the square-mile piece of
property at the confluence of the Cannonball and Missouri rivers.
Authorities chose to enter the camp ‘‘cautiously and tactfully’’ to
ensure the safety of both officers and protesters, according to Highway
Patrol Lieutenant Tom Iverson. The arrests were a last resort, he said.
‘‘We did not want this. Unfortunately, there were some bad actors that
forced us into this position,’’ he said.
Only one person resisted arrest; otherwise there were no major incidents
and there were no injuries, Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier said.
Energy Transfer Partners began work on the last big section of the oil
pipeline this month after the Army gave it permission to lay pipe under a
reservoir on the Missouri River. When complete, the pipeline will carry
oil through the Dakotas and Iowa to a shipping point in Illinois.
SOURCE
UK: £450m lost over failed green power programme
Minister who backed plan now works in sector
Britain is wasting hundreds of millions of pounds subsidising power
stations to burn American wood pellets that do more harm to the climate
than the coal they replaced, a study has found.
Chopping down trees and transporting wood across the Atlantic Ocean to
feed power stations produces more greenhouse gases than much cheaper
coal, according to the report. It blames the rush to meet EU renewable
energy targets, which resulted in ministers making the false assumption
that burning trees was carbon-neutral.
Green subsidies for wood pellets were championed by Chris Huhne when he
was energy and climate change secretary. Mr Huhne, 62, was jailed in
2013 for perverting the course of justice
SOURCE
NY’s Legislators Rise Up Against Governor Cuomo’s Crony ‘Green Energy’ Boondoggle
(At least ) two notions from famous Americans come to mind when
contemplating New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s $8 billion flight of
unilateral crony “green energy” fancy.
Playwright George Bernard Shaw noted: “A government that robs Peter to
pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.” And American
social scientist William Graham Sumner penned in 1883 “The Forgotten
Man” – in which he rightly identifies the “forgotten men” as the
citizens paying for the government fiascos in which politicians engage.
What brings these men’s wise words to a New York state of mind?:
“Governor Andrew Cuomo announced a unilateral mass expansion of
government – in the name of fighting global warming…oops, I mean climate
change: ‘The state’s Public Service Commission (PSC) earlier Monday
passed a new set of standards that by 2030 is supposed to ensure that
half of New York’s energy needs are met by renewable methods, ranging
from solar and wind, as well as hydro and nuclear power.’”
Is that gi-normous “green energy” increase possible? Not so much as it
is highly improbable: “As of 2015, New York only generated 11% of its
energy via renewables. A tally it has taken them decades – and tens of
billions of subsidy dollars – to attain. And now they have mandated a
nearly 500% increase – in only fifteen years. Predicated, again, upon
energy sources that require massive, ongoing government cash infusions –
and in most instances take more energy to produce than they provide.”
The lofty “green energy” goals nigh certainly won’t happen – but the
massive taxes to pay for the attempt certainly will: “(T)he Public
Service Commission also included a new (energy) tax worth $8 billion.”
That is a HUGE tax increase. And where does most of that
robbed-from-Peter-the-Forgotten-Man money go? To Cuomo’s Paul:
“(D)ownstate energy consumers bore a disproportionate burden of the cost
of state subsidies that will support three upstate nuclear power
plants.”
Wait – who?: “(The tax) money will go to plant owner Exelon, a
Chicago-based Fortune 100 company with annual revenues of over $34
billion.”
So let’s run the checklist. Cuomo unilateral government power
grab? Check. Executed in the name of global warming climate
change – the Greatest Scam on Earth? Check. Containing
completely unrealistic government-mandated “green energy” goals?
Check. And monstrous tax increases? Check. With the
tax hike coin taken from faceless citizens – going to a government
crony? Check.
Cuomo’s mandate-and-tax-riddled “green energy” plan is a guaranteed
disaster-to-be. It must be stopped. Thankfully, New York’s
legislators – the Forgotten Men’s representatives – are rising up to
stop it.
Behold S. 4417. Sponsored by state Republican Senator Tony Avella,
it strikes right at the heart of Cuomo’s true objective, and the only
thing that gets his boondoggle off the ground – the mammoth tax
increase: “(It) would direct the state PSC to repeal any electric rate
increase ‘where such increase is a subsidy to upstate nuclear power
plants.’”
New York’s legislature should get behind Senator Avella’s bill – which
frees the Empire State from Cuomo’s cronyism – and pass it.
Time’s a-wasting – for New York’s legislature to get out in front of and
prevent Cuomo’s monumental tax-money-wasting. They absolutely
should not waste one moment more.
New York’s Peters and Forgotten Men will thank you.
SOURCE
California Rains on 'Settled Science'
Californians are scratching their heads at a seemingly relentless deluge
of rain — something that amounted to little more than wishful thinking
this time last year. A multi-year drought hit the state’s agriculture
system hard, but this winter, to everyone’s surprise, rainfall came. And
came. And then came some more. According to this week’s U.S. Drought
Monitor report, “As of February 21, the daily Sierra Nevada snowpack was
186% of average for the date and 151% of the April 1 climatological
peak.” Precipitation there is anywhere from 223% to 230% of average.
Do problems continue? Sure. Particularly in southern California, low
water levels persist, as noted by the Drought Monitor: “Even though the
reservoirs were responding quite favorably, they still have a long way
to go before we can classify this area as drought-free.” Nevertheless,
the report continues, “With the removal of … D3 [extreme drought], D2
[severe drought] is now the worst drought condition in the state; August
6, 2013 was the last time California had no D3.” Contrast this to last
February, when NOAA reports that 61% of the state fell under extreme
conditions. Californians waited a long time for this. And depending on
who their source was for news, they thought it would never come.
For example, in June 2016, BuzzFeed ran this alarming headline: “El Niño
Is Dead And California Could Be ‘In A Drought Forever.’” After
underwhelming rains during last winter’s El Niño and the expectation of
drier than average conditions typically experienced during La Niña (this
season’s episode), the article dramatically foreshadowed what alarmists
wrongly predicted was a perma-drought, not unlike what they prophesied
for Texas.
NASA climatologist Bill Patzert defeatedly stated, “We are in a drought
forever. I can’t think of any scenario where we would have six wet El
Niño years in a row, which would top out all the reservoirs and the
ground water supply.” Apparently, we don’t need to. This year shattered
expectations, once again demonstrating how much we still don’t know
about the climate.
Of course, California could fall back into another expansive drought. Or
maybe this summer’s predicted El Niño will behave like normal and keep
the bounty coming for months and years to come. Only time will tell. But
recent developments should teach us to expect the unexpected and not
fall victim to ridiculous predictions that serve only to advance
partisan interests.
SOURCE
Hundreds of scientists urge Trump to withdraw from U.N. climate-change agency
MIT’s Richard Lindzen says policies cause economic harm with ‘no environmental benefits’
More than 300 scientists have urged President Trump to withdraw from the
U.N.’s climate change agency, warning that its push to curtail carbon
dioxide threatens to exacerbate poverty without improving the
environment.
In a Thursday letter to the president, MIT professor emeritus Richard
Lindzen called on the United States and other nations to “change course
on an outdated international agreement that targets minor greenhouse
gases,” starting with carbon dioxide.
“Since 2009, the US and other governments have undertaken actions with
respect to global climate that are not scientifically justified and that
already have, and will continue to cause serious social and economic
harm — with no environmental benefits,” said Mr. Lindzen, a prominent
atmospheric physicist.
Signers of the attached petition include the U.S. and international
atmospheric scientists, meteorologists, physicists, professors and
others taking issue with the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change [UNFCCC], which was formed in 1992 to combat “dangerous”
climate change.
The 2016 Paris climate accord, which sets nonbinding emissions goals for nations, was drawn up under the auspices of the UNFCCC.
“Observations since the UNFCCC was written 25 years ago show that
warming from increased atmospheric CO2 will be benign — much less than
initial model predictions,” says the petition.
Mr. Trump said during the campaign he would “cancel” U.S. participation
in the Paris Agreement, which was ratified in September by former
President Barack Obama over the objections of Senate Republicans, who
argued that the accord requires Senate ratification under the U.S.
Constitution.
Myron Ebell, a Competitive Enterprise Institute scholar who led the
Trump transition team on the Environmental Protection Agency, told
reporters last month in London that the president would pull out of the
Paris Agreement.
Advocates for climate change policies have called for Mr. Trump to honor
the agreement, under which nations agree to enact policies to keep the
increase in global temperatures this century under 2 degrees Celsius
from pre-industrial levels.
Last week the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops reaffirmed its support
for the Paris Agreement in a letter to Secretary of State Rex W.
Tillerson, saying the agreement is “urgently needed if we are to meet
our common and differentiated responsibilities for the effects of
climate change.”
More than 700 companies and investors have signed onto a statement
urging Mr. Trump to abide by the Paris accord coordinated by nine
environmental groups, including the American Sustainable Business
Council, the Environmental Defense Fund and the World Wildlife Fund.
“Failure to build a low-carbon economy puts American prosperity at risk.
But the right action now will create jobs and boost US
competitiveness,” said the statement on LowCarbonUSA.org. “We pledge to
do our part, in our own operations and beyond, to realize the Paris
Agreement’s commitment of a global economy that limits global
temperature rise to well below 2 degrees Celsius.”
Challenging the catastrophic climate change narrative, Mr. Lindzen describes carbon dioxide as “plant food, not poison.”
“Restricting access to fossil fuels has very negative effects upon the
wellbeing of people around the world,” he says in his letter.
“It condemns over 4 billion people in still underdeveloped countries to continued poverty.”
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
24 February, 2017
Trump readies slew of new orders targeting EPA
President Trump is planning to issue executive orders this week to begin
rolling back the centerpiece of President Obama's climate change agenda
with several other regulations.
Trump is expected to soon issue the orders targeting regulations put
into place by the Environmental Protection Agency, including the Clean
Power Plan, which directs states to cut greenhouse gas emissions from
existing power plants.
The EPA climate plan was halted a year ago by the Supreme Court until
the courts can rule on litigation by 28 state attorneys general, the
coal industry and hundreds of individual companies and industry groups.
The order is expected to direct the agency to redo the climate change
rule, which would be different from asking the agency to rescind the
regulation altogether. Ultimately, direction on what to do about the
greenhouse gas rule will have to come from the courts.
But Trump isn't planning on stopping there. The president also will
issue a separate order targeting the EPA's Waters of the U.S. Rule,
which greatly expanded the agency's jurisdiction over waterways to
include everything from major waterways to drainage ponds on private
lands. Both the Clean Power Plan and the Waters of the U.S. Rule have
been long-time targets of the Republican Party.
Reports also say to expect a third Trump action to end the Department of
Interior's moratorium on new coal mining leases put in place by the
Obama administration.
EPA officials told Reuters that they were told to expect the executive
actions shortly after EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt was confirmed, but
the exact timing of the orders is unknown.
Pruitt was confirmed by the Senate on Friday and sworn in as the
nation's 14th EPA administrator. He addressed EPA employees briefly
Tuesday during his first full day as as head of the agency.
SOURCE
Pruitt's EPA Will Be Better for Property Rights, States.
His Rule of Law record is exactly why ecofascists hate him so much
The sky is falling, and the oceans will soon cover the land. That is
what Chicken Little leftists would have us believe following the
confirmation of former Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt as
director of the Environmental Protection Agency.
The hysterical warnings from the anti-free market crowd were as
ludicrous as they were predictable; Pruitt is a conservative, so he
wants dirty water, dirty air, toxic land and he will allow corporations
free rein to dump chemical sludge into our pristine waterways.
In reality, Pruitt is not a conservative hardliner at all. Unlike many
conservatives, he doesn’t want to get rid of the EPA, but believes it
can play a vital role in protecting the environment. What makes Pruitt
unacceptable to the radical Left is his respect for the constitutional
power of the states to direct their own affairs, his record of fighting
to protect private property rights, and his respect for the Rule of Law.
For decades progressives have used federal agencies, and the mountains
of regulations they generate, to achieve through the federal bureaucracy
(if not the courts) what they have been unable to achieve at the polls.
The EPA has become one of the most dangerous of all federal agencies,
not only abusing its power but destroying the lives of innocent
Americans in the process.
Just ask Andy Johnson, a Wyoming farmer who sued the EPA after he was
fined $16 million for building a small fishing pond on his property.
After having done his due diligence and receiving all necessary permits
and approvals to build a small pond on his property, the EPA claimed
Johnson violated federal law, arguing his pond was subject to the Clean
Water Act. After years of harassment and threats by the agency, Johnson
reached a settlement last May where all charges and fines were dropped
in exchange for planting willow trees around the pond to prevent
erosion.
Johnson’s story is just one of thousands like it, and progressive
environmentalists fear Pruitt because not only has he promised to end
such abuses, but as Oklahoma attorney general he filed 14 lawsuits
against the EPA to stop these types of abuse.
In a recent interview, Pruitt explained his philosophy of protecting the
environment while simultaneously protecting property rights: “I reject
this paradigm that says we can’t be both pro-environment and pro-energy.
We are blessed with great national resources, and we should be good
stewards of those. But we’ve been the best in the world at showing you
do that while also growing jobs and the economy. Too many people put on a
jersey in this fight. I want to send the message that we can and will
do both.”
In a departure from the radicalism of the Obama administration, Pruitt
sees it as his job to enforce the law as written, rather than create law
through regulatory fiat or “sue and settle” (getting friendly
organizations to sue before a friendly judge, and create law through the
ruling). Pruitt argues, “Agencies exist to administer the law. Congress
passes statutes, and those statutes are very clear on the job EPA has
to do. We’re going to do that job.”
In light of that philosophy, Pruitt has already begun to roll back Obama
administration excesses and abuses. He is withdrawing from the Clean
Power Plan (Obama’s climate regulation scheme geared toward destroying
the fossil fuel industry), and the 2015 Waters of the United States
rule, through which the Obama EPA quite literally claimed the authority
to regulate and control every single stream, creek, pond or mud hole as a
tributary to a “navigable waterway.” He also declared his agency will
review the Clean Air Act to determine whether it even has the authority
to regulate carbon dioxide, which has been the lynchpin of the
progressive effort to give government control over industry.
Instead, says Pruitt, his focus will be on cleaning up the air and water
of the United States to correct and prevent problems like the lead
poisoning of the Flint, Michigan water supply, and the unfolding failure
of the Oroville Dam in California, which is putting tens of thousands
of lives at risk. He also wants to revamp the EPA’s process for
producing environmental data to make it scientifically driven rather
than ideologically driven, in order to restore trust in the reports
produced by his agency.
He also acknowledged the primary role of the states in keeping the
environment safe, arguing for federalism: “Every statute makes clear
this is supposed to be a cooperative relationship. … Congress understood
that a one-size-fits-all model doesn’t work for environmental
regulation, and … the state departments of environmental quality have an
enormous role to play.” He vehemently opposes the position of the Obama
EPA, which saw the states as “a vessel of federal will.”
So while career progressives in the EPA seek to undermine their new
boss, and while Hollywood elitists like Susan Sarandon wring their hands
and declare Pruitt’s appointment to be the “end of the EPA,” average
Americans can sleep soundly. There is now a man at the head of that
agency who wants to make sure they have clean air to breathe and clean
water to drink, while also making sure bureaucratic thugs don’t ruin
their lives if they decide to build a pond or clear brush off their
land.
And that is welcomed news indeed.
SOURCE
NASA to Stop Shilling for Big Green, Restart Exploring Space…
“And would sir like a regular or large fries, with that? And how about a McFlurry?”
I do hope that Gavin “Toast” Schmidt, the head of NASA’s Goddard
Institute of Space Studies (GISS), followed the advice I gave him a few
months back. Because it now looks very much as if he and many of his
colleagues are about to face exciting new job opportunities, hopefully
in areas best suited to their talents, such as the challenging world of
fast-food retail.
Yes, as we predicted, NASA is going to be stripped of the two main roles
it enjoyed under the Obama administration – Muslim outreach and green
propaganda – and return to its original day (and night) job as an agency
dedicated to space exploration.
The U.S. Senate passed legislation recently cutting funding for NASA’s global warming research.
The House is expected to pass the bill, and President
Trump will likely sign it. Supporters say it “re-balances” NASA’s
budget back toward space exploration and away from global warming and
earth science research. Republicans plan to end the more than $2 billion
NASA spends on its Earth Science Mission Directorate.
“By rebalancing, I’d like for more funds to go into
space exploration; we’re not going to zero out earth sciences,” Texas
Republican Rep. Lamar Smith, who chairs the House Committee on Science,
Space and Technology, told E&E News. “I’d like for us to remember
what our priorities are, and there are another dozen agencies that study
earth science and climate change, and they can continue to do that.”
Before we shed too many tears for the plight of Gavin Schmidt and the
rest of his global warming research team, though, let’s just pause to
reflect on how much damage they have done to the cause of honest science
over the years and what eye-wateringly vast quantities of our money
they have wasted.
A good place to start is this excellent piece by Steve Goddard, entitled The Pause Is Real: NASA Temperatures Aren’t.
Here is the damning chart that says it all:
How did a supposedly respectable government agency get away with such blatant fraud?
Well, one answer is that it was encouraged to do so by the US government
which paid its Earth Science research division $2 billion a year, while
giving only $781.5 million and $826.7 million to its astrophysics and
space technology divisions. Obama wanted “global warming” to be real and
dangerous: and – lo! – thanks to the magic of his crack
prestidigitators at NASA, NOAA and the rest, it was.
But the longer answer is that this is what happens when green ideologues
are allowed to infiltrate and hijack government institutions. As we’ve
reported before, NASA has been caught out fiddling temperature data on
“an unbelievable scale”. So too has NOAA. That’s because their global
warming departments are mostly run by true believers – scientists who
want to show the world that global warming is a major threat in urgent
need of more grant funding, regardless of what the actual temperature
data shows. Hence the many, many adjustments.
This has done tremendous damage not just in the US but across the world
because it has enabled green propagandists to point at the dodgy
adjusted data from NASA and NOAA and claim: “The Experts say…”
Now, thanks to Donald Trump, that fraud is about to come to a sudden and
painful end. It never ceases to amaze and nauseate me that more people,
especially on the right, aren’t more grateful for what is being done
here.
While mainstream media commentators on both left and right bloviate
about Trump’s style (clearly they prefer Obama’s empty rhetoric) and
stoke up fake news stories about Russian plots, Trump is busily getting
on with one of the most valuable and important missions ever conducted
by a US president: he is putting an end to the biggest and most
expensive scientific scam in history.
Oh, and he is also working wonders for property rights and business by
rescinding such damaging regulations as the Waters Of The US and the
Climate Action Plan.
A source briefed on the matter told The Washington
Post one of the orders “will instruct the Environmental Protection
Agency to begin rewriting the 2015 regulation that limits greenhouse-gas
emissions from existing electric utilities” and order “the Interior
Department’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to lift a moratorium on
federal coal leasing.”
Trump will issue a second order instructing the EPA
and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to rewrite the “Waters of the U.S.”
(WOTUS) rule that expanded federal control over rivers, streams and
wetlands — even those on private property.
If ever a swamp needed draining, it’s the swamp of the $1.5 trillion
environmental scam. This could have gone on for ever and ever. Our
grandchildren ought to be properly grateful to President Trump that it
didn’t.
SOURCE
More speculations and surmises
What if ....
In Geneva, Switzerland, yesterday, the IPCC named the team of 86 experts
from 39 countries that will author the investigation on the impacts of
global warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels and related global
greenhouse gas emission pathways, in the context of strengthening the
global response to the impact of climate change, sustainable
development, and efforts to eradicate poverty.
The Special Report, which is due to be published in 2018, was
commissioned by the Paris agreement COP21 in 2015. It will be a robust
scientific report into ways to arrest global warming levels by assessing
research and highlighting policy options available to support the
achievement of a climate safe, equitable and sustainable world.
Head of UC’s Department of Political Science and International Relations
and director of the Sustainable Citizenship and Civic Imagination: Hei
Pu?waitanga research group, Assoc Prof Hayward will be using her
expertise in the field of sustainable development, poverty eradication,
and reducing inequalities.
“We need interdisciplinary thinking to address complex serious problems,
and it is heartening to see recognition for the way Arts and Humanities
can also assist us in tackling some of our world’s greatest
challenges,” she says.
While Assoc Prof Hayward is the only New Zealander on this IPCC special
report team, she says other New Zealanders are expected to be nominated
to write later reports.
Professor Ian Wright, UC Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and
Innovation), observed that an international perspective and community
engagement are key drivers for the future of the institution.
“This type of activity, where UC academic expertise is being used to
underpin mitigation strategies to a critical global issue, underlines
the fact that the University of Canterbury is engaging with local,
regional, national and international communities, including business.”
SOURCE
Greens cowardice on Islam, other key issues, matches their ignorance
Chris Kenny discusses Australia's Green party:
Islam is the most feminist religion. Wind energy is reliable. Border
security is unnecessary. The US alliance is inimical to our national
interest. The Australian is a race-baiting newspaper.
The Australian Greens have strayed so far from reality in their
post-truth universe that they must have become confused between the real
world and a flashback to some trip in the 70s.
They have become the lunatics at the bottom of the garden shouting at the moon.
It would be hilarious if it weren’t so dangerous, amusing if it wasn’t
so damaging to our nation. “The Australian, or as it may be better
described, the Q Society Gazette,” said Greens senator Nick McKim in the
Senate today, “has become little more than a loss-making, race-baiting
rag.”
Not only do these political fringe dwellers combine with Labor and
crossbench senators to undermine the nation’s fiscal position and
economic future, but they meddle incessantly and odiously in identity
politics, fuelling resentment and division, and spitting bile at
mainstream voters, their concerns and their values.
This latest foray from Greens leader, Richard Di Natale, and McKim has
come after today’s page one article by Caroline Overington about Yassmin
Abdel-Magied.
Overington revealed how taxpayers had funded the writer’s tour to
majority Muslim nations in North Africa and the Middle East to promote
her book and her views.
It was highly relevant and topical given Abdel-Magied’s appearance on
Q&A on Monday night, when she attempted to justify sharia law, and,
astonishingly, said Islam was “the most feminist” religion.
In return for its reporting on this issue, this newspaper was singled
out by the Greens leader who claimed we had attacked Abdel-Magied and
that our reporting was fuelling tensions around Islam.
Overington revealed Abdel-Magied’s tour took her to a range of countries where women are treated appallingly.
She did nothing but put salient facts into the debate. She can’t do much
about her skin colour but Overington is neither middle-aged nor male
and anyone who reads her work knows she is a strong feminist.
McKim and Di Natale, on the other hand, are white non-Muslim men eager
to parade their tolerance for Islam while wilfully blind on equality for
women behind the veil.
Their cultural and political cowardice is matched only by their ignorance.
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
23 February, 2017
Fake news at the NYT
The article below appeared in the NYT as "How an Interoffice Spat
Erupted Into a Climate-Change Furor". In the best traditions of
the Green/Left it is an attempt to discredit scientific dissent by "ad
hominem" abuse. It refers to the Bates revelations about the Tom
Karl "pause" paper but has no science in it at all. It is just an
extended effort to discredit the motives of Bates.
It
gives no answer to the important allegation that Karl constructed his
temperature database by using invalid ocean temperature measurements and
mentions not at all the Fyfe et al. paper,
in which some prominent Warmist scientists also distanced themselves
from the Karl paper. The article is a closing of the ranks, nothing
more. It is a desperate attempt to trivialize an important issue
of scientific integrity.
A few weeks ago, on an obscure climate-change blog, a retired government
scientist named John Bates blasted his former boss on an esoteric point
having to do with archiving temperature data.
It was little more than lingering workplace bad blood, said Dr. Bates’s
former co-workers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. Dr. Bates had felt he deserved his boss’s job at NOAA,
they said, not the demotion he received.
“He’s retaliating. It’s like grade school,” said Glenn Rutledge, a former physical scientist at NOAA who worked with Dr. Bates.
But in what seems like a remarkable example of office politics gone
horribly wrong, within days the accusations were amplified and
sensationalized — in the pages of the British tabloid The Mail on Sunday
— inciting a global furor among climate-change deniers.
The Mail claimed that Dr. Bates had revealed fraud in important research
by NOAA that supports the widely held belief that climate change is
real. “How world leaders were duped into investing billions over
manipulated global warming data,” the article’s headline said.
The scientific community swiftly shot down the accusations, and affirmed
the accuracy of the research. And Dr. Bates himself later stated in an
interview with a business news site that he had not meant to suggest
that his former boss had played fast and loose with temperature data.
“The issue here is not an issue of tampering with data,” Dr. Bates said.
Still, Dr. Bates has emerged as a hero to some conservative media
outlets and politicians, and among climate-change deniers on Facebook
and Twitter.
The Texas congressman and longtime climate skeptic Lamar Smith posted a
link to a summary of the claims multiple times on Twitter. The House
Committee on Science, Space and Technology, which Mr. Smith heads, took
up the controversy at a hearing.
NOAA itself is now bringing in independent investigators to review Dr.
Bates’s claims. “NOAA takes seriously any accusations that its policies
and procedures have not been followed,” a spokesman, Scott Smullen, said
in a statement.
Dr. John Bates, a retired government scientist, at his home in Arden,
N.C. His criticism of a former boss on an esoteric point about archiving
temperature data resulted in a furor among climate-change deniers.
Credit Chris Bott
Dr. Bates did not respond to repeated requests for comment nor to
detailed questions about the incident and his former co-workers’
characterizations.
Interviews with six of his former colleagues at NOAA’s National Centers
for Environmental Information, including two former bosses, painted a
picture of a room filled with brilliant scientists, and — like many
workplaces — its fair share of mundane professional spats and
jealousies.
Dr. Bates was demoted from a managerial role in 2012 under Thomas Karl —
the lead author of the study Dr. Bates has questioned — after
complaints over Dr. Bates’s professional conduct, according to the
former colleagues and supervisors. He also became frustrated that his
efforts to enforce strict procedures in the archiving of climate data
were not getting as much attention as he had hoped.
“He was often heard saying that he, not Karl, should be running the
center,” said Marjorie McGuirk, former chief of staff at the data
center.
At the heart of the furor is a study led by Dr. Karl, the former
director of NOAA’s data center. The NOAA center handles the nation’s
trove of climate and weather data. Dr. Karl’s study had refuted earlier
work suggesting that global warming had slowed earlier in this century.
According to the article in The Mail, Dr. Bates claimed that the study
relied on problematic data. The researchers threw out good data on sea
temperatures recorded on buoys, and “corrected” it with what he said was
bad data from ships, Dr. Bates said, according to The Mail.
“You never change good data to agree with bad, but that’s what they did —
so as to make it look as if the sea was warmer,” he was quoted in The
Mail as saying. The Mail on Sunday article also argued that the study
had been rushed into the journal Science to influence the 2015 Paris
climate deal, in which world leaders agreed to curb planet-warming
emissions.
David Rose, the author of The Mail on Sunday article, said in a Twitter correspondence that he stood by his reporting.
The Mail on Sunday, together with its sister tabloid, The Daily Mail, in
the past has been accused of publishing work that disputed the widely
held scientific belief that warming is the result of human activity.
The outcry over Dr. Bates’s claims points to a push by some in the
right-wing media to cast doubt on established climate science, and to
dispel public support for emissions regulations. Breitbart, the
right-wing website formerly run by Stephen K. Bannon, President Trump’s
chief strategist, repeatedly played up Dr. Bates’s claims. “John Bates
has provided the smoking gun,” it reported. Fox News called the
accusations “explosive.”
Rick Perry, the former Texas governor who is President Trump’s pick for
energy secretary, at his conformation hearing last month. Mr. Perry,
once a climate-change denier, now acknowledges that the climate is
warming. Credit Al Drago/The New York Times
Breitbart and Fox News did not respond to a request for comment.
“I think there’s already been enormous damage,” said Bob Ward, a
researcher at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the
Environment at the London School of Economics. “What they’re trying to
do is to slow the pace of action on climate change.”
In his interview with the site E&E News this month, Dr. Bates stated
that the issue wasn’t with data tampering. Rather, he said, his issue
was that some of the processed data used in the report wasn’t
subsequently archived in accordance with strict protocols that Dr. Bates
had developed. In other words, it was a filing problem, not a science
problem.
The paper’s authors disputed that strict archiving of the calculations
was necessary, because all of the original data used in the report was
properly archived. And the data was subsequently made available to other
researchers, said Tom Peterson, a research meteorologist who is a
co-author of the study with Dr. Karl.
SOURCE
Sea Level Rise: A Reason to Drown in Fear?
The debate isn't so much over the facts of warming but how to respond
The quibbling over how much warming the world has actually seen is back
in the news thanks to new allegations from Dr. John Bates, a former NOAA
scientist who says the agency used bogus techniques to discredit the
recent global warming pause. Given the long history of accusations
against the agency — including longstanding charges of rewriting logbook
data — these assertions should be investigated, regardless of what may
or may not turn up. Perhaps the agency is guilty, or perhaps not.
But let’s set aside for a moment the wrangling over the magnitude of
warming and lay out what everyone can agree on. We know unequivocally
that global temperatures have gradually warmed for more than a century
now. (This acknowledgement, by the way, reveals the Left’s slandering of
conservatives as “climate deniers” to be all the more vindictive). We
also know that periods of cooling or static measurements have
occasionally interrupted this gradual warming, but it hasn’t been enough
to reduce the overall upward trend. And finally, we know that global
carbon dioxide emissions have risen to slightly more than 400 parts per
million (ppm), an increase from 340 ppm in the early 1980s.
It’s what to extract from this information that results in harsh
disagreement and even indignation. How much of the warming is natural?
How much is cyclical? How much (if any) is driven by CO2? If it’s a mix
of man-made and cyclical effects, which one is disproportionately to
blame for meteorological changes? The Left, in addition to blaming
climate change for what it says are worsening droughts and burgeoning
heat waves, worries that sea levels, aided by the acceleration in ice
loss, will wreak havoc on coastlines and nearby lowlands.
In truth, it’s admittedly a bad time for sea ice concentration. A few
years ago, Antarctica was almost routinely, it seemed, breaking records
in ice coverage. So it might come as a surprise today to learn that it’s
now at a record low. In fact, both the North and South Poles are
measuring historically low percentages. According to a large number of
scientists, the continuation of global warming means coastal areas are
in for a nightmare scenario. What does the data say?
Last June, NOAA reported, “Sea level has been rising over the past
century, and the rate has increased in recent decades. In 2014, global
sea level was 2.6 inches (67 mm) above the 1993 average — the highest
annual average in the satellite record (1993-present). Sea level
continues to rise at a rate of about one-eighth of an inch (3.2 mm) per
year, due to a combination of melting glaciers and ice sheets, and
thermal expansion of seawater as it warms.” And according to a February
2016 USA Today report, ocean levels overall increased by 5.5 inches
during the 20th century.
Think about that. The rate at last check was one-eighth of an inch per
year and mere inches when all added up. Assuming this is true — not to
mention even accurate, considering these are such minuscule measurements
for a vast swath of geography — that’s hardly what we would call a
crisis, and it’s worth noting too that the way this stuff is measured
has been revolutionized over time. That said, both poles are
experiencing higher-than-average ice melt today, which presumably will
affect this rate. But just how much?
In the same report, NOAA went on to estimate “that there is very high
confidence (greater than 90% chance) that global mean sea level will
rise at least 8 inches (0.2 meter) but no more than 6.6 feet (2.0
meters) by 2100.” And that’s taking into account rather extreme
scenarios. Some people, particularly those along the coast,
understandably worry about this (though a significant number of
Americans actually enjoy the more pleasant effects of global warming,
like milder winters). The question isn’t so much that global
temperatures — and to a smaller degree the oceans — are rising, but why.
Furthermore, how do we respond?
This is where policy disagreements come in. The bottom line is that this
debate could come down to whether we want to adapt to climate change or
instead attempt to mitigate its effects. NOAA says the rate at which
seas are expected to rise “depends mostly on the rate of future carbon
dioxide emissions and future global warming.” We contend there are very
legitimate reasons to embrace CO2. Though for the most part temperatures
and carbon dioxide emissions have risen in tandem, emissions alone
can’t explain the periodic temperature drops and stagnations. And
completely eliminating those emissions would be futile — and immensely
expensive. But economic control, after all, is the real climate agenda.
As The Daily Signal’s Katie Tubb observes, “[C]limate sensitivity
modeling used by the EPA shows that totally eliminating all carbon
dioxide emissions in the U.S. would reduce warming by only 0.137 degree
Celsius by the end of the century, and only 0.278 degree Celsius if the
entire industrialized world totally eliminated all carbon dioxide
emissions.” Moreover, the greening of deserts and an abundance of food
for trees and vegetation are surely welcome benefits.
Whether the globe is warming or cooling, there are benefits and setbacks
to both, as history demonstrates. And humans who expect to have the
ability to balance the climate are significantly less realistic than
those who advocate adapting, like we always have, to what comes next.
Americans didn’t abandon certain areas altogether because of
earthquakes; they figured out how to create stronger and more flexible
structures. The same goes for places prone to tornadoes and hurricanes.
Remember, temperatures have not risen at the rate at which they were
projected, and the future of sea levels are equally uncertain.
Game-changing global cooling didn’t happen like the CIA and Time
magazine and others warned in 1974, nor will an ice age happen by 2021,
as The Washington Post forecast in 1971. On the flip side, the New York
Times' 1969 warning “that the ocean at the North Pole may become an open
sea within a decade or two” didn’t happen either. So take predictions
with a grain of salt.
In any case, even if the threat is real, adaption creates far more
economic opportunities than forcing hundreds of millions into
destitution through costly taxation and regulation. So go ahead and
build your beachfront home. We’ll figure out, through innovation, how to
protect it if we ever reach that point. Or maybe we could just get
Barack Obama to finally cash in on his 2008 promise about the “moment
when the rise of the oceans began to slow…”
SOURCE
Dakota Access Pipeline protesters cost North Dakota taxpayers $33 million
Last summer, hordes of professional leftists, ne’er-do-wells, thugs, and
drug users descended upon North Dakota intent upon “helping” the tribes
opposing the Dakota Access Pipeline, which is being developed by Energy
Transfer Partners.
The self-important radicals dubbed themselves “water protectors.”
In their view, the $3.8 billion pipeline had to be stopped because of
their fervent belief in global warming and the possibility that, one
day, the pipeline might leak and pollute the water.
This motley crew has been far from ideal neighbors. One activist
complained that others in the group were consuming tribal resources
without contributing sufficiently and seemed to view the protest as
little more than a Burning Man festival. Another activist advised
potential protesters not to bring alcohol or drugs and told them that
“you are not on vacation.”
Due to the protesters, the tribe’s casino has seen a decline in
business, which has caused a shortfall of millions of dollars in the
tribe’s budget.
And the tribe is not the only one paying the price for the protest.
According to a state estimate, state and local taxpayers were
responsible for paying nearly $33 million to deal with the protests as
of Feb. 10. With the imminent arrival of flooding season, federal
authorities have ordered the squatters to leave.
In early Dec. 2016, the chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Dave
Archambault II, asked protesters to leave, but hundreds chose to ignore
his request. Previously, the tribal chairman had expressed concern over
the fact that protesters were digging latrines in the flood plain, which
could result in waste being washed into the Cannonball River.
As if that was not bad enough, protesters have also burned tires. What
kind of environmentalists burn tires — willfully releasing carbon and
noxious chemicals into the atmosphere?
The left, including many in the media, would have you believe that these
protesters have been peaceful. The facts are otherwise. Over the past
several months, protesters have flagrantly defied government orders;
blocked state and county roads and railroad tracks; attacked police with
pepper spray; pointed lasers at police; thrown rocks, bottles, bricks,
feces, burning logs, and Molotov cocktails, among other things, at
police; intentionally stampeded hundreds of bison toward police; and
burned county vehicles. One protester even shot at police.
Unsurprisingly, many — over 700, in fact — have been arrested. Of those
arrested, many had criminal records, and more than 90 percent were from
out of state. Of course, the protesters have complained bitterly about
the police response to the protesters’ criminal actions.
Nor have police been the protesters’ only targets. Protesters have
sabotaged or burned construction vehicles and equipment; cut ranchers’
fences allowing bison to escape; harassed farmers and ranchers; and
killed cows and bison. In one disturbing incident, protesters ran a
pipeline construction worker off the road and chased and surrounded him
until he was extricated by federal agents.
According to one estimate last fall, protesters had caused $10 million
of damage to construction equipment. Protesters and their supporters
have also phoned in numerous death threats to a local county government
and local businesses.
As the number of protesters has dwindled, another problem has grown: the
protesters’ piles of garbage. The tribe, working together with local
and state authorities, is in the process of removing an estimated 4.5
million pounds of garbage and debris — much of it still frozen. The
process was expected to take weeks; but, with snow already beginning to
melt, time is running out.
About 200 vehicles, which were abandoned by protesters, are also being
removed. Knowing time is of the essence, protesters continue to cause
problems: just last week, they blocked several sanitation trucks from
entering their camp.
Rick Manning, President of Americans for Limited Government, stated,
“President Trump must investigate the funders of these polluting
protesters and to send them the bill for the mess the protesters
created. It is unacceptable for these costs to be borne by taxpayers and
the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe.”
SOURCE
Our children have been brainwashed about global warming
It’s all about destroying capitalism
Yes, our people have been brainwashed from K to BA from ignorant
teachers and professors who, themselves, were brainwashed before them.
Nowhere in the news media or schools have the following subjects been
exposed:
Christiana Figueres, the U.N.’s top climate change official, says that
it’s not about the climate. It’s about redistribution of the wealth and
the destruction of capitalism. In simpler terms, she intends to replace
free enterprise, entrepreneurial capitalism with UN-controlled,
centralized, socialized One World government and economic control.
Papal Advisor Naomi Klein admits in her much-publicized screed that
‘Global Warming’ is all about anti-capitalism and nothing to do with
science.
Ottmar Edenhofer, lead author of the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report
(2007), summed up the situation quite clearly. Speaking in 2010, he
advised: “One has to free oneself from the illusion that international
climate policy is environmental policy. Instead, climate change policy
is about how we redistribute de facto the world’s wealth.”
Head of the EPA Gina McCarthy admitted during a U.S. House hearing that
anti-coal CO2 regulations attached to EPA’s so-called “Clean Power Plan”
wouldn’t have any measurable impact on global warming. She testified,
“We see it as having had enormous benefit in showing sort of domestic
leadership as well as garnering support around the country for the
agreement we reached in Paris.”
Also mentioned was a quote from former U.S. Senator and chief climate
envoy during the Clinton administration, Timothy Wirth, which shows how
Democrats unconditionally stick behind climate change to forward its
progressive agenda. “We’ve got to ride the global warming issue,” Wirth
said. “Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, we will be doing
the right thing.”
The late Dr. Stephen Schneider’s heartfelt rationalization for
climate-change advocacy involved his stated position that climate
scientists must necessarily “offer up scary scenarios, make simplified,
dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might
have” so as to “capture the public’s imagination” by “getting loads of
media coverage” as a means to advance the cause.
Maurice Newman, the chairman of Australia’s business advisory council
said the UN was using false models showing sustained temperature
increases to end democracy and impose authoritarian rule.
“The real agenda is concentrated political authority,” Newman wrote in
an opinion piece published in the Australian newspaper. “Global warming
is the hook. It’s about a new world order under the control of the UN….
“It is opposed to capitalism and freedom and has made environmental
catastrophism a household topic to achieve its objective.”
Today’s folks have heard over and over from such sterling non-scientists
as Barack Obama, Al Gore, and John Kerry that the global warming
fiction is, in fact, the truth. It’s refreshing that we now have a
president who actually speaks the truth, which is: 1) CO2 is not a
pollutant and 2) CO2 does not cause global warming.
We can only hope.
SOURCE
Climate Models Are Warming Earth Two Times Faster Than Reality
Climate models show twice as much warming during the 21st Century than
what’s actually been observed, according to a new report highlighting
the limitations of global climate models, or GCMs.
“So far in the 21st century, the GCMs are warming, on average, about a
factor of 2 faster than the observed temperature increase,” Dr. Judith
Curry, a former Georgia Tech climate scientist who now runs her own
climate forecasting company, wrote in a report for the U.K.-based Global
Warming Policy Foundation.
Curry has been one of the foremost critics of climate models, arguing
that while they can be useful, there are too many uncertainties and
issues to rely on models for public policy decisions.
Curry’s report gives a detailed rundown of why models can be useful for
modeling complex climate systems, but also points out that GCMs fail to
capture natural variability in the climate.
“The reason for the discrepancy between observations and model
simulations in the early 21st century appears to be caused by a
combination of inadequate simulations of natural internal variability
and oversensitivity of the models to increasing carbon dioxide,” wrote
Curry.
Climate models assume carbon dioxide is the control knob for average
global temperature and fail to take into account “the patterns and
timing of multidecadal ocean oscillations” and “future solar variations
and solar indirect effects on climate,” Curry explains.
Models also “neglect of the possibility of volcanic eruptions that are
more active than the relatively quiet 20th century” and suffer from an
“apparent over-sensitivity to increases in greenhouse gases,” Curry
continues.
Global warming skeptics have been pointing out problems with climate
models for years, but only recently have scientists taken a hard look at
modeling’s actual predictive powers.
A group of scientists admitted in early 2016 that the 15-year “pause” in
global warming threw a wrench into climate model predictions, forcing
some to go back to the drawing board to see what went wrong.
“There is this mismatch between what the climate models are producing
and what the observations are showing,” John Fyfe, Canadian climate
modeler, told Nature in 2016. “We can’t ignore it.”
But climate model problems predate the recent warming “pause.” Chip
Knappenberger and Patrick Michaels, climate scientists at the
libertarian Cato Institute, have long criticized most climate models,
which they say have not accurately predicted global temperature rises
for the past six decades.
In late 2015, Michaels and Knappenberger published research comparing
observed rates of global surface temperature warming since 1950 to
predictions made by 108 climate models.
They found the models predicted much higher warming rates than actually occurred from rising carbon dioxide emissions.
Even the recent string of “record warm” years are below what most
climate models predicted. A recent El Nino temporarily brought global
average temperature in agreement with most climate models, but the globe
is expected to cool in the coming years as the tropics cool.
And that’s only surface temperature readings. A similar mismatch exists
between satellite-derived temperature readings and model predictions.
Climate scientists John Christy and Roy Spencer manage a prominent
satellite-derived temperature data set out of the University of Alabama,
Huntsville. Their data showed no warming for about two decades — a
streak only broken by the recent El Nino warming event.
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
22 February, 2017
Hurrah! Trump scrapping NASA climate research division in crackdown on ‘politicized science’
The crooks are going
Donald Trump is poised to eliminate all climate change research
conducted by Nasa as part of a crackdown on “politicized science”, his
senior adviser on issues relating to the space agency has said.
Nasa’s Earth science division is set to be stripped of funding in favor
of exploration of deep space, with the president-elect having set a goal
during the campaign to explore the entire solar system by the end of
the century. This would mean the elimination of Nasa’s world-renowned
research into temperature, ice, clouds and other climate phenomena.
Nasa’s network of satellites provide a wealth of information on climate
change, with the Earth science division’s budget set to grow to $2bn
next year. By comparison, space exploration has been scaled back
somewhat, with a proposed budget of $2.8bn in 2017.
Bob Walker, a senior Trump campaign adviser, said there was no need for
Nasa to do what he has previously described as “politically correct
environmental monitoring”. “We see Nasa in an exploration role, in deep
space research,” Walker told the Guardian. “Earth-centric science is
better placed at other agencies where it is their prime mission.
“My guess is that it would be difficult to stop all ongoing Nasa
programs but future programs should definitely be placed with other
agencies. I believe that climate research is necessary but it has been
heavily politicized, which has undermined a lot of the work that
researchers have been doing. Mr Trump’s decisions will be based upon
solid science, not politicized science.”
SOURCE
Heavy reliance on other countries for "green" Britain's electricity supply
More than two kilometres down a dark, dank tunnel deep inside a
Norwegian mountain, the air is thick with dust and the smell of
explosives. A pair of red laser beams pierce the blackness, providing
guide marks for a drilling machine to bore a computer-programmed pattern
of 30 holes into the rock.
“Once the drilling starts it gets really noisy,” Nigel Williams says.
“They go four metres into granite. Think of the power needed to do that.
They are massive machines.” The resulting holes will be packed with
explosives and then detonated. Three such blasts extend the tunnel by
ten metres each day.
It forms a crucial part of National Grid’s key project: to build the
world’s longest subsea power cable. Like a giant extension lead, the
£1.4 billion, 450-mile North Sea Link interconnector will plug Britain
into the Norwegian grid, enabling it to import 1.4 gigawatts of
electricity, enough to power 750,000 homes. From Blyth in
Northumberland, the cable will stretch across the North Sea before
winding its way through 60 miles of fjords until the seabed comes to an
abrupt halt on the far side of this mountain, 50 miles northeast of
Stavanger. The cable will run through the tunnel, now close to
completion, and then cross a lake to Kvilldal, home to Norway’s biggest
hydroelectric power plant, where it will connect with the grid.
While Britain is facing increasing challenges keeping the lights on as
old coal and nuclear plants close and intermittent wind and solar take
their place, plants such as Kvilldal mean that Norway’s grid is
practically overflowing with cheap and reliable green power.
“From a UK perspective, wind and volatility has picked up and has become
a real headache,” Mr Williams, National Grid’s project director for
North Sea Link, says. “These interconnectors can provide flexible
services to support changes in output very quickly.”
Britain has 4GW of interconnectors, but the government has backed the
development of up to a further 9GW. Ofgem, the regulator, offers
financial support through a new “cap and floor” system to guarantee
domestic developers such as National Grid, which is building the link
jointly with Statnett, its Norwegian counterpart, a minimum return.
Critics have questioned whether foreign power imports can be relied upon
in a crisis. Even Norway’s usually plentiful hydropower supplies, which
mean that its wholesale power prices typically are only half of British
levels, can run short and push up prices in a dry year. Thor Anders
Nummedal, project director for Statnett, says that any water shortages
would hit only in the spring, after the UK’s winter demand peak. In
fact, he says, the interconnector will allow Norway to import wind power
from Britain when there is surplus. “Then we don’t have to use water
and we can store it and use it later,” he says. “Imports from the UK
will enable us to avoid price shocks.”
Ensuring that the interconnector is reliable also means going to great
lengths to protect it from the kind of damage suffered by one of the
UK’s existing interconnectors, which was severed by a ship’s anchor last
year. The cable will be laid in 80-mile stretches, reeled off the back
of a ship at more than six miles a day. Once each stretch is on the
seabed, a robotic machine the size of a tank will crawl along its length
at a rate of two metres a minute, blasting water down beneath it with
the force of 500 patio jet washers and creating a trench into which the
cable can fall.
Work at sea is due to begin from Britain in 2018 and Norway in 2020 —
provided that the cable is made in time. Development of new
interconnectors and offshore wind farms around Europe mean that there is
fierce demand for the specialist cables. About five inches, or 13cm, in
diameter, they consist of a copper core wrapped in paper and soaked
with oil, then coated in lead, tape, steel and plastic to insulate and
protect it. Delays to cable supply, meaning that it cannot be laid in
calmer summer weather, represent the biggest risk to the project’s
schedule and could increase the cost up to more like £1.8 billion,
according to Mr Williams.
If all goes to schedule, the link should start operating in December
2021, in time to make good on Mr Nummedal’s light-hearted promise to
“turn on the power and light up the Norwegian Christmas tree in
Trafalgar Square”.
That’s assuming that the cable works to begin with. “Only when you plug
in and you turn the voltage up at the converter ends, only then will you
test the cable,” Mr Williams says. If there is a fault, most likely at
the join between two sections, a remotely operated vehicle will be sent
down to sever it and pull the ends up to the surface to be linked
afresh. Nobody wants that to happen.
“Do it once, do it well,” Mr Williams says. “You never want to see that cable again.”
Progressing by making connections
Interconnectors represent a small but rapidly growing part of National
Grid’s business (Emily Gosden writes). The utility giant already co-owns
Britain’s existing subsea power cables linked to France and the
Netherlands, but there are more in the pipeline. As well as the new
North Sea Link to Norway, it is building the Nemo link to Belgium, is
preparing to build an interconnector to Denmark and a second to France.
“It’s our growth area,” Jon Butterworth, head of National Grid’s
non-regulated business, says. “We are actively looking at more
interconnectors.” Indeed, the company has early plans for a link
crossing part of the northern Atlantic to Iceland and is understood to
be considering second links to the Netherlands and Norway.
The projects offer the potential for higher returns than the Grid’s core
domestic power and gas networks. It could earn up to 8 per cent for the
North Sea Link, compared with about 4.5 per cent on most of its
regulated business, using Ofgem’s post-tax real project return figures.
However, the expansion has fuelled concerns about a potential conflict
of interest between National Grid’s role as system operator, advising
the government on keeping the lights on, and its commercial interest in
developing interconnectors.
SOURCE
Global warming not happening in China
How often have we heard that extreme weather is a sign of global warming?
In one of the most comprehensive studies on trends in local severe
weather patterns to date, an international team of researchers
found
that the frequency of hail storms, thunderstorms and high wind events
has decreased by nearly 50 percent on average throughout China since
1960.
The team analyzed data from the most robust meteorological database
known, the Chinese National Meteorology Information Center, a network of
983 weather observatories stationed throughout China's 3.7 million
square miles. Meteorologists have been collecting surface weather data
through the network since 1951 or earlier, which provided the
researchers an unprecedented look at local severe weather occurrences.
"Most of the data published on trends in severe weather has been
incomplete or collected for a limited short period," said Fuqing Zhang,
professor of meteorology and atmospheric science and director, Center
for Advanced Data Assimilation and Predictability Techniques, Penn
State. "The record we used is, to the best of our knowledge, the
largest, both in time scale and area of land covered."
The team, who report their findings today (Feb. 17) in Scientific
Reports, found that the strength of the East Asian Summer Monsoon
decreased at a rate strongly correlated to that of severe weather
throughout the same time period. The monsoon is an annually recurring,
long-term weather phenomenon that brings warm, moist air from the south
to China in the summer, and cooler air from the north to China in the
winter. A monsoon's strength is measured by calculating the average
meridian wind speed in this area.
"We believe that changes in monsoon intensity are affecting severe
weather in the area because of the strong correlation we found, but we
cannot say the monsoon is the exclusive cause," said Zhang. "A monsoon
is one of the major drivers of severe weather because it affects the
three necessary 'ingredients' for severe weather, which are wind shear,
instability and triggering."
Wind shear is the difference between the wind speed and direction at
different altitudes. Because a monsoon brings southerly winds into
China, a weaker summer monsoon would decrease the overall low
tropospheric wind shear. The weaker monsoons would also bring less warm,
moist air from the south—one of the most common sources of instability
in the atmosphere. A common triggering mechanism for severe convective
weather is lifting by the front, a high temperature gradient across the
monsoon, and this would also be reduced in a weaker summer monsoon.
Some studies suggest that climate change may be one of the reasons that
the Asian Summer Monsoon weakened. One factor in monsoon formation is
the difference between the temperature above land and the temperature
above adjacent ocean or sea. A warming climate would affect the
difference between these two and, as a result, simulations show that
this could continue decreasing the monsoon's strength. However, the team
noted that other major changes in the area—such as an increase in
industrialization and air pollution in China in the 1980s—might have
played a significant role in the region's atmospheric changes and could
affect the severe weather.
While a decrease in severe weather might sound beneficial, it may not always be a good thing.
"There are many natural cycles that rely on severe weather and the
precipitation it brings," said Qinghong Zhang, professor of atmospheric
and oceanic sciences, Peking University, lead author of the study, who
conducted this research while on sabbatical at Penn State. "A decrease
in storms could potentially lead to an increase in droughts. Also, some
theorize that while the frequency of severe weather decreases, their
intensity could potentially increase. We cannot say if this is true yet,
but it is something we will analyze in the future."
This was the first study in its level of detail because of the amount of
data collected by the Chinese National Meteorology Information Center.
The study also showed that occurrences of hail remained relatively
steady from 1961 through the 1980s before plummeting.
"The frequency of thunderstorms and high winds decreased gradually over
the time period we studied, but not hail," said Qinghong Zhang. "This is
something we don't fully understand at this point but plan to
investigate more."
SOURCE
Global warming: Be fair to both sides
The public is vastly misinformed on the global warming/climate change
issue, because of the utter one-sidedness of the media's coverage. I
know doom and gloom sells, but whipping up hysteria with headlines about
rising seas, melting glaciers and climbing temperatures is
irresponsible and dangerous. 1970s headlines threatened a new ice age,
1980s headlines warned us of population growth that would lead to global
starvation, and now we are told we'll burn to death because of
carbon-dioxide emissions.
To present the debate fairly, first the two protagonists must be
identified. They are the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Control and
the Nongovernmental Panel on Climate Control. The IPCC is a branch of
the United Nations. It is not a scientific panel. Dr. Rajendra Pachauri,
its former chairman, explains: "We are an intergovernmental body, and
we do what the governments of the world want us to do. If the
governments decide we should do things differently and come up with a
vastly different set of products, we would be at their beck and call."
Another U.N. climate official, Ottmar Edenhofer, stated that the goal of
environmental policy is to "redistribute de facto the world's wealth by
climate policy."
The NIPCC is a group of nongovernment scientists. According to its
website, the NIPCC "seeks to objectively analyze and interpret data and
facts without conforming to any specific agenda." The NIPCC is funded by
special interests specifically to counter the claims coming from the
IPCC. I am not insinuating that either one of these groups is right or
wrong, but rather that the media should inform the public of the
players.
Second, presenting the debate in an antagonistic manner ignores the fact
that there is common ground and scientific agreement between some of
the players on the two sides. Both state that the climate has always
changed and always will. They agree that there was a "pause" in global
warming from 1998 to 2015. It is also agreed that carbon dioxide is a
greenhouse gas, the accumulation of which warms the lower atmosphere.
And there's consensus that the Industrial Revolution produced a new
source of carbon-dioxide emissions. They also agree that a temperature
increase of about 0.7 degrees centigrade may (my emphasis) have occurred
in the 20th century.
The ongoing debate is fueled by science issues. The most contentious is
exactly how much the industrial (read human) carbon-dioxide emissions
contribute or will contribute to warming. There is also debate as to
whether humans have caused any dangerous warming for the past 50 or so
years. And finally there is considerable doubt as to whether the various
computer models used by the IPCC can accurately predict the climate 100
years from today.
Use these suggestions as a basis for fair and honest coverage. This is a
political debate and should be presented as such. If you have an
opinion about global warming, remain flexible, because the science is
most certainly not settled.
SOURCE
Australia: Coal proves its worth while the Left tilts at windmills
[Former Leftist leader] Kevin Rudd breezed into the Sky News studio in
Canberra last week to decry the lack of “deep, strong, committed
national leadership” since the electorate’s foolish decision to turf
him out of office.
It was “nuts” to remove the carbon tax, he said. “Where we are now can be summed up in three words: dumb, dumb, dumb.”
Australia’s energy market could be dumber still if Labor wins office and
pursues its vanity target of 50 per cent renewable energy by 2030. The
plight of South Australia, the canary in the turbine blades,
demonstrates what happens when an economy becomes hostage to unreliable
sources of power.
Yet Rudd was unapologetic. Coal? Don’t get him started. “The message for
coal, long-term globally, is down and out,” he informed us. We need “a
heavy mix of renewables”, which was why he was proud that the government
had introduced the renewable energy target.
In the real world, the one outside Rudd’s brain, the RET is nothing to
be proud of. It is one of the most expensive public policy disasters of
the century, market intervention on a massive scale with unfair and
unintended consequences that will haunt Australians for decades.
Rudd, determined to tackle the era’s “greatest moral challenge”, upped
the target by more than 450 per cent in an uncosted promise before the
2007 election.
It was crazy, as the Productivity Commission politely tried to tell him
in a 2008 submission. The target would not increase abatement but would
impose extra costs and lead to higher electricity prices, the commission
warned.
It would favour existing technologies — namely wind and solar — while
holding back new ideas that might ultimately be more successful.
Rudd, of course, knew better. Not for the last time, he ignored the
Productivity Commission and pushed ahead with his renewable target of
45,000GWh by 2020, of which 41,000GWh would come from large-scale wind
and solar.
If the policy was designed to punish Australian consumers, it was a
roaring success. Household electricity bills increased by 92 per cent
under the Rudd-Gillard governments, six times the level of inflation.
Rudd went further, spending $4.15 billion on dubious clean energy
boondoggles. He put $1.6bn into solar technologies, delivered $465
million to establish the research institute Renewables Australia, gave
$480m to the National Solar Schools Program to give schools “a head
start in tackling climate change and conserving our precious water
supplies”. Easy come, easy go; the money tree seemed ripe for picking.
The cost of meeting Rudd’s windmill and solar fetish has been
extraordinary. Wind-generated power is roughly three-times more
expensive than traditional energy, and large-scale solar even pricier.
It has taken cross-subsidies of $22bn to keep renewables viable,
according to a 2014 review for the federal government. The economy-wide
cost was put at $29bn.
It amounts to industry welfare on steroids. Corporations that jumped on
the clean energy gravy train have benefited from assistance on a far
greater scale than that we once lavished on the car industry.
Wind farm operators work in splendid isolation from the risk and
uncertainty that trouble ordinary businesses. Their share price is not
driven by supply and demand for electricity, but by the funny-money
world of large-scale generation certificates.
When the LGC spot price shot up from $52 in July 2015 to $86, the value of Infigen’s stock quadrupled.
Coal energy producers, on the other hand, saw their fortunes decline.
The Alinta power station closed at Port Augusta in May last year, ground
down by operating losses of about $100m.
The result of Labor’s ill-considered RET policy should shame the social
justice party into silence. Shareholders in the likes of Infigen have
grown rich by squeezing coal operators out of business with all that
entails: the loss of 440 jobs at Port Augusta, for example, and the
threat the closure presents to jobs in other South Australian
industries.
They have grown rich through a scheme that has made the electricity grid more unstable and reduced the reliability of supply.
They have grown rich through a scheme that has more than doubled the
cost of running an airconditioner, a detail that probably won’t trouble
Infigen’s executives on the 22nd floor of their five-star energy-rated
Pitt Street, Sydney, headquarters but would make life uncomfortable for a
pensioner surviving on $437 a week in Adelaide’s northern suburbs.
On paper, the case for abolishing the RET is strong. Deloitte’s
estimates the reduction in electricity prices would add $28.8bn to GDP
by 2030 and create 50,000 jobs.
The politics of liberalising the energy market would be punishing,
however, and all but impossible to negotiate through the Senate.
The status quo — a 23.5 per cent renewable target by 2020 — will require
doubling the capacity of wind and solar and will further erode the
viability of coal plants. The doubling of energy future prices that
followed the announcement of the closure of Victoria’s Hazelwood power
station is a sign of things to come.
Rudd’s claim that coal is “down and out” will come as news to the
Japanese government, which is planning up to 47 coal-fired, high-energy,
low-emissions plants burning high-quality Australian black coal.
It would be viable in Australia, too, if energy providers enjoyed a free
market. With gas prices high, ultra-supercritical coal generation would
fill the demand for base-load power.
Yet the uncertainty of Labor’s greener-than-thou policies — not just a
50 per cent RET but a price on carbon, too — could yet make the end of
coal a self-fulfilling prophecy.
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
21 February, 2017
Strange science
The article below says that global warming cools the temperature in
the Pacific and that a cooler Pacific is likely to produce centuries of
drought in California. It appeared just 4 months before the
current floods: A very large predictive failure.
But it
was a nutty article anyway. The Pacific is the world's largest
body of water. Why should global warming cool it? How can
something global leave out the Pacific or even a large part of the
Pacific? The authors could have avoided the egg currently residing on
their faces if they had questioned their finding that warming causes
ocean cooling. Such an absurd finding should have led them to
question whether or not something was wrong with their research
methods. There clearly was.Prolonged California aridity linked to climate warming and Pacific sea surface temperature
Glen M. MacDonald et al.
Abstract
California
has experienced a dry 21st century capped by severe drought from 2012
through 2015 prompting questions about hydroclimatic sensitivity to
anthropogenic climate change and implications for the future. We address
these questions using a Holocene lake sediment record of hydrologic
change from the Sierra Nevada Mountains coupled with marine sediment
records from the Pacific. These data provide evidence of a persistent
relationship between past climate warming, Pacific sea surface
temperature (SST) shifts and centennial to millennial episodes of
California aridity. The link is most evident during the thermal-maximum
of the mid-Holocene (~8 to 3?ka; ka = 1,000 calendar years before
present) and during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) (~1?ka to
0.7?ka). In both cases, climate warming corresponded with cooling of the
eastern tropical Pacific despite differences in the factors producing
increased radiative forcing. The magnitude of prolonged eastern Pacific
cooling was modest, similar to observed La Niña excursions of 1o to
2?°C. Given differences with current radiative forcing it remains
uncertain if the Pacific will react in a similar manner in the 21st
century, but should it follow apparent past behavior more intense and
prolonged aridity in California would result.
SOURCE CA: Global warming causes droughts, global warming causes floods. Is there anything it can't do?Credulous journalists below just parrot what the incompetent scientists sayWith
California having its most rainy winter in years, residents have relied
on emergency spillways and other precautions for the past two weeks.
The
night of Feb. 11, the Oroville dam filled with rain and its emergency
spillway was used for the first time. The dam’s emergency spillway,
however, collapsed. The residents of Oroville and surrounding towns
downstream were ordered to evacuate immediately.
CSUN professor
of hydrogeology Ali Tabidian said this is one of the major issues with
global warming, which is causing such extreme weather. When it comes to
floods, Tabidian said, they’re going to be bigger and more frequent.
He
also said dams and levees are based on years of data. So engineers do
their best to take this information into account when they’re designing
precautions. However, the type of rain and climate happening now is not
in the data from the past because of global warming.
“A lot of flood control projects, these are based on old data,” Tabidian said.
Not
only is global warming an issue, but urbanization is as well. According
to Tabidian, with urbanization there is an increase of asphalt and a
decrease in soil. Therefore, when it rains, there’s not as much soil to
absorb it. All the extra water will flow into lakes and rivers.
“With so many homes and shopping centers, it’s unbelievable and going to generate more runoff and bigger floods,” Tabidian said.
SOURCE High efficiency, low emission (HELE) coal-fired powerDeploying
high efficiency, low emission (HELE) coal-fired power plants is a key
first step along a pathway to near-zero emissions from coal with carbon
capture, use and storage (CCUS). HELE technologies are commercially
available now and, if deployed, can reduce greenhouse gas emissions from
the entire power sector by around 20%.
What does improving efficiency mean?
Improving
efficiency increases the amount of energy that can be extracted from a
single unit of coal. A one percentage point improvement in the
efficiency of a conventional pulverised coal combustion plant results in
a 2-3% reduction in CO2 emissions.
What can be achieved?
Moving
the current average global efficiency rate of coal-fired power plants
from 33% to 40% by deploying more advanced off-the-shelf technology
could cut two gigatonnes of CO2 emissions now, while allowing affordable
energy for economic development and poverty reduction. Two gigatonnes
of CO2 is equivalent to:
* India's annual CO2 emissions
* Running the European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme for 53 years at its current rate, or
* Running the Kyoto Protocol three times over
In
addition to significant benefits from reduced CO2 emissions, these
modern high efficiency plants have significantly reduced emissions of
nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulphur dioxide (SO2 ) and particulate matter
(PM). Beyond the climate benefits of reduced CO2 emissions, reduction in
these pollutants is of additional importance at the local and regional
level to address air quality and related health concerns.
Supercritical & Ultrasupercritical Technology
New
pulverised coal combustion systems – utilising supercritical and
ultra-supercritical technology – operate at increasingly higher
temperatures and pressures and therefore achieve higher efficiencies
than conventional PCC units and significant CO2 reductions.
Supercritical steam cycle technology has been used for decades and is
becoming the system of choice for new commercial coal-fired plants in
many countries.
Research and development is under way for
ultra-supercritical units operating at even higher efficiencies,
potentially up to around 50%. The introduction of ultra-supercritical
technology has been driven over recent years in countries such as
Denmark, Germany and Japan, in order to achieve improved plant
efficiencies and reduce fuel costs.
SOURCE Canada: Murray Energy CEO claims global warming is a hoax, says 4,000 scientists tell him soMurray
Energy Chairman and CEO Robert Murray on Friday claimed global warming
is a hoax and repeated a debunked claim that the phenomenon cannot exist
because the Earth's surface is cooling.
Murray appeared on
CNBC's "Squawk Box" to discuss Republicans' rollback of an Obama-era
rule that would have restricted coal mining near waterways. President
Donald Trump signed the measure on Thursday in front of Murray and a
group of Murray Energy workers.
Murray Energy is the country's
largest coal miner. Many of its mines are in Appalachia, a region that
would suffer some of the biggest impacts of the rule. Murray also
successfully sued to delay implementation of the Clean Power Plan, which
would regulate planet-warming carbon emissions from power plants.
Asked
about the economic analysis behind President Barack Obama's energy
regulations, Murray said, "There's no scientific analysis either. I have
4,000 scientists that tell me global warming is a hoax. The Earth has
cooled for 20 years."
It was not immediately clear who the 4,000 scientists Murray referenced are.
Asked
for clarification, a spokesperson for Murray Energy sent links to the
Manhattan Declaration on Climate Change, which says "human-caused
climate change is not a global crisis," and the Global Warming Petition
Project, a list of science degree holders who don't think humans cause
climate change.
Murray's claim that there is no scientific analysis behind climate change is not true.
A
landmark 2013 study assessed 4,000 peer-reviewed papers by 10,000
climate scientists that gave an opinion on the cause of climate change.
It showed 97 percent of the authors attributed climate change to manmade
causes.
The above is a false claim. The "landmark" Cook
study in fact showed that two thirds of climate scientists took no
position on global warming. Read the abstract for yourself here SOURCE Australian Leftist leader fails to specify cost of his renewables policy when asked four timesBill
Shorten has declined to be specific about the cost of Labor’s goal to
have 50% of Australia’s electricity generated from renewable sources by
2030.
In an early morning radio interview on Wednesday, Shorten
was asked four times about the cost to consumers of executing such a
transition, but the Labor leader deflected, pointing to the costs of not
acting.
With the Coalition intent on making energy policy a
point of sharp partisan difference, Malcolm Turnbull pounced on the
interview, telling reporters in Canberra the Labor leader had admitted
“he had no idea what his reckless renewable energy target would cost, or
what its consequences would be.”
“He confirmed precisely the
criticism that we’ve made about Mr Shorten, that he is literally
clueless on this subject, mindless, just like South Australia has been.”
Labor’s
50% by 2030 policy is not a RET, it is an “aspiration”. Labor’s
election policy says the 50% national goal would work in concert with
state-based RET schemes, which the prime minister has blasted
consistently since a storm plunged South Australia into a statewide
blackout last year.
During an interview with the ABC Shorten was
pressed repeatedly about the practical consequences of the shift – the
costs to consumers of executing such a significant transition in
Australia’s energy mix.
Shorten attempted to explain the broad
rationale for increasing renewables in Australia’s energy mix, and he
said Labor believed there was “a range of levers which assist, from
having an emissions intensive scheme and the energy intensity scheme in
the energy industry, having a market trading scheme and an emissions
trading scheme [and] looking at the rate of land clearing.”
“Our answer is very, very straightforward. We think the cost of not acting is far greater.”
“We
don’t think we could sustain the cost as the Liberals are saying, of
building new coal-fired power generation on the scale which Mr Turnbull
is saying and we don’t think that, from insurance to drought to extreme
weather events, that we can simply go business as usual.”
Australian
National University research associate Hugh Saddler in July 2015
estimated Labor’s policy would increase wholesale market prices by four
cents per kWh above present levels in every state market except South
Australia.
By signing on to the Paris climate agreement, the
Turnbull government has committed Australia to reducing emissions by
26-28% on 2005 levels by 2030. Meeting those targets will impose costs
on consumers.
The government has been advised by numerous experts
that its Direct Action climate policy will not allow Australia to meet
the Paris targets, and adopting an emissions intensity scheme, a form of
carbon trading, would allow Australia to reduce emissions from energy
at the least cost to households and businesses.
The government has thus far rejected that advice.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
20 February, 2017
The war on coal is over with Scott Pruitt in at EPA, sets stage for 2018 Senate electionsThe Senate confirmed Scott Pruitt on Friday to run the Environmental Protection Agency. Vote was 52 to 46Ever
since his time as Oklahoma Attorney General, Pruitt has fought the EPA
at every turn throughout the country. Pruitt joined 11 other Republican
Attorneys General in 2013 to fight against the sue and settle lawsuits
of the EPA which provided the agency with wide latitude over the
enforcement of environmental law, where environmental groups sue the EPA
and to avoid further litigation, the parties settle the suit and the
EPA is given permission to address the issue with newly expanded powers.
There
will also be an opportunity for the EPA to reconsider the 2009 Carbon
Endangerment Finding, defining carbon dioxide as a harmful pollutant
under the Clean Air Act, which has been used to justify the continual
implementation of regulations that expand the agency’s power and wage a
war on coal via the new and existing power plant rules.
The EPA
has successfully forced states to regulate the coal industry as an
extension of the Clean Air Act, and given itself far more oversight than
ever intended.
This assault on coal has placed burdens on the
economy that Pruitt has consistently seen as both unattainable and
unnecessary, arguing in 2014 in response to a new EPA regulation on
emission controls that “The EPA can’t force utility companies to
actually incorporate emission control measures unless they’re achievable
through technology. And here, there really isn’t any demonstrated
technology that will see a reduction of 30 percent… this is coerced
conservation.”
Pruitt’s constant defense against this coercion by
the agency built by the Obama Administration allowed all 52 Senate
Republicans to back him Thursday morning as his confirmation process
moved forward. However, Republicans were not alone in their favor for
Pruitt.
West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin and North Dakota
Senator Heidi Heitkamp both voted in support of Scott Pruitt as well,
and this vote could be what saves them in 2018 as Democrats defend a
whopping 25 Senate seats. Even Democrats are starting to learn that the
war on coal is hurting the jobs of their constituents and polluting the
economies of their states.
The Washington Post reported in Dec.
2016 that West Virginians were “euphoric” and “thrilled” by Trump’s win
noting that “Before the price of coal collapsed, before the number of
working miners in the state fell to a 100-year low of 15,000, miners
could make $60,000, even $75,000 a year, without a high school
education. Walmart money doesn’t come close.”
In states with a
strong mining industry, a senator’s vote for Pruitt is a vote to return
economic possibility and the American dream to thousands of workers.
Even
Heidi Heitkamp has been consistently willing to oppose her Democratic
establishment when it comes to assisting her constituents in getting
back to work. In 2015 Heitkamp argued “EPA’s over-reaching policy won’t
work for North Dakota. We now have EPA in the driver’s seat dictating
how we generate and transmit electricity, and that’s a dangerous road to
go down.”
Constituents in states like North Dakota and West
Virginia were integral in developing a support base for Trump that
Democrats willfully ignored. Heitkamp and Manchin have proved that they
are listening to their people, other Democrats would be wise to do the
same.
The rust belt was integral to Trump’s election in part
because of their reliance on coal; for states like Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Virginia, and Indiana, three of which Trump won, Trump was the easy
decision to get the people back to work and make the economy stable once
again. Yet all four of these states have Democrats in office, all up in
2018 as well, who voted against Pruitt: Sherrod Brown, Bob Casey, Mark
Warner and Joe Donnelly.
In a statement, Americans for Limited
Government President Rick Manning blasted these senators as “those
politicians who voted against the Pruitt nomination told the workers in
their states they prefer San Francisco radical environmentalist campaign
cash over the votes and livelihoods of their constituents.”
Clearly,
Heitkamp and Manchin are focused on creating jobs for their
constituents and retaining their position in 2018, and proof was their
vote for Pruitt. Brown, Casey, Warner and Donnelly, not so much.
President
Obama led the war on coal, and now Scott Pruitt is about to end it as
EPA Administrator. The work he has done in Oklahoma sets the stage for
ending EPA overreach and in doing so, he can force other Democrats in
the Senate to actually start listening to their constituents — or else
face the music in 2018.
SOURCE Demon coalCoal
is a gift that we have in abundance. The vast reserves of coal
guarantee the United States energy for hundreds of years. Coal is
efficient. No fuel, other than uranium, is cheaper. Coal
burns clean in modern plants. Strip-mining coal in the modern way
improves the landscape. According to the Energy Information
Administration, the U.S. demonstrated coal reserve base is 477 billion
2,000-pound tons, enough for more than 500 years at current consumption
rates.
In the eyes of the diminishing crowd of believers in
catastrophic global warming, coal is evil, a demon. Why?
Because it is mostly carbon, and when coal is burned, carbon dioxide
(CO2) is created. CO2 is supposed to create a disaster. As
the predicted disaster (global warming) fails to materialize, a new
disaster (extreme weather) is invented. The disasters that never
materialize are blamed on CO2 and indirectly on coal.
Apocalyptic
ideology needs scapegoats. Coal and CO2 serve well.
According to the Sierra Club, demon coal will destroy our world and
poison our children. If the Sierra Club only offered mountain
meadows and wildflowers, it would be pretty boring and wouldn't raise
$100 million every year. Demons and conspiracies are the stuff
that raises big money.
The CO2 released by burning coal is
wonderful stuff. Plants breathe CO2, and if there is more CO2 in
the air, the plants breathe easy, grow faster, and need less
water. Greenhouse operators put CO2 generators in their
greenhouses because more CO2 helps plants thrive. Worldwide
agriculture is going strong, partly because the amount of CO2 in the
atmosphere has increased from about 0.03% to 0.04%.
The idea that
"science" proves that CO2 is a demon is most plausible to people with
limited exposure to down and dirty science. Down and dirty science
is at its dirtiest when it is seeking money or protecting its
money. Former president Dwight Eisenhower, in his 1961 farewell
address, anticipated global warming:
The prospect of domination
of the nation's scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and
the power of money is ever present - and is gravely to be regarded.
Yet,
in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should,
we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public
policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological
elite.
Eisenhower's fears have materialized. A not so elite
alliance of climate scientists and federal bureaucrats has captured
public policy, demonizing CO2 and predicting a global disaster.
Around 2010, the disaster narrative shifted from "global warming" to
"extreme weather." That should have closed down the demonization
of CO2. It's not fair to keep changing disasters. But they
had to change their disaster, because global warming stopped beginning
in 1998. By 2010, the revision of the predicted disaster was well
underway.
The failure of global warming to continue after 1998
is powerful evidence that the theories predicting disastrous global
warming from CO2 are simply wrong and that the amount of warming that
might happen is likely negligible or beneficial. Global
environmental data suggests that global warming is a scare story whose
time has passed. The failure of the globe to warm for the last two
decades is validated by satellite temperature measurements, the most
reliable form.
In 2015, an attempt was made to erase the global
warming pause by re-analyzing ocean temperatures. That attempt has
been discredited by angry whistleblowers.
Psychologically,
extreme weather is a good choice for a disaster. It seems that weather
is becoming more extreme because the memory of previous extreme weather
episodes fades with time. Scientifically, extreme weather clashes
with global warming. According to global warming theory, the poles
are supposed to warm more than the tropics, decreasing the temperature
difference between the tropics and the poles. But weather is
driven by that temperature difference. Less temperature difference
due to global warming should result in less energy available to drive
weather. But extreme weather is an elastic concept. If the
weather is nice and uneventful for long periods, that is extreme,
too. In the U.S., it is clear that extreme weather is decreasing.
The
promoters of dubious science like to add conspiracy theories to
discredit objections. Anyone who disagrees with them is part of
the conspiracy. In the case of global warming skeptics, they are
supposedly part of a conspiracy promoted by the fossil fuel companies.
The
Harvard professor Naomi Oreskes deserves the title of global warming
conspiracy queen. According to Dr. Oreskes, the oil companies, in
league with certain right-wing scientists, belonging to the
military-industrial complex, are plotting to spread disinformation
critical of the absolutely clear and true science of global warming that
has been devised by very sincere and nice scientists. She even
made a movie about it.
Dr. Oreskes should get in touch with the
many inventors of high-mileage carburetors whose inventions are
allegedly being suppressed by the oil companies. Also interesting
are the people who claim that General Motors bought up and closed down
all the trolley car lines so people would have to buy cars and buses.
The
organization that hates coal more than any other is the Sierra
Club. Every scrap of literature produced by the Sierra Club on the
subject of coal includes a picture of a backlit smokestack. By
photographing a smokestack emitting harmless condensing steam with the
sun behind the smokestack, the steam can be made to look like black
smoke.
It is rare to see black smoke coming from a
smokestack. Polluting smokestacks disappeared many decades
ago. Below is a picture of the John W. Turk generating plant in
Arkansas. Nothing visible comes out of the smokestack even while
it is burning 300 tons of coal per hour. Noxious substances in the
flue gas have been scrubbed down to a low level by pollution control
equipment.
In a modern plant that burns coal to generate
electricity, the principal polluting substances - sulfur, particulates,
nitrogen oxides, and mercury - are removed from the flue gas and reduced
to low levels before the gas enters the smokestack. The ash left over
after the coal is burned is buried in a safe landfill. In spite of
being overregulated by the government, and demonized by the Sierra
Club, modern coal plants are highly reliable and generate electricity
cleanly and cheaply. The carbon dioxide emitted is harmless and
increases agricultural productivity.
By using coal to generate
electricity, natural gas, a premium fuel, can be reserved for low-duty
cycle, peaking power plants, for powering transportation, for domestic
heating, or to be exported to customers in Asia. Natural gas
should not be squandered by using it to generate base load electricity
when vast coal supplies are available.
But, if you listen to the
Sierra Club, coal is a dirty and outdated fuel. Rather than
suggesting natural gas or nuclear, the normal alternatives to coal, the
Sierra Club wants us to use windmills to generate electricity. The
Sierra Club is especially interested in offshore wind:
Offshore
wind produces no air or water pollution as it generates electricity.
Coal plants, by contrast, pollute our air with soot and smog that cause
or worsen respiratory illnesses, heart disease, and asthma. Asthma from
coal plant pollution is estimated to cause3,000,000 lost work days and
554,000 asthma attacks each year, 26,000 of which are severe enough to
require an emergency room visit. Coal plants also dirty our water with
toxic mercury that can cause birth defects, neurological disorders, and
developmental delays in children.
The medical claims that the
Sierra Club attributes to modern coal use are false or at least
astronomically exaggerated. Note the fake, nearly exact numbers
for asthma attacks and emergency room visits.
The problem with
wind power is that it stops when the wind stops. You have to have
alternative plants to take up the load. With wind power, you don't
replace the fossil fuel infrastructure. It keeps on working, as a
backup, part-time and at great cost.
SOURCE If THIS isn’t evidence of SABOTAGE against Trump, I don’t know what it isBy Allen West
I was driving down I-45 from Dallas to Houston Friday morning I heard this very disturbing news.
As
reported by The Week, “In a last-ditch effort to block the confirmation
of President Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency director nominee
Scott Pruitt, EPA employees have resorted to calling their senators.
(Ahead
of) Pruitt’s confirmation vote… employees at the agency (were) growing
increasingly worried about the possibility of a new boss who has vowed
to “get rid of” the EPA and who sued the EPA “at least 14 times” while
he was Oklahoma’s attorney general, The New York Times reported.
“It
seems like Trump and Pruitt want a complete reversal of what EPA has
done. I don’t know if there’s any other agency that’s been so reviled,”
said EPA lawyer Nicole Cantello. “So it’s in our interests to do this.”
The
bold and blatant effort is out of the ordinary, and perhaps
unprecedented. “I’ve been here for 30 years, and I’ve never called my
senator about a nominee before,” an EPA employee in North Carolina told
The New York Times. Former EPA employee Judith Enck said the rebellion
reveals how desperate EPA employees are to block Pruitt. “EPA staff are
pretty careful. They’re risk-averse,” Enck said. “If people are saying
and doing things like this, it’s because they’re really concerned.”
Former
Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt was indeed confirmed as the new
Director of the EPA on Friday, obviously to the chagrin of the employees
of the agency he’s about to lead.
What type of bizarro world are we
living in where government employees of an agency are now calling to
block the nominations of their future boss? Haven’t these folks EVER
heard of the Hatch Act (which prevents government employees from
lobbying)?
This is purely political activity and it should not
and must not be tolerated. However, this abhorrent behavior has been
playing out quite often in these early days of the Trump administration.
There’ve been reported instances of similar actions in the Department
of Defense and State, and we all know someone is leaking classified
information to the liberal progressive media in order to undermine — no,
sabotage — the peaceful transition of government.
These are
government employees whose salaries are paid for by the American
taxpayer. They should not be using their positions as political
platforms, which is what the Hatch Act seeks to prevent. This just goes
to further lend credibility to this belief that there’s some sort of
residual rear guard, Obama shadow government left in place to create
chaos for the incoming Trump administration.
Can you just imagine
if, in February 2009, there were government agency employees calling
their Senators, demanding they block Obama cabinet and agency
appointees? The liberal progressive media would be going apoplectic!
Instead they’re busy frothing over President Trump’s impromptu press
conference from Thursday. Yes, it is the media’s fault they’re losing
credibility and are hardly trusted. A story such as this should be
receiving immense coverage, but instead, these rogue employees are being
heralded as heroes and courageous by the leftists.
It’s time
some very serious actions take place, and the government unions are not
going to like what I say. These folks cannot see themselves any longer
as being impervious to suffering any consequences to their actions. Not
just this, but also the failures of government inefficiency — a reason
why there are so many government hired contractors.
These government employees must be fired.
They
cannot operate in this realm of feeling “untouchable” any longer. Their
paychecks are signed by us, the American taxpayer. They don’t work for
any political party, cause, or in advancement of an ideology. They are
part of the swamp, the bureaucratic administrative state, and there is
no place more indicative of that than the IRS and the EPA. This agency
in the past eight years was used as an ideological agenda weapon of mass
destruction.
SOURCE US Congress launches a probe into climate data that duped world leaders over global warmingRevelations
by the Mail on Sunday about how world leaders were misled over global
warming by the main source of climate data have triggered a probe by the
US Congress.
Republican Lamar Smith, who chairs the influential
House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space and Technology,
announced the inquiry last week in a letter to Benjamin Friedman, acting
chief of the organisation at the heart of the MoS disclosures, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
He
renewed demands, first made in 2015, for all internal NOAA documents and
communications between staff behind a controversial scientific paper,
which made a huge impact on the Paris Agreement on climate change of
that year, signed by figures including David Cameron and Barack Obama.
The
paper – dubbed the ‘Pausebuster’ – claimed that contrary to what
scientists had been saying for several years, there was no ‘pause’ or
‘slowdown’ in the rate of global warming in the early 21st Century, and
that in fact it had been taking place even faster than before.
The ‘pause’ had been seized on by climate sceptics, because throughout the period, carbon dioxide emissions continued to rise.
This
month, this newspaper revealed evidence from a whistleblower, Dr John
Bates, who until the end of 2016 was one of two NOAA ‘principal
scientists’ working on climate change, showing that the paper based its
claims on an ‘unverified’ and experimental dataset measuring land
temperatures, and on a then newly issued sea-temperature dataset that is
now to be withdrawn and replaced because it exaggerates both the scale
and speed of warming.
The ‘Pausebuster’ paper’s claims were
trumpeted around the world when it was published by the journal Science
in June 2015, six months before the UN Paris climate-change conference.
Its assertions were highlighted in scientific briefings to officials who
hammered out the Agreement – which commits the developed world to
sweeping greenhouse-gas emissions cuts and pledges an additional £80
billion every year in ‘climate-related’ aid to poor nations.
In
his letter to NOAA, Congressman Smith expresses frustration that
previous demands for documents about the Pausebuster were not met,
although his committee took the unusual step of issuing a legal
subpoena. NOAA’s decision to withhold the documents was, he wrote,
‘without any justification in law’.
As for the revelations by
this newspaper, Mr Smith said they ‘raise additional questions as to
whether the science at NOAA is objective and free from political
interference’. NOAA has said it intends to bring in ‘independent outside
parties’ to investigate the Pausebuster and the flawed datasets.
Last
week Peter Stott, head of climate monitoring at the UK Met Office,
admitted that notwithstanding the Pausebuster, it was clear ‘the
slowdown hasn’t gone away’.
The ‘pause’ is clearly visible in the Met Office’s ‘HadCRUT 4’ climate dataset, calculated independently of NOAA.
Since
record highs caused last year by an ‘el Nino’ sea-warming event in the
Pacific, HadCRUT 4 has fallen by more than half a degree Celsius, and
its value for the world average temperature in January 2017 was about
the same as January 1998.
SOURCE Polar bear numbers still on the risePolar bear populations are still growing despite global warming, according to new research.
The
new population estimates from the 2016 Scientific Working Group are
somewhere between 22,633 to 32,257 bears, which is a net increase from
the 2015 number of 22,000 to 31,000. The current population numbers are a
sharp increase from 2005’s, which stated only 20,000 to 25,000 bears
remained — those numbers were a major increase from estimates that only
8,000 to 10,000 bears remained in the late 1960s.
Until the new
study, bear subpopulations in the Baffin Bay and Kane Basin (KB) were
thought to be in decline due to over-hunting and global warming. The new
report indicates this is not the case.
Scientists are
increasingly realizing that polar bears are much more resilient to
changing levels of sea ice than environmentalists previously believed,
and numerous healthy populations are thriving.
Predictions that
bears would die due to a lack of sea ice have continuously not come to
pass. Recent rumors about polar bear extinction underscore another time
when scientists discovered the creatures possess higher resilience to
changing levels of sea ice than previously believed. Another new study
by Canadian scientists found “no evidence” polar bears are currently
threatened by global warming.
“We see reason for concern, but
find no reliable evidence to support the contention that polar bears are
currently experiencing a climate crisis,” Canadian scientists wrote in
their study, published in the journal Ecology and Evolution.
Polar
bears became an icon for environmentalists who claimed that melting
Arctic sea ice could kill thousands of bears. Former Vice President Al
Gore heavily promoted this viewpoint by featuring polar bears swimming
for their lives and drowning in his 2006 film on global warming.
Fears
about global warming’s impact on polar bears even spurred the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service (FWS) to say that the bear was “threatened” under
the Endangered Species Act in 2008. Polar bears were the first species
to be listed over possibly being harmed in the future by global warming.
Scientists,
however, have increasingly been questioning alarmists as there are way
more polar bears alive today than 40 years ago.
In fact, polar
bears have likely survived past ice-free periods in the Arctic. There is
no evidence of large scale marine life extinctions in the Arctic in the
past 1.5 million years, despite the Arctic going through prolonged
periods with no summer ice cover.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
19 February, 2017
Sea
ice around Antarctica hits record low as NASA captures the moment
massive iceberg the size of Manhattan breaks away from giant
glacierOnce again a single event is being hailed as proof
of global warming. But you cannot logically do that. A
global theory requires global evidence. You can have warming in
one place while it is cooling elsewhere -- for no net effect. And
it IS cooling elsewhere. I repeat once again the graph showing ice
GROWTH in Greenland. The authors below slide around the Greenland
data by saying: "At the other end of the planet, ice covering the
Arctic Ocean has set repeated lows in recent years." It sure has
-- in recent years but not this year. Greenies sure can be
slippery.
And breaking ice shelves of course do not raise the
water level by one iota. They are FLOATING ice. Check your
Archimedes.
Also note that West Antarctica is normally more prone
to melting than the rest of Antarctica -- probably due to greater
subsurface vulcanismSea
ice around Antarctica has shrunk to the smallest annual extent on
record after years of resisting a trend of man-made global warming,
preliminary U.S. satellite data has revealed.
Ice floating around
the frozen continent usually melts to its smallest for the year around
the end of February, the southern hemisphere summer, before expanding
again as the autumn chill sets in.
This year, sea ice extent
contracted to 2.287 million square kilometres (883,015 square miles) on
Feb. 13, according to daily data from the U.S. National Snow and Ice
Data Center (NSIDC).
That extent is a fraction smaller than a
previous low of 2.290 million sq kms (884,173 square miles) recorded on
Feb. 27, 1997, in satellite records dating back to 1979.
It comes as NASA revealed stunning images of a huge area of ice breaking off from the Pine Island Glacier.
Pine
Island Glacier is one of the main glaciers responsible for moving ice
from the interior of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet to the ocean.
The
Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured these images of
Pine Island Glacier's floating edge before and after the recent break.
The top image shows the area on January 24, 2017, while the second image shows the same area on January 26.
About a kilometer or two of ice appears to have calved (broken off) from the shelf's front.
Mark Serreze, director of the NSIDC, said he would wait for a few days' more measurements to confirm the record low.
'But
unless something funny happens, we're looking at a record minimum in
Antarctica. Some people say it's already happened,' he told Reuters.
'We tend to be conservative by looking at five-day running averages.'
In
many recent years, the average extent of sea ice around Antarctica has
tended to expand despite the overall trend of global warming, blamed on a
build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, mainly from burning
fossil fuels.
People sceptical of mainstream findings by climate
scientists have often pointed to Antarctic sea ice as evidence against
global warming. Some climate scientists have linked the paradoxical
expansion to shifts in winds and ocean currents.
'We've always
thought of the Antarctic as the sleeping elephant starting to stir.
Well, maybe it's starting to stir now,' Serreze said.
World
average temperatures climbed to a record high in 2016 for the third year
in a row. Climate scientists say warming is causing more extreme days
of heat, downpours and is nudging up global sea levels.
At the other end of the planet, ice covering the Arctic Ocean has set repeated lows in recent years.
Combined,
the extent of sea ice at both ends of the planet is about 2 million sq
kms (772,200 square miles) less than the 1981-2010 averages for
mid-February, roughly the size of Mexico or Saudi Arabia.
The
shocking new NASA images show the reality of the problem, as Pine Island
Glacier has shed another block of ice into Antarctic waters.
The
loss was tiny compared to the icebergs that broke off in 2014 and 2015,
but the event is further evidence of the ice shelf's fragility.
SOURCE Canada: The public backlash rises as the credibility of high-cost low-carbon policies collapsesDespite
what you might hear from certain Canadian politicians, governments
everywhere are starting to back away from anti-carbon policies as the
backlash from voters continues to mount. We see it in Germany where
they’ve begun returning to coal power. We see it in the cancellation of
green subsidies in the U.K., Portugal and Spain. And there are even
signs of it in Ontario, which suspended plans for $3.8 billion in new
renewable contracts.
Something largely lost in the media flurry
over President Trump’s executive orders was the Republican Congress’s
unravelling of notable fossil fuel regulations. The House passed two
resolutions last week: one rescinding “war-on-coal” water-quality
standards, and another rescinding a rule requiring energy companies to
report payments made to governments to extract oil, gas and minerals.
This
is just the start. The Republicans will roll back more regulations.
President Trump will likely withdraw from the Paris COP21 agreement with
its weak, King-Canute-like commitments to keep temperatures rising no
more than 1.5 degrees by 2100. The United States will likely decline to
advance climate policies for at least four more years. But is it
behaving any differently than other countries?
In a recent
National Bureau of Economic Research paper, Yale University economist
William Nordhaus, a strong proponent of climate policies, shows that
government efforts have globally done little to reduce GHG emissions.
Only the EU has implemented national carbon policies and even those were
very modest. Nordhaus aptly calls all the empty talk from so many
governments, from South America to Scandinavia, the “Rhetoric of
Nations.”
Nordhaus argues that the original Kyoto accord target
of limiting temperature increases to no more than two degrees by 2100 is
now infeasible. An increase limited to two-and-a-half degrees is
technically feasible but “would require extreme, virtually universal
global policy measures.” His optimal path to achieve decarbonization
with more aggressive policies, without completely suffocating economic
growth, requires letting the global temperature rise by an expected 3.5
degrees by 2100.
Governments have a major credibility problem:
they’re overpromising and under-delivering. As I’ve written in this
space before, Canada’s “commitment” to reduce GHG emissions by 30 per
cent from 2005 levels is certain to fail, even if the optimistic
environment minister insists that target is but a “minimum.”
There
is, of course, a reason why governments are backing away from carbon
policies: voters don’t like them. This becomes apparent the moment the
public understands that increasing carbon prices comes at a cost. And
the phase-out of oil, gas and coal jobs don’t end up replaced by green
jobs, as politicians promised they would.
Take the example of
Ontario’s renewable energy policies, which have imposed high energy
costs by phasing-out coal and subsidizing wind and solar energy.
Sole-sourced, non-competitive contracts awarded to producers of wind and
solar power have become extremely expensive. Adding to that cost, for
every megawatt of intermittent solar and wind energy added to the grid,
another megawatt (or close to it) of reliable base-load power — natural
gas or nuclear — must be added as well, for those many days without
enough wind or sun. When there’s too much wind, solar or other power, as
often happens, Ontario has had to pay producers to curtail production,
or dump electricity at a loss into the markets of neighbouring
competitors.
SOURCE Now trees are bad?Scotland was originally heavily forestedSome
of Scotland’s greatest landscapes could be threatened by plans to
expand tree coverage to a quarter of the country, according to an
alliance of countryside campaigners.
The Scottish government has
set an ambitious target of increasing woodland cover from 17 per cent to
25 per cent by 2050. The SNP administration has also pledged to plant
10,000 extra hectares of trees by 2022 as part of its strategy to combat
climate change.
However, groups representing mountaineers and gamekeepers have forged an unlikely partnership to oppose the plans.
Mountaineering
Scotland (MS) and the Scottish Gamekeepers Association (SGA) have
submitted a joint letter expressing concern to Roseanna Cunningham, the
environment secretary.
SOURCE Britain receives final warning on ‘shameful’ air pollution levelsThe
European Commission has threatened Britain with court action and
hundreds of millions of pounds in fines for persistently breaching EU
limits on air pollution.
In a move described as shameful for the
UK, the commission sent a “final warning” yesterday, accusing the
country of failing to address breaches in 16 areas, including London,
Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and Glasgow.
Britain is one of five
EU countries served with the warning over illegal levels of nitrogen
dioxide, which causes heart and lung diseases. Diesel cars —
representing a third of those on British roads — are a big source of
NO2. Air pollution from sources including road traffic, industry,
farming and construction sites is linked to the early deaths of about
40,000 people a year in Britain.
SOURCE Could the EPA be gone by this time next year?Liberals are losing their minds over a new bill in Congress, and it’s only one sentence long. It reads:
“The Environmental Protection Agency shall terminate on December 31, 2018.”
Introduced
by freshman Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), it comes after a series of
potentially deadly cases in which people and the environment were
poisoned by the EPA. Not only did EPA officials spill three million
gallons of toxic waste into a Colorado river, they were caught
conducting banned human medical experiments in which people were forced
to inhale poisonous car exhaust, using the same methods used in
suicides.
Gaetz’s legislation has three co-sponsors: Reps. Steven Palazzo (R-Miss.), Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), and Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.)
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
17 February, 2017
Another brainless Warmist overgeneralizationIt
never stops. Warmists point to some unusual event somewhere and
conclude from that that the globe is warming. But climate is NOT
uniform. The temperature can be rising in one place while it is
falling elsewhere. And that is what we see below. Part of
Arctic Norway has warmed up a bit and that is presented as evidence of
global warming.
In fact other parts of the Arctic --
Greenland -- are getting colder. See the ice cover graph
below. These attempts to generalize from one instance are
statistical and brainless rubbish, albeit rubbish that is all to common
among Warmists. Global evidence is needed to support a global
theoryIn
the Arctic something odd is taking place. Temperatures in Spitzbergen,
on the Norwegian island of Svalbard, hit a balmy 4C on Monday,
At
this time of year they should be around minus 16C. Instead locals are
having to adapt to a fast-changing environment, one that leaves Norway’s
environment minister Vidar Helgesen in a sweat.
“What is happening now is a harbinger of things to come, we are seeing drastic changes,” he tells Climate Home in an interview.
“One
of our major glaciers is retreating one metre a day, two kilometres in
five years. It’s happening very fast and the world should take note.
“This will happen faster in the Arctic. We know a 2C rise in global average temperatures means up to 4C in the Arctic.”2
The
unusual conditions should alarm all governments, he says, given the
Arctic’s influence on global weather patterns and the evolving links
between climate change and issues such as conflict and migration.
SOURCE Trump's likely science adviser calls climate scientists 'glassy-eyed cult'The
man tipped as frontrunner for the role of science adviser to Donald
Trump has described climate scientists as “a glassy-eyed cult” in the
throes of a form of collective madness.
William Happer, an
eminent physicist at Princeton University, met Trump last month to
discuss the post and says that if he were offered the job he would take
it. Happer is highly regarded in the academic community, but many would
view his appointment as a further blow to the prospects of concerted
international action on climate change.
“There’s a whole area of
climate so-called science that is really more like a cult,” Happer told
the Guardian. “It’s like Hare Krishna or something like that. They’re
glassy-eyed and they chant. It will potentially harm the image of all
science.”
Trump has previously described global warming as “very
expensive … bullshit” and has signalled a continued hardline stance
since taking power. He has nominated the former Texas governor Rick
Perry, a staunch climate sceptic, as secretary of energy and hopes to
put the Environment Protection Agency (EPA) under the leadership of
Scott Pruitt, the Oklahoma attorney general, who has been one of the
agency’s most hostile critics.
John Holdren, Barack Obama’s
science adviser, said Happer’s outspoken opinions would be a
“substantial handicap” for a job that has traditionally involved
delivering mainstream scientific opinion to the heart of policymaking.
“Every
national academy of science agrees that the science is solid, that
climate change is real,” he said. “To call this a cult is absurd and …
an insult to the people who have done this work.”
Happer also
supports a controversial crackdown on the freedom of federal agency
scientists to speak out about their findings, arguing that mixed
messages on issues such as whether butter or margarine is healthier,
have led to people disregarding all public health information.
“So
many people are fed up of listening to the government lie to them about
margarine and climate change that when something is actually true and
beneficial they don’t listen,” he said, citing childhood vaccines as an
example. “The government should have a reputation of being completely
reliable about facts – real facts.”
Happer dismissed concerns
that Trump is “anti-science”, saying he had a positive impression of the
president during their January meeting. “He asked good questions – he
was very attentive, actually,” he said.
Climate change was
mentioned but was not the main focus of discussions, according to
Happer, who revealed that Trump had expressed support for solar energy
in areas like Arizona “where it makes sense”.
“His comments were
that of a technically literate person,” he said. “He wasn’t
ideologically opposed to renewables; he wasn’t ideologically in favour
of them either.”
Unlike many of his scientific peers, Happer is
in favour of contentious legislation aimed at reining in the ability of
federal agency staff to hold press conferences, give television
interviews and promote their findings on official websites.
The
“Secret Science Reform Bill”, which is being pushed by the Texas
Republican Lamar Smith, chairman of the House science, space and
technology Committee, would require federal agencies to publish all the
raw data underpinning any proposed regulations and for new findings to
be scrutinised extensively by outside experts before being announced.
However, critics view the bill as an attempt to strip federal agencies
of autonomy and reduce their regulatory powers.
“There is this
special need for government science to be especially clean and without
fault,” said Happer. “It’s OK to have press conferences, but before you
do that you should have the findings carefully vetted.”
When
asked for examples of where the current vetting process has failed,
Happer cited a recent controversy surrounding a high-profile paper
published by National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
(Noaa) scientists showing that global surface temperatures had risen
again after temporarily levelling off.
Earlier this month, a
retired Noaa scientist, Robert Bates, accused his former colleagues of
rushing out the paper ahead of the UN conference, prioritising political
impact over scientific rigour – although Bates later clarified that he
had an issue with timing and transparency rather than “tampering with
data”.
“This disappearance of the hiatus in global warming, which
was trotted out just before the [UN] Paris conference … it was clearly
just a political fanfare,” said Happer. “We shouldn’t be doing that.
They were fiddling with the temperature records to make the hiatus go
away.”
Happer argues that climate monitoring, such as the
collection of CO2 and atmospheric temperature data, is valuable and
should be continued. However, he claims that the overall threat posed by
global warming has been overplayed by scientists swayed by a political
agenda and power-hungry civil servants.
“There’s a huge amount of
money that we spend on saving the planet,” he said. “If it turns out
that the planet doesn’t need saving as much as we thought, well, there
are other ways you could spend the money.
“When you talk about
fossil fuel companies being motivated, well, there’s nobody more
motivated than the people working for the federal government,” he added.
“You can’t rise in the American bureaucracy without some threat to
address.”
Happer said he began to question the emerging consensus
view on climate change while working as director of research at the
Department of Energy as part of the George W Bush administration.
Climate scientists would “grudgingly” present their work to
administrators, he claims, while those in other fields would share their
results with enthusiasm.
“I would ask questions but they were
evasive and wouldn’t answer,” he said. “This experience really soured me
on the community. I started reading up and I realised why they weren’t
answering the questions: because they didn’t have good answers. It was
really at that point that I began to get seriously worried about climate
as a science.”
Concerns about the Trump administration’s
apparent disregard for mainstream scientific thinking on climate change
has triggered a wave of activism, including plans for a science march in
various cities.
However, Happer said that the public, who may view scientists as part of a privileged elite, may be less sympathetic.
“There’s
a potential downside [to the march] of them being seen as a greedy
bunch of spoiled people,” he said. “I don’t think they’re that way
myself, but it could be easily twisted into that kind of narrative.”
SOURCE What are they trying to hide?The children of the light love the light, but the children of the darkness love the darkness -- John 3:19-21Judicial
Watch, a conservative group, has used the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) to sue for the privileged email correspondence of nine climate
scientists employed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA).
On January 27, 2017, the Climate Science
Legal Defense Fund (CSLDF) filed a brief in the District of Columbia
federal District Court urging the court to protect the communications
between these scientists.
Why Do These Emails Matter?
In
2013, a leaked draft of an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
report stated that the rate of global warming had slowed between 1998
and 2012. Though the final report stated that “trends based on short
records are very sensitive to the beginning and end dates and do not in
general reflect long-term climate trends,” climate contrarians latched
onto the idea of a “pause” in warming to bolster their position: If
global warming has stopped, there is no need to curb fossil fuel use or
take any other action to combat climate change.
The hiatus was
rebutted in 2015 when Thomas Karl and his colleagues at NOAA published a
paper in Science based on updated, more accurate data that demonstrated
that there was no pause in global warming. In fact, warming from 2000
to 2015 was at least as great if not greater than that of the last half
of the 20th century.
Other researchers have corroborated Karl et
al.’s conclusions. Most recently, a 2017 Science Advances study by Zeke
Hausfather, a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth, validated Karl et
al.’s findings using independent data from satellites, buoys and
free-floating Argo floats, and reached the same conclusions about the
rate of global warming.
Soon after Karl et al. published their
study, Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), Chair of the House Committee on
Science, Space, and Technology — who disputes the scientific consensus
on climate change — subpoenaed the scientists’ documents and
communications. He alleged that NOAA had readjusted historical
temperature readings to suit the Obama administration’s political
agenda, that the scientists had engaged in “suspicious” behavior, and
that this had “broad national implications.”
NOAA supplied some documents to Smith, but refused to turn over the scientists’ confidential email correspondence.
In
late 2015, Judicial Watch sued for the scientists’ emails under the
Freedom of Information Act, a law designed to ensure transparency in
government. Judicial Watch states it “is investigating how NOAA collects
and disseminates climate data that is used in determining global
climate change.”
SOURCE Plastic bags cause global warming?Like how?New
York City shoppers can put away their coin purses if they want to
continue to use plastic bags. Gov. Cuomo Tuesday signed a bill to impose
a moratorium blocking the city from imposing a controversial 5-cent fee
on plastic disposable bags.
Cuomo, who released a lengthy
statement on the issue, said the city law that was due to go into effect
on Wednesday was “deeply flawed” even if the intent to clean up the
environment was a good one.
The governor said he’s creating a task force to come up with a uniformed statewide plan to deal with “the plastic bag problem.”
Gov. Cuomo torn on whether to block plastic bag fee
"New
York — like the rest of the nation — is currently struggling with the
environmental impact of plastic and paper bag waste, particularly with a
focus on plastic bags,” Cuomo said. “Plastic bags are convenient, but
not without financial and environmental costs.”
Supporters of the moratorium criticized the bag fee as nothing more than a tax that would hurt lower-income people.
“I'm
absolutely thrilled that the madness has been put on hold and I hope
that during the next year that maybe we can come up with something that
is more acceptable to both sides of this,” said Assemblyman Dov Hikind
(D-Brooklyn).
Opponents of the delay, including Mayor de Blasio, had argued the fee would benefit the environment.
Brooklyn assemblyman wants plastic bags banned in New York
De
Blasio, appearing on NY1 Tuesday night, called the moratorium a mistake
“because we need to do something to address global warming right here
in this city.”
He said the goal of the fee, which he made clear
was initially a City Council idea, was to change people’s behavior to
get away from using plastic bags, which clog landfills.
“Now we have a status quo that’s not going to get us anywhere,” de Blasio said.
City
Council spokeswoman Robin Levine accused Cuomo and the state
Legislature of imposing their will on the issue over that of the City
Council.
NYC's proposed bag fee divides father, son who are Albany pols
"Instead
of protecting the autonomy of the New York City Council and our
legislative process, Gov. Cuomo has added to the rampant dysfunction
that is Albany by putting cheap politics ahead of our environment and
the will of the people who actually live in New York City,” Levine said.
Levine
said that the Council would have been willing to earmark a portion of
the bag fee for environmental purposes had Cuomo and the Legislature
granted the authority to do so.
“The New York City Council's
Bring Your Own Bag law would have stopped the scourge of plastic bags in
our City, and this ridiculous state law undermines New York City's
authority, hurts New Yorkers and sets a dangerous precedent for our city
and every other locality in the state,” she said.
Cuomo, who
last week called it a “complicated” issue, legally had until Saturday to
sign or veto the moratorium bill that the Legislature passed last week.
But with the city law imposing the bag fee set to go into effect on Wednesday, Cuomo acted Tuesday.
“While
there are no doubt institutional political issues at play, and while
New York City's law is an earnest attempt at a real solution, it is also
undeniable that the City's bill is deeply flawed,” Cuomo said.
He called the provision that merchants keep the 5-cent fee as profit “the most objectionable.”
SOURCE The Australian Left's 50 per cent renewable energy aim suddenly gets complicated by the political heatLabor’s renewable energy policy used to be so simple it could be reduced to street-march chants.
“What do we want?” “Fifty per cent renewable energy.” “When do we want it?” “2030.”
But
now it has been complicated by the intensification of the political
debate over energy security, and Labor has had to lose the simplicity of
a “target” with the addition of terms such as “aspirations” and
“goals”.
It no longer sounds like a guaranteed destination.
“What
do we want?” “An aspirational approach to renewable energy goals.”
“When do we want it?” “Some time in the future we hope but first we have
to see where we are in 2020.”
Try chanting that. In fact, try defending and defining it in a political debate.
“What
we have is, there are two Labor policies: there’s the renewable energy
target and there’s the goal of getting to 50 per cent renewable energy,”
shadow treasurer Chris Bowen told Sky News yesterday.
“Now 50 per cent renewable energy is underpinned by a range of policy measures.”
Tested
on definitions Mr Bowen said: “Well, there’s the renewable energy
target and then we have the 50 per cent aspiration which is separate to
our renewable energy target.”
Today opposition environment
spokesman Mark Butler had a crack at explaining the policy but also
seemed to add qualification to qualification.
The aim, from what
he told Radio National, seems to be to promote the shift to renewables
with the wish and the hope the momentum will produce the goal in 15
years. The hope is that a combination of early backing and the
retirement of fossil fuel generators will see Australia coasting to 50
per cent renewable energy use.
Well, that’s the aspiration. There is not dedicated plan to fix a target for 2030.
First
task is to reach 23.5 per cent renewables by 2020, as proposed by the
Paris Agreement Australian signed last year. By then, the task will have
been done, said Mr Butler.
“By the 2020s though, this technology
on all the modelling will be able to stand on its own two feet, compete
in the market without subsidy from government or without subsidy
effectively from consumers through a government legislated scheme,
providing that there is a proper policy framework that gives investors a
long term price investment signal that is compliant with our carbon
pollution reduction efforts,” he said.
That momentum combined
with emission reduction targets, Mr Butler said, “will require, in my
very clear view, about half of our electricity by 2030 will be zero
emissions”.
The political debate, which has been condemned by
industry and the ACTU, also had hidden the fact there isn’t much
difference between Labor and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
Mr
Turnbull said Monday: “Renewables have a very big place in Australia’s
energy mix and it will get bigger. The cost of renewables is coming
down.”
The key difference is the Government has yet to offer a
“target” as the Prime Minister knows that would require some form of
emissions trading, and Coalition colleagues wouldn’t allow that.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
16 February, 2017
More on the Bates revelations about the NOAA paper by Tom KarlThe
writer below says that the Bates revelations have one and one only
important implication: That unvalidated data was used. In my
career as a psychometrician, I too often railed against the unvalidated
data often used by my fellow social scientists. So I agree that
use of unvalidated data means that the conclusions of that particular
study cannot be accepted.
I don't think the problem ends
there, however. I think it unlikely that the data used CAN be
validated. The revelation about the best measurements of sea
surface temperature not being used do, I think, have that implication.
They imply that the data body used was constructed to defraudIt
is sometimes said science is all about data… observation, measurement,
experiment, measurement… But that is NOT the whole story. To ensure data
is reliable and understood, we’ve developed standard units of measure,
and document procedures used to obtain and record measurements. The
intention is to make sure BOTH the data AND collection methods can be
reliably understood and used by others. The fleshed out version of this
is the scientific method, and is integral to, and indispensable in the
advance of science. It works because it helps eliminate bias and protect
the
integrity
of both data and process. Any departure from rigorous adherence to these
principles may or may not adversely affect data. But it increases the
risk, and introduces doubt as to the overall integrity. And any
subsequent reliance on this data must not assert confidence levels
beyond the weakest preceding link. For example, it would be inaccurate
or dishonest to claim 100% certainty on results that can only be
replicated 50% of the time.
So let’s wind forward…
There has been much suck-and-blow blather in the aftermath of the
David Rose column on the whistleblower allegations by former NOAA scientist John Bates.
I won’t rehash the article, other than to say Rose does seem eager to
sensationalize speculative results rather than the details, but that in
no way negates the seriousness of the allegations stated. What I want to
discuss is the allegations and impacts. Rose is not the story. Bates is
not the story. The story is the circumvention of procedures put in
place to protect the integrity of the data, and hence the reputation of
the NOAA. From John Bates:
Predictably,
both the “consensus” and skeptic camps largely missed the mark in
jumping to defend or attack positions. There were a flurry of hastily
written newspaper and blog reports on “
bad data“, “
data manipulation“, and “
data tampering“.
Bates’ report didn’t say data was deliberately compromised (he
mentioned a “thumb on the scale” which he later seemed to walk back),
but that the presentation may have been biased, and adherence to
protocol was haphazard. These of course are different things. This
opened the door for the usual suspects from the other side to rush out
reports showing the NOAA data was largely in agreement with other
datasets, directing the discussion away from the presentation and
protocol questions to “The data checks out. See? No problem.” This was
cleverly, cynically, and all too accurately highlighted by Gavin Schmidt:
Let
there be NO mistake: Regardless of the best efforts of Schmidt and
friends to paint this as just deniers denying, if NOAA followed THEIR
OWN established protocols, there would be no story.
Now the
hordes of hyperactive and secure-in-their-ignorance columnists, tweeters
and bloggers from the periphery join in with escalations of character
attacks, dishonest misdirections, and deliberately uncharitable
interpretations of innocuous statements. The Guardian chipped in with a
nastily biased bit:
Referring back to the
Science Insider piece…
Just
one little problem: They provide no evidence that Bates said anything
about being wary of skeptics. He said “people”. And as both skeptic and
consensus camps have seemingly derailed in their rush to the wrong
conclusion, it could easily mean either, or more likely both.
I
could go on at length about the ridiculous obfuscation and mean spirited
BS thrown about during any attempted discussion of the allegations
(most of which have not been denied, but rather downplayed) but I’ll
save that for a separate post. That’s just another distraction from the
real issue at hand.
No, the issues are as Bates outlined:
“Ethical standards must be maintained”. There can be no confidence in
data without confidence in the procedures surrounding collection and
storage of data. And persons or organizations that place no value in
these procedures further erode confidence. This happens repeatedly:
- publicly funded trustee of information gets “sloppy”
- concern is expressed
- those at fault are defended
- the ‘concerned’ are attacked
- conversation derails
- nothing is fixed
- rinse and repeat
This is damaging to public confidence in climate science in
particular, and government programs in general. And rightfully so. There
are many billions in public funds that need to be allocated to the best
possible effect. At a minimum, these continued scandals damage public
willingness to invest resources required. And potentially more damaging,
errors lead to resources that could have been better spent (poverty,
etc) being wasted to no benefit.
Perhaps in this case no data was
harmed. I hope not. But if we don’t take these matters seriously
eventually there will be damages. And not just to a database.
SOURCE Hans Rosling: humanism by numbersThe Swedish statistician was a powerful antidote to our Malthusian times
Hans
Rosling, the Swedish doctor and statistician who died on Tuesday, has
rightly been the subject of glowing obituaries ever since. With great
imagination and humour, Rosling made understanding the world through the
use of statistics more enjoyable and more enlightening than perhaps
anyone else. But while his ability to bring numbers to life was a great
talent, the message he conveyed about the state of humanity was even
more important.
Essentially, Rosling told a story of a world in
which things have been getting better for almost everyone. In making
this point, Rosling wasn’t alone. Others, like Indur Goklany, Matt
Ridley and Steven Pinker (and, of course, spiked), have, in various
ways, pointed out the benefits of a richer, better educated and more
peaceful world. Nonetheless, Rosling was certainly rowing against the
stream in an age where many of the elite and influential commentators
were obsessed with climate change and overpopulation. Human beings were
screwing up the planet on the one hand while, on the other, billions of
people were doomed to lives that would be nasty, brutish and short.
Rosling
pointed out the great strides that have been made in the past 200
years. In the early 19th century, almost everyone – apart from the very
richest people on the planet – was poor and unhealthy. They had few
possessions, no education and were destined to die young by modern
standards. Living past 40 would be unusual. But thanks to the Industrial
Revolution and continuing material progress, countries started to get
richer and healthier, starting with the UK and the Netherlands, but soon
spreading across Europe and America.
As former colonies achieved
independence in the decades after the Second World War, they too
started to become richer. Life expectancy has shot up in developing
countries and they are, for the most part, converging with the living
standards and longevity of the richest developed countries. Of course,
there are still plenty of places where this needs to go a lot further –
particularly poor countries that are blighted by war – but the trend is
clear: things are getting better.
Moreover, Rosling was clear
that it is industrialisation that we have to thank for all that. His
entertaining TED talk about washing machines is a case in point. His
eco-worrier students would proudly proclaim that they had forsworn the
motor car for the sake of the planet. But as Rosling pointed out, every
one of them still needed a washing machine. He recounted the moment in
his childhood when his parents finally bought an automatic washing
machine, an event so momentous that it demanded a family gathering. Just
a couple of generations ago, his grandmother would have washed clothes
by boiling water on a fire and scrubbing each garment by hand – still
the greatest chore for billions of women around the world.
All
that labour is saved thanks to electricity, running water and the
liberation that is the washing machine. And the washing machine is in
turn the product of a whole host of other industries from steel mills to
chemical refineries. And what comes out of washing machines, he asked?
Books. When women are freed from hours of laundry, they have time to
read books to their children, offering another kind of liberation:
education. The most pressing question we face, therefore, is how
everyone on the planet can enjoy the freedom that comes from washing
machines and other labour-saving devices.
This human-centred
outlook was what made Rosling’s statistics and presentational skills
matter. There are plenty of ways of making data look entertaining.
Rosling’s contribution was to put that gift to the service of making the
case for more development. The world’s most high-profile
neo-Malthusians, Paul and Anne Ehrlich, did Rosling the greatest
compliment by rubbishing his ideas, calling him ‘a confused
statistician’ and claiming – as they have done for decades – that
extreme poverty would be the lot of the great majority of humanity when
the inevitable civilisational collapse occurs. Rosling showed that
industrial and technological progress could solve the big problems
facing humanity, if we didn’t do anything so stupid as to turn away from
these powerful, welfare-enhancing tools.
The Ehrlichs are back
in vogue, feted by the Royal Society – supposedly the bastion of
rational, scientific thought. The leader of the UK’s main opposition
party, Jeremy Corbyn, once signed a Commons motion that claimed that
‘humans represent the most obscene, perverted, cruel, uncivilised and
lethal species ever to inhabit the planet’ and looked ‘forward to the
day when the inevitable asteroid slams into the Earth and wipes them out
thus giving nature the opportunity to start again’. The most backward,
misanthropic ideas are still very much mainstream. Hans Rosling was a
powerful antidote to such thinking and will be greatly missed. RIP.
SOURCE Cutting carbon emissions in Mass. may increase them elsewhereA
Baker administration plan to cut harmful greenhouse gases could have
the unintended consequence of boosting carbon emissions across the rest
of New England, say some environmental advocates and representatives of
the energy industry.
The plan was designed to comply with a
landmark 2016 Supreme Judicial Court decision that requires specific
limits on sources of greenhouse gases. But while the regulations might
help the state curb emissions, they could cause electricity production
to be diverted to less efficient power plants outside the state that
might use more polluting energy sources, such as coal or oil, critics
say.
At a recent hearing at the state Department of Environmental
Protection, Dan Dolan, president of the New England Power Generators
Association, called the proposed rules “fundamentally flawed.”
“While
Massachusetts plants have their ability to operate severely curtailed,
electricity demand will still have to be met,” said Dolan, who
represents the state’s coal and natural gas industries. “So plants in
Connecticut, Rhode Island, and other states that are less efficient and
higher emitting will run more. It just doesn’t make sense.”
Environmental
advocates acknowledge the proposed rules could, in the short term,
increase emissions in neighboring states. They support the proposal
overall, but are urging the state to revise the rules to make that less
likely.
State officials declined to answer questions about the
rules’ potential to increase emissions in other New England states, but
issued this statement:
“Through a robust comment period and
public hearings around the state, Mass. DEP looks forward to engaging
with stakeholders in an effort to ensure that the final rules are
thoughtfully designed and effectively implemented.”
The rules
would require power plants in Massachusetts to reduce emissions 2.5
percent each year, starting in 2018. Once they reach their annual
pollution limits, they would be required to shut down.
The
regulations would also cap emissions for the state’s fleet of vehicles,
other parts of the transportation sector, natural gas mains used by
utilities, and gas-insulated switch gear, such as circuit breakers.
Critics
say the draft regulations would ultimately force the operator of the
regional grid to draw a greater portion of its electricity from dirtier
plants. ISO New England, an independent company that runs the grid, must
seek power from the most efficient plants — those that provide the
cheapest electricity with the least emissions — before looking
elsewhere.
When the company can no longer obtain energy from
those sources to keep the lights on, it turns to the region’s remaining
coal and oil plants, which pump more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
Under
the 2008 Global Warming Solutions Act, the state must reduce emissions
25 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and 80 percent below that
threshold by 2050.
Last May, the state’s highest court ordered
the Baker administration to limit overall emissions from specific
sources, such as vehicles and power plants, and set annual limits on
those emissions.
State officials say Massachusetts has already
cut emissions by nearly 20 percent below 1990 levels. But environmental
advocacy groups dispute that figure and say it doesn’t account for the
closing of the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in 2019, which is likely to
result in more carbon emissions from other energy sources.
Concerns
about rising emissions in New England aren’t hypothetical. In 2015, the
year after the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant closed, the region saw
emissions rise for the first time in five years.
Environmental
advocates acknowledge that whatever increase in emissions elsewhere
might result from Massachusetts’ rules, it would disappear when more
energy from offshore wind, hydropower, and solar facilities is brought
online. And the increase, known in the industry as “leakage,” would be
minor, they say. Overall, they praise the scope of the proposed rules.
“It
would be worth the possibility of a small rise in emissions, because we
would be sending a clear, strong signal to the market that the future
of power in Massachusetts will be clean and renewable,” said David
Ismay, a senior attorney at the Conservation Law Foundation .
Ismay
and other environmental advocates are drafting suggestions for revised
regulations that they say would reduce the likelihood of a rise in
emissions. Their plan would create a kind of auction system that would
allow power plants to trade emission allowances. That would encourage
the grid to use newer, more efficient plants, such as one recently built
in Salem, they say.
The system would be similar to the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a cap-and-trade program that allows plants
across the region to swap pollution allowances.
“The leakage
argument is historically something of a ‘sky is falling’ one that power
companies frequently make in opposition to new climate initiatives, and
was made by opponents” of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, Ismay
said.
Since the initiative began in 2008, it has led to reduced
emissions and lower energy prices, said Peter Shattuck, director of the
clean energy initiative at the Acadia Center, an environmental advocacy
group in Boston.
“While there may be some offsetting increases in
emissions beyond Massachusetts’ border, the Commonwealth has to set its
own policy course,” Shattuck said. “If we’d been looking over [our]
shoulder at what other states were doing, we might never have pursued
health care reform, marriage equality, or the Global Warming Solutions
Act itself.”
But power plant companies warn the proposed rules,
which the state is required to issue in August, could threaten their
viability in Massachusetts. Dynegy, a Houston energy company that owns
nearly one-third of the state’s power plants, said the rules could force
it to shutter its plants and eliminate hundreds of jobs.
SOURCE British commuters warned of air pollution riskTravelling
by public transport exposes commuters to up to eight times as much air
pollution as those who drive to work, a groundbreaking study found.
In
the latest evidence of the health risks posed by rising traffic levels,
researchers found that drivers commuting in diesel cars did the most
harm to the wellbeing of other travellers — producing six times as much
pollution as the average bus passenger.
The authors said that the
results revealed a “violation of the core principle of environmental
justice” because those who contributed most to air pollution in cities
were least likely to suffer from it. People in poorer areas, who are
more reliant on buses to get to work, suffer greater exposure than those
in wealthier neighbourhoods, who are more likely to commute by car,
according to the study by the University of Surrey.
Air pollution
causes 40,000 premature deaths a year in Britain and diesel vehicles
are a large contributor to the problem, producing high levels of
particulates and toxic nitrogen oxides, which can cause respiratory
disease and heart attacks. Of Britain’s 5.4 million asthma sufferers,
two thirds say that poor air quality makes their condition worse.
Sadiq
Khan, the mayor of London, is due to introduce a £10 daily “toxicity
charge” on pre-2005 diesel cars in central London this year and has
called for a national scrappage scheme to encourage diesel drivers to
buy cleaner vehicles. The government will publish a plan in April for
tackling air pollution after the previous one was ruled inadequate by
the High Court.
The latest study involved commuters wearing air
pollution monitors who undertook hundreds of journeys by car, bus and
Tube. Bus passengers were exposed to concentrations of particles, known
as PM10, which were five times higher than those experienced by car
commuters. Levels of PM2.5 fine particles, which can be more lethal as
they are drawn deep into the lungs, were twice as high on buses as in
cars. Bus journeys were typically 17-42 minutes longer than car
journeys, meaning that bus passengers were exposed to higher levels of
pollution for longer. Motorists tend to keep windows closed and are
protected by filters stopping particles and dust from entering the
interior. Bus passengers, by contrast, are subjected to pollution at
stops when the doors are opened, often in places where queues of idling
vehicles are pumping out high levels of toxic gas and particles.
Diesel
buses on average produce three times as many particles per mile as
diesel cars but they typically carry 20 times as many people.
The
authors calculated that the emissions produced per person by a diesel
car containing two people were six times higher than by a bus containing
40 people and travelling the same distance. Tube passengers had the
shortest journeys but were exposed to eight times the level of PM10
pollution as car commuters and five times as much PM2.5 pollution.
The
researchers did not measure pollution experienced by people who walked
to work but said that they could experience high exposure because of the
time spent beside traffic. The study found that passengers on the
Underground’s District line, whose trains have closed windows, were
exposed to far lower concentrations of particles than those on trains
with open windows. Particle levels were much higher on trains with open
windows in deep tunnels.
People using public transport were also
exposed to more pollution than car commuters because they spent time at
bus stops and at stations or walked on busy roads to complete their
journeys, the study found. Levels of pollutants in the morning peak were
up to 43 per cent higher than in the afternoon peak.
Prashant
Kumar, who led the study published in the journal Environment
International, said: “We found that there is definitely an element of
environmental injustice among those commuting in London, with those who
create the most pollution having the least exposure to it.”
Parts
of southeastern England could experience high air pollution today
because strongly easterly winds have swept pollutants across the Channel
from the continent, the Met Office said.
SOURCE The Carbon-Tax ScamI
have nothing but respect for former Secretaries of State Jim Baker and
George Shultz, but come on, gentlemen: You’ve been snookered.
These
two esteemed gentlemen are endorsing a tax scam that would be one of
the largest income-redistribution schemes in modern times. It would do
considerable and lasting damage to the U.S. The justification for the
tax is that it will save the planet by reducing greenhouse-gas
emissions, but it won’t even do that.
The Baker-Shultz plan would
impose on America a carbon tax, which would be a tax on American energy
consumption. Since energy is a central component of everything that
America produces, it would make the cost and thus the price of
everything — and I mean everything — produced in America more expensive.
It is a tax that only China, India, Mexico and Russia could love.
The
tax is highly regressive, so the remedy that the two call for is a
quarterly check from the Social Security Administration for every
American. They call this a dividend. Somehow they have come to the
conclusion that two really bad ideas paired together make for a good
idea.
So let’s get this straight: We are going to tax the
producers of the economy and then give the money to people who don’t
produce, and somehow this isn’t going to negatively affect the economy.
If that makes sense, then why not adopt a 100 percent tax on production
and then redistribute the money to everyone?
My colleague Katie
Tubb at The Heritage Foundation has noted another glaring flaw with the
carbon tax. While it is true that a carbon tax is a much more efficient
way to cap carbon-dioxide emissions than the mishmash of EPA
regulations, renewable energy standards and subsidies for wind and solar
power, there’s a strong likelihood that the carbon tax would end up not
being a replacement for these economically destructive policies.
Instead, it would simply be another addition to the regulations. It is
naive in the extreme to think otherwise.
I’ve been somewhat open
to a carbon tax in the past. The idea of replacing our current,
economically destructive tax system with something less economically
destructive is attractive. But the reality is that even a carbon tax
perfectly administered is a poor substitute for the strong tax and
regulatory reform that is currently possible.
But the green plan
proposed by these former Reagan statesmen would not cut a single tax
rate, meanwhile giving the Left a massive new tax regime. How could any
conservative support this plan?
Even worse is that the
Baker-Shultz plan does close to nothing to reduce greenhouse-gas
emissions or to lessen the threat — if one exists — of global warming.
Whether or not the U.S. reduces its carbon emissions has close to zero
impact on worldwide carbon-dioxide emissions. This is because China and
India are building coal-burning energy plants at a frantic pace. The
Wall Street Journal reported in November that new coal production in
China in the next few years will create more carbon dioxide emissions
than the entire energy production of Canada. India isn’t far behind.
So
it is a fairy tale that China and India and other fast-developing
nations have any commitment to reducing their fossil fuel use. As Donald
Trump would say, they are laughing at America behind our backs. They
would be absolutely gleeful about the proposed U.S. carbon tax. Raising
the cost of production for U.S. goods and services will transfer more
production to China and India. We will get relatively poorer, and they
will get relatively richer.
And if you are a global-warming
worrier: This carbon-tax would drive global greenhouse-gas levels up,
not down. We have clean-coal regulations. None of the developing nations
do. The less America produces, the worse off the planet is.
The
best way to reduce global greenhouse gases is for the U.S. to produce
more of our domestic energy, not less. We have very cheap and abundant
natural gas (thanks to fracking), and we should export it all over the
world. The U.S. has reduced carbon emissions more than any other nation
not because of regulations or green-energy subsidies but because of
shale gas. Let’s sell it to every corner of the globe, get rich and save
the planet.
The Baker-Shultz plan will do nothing to save the planet, but it will surely make America poorer.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
15 February, 2017
Legendary Motor Developer Calls Electric Cars An “Environmental Fraud” …”Dangerous False Path”!Professor
Friedrich Indra has been retired since 2005 and is considered to be one
of the world’s leading engine developers. The 76-year old used to work
for Audi and General Motors.
In a recent interview with the
online FOCUS news magazine he raised a lot of eyebrows by stating that
he thinks electric mobility is a “dangerous false path”, claiming that
the electric car “does not solve a single environmental problem” and
that it “contributes nothing to climate protection”.
Indra calls the claims that electric cars are CO2-free “absurd”.
Fake efficiency
Citing
an earlier stiudy by a Professor Spicha, Indra says that the
well-to-wheel-CO2 of an electric car in Germany is in fact 1.6 times
worse than the conventional internal combustion engine. The CO2
perforamnce of an electric car in China is even four to five times worse
when it comes to consumption, and that does not mention the huge energy
quantities needed for manufacturing the batteries that electric cars
need, which would be enough to power a conventional automobile 30,000
kilometers, he told FOCUS.
Electric cars also have the problems of recycling the batteries, as they are a long way from being fully recyclable.
According
to Indra, internal combustion engines have made “very impressive
progress“, saying: “The motors are continuously getting more powerful
and more fuel efficient.” The engine expert believes that the final
solution is “CO2-neutral synthetic fuels. They need as much CO2 for for
their manufacture as emitted when in operation.”
The “second greatest environmental fraud”
When
it comes to hybrid automobiles, Indra opinion is harsh, calling the
plug-in-hybrids “the second greatest environmental fraud because the
determination of the fuel consumption does not even include the power
that was previously needed to charge up the car.” This is how
“sportscars using the technology come up with perverse values like 3.1
liters consumption per 100 km [80 mpg]”.
In the interview Indra
rails against what he calls “widespread hatred against internal
combustion engines” among the media and policymakers, who he says
exploited the VW emissions test cheating affair to spread more hate
against the internal combustion engines. He thinks the scandal was
played up by the media and is “completely disassociated from fact“.
Never has “industry and policymaking acted so irrationally“. He believes
politicians are in for a rude awakening once the true costs start
coming in.
In the meantime in some countries the market share by
pure electric cars is already retreating. That’s also going to happen
with the plug-in-hybrids after all the ‘rich people’ are supplied with
these cars.”
He says the claimed “success” of electric cars in
China and Norway is due to massive government subsidies: “No country in
the world can afford that over the long-term. That will level off once
again, as is already the case in Norway.”
SOURCE Race to save badly damaged California dam before MORE rainfallFor
years, Warmists blamed the recent California semi-drought on global
warming. So how do they explain the huge rainfall CA is having
now? Are we now having global cooling? Or was it all just
more dishonest propaganda?Authorities in California were so
sure the Oroville Dam was going to catastrophically collapse that they
abandoned their command post on Sunday evening.
At a press
conference on Monday, the Acting Chief of the Department of Water
Resources Billy Croyle revealed the situation had become so perilous he
ordered his staff to flee.
Officials also admitted they are in a
race against time to drain up to 50-feet of water from the stricken
Oroville Dam before a storm hits on Wednesday.
Almost 200,000
people were frantically ordered on Sunday to evacuate along a 40-mile
stretch of the Feather River below the dam after authorities said its
emergency spillway could give way.
A gaping 250-foot chasm was
expected to collapse and unleash a 30ft 'tsunami' tidal wave that could
have killed thousands and left nearby towns under 100ft of flood water.
Tens
of thousands of panicked residents took to the freeways, causing total
gridlock on the roads and sending anxiety levels soaring as they
wondered if the dam would burst while they were sat in their cars.
'Everyone was running around; it was pure chaos,' Oroville resident Maggie Cabral told CNN affiliate KFSN on Sunday.
'All
of the streets were immediately packed with cars, people in my
neighborhood grabbing what they could and running out the door and
leaving. I mean, even here in Chico, there's just traffic everywhere.'
On Monday, Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said the evacuation below the nation's tallest dam will not end right away.
He
added that they are working on a plan to allow residents to return home
when it's safe - but offered no timetable for when they would be
allowed to go home.
He added that so far there have been zero reports of looting in any of the evacuated towns.
Honea also said more than 500 Butte County jail inmates were safely transferred to Alameda County Jail farther south.
And
as officials rushed to release water from the dam and fix the spillway,
the empty abandoned cities resembled ghost towns after the forced
evacuations.
SOURCE Skeptical Mass. meteorologist fired but many meteorologists question climate change scienceThey
observe changes in the atmosphere like astronomers study the stars,
analyzing everything from air pressure to water vapor and poring over
computer models to arrive at a forecast.
But for all their
scrutiny of weather data, many meteorologists part ways with their
colleagues — climate scientists who study longer atmospheric trends — in
one crucial respect.
Many remain skeptical about whether human
activity is causing climate change, as underscored by the recent
departure of Mish Michaels from WGBH News
Michaels, a former
meteorologist at WBZ-TV, lost her job as a science reporter at WGBH’s
show “Greater Boston” this week after colleagues raised concerns about
her views on vaccines and climate change. She had previously questioned
the safety of vaccines and the evidence that human activity was causing
global warming, both widely held views in the scientific community.
A
national survey last year by researchers at George Mason University in
Virginia found that just 46 percent of broadcast meteorologists said
they believed that climate change over the past 50 years has been
“primarily or entirely” the result of human activity. By contrast,
surveys of climate scientists have found that 97 percent attribute
warming to human activity.
The upcoming Atlanta climate summit offers a viable way to push back when basic science and truthful discourse are at risk.
“Weather
forecasters are people, too, and their political ideology plays a role
in their views,” said Ed Maibach, who directs the Center for Climate
Change Communication at George Mason and oversaw the study. “So
conservative forecasters tend to be more skeptical than liberal
forecasters.”
Among those skeptics is Tim Kelley, who has issued weather forecasts on New England Cable News (NECN) since 1992.
Kelley
describes himself as a “student of climate change,” but says his
experience with the variability of computer models has made him
skeptical that anyone can predict how greenhouse gases will change the
environment in the coming decades.
“How can their computer models
be better than ours?” he said. “We look at computer projections all the
time, and we know how off they can be.”
Kelley acknowledges the
climate is changing, but like many skeptics questions whether rising
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is the reason. He believes
most of the changes are natural, not man-made.
“I’m much less alarmed by global warming than most people,” he said. “I’d rather it be warmer.”
Kelley said he was deeply concerned by Michaels’ apparent firing.
“It’s
alarming that you can be scapegoated or branded as a denier,” he said.
Officials at WGHB didn’t return messages seeking comment.
Maibach,
whose study was funded by the National Science Foundation, said that 99
percent of the 646 broadcast meteorologists he surveyed acknowledged
that the earth’s climate is changing.
While many meteorologists
are unconvinced about climate change, the profession as a whole has
grown more accepting of the scientific consensus on climate change,
surveys show. A study he just completed, though not yet published, found
an increase in the percentage of meteorologists that attributed climate
change to human activity.
In a separate survey of members of the
American Meteorological Society, Maibach found that 67 percent said
they thought climate change is entirely, largely, or mostly caused by
human activity. About 20 percent of the group’s members work for
broadcast stations.
Despite the shift, environmental advocates
are disturbed about the sizeable ranks of broadcast meteorologists who
remain skeptics, particularly given their public influence.
“It’s
definitely concerning,” said Bernadette Woods Placky, director of
Climate Matters, a New Jersey program that seeks to help meteorologists
reflect climate change in their reports. The group provides
broadcast-ready graphics and educational materials to 375 of the
nation’s 2,200 TV meteorologists.
Placky said she tells skeptics
that there’s a vast difference in the data that weather forecasters and
climate scientists use in their computer models. Unlike weather
forecasts, climate models are far broader in scope, she said.
“There’s
a lot of misinformation out in the public, and meteorologists have a
lot going on,” she said. “But they should know that climate models take
into account the entire climate system.”
Paul Gross, a
meteorologist with WDIV-TV in Detroit for the past 34 years, said he
tries to help viewers understand that while weather is a reflection of
day-to-day changes, climate change is caused by the slow accumulation of
those changes over time.
“Weather is the little picture; climate
is the big picture,” he said. “This shouldn’t be a politically
motivated conversation that seeks to confuse the public.”
Rob
Eicher, a former weekend meteorologist at WHDH-TV in Boston, said
viewers shouldn’t put too much stock in weather forecasters’ views on
climate change.
“It’s like asking a podiatrist for help when you have chest pains,” he said. “It’s a different specialty.”
He
also pointed to politics as the cause of many skeptical forecasters,
especially those who work at stations run by right-leaning owners.
“What
people need to understand is that there’s a completely different set of
physics in understanding weather and climate changes,” he said. “We can
predict tides years and years in advance, but I can’t tell you what the
wave heights will be in a few days from now. Climate deals with much
larger issues.”
SOURCE Biofuel Blunder: Navy Should Prioritize Fleet Modernization over Political InitiativesFor
the past several years, the President and Navy Secretary Ray Mabus have
directed the U.S. Navy to dedicate increasingly precious budgetary
resources to establish a “green fleet”—i.e., to replace conventional
diesel fuel for ships with biofuels harvested from organic material.
Supporters
claim that instability in the fossil fuel market justifies paying more
for unproven technologies, but this initiative will in effect cause
fiscal instability in an already unstable Department of Defense budget.
Most Capable Fleet, Not Green Fleet
While
the Navy is officially embracing biofuel use as a tool to decrease its
dependence on fuels from the volatile Middle East, there are good
reasons why the Navy should keep relying on conventional fuels.
Diesel
Will Be Plentiful. The American petroleum sector is currently
undergoing a booming revival, and new sources of fuel such as shale will
decrease demand for diesel elsewhere in the U.S. economy. This will
help secure sources of diesel to be readily available to the U.S.
military.
No Established International Infrastructure. That could
cause considerable challenges given the Navy’s global reach. It might
be difficult or even impossible to refuel a “green” ship in foreign
waters, because a foreign biofuel infrastructure capable of meeting the
Navy’s needs is almost non-existent. Even if the U.S. builds its own
supply chain for the Navy, it would still have to rely on diesel if
refueling in foreign ports.
Increased Corrosion. Studies have
shown that biofuels are more corrosive than regular diesel and can
therefore increase maintenance costs within the Navy’s fleet.[1] This
would only worsen the current fleet’s dire situation, since inspection
failures are already occurring at an alarming rate within the fleet.[2]
Increasing average age of U.S. fleet; delayed, deferred, and underfunded
modernization; and use of fuels with potentially harmful consequences
is a recipe for a fleet readiness crisis.
Increased Expenses.
Biofuels are disproportionately more expensive than conventional fuels. A
gallon of biofuel costs $26, whereas the Department of Defense
purchases diesel at about $3.60 per gallon. Many argue that this rate
will decrease over time as biofuel production increases, but in the
interim, the Navy’s readiness would be further damaged by wasting
precious resources on biofuels that are seven times more expensive than
the Navy’s conventional fuels—not including the increased maintenance
costs.
An Already Unstable Funding Environment. Even in a
fiscally robust environment, biofuels are not a wise allocation of the
Pentagon’s funds. The U.S. military is currently facing serious funding
reductions due to sequestration, which was mandated by the Budget
Control Act of 2011. Under these cuts, the Navy will be unable to
sustain its current shipbuilding rate, which has already been below the
necessary level for a number of years.
As defense spending is
projected to keep decreasing into the future, the Navy’s budget becomes
even more fragile. Naval Surface Warfare Director Rear Admiral Tom
Rowden projected that the fleet could fall to 257 ships—around 50 less
than the Navy’s requirement—by 2020.[3] Yet the Navy will still be
required to replace the aging ballistic missile submarine fleet and
maintain 10 carrier air wings, as both are the key elements of U.S.
strategic posture.[4]
Biofuels currently do not consume much of
the Pentagon’s topline budget; however, it is essential that the
organization scrutinizes any and all programs, no matter how small or
large. Fleet readiness is of utmost importance to the Navy and the
security of this nation. Programs jeopardizing readiness in order to
support unproven science with questionable results should be eliminated.
SOURCE Australia's winter wheat crop looks set to be the largest ever recordedLooks
like the food shortages that Greenies are always predicting will have
to be postponed once again. From Malthus to Hitler to Paul Ehrlich
to the New York Times the false prophecies never ceaseIt’s
been a record-breaking winter season for Australian grain producers
with the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and
Sciences (ABARES) sharply revising its production estimates for wheat,
barley, canola and chickpeas higher in its latest Australian crop
report, released on Tuesday.
ABARES estimates that total
Australian winter crop production increased by a mammoth 49% in 2016–17
to 58.9 million tonnes, some 12 higher than the previous estimate
offered in December.
“The revision was the result of yields being
higher than anticipated and reaching unprecedented levels in most
regions,” it said, adding “generally favourable seasonal conditions
pushed national winter crop production to a new record high”.
By
crop, ABARES said wheat production is estimated to have increased by 45%
to a record high of 35.1 million tonnes. Barley production was up even
more, jumping by 56% to 13.4 million tonnes, again a record high.
Canola
production rose by 41% to 4.1 million tonnes, equalling the record of
2012–13, while chickpea production increased by 40% to 1.4 million
tonnes, again a record high.
A record breaking season for Australia;s major crops, and one that bodes well for agricultural output in Australian GDP.
This table shows the estimated production levels for 2016/17, comparing the results to those seen in the previous two years:
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
14 February, 2017
What fun! John Cook rides again!He
is the author of the famous 97% claim and a most energetic defender of
Warmism. And he certainly is a crook Cook. He makes a great
pretence of science by reporting known facts but ignoring or leaving
some things out. He then pretends that he has proven global warming.
But
his latest is a superb example of psychological projection. He takes
some well-known examples of psychological defence mechanisms and
purports to find examples of them among climate skeptics. But
exactly those same mechanisms are common among Warmists.
An excerpt:
I’m
a cognitive psychologist interested in better understanding and
countering the techniques used to distort the science of climate change.
I’ve found that understanding why some people reject climate science
offers insight into how they deny science. By better understanding the
techniques employed, you can counter misinformation more effectively.
Every
movement that has rejected a scientific consensus, whether it be on
evolution, climate change or the link between smoking and cancer,
exhibits the same five characteristics of science denial (concisely
summarized by the acronym FLICC). These are fake experts, logical
fallacies, impossible expectations, cherry picking and conspiracy
theories. When someone wants to cast doubt on a scientific finding,
FLICC is an integral part of the misinformation toolbox.He
points to no specific examples of each fallacy among skeptics so, very
briefly, let me point out how those fallacies apply to Warmists:
* Fake experts: Al Gore
* Logical fallacies: Some extreme weather events imply a general increase in extreme weather events
*
Impossible expectations: No change is too small to be worth
noticing. Even temperature changes in the hundredths of one degree
mean something. No change is small enough to prove temperature
stasis
* Cherry picking: Looking at only a short run of
temperature records. The Central England Temperature record goes
back to 1659 and shows no trend
* Conspiracy theories: Big oil is behind climate skepticism
Perhaps
most amazing in Cook's latest screed is the way he refers to his own
97% paper. He accurately describes it as showing that:
"Among the papers stating a position, 97 percent agreed that humans are causing global warming"He completely skates over the fact that two thirds of the papers he examined
took no position
on global warming. So only ONE THIRD of all scientists, and not
97%, agreed with global warming. It's typical Cook. He
quotes facts but ignores their full implications.
And, as far as I
can see, that goes for all of the other claims in his
paper. For instance: He wades in to the uproar generated by
the David Rose article which questioned a paper by NOAA's Tom
Karl. He implies that Rose is wrong and the Karl paper is
right. So there has been no C21 temperature "pause". He
"forgets" to mention that, in
the Fyfe et al. paper,
some prominient Warmist scientists also distanced themselves from the
Karl paper. Cook is so unbalanced it is a wonder he doesn't fall
over.
Cook really is a crook Cook. David Rose replies to his critics below.
How can we trust global warming scientists if they keep twisting the truth David Rose
They
were duped – and so were we. That was the conclusion of last week’s
damning revelation that world leaders signed the Paris Agreement on
climate change under the sway of unverified and questionable data.
A
landmark scientific paper –the one that caused a sensation by claiming
there has been NO slowdown in global warming since 2000 – was critically
flawed. And thanks to the bravery of a whistleblower, we now know that
for a fact.
The response has been extraordinary, with The Mail on
Sunday’s disclosures reverberating around the world. There have been
nearly 150,000 Facebook ‘shares’ since last Sunday, an astonishing
number for a technically detailed piece, and extensive coverage in media
at home and abroad.
It has even triggered an inquiry by
Congress. Lamar Smith, the Texas Republican who chairs the House of
Representatives’ science committee, is renewing demands for documents
about the controversial paper, which was produced by America’s National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the world’s leading
source of climate data.
In his view, the whistleblower had shown
that ‘NOAA cheated and got caught’. No wonder Smith and many others are
concerned: the revelations go to the very heart of the climate change
industry and the scientific claims we are told we can trust.
Remember,
the 2015 Paris Agreement imposes gigantic burdens and its effects are
felt on every household in the country. Emissions pledges made by David
Cameron will cost British consumers a staggering £319 billion by 2030 –
almost three times the annual budget for the NHS in England.
That
is not the end of it. Taxpayers also face an additional hefty
contribution to an annual £80 billion in ‘climate aid’ from advanced
countries to the developing world. That is on top of our already
gargantuan aid budget. Green levies and taxes already cost the average
household more than £150 a year.
The contentious paper at the
heart of this furore – with the less than accessible title of Possible
Artifacts Of Data Biases In The Recent Global Surface Warming Hiatus –
was published just six months before the Paris conference by the
influential journal Science.
It made a sensational claim: that
contrary to what scientists have been saying for years, there was no
‘pause’ or ‘slowdown’ in global warming in the early 21st Century.
Indeed,
this ‘Pausebuster’ paper as it has become known, claimed the rate of
warming was even higher than before, making ‘urgent action’ imperative.
There
can be no doubting the impact of this document. It sat prominently in
the scientific briefings handed out to international negotiators,
including EU and UK diplomats.
An official report from the
European Science Advisory Council stated that the paper had ‘refined the
corrections in temperature records’ and shown the warming rate after
2000 was higher than for 1950-99.
So, flawed as it was, the
Pausebuster paper unquestionably helped persuade world leaders to sign
an agreement that imposes massive emissions cuts on developed countries.
No
wonder, then, that our revelations were met with fury by green
propagandists. Some claimed the MoS had published ‘fake news’. One
scientist accused me of becoming the ‘David Irving of climate change
denial’ – a reference to the infamous Holocaust denier.
Yet
perhaps more damaging is the claim from some in the green lobby that our
disclosures are small beer. In fact, their importance cannot be
overstated. They strike at the heart of climate science because they
question the integrity of the global climate datasets on which pretty
much everything else depends.
The whistleblower is a man called
Dr John Bates, who until last year was one of two NOAA ‘principal
scientists’ working on climate issues. And as he explained to the MoS,
one key concern is the reliability of new data on sea temperatures
issued in 2015 at the same time as the Pausebuster paper.
It
turns out that when NOAA compiled what is known as the ‘version 4’
dataset, it took reliable readings from buoys but then ‘adjusted’ them
upwards – using readings from seawater intakes on ships that act as
weather stations.
They did this even though readings from the ships have long been known to be too hot.
No
one, to be clear, has ‘tampered’ with the figures. But according to
Bates, the way those figures were chosen exaggerated global warming.
And
without this new dataset there would have been no Pausebuster paper.
If, as previous sea water evidence has shown, there really has been a
pause in global warming, then it calls into question the received wisdom
about its true scale.
Then there is the matter of timing.
Documents obtained by this newspaper show that NOAA, ignoring protests
by Dr Bates, held back publication of the version 4 sea dataset several
months after it was ready – to intensify the impact of the Pausebuster
paper. It also meant more sceptical voices had no chance to examine the
figures.
Our revelations showed there was another problem with
the Pausebuster paper – it used an untested experimental version of the
dataset recording temperatures on land, which had not been properly
archived and made accessible to other scientists.
This was a
fundamental breach of mandatory rules under NOAA’s Climate Data Records
programme, which Bates had devised. Is it sharp practice? Certainly it
carries the stench of ‘Climategate’ in 2009, when leaked emails showed
scientists colluding to hide data and weaknesses in their arguments.
It
is important to acknowledge the MoS did make one error: the caption on a
graph, showing the difference between NOAA’s sea data records and the
UK Met Office’s, did not make clear that they used different baselines.
We corrected this immediately on our website.
The only ‘fake news’ in our revelations is the claim that they don’t matter.
In
truth, they are hugely damaging, for they suggest an agreement made by
figures such as Barack Obama and David Cameron rested in part on
research that had not been published with integrity.
This is an age where many have come to question the role of experts. Restoring trust demands transparency.
In
climate science, this means being open about the fact there are still
critical uncertainties: not about the basic proposition that the world
is warming, thanks in part to humans, but about the speed at which this
is happening; and when it is likely, left unchecked, to become truly
dangerous.
Al Gore famously said: ‘The science is settled.’ It is not.
We cannot allow such a vital issue for our future to be mired in half truths and deceptions.
SOURCE Greenland has gained nearly 500 billion tons of ice this winter, blowing away all prior records and many @NASA lies SOURCE Can a children's lawsuit force action on climate change?On
Friday, President Trump was named the lead defendant in a lawsuit
brought by 21 US students – one as young as nine – against the US
government.
The case, Juliana v. United States, was first filed
in 2015 with President Barack Obama listed as lead defendant, so the
switch to Mr. Trump is largely procedural.
But the plaintiffs are
seeking a court order that will compel the US government to drastically
curb carbon emissions. With the change from Mr. Obama to Trump, they’re
now taking on an administration that looks askance at climate science.
This
marks the latest shift in a years-long legal campaign that aims to move
beyond political inaction on climate change by establishing a
Constitutional right to a stable climate.
"The US is most
responsible for climate change, so it's really the most important case
in the world right now on the issue," said Julia Olson, lead counsel for
the plaintiffs.
The group sponsoring this lawsuit, Our
Children’s Trust, has been attempting to litigate climate-change action
since 2011, when young plaintiffs affiliated with the group filed
lawsuits or regulatory petitions in all 50 states.
While these
cases differed in their specifics, they all sought to apply the public
trust doctrine – the concept that the government owns and must maintain
natural resources for the public’s use – to the atmosphere, and, by
extension, compel state governments to implement policies that would
drastically reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
The group has had
some success. In September 2016, after the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court sided with the group, Gov. Charles Baker issued an
executive order directing the state government to establish
emissions-reductions regulations by August 2017, and prepare a
"comprehensive energy plan" within two years.
But elsewhere, judges saw greenhouse-gas reductions as a matter for the legislatures, not the courts.
In
New Mexico, for instance, the state appeals court ruled that, "where
the State has a duty to protect the atmosphere under ... the New Mexico
Constitution, the courts cannot independently regulate greenhouse gas
emissions in the atmosphere as Plaintiffs have proposed.”
Robert
L. Wilkins, judge for the US District Court in the District of Columbia,
echoed these thoughts on the federal level, ruling that "federal courts
have occasionally been called upon to craft remedies that were seen by
some as drastic.... But that reality does not mean that every dispute is
one for the federal courts to resolve, nor does it mean that a sweeping
court-imposed remedy is the appropriate medicine for every intractable
problem.”
But last November, a federal judge in Oregon ruled that
a case brought by Kelsey Juliana and 20 other young plaintiffs could
proceed to trial. Judge Ann Aiken grounded her ruling in the Fifth
Amendment's promise that "no person ... shall be deprived of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law."
She wrote,
"Where a complaint alleges governmental action is affirmatively and
substantially damaging the climate system in a way that will cause human
deaths, shorten human lifespans, result in widespread damage to
property, threaten human food sources, and dramatically alter the
planet's ecosystem, it states a claim for a due process violation."
The
trial will begin in Judge Aiken’s courtroom later this year. The
plaintiffs' attorney, Ms. Olson, is confident that the case will proceed
to – and win in – the Supreme Court, as reported by Slate’s Eric
Holthaus.
But legal experts caution that the trial and appeals
process could take years, and that the Trump administration will likely
want to drag it out for as long as possible.
And even the
landmark legal victory sought by Our Children’s Trust might not mean the
end of the story. The decades-long struggle to desegregate cities
through busing and other programs revealed the difficulties of
translating court orders into workable public policy – especially when
doing so impacts citizens' day-to-day lives.
Even so, after years
of legislative inaction on the issue, environmental activists are
looking for outside-the-box solutions, and many see new hope in Our
Children’s Trust.
As Michael Burger, executive director of the
Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University, told Slate,
"There is no question that [Judge Aiken’s] decision, in both its
eloquence and its bold declaration of a new constitutional right, breaks
new ground."
SOURCE Deep green climate evangelist resigns from Australia's Climate Change Authority over coal powerShould
we be concerned? Hardly. He's about as dedicated a Greenie
as they come. And, as such, he is a great prophet of
doom. So much so that he shoots himself in the foot at times. He says,
for instance, that "the world is on a path to a very unpleasant future
and it is too late to stop it". If it is too late why
bother? Why not just give up his Greenie warbling and kick the
cat?The Turnbull government's recent embrace of
coal-fired power shows it has "abandoned all pretense of taking global
warming seriously", Climate Change Authority member Clive Hamilton said,
explaining why he resigned from the agency.
Professor Hamilton,
who teaches public ethics at Charles Sturt University, sent his
resignation letter to Environment and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg on
Friday, saying it was "perverse" that the government would be boosting
coal when 2016 marked the hottest year on record.
Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull used his National Press Club speech last week to call
for support for so-called "clean coal-fired power plants" to provide
"reliable baseload power" while meeting Australia's carbon emissions
goals.
Professor Hamilton said the comments were "completely
irresponsible and perhaps the sharpest indicator yet just how completely
Malcolm Turnbull has capitulated to the hard right of the Liberal
Party".
"If the new coal-fired power plants were built, it would
make the government's already weak 2030 [carbon] reduction target
unattainable," he said in his letter.
"Deeper cuts in the subsequent decades, essential to limit the worst impacts of warming, would be off the table.
"Professor
Hamilton told Fairfax Media the authority "no longer has any role in
the development of climate change policy in Australia".
Mr
Frydenberg said the government was "unapologetic that our priority as we
transition to a lower emissions future is energy security and
affordability".
"We are smashing our 2020 target by 224 million
tonnes and we have an ambitious 26 to 28 per cent emissions reduction
target by 2030 on 2005, which on a per capita basis is one of the
highest in the G20," he said.
The Senate blocked repeated efforts
by Abbott government to scrap the authority. In October 2015, then
environment minister Greg Hunt appointed five new members including
Wendy Craik as chairwoman in a move the Greens said amounted to a
stacking of Coalition-leaning appointees.
"In its first years,
the authority did great work," Professor Hamilton said, including
recommending Australia should aim to cut 2000-level emissions by 40-60
per cent by 2030.
The current government target is for a cut of
as much as 28 per cent from 2005 levels by 2030, which amounts to about
20 per cent below 2000 levels.
The authority, though, "has become
a shadow of its former self", particularly since the departure of
former Reserve Bank governor Bernie Fraser as its chairman, Professor
Hamilton said.
Last September, Professor Hamilton and fellow
authority member David Karoly, issued a dissenting report, accusing the
authority of failing to give the government independent advice.
The
two claimed its Special Review of Australia's climate goals and
policies was based on "reading from a political crystal ball" rather
than meeting its own terms of reference.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
13 February, 2017
Global warming data comes from a very narrow cliqueScott
Adams is mostly right below. Published climate data is a long way
from the raw data and doing the transformation is the work of a very
few scientists (or alleged scientists). The edited climate data is
however readily available to all and even that data can be embarrassing
to Warmists -- the tiny magnitude of the changes, for instanceOne
of the most famous statistics in the world of politics is the claim
that 97% of climate scientists agree with the idea that humans activity
is boosting CO2 to dangerous levels.
Critics say the 97% is
misleading, because the critics like to include in their own list the
scientists that are working for energy companies. The industry-paid
scientists and engineers have less credibility, say the critics of the
climate science critics.
Recently I retweeted a link to a climate
science whistleblower. I don’t have any way to evaluate his claims. But
his story did a good job of illustrating the flow of data from the
measuring devices all the way to the published papers and then to your
brain. And what I got out of that was that very few people have direct
access to the measuring devices and the original data. Let’s say 1% of
climate scientists are actually involved in generating the temperature
data and deciding what to include, what to smooth, what to replace, and
so on. Apparently you can measure Earth’s temperature a number of ways,
from ice core samples, to satellites, to ocean buoys, to land
thermometers. I might be missing a few. Oh, and each of those methods
probably change a bit over time, so you have some apples-to-oranges
comparisons if you look at history.
In other words, even the 1% involved in direct measurements might not be involved in all the different forms of it.
What
follows next is pure speculation, based on my years of experience in
corporate America and my understanding of human nature. But it seems to
me that 99% of the 97% are relying on the accuracy and honesty of the 1%
who actually produce the temperature measurements. Sure, the other
scientists read the papers, and see whatever "adjustments" were made by
the authors. But that seems like opening the hood of the car, looking at
the outside of the engine, and determining that it’s all good on the
inside.
Speaking of my corporate experience, this reminds me of a
situation when I worked for the phone company. 100% of the employees
believed that one of the Executive Directors in our group was a PhD in
some sort of technology field. After all, he said he was, and the Human
Resources group does background checks before hiring. So he had to be a
PhD, right?
But it turns out he was a con man. He had no PHd.
The Human Resources group was two years behind in their background
checks. When they caught up with him, he was fired immediately.
I’m
open to correction on my assumption that the 97% of climate scientists
depend on the accuracy and honesty of the handful of people with direct
access to the data. Let me know if I got that wrong. If I’m wrong, that
supports my point that non-scientists such as myself can’t be expected
to have useful opinions on science topics.
You just witnessed a
little trick I learned from President Trump. I gave myself two ways to
win and no way to lose. You should try it. It works every time.
SOURCE Swift repeal of Greenie rules leaves former staffers steamingThese
frustrated little authoritarian bureaucrats who believe they are
entitled to tell others what to do deserve more than steaming. How
about letting them go as no longer needed?Joe Pizarchik
spent more than seven years working on a regulation to protect streams
from mountaintop removal coal mining. It took Congress 25 hours to kill
it.
The rule is just one of dozens enacted in the final months of
the Obama administration that congressional Republicans have begun
erasing under a once-obscure law — much to the dismay of agency staffers
who hauled those regulations through the long process to
implementation.
"My biggest disappointment is a majority in
Congress ignored the will of the people," said Pizarchik, who directed
the Interior Department’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement from 2009 through January. "They ignored the interests of
the people in coal country, they ignored the law and they put corporate
money ahead of all that."
The arrival of a Republican president
opened the door for GOP lawmakers to employ a rarely used legislative
tool, the Congressional Review Act of 1996, to nullify executive branch
regulations issued since mid-June. The act allows lawmakers to sandblast
recently enacted rules with a simple majority vote — as they did last
week to the stream regulation, which the Interior Department had
completed in December.
President Donald Trump is expected to sign off on that repeal, along with others moving through the Capitol.
Congress
has successfully used the 1996 law only once before, but Republicans
are wielding it now to slash away potentially dozens of late-term Obama
rules. That has left officials who spent years working on those rules
feeling rubbed raw.
"It’s devastating, of course," said Alexandra
Teitz, a longtime Democratic Hill aide who joined Interior’s Bureau of
Land Management in 2014 as a counselor to the agency’s director and
worked on a rule to curb methane waste from oil and gas production. A
House-passed Congressional Review Act resolution targeting that rule
awaits action in the Senate.
Pizarchik and other former Obama
administration officials called the rapid repeal process intensely
unfair. The 1996 law says any repeal must come within 60 legislative
days after a rule becomes final.
"If there had been more time and
Congress had not rushed this through but had actually deliberated on
what was in the rule, [then] the results would have been different,"
Pizarchik said.
But proponents of the repeal process maintain that it is a blunt but necessary tool.
"It’s
important that Congress have a say in the rules that are applied in
this country," said James Gattuso of the Heritage Foundation. "The CRA
just makes it easier for Congress and the president to make sure the
rules and actions of the agencies reflect their priority."
The
House took up a repeal resolution for Pizarchik’s stream rule shortly
before 2 p.m. Feb. 1. The Senate wrapped up its vote — all Republicans
but one were joined by four Democrats — shortly after 3 p.m. Feb. 2.
That’s
about as fast as a measure can clear Congress, and the swiftness has
former Obama officials wondering if lawmakers even understood the
regulations they voted to kill.
SOURCE Don't suffer weather amnesiaClimate Skeptic Willie Soon Addresses Packed Audience in L.A.LOS
ANGELES — Dr. Wie-Hock "Willie" Soon of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center
for Astrophysics addressed a gathering of the American Freedom Alliance
on Thursday night at the Luxe Hotel, describing the current state of
debate about climate change as "spitting science in the face" and
"treating science like a piece of rubbish."
Mixing humor and science, he entertained the gathering as he made the case for skepticism about climate change.
He
began by mocking the degree to which carbon dioxide was treated like a
toxic gas by proponents of radical policies on climate change. "Next it
will be oxygen, it will be anything that you want on the chemical
table," he joked.
"The Sun is a primary driver of climate change —
and has a far greater impact than changes in CO2," he said, in a slide
presented to the packed audience of about 100 conservatives.
Another slide added: "Climate science is dangerously corrupted and co-opted by multiple anti-science forces and players."
To
the amusement of the audience, Dr. Soon played a clip of Al Sharpton
mocking him on MSNBC, pointing to research funding he had received from
fossil fuel companies. "It is really, truly, a badge of honor, Rev. Al
Sharpton, to be accused by you of a conflict of interest," he said.
Dr.
Soon called much of the reporting about his work in the mainstream
media "fake news." And he mocked the fads and fashions that have sprung
up around climate change.
For example, he said, the "locavore"
movement, which stressed eating locally-produced food to save energy,
actually increased greenhouse gases, because of the energy efficiencies
achieved by larger and more established farms that benefited from
economies of scale.
He also mocked California politicians for
their statements on science — especially Governor Jerry Brown and former
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. In 1977, he pointed out, Gov. Brown had
warned of a drought of "immeasurable magnitude" — a meaningless phrase,
in scientific terms.
The movement toward renewable energy
sources, he said, was not a sign of progress, but regression toward the
lower energy densities of the pre-industrial age. He also likened belief
in carbon "pollution" to the superstitious beliefs of primitive
civilizations, illustrating his point with a 1933 newspaper article
describing a drought in Syria that was blamed by locals on yo-yo toys.
He
then launched into his data-heady scientific presentation in earnest.
For all the focus on carbon dioxide, the most important greenhouse gas
in the climate system was water vapor, he said. And carbon dioxide, he
noted, was not a "pollutant," as the term was conventionally used.
While
it was true that the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide had
been increasing, he said, and had passed 400 parts per million, the
dominant effect of water vapor had helped flatten the greenhouse effect,
such that the rise of global surface temperatures had slowed
significantly.
He said that some climate scientists manipulated
graphs to make climate change seem more severe than it was — for
example, by representing temperature anomalies rather than absolute
temperatures.
His latest work, he said, was in understanding how
temperature data sets were constructed. He and his colleagues were
examining data gathered in rural areas, to remove the distortion of
measurements in urban areas. They found that there was, in fact, some
surface temperature warming, albeit less severe than conventional data
sets showed. But the effect, he said, was more likely the result of
fluctuations in energy output from the sun, which in turn affected water
vapor.
The major effect of cutting carbon dioxide emissions to
zero, he said, would be "to kill and hurt poor people and greatly harm
animals and the environment."
In the past, Dr. Soon noted, the
left had attacked his research because he had taken funding from fossil
fuel companies. He cited the New York Times as one of his chief
antagonists, after it ran a disparaging profile of him in 2015.
As
a result, he said, he had not accepted any funding for his latest
research on the composition and manipulation of climate data sets.
SOURCE Green Energy Is Causing Power Shortages In Europe During An Awful WinterOver-reliance on green energy and freezing winter weather triggered serious power shortages across Europe.
European
Union nations, including Greece and Hungary, hoarded power due to the
cold winter weather. That hoarding triggered shortages that cut off
electricity to tens of thousands of homes and sent power prices soaring
to record levels.
Temperatures across southern Europe are
expected to drop below freezing again next week. The continent has been
unable to meet electricity demand, as green energy tends to go offline
in the cold. Solar power, for example, tends to produce less energy in
the winter because the days are shorter.
"What I see in the
Balkans is clear evidence that everybody first secures its own
consumption and only then, if they’re in a position to do so, they’ll
help the others," Andras Totth, the deputy CEO of the Hungarian utility
MVM, told Bloomberg.
Europe has increasingly invested in green
energy in recent years, which has created big problems preventing
blackouts during the winter.
The average European spent 26.9
cents per kilowatt-hour on electricity during the last full year of
data, while the average American only spent 10.4 cents, according to an
analysis of government data previously published by The Daily Caller
News Foundation.
Even EU nations where power is relatively cheap
pay a lot more for power than any U.S. state. Great Britain, for
example, pays an average of 54 percent more for electricity than
Americans paid last year. Much of the expense comes from subsidies for
green energy, which account for roughly 7 percent of British energy
bills, according to government study released last July.
Power
prices are so absurdly high on the continent that cutbacks have already
been made. Denmark’s new government pledged to reduce the amount of
money it spends on "green" energy by 67 percent in December, and Germany
plans to abandon the construction of new wind power plants by 2019.
Green
energy subsidies and mandates have greatly increased the price of
electricity throughout Germany, especially, which has some of the
continent’s highest power prices. The German government has mandated
that the nuclear reactors be replaced with wind or solar power, but the
estimated cost of doing so is over $1.1 trillion.
SOURCE West Australian Leftists back down on "renewable" energy targetThe
power outages in "green" South Australia are giving them jitters. Any
hint of going down the South Australian path would paint a target on
their backsWA LABOR is attempting to climb down from a 50
per cent renewable energy target committed to in October, which Liberal
ministers have swarmed upon as evidence of its economic vandalism.
Recordings
have emerged of Labor energy spokesman Bill Johnston telling the
National Environmental Law Association State conference in October the
party had a clear target for the proportion of energy it intended to
derive from renewable sources.
"The Labor Party’s target is at least 50 per cent by 2030," Mr Johnston told the conference during a Q and A session.
"We
don’t believe that that is going to push up prices because we believe
it will be done on a competitive basis and, as I say, I think setting a
target leads to policy action and I think there are a lot of policy
actions that are required."
The emergence of the tape comes as
renewable energy leader South Australia, grappling with a heatwave, is
hit by more widespread power outages in the latest of a series of
rolling blackouts.
The State endured a complete blackout in
October which prompted furious national debate over its near-met target
of 50 per cent renewables and its ramifications for secure energy
supplies and household electricity prices.
WA Labor released a
statement on Thursday quoting Mr Johston saying it "will not introduce a
State-based renewable energy target"
"We aspire to have more
renewable energy," the statement said. "After the election, we
will sit down with industry and the community to see what is achievable
and affordable."
The statement said WA Labor would "co-invest to
develop a diverse economy and new jobs" in coal mining town Collie and
other regional communities.
Energy Minister Mike Nahan said Labor
was clearly "ideologically driven" towards the 50 per cent RET by 2030,
which would devastate WA’s economy.
"In WA we are an
energy-intensive State, we process minerals, we have hot weather, we
have air conditioning and we live in a modern society where we rely on
energy for almost everything we do," he said.
Dr Nahan said the
Liberals had overseen uptake of about 13 per cent renewables driven
mainly by solar power, and was committed to a COAG target of 23.5 per
cent by 2020. "But at the same time going forward we will commit to our
coal industry, and large gas," he said.
Dr Nahan said wind was
unreliable as an energy source because it often dropped during hot
weather, when electricity consumption was highest.
Malcolm
Turnbull yesterday lumped in WA Labor’s plan for a 50 per cent renewable
energy target with his broader warnings about the threat to electricity
prices and reliability of supplies posed by reliance on wind and solar
power.
He pointed to Wednesday night’s black out in South
Australia as the product of favouring ideology ahead of efficient and
objective management of energy.
"Labor is drunk on Left ideology
on energy and they are putting Australians’ livelihoods, their
businesses and their households at risk," the Prime Minister said.
Social
Services Minister and former WA treasurer Christian Porter told 6PR WA
Labor’s plans would be "a disaster for WA business and households".
"It
will have the only and inevitable outcome of ratcheting up household
electricity prices and making business very difficult to run in WA," he
said.
"A 50 per cent RET from State Labor is a political
millstone that will sit round their neck this campaign. I’m astonished
they would even contemplate going there."
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
12 February, 2017
Trump's election and the impact on New England's energy industryPresident
Trump promises to bring big changes to how and where we get our energy,
driven in part by his fossil fuel fandom and a self-professed
skepticism about man-made climate change.
But figuring out the
long-term impact on New England's energy industries is complicated,
especially with Trump's team still being assembled. He has picked
leaders for several key agencies. Most notably, former Exxon Mobil chief
executive Rex Tillerson is now secretary of state, and former Texas
governor Rick Perry has been chosen to run the Department of Energy. But
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, down to two of five members
as of last Friday, lacks a quorum. That means it can't make major
decisions until Trump appoints at least one new commissioner.
Regardless
of what happens in Washington, Massachusetts and nearby states will be
able to keep advancing several significant energy policies unimpeded.
The region already has aggressive greenhouse gas controls that will be
in place even after the Clean Power Plan - an Obama administration
creation aimed at curbing power plant emissions - goes away as expected
under Trump's Environmental Protection Agency. Also, Massachusetts'
plans to tap into huge amounts of hydropower in Canada and offshore wind
power south of Martha's Vineyard are moving ahead.
But even
with those programs in place, there's plenty of uncertainty about the
impact the change in administration will have on the energy sector here.
Research and startups
Experts say the greatest local
impact could be felt among the Boston area's universities and
early-stage clean-tech firms. The millions of dollars that the federal
government spends annually on research grants could be a prime Trump
target. At particular risk is the ARPA-E grant program, which funds
high-tech energy research and is administered by the Department of
Energy. Massachusetts has been the second largest recipient of ARPA-E
funds after California, with more than $150 million flowing to the state
since the program's inception in 2009.
Coal
Trump is
fond of coal. New England power generators, not so much. Only about 1
percent of the regions's electricity still comes from coal. Brayton
Point, Massachusetts' last coal-fired power plant, is closing in June.
Trump's election isn't going to change that. Connecticut's final coal
plant is scheduled to be converted to natural gas, and Eversource is
selling two coal-run plants in New Hampshire that face an uncertain
future. Environmental rules have played a role in coal's demise, but the
competition from cheap natural gas is the primary reason it's no longer
in demand here.
Natural gas
A proliferation of natural
gas power plants in New England helped keep a damper on energy prices,
but the plants also created a new set of issues. Most notably, the
region's constrained pipeline system is creeping closer to its
cold-weather capacity. That's why pipeline operator Spectra Energy
teamed up with utilities Eversource and National Grid for a massive -
and controversial - expansion project known as Access Northeast. The
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has shown a willingness to approve
large pipeline projects in the face of local opposition; witness last
month's approval of another Spectra project that included a
much-maligned Weymouth compressor facility that will help regulate the
flow of gas in the area. Jim Grasso, a government relations consultant
who works with energy-industry clients, says Access Northeast is more
likely to materialize under a Trump presidency than it would have been
if Hillary Clinton had won the election.
But the biggest hurdle
Access Northeast faces isn't getting permits - it's the project's $3
billion-plus price tag. And it's not clear if Trump can help with
financing. Efforts to pass on the costs to electricity ratepayers last
year met resistance from the state Supreme Judicial Court, which ruled
against the idea, and later from regulators in other New England states.
Hydropower
State
officials are moving ahead with a bidding process for "clean energy"
contracts aimed at prompting at least one major new power line to be
built that will bring Canadian hydropower into southern New England.
Eversource
spokeswoman Caroline Pretyman says the Department of Energy is weighing
its request for a permit for the company's Northern Pass project in New
Hampshire that would allow the power line to cross the border into
Canada. The federal agency will make a recommendation, she said, but
ultimately, the decision would be Trump's. (New Hampshire officials also
will have a say.) Energy experts predict Trump would be predisposed to
approve such a project, despite the fact the power would come from a
foreign source. A similar transmission line, one that would connect
Canadian hydropower to the New York City area, was included on a recent
list of infrastructure priorities reportedly circulated by the Trump
transition team.
Solar
Congress in late 2015 extended the
life of a federal tax credit program that many solar developers use to
finance projects, but it's scheduled to be phased out over the next
several years.
Some clean-energy experts fear the tax credit
could get jettisoned amid the wholesale restructuring of the
government's tax codes envisioned under Trump's leadership and the
Republican-controlled Congress. Others say they would be surprised if
Congress revisited energy tax credits so soon after extending them.
Meanwhile,
state officials control two other types of incentives for solar
developers, and those are likely to be slowly pared. At the same time,
however, the state's legal requirements for utilities to purchase
certain amounts of renewable power will continue to grow each year,
regardless of who is in the White House.
Wind
As with
solar projects, wind farm developers often bank on a set of federal tax
credits that Congress extended in late 2015. It's possible these
incentives could come under scrutiny as part of a Trump tax overhaul.
He's been critical of the wind power industry's subsidies. But like
solar developers, wind farm developers will continue to benefit from the
state's steadily increasing requirements for renewable energy
purchases. The state has a law on the books that allows for up to 1,600
megawatts in long-term contracts with future offshore wind farms -
that's roughly enough power for more than 600,000 homes.
Those
wind farms would be built in federal waters, and three developers -
including one with ties to investment bank Goldman Sachs, and another
owned by private equity giant Blackstone Group - already have secured
lease rights. It's possible that the Trump administration could slow the
progress of any projects because they come under federal jurisdiction.
But that would also irritate the Wall Street types that have invested in
these projects.
SOURCE Dakota Access Pipeline Easement Marks a New Day for US EnergyThe
final easement granted on Wednesday by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
to complete the Dakota Access pipeline project sent a clear signal to
our nation: Infrastructure development is once again a priority.
Last
November, America chose a president who campaigned on rebuilding
America's infrastructure, encouraging energy development, and
championing job creation. Now, only weeks into his administration,
President Donald Trump's actions have matched his campaign promises.
Four
days after his inauguration, the president signed an executive order
for expedited approval of the Dakota Access pipeline easement. Two weeks
later, the easement has been granted.
This stands in stark
contrast to the actions of President Barack Obama, whose disregard for
the rule of law last fall halted the completion of the legally permitted
Dakota Access pipeline.
This sent a chilling message to the
private industries that finance, develop, and complete all required
regulatory reviews to build roads, bridges, transmission lines,
pipelines, wind farms, and water lines.
The message was that when
top government officials and lawless mobs decide to obstruct a legally
permitted pipeline project that is more than 90 percent complete, no
infrastructure project is safe.
Few people outside North Dakota
can comprehend the chaos this conflict brought to my state. It became a
cause c‚lŠbre, bringing thousands of political activists, anti-oil
extremists, and movie stars to an area south of Bismarck where they
illegally camped on federal land.
These protestors damaged
bridges and construction equipment, burned tires, threatened law
enforcement and area residents, and blocked progress on the pipeline's
construction.
Except for a few hundred still in the area, these protesters are mostly gone.
Yet
today, the nearby Standing Rock Sioux members and state and county
crews are feverishly cleaning up the mess of personal belongings, trash,
and human waste they left behind-an estimated 250 truckloads that must
be hauled to the Bismarck landfill.
They are hoping to beat next
month's spring thaw on the floodplain where they camped, so that the
trash left behind by these "water protectors" doesn't pollute the
Missouri River.
There is a poignant and absurd irony about this
situation. Those claiming to be the true protectors of land and water
turned out to be the only threat to the environment.
With the
easement to finish the Dakota Access pipeline now granted, it's time to
get to work and finish this $3.7 billion private project that will
deliver as many as 570,000 barrels of oil a day from northwestern North
Dakota through South Dakota and Iowa to connect to existing pipelines in
Illinois.
This important piece of energy infrastructure will enhance America's energy security and put Americans back to work.
I am grateful for the president's commitment to projects like this that are so vital to our nation.
It
sends a strong signal of a new era of cooperation between the federal
government and private businesses that are committed to moving our
nation forward with new critical infrastructure creating greater job
opportunities for Americans.
SOURCE Being anti-energy is being anti-humanityThe IPCC wants the world to stop using coal, oil and natural gas -- and a dramatically lower world population
Everything
you need to know about how perverse and dangerous the UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is, is summed up in its
latest report. Released on November 2, it issued the same tired, old
and untrue claims of "severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts for
people and ecosystems."
The IPCC wants the world to stop using
coal, oil and natural gas, saying that they must be "phased out almost
entirely" by the end of the century. The report reeks of their contempt
for humanity.
Losing electricity, no matter where you live, is
losing every technology that enhances and preserves your life. You lose
the ability to cool or warm your home, apartment, or workplace. You lose
the ability to keep food safe in your refrigerator and freezer. You
most certainly lose the lighting. You lose the ability to turn on your
computer or television. Indeed, to use everything you take for granted.
Since
the discovery and generation of energy with coal, oil, and natural gas,
generations have lived lives not only different from all who preceded
them, but better in so many ways, not the least of which is extended
life expectancy. Nations with energy are places where people live
longer, healthier lives. They are also wealthier nations where the
energy translates into industry, jobs, transportation, and all the other
attributes of modern life.
Although we usually don't associate
energy with morality, Alex Epstein has. His book, The Moral Case for
Fossil Fuels ($27.95, Portfolio, an imprint of the Penguin Cover -
Moral Case for Fossil FuelsGroup), is the finest case for the role
coal, oil and natural gas has played in our lives and the positive,
emancipating impact they have had on humanity. Everyone should read it.
"I
hold human life as the standard of value," says Epstein. "I think that
our fossil fuel use so far has been a moral choice because it has
enabled billions of people to live longer and more fulfilling lives, and
I think the cuts proposed by the environmentalists in the 1970s were
wrong because of all the death and suffering they would have inflicted
on human beings."
"Eighty-seven percent of the energy mankind
uses every second comes from burning one of the fossil fuels: coal, oil
or natural gas." That has not stopped environmentalists from denouncing
coal and oil as "dirty" or because their use generates carbon dioxide
(CO2) emissions. What they never tell you is how small those emissions
are and that they play an infinitesimal role to influence the Earth's
weather or climate. They never tell you that the Earth has centuries
more of untapped reserves. The modern world could not exist without
them.
"In the last 80 years, as CO2 emissions have most rapidly
escalated, the annual rate of climate-related deaths worldwide fell by
an incredible rate of 98%. That means the incidence of death from
climate is 50 times lower than it was 80 years ago."
Epstein
points to "the power of fossil-fueled machines to build a durable
civilization that is highly resilient to extreme heat, extreme cold,
floods, storms, and so on" to demonstrate the foolishness of those who
oppose their use. Primary among them is the UN's Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change. As part of its 40th session, in early November the
IPCC adopted the final "synthesis" report of its Fifth Assessment
Report. This full-scale update calls for the reduction of energy
worldwide. They base this on the claim that "human influence on the
climate system is clear."
CFACT NY air banner no global warming
17 years yIt is not clear. Despite the CO2 emissions, the Earth has been
in a cooling cycle for the last 19 years, during the same time the
IPCC's "climate experts" and others were telling us the Earth was going
to become dangerously warm.
Epstein reminds us that, "In 1972,
the international think tank, the Club of Rome, released a
multimillion-copy-selling book, The Limits of Growth, which declared
that its state of the art computer models had demonstrated that we would
run out of oil by 1992 and natural gas by 1993 (and, for good measure,
gold, mercury, silver, tin, zinc, and lead by 1993 at the latest.)
It
is essential to understand that every one of the "global warming"
predictions made in the 1980s and the decades since then has been WRONG.
Every one of the computer models on which those predictions were based
was WRONG.
A younger generation graduating from high school this
year has never spent a day when the overall temperature of the Earth was
warming. The Earth's natural cooling cycle is based on a natural low
cycle of solar radiation. The Sun is generating less heat. Indeed, the
Earth is nearing the end of the Holocene cycle, one of warmth for the
past ten thousand or more years that has given rise to human
civilization.
Epstein's book is more than just philosophical
opinion. It is based on documented facts regarding fossil fuel use. At
one point he quotes Paul Ehrlich who, in his 1968 Ehrlich book, The
Population Bomb, declared that "the battle to feed humanity is
over." Epstein notes that in 1968 the world's population was 3.6
billion people. "Since then it has doubled, yet the average person is
better fed than he was in 1968. This seeming miracle was due to a
combination of the fossil fuel industry and genetic science." Farming
today is mechanized and that requires fuel!
The claims that
Epstein debunks are accompanied by the fundamental truths about fossil
fuel use and science. His book, comprehensible to anyone whether they
have any knowledge of science or not, should be on everyone's reading
list.
At the heart of environmentalism and its "save the Earth"
agenda is the reduction, if not the elimination, of humans from planet
Earth.
SOURCE Poland To Take EU To Court Over Global Warming RulesPoland threatened to sue the European Union (EU) over its global warming regulations, according to documents seen by Reuters.
An
EU deal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent by 2030,
fulfilling its pledge to the United Nations, poses problems for EU
member-state Poland. Reducing emissions may harm Poland's coal industry -
a critical industry for the country.
Poland is challenging the
legal basis for the EU's global warming rules, and is determined to
bring the case to the European Court of Justice (ECJ), though an unnamed
source doesn't think Poland will go that far.
"[T]o challenge the legal basis (of EU climate policy) is extreme even for Poland," an anonymous EU official told Reuters.
EU
global warming rules require unanimous consent from all 28
member-nations, meaning that Poland could block them. Poland repeatedly
opposed EU measures to combat global warming and has fought the bloc on
coal subsidies.
If passed, the EU resolution mandates that 15
percent of Poland's energy come from "green" sources by 2020. Poland
presently generates nearly 90 percent of its electricity from coal
power, making it the second largest coal consumer in Europe. Green
energy accounts for less than 5 percent of energy production in 2012.
Poland
is currently governed by the conservative and anti-EU Law & Justice
party, the first political party to win enough seats in parliament to
govern alone since the Soviet Union collapsed. Poland does not have a
single member of a left-wing party in parliament.
Law &
Justice generally opposes wind and solar energy and favors an energy
policy that emphasizes tariffs targeted at Russian natural gas. It has
even advocated for a moratorium on the construction of new wind power
turbines and supports dismantling of any wind plant within three
kilometers of a residential area.
Environmental groups like
Greenpeace have repeatedly criticized Law & Justices energy policy
ideas, claiming that the country's CO2 emission reductions are
insufficiently ambitious.
The EU has committed by 2030 to reduce
its carbon emissions by 40 percent and increase "green" energy
production to 27 percent of energy consumption. Due to these mandates,
the cost of electricity for the average European is 57 percent higher
than the cost of electricity for the average Pole. Both the United
States and Poland pay about the same amount for electricity.
SOURCE Australia: Perth has second-wettest day everOne recollects prominent Australian Warmist Tim Flannery predicting that Perth would become a ghost town because its rains will dry up.
He hasn't got a clue about climate. He is a palaeontologist who
knows a lot about ancient kangaroos but not much else. He's just
another Green/Left propagandist and false prophetPerth has
come close to having its wettest-ever day as heavy rain in WA's
southwest caused flash flooding and left more than 9000 properties
without power.
Perth had more than 114mm of rain in the 24 hours
to Friday morning, which is slightly shy of the record 120.6mm that fell
on February 9, 1992.
The unseasonal weather also resulted in the city reaching only 17.4C on Thursday, making it Perth's coldest February day ever.
A Western Power spokesman there 2900 homes were still without electricity on Friday morning.
Bureau
of Meteorology duty forecaster Catherine Schelfhout said there would be
risks of flooding in the upper Swan River in coming days.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
10 February, 2017
Welcome to "green" electricity. South Australia shows the wayIt's
high summer in Australia. S.A. turned off its last coal-fired
station in the middle of last year. This is the fourth time since
then that there has been a power outage. On this occasion the
atmospheric high pressure cell that brought the heat wave also caused
the wind to stop blowing, bringing the output from all the wind farms to
almost nothing. So green power makes it likely that you will lose
power just when you most need it. No AC!
The small gas-powered Pelican point generator is privately owned and usually runs well below capacity for cost reasons.SA
POWER Networks was ordered on Wednesday night to restore electricity to
about 40,000 households and businesses after supplies were deliberately
cut amid soaring temperatures.
Power to customers across the
state was switched off from 6.33pm under "rotational load shedding"
orders from the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) "due to lack of
available generation supply in SA", SA Power Networks said. About 45
minutes later electricity was restored after SA Power Networks announced
that AEMO had ordered it to return supply.
"AEMO has called an end to load shedding, we are restoring power," the supplier said.
As customers reacted with outrage, the blame game immediately began.
State
Energy Minister Tom Koutsantonis said: "Every South Australian has a
right to be angry. We had spare capacity in the SA generation market and
the market didn’t turn that generation on."
"The second unit at
Pelican Point (power station) could’ve been turned on last night, it had
gas, was ready to go and it wasn’t turned on. The national market isn’t
working," he said.
"We (the State Government) have been taking
advice from the market operator and others but after last night we have
to reassess. We will do what’s necessary to make sure SA has sufficient
generation," Mr Koutsantonis said.
"It’s my understanding that
AEMO (Australian Energy Market Operator) was made aware more generation
was available and chose not to turn that generation on. Serious
questions have to be asked about why we had generation available that
wasn’t used."
The temperature was still above 40C when the
rolling blackouts began at 6.33pm to conserve power supplies as
homeowners used airconditioners for relief from the heat.
SA’s
power reliability will again be under scrutiny given a series of major
blackouts, including a statewide failure in September.
An SA
Power Networks spokesman said they were acting on instructions from AEMO
in response to insufficient generation supply in SA. "We don’t
generate," he said. "This is not an SA Power Networks issue — we are the
muggins in the middle between the customer and generation supply."
SA
Liberal frontbencher Simon Birmingham said it was "yet another example
that the South Australian Government can’t keep the lights on". "It’s a
chronic failing that can only hurt investment confidence in the state,"
Mr Birmingham said.
"It’s a demonstration that ad hoc state-based
renewable energy targets have gone too far — when reliability can’t be
maintained on a day the likes of which SA faces numerous times every
single summer."
Federal Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg said the
blackout "is yet another example of Jay Weatherill’s failed experiment".
"Because of the lack of base load generation there literally wasn’t
enough electricity being produced to power the state," he said.
"It’s
time Labor both federally and at a state level recognised its high
renewable energy targets are putting at risk energy security and
affordability."
The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO)
issued a statement, saying at 6.33pm on Wednesday "approximately 100
megawatts (MW) of local load shedding was instructed in South Australia
to maintain the security of the power system."
It said "load
shedding" — affecting about 40,000 homes and businesses — was
"instructed by AEMO to avoid damage to network equipment due to
potential overloading."
At 7pm AEMO gave permission to restore the 100 MW of load, and at about 7.10pm electricity supply had been restored.
Angry
customers who lost power on dinner time took to social media to express
their outrage with the electricity system. They also noted that, yet
again, businesses were losing money due to uncertain electricity
supplies.
The public also took full advantage of Premier Jay
Weatherill’s "Q & Jay" life Facebook session on Wednesday night,
with critical comments pouring in.
Among them Anthony Hunter
wrote: "Here’s a question, why are we having load-shedding power cuts
right at this moment, when it’s only one day of hot weather. "Surely the
hottest state in Australia can handle one day of heat?"
SOURCE The Greenland ice sheet surface mass balance has risen +100 billion tons above the 1990-2013 averageJan 20-Feb 7,2017
SOURCE Bill Nye wants to ‘save the world’ by explaining to your kids how science works, despite not being an actual scientistNetflix
is launching a new show confidently titled "#bill nye Saves the World"
where Nye will explain complicated topics like global warming to kids as
he understands it. The show wants to illustrate how #Climate Change
impacts everything from politics to pop culture, but from his "special
blend of lab procedure" and quirky guests.
He also wants to
refute what he considers are non-scientific claims by industry leaders,
politicians, and religious leaders. By doing that, he’ll be "saving the
world." There’s just one problem: Nye is a not a scientist and his track
record is dreadful.
Since ending his first show in the early
2000s, Nye has been on a quest to convince as many people as he can that
climate change is the world’s greatest threat. But schoolchildren
aren’t interested in demagoguery, but rather "how and why" things tick.
And parents may be wondering if a climate activist should be spreading
his gospel to their children. He also brings with him over a decade of
controversial assertions that may prove daunting to overcome.
Epic fail
In
a heavily publicized experiment, Nye tried to demonstrate how carbon
dioxide (CO2) warmed up the atmosphere. He put a thermometer in a sealed
container filled with excess amounts of CO2. He then used a heat lamp
to warm up the container and watched as the temperature rose. That, he
said, was proof that CO2 is overheating the planet. But what Nye proved
wasn’t CO2’s response to radiation like the sun, but rather the
"convective" properties of any gas.
Genuine scientists who
replicated his experiment used Argon as an experimental control gas (a
staple in #Science) and just like the CO2, it heated up as well. The
problem was that Argon has no infrared properties; Nye’s experiment only
proved the "processes related to convective heat transfer," which play
no role in global warming. That didn’t stop Al Gore from incorporating
the debunked experiment into his Climate Un-Reality Project to train his
climate warriors.
Climate doubters un-American
He also
said that politicians who doubt global warming were unpatriotic in order
to shame them. In a well-publicized interview, Nye said Article 1,
Section 8 of the constitution proved his point. He said this section
alone should compel lawmakers to "promote the progress of science and
useful arts." Not quite.
The constitution actually reads, "To
promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited
times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective
writings and discoveries." It has nothing to do with science and
everything to do with patents and copyrights.
Skeptics should be jailed
Nye
even said the energy revolution of the early 1900s was "akin to human
slavery" and climate skeptics should be jailed for ruining his quality
of life. He said doubts about global warming affected his existence as a
public citizen.
And when Sarah Palin said Bill Nye was not a
scientist, the liberal media leapt to his defense proclaiming her
remarks were untrue. But Bill Nye was what one journalist described as a
"professional lab-coat wearer." He has never published a single
peer-reviewed paper and has spent most of his time talking about how
great science is instead of doing it.
Not surprisingly, he
graduated from college as a mechanical engineer. He makes science look
and feel good, which allows others to call him "the Science Guy." In
other fields, Nye would be known as a science presenter.
He’s
tweeted that there’s been more severe weather despite that being
statistically untrue and said climate deniers were responsible for
keeping global warming out of the last election. But he has admitted
that skeptics have been surprisingly successful even if he thinks the
"science" is on his side. Which he’ll be teaching to your children
starting on April 21.
SOURCE The Purpose Of The Military Is To Defend The Homeland, Not Promote Wind TurbinesGore's
malign influence, which consistently reflected the views of the most
radical environmentalists, was manifest repeatedly in foreign policy
issues that had scientific, technological or environmental elements.
"The
business of America is business," President Calvin Coolidge famously
said. He might have added that the business of the nation’s military is
to defend America—not the promotion of radical environmentalism. (Duh.)
An editorial in Monday’s Wall Street Journal offers an example of how
that simple axiom was pushed aside by the Obama administration,
which over the objections of the military gave the green light to a huge
wind farm in North Carolina that will interfere with the functioning of
a sophisticated U.S. Navy radar surveillance system.
The radar
installation, Relocatable Over-the-Horizon Radar (ROTHR), monitors over
two million square miles and is an integral part of our homeland
security. It can detect and track criminal operations, terrorist
threats, and menacing activity of unfriendly nations throughout the
Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico and in northern South America.
The
North Carolina ROTHR, one of the nation’s two sites, uses high-frequency
radar waves bounced off a layer of the atmosphere (the ionosphere) to
provide long-range over-the-horizon radar coverage. The system is
difficult to operate reliably because high-frequency waves are
susceptible to interference from lightning almost anywhere in the world,
and the reception of signals changes throughout the course of the day
and the seasons.
The last thing such a system needs is another interfering variable, but as described in the Wall Street Journal:
The
Navy—informed by MIT and government studies—has long held that wind
farms within a 28-mile radius of a ROTHR site interfere with its ability
to function. In 2011 the Spanish wind-turbine manufacturer Iberdrola
nonetheless applied to build a giant wind farm in North Carolina near
the Virginia border. The farm’s more than 100 turbines, some more than
500 feet tall, would fall within 28 miles of the ROTHR site, some as
near as 14 miles.
Not surprisingly, U.S. military officials
opposed a massive wind turbine project in such close proximity to their
sensitive radar installation, but they were overruled by the Obama White
House. What could have been the countervailing factor? Well, the
preamble in the agreement with Iberdrola reads, in part, "it is an
objective of the DoD to ensure that the robust development of renewable
energy resources . . . may move forward in the United States."
The
Department of Defense is supposed to be a cheerleader for "renewable
energy resources," at the cost of compromising national security? At
least Obama advisors Valerie Jarrett and John Holdren didn’t substitute
Priuses for Humvees in Iraq and Afghanistan, although I wouldn’t have
put it past them.
This was not the first time that Democrats in
power have indulged in irresponsible eco-babble and nonsense that
endangered the nation. In April 1996, Secretary of State Warren
Christopher announced that thereafter, environmental concerns would
become coequal with national security and economic issues in U.S.
foreign relations. Several major initiatives were part of this policy,
including international agreements and conventions, strategically
distributed largess from the State Department and Agency for
International Development and new "environmental hubs" at selected U.S.
embassies, which would promulgate the environmental gospel according to
Vice-President Al Gore.
Secretary Christopher singled out the
Biodiversity Treaty, which then-Undersecretary of State Tim Wirth
characterized as having "top priority among all treaties" and agreements
awaiting confirmation. Never ratified by the U.S. Senate, that
international agreement--largely a product of the corrupt United Nations
Environment Program and various European Union puppets in developing
countries--was a concoction that only a science-challenged radical like
Gore could love: a volatile combination of ignorance of science and
ideological, heavy-handed environmental and foreign policy that, had it
been implemented by the United States, would have been detrimental to
our economy and to scientific and technological innovation.
The
treaty’s Cartagena Biosafety Protocol, which incorporates the bogus
"precautionary principle," governs R&D and commerce in genetically
engineered organisms used in agriculture. It has inhibited advances in
crop genetics worldwide in the nations that signed it, especially in
poorer countries. (Unnecessary case-by-case regulation, poverty and
government corruption are an inauspicious combination.)
scientific, technological or environmental elements.
To
create and sustain the base of information necessary to justify his
views, Gore enlisted the resources of the intelligence community. John
Deutch, coordinator of all U.S. intelligence activities (and consummate
yes-man), signed on: "I intend to make sure that environmental
intelligence remains in the mainstream of U.S. intelligence activities,"
he said. "Even in times of declining budgets, we will support
policymakers."
Gore's malign influence, which consistently
reflected the views of the most radical environmentalists, was manifest
repeatedly in foreign policy issues that had scientific, technological
or environmental elements. He directed his minions in various government
departments to pursue an international agreement that would have
delegated to various "green" international organizations authority to
regulate "hazardous chemicals." The new system would have lumped
together chemicals of low intrinsic toxicity with pesticides, industrial
lubricants and other more toxic substances--and thereby made the former
guilty by association.
Many federal agencies joined in this
Clinton Administration environmental shell game. The Agency for
International Development provided a kind of "slush fund" for the
schemes of radical environmentalists. The agency's foreign aid funds
were used to undermine market economies abroad and put American
businesses at a competitive disadvantage. In Indonesia, for example, AID
gave more than $1.3 million to the local chapter of Friends of the
Earth (virtually its entire operating budget) for its campaign against
New Orleans-based Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold. The environmental
organization accused the mining company of polluting an Indonesian
river, destroying crops and inciting military attacks on civilians. None
of these accusations was substantiated. In addition, through U.S.
environmental activists, Friends of the Earth successfully lobbied the
Overseas Private Investment Corporation, a federal agency that promotes
business abroad by insuring companies against the risk of
nationalization, to cancel Freeport's $100-million policy.
We
have likely seen the last of such irresponsible, dangerous policies in
the name of environmentalism. The influence of Generals Kelly and Mattis
in the Trump cabinet (secretaries of Homeland Security and Defense,
respectively) should ensure that.
SOURCE Solar Inconvenient Truth: Ivanpah Plant a Big Fossil Fuel UserThe
BrightSource Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating Facility, which uses
320,000 mirrors to create thermal energy, still qualifies under state
rules as an alternative energy source, despite using about 1.4 billion
cubic feet of natural gas a year, according to a report by the Press
Telegram.
The California Air Resources Board’s most recent
analysis reportedly found that during Ivanpah’s second year of
operation, carbon emissions from gas, used to focus Ivanpah’s mirrors at
night, jumped by 48.4 percent, to 68,676 metric tons.
The joint
venture between BrightSource Energy, NRG, Google and Bechtel was
approved by the Obama administration as its biggest alternative-energy
project on public lands. The project also received $1.6 billion in
taxpayer loan guarantees, and $600 million in federal tax credits, to
reduce carbon emissions by 400,000 tons of carbon-dioxide emissions per
year.
NRG operators also assured California that the project
would create 2,636 jobs during the project’s construction, and pay $300
million in state and local tax revenues over the life of the project.
But
carbon emissions data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration
demonstrats that natural gas consumption at Ivanpah increased by about 7
percent in the first three quarters of 2016, compared to the prior
year.
The 450 California power plants, manufacturing facilities
and other operations in the state facilities that produce 25,000 or more
metric tons of carbon dioxide per year are required to slash carbon
dioxide emissions, or buy pollution credits, either from those that shut
down activities, or from designated alternative energy producers.
Southern
California Edison, PG&E, and other utilities are under a state
mandate to acquire 33 percent of their electricity from renewable
sources by 2020, and 50 percent by 2030.
Ivanpah is designated as
a renewable source because it uses 352,000 mirrors to reflect sunlight
onto three thermal boilers at the top of large towers. That, in turn,
creates steam power that causes huge electric turbines to spin to
generate electricity.
But Ivanpah claims that natural gas must be
burned at night and during overcast days as a maintenance requirement
to heat the towers and keep the turbines online. It also claims this
hybrid solution improves the length of time and the amount of solar
electricity generated each day. Critics now refer to the hybrid plant as
another fossil fuel scam.
David Knox, spokesman for the plant’s
operator, Houston-based NRG Energy, told Riverside Press-Enterprise
reporter Daniel Danelski that the reason for natural gas use increase
was Ivanpah’s increasing its electrical generation: "The reason for this
is that the more the units run, the more we use the auxiliary boilers
to support that increased operation."
David Lamfrom, California
desert manager for the National Parks Conservation Association, warned
Solar Industry magazine: "We obviously made a mistake here." Not only
does the project consume 5.6 square miles of undisturbed public land
that is home to the endangered desert tortoise, but Ivanpah has also
become one of the larger burners of fossil fuel in California.
Tensions
between solar generators and NPCA environmentalists have grown since
former Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell, based on the supposed
success of Ivanpah, announced the approval of the 350 megawatt Midland
Solar Energy Project in Nevada, and the 100 megawatt Quartzsite Solar
Energy Project in Arizona.
Ivanpah has an exemption from state
rules to qualify as an alternative energy source, because only 5 percent
or less of its electrical generation is due to daylight burning of
natural gas, according to the California Energy Commission.
Earlier,
Breitbart News noted that Ivanpah fell 55 percent short of its 2014
electrical generation goal of 940,000 megawatt hours, but it did
incinerate about 28,000 wild birds. Both issues have improved, but the
use of natural gas is far higher than the original business plan.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
9 February, 2017
Big foot-shoot: New baseline shows SLOWER warming
The galoots behind the study below seemed to have been unhappy that
19th century steam trains might have affected the baseline against which
global warming was measured. They argued that temperatures in the
period 1720-1800 would be a better criterion for what the temperature
was before industrial influences cut in.
So they did the work of
getting their new baseline temperature. But what did they find?
They found that the temperature in this pre-industrial period was
"likely 0.55–0.80°C cooler than 1986-2005". That compares with the
usual agreed figure of about two thirds of a degree for global warming
so far.
So at the lower end the new baseline shows LESS
warming than previous studies. They were a little bit cowardly,
however, in that they stated a range rather than a single figure.
Previous authors have chosen a single most likely figure.
It's a
bit rough but we could take an average of their two extremes as a
single figure. In that case we are back to the two thirds of a
degree already accepted. So we are left with two possible conclusions
from their study. In the modern warming period, the amount of
warming is uncertain or that it is still just about the two thirds
already agreed.
But here's the killer: The conventional
estimate of warming shows warming of two thirds of a degree over a
period of around 100 years -- which is certainly a trivially slow
warming. But the baseline in the new work is around 300 years
ago. So if a change of two thirds of a degree over one century is
trivial, what is the same change over a 300 year period? It looks
like these guys have really shot warmism in the foot.
But
in their usual way, most Warmists will simply choose the starting point
that suits them. Sad for them that an earlier starting point did
not help.
The authors must have known they were on dangerous
ground so they included the El Nino effect (2015/2016) in their estimate
of current temperature. But that is rubbish and is increasingly
being recognized as such. But it's the only way they could get
their final estimate of a one degree rise
Estimating changes in global temperature since the pre-industrial period
Ed Hawkins et al.
Abstract
Better defining (or altogether avoiding) the term ‘pre-industrial’ would
aid interpretation of internationally agreed global temperature limits
and estimation of the required constraints to avoid reaching those
limits.
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
process agreed in Paris to limit global surface temperature rise to
‘well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels’. But what period is
‘pre-industrial’? Some-what remarkably, this is not defined within the
UNFCCC’s many agreements and protocols. Nor is it defined in the IPCC’s
Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) in the evaluation of when particular
temperature levels might be reached because no robust definition of the
period exists. Here we discuss the important factors to consider when
defining a pre-industrial period, based on estimates of historical
radiative forcings and the availability of climate observations. There
is no perfect period, but we suggest that 1720-1800 is the most suitable
choice when discussing global temperature limits. We then estimate the
change in global average temperature since pre-industrial using a range
of approaches based on observations, radiative forcings, global climate
model simulations and proxy evidence. Our assessment is that this
pre-industrial period was likely 0.55–0.80°C cooler than 1986-2005 and
that 2015 was likely the first year in which global average temperature
was more than 1°C above pre-industrial levels. We provide some
recommendations for how this assessment might be improved in future and
suggest that reframing temperature limits with a modern baseline would
be inherently less uncertain and more policy-relevant.
SOURCE
NOAA agrees to review scientist’s claim that data manipulated to discredit warming ‘pause’
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday that it
would review a whistleblower’s allegations that the agency manipulated
climate data in order to eliminate the global warming “pause” for
political reasons.
The whistleblower, John Bates, who retired in December as principal
scientist of the National Climatic Data Center, rocked the climate
change debate Sunday with his claim that a top NOAA climate scientist
selectively used data to discredit the global warming hiatus in a key
2015 study.
“NOAA is charged with providing peer-reviewed data to the American
public and stands behind its world-class scientists,” a NOAA spokesman
said in an email. “NOAA takes seriously any allegation that its internal
processes have not been followed and will review the matter
appropriately.”
SEE ALSO: Climate change whistleblower alleges NOAA manipulated data to hide global warming ‘pause’
Mr. Bates laid out his allegations in a lengthy article Saturday on the
Climate Etc. blog, run by former Georgia Tech climatologist Judith
Curry, and in a Sunday interview with the United Kingdom’s Daily Mail.
He criticized the June 2015 “pausebuster” paper’s lead author, Thomas
Karl, then director of the National Centers for Environmental
Information, for what Mr. Bates described as a failure to archive and
document his climate data sets.
“Gradually, in the months after [the paper] came out, the evidence kept
mounting that Tom Karl constantly had his ‘thumb on the scale’ — in the
documentation, scientific choices, and release of data sets — in an
effort to discredit the notion of a global warming hiatus and rush to
time the publication of the paper to influence national and
international deliberations on climate policy,” Mr. Bates said in his
Saturday post.
The paper refuting the 1998-2013 “pause” in global temperature increases
was published six months before the Paris Climate Summit, a priority of
the Obama administration’s environmental agenda.
Ms. Curry called Monday on the NOAA inspector general to evaluate the
claims made by Mr. Bates, adding that he has “more revelations” coming
as well as “more detailed responses to some of the issues raised above.”
“Other independent organizations will also want to evaluate these
claims, and NOAA should facilitate this by responding to FOIA requests,”
Ms. Curry said.
She cited the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, which has
tangled with NOAA over document disclosure related to the “pausebuster”
paper.
“The House science committee has an enduring interest in this topic and
oversight responsibility,” Ms. Curry said. “NOAA should respond to the
committee’s request for documentation including emails.”
In an interview with the Daily Mail, Mr. Karl said the archiving process
“takes a long time” and denied that he had hurried along the paper to
coincide with the summit, saying, “There was no discussion about Paris.”
Mr. Bates has since engaged in a back-and-forth on Climate Etc. with
other scientists, including “pausebuster” co-author Thomas Peterson,
about the details of his claim.
Several scientists have come to Mr. Karl’s defense, arguing that other
research has borne out the study’s conclusions. Climate scientist Peter
Thorne, who has done work for NOAA, argued that Mr. Bates was “not
involved in any aspect of the work.”
“John Bates never participated in any of the numerous technical meetings
on the land or marine data I have participated in at NOAA NCEI either
in person or remotely,” Mr. Thorne said on Icarus.
Mr. Bates responded that Mr. Thorne was not a federal employee and
therefore was unable to participate in government-only meetings, “and
certainly never attended any federal meetings where end-to-end
processing was continuously discussed.”
Meanwhile, Ms. Curry said she hoped “policies can be put in place to keep this from ever happening again.”
“Under the Obama administration, I suspect that it would have been very
difficult for this story to get any traction,” she said. “Under the
Trump administration, I have every confidence that this will be
investigated (but still not sure how the MSM will react).”
SOURCE
Trump Agrees With Princeton Physicist That Global Warming Is A ‘Cult Movement’
President Donald Trump told a candidate to be his top science adviser
that he agreed global warming had become a “cult movement in the last
five or 10 years.”
Princeton University physicist Will Happer met with Trump in January
about a week before the inauguration. He told Trump he believed man-made
global warming had been “exaggerated,” to which Trump replied: “I agree
with you.”
“Very briefly. I said, ‘I’m sure you know my position that I think
climate change has been tremendously exaggerated—its significance.
Climate is important, always has been, but I think it’s become sort of a
cult movement in the last five or 10 years,’” Happer told The Scientist
(TS) in a wide-ranging interview.
“So in just a sentence or two, I said, ‘That’s my view of it,’” Happer
said. “And he said, Well, I agree with you. But that’s all we
discussed.”
Happer is a candidate to be one of Trump’s top science advisers, though
it’s unclear where his official post will be. For example, Happer could
head White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy or even sit
on the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.
Happer served as the director of the Office of Energy Research at the
Energy Department (DOE) under former President George H.W. Bush. So,
maybe Happer could be asked to head DOE’s Office of Science.
Happer is a prominent skeptic of man-made global warming — in fact, he
believes more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is a good thing since it
stimulates plant life. He’s said the world is in a CO2 “drought” and
fought the Obama administration’s labeling it as a “pollutant.”
One of Happer’s goals, if he’s asked to join the Trump administration,
would be fixing currently perverse incentives that come with
government-funded science.
“One of the problems with the programs for the last 15 or 20 years was,
unless you promised that your results were going to bring some sort of
alarming new evidence that people were driving the planet to extinction
by releasing CO2, you couldn’t get funding,” Happer told TS.
“That was really sick,” he said. “You shouldn’t have funding decisions
based on whether you expect to get alarmist results from the applicant.
And that’s the way it was.”
TS pushed back, asking Happer for examples of this, to which Happer
responded: “I told you it was an anecdote, but my impression is it’s
been in the last 10 years.”
Happer may not have had any concrete examples, but his interview comes
amid allegations from a whistleblower that National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists manipulated climate data to
show more warming in order to influence policymakers.
Dr. John Bates, the former principal scientist at the National Climatic
Data Center in Asheville, N.C., said NOAA scientists toyed with data in a
2015 study “to discredit the notion of a global warming hiatus and rush
to time the publication of the paper to influence national and
international deliberations on climate policy.”
SOURCE
Left-Wing Media Furious Cartoons Aren’t Indoctrinating 5-Year-Olds About Global Warming
A parental advice columnist for left-leaning news site Slate argues that cartoons are “ignoring” global warming.
“After a few more questions, I discovered that he’s never heard any of
his favorite science shows mention climate change or global warming,”
Melinda Wenner Moyer, a science writer and parental advice columnist for
Slate, wrote in an article.
“Which is strange, because according to overwhelming scientific
consensus, climate change is one of the most important environmental
issues of our time,” she wrote. “My son can tell you everything you ever
wanted to know about red pandas, except for the fact that their very
existence is being threatened by the changing climate.”
Moyer asked Nickelodeon for examples of its programming that covered
global warming, and the network sent her six examples of shows that
talked about related subjects, like wind and solar power or littering.
The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) said they focus on teaching
“foundational science concepts,” and further, determine programming
based on the “the most age-appropriate way to serve our audience” and do
not often cover global warming, consequently .
Moyer refers to one example in her child’s favorite cartoons discussing
global warming. In that program, Professor Hootsburg claims that as “the
Earth gets warmer and warmer, big storms get bigger and bigger.”
Moyer, however, ignores the many kids shows dealing environmental
issues, including Captain Planet, the Octonauts and the Smoggies.
Several government-funded studies suggest children are the most
susceptible to environmentalism. Research run on 30 Girl Scout troops in
northern California found that having the kids engage in energy-saving
activities had a “lasting impact on family energy consumption” for at
least eight months after the end of the program.
SOURCE
Australia needs to wake up to climate change racket
Now we hear from an eminent whistleblower with America’s National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that the organisation used dodgy
data to claim the “pause” in global warming from 1998 never existed, and
had rushed to publish without the usual checks in order to influence
the Paris Agreement on climate change.
This latest scandal comes on top of previous embarrassments for the
climate alarm community. There was the 2009 “climategate” batch of
leaked emails from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East
Anglia that were published on a Russian website three weeks before the
Copenhagen summit, revealing a staggering level of fraud, manipulation,
and deceit.
Another batch of leaked emails, dubbed Climategate 2.0, a couple of
years later, showed eminent climate scientists conspiring to have PhDs
stripped from their sceptic rivals, to have journal editors fired for
publishing papers they didn’t like, and colluding with the media to
slant coverage.
All the fakery adds up to the conclusion that the whole global warming
crusade isn’t about science, but politics — and big money.
The NOAA scandal couldn’t have come at a better time for US President
Donald Trump to strengthen his resolve to ditch the Paris climate
agreement stitched up by his predecessor, Barack Obama.
And in turn Trump’s defection should encourage the Turnbull government
to tear up our own Paris climate agreement which they foolishly ratified
in November, after Trump won the US presidential election.
Tony Abbott is right: even though it was his government which made the
deal, he recognises the changed circumstances of the world. We need to
scrap the unreasonably punitive renewable energy targets of 26-28 per
cent we have committed to abide by in 2020.
Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg keeps telling us it’s a better deal than
the Labor Party’s 50 per cent renewable energy target, but that’s not
the point.
Low-cost, coal-fired energy has underpinned this nation’s prosperity.
With our abundant resources we should be the world’s low-cost energy
superpower, as Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce keeps saying.
Higher RETS equal higher electricity prices, and an unreliable power
supply, which is the death-knell to business, as we are seeing in South
Australia.
By kowtowing to climate nonsense, successive governments have proven
they have no intention of putting Australia first, and this is what is
driving the Hanson phenomenon. Scrapping the United Nations control of
our energy mix would be an enormous morale boost to the country.
SOURCE
***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here
*****************************************
8 February, 2017
Politics and science are a toxic combination
Rt. Hon. Viscount Ridley
Alternative facts have no place in climate-change research. Greater integrity is essential if the scandals are to stop
Back in December, some American scientists began copying government
climate data onto independent servers in what press reports described as
an attempt to safeguard it from political interference by the Trump
administration. There is to be a March for Science in April whose
organisers say: “It is time for people who support scientific research
and evidence-based policies to take a public stand and be counted.”
Well, today they have a chance to do just that, but against their own
colleagues who stand accused of doing what they claim the Trump team has
done. Devastating new testimony from John Bates, a whistleblowing
senior scientist at America’s main climate agency, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, alleges that scientists themselves have
been indulging in alternative facts, fake news and policy-based
evidence.
Dr Bates’s essay on the Climate Etc. website (and David Rose’s story in
The Mail on Sunday) documents allegations of scientific misconduct as
serious as that of the anti-vaccine campaign of Andrew Wakefield. Dr
Bates’s boss, Tom Karl, a close ally of President Obama’s science
adviser, John Holdren, published a paper in 2015, deliberately timed to
influence the Paris climate jamboree. The paper was widely hailed in the
media as disproving the politically inconvenient 18-year pause in
global warming, whose existence had been conceded by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) two years earlier.
Dr Bates says Mr Karl based the “pausebuster” paper on a flawed
land-surface data set that had not been verified or properly archived;
and on a sea-surface set that corrected reliable data from buoys with
unreliable data from ship intakes, which resulted in a slightly enhanced
warming trend. Science magazine is considering retracting the paper. A
key congressional committee says the allegations confirm some of its
suspicions.
Dr Bates is no “denier”; he was awarded a gold medal by the US
government in 2014 for his climate-data work. Having now retired he
writes of “flagrant manipulation of scientific integrity guidelines and
scientific publication standards”, of a “rush to time the publication of
the paper to influence national and international deliberations on
climate policy” and concludes: “So, in every aspect of the preparation
and release of the data sets leading into [the report], we find Tom
Karl’s thumb on the scale pushing for, and often insisting on, decisions
that maximize warming and minimize documentation.”
This is more than just a routine scientific scandal. First, it comes as
scientists have been accusing President Trump and other politicians of
politicising science. Second, it potentially contaminates any claim that
climate science has been producing unbiased results. Third, it
embarrasses science journalists who have been chronicling the growing
evidence of scientific misconduct in medicine, toxicology and
psychology, but ignored the same about climate science because they
approve of the cause, a habit known as noble-cause corruption.
Colleagues of Mr Karl have been quick to dismiss the story, saying that
other data sets come to similar conclusions. This is to miss the point
and exacerbate the problem. If the scientific establishment reacts to
allegations of lack of transparency, behind-closed-door adjustments and
premature release so as to influence politicians, by saying it does not
matter because it gets the “right” result, they will find it harder to
convince Mr Trump that he is wrong on things such as vaccines.
Besides, this is just the latest scandal to rock climate science. The
biggest was climategate in 2009, which showed scientists conspiring to
ostracise sceptics, delete emails, game peer review and manipulate the
presentation of data, including the truncation of a tree-ring-derived
graph to disguise the fact that it seemed to show recent cooling (“hide
the decline”). The scientists concerned were criticised by two rather
perfunctory inquiries, but have since taken to saying they were
“exonerated”.
There was the case of the paper the IPCC relied upon to show that local
urban warming was not distorting global data sets, which turned out to
be based partly on non-existent data from 49 Chinese weather stations;
the Scandinavian lake sediment core used “upside down” to imply sudden
warming; the chart showing unprecedented recent warming that turned out
to depend on a single larch tree in Siberia; the southern hemisphere
hockey-stick chart that had been created by the omission of inconvenient
data series; the Antarctic temperature trend that turned out to depend
on splicing together two weather station records.
Then there was the time when a well known climate scientist, Peter
Gleick, stole the identity of a member of a think tank so he could leak
confidential documents along with a fake one. Stephan Lewandowsky had to
retract a paper about the psychology of climate scepticism that seemed
to be full of methodological flaws and bizarre reasoning.
And don’t forget Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC for 13 years
and often described as the “world’s top climate scientist”. He had to
retract his “voodoo science” dismissal of a valid finding that
contradicted claims from Dr Pachauri’s own research institute about
Himalayan glaciers, which had led to a lucrative grant. That scandal
resulted in a highly critical report into the IPCC by several of the
world’s top science academies, which recommended among other things that
the IPCC chairman stand down after one term. Dr Pachauri ignored this,
kept his job and toured the world while urging others not to, before
resigning over a personal scandal allegation.
I have championed science all my adult life. It is humankind’s greatest
calling. That is why I deplore those who drag down its reputation by
breaching its codes of conduct for political reasons, and I have no time
for those excusing these enormities. They foment anti-intellectualism
and play directly into the hands of people such as Mr Trump. Under the
Obama administration,” says Professor Judith Curry, Dr Bates’s
colleague, “I suspect that it would have been very difficult for this
story to get any traction.” Yikes.
Dr Bates calls for more ethics teaching in science and for “respectful
discussion of different points of view” — which we were emptily promised
after climategate. It is time for the many brilliant scientists who are
discovering great insights into quasars and quarks, Alzheimer’s and
allergies, into neurons, fossils, telomeres and ice ages, to “take a
public stand and be counted” against the politicisation of some science
within their own ranks.
SOURCE
Big new German coal-fired power plant going ahead
The German Muenster district court on Thursday granted an
emission-control permit to Datteln 4, a hard-coal fired power station
under construction by utility Uniper that has been held up by an intense
legal battle with environmentalists.
Uniper said it aims to begin supplying electricity and district heating
from the 1,050 megawatts plant in western Germany in the first half of
2018.
The project goes back to 2009, aims to replace ageing installations
taken offline by Uniper, and initially was aimed to start producing in
2011.
SOURCE
Japanese government planning to build 45 new coal fired power stations to diversify supplyThe
Japanese government is moving ahead with its plans to build up to 45
new coal fired power stations. The power plants will utilise high
energy, low emissions (HELE) technology that use high-quality black
coal.
Japan is the largest overseas market for Australian coal producers, taking more than a third of all exports.
Tom
O'Sullivan, a Tokyo based energy consultant with Mathyos Global
Advisory, said in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011,
Japan started importing more liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Australia.
But
he said the move to more coal fired power was because coal was cheaper
than LNG, and the energy security was priority for the government.
"Japan
needs to import 95 per cent of all its energy sources," he said. "So
it's trying to diversify its fuel sources and it doesn't want to be too
reliant on any one market."
Japan has ratified the Paris Climate Agreement and committed to a 26 per cent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions by 2030.
But
Mr O'Sullivan said Japan was yet to price carbon emissions.
"Although Japan spent $US36 billion dollars on commercial solar power
last year, and is planning much more, there is no carbon price," he
said.
"So at this stage there is no incentive
to not build coal fired power station, unlike other countries and states
that can have a price as high as $US35-40 per tonne of carbon dioxide
emitted."
Mr O'Sullivan said while community and environmental
groups had expressed concerns about the construction of a major coal
power station, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was firmly behind the plans.
He
said the decision would ensure the use of coal in Japan would continue
well into the middle of the century. "These guys [private companies] are
not going to go ahead and [put money into] in large capital investments
unless they have a 30-year depreciation period," he said. "So if
they're building these coal power plants now it is reasonable to expect
them to be still on the books by the end of 2050."
SOURCE Australia’s Chief Scientist labels Trump’s censoring of environmental data as ‘Stalinist’He
ignores the blatant dishonesty of the American climate establishment
that motivates Trump's attempt to stem the flow of Green/Left fake
news. In typical Green/Left style, he tells only half the
story. He has outed his own politicsAustralia’s Chief
Scientist has likened US President Donald Trump’s censoring of
environmental data to Soviet Dictator Joseph Stalin.
Dr Alan
Finkel was speaking at the Chief Scientists’ roundtable discussion at
the Australian National University on Monday when he said “science is
literally under attack”, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.
"The
Trump administration has mandated that scientific data published by the
EPA must undergo review by political appointees before they can be
published,” Dr Finkel said during the discussion.
Adding that the
Trump administration’s decision to bar the EPA from sending out press
releases or placing new content on its website was “reminiscent of
political officers in the old Soviet Union”.
"Every military
commander there had a political officer second guessing his decisions,”
he said, making a reference to Joseph Stalin and Trofim Lysenko, a
soviet agrobiologist.
“Stalin loved Lysenko's conflation of
science and Soviet philosophy and used his limitless power to ensure
that Lysenko's unscientific ideas prevailed."
He also stated
modern science had no room “for political control” and expressed his
gratitude that no Australian political figure had ever tried to censor
him.
"Frank and fearless advice - no matter the views of the political commissars at the EPA,” he said.
SOURCE Global cooling? Snow falls in Kuwait for 'first time ever'Snow fell on Kuwait on Thursday morning for the first time in the country's history, pictures sent to Middle East Eye show.
Footage sent to MEE showed snow flakes falling in the Gulf state, where temperatures have plummeted in recent days.
Temperatures
in Kuwait soar up to 50C in the summer months and even in winter 20C is
the norm. However, on Thursday the temperature was as low as 3C.
There
is no record of snow having fallen in Kuwait before, although the
emirate has experienced hail and frost in the past when temperatures
have fallen in the winter.
A Kuwaiti told MEE that Thursday's snow was a first for the country.
"I
asked my grandfather, he said there has never been snow before," they
said, preferring to remain anonymous. "Everyone is surprised."
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
7 February, 2017
Peer reviewed article in academic journal rejects WarmismThe authors are "slayers"
-- scientists who reject any temperature effect of CO2 at all.
Most skeptics allow some influence of CO2 but on both theoretical and
empirical grounds believe the effect to be trivial or negligible.
As the article is a comprehensive review of the evidence, it must carry
some weight.Role of atmospheric carbon dioxide in climate change
By Martin Hertzberg, Hans Schreuder
Abstract
The
authors evaluate the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) consensus that the increase of carbon dioxide in the
Earth’s atmosphere is of anthropogenic origin and is causing dangerous
global warming, climate change and climate disruption. The totality of
the data available on which that theory is based is evaluated. The data
include: (a) Vostok ice-core measurements; (b) accumulation of CO2 in
the atmosphere; (c) studies of temperature changes that precede CO2
changes; (d) global temperature trends; (e) current ratio of carbon
isotopes in the atmosphere; (f) satellite data for the geographic
distribution of atmospheric CO2; (g) effect of solar activity on cosmic
rays and cloud cover. Nothing in the data supports the supposition that
atmospheric CO2 is a driver of weather or climate, or that human
emissions control atmospheric CO2.
SOURCE American Geophysical Union waffles on Tom Karl paperShort summary of the careful wording below: "Who cares?"Early
today, AGU’s former Board member John Bates published a letter
outlining what he believes to be mismanagement of climate science data
in a highly-cited scientific paper, “Possible artifacts of data biases
in the recent global surface warming hiatus” (Tom Karl, et al. 2015). A
story about that letter was also published in The Daily Mail, a daily
newspaper published in the U.K.
The implications of these pieces
will unfold over time, and many questions remain to be answered. What,
if any response on AGU’s part will be constructive is yet to be
determined. However, I do want you to know that we are very closely
monitoring the situation, have considered the possible implications, and
will be sharing any new information or response by AGU with you here.
We stand ready to be an authoritative resource for Congress and others
on climate science, scientific integrity and data.
I also want
you to know that, while climate science knowledge is evolving, these
reports do not change our fundamental understanding of climate change.
The Karl study updated the NOAA global temperature record, but there
have been many other studies, using other, independent global
temperature records, that have improved our understanding of the climate
system and anthropogenic climate change since then. For example, all
independent records now show that the past two years were the warmest
years on record.
In addition, I want you to know that AGU remains
committed to serving as a leader in data and transparency in science.
We have long supported open well-managed data in the Earth and space
sciences. As indicated in our position statement, these data are a world
heritage and should be treated as such. We co-led the development of
the Coalition for Publishing Data in the Earth and Space Sciences
(COPDESS), which connects Earth and space science publishers and data
facilities to help translate the aspirations of open, available, and
useful data from policy into practice. And, AGU has developed a Data
Management Assessment Program, which helps data repositories, large and
small, domain specific to general, use best practices to assess and
improve their data management practices.
I know many of you will
have concerns or questions about this news, and I strongly encourage you
to share those thoughts with us here, or in an email to
president@agu.org.
UPDATE (5 February, 12:36 p.m.): I want to
clarify – AGU’s position on the scientific consensus on climate change
and the need for openness and transparency in science is firm. As we
stated “while climate science knowledge is evolving, these reports do
not change our fundamental understanding of climate change,” and “AGU
remains committed to serving as a leader in data and transparency in
science.”
As to the merits – or lack thereof – of the allegations
made in John Bates’ post about data mismanagement, within NOAA, that
discussion is and will continue to unfold in dialogue among scientists,
such as in this article by Zeke Hausfather from Berkeley Earth and this
blog post from the Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units.
AGU has been and will continue to be a vocal voice in support of scientific integrity in the new Administration:
AGU
believes that the merits of the Karl et al. (2015) should be and have
been discussed in appropriate peer-reviewed scientific journals. We note
that the main results of that study have since been independently
replicated by later work. In the meantime, we will continue to stand up
for the credibility of climate science, the freedom of scientists to
conduct and communicate their science.
The purpose of our posts
on this topic – past, present, and future — are to make you aware of
this development affecting climate science and scientific data
management. We are closely monitoring how this will play out among
policymakers and influencers.
For example, U.S. House of
Representatives Committee on Science, Space, and Technology issued a
misleading press release. These types of statements by policymakers that
attempt to take one study/dispute and blow it out of proportion are
both unhelpful and misleading. We will be working with the science
committee to demonstrate the scientific consensus on climate change and
to encourage them not to interfere with the scientific process.
SOURCE A Libel Suit Threatens Catastrophe for the Climate of Public DebateThe
First Amendment provides robust protection for political and scientific
debate, but it faces a new threat from a climate activist determined to
silence his critics. In a case pending before the District of Columbia
Court of Appeals, Penn State professor Michael Mann is waging an
aggressive campaign of lawfare, accusing of defamation those who dare to
question his work. So far, the courts have given this assault on free
speech a green light.
Mr. Mann is famous as the creator of the
“hockey stick” graph, which portrays a dramatic trend in global warming
over the past century. Numerous critics have cast doubt on the quality
and accuracy of his work. They argue that his historical temperature
proxies are unreliable, his data presentation misleading, and his
statistical techniques skewed.
Even among those who support the
theory of global warming, some have singled out Mr. Mann’s work as
sloppy and exaggerated. David Hand, a former president of Britain’s
Royal Statistical Society, has written that Mr. Mann’s technique
“exaggerated the size of the blade at the end of the hockey stick,”
which corresponds to the 20th-century temperature rise.
Not
content to answer his critics in the public square, Mr. Mann has sued
them. One target of his lawsuit is the political magazine National
Review, which published a 270-word blog post criticizing Mr. Mann as
“the man behind the fraudulent . . . ‘hockey-stick’ graph.” His lawsuit
objects to the magazine’s decision to quote a critic who wrote that Mr.
Mann “could be said to be the Jerry Sandusky of climate science, except
that instead of molesting children, he has molested and tortured data.”
National
Review moved to dismiss the suit, citing a phalanx of Supreme Court
precedent. The Constitution obviously does not allow crippling damages
to be imposed for voicing one’s opinion, however vehemently or
caustically. Punishing such criticism because a jury disagrees with it
does not aid the search for truth, but impedes it by stifling
conflicting views. As the liberal Justice William Brennan observed:
“Truth may not be the subject of either civil or criminal sanctions
where discussion of public affairs is concerned.” Such speech “is the
essence of self-government.”
As a federal court once put it in
the particular context of scientific controversies: “More papers, more
discussions, better data, and more satisfactory models—not larger awards
of damages—mark the path toward superior understanding of the world
around us.” Even a meritless defamation suit can be an effective weapon
to intimidate critics and shut down debate through ruinous litigation
costs.
In this case the trial court refused to dismiss Mr. Mann’s
libel suit. Judge Natalia Combs Greene ruled that the defamation claims
were “likely” to succeed because “to call his work a sham or to
question his intellect and reasoning is tantamount to an accusation of
fraud,” when in fact Mr. Mann “has been investigated by several bodies
(including the EPA)” which determined that his research was “sound and
not based on misleading information.” For procedural reasons, the case
was reassigned to Judge Frederick Weisberg, who largely adopted Judge
Green’s reasoning.
Appellate courts, which exist to reverse such
legal error, in this case compounded it. National Review was supported
in friend-of-the-court briefs by such unlikely allies as the American
Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the
Washington Post and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.
Yet a panel of the D.C. Court of Appeals—Judges Vanessa Ruiz,Corinne
Beckwith and Catharine Easterly—held in December that Mr. Mann’s suit
should proceed to a jury. The court again relied on various “official”
investigations that had cleared Mr. Mann of misconduct, including an
inquiry by the federal government. Speech that disagrees with the
government is at the core of the First Amendment’s protection—though not
in this court’s topsy-turvy world.
National Review has filed a
petition for rehearing along with its co-defendants, the Competitive
Enterprise Institute and Rand Simberg. If the full court of appeals does
not correct the error and end this assault on the First Amendment, the
case will doubtless proceed to the Supreme Court.
Those hoping
Mr. Mann prevails because they agree with him about global warming are
missing the point. If he succeeds in diminishing the right to free
speech, he and his fellow climate activists have just as much to lose.
Mr. Mann has attacked his critics for peddling “pure scientific fraud,”
engaging in what he calls “the fraudulent denial of climate change,” and
taking “corporate payoffs for knowingly lying about the threat climate
change posed to humanity.” He accused Fox News of trying to “mislead its
viewers” through a “deceptive” report about climate change.
None
of this is particularly polite, but it is common in the cut-and-thrust
of public debate. If such caustic criticism is now to be fair game for
legal action, big oil companies and other well-heeled interests can
launch their own lawsuits asking juries in Texas or Oklahoma to silence
Mr. Mann and his allies.
The logic of Mr. Mann’s position
threatens to convert political and scientific debate into a litigation
free-for-all, with all sides seeking to sue one another into submission
instead of resolving differences through the free exchange of ideas. For
those who care about the spirit of open inquiry at the heart of the
scientific enterprise, it is scarcely possible to imagine a greater
legal disaster than the prospect of Mr. Mann’s succeeding on his claims.
SOURCE The hidden agendas of sustainability illusionsAbsurd, impractical sustainability precepts are actually a prescription for government control
Paul Driessen
As
President Trump downgrades the relevance of Obama era climate change
and anti-fossil fuel policies, many environmentalists are directing
attention to “sustainable development.”
Like “dangerous manmade
climate change,” sustainability reflects poor understanding of basic
energy, economic, resource extraction and manufacturing principles – and
a tendency to emphasize tautologies and theoretical models as an
alternative to readily observable evidence in the Real World. It also
involves well-intended but ill-informed people being led by ill-intended
but well-informed activists who use the concept to gain greater
government control over people’s lives, livelihoods and living
standards.
The most common definition is that we may meet the
needs of current generations only to the extent that doing so will not
compromise the ability of future generations to meet their needs.
Sustainability thus reflects the assertion that we are rapidly depleting
finite resources, and must reduce current needs and wants so as to save
raw materials for future generations.
At first blush, it sounds logical and even ethical. But it requires impossible clairvoyance.
In
1887, when the Hearthstone House became the world’s first home lit via
hydroelectric power, no one did or could foresee that electricity would
dominate, enhance and safeguard our lives in the myriad ways it does
today. Decades later, no one anticipated pure silica fiber optic cables
replacing copper wires.
No one predicted tiny cellular phones
with superb digital cameras and more computing power than a 1990 desktop
computer or 3-D printing or thousands of wind turbines across our
fruited plains – or cadmium, rare earth metals and other raw materials
suddenly required to manufacture these technological wonders.
Mankind
advanced at a snail’s pace for thousands of years. As the modern
fossil-fuel industrial era found its footing, progress picked up at an
increasingly breathtaking pace. Today, change is exponential. As we
moved from flint to copper, to bronze, iron, steel and beyond, we didn’t
do so because mankind had exhausted Earth’s supplies of flint, copper,
tin and so on. We did it because we innovated – invented something
better, more efficient or practical. Each advance required different raw
materials.
Who today can foresee what technologies future
generations will have 25, 50 or 200 years from now? What raw materials
they will need? How we are supposed to ensure that those families meet
their needs?
Why then would we even think of empowering
government to regulate today’s activities today based on the wholly
unpredictable technologies, lifestyles, needs, and resource demands of
distant generations? Why would we ignore or compromise the needs of
current generations, to meet those totally unpredictable future needs –
including the needs of today’s most impoverished, energy-deprived,
malnourished people, who desperately want to improve their lives?
Moreover,
we are not going to run out of resources anytime soon. A 1-kilometer
fiber optic cable made from 45 pounds of silica (Earth’s most abundant
element) carries thousands of times more information than an equally
long RG-6 cable made from 3,600 pounds of copper, reducing demand for
copper.
In 1947, the world’s proven oil reserves totaled 47
billion barrels. Over the next 70 years, we consumed hundreds of
billions of barrels – and yet, in 2016 we still had at least 2,800
billion barrels of oil reserves, including oil sands, oil shales and
other unconventional deposits: at least a century’s worth, plus abundant
natural gas. Constantly improving technologies now let us find and
produce oil and natural gas from deposits that we could not even detect,
much less tap into, just a couple decades ago.
Sustainability
dogma also revolves around hatred of fossil fuels, and a determination
to rid the world of them, regardless of any social, economic or
environmental costs of doing so. And we frequently find that supposedly
green, eco-friendly and sustainable alternatives are frequently anything
but.
U.S. ethanol quotas eat up 40% of the nation’s corn,
cropland the size of Iowa, billions of gallons of water, and vast
quantities of pesticides, fertilizers, tractor fuel and natural gas, to
produce energy that drives up food prices, damages small engines and
gets one-third less mileage per gallon than gasoline.
Heavily
subsidized wind energy requires standby fossil fuel generators,
ultra-long transmission lines and thus millions of tons of concrete,
steel, copper, rare earth metals and fiberglass. The turbines create
chronic health problems for people living near them and kill millions of
birds and bats – to produce intermittent, wholly unreliable electricity
that costs up to 250% more than coal-based electricity.
For all
that, on a torrid August 2012 day, Great Britain’s 3,500 giant wind
turbines generated a mere 12 megawatts of electricity: 0.032% of the
38,000 MW the country was using at the time.
The United Kingdom
also subsidizes several huge anaerobic digesters, intended to convert
animal manure and other farm waste into eco-friendly methane for use in
generating electricity. But there is insufficient farm waste. So the
digesters are fed with corn (maize), grass and rye grown on 130,000
acres (four times the size of Washington, DC), using enormous amounts of
water, fertilizer – and of course diesel fuel to grow, harvest and
transport the crops to the digesters. Why not just drill and frack for
natural gas?
That brings us to the political arena, where the
terminology is circular, malleable, infinitely elastic, the perfect tool
for activists. Whatever they support is sustainable; whatever they
oppose is unsustainable; and whatever mantras or protective measures
they propose give them more power and control.
The Club of Rome
sought to build a new movement by creating “a common enemy against whom
we can unite” – allegedly looming disasters “caused by human
intervention in natural processes” and requiring “changed attitudes and
behavior” to avoid global calamities: global warming and resource
depletion.
“Building an environmentally sustainable future
requires restricting the global economy, dramatically changing human
reproductive behavior, and altering values and lifestyles,” said
Worldwatch Institute founder Lester Brown. “Doing this quickly requires
nothing short of a revolution.”
“Current lifestyles and
consumption patterns of the affluent middle class – involving high meat
intake, the use of fossil fuels, electrical appliances, home and
workplace air conditioning, and suburban housing – are not sustainable,”
Canadian arch-environmentalist Maurice Strong declared.
“Minor
shifts in policy, moderate improvements in laws and regulations,
rhetoric offered in lieu of genuine change,” former Vice President Al
Gore asserted – “these are all forms of appeasement, designed to satisfy
the public’s desire to believe that sacrifice, struggle and a wrenching
transformation of society will not be necessary.” Environmental
activist Daniel Sitarz agreed, saying: “Agenda 21 proposes an array of
actions intended to be implemented by every person on Earth. Effective
execution of Agenda 21 will require a profound reorientation of all
humans, unlike anything the world has ever experienced.”
“Sustainable
development,” the National Research Council declaimed in a 2011 report,
“raises questions that are not fully or directly addressed in U.S. law
or policy, including how to define and control unsustainable patterns of
production and consumption, and how to encourage the development of
sustainable communities, biodiversity protection, clean energy,
environmentally sustainable economic development, and climate change
controls.” In fact, said Obama science advisor John Holdren, we cannot
even talk about sustainability without talking about politics, power,
and control. Especially control.
Of course, the activists,
politicians and regulators feel little pain, as they enjoy salaries and
perks paid by taxpayers and foundations, fly to UN and other conferences
at posh 5-star resorts around the world, and implement agendas that
control, redesign and transform other people’s lives.
It is We
the Governed – especially working class and poor citizens – who pay the
price, with the world’s poorest families paying the highest price. We
can only hope the Trump Administration and Congress will dismantle and
defund sustainable development, the alter ego of cataclysmic manmade
climate change.
Via emailGlobal warming Game; The Hidden Agenda If
one utilises the principles of mass psychology in the same manner as
one uses them in the financial markets to analyse the issue of global
warming; well, something starts to stink? If there is too much
noise being made about the issue and the masses are buying the nonsense
and that is an immediate red flag.
What we have learned from the
investing arena can be applied to any other field, and we have long
since learned that if someone is trying to force something down your
throat that there is usually a hidden agenda, especially if corporations
and governments are backing the so-called proposition. The
governments do nothing for the good for their people; the only thing
they are concerned with is lining their pockets with as much money as
they can.
Close to 32,000 scientists signed this petition stating
that the Global warming story line is total rubbish. If
scientists don’t believe in this hypothesis, and they have the
credentials to understand the theory behind these claims, then logic
dictates that a rational individual should take the same route.
The
main players here are corporations and politicians. Politicians
are nothing but paid corporate prostitutes, therefore, the only time you
can trust these two groups is when their lips are not moving.
This Video below reveals the depth of this scam and the length the top
shadowy players will go to in order to get what they want; ultimately
they are only concerned with money and power.
What the media refuses to tell you about Global warming
Even Green Peace Co-founder believes that Global warming is being used to sell the masses a bag of expensive goods. scam
As
a result of this push to prevent global warming, many sectors have
taken it to the chin; the sector that has taken the most brutal
punishment is the coal sector. Coal consumption is not going to drop,
Asia will continue to embrace coal as its cheap and new coal plants are
almost as efficient as nuclear plants.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
6 February, 2017
Exposed: How world leaders were duped into investing billions over manipulated global warming data I
and many others said at the time that the Karl paper was full of heroic
assumptions and wild improbabilities. And I now understand why a
lot of Warmist bigshots distanced themselves from it in the Fyfe et al. paper. Note that German scientists also concluded that Tom Karl's "adjustments" were not validated The
Mail on Sunday today reveals astonishing evidence that the organisation
that is the world’s leading source of climate data rushed to publish a
landmark paper that exaggerated global warming and was timed to
influence the historic Paris Agreement on climate change.
A
high-level whistleblower has told this newspaper that America’s National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) breached its own rules on
scientific integrity when it published the sensational but flawed
report, aimed at making the maximum possible impact on world leaders
including Barack Obama and David Cameron at the UN climate conference in
Paris in 2015.
The report claimed that the ‘pause’ or ‘slowdown’
in global warming in the period since 1998 – revealed by UN scientists
in 2013 – never existed, and that world temperatures had been rising
faster than scientists expected. Launched by NOAA with a public
relations fanfare, it was splashed across the world’s media, and cited
repeatedly by politicians and policy makers.
But the
whistleblower, Dr John Bates, a top NOAA scientist with an impeccable
reputation, has shown The Mail on Sunday irrefutable evidence that the
paper was based on misleading, ‘unverified’ data.
It was never subjected to NOAA’s rigorous internal evaluation process – which Dr Bates devised.
His
vehement objections to the publication of the faulty data were
overridden by his NOAA superiors in what he describes as a ‘blatant
attempt to intensify the impact’ of what became known as the Pausebuster
paper.
His disclosures are likely to stiffen President Trump’s
determination to enact his pledges to reverse his predecessor’s ‘green’
policies, and to withdraw from the Paris deal – so triggering an intense
political row.
In an exclusive interview, Dr Bates accused the
lead author of the paper, Thomas Karl, who was until last year director
of the NOAA section that produces climate data – the National Centers
for Environmental Information (NCEI) – of ‘insisting on decisions and
scientific choices that maximised warming and minimised documentation…
in an effort to discredit the notion of a global warming pause, rushed
so that he could time publication to influence national and
international deliberations on climate policy’.
Dr Bates was one of two Principal Scientists at NCEI, based in Asheville, North Carolina.
Official
delegations from America, Britain and the EU were strongly influenced
by the flawed NOAA study as they hammered out the Paris Agreement – and
committed advanced nations to sweeping reductions in their use of fossil
fuel and to spending £80 billion every year on new, climate-related aid
projects.
NOAA’s 2015 ‘Pausebuster’ paper was based on two new
temperature sets of data – one containing measurements of temperatures
at the planet’s surface on land, the other at the surface of the seas.
Both
datasets were flawed. This newspaper has learnt that NOAA has now
decided that the sea dataset will have to be replaced and substantially
revised just 18 months after it was issued, because it used unreliable
methods which overstated the speed of warming. The revised data will
show both lower temperatures and a slower rate in the recent warming
trend.
The land temperature dataset used by the study was
afflicted by devastating bugs in its software that rendered its findings
‘unstable’.
The paper relied on a preliminary, ‘alpha’ version of the data which was never approved or verified.
A
final, approved version has still not been issued. None of the data on
which the paper was based was properly ‘archived’ – a mandatory
requirement meant to ensure that raw data and the software used to
process it is accessible to other scientists, so they can verify NOAA
results.
Dr Bates retired from NOAA at the end of last year after
a 40-year career in meteorology and climate science. As recently as
2014, the Obama administration awarded him a special gold medal for his
work in setting new, supposedly binding standards ‘to produce and
preserve climate data records’.
Yet when it came to the paper timed to influence the Paris conference, Dr Bates said, these standards were flagrantly ignored.
The
paper was published in June 2015 by the journal Science. Entitled
‘Possible artifacts of data biases in the recent global surface warming
hiatus’, the document said the widely reported ‘pause’ or ‘slowdown’ was
a myth.
Less than two years earlier, a blockbuster report from
the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which drew on
the work of hundreds of scientists around the world, had found ‘a much
smaller increasing trend over the past 15 years 1998-2012 than over the
past 30 to 60 years’. Explaining the pause became a key issue for
climate science. It was seized on by global warming sceptics, because
the level of CO2 in the atmosphere had continued to rise.
Thanks to today’s MoS story, NOAA is set to face an inquiry by the Republican-led House science committee.
Some
scientists argued that the existence of the pause meant the world’s
climate is less sensitive to greenhouse gases than previously thought,
so that future warming would be slower. One of them, Professor Judith
Curry, then head of climate science at the Georgia Institute of
Technology, said it suggested that computer models used to project
future warming were ‘running too hot’.
However, the Pausebuster
paper said while the rate of global warming from 1950 to 1999 was 0.113C
per decade, the rate from 2000 to 2014 was actually higher, at 0.116C
per decade. The IPCC’s claim about the pause, it concluded, ‘was no
longer valid’.
The impact was huge and lasting. On publication
day, the BBC said the pause in global warming was ‘an illusion caused by
inaccurate data’.
One American magazine described the paper as a ‘science bomb’ dropped on sceptics.
Its
impact could be seen in this newspaper last month when, writing to
launch his Ladybird book about climate change, Prince Charles stated
baldly: ‘There isn’t a pause… it is hard to reject the facts on the
basis of the evidence.’
Data changed to make the sea appear warmer
The
sea dataset used by Thomas Karl and his colleagues – known as Extended
Reconstructed Sea Surface Temperatures version 4, or ERSSTv4, tripled
the warming trend over the sea during the years 2000 to 2014 from just
0.036C per decade – as stated in version 3 – to 0.099C per decade.
Individual
measurements in some parts of the globe had increased by about 0.1C and
this resulted in the dramatic increase of the overall global trend
published by the Pausebuster paper.
But Dr Bates said this
increase in temperatures was achieved by dubious means. Its key error
was an upwards ‘adjustment’ of readings from fixed and floating buoys,
which are generally reliable, to bring them into line with readings from
a much more doubtful source – water taken in by ships. This, Dr Bates
explained, has long been known to be questionable: ships are themselves
sources of heat, readings will vary from ship to ship, and the depth of
water intake will vary according to how heavily a ship is laden – so
affecting temperature readings.
Dr Bates said: ‘They had good
data from buoys. And they threw it out and “corrected” it by using the
bad data from ships. You never change good data to agree with bad, but
that’s what they did – so as to make it look as if the sea was warmer.’
ERSSTv4
‘adjusted’ buoy readings up by 0.12C. It also ignored data from
satellites that measure the temperature of the lower atmosphere, which
are also considered reliable. Dr Bates said he gave the paper’s
co-authors ‘a hard time’ about this, ‘and they never really justified
what they were doing.’
Now, some of those same authors have
produced the pending, revised new version of the sea dataset – ERSSTv5. A
draft of a document that explains the methods used to generate version
5, and which has been seen by this newspaper, indicates the new version
will reverse the flaws in version 4, changing the buoy adjustments and
including some satellite data and measurements from a special high-tech
floating buoy network known as Argo. As a result, it is certain to show
reductions in both absolute temperatures and recent global warming.
The
second dataset used by the Pausebuster paper was a new version of
NOAA’s land records, known as the Global Historical Climatology Network
(GHCN), an analysis over time of temperature readings from about 4,000
weather stations spread across the globe.
This new version found
past temperatures had been cooler than previously thought, and recent
ones higher – so that the warming trend looked steeper. For the period
2000 to 2014, the paper increased the rate of warming on land from 0.15C
to 0.164C per decade.
In the weeks after the Pausebuster paper
was published, Dr Bates conducted a one-man investigation into this. His
findings were extraordinary. Not only had Mr Karl and his colleagues
failed to follow any of the formal procedures required to approve and
archive their data, they had used a ‘highly experimental early run’ of a
programme that tried to combine two previously separate sets of
records.
This had undergone the critical process known as
‘pairwise homogeneity adjustment’, a method of spotting ‘rogue’ readings
from individual weather stations by comparing them with others nearby.
However,
this process requires extensive, careful checking which was only just
beginning, so that the data was not ready for operational use. Now, more
than two years after the Pausebuster paper was submitted to Science,
the new version of GHCN is still undergoing testing.
Moreover,
the GHCN software was afflicted by serious bugs. They caused it to
become so ‘unstable’ that every time the raw temperature readings were
run through the computer, it gave different results. The new, bug-free
version of GHCN has still not been approved and issued. It is, Dr Bates
said, ‘significantly different’ from that used by Mr Karl and his
co-authors.
Dr Bates revealed that the failure to archive and
make available fully documented data not only violated NOAA rules, but
also those set down by Science. Before he retired last year, he
continued to raise the issue internally. Then came the final bombshell.
Dr Bates said: ‘I learned that the computer used to process the software
had suffered a complete failure.’
The reason for the failure is
unknown, but it means the Pausebuster paper can never be replicated or
verified by other scientists.
The flawed conclusions of the
Pausebuster paper were widely discussed by delegates at the Paris
climate change conference. Mr Karl had a longstanding relationship with
President Obama’s chief science adviser, John Holdren, giving him a
hotline to the White House.
Mr Holdren was also a strong advocate
of robust measures to curb emissions. Britain’s then Prime Minister
David Cameron claimed at the conference that ‘97 per cent of scientists
say climate change is urgent and man-made and must be addressed’ and
called for ‘a binding legal mechanism’ to ensure the world got no more
than 2C warmer than in pre-industrial times.
President Obama
stressed his Clean Power Plan at the conference, which mandates American
power stations to make big emissions cuts.
President Trump has since pledged he will scrap it, and to withdraw from the Paris Agreement.
Whatever
takes its place, said Dr Bates, ‘there needs to be a fundamental change
to the way NOAA deals with data so that people can check and validate
scientific results. I’m hoping that this will be a wake-up call to the
climate science community – a signal that we have to put in place
processes to make sure this kind of crap doesn’t happen again.
‘I
want to address the systemic problems. I don’t care whether
modifications to the datasets make temperatures go up or down. But I
want the observations to speak for themselves, and for that, there needs
to be a new emphasis that ethical standards must be maintained.’
He
said he decided to speak out after seeing reports in papers including
the Washington Post and Forbes magazine claiming that scientists feared
the Trump administration would fail to maintain and preserve NOAA’s
climate records.
Dr Bates said: ‘How ironic it is that there is
now this idea that Trump is going to trash climate data, when key
decisions were earlier taken by someone whose responsibility it was to
maintain its integrity – and failed.’
NOAA not only failed, but
it effectively mounted a cover-up when challenged over its data. After
the paper was published, the US House of Representatives Science
Committee launched an inquiry into its Pausebuster claims. NOAA refused
to comply with subpoenas demanding internal emails from the committee
chairman, the Texas Republican Lamar Smith, and falsely claimed that no
one had raised concerns about the paper internally.
Last night Mr
Smith thanked Dr Bates ‘for courageously stepping forward to tell the
truth about NOAA’s senior officials playing fast and loose with the data
in order to meet a politically predetermined conclusion’. He added:
‘The Karl study used flawed data, was rushed to publication in an effort
to support the President’s climate change agenda, and ignored NOAA’s
own standards for scientific study.’
Professor Curry, now the
president of the Climate Forecast Applications Network, said last night:
‘Large adjustments to the raw data, and substantial changes in
successive dataset versions, imply substantial uncertainties.’
It was time, she said, that politicians and policymakers took these uncertainties on board.
Last
night Mr Karl admitted the data had not been archived when the paper
was published. Asked why he had not waited, he said: ‘John Bates is
talking about a formal process that takes a long time.’ He denied he was
rushing to get the paper out in time for Paris, saying: ‘There was no
discussion about Paris.’
They played fast and loose with the figures
He
also admitted that the final, approved and ‘operational’ edition of the
GHCN land data would be ‘different’ from that used in the paper’.
As
for the ERSSTv4 sea dataset, he claimed it was other records – such as
the UK Met Office’s – which were wrong, because they understated global
warming and were ‘biased too low’.
Jeremy Berg, Science’s
editor-in-chief, said: ‘Dr Bates raises some serious concerns. After the
results of any appropriate investigations… we will consider our
options.’ He said that ‘could include retracting that paper’.NOAA
declined to comment.
SOURCE NASA / NOAA Climate Data Is Fake DataNOAA shows the Earth red hot in December, with record heat in central Africa.
(Graphic above from
here)
The
map above is fake. NOAA has almost no temperature data from Africa, and
none from central Africa. They simply made up the record temperatures.
See below for a graphic showing what Thermometer Data they have:
(
Source of above graphic)
More HERE "The ocean exerts a dominant control on atmospheric CO2 levels."It's not coal-fired power stations after all!SOURCE Green movement 'greatest threat to freedom', says Trump adviserThe
environmental movement is “the greatest threat to freedom and
prosperity in the modern world”, according to an adviser to the US
president Donald Trump’s administration.
Myron Ebell, who has
denied the dangers of climate change for many years and led Trump’s
transition team for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) until the
president’s recent inauguration, also said he fully expected Trump to
keep his promise to withdraw the US from the global agreement to fight
global warming.
Ebell said US voters had rejected what he dubbed
the “expertariat” and said there was no doubt that Trump thinks that
climate change is not a crisis and does not require urgent action.
Trump
has already replaced the climate change page on the White House website
with a fossil-fuel-based energy policy, resurrected two controversial
oil pipelines and attempted to gag the EPA, the Agriculture Department
and the National Parks Service.
Trump, who has called climate
change a “hoax” and “bullshit”, has packed his administration with
climate-change deniers but appeared to soften his stance after his
election win, saying there is “some connectivity” between human activity
and climate change. However, he also claimed action to cut carbon
emissions was making US companies uncompetitive.
Ebell, who has
returned to his role at the anti-regulation thinktank the Competitive
Enterprise Institute, said on Monday: “The environmental movement is, in
my view, the greatest threat to freedom and prosperity in the modern
world.”
The CEI does not disclose its funders but has in the past
received money from the oil giant ExxonMobil. “Our special interest is,
I would say, freedom,” Ebell said.
During the US presidential
campaign, Trump pledged to withdraw from the climate change deal agreed
by 196 nations in Paris in 2015, making the US the only country
considering doing so. “I expect President Trump to be very assiduous in
keeping his promises,” Ebell said.
Trump’s pick for secretary of
state, the former ExxonMobil boss Rex Tillerson, appeared to contradict
the president about leaving the climate agreement at his confirmation
hearing, saying the US should keep “its seat at the table”.
“Who
is going to win that debate? I don’t know but the president was elected
and Tillerson was appointed by the president, so would guess the
president will be the odds-on favourite,” said Ebell. “The people who
elected him don’t want a seat at the table.”
“The people of
America have rejected the expertariat, and I think with good reason
because I think the expertariat have been wrong about one thing after
another, including climate policy,” he said. “The expert class, it seems
to me, is full of arrogance or hubris.”
“I don’t think there is
any doubt that [Trump] thinks that global warming is not a crisis and
does not require drastic and immediate reductions in greenhouse gas
emissions,” he said. The deal agreed by the world’s nations in Paris
aims to hold the global temperature rise to well below 2C, a target that
requires dramatic cuts in carbon emissions. Without this, the world’s
climate experts concluded there will be “severe, widespread, and
irreversible impacts” on people and the natural world.
Ebell,
speaking in London, claimed that the motivation for climate action was
protecting a special interest: “The climate-industrial complex is a
gigantic special interest that involves everyone from the producers of
higher priced energy to the academics that benefit from advancement in
their careers and larger government grants.” The IMF has calculated that
fossil fuels receive $10m every minute in subsidies, while the fossil
fuel industry spends at least $100m a year on lobbying.
China’s
president, Xi Jinping, recently reaffirmed his nation’s commitment to
tackling climate change and said the nation’s green investments were
already “paying off”. China pledged earlier in January to invest $360bn
in renewable energy by 2020.
In an echo of Trump’s claim that
climate change was a hoax invented by China, Ebell said: “China is
making big investments in producing more solar panels and windmills,
which they sell to gullible consumers in the western world, so that
power and electricity prices will become higher and the Chinese economy
will become more competitive.”
SOURCE House votes to overturn Obama rule on natural gas 'flaring'The
Republican-controlled House voted on Friday to overturn an Obama
administration rule that sought to reduce harmful methane emissions into
the environment, part of the Democratic president's campaign to combat
climate change.
Lawmakers voted 221-191 to roll back the Interior
Department rule that had clamped down on oil companies that burn off
natural gas during drilling operations on public lands. Three Democrats
voted in favor of repealing the rule, which was finalized in November,
while 11 Republicans opposed repeal.
Republicans argued that the
rule is causing job losses in energy-dependent states across the West
and is undercutting domestic energy production. The measure now goes to
the Senate.
The House vote followed action in the Senate earlier
Friday ending an Obama-era regulation that requires oil and gas
companies to disclose payments to foreign governments for mining and
drilling.
The House and Senate also gave final approval this week
to a measure that eliminates a rule to prevent coal mining debris from
being dumped into nearby streams.
The votes are among a series
Republicans are taking under GOP control of Congress and the White House
to reverse years of what they call excessive regulation during
President Barack Obama's tenure. Rules on fracking, federal contracting
and other issues also are in the GOP crosshairs.
Republicans said
the natural gas rule costs energy companies more than $1 billion a year
and costs states and the federal government million in lost tax
payments.
"This rule is a needless burden on American families,"
said Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., who said the boom in natural gas
production in recent years benefits "everyday Americans" by lowering
energy costs and reducing air pollution from coal-fired power plants.
Energy
companies frequently "flare" or burn off vast supplies of natural gas
at drilling sites because it earns less money than oil. A government
report said about 40 percent of gas being flared or vented could be
captured economically and sold.
Gas flaring is so prevalent in
oil-rich North Dakota that night-time flaring activity on drilling sites
is visible in NASA photos from space.
Environmental groups and
public health organizations opposed the rollback, saying the new rule
will reduce the risk of ozone formation in the air and ozone-related
health problems, including asthma attacks, hospital admissions and
premature deaths.
Methane, the primary gas burned off during
flaring operations, is strong contributor to climate change. It is about
25 times more potent at trapping heat than carbon dioxide, although it
does not stay in the air as long. Methane emissions make up about 9
percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, according to government
estimates.
The oil industry has argued that new regulations are
not needed for methane because the industry already has a financial
incentive to capture and sell natural gas. Methane emissions have been
reduced by 21 percent since 1990 even as production has boomed,
according to the Western Energy Alliance, an industry group.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
5 February, 2017
Australian Federal government plan for clean coal powerThe
very term "clean" coal is a monstrous crock. The claim is that
CO2 is "dirty". But we all breathe CO2 out. Do we breathe
out dirt? And the idea that you can capture and store it is
equally absurd. It's possible in theory but the engineering
challenges would make it monstrously expensiveThe
Turnbull government is planning to help fund the construction of new
clean-coal-fired power stations in an extraordinary measure to
intervene in the looming energy security and pricing crisis.
In a
move to address the premature closures of state power plants, the
federal government will look to either repurpose plants or directly
invest in the construction of new-generation coal-fired plants in
partnership with the private sector. A senior government source
confirmed Malcolm Turnbull had asked late last year for options to fund
“ultra-super-critical power plants” to provide clean-coal alternatives
and lower fuel costs, which would not only alleviate price pressure for
consumers and business but arrest the decline in Australia’s
competitive advantage in manufacturing.
In a direct challenge to
the Labor states, and drawing the political battlelines with Bill
Shorten, the Prime Minister yesterday blamed “huge” renewable energy
targets set by Labor governments for pushing power prices to the highest
of any OECD country.
In his first national address of the year,
Mr Turnbull accused Labor yesterday of a “mindless rush” to renewables,
and hinted that the government would intervene to protect prices and
security of supply with a path to state-of-the-art coal-fired
technology.
The Australian has confirmed that Mr Turnbull and
senior ministers, including Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg, have been
in discussions since December on what exceptional measures the
commonwealth could take to subsidise new coal-fired generation, as well
as provide incentives to the states to lift the moratorium on new gas
development, which is also having a crippling impact on reliability and
prices.
“States are setting huge renewable targets, far beyond
that of the national RET, with no consideration given to the baseload
power and storage needed for stability,” Mr Turnbull said in a speech to
the National Press Club in Canberra yesterday. “We will need more
synchronous baseload power and, as the world’s largest coal exporter, we
have a vested interest in showing that we can provide both lower
emissions and reliable baseload power with state-of-the-art
clean-coal-fired technology.”
Energy storage would also be a
priority in the government’s energy policy, with Mr Turnbull claiming
it had long been neglected in Australia.
“You’d think if anyone
had a vested interest in showing that you could do really smart, clean
things with coal it would be us, wouldn’t you? Who has a bigger interest
than us? We are the biggest exporter. Yet we don’t have one power
station that meets those requirements,” he said.
“This has got to
be all about Australian families and Australian businesses, making sure
that they can keep the lights on and, when they’re on, they can afford
to pay the bill.
“And, yes, of course, we meet our emissions reduction targets.
“Nothing
will more rapidly de-industrialise Australia and deter investment more
than more and more expensive, let alone less reliable, energy.
“Australia
is the world’s largest exporter of coal, has invested $590 million
since 2009 in clean-coal technology research and demonstration, and yet
we do not have one modern high-efficiency, low emissions coal-fired
power station, let alone one with CCS?”
Industry Minister Arthur
Sinodinos yesterday flagged the possibility of the $10 billion Clean
Energy Finance Corporation being used to fund technology-neutral power
sources, but would not reveal what the government might do.
“The
whole issue is being looked at because we need now a systemic
approach,’’ Senator Sinodinos told Sky News. “And Malcolm Turnbull I
think is a good Prime Minister to do that.’’
Another government
source close to the discussions said “it is very early days” but sites
being raised as possibilities for new coal-fired power plants included
in Queensland, the Hazelwood plant in Victoria, which is due to be
mothballed next month, and the gas-fired plant site at Pelican Point in
South Australia.
Scott Morrison, who recently led a push for the
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank to include coal power as an option
in the region as it transitions to higher levels of renewable energy,
confirmed that new coal would be part of the government’s energy policy
mix. “Coal is part of our energy future, coal is part of our security
and energy security and affordability, and we will have more to say as
time goes on but the Prime Minister made it very clear today that you
cannot be technology dependent or biased in any way in this area nor
can you be, frankly, resource dependent on these things,” the Treasurer
said.
“It is about energy affordability, security and
sustainability. That is what households, families need, it is what
businesses need. And coal is part of that. We need to have an energy
future that is inclusive of what has been one of our greatest energy
advantages for 100 years.”
The Opposition Leader on Tuesday
claimed his 50 per cent renewable energy target would create “real jobs
... for blue-collar workers, jobs for engineers, jobs for designers’’.
Labor’s
energy spokesman, Mark Butler, yesterday blamed the government for
pushing up power prices because of uncertainty in the electricity
market.
“Instead of addressing the investment uncertainty facing
the energy sector with sensible national policy that would reduce the
cost of electricity, improve reliability and cut pollution, the Prime
Minister is actively causing prices to rise, security to suffer and
pollution to grow,” he said.
But Mr Frydenberg said Labor had presided over a 100 per cent increase in power prices.
“Their
record in government was a disaster,” the minister said. “Bill
Shorten’s 50 per cent renewable energy target would require 10,000 wind
turbines to be built between now and 2030.”
Latrobe City Council
Mayor Kellie O’Callaghan welcomed Mr Turnbull’s statement, saying a
clean-coal policy could mean a new power station to replace Hazelwood
was back on the table.
SOURCE Senate panel advances Trump EPA chief pick over Democrats' boycottA
Senate committee suspended rules on Thursday to approve U.S. President
Donald Trump's controversial choice to lead the Environmental Protection
Agency on Thursday, amid a boycott of his nomination by the panel's
Democratic members.
John Barrasso, chair of the Senate's
environment and public works committee, said the panel would "suspend
several rules" temporarily to approve the nomination of Oklahoma
Attorney General Scott Pruitt as EPA administrator.
Democrats on
the committee boycotted Wednesday's meeting to approve Pruitt, saying
that he doubts the science of climate change and has too many conflicts
of interest with the companies he would be charged with regulating.
The
full Senate will now vote on Pruitt's nomination. The date for that has
not yet been confirmed, but with Republicans holding a majority in the
Senate, the nomination will likely be approved.
Barrasso
justified the move by saying that Pruitt, who sued the EPA 14 times as
Oklahoma's top attorney, reflects the agenda of the president who won
the 2016 election. "Elections have consequences and a new
president is entitled to put in place people who advance his agenda," he
said.
Environmental groups, which have strongly criticized the
choice of Pruitt, raised concerns that the nomination was pushed through
to the full Senate.
SOURCE Senate votes to block Obama coal ruleSenators
voted 54-45 Thursday to kill an Obama administration coal mining rule,
giving President Trump his first chance to formally take off the books
an environmental rule from the previous administration.
The
Congressional Review Act (CRA) challenge passed by the Senate undoes the
Interior Department’s Stream Protection Rule, a regulation requiring
coal firms to clean up waste from mountaintop removal mining and prevent
it from going into local waterways.
The coal industry and its
congressional allies have looked for ways to kill the rule since Obama
regulators began crafting it early in his term.
They argued the
regulation would be such a financial hindrance for the coal industry
that it would kill jobs in economically distressed areas of Appalachia
already struggling due to the sector’s market-driven downturn.
The
Office of Surface Mining finalized the rule in December, and the GOP
this week quickly introduced and voted on a CRA resolution taking the
rule off the books and blocking regulators from writing a similar rule
in the future.
The House passed the bill 228-194 on Wednesday
night. Trump supports the legislation, Republicans said, meaning the
rule will come off the books as soon as he signs it.
Sens. Joe
Manchin (D-W.Va.), Heidi Heitkamp (D-N.D.), Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.) and
Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) were the only Democrats to support the measure
in the Senate. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) was the only Republican to
vote against it.
“In my home state of Kentucky and others across
the nation, the stream buffer rule will cause major damage to
communities and threaten coal jobs,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.) said on Thursday, noting industry opposition and state
lawsuits against the rule.
“We should heed their call now and
begin bringing relief to coal country. Today’s vote on this resolution
represents a good step in that direction.”
Environmentalists,
public health advocates and Democrats broadly support the rule, saying
it will protect waterways and prevent health risks for people living in
coal-heavy areas.
“If you want to help miners, then come address
their health and safety and their pension program,” Sen. Maria Cantwell
(D-Wash.), the ranking member of the Energy and Natural Resources
Committee, said during floor debate
“You can protect the coal
industry here with special interests and the amount of lobbying they do,
or you can step up in a process and have a regulation that works for
the United States of America so the outdoor industry and sportsman and
fishermen can continue to thrive.”
The resolution will be the first CRA challenge undoing an Obama-era rule to hit President Trump’s desk.
The
CRA, which gives Congress the power to undo rules shortly after they
are finalized, is a rarely successful tool: It has only been used to
undo a rule once, in 2001.
But Republicans have pledged to pass several CRA resolutions blocking late Obama rules this session.
SOURCE Is Anything Wrong With Natural, Non-Man-Made Climate Change?I
recently asked an environmentalist this question: “If we found out that
the planet was warming for purely natural reasons, would you be in
favor of climate engineering to stop it, because the current temperature
and sea level are the right ones for humans?”
He seemed appalled. “No, of course not, man,” he said.
“Thank
you,” I said. And I meant it, because this fellow had just made a
concession that is fatal to the central argument in favor of reducing
carbon emissions: the risk of catastrophic climate change.
Climate
alarmists are alarmed about the human impact on the climate. Most
of them are not, however, actually alarmed about climate change per se.
That is why they have proposed virtually nothing that would protect
anyone from natural climate change. In fact, if it turns out that
temperatures and sea levels are rising for purely natural reasons, most
environmentalists would probably be against doing anything to stop it,
just liked the fellow I asked.
Of course, not all climate
alarmists agree. Some of them do think that rising temperatures and sea
levels are alarming regardless of what’s causing them to rise. Such
voices are in a tiny minority, however, and the policy prescriptions
that follow logically from their concerns have nothing to do with
reducing carbon emissions. If we are worried about global warming
regardless of its causes, then the right policy is adaptation (i.e.,
help people adjust to life at higher temperatures) and prevention (i.e.
planetary climate engineering, by altering the atmosphere in ways that
neutralize natural climate change).
Many climate alarmists,
however, are like the fellow who unwittingly admitted that he’s not
actually alarmed about climate change in and of itself, just climate
change caused by human activity. The most radical of these
environmentalists flatly deny that temperatures and sea levels could be
rising partly for natural reasons. In other words, they deny natural
climate change. Call them “climate deniers” for short, since they are
denying that the climate is doing now what it has always done, namely
change for natural reasons.
Ironically enough, it turns out that
these climate deniers are also science deniers. The UN’s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) summarizes all of the
climate science that climate alarmists use to justify their anti-carbon
policies. It is the most authoritative source for environmentalists’
claims about the scientific consensus on climate change. On the link
between human activity and climate change, the IPCC has this to say: “It
is extremely likely that more than half of the observed increase in
global average surface temperature from 1951 to 2010 was caused by the
anthropogenic increase in greenhouse gas concentrations and other
anthropogenic forcings together.”
The same IPCC report says that
current warming is “unequivocal” i.e.; there is virtually no doubt that
the planet is warming. But the IPCC is not nearly so unequivocal about
the causes. It cites human activity as the major cause of warming, but
not necessarily the only cause. Scientists aren’t sure what the climate
trend would be in the absence of human activity; it’s possible that
carbon emissions have an even bigger warming impact than they fear, and
the impact is being mostly absorbed by an underlying cooling trend; they
just don’t know. The IPCC’s carefully qualified attribution statement
recognizes that scientists don’t understand the climate well enough to
quantify precisely the relative contribution of the various human and
natural factors in the current warming trend.
The bottom line is
that scientists are much more confident that the planet is warming than
they are confident that they understand why the planet is warming. This
only stands to reason. It is obviously easier to measure temperature
change than to draw “unequivocal” conclusions about causation from the
incredibly rich, complex, and often impenetrable picture that the
climate data present. Those who think that the scientific debate is over
are the real science deniers.
Uncertainty is not necessarily
fatal to precautionary policies such as the widespread calls for
reducing carbon emissions. Policies designed to guard against risks have
to take uncertainty into account. But uncertainty is not an excuse for
throwing rational cost-benefit analysis out the window. Through policies
like the Paris Agreement on climate change, alarmists are proposing
hugely expensive reductions in carbon emissions that would hit the
world’s poorest and most vulnerable populations hardest.
But the
only benefit they propose is a reduction in warming that today’s
scientists would not be able to measure, much less conclusively
attribute to the policy. Warming could stop completely without any
reduction in carbon emissions, and it could continue despite the
elimination of all carbon emissions. Scientists don’t know what the
future holds because they don’t understand natural climate variability
well enough to say what the underlying climate trend would be today in
the absence of human impact.
It’s very telling that climate
alarmists never mention natural climate change. And yet the danger of
natural climate change is all too real. Most people don’t realize that
the last 9,000 years have been uncharacteristically stable compared to
the violent climate changes in the 9,000 years before that. 18,000 years
ago, the state of Wisconsin was under nearly two miles of ice. Average
temperatures were 40 degrees Farenheit lower than they are today, when
they suddenly began to soar. The glaciers that covered most of the
northern hemisphere started melting away, and never stopped melting.
Ocean levels rose 300 feet between 15,000 and 8,000 years ago; that’s
less time than between Sumerian civilization and the present day. It is
very likely that we are towards the end of a short warm period between
major glaciations of the Pleistocene Ice Age, which has lasted 2.6
million years. Carbon dioxide levels are the highest they’ve been in
800,000 years, as we’re often told, but the baseline is that of a ice
age that has brought carbon dioxide levels to their lowest point in 245
million years.
Climate alarmists generally don’t know any of this
because they’re not really afraid of climate change. What they’re
afraid of is fossil fuels. Some of them have been advocating renewable
fuel standards since the 1970s, when the scientific doomsday fad was
imminent oil scarcity. Others are socialists like Naomi Klein, who
thinks that corporations are the height of human evil. Still others are
simple proponents of government regulation like you find in every sector
of the economy, the agents of government’s rapacious appetite for
control. And still others are underdeveloped countries whose governments
see the possibility of massive redistribution in a progressive scheme
of decarbonization.
The one thing these people generally have in
common is that they deny the present danger of natural climate change
and they deny the many legitimate questions that remain about exactly
what the climate science is telling us. They are the real climate
deniers, the real science deniers, and that’s why they risk going down
as just another doomsday fad.
SOURCE A Scientists’ March on Washington Is a Bad IdeaThe NYT says soTalk
is growing about a march for science on Washington, similar to the
Women’s March. Credit Hilary Swift for The New York Times
Talk is
growing about a March for Science on Washington, similar to the Women’s
March the day after President Trump’s inauguration. It is a terrible
idea.
Among scientists, understandably, there is growing fear
that fact-based decision making is losing its seat at the policy-making
table. There’s also overwhelming frustration with the politicization of
science by climate change skeptics and others who see it as threatening
to their interests or beliefs.
But trying to recreate the
pointedly political Women’s March will serve only to reinforce the
narrative from skeptical conservatives that scientists are an interest
group and politicize their data, research and findings for their own
ends.
I am a coastal geologist. I direct a center where our
mission is to conduct scientific research and then communicate that
science to elected officials, regulators, even private entities and the
public. There is no question that the proposed March for Science will
make my job more difficult and increase polarization.
Please
understand, I don’t shy away from openly presenting the facts about the
changing climate and rising seas. But I’ve learned that doing so is not
without risk.
In 2010, I was a co-author of a report for North
Carolina’s Coastal Resources Commission that said sea levels along the
state’s coastline could rise by as much as 39 inches by the end of the
century. That conclusion was based on the best peer-reviewed science and
was intended to help policy makers plan for the future.
But it
alarmed real estate and other economic development interests, which
quickly attacked the report. The coastal commission ignored it. The
authors, myself included, were widely slandered. And the Legislature
passed a law that barred state and local agencies from developing
regulations or planning documents anticipating a rise in sea level. “I
think this is a brilliant solution,” the comedian Stephen Colbert said
at the time. “If your science gives you a result that you don’t like,
pass a law saying the result is illegal. Problem solved.”
You
might think that the lesson I learned from that experience was to
distrust the political establishment. No. What I learned was that most
of those attacking our sea-level-rise projections had never met me, nor
my co-authors. Not only that, most of the public had never met anyone
they considered a scientist. They didn’t understand the careful,
painstaking process we followed to reach our peer-reviewed conclusions.
We were unknowns, “scientists” delivering bad news. We were easy marks
for those who felt threatened by our findings.
A march by
scientists, while well intentioned, will serve only to trivialize and
politicize the science we care so much about, turn scientists into
another group caught up in the culture wars and further drive the wedge
between scientists and a certain segment of the American electorate.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
3 February, 2017
Scientists Criticize 'Hottest Year on Record' Claim as HypeClaims
that 2016 was “the hottest year on record” are drawing sharp criticism
from scientists who say it reflects how global warming has become more
social crusade than evidence-based science.
“The Obama
administration relentlessly politicized science and it aggressively
pushed a campaign about that politicized science,” said Steven E.
Koonin, who served as under secretary for science in Obama’s Department
of Energy from 2009 to 2011.
Koonin, a theoretical physicist at
New York University who once worked for energy giant BP, also blamed a
“happily complicit” media for trumpeting the now-departed Obama
administration’s dubious claim.
The controversy began in
mid-January when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
issued a report declaring that “the globally averaged temperature over
land and ocean surfaces for 2016 was the highest among all years since
record-keeping began in 1880.”
NOAA fixed the 2016 increase at
0.04 degrees Celsius. The British Met Office reported an even lower
rise, of 0.01C. Both increases are well within the margin of error for
such calculations, approximately 0.1 degrees, and therefore are
dismissed by many scientists as meaningless.
The reports,
however, set the global warming bell towers ringing. Gavin Schmidt, head
of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, was quoted at Climate
Central referring to the past temperature record and saying “2016 has
really blown that out of the water.”
Following the lead of the
Schmidt and government press releases, USA Today wrote that “the planet
sizzled to its third straight record warm year in 2016.” The New York
Times’ front-page headline said, “Earth Sets Temperature Record for
Third Straight Year.” The article declared that the latest readings were
“trouncing” earlier numbers and the planet had thus “blown past” the
previous records.
Such characterizations are absurd, according to
Richard Lindzen, a meteorology professor at MIT and one of the world’s
foremost skeptics that global warming represents an existential threat.
“It’s
typical misleading nonsense,” Lindzen said in an e-mail. “We’re talking
about less than a tenth of degree with an uncertainty of about a
quarter of a degree. Moreover, such small fluctuations – even if real –
don’t change the fact that the trend for the past 20 years has been much
less than models have predicted.”
Koonin suggested the White House and the media could consider an alternative presentation of what’s happening.
“I
think simply by having the government press releases on the changing
climate be fulsomely scientific – that is, putting in all the relevant
facts – we would see more genuine science in the media discussions,” he
said.
As an example, he offered a headline that read, “Global
Temperatures Up 0.0X for 2016; Within Margin of Error for Last N Years.”
Rather than exclaim “Sea Levels Highest on Record,” Koonin said, the
press releases could encourage, and perhaps media outlets accept, one
that reads, “Sea Level Rose 0.1 Inches Last Year, Consistent With
Century-Long Trend.”
But would that stir public opinion or sell papers?
“It’s
not my job to sell papers,” Koonin said. “The White House positions,
the press releases, the published stories – all of that is not exactly
inaccurate but it is promoting something considerably less alarming or
certain than the layperson might conclude from reading it all.”
The issue is not one of fake news or manipulated data but of emphasis.
The
Times said it did not rely solely on data sets that showed a 0.01C
increase. The paper’s coverage incorporated other studies that showed a
greater increase in average temperatures, particularly those that take
Arctic changes into account, said Justin Gillis, who covers global
warming for The Times. Gillis provided a bar graph to
RealClearInvestigations that showed three other conclusions reflecting
higher temperature jumps than those recorded by NOAA and the British
meteorology office in conjunction with East Anglia University, one of
the world’s centers of global warming research.
Judith Curry, a
former Georgia Tech scientist who left her academic post this month
largely because of the charged politics surrounding global warming, said
the other temperature data sets are less precise.
She said there
are “some good reasons” why one of the British 0.01C sources elects not
to extend its coverage to the Arctic Ocean. “There is little to no
data, and the extrapolation methods are dubious,” Curry wrote in an
e-mail.
Neither USA Today nor Schmidt replied to requests for comment.
In
addition to Curry, Koonin and Lindzen, five other experts told
RealClearInvestigations the layman’s understanding of the issue would
improve if the Trump administration adopted a more neutral stance toward
global warming stories. That would be certain to be interpreted as one
of “denial” about global warming, and already several figures in the
emerging Trump team have been denounced by The Times and others as
climate deniers.
This rhetoric again obscures the real issue,
according to the skeptics, who insist the important question for
government and taxpayers isn’t global warming’s reality but rather its
extent
SOURCE The Global Warming Smoking Gun: 1910 to 1940The
global warming narrative is straightforward. Carbon dioxide, (CO2),
released by burning coal, oil and natural gas, is increasing in the
atmosphere. The increased concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere will
cause the globe to warm. The warming will create numerous bad effects.
Therefore, we must reduce the emissions of CO2 by switching to green
energy such as windmills, solar power and crops that can be burned for
energy.
The global warming idea has caught on, at least in
left-leaning circles. Millions of people believe that global warming is
solid science. If you doubt the global warming idea, you will be accused
of not believing in science. According to the promoters of global
warming, doubters are like the people who put Galileo on trial, or the
people who think the Earth is flat.
The global warming narrative
consists of assertions, supposedly based on science, and proposed
actions that will avert the (purported) disaster. The narrative is very
fragile and is susceptible to collapse if the assertions or proposed
actions are faulty.
There are a lot of faults in the narrative.
For example, the alternative energy proposed is too expensive by an
order of magnitude. Carbon dioxide increase could be stopped by
switching coal electricity to nuclear electricity because it is only
necessary to reduce CO2 emissions by about half, because the other half
of the CO2 emitted disappears into the ocean. (See this.) But, most of
the global warmers hate nuclear, so nuclear is not on the menu.
The
global warming program to reduce CO2 emissions and change the world’s
energy sources is a political impossibility because China and India are
not going to participate beyond selling windmills to us and to the
Europeans. China burns 4 times as much coal as we do.
Then, it is
not clear that warming is a bad thing. It might be very beneficial.
Some of the supposed bad effects, such as the oceans rising and flooding
the coasts, are so silly as to be not deserving of refutation. It is
well-established that adding CO2 to the atmosphere helps agriculture,
because plants grow better, with less water, in an atmosphere with
enhanced CO2.
The most vulnerable item in the global warming
narrative is the assertion that CO2 is going to cause substantial
warming. It is not unreasonable to expect CO2 to create warming. The
real question is how much. The high priests of global warming, the
United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change or IPCC, say
that doubling the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere will raise the
average global temperature by 3 degrees Celsius or 5+ degrees
Fahrenheit. The scientific basis for this claim is extremely shaky. The
claim is based solely on computer models of the Earth’s atmosphere.
A
perspective on the climate models from a prominent scientist, Kevin
Trenberth, who is allied with the global warmers, can be seen here. He
says there is a lot wrong with the models and the IPCC is not actually
making predictions with the models.
The climate models include
many approximations and assumptions that are not necessarily well
grounded in atmospheric physics. As a result, there are many adjustable
parameters the value of which must be set by a “tuning” process. The
tuning is accomplished by running the models against the past, adjusting
the parameters to make the model output agree with the known past
climate. The past climate is also not well known in many respects, so
estimating is used, and different modelers have different past climate
estimates. The great danger is that the model may be tuned to agree with
the past but then fail to predict the future. This can happen if the
model is based on faulty assumptions, but that there is enough spare
adjusting capacity inherent in the parameters so that the model can be
forced to agree with the past even though the model is faulty.
The
situation with the climate models used by the IPCC is that they cannot
be made to even agree with the past climate. The illustration below is
from the 2013 report of the IPCC (AR5: 10.3.1.1.2 ). It plots the
climate temperature observations against the averaged output of the
various models used by the IPCC. There are two areas of serious
disagreement illustrated by added annotation. From 1910 to 1940 the
Earth warmed strongly, but the models do not generate a match to that
warming. The other area of disagreement is the period starting in 1998
when global warming stopped, called the “Hiatus” or the “Pause.” The
models project global warming continuing, not stopping in 1998.
The
climate models attribute the strong warming trend from 1975 to 1998,
the late 20th century warming, to the influence of CO2 (and minor
greenhouse gases). However, the very similar warming from 1910 to 1940,
the early 20th century warming, cannot be blamed on CO2 because in that
less industrialized time there was not enough increase in CO2 to account
for more than a tiny part of that warming. Although there are plenty of
theories, the cause of the early 20th century warming is unknown. Some
modelers incorporate speculative theories to try to make their models
better match observations. But, the average of the models still cannot
fit to the early 20th century warming. The obvious important question is
how do we know the late 20th century warming was caused by CO2 and not
by the same unknown force that caused the early 20th century warming?
The
inability to explain the early 20th century warming, and the real
probability that the late 20th century warming may be forced by factors
other than CO2, constitute a smoking gun type of evidence, casting doubt
on the predictions of global warming forced by CO2. Doubt concerning
the viability of the climate models is further reinforced by the lack of
warming during the last 18 years, the Hiatus.
What other forces
may be driving the Earth’s climate? Exchange of heat with the oceans can
potentially have a large effect on climate. Vast quantities of cold,
salty water sink to the bottom of the ocean in the polar regions. That
sinking water tends to warm the Earth because cold water is removed from
the surface environment. However cold water is upwelling to the surface
in various places. That cools the Earth. In the short term the sinking
and up welling are not necessarily in balance, resulting in net storage
or net emission of cold water from the subsurface ocean. The promoters
of global warming try to use ocean heat storage to explain model
failure. The ocean can “explain” any failure of the models. But, that is
speculation because there are not good observations of the interchange
of heat between the atmosphere and the oceans. The ocean influence cuts
both ways, explaining away the model failures, or else providing an
alternative, non-CO2, explanation for the warming and cooling of the
Earth.
The sun may have an effect on the Earth’s climate not
acknowledged by the models. It is known the sun has various cycles, the
11-year sunspot cycle being most prominent. It is known that an
exceptionally cold period from 1645 to 1715, the Maunder Minimum, was
accompanied by the near absence of sunspots. But good measurements of
the sun only began in the satellite era, so we have a lack of knowledge
concerning the effect of the sun. The Danish physicist, Henrik
Svensmark, has a pretty good theory suggesting that cycles in the
strength of the sun’s magnetic field modulate the arrival of cosmic rays
to the Earth and the cosmic rays provide nuclei for the formation of
cloud droplets. Clouds affect climate.
The pacific decadal
oscillation changes the temperature of parts of the Pacific Ocean about
every 30 years. It was only discovered in the 1990’s by a biologist
investigating variation in the Alaska salmon catch. That and a similar
oscillation in the Atlantic are probably driven by ocean circulation and
may drive climate. There may be, and probably are, forces driving
climate that are yet to be discovered.
As one professor said, to err is human, but to really foul up you need a computer.
SOURCE Liberal Mega-Donor Tom Steyer Gives Up On Climate Change (Because No One Cares…)Tom
Steyer – the hedge fund guy with the annoying tartan tie – has decided
to quit green advocacy politics and move “beyond climate change” in
order to campaign on something – anything – that people actually give a
damn about.
“We want to know what matters most to you, and what should be done,” he pleads, desperately, in a new video.
Let us pause for a moment and savour the man’s absurdity, chutzpah and brazen hypocrisy.
Here is a guy who, for the last decade, has been telling us that climate change is the most important issue of our time.
That’s
why he spent millions of his personal fortune in the last two election
cycles promoting liberal causes and supporting Democrat candidates: in
order – as he puts it on the website of his NextGenClimate
SuperPac – to “prevent climate disaster.”
So what exactly has happened to make this great green philanthropist change his mind?
Did the planet stop warming? [well yes, actually, it pretty much did for the last 20 years, but that’s another story…]
Did
mankind suddenly see sense and abandon the selfishness, greed and
refusal to amend his lifestyle which has caused carbon-dioxide to reach
levels unprecedented in the age of humans?
Did the mighty
political power of all the nations who met in Paris to secure a climate
deal in December 2015 result in an agreement so watertight and effective
that the world was saved from the clutches of ManBearPig?
Nope.
What happened was that this shyster opportunist – as I reported here,
part of his vast fortune comes from his earlier investments in Big Coal –
has simply reached the very expensive conclusion that no one gives a
damn about the greenies’ imaginary climate problem.
Steyer spent about $86 million in the 2016 election cycle, trying to
get Democrats elected. Republicans, however, held onto both chambers of
Congress, won the presidency and saw state legislature and governorship
gains. NextGen spent about $56 million in 2016, according to campaign
finance data.
NextGen spent nearly $21 million
in the 2014 election cycle, but only had a 38 percent rate of
supporting winning candidates, according to the Center for Responsive
Politics. Steyer spent more than $73 million of his personal fortune
that election cycle only to see Republicans take control of the Senate.
SOURCE Faced with U.S. retreat on climate change, EU looks to ChinaFaced
with a U.S. retreat from international efforts to tackle climate
change, European Union officials are looking to China, fearing a
leadership vacuum will embolden those within the bloc seeking to slow
the fight against global warming.
While U.S. President Donald
Trump has yet to act on campaign pledges to pull out of the 2015 Paris
accord to cut greenhouse gas emissions, his swift action in other areas
has sparked sharp words from usually measured EU bureaucrats.
When
Trump's former environment adviser, until the president's inauguration
this month, took to a stage in Brussels on Wednesday and called climate
experts "urban imperialists", a rebuke from Britain's former energy
minister drew applause from the crowd packed with EU officials.
But
with fault lines over Brexit, dependence on Russian energy and
protecting industry threatening the bloc's own common policy, some EU
diplomats worry Europe is too weak to lead on its own in tackling
climate change.
Instead, they are pinning their hopes on China,
concerned that without the backing of the world's second-biggest economy
support for the global pact to avert droughts, rising seas and other
affects of climate change will flounder.
"Can we just fill the
gap? No because we will be too fragmented and too inward looking," one
EU official, involved in climate talks, told Reuters. "Europe will now
be looking to China to make sure that it is not alone."
The EU's
top climate diplomat Miguel Arias Canete will travel to Beijing at the
end of March, EU sources said. Offering EU expertise on its plans to
build a "cap-and-trade" system is one area officials see for expanded
cooperation.
Enticed by huge investments in solar and wind power
in economies such as China and India, Germany, Britain and France are
seeking closer ties to gain a share of the business.
But hurdles
stand in the way of an EU clean energy alliance with China after the two
sides narrowly averted a trade war in 2013 over EU allegations of solar
panel dumping by China.
"We need to embrace the fact that China
has invested very heavily in clean energy," Gregory Barker, climate
change minister to former British Prime Minister David Cameron, told
Reuters on the sidelines the environment conference in Brussels
organized by conservative politicians.
"If America won't lead then it's clear that China will."
'WE LOST A MAJOR ALLY'
China's
partnership with former U.S. President Barack Obama's administration
helped get nearly 200 countries to support the Paris climate change pact
in 2015.
That agreement, which looks to limit the rise in
average global temperature to "well below" 2 degrees Celsius compared
with pre-industrial levels, entered into force late last year, binding
nations that ratified to draft national plans to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions.
But despite Beijing's green policy drive, propelled by
domestic anger over smog and the environmental devastation wrought by
rapid economic growth, some EU officials are skeptical it can pull as
much weight as the United States on climate issues.
"We will make
a lot of noises (about allying with China), but let's be honest we lost
an ally - a major one," a senior EU energy diplomat said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. "China's biggest issues are domestic ... It's
clean water, air and food."
When the United States last took a
step back on climate diplomacy, giving up on the 1997 Kyoto protocol on
CO2 emissions under former U.S. President George W. Bush, Europe assumed
leadership of global negotiations to cap planet warming.
It is
among the first now to legislate on how to spread the burden among its
member nations of its promise to cut emissions by 40 percent by 2030.
Talks
are tough, though, particularly for coal-dependent nations such as
Poland, and EU officials fear climate scepticism in the Trump
administration may slow efforts.
"This may give the perfect
excuse to a number of countries like Poland," another EU official said.
"The deal has always been that we move when the big players (the United
States and China) move."
Others are more sanguine, saying a U.S.
retreat would dent, but not destroy, the current global momentum in
tackling climate change - not least because cities, businesses and civil
society are driving for change as much as governments.
"If the
U.S. doesn't play the game, that's a problem. But it's a trade problem,"
an EU diplomat said. "Maybe European business will win out."
To
date, there has been no sign that any other country is preparing to pull
out of the Paris agreement. Days after Trump's election, almost 200
nations at the Marrakesh annual U.N. talks agreed a declaration saying
that tackling climate change was an "urgent duty".
SOURCE Contrary to reports, climate change doubter Ken Haapala is not guiding NOAAThe
protege of Fred Singer, the grandfather of climate change skepticism,
was said to have the keys to NOAA’s future. Democratic lawmakers feared
he would steer the agency toward outright climate-change denial and
appealed to the Trump administration to remove him.
But,
according to the Commerce Department, which oversees NOAA, climate
change doubter Ken Haapala never met with NOAA leadership and isn’t
shaping its future.
“He has never stepped foot on the premises [as part of a transition team],” a department spokesman said.
But
confusion arose as official documents list Haapala as a member of the
Commerce Department landing team, which helped agencies plan for new
leadership prior to the inauguration.
Haapala’s name appears on
the website GreatAgain.gov, as a Department of Commerce landing team
member (see screenshot below). And, a separate document, prepared by
NOAA’s internal transition team, includes Haapala and his biography (see
screenshot below) among the landing team group.
But an NOAA
spokesman said only a few people listed on the document actually had
direct interactions with NOAA’s internal transition team. As for
Haapala, the spokesman said: “We’ve had no contact with the guy. We’ve
never seen the guy.”
Adding to the confusion, Haapala’s own
organization, the Science and Environmental Policy Project, stated he
joined the team as of Jan. 2: “Ken Haapala was asked to volunteer for a
non-paid, temporary position on a Trump transition landing team. He
responded as he would have for any major national candidate – Yes.”
But
the Commerce Department spokesman insists Haapala never served, either
on the landing team or on the beachhead team, which begins the
implementation of the new administration’s policy after inauguration.
“He never participated in staffing or policy discussions or any
programmatic operations,” the spokesman said.
Haapala, reached by
phone, would not “confirm or deny” participation on any transition
team, and he said he was told to refer press to the Commerce Department.
In
recent weeks, media and lawmakers were alarmed by the listing of
Haapala on official documents and the fear he would influence NOAA’s
climate-change activities.
On Jan. 12, E and E News published the story headlined, “Climate science denier on Commerce landing team.”
Twelve
days later, Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.) and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse
(D-R.I.) wrote a letter to Trump, protesting Haapala’s appointment,
calling it “extremely troubling.” The lawmakers said Haapala has no
background in physical or natural science and “has made a career denying
the science of climate change and advocating against actions necessary
to protect Americans from its worst impacts.”
Science and
Environmental Policy Project has promoted doubt about the seriousness of
climate change since its inception in 1990. It was founded by Singer
and the late Frederick Seitz, a renowned physicist. Haapala said Singer,
92, still serves as chairman but is “not as active” as he used to be in
the organization.
Both Singer and Haapala have been vocal
opponents of actions to curb climate change, arguing the human influence
is small and that its effects are likely to be minimal and benign.
“[It’s]
past time [to end the scare and] stop the madness of wasting great sums
of money on EPA’s imaginary threat,” Haapala said in 2015.
Scientists
and NOAA career staff have expressed concerns that the new
administration will meddle in its communication of climate-change
science. But Trump’s pick for secretary of commerce, Wilbur Ross, has
stressed that he will allow NOAA scientists to freely share their work
and that he seeks to provide the public “with as much factual and
accurate data as we have available.”
[Trump’s pick to lead Commerce Department says NOAA scientists can freely share their work]
The
NOAA spokesman said the transition to the new administration has gone
well so far. “We’ve had a very smooth transition,” he said. “We’re
pleased with the interactions we’ve had so far.”
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
2 February, 2017
Action is needed to make stagnant CO2 emissions fall. Why?I
have been pointing out for over a year that CO2 levels have stopped
rising and admissions of that are starting to appear in the
literature. The figures from Mauna Loa and Cape Grim are too plain
even for Warmists to deny and they haven't got around to fudging them
yet.
But the article below says that static levels are not
enough. Levels have to decline. But why? We live in
perfect comfort with the current levels. So where is the need to
reduce them? The article below does not say. It just asserts
such a need. The Warmists have a very profitable schtick and they
don't want to let it go. They can't accept that they have won
their goalSummary:
2016 marked the third year in a
row when global carbon dioxide emissions remained relatively flat, but
actual declines won't materialize without advances in carbon capture and
storage technology and sustained growth in renewables.
FULL STORY
Without
a significant effort to reduce greenhouse gases, including an
accelerated deployment of technologies for capturing atmospheric carbon
and storing it underground, and sustained growth in renewables such as
wind and solar, the world could miss a key global temperature target set
by the Paris Agreement and the long-term goal of net-zero climate
pollution.
The finding, published in the Jan. 30 issue of the
journal Nature Climate Change, is part of a new study that aims to track
the progress and compare emission pledges of more than 150 nations that
signed the Paris Agreement, a 2015 United Nations convention that aims
to keep global warming below 2 degrees Celsius of pre-industrial levels
-- the threshold that scientists have marked as the point of no return
for catastrophic warming.
"The good news is that fossil fuel
emissions have been flat for three years in a row," said Robert Jackson,
chair of the Department of Earth System Science at Stanford's School of
Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences. "Now we need actual
reductions in global emissions and careful tracking of emission pledges
and country-level statistics."
In the new study, Jackson and his
colleagues developed a nested family of metrics that can be used to
track different national emissions pledges and thus global progress
toward the objectives of the Paris Agreement.
Applying their
method to the recent past, the researchers found that global carbon
dioxide emissions have remained steady at around 36 gigatons of carbon
dioxide for the third year in a row in 2016.
"The rapid
deployment of wind and solar is starting to have an effect globally, and
in key players such as China, the U.S. and the European Union," said
Glen Peters, senior researcher at the Center for International Climate
and Environmental Research -- Oslo (CICERO) and lead author for the
study. "The challenge is to substantially accelerate the new additions
of wind and solar, and find solutions for effectively integrating these
into existing electricity networks."
However, wind and solar
alone won't be sufficient to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement. When
the researchers examined the drivers behind the recent slowdown, they
found that most of them boiled down to economic factors and reduced coal
use, mostly in China but also the United States.
In China, the
decline in coal use was driven by reduced output of cement, steel and
other energy-intensive products, as well as a dire need to alleviate
outdoor air pollution, which is responsible for more than 1 million
premature deaths annually.
The reasons for the decline in the
United States were more complex, driven not only by a decline in coal
use but also by gains in energy efficiency in the industrial sector and
the rapid rise of natural gas and wind and solar power. "2016 was the
first year that natural gas surpassed coal for electricity generation,"
said Jackson, who is also chair of the Global Carbon Project, which
tracks the amount of carbon dioxide emitted by humans each year.
Looking
to the future, the researchers predict that the greatest challenge to
meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement is the slower than expected
rollout of carbon capture and storage technologies. Most scenarios
suggest the need for thousands of facilities with carbon capture and
storage by 2030, the researchers say, far below the tens that are
currently proposed.
Jackson notes that carbon capture and storage
technology will prove even more crucial if President Donald Trump
follows through with his campaign pledge of resuscitating the nation's
struggling coal industry.
"There's no way to reduce the carbon emissions associated with coal without carbon capture and storage," Jackson said.
SOURCE Trump’s Climate Plans Just Made the Media’s Heads ExplodeJames Delingpole
I’ve just watched the London liberal media’s heads exploding like ripe watermelons.
It
was great – a bit like that No Pressure video that the enviro-loons
made a few years ago, only better because this time the victims weren’t
blameless schoolchildren but grisly, puffed-up, righteously eco,
Trump-and-Brexit-hating TV and newspaper Environment Correspondents, all
of whom hate my guts. (They hate yours too, so don’t get smug.)
The
occasion was a press conference hosted by the Global Warming Policy
Foundation for Myron Ebell, head of the Trump administration’s
Environmental Protection Agency transition team. Satan’s Emissary, as
liberals prefer to think of him.
Ebell had come to tell them
about Trump’s plans for the environment and energy, which I won’t repeat
here because you know them already. (It’s going to be beautiful, that’s
all you need to remember.)
No, the reason I went wasn’t to hear what Ebell had to say but to watch how his audience reacted.
You
know that scene in The Omen when Damien’s parents try to take him into a
church? It was a bit like that. Or maybe the one in The Exorcist, where
Regan’s head does a 360 degree spin.
They hated it. (Especially
the bit where Ebell told them that Trump would definitely be pulling the
U.S. out of the Paris climate treaty) They couldn’t believe what they
were hearing. They curled their lips. They laced their questions with
the bitterest scorn. But they didn’t really tune into Ebell’s measured,
silken, soft-spoken answers because, hell, they knew what he was saying
just had to be wrong and they didn’t really understand what he meant
anyway.
The reporter who set the tone – and if nothing else,
you’ve got to admire his honesty – was the one from Channel 4 News who
told Ebell: “It will occur to you that this room is full of people like
myself who consider that nothing you say has any basis in fact. So what
you’ve been telling us is essentially meaningless.”
Ebell replied
with some painful home truths. “Elections are surprising things…” he
began and went on to explain to the mystified audience why and how it
was that Brexit happened and Trump happened.
Basically, he argued
– perhaps channelling Michael Gove – people have had enough of the
“Expertariat”. And with good reason: “The expert class is full of
arrogance and hubris.”
I did debate with myself beforehand
whether or not to a five hour round trip just to attend this one hour
conference. (There was another Breitbart piece I’d been planning, which
might have been cleverer or more interesting or got more traffic, I
don’t know.)
But, hell, it was worth it for a number of reasons.
One
was the joy of watching the feline Ebell goading the audience with his
amused erudition, sweet politeness, and crushing one liners. He’s a
cultured, fearsomely intelligent man: Cambridge-educated. (Bizarrely, he
was a friend there of Oliver Wetwin, though I don’t think their
politics much align these days.)
When the press essentially
accused Ebell of representing evil oil interests, he replied by noting
the vast power and corruption of what he called the Climate Industrial
Complex – from grant-grubbing scientists to regulation-hungry
rent-seeking businesses – which feeds on the global warming scam.
When
someone invoked battery technology and Elon Musk, he quietly wondered
how “the largest recipient of federal taxpayer subsidies in the history
of the world” could be represented as any kind of role model.
When
asked about the Endangered Species Act he replied – to audible gasps of
disgust and hatred – that he’d been trying to reform it for years
(without much success) because it didn’t do much for endangered species
but did an awful lot of damage to private property and land use rights.
Perhaps
the main reason for going, though, was to witness at first hand one of
the main reasons why the Great Global Warming Scamsters have got away
with so much for so long: the abject failure of the media to do its job
and interrogate the alarmist narrative.
The press comes in for a
lot of stick. But though I think that on the whole journalists are a lot
more principled, brave, and committed species than they are generally
given credit for, I’d certainly make an exception for those in the
Energy, Environment, and Climate sectors.
With one or two
exceptions – none immediately spring to mind, but I’m sure there some –
they are a bunch of despicable fails. They’re far too much in bed with
the environmental movement; far too ready to transcribe their stories
almost verbatim from the press releases of Greenpeace and the WWF or
whichever renewable energy outfit has given them the sweet-talk; and
far, far too reluctant to question the bullshit fed to them by the
compromised scientists who have been milking the climate scare for the
last four decades.
Unfortunately, I arrived too late to catch the
bit in the conference where someone asked Myron Ebell what Stephen K.
Bannon, Trump’s chief policy adviser, thought about climate change.
“Well
you can get an idea from the fact that when he was at Breitbart the guy
he recruited to write about it was James Delingpole…” Ebell said.
No wonder I got so many hate-filled glares when I poked my head into the crowded room, 15 minutes late.
The
feeling’s mutual. But that’s OK because I’m on the right side of
history, whereas their view of the world is toast. Welcome to the suck,
guys. It’s only just beginning…
SOURCE North Dakota wants hired pipeline protesters to pay state income taxesAfter
spending more than $22 million on the Dakota Access pipeline protest,
North Dakota wants to make sure any paid activists remember to submit
their state income taxes.
Tax Commissioner Ryan Rauschenberger
said his office is keeping an eye out for tax forms from environmental
groups that may have hired protesters to agitate against the 1,172-mile,
four-state pipeline project.
“It’s something we’re looking at. I
can tell you I’ve had a number of conversations with legislators
regarding this very issue,” said Mr. Rauschenberger. “[We’re] looking at
the entities that have potential paid contractors here on their behalf
doing work.”
It’s no secret that millions have been funneled into
the six-month-old demonstration via crowdfunding websites, and that
more than 30 environmental organizations, including the Sierra Club,
Indigenous Environmental Network, Food and Water Watch, 350.org and
Greenpeace, have backed the protest.
If national environmental
organizations are paying protest personnel, they’re not saying so
publicly. Still, Mr. Rauschenberger said red flags will be raised if he
doesn’t start seeing W2 or 1099 tax forms from those affiliated with the
protest arriving at his office.
“It’s something we could possibly pursue if we don’t see 1099s coming in for the activity,” Mr. Rauschenberger said.
The
ongoing demonstration has been costly to the state. Sen. Heidi
Heitkamp, North Dakota Democrat, issued a plea last week for federal
help with unruly protesters, some still camped out on federal land,
after President Trump moved to expedite the pipeline review.
“After
five months of protests, over 600 arrests related to those protests,
and more than $22 million in North Dakota taxpayer dollars spent on law
enforcement resources to keep North Dakotans safe during the protests,
state and local law enforcement agencies are in dire need of federal
support,” Ms. Heitkamp said in her letter.
Morton County Sheriff
Kyle Kirchmeier has criticized “paid agitators” who crossed the line
from peaceful protest to lawbreaking by trespassing on private property,
blocking highways and bridges and throwing rocks, feces and burning
logs at law enforcement.
“If an organization is directly paying
someone to come and do activities on their behalf, even protesting — if
they’re receiving income and they’re here in North Dakota performing
activities for an organization, they owe income tax from Day One,” Mr.
Rauschenberger said. “And that entity should be issuing 1099s. Just like
a contractor.”
Whether protesters would be required to report income based on crowdfunding donations falls into more of a gray area, he said.
“I
think a lot of people think that, ‘Oh, if something goes through
GoFundMe, it’s just always considered a gift.’ But it can also be used
as a way to funnel money just like an employer paying a contractor,” Mr.
Rauschenberger said. “It can be a way to funnel money as well, and very
well could be taxable. I’m not saying it is. I’m saying it could be.
And it’s really on a case-by-case basis.”
He said the IRS has
issued a “loose guidance” on crowdfunding. In general, such income is
considered exempt if it represents a gift to be repaid, a purchase of an
equity interest or a gift without any expectation of repayment.
Rob
Port, who runs North Dakota’s Say Anything blog, said the crowdfunding
donations are often framed as payment for services provided. He has
tabulated at least $11.2 million in contributions to the DAPL protest.
“If
those receiving the money didn’t use it in attempting to block the
pipeline, I think those giving the money would be upset. They’d feel
cheated,” said Mr. Port. “That certainly seems like a quid pro quo
relationship to me. That seems like one person paying another person in
pursuance of a specific endeavor.”
Several hundred protesters
have braved the harsh North Dakota winter in their ongoing effort to
stop the $3.8 billion project over fears about its impact on water
quality.
The Standing Rock Sioux tribal council has asked
occupiers to leave, citing environmental damage and looming spring
flooding at some camps, even though the tribe has led opposition to the
pipeline.
Mr. Rauschenberger emphasized that the state isn’t
looking into the tribe’s financial relationship with protesters, only
off-reservation activity. In addition, contributions such as food and
shelter would be considered in-kind donations and not subject to
taxation.
“The paper trail for something like that would be
probably nonexistent,” he said. “We’d be looking at cash, whether it was
a check, cash or debit card issued for performing services as opposed
to more of the in-kind. It would be too difficult from an enforcement
standpoint. We’d be looking at the cash money trail.”
Any paid protesters would owe income tax in North Dakota if their total income in 2016 exceeded $10,350.
Enforcing
the tax code may also come down to whether the costs exceed the
benefits. There are rumors that some of the thousands of protesters who
moved in and out of camps starting in August were being paid with
hard-to-track debit cards, and the state tax division has a staff of
128.
“It all comes down to resources,” Mr. Rauschenberger said.
SOURCE Bad effects of a carbon taxTesla
Motors Inc. founder Elon Musk is pressing the Trump administration to
adopt a tax on carbon emissions, raising the issue directly with
President Donald Trump and U.S. business leaders at a White House
meeting Monday regarding manufacturing.
But what the article
doesn’t mention is that such a tax would make his electric cars more
financially attractive. It’s rather unseemly (and I’m bending over
backwards for a charitable characterization) that a rich guy is pushing a
tax on the rest of us as a way of lining his pockets.
What’s
ironic, though, is that he’s probably being short-sighted because a
carbon tax presumably would hit coal, and that’s a common source of
energy for electrical generation. So while regular drivers would pay a
lot more for gas, Tesla drivers would pay more at charging stations.
Some
big oil companies also are flirting with an energy tax for cronyist
reasons. An article in the Federalist notes that some of those firms
support carbon taxes because they want to create hardships for their
competitors.
…carbon taxes do not affect all fossil fuels
equally. So just as some fossil fuels are much more carbon-intensive
than others, here we can begin to understand how, beyond the benefits of
predictability, a carbon tax might actually help some fossil-fuel
providers… As a recent National Bureau of Economic Research working
paper illustrates, for example, in the United States a tax on carbon
would disproportionately impact the use of coal relative to natural gas
for energy production. …Don’t be surprised, then, if some domestic
producers of natural gas end up promoting a carbon tax, not only out of
concern for regime stability but also out of a concern to make their
product more competitive in the energy marketplace.
To be fair, I
suppose that Musk and the energy companies might actually think energy
taxes are a good idea, so their support may have nothing to do with self
interest.
But it’s always a good idea to “follow the money” when looking at how policy really gets made in Washington.
Even
more depressing, the adoption of one bad policy may lead to the
expansion of another bad policy. More specifically, some proponents of
energy taxes admit that ordinary taxpayers and consumers will be hurt.
But rather than realize that a new tax is a bad idea, they decide to
match a tax increase with more spending. Here is a blurb from a report
by the American Enterprise Institute.
Using emissions and other
data from 2013 and 2014, we also find that the revenue from the carbon
tax could be enough to expand the EITC to childless workers and hold
other low income households harmless, combining a regressive tax with
progressive benefits.
This is not good. The EITC already is the
fastest-growing redistribution program in Washington. Making it even
bigger would exacerbate the fiscal burden of the welfare state.
SOURCE Judge questions global warmingA
jury was selected in Washington state on Monday in the first trial over
a coordinated protest that disrupted the flow of millions of barrels of
crude oil into the United States, a proceeding activists hope will
serve as a referendum on climate change.
Activist Ken Ward says
he will not dispute that he shut down a valve on the Kinder Morgan Inc’s
Trans Mountain Pipeline near Burlington, Washington, but he will
testify that such actions are necessary in the face of the government’s
failure to address global warming.
“I am going to talk a little
bit about climate science” during the trial in Skagit County Superior
Court, said Ward, a former deputy director of Greenpeace USA and
co-founder of Green Corps.
“I spent 30-some-odd years following
only legal approaches,” Ward said in an interview. “It’s only been in
recent years that the scale of the problem and lack of a political
solution leaves no choice but direct action.”
Ward, 60, is charged with trespassing, burglary and sabotage. If convicted, he could face up to three decades in prison.
Officials,
pipeline companies and experts said the protesters could have caused
environmental damage themselves by shutting down the lines.
Judge
Michael Rickert has barred Ward’s lawyers from formally mounting a
“necessity” defence or arguing that his actions were justified in light
of a looming environmental crisis.
“I don’t know what everybody’s
beliefs are on [climate change], but I know that there’s tremendous
controversy over the fact whether it even exists,” Rickert said. “And
even if people believe that it does or it doesn’t, the extent of what
we’re doing to ourselves and our climate and our planet, there’s great
controversy over that.”
After the defence was denied, Ward said he was shocked that Rickert questioned the existence of global warming.
“We
are in the late stages of global collapse,” he said, “and to have
someone who is presumably as knowledgeable and aware as a judge should
be blithely dismissing the biggest problem facing the world is
chilling.”
Ward said he would try to use the “necessity” defence from the witness stand.
Ward
was arrested in October when he and other activists in four states cut
padlocks and chains and entered remote flow stations to turn off valves
to try to stop crude from moving through lines that carry as much as 15
percent of daily U.S. oil consumption.
Supporters call Ward’s
trial an “all hands on deck moment” for the climate change movement,
which has also spawned protests of the Dakota Access and Keystone XL
pipeline.
Last week U.S. President Donald Trump signed orders
smoothing the path for those pipelines in an effort to expand energy
infrastructure.
Skagit County Prosecutor Rich Weyrich said he expected the trial to be completed this week.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
1 February, 2017
Have the Warmists already succeeded in their Quixotic quest? Has the rise in CO2 stopped already?The
rather startling paper from last December below does not seem to have
got much press. I wonder why? It implies that the job of
limiting CO2 in the atmosphere has already succeeded. CO2 levels have
already peaked. So can all the Warmists go into retirement now --
and congratulate themselves on a job well done?Reaching peak emissions
Robert B. Jackson et al.
Rapid
growth in global CO2 emissions from fossil fuels and industry ceased in
the past two years, despite continued economic growth. Decreased coal
use in China was largely responsible, coupled with slower global growth
in petroleum and faster growth in renewables.
SOURCE Role of terrestrial biosphere in counteracting climate change may have been underestimatedSomething else not in the models -- and its a big oneA new study analysed the extent to which changing land-use practices, such as deforestation, can affect carbon emissions.
Role of terrestrial biosphere in counteracting climate change may have been underestimated
New
research suggests the capacity of the terrestrial biosphere to absorb
carbon dioxide (CO2) may have been underestimated in past calculations
due to certain land-use changes not being fully taken into account.
It
is widely known that the terrestrial biosphere (the collective term for
all the world’s land vegetation, soil, etc) is an important factor in
mitigating climate change, as it absorbs about 20% of all fossil fuel
CO2 emissions.
But its role as a net carbon sink is affected by land-use changes such as deforestation and expanded agricultural practice.
A
new study, conducted by an international team including scientists from
the University of Exeter, has analysed the extent to which these
changing land-use practices affect carbon emissions – allowing the
levels of CO2 uptake by the terrestrial biosphere to be more accurately
predicted.
The results, published in the journal Nature
Geoscience, not only show that CO2 emissions from changing land-use
practices are likely to be significantly higher than previously thought,
but also imply that these emissions are compensated for by a higher
rate of carbon uptake among terrestrial ecosystems.
Co-author
Professor Stephen Sitch, from the University of Exeter, said: “The
results imply that reforestation projects and efforts to avoid further
deforestation are of the utmost importance in our pursuit to limit
global warming to below 2oC, as stated in the Paris climate agreement.”
Co-author
Professor Pierre Friedlingstein, from the University of Exeter said:
"The terrestrial biosphere is the least constrained component of the
global carbon cycle. It is often estimated as the residual from how much
of our fossil fuel CO2 emissions remain in the atmosphere or are
absorbed by the ocean. Also it's a source of carbon following
deforestation but it's also a carbon sink as a response to atmospheric
CO2 increase.
"This study is a bit of a good news/bad news story.
Bad news first: It shows that land-use changes emissions are larger
than previous estimates. God news is: this implies that the land carbon
sink is also larger than assumed before."
Co-author Dr Tom Pugh,
from the University of Birmingham, said: “Our work shows that the
terrestrial biosphere might have greater potential than previously
thought to mitigate climate change by sequestering carbon emissions from
fossil fuels. However, to fully realise this potential we will have to
ensure that the significant emissions resulting from land-use changes
are reduced as much as possible.”
SOURCE
NY Times makes out climate change believers are forced to speak in hidden codesMore Fake News from the NY TimesHere’s
a creative effort to sell the story that the people with billion dollar
industries, all the academic positions and a sympathetic media
entourage are going underground, forced to disguise their belief about
“climate change”.
This is a death-throes type article, clutching
for ways to pretend Global Worriers are still relevant, and to feed a
fantasy that they might be the underdog:
In America’s Heartland, Discussing Climate Change Without Saying ‘Climate Change’
So while climate change is part of daily conversation, it gets disguised as something else.
“People are all talking about it, without talking about it,” said Miriam
Horn, the author of a recent book on conservative Americans and the
environment, “Rancher, Farmer, Fisherman.” “It’s become such a charged
topic that there’s a navigation people do.”
What really happened is that climate change is overused agitprop
and people are tired of being beaten over the head with it. The first
most compelling example the NY Times can find is a farmer called Doug
Palen who talks about “carbon sequestration” in his soil (and what crop
farmer wouldn’t?) Palen is painted as a “believer”: In short, he is a
climate change realist. Just don’t expect him to utter the words
“climate change.”
But this is the strongest statement he makes:
“If politicians want to exhaust themselves debating the climate, that’s
their choice,” Mr. Palen said, walking through fields of freshly planted
winter wheat. “I have a farm to run.”
And he is so much of a believer “he didn’t vote for Hillary Clinton.” Need I say more?
Apparently
anyone who discusses weather problems or ecology could be painted, via
some kind of fantasy, as a believer in disguise who is hiding the topic
of climate change. This is the best they could do?
Palen
may be a believer (who knows), but there’s no evidence of it in his
quotes. The article goes to quite some length to tell us about him, but
it’s all just good farming science. Palen has “a conservationist streak”
and is a no-till farming advocate. He looks after his soil, and feels
alienated by environmentalists because he uses chemicals. Palen even
says he wants to “be left alone” by the EPA. He sounds like every
skeptical farmer I know yet this is the guy painted as the star example
of an underground believer?
Last week, Mr. Palen, the farmer, was
again talking weather — if not climate change — at a conference of
no-till farmers in Salina, Kan. Sessions included “Using Your Water
Efficiently,” “Making Weather Work for You in 2017” and “Building
Healthy Soil With Mob Grazing,” a practice that helps to fertilize the
land.
As evidence the topic is too hot to discuss, The NY Times
writer, Hiroko Tabuchi, tells us a science teacher has even suffered
“car keying” (like that never happens) and once got a letter from a
student saying: “Know that God’s love surpasses knowledge.” Scary stuff
indeed. Why even mention these?
To be fair though, the teacher
did get a book bag thrown at him, so now he asks students if they like
light bulbs as a soft way to lead into climate talk – as if
climate science was anything like the science of light bulbs. (Light
bulb models can predict things…)
Tabuchi manages to find some
real believers who have realized they have to change their boring
messaging. This also fits with my theory that ‘climate change’ is a dead
dog topic on its way out. The last die-hards are repackaging the
message, but few people care.
SOURCE Gas from grass?In
December 2016, Biofuelwatch published a background briefing about
Ecotricity’s “green gas from grass” (i.e. grass-based biomethane)
proposals: “How Green is Ecotricity’s Green Gas from Grass”
Ecotricity
has now sent us a response to this briefing. You can read
Ecotricity’s response and Biofuelwatch’s comments (in red) below or by
downloading a pdf here.
Ecotricity’s response (black font) with Biofuelwatch comments (red font):
Introduction:
The
launch of Ecotricity’s Green Gas campaign in November has
stimulated interest and discussion from many sources: farmers,
environmentalists, supporters of sustainable agriculture, pro-fracking
advocates and biofuel campaigners.
The purpose of the report is
to explore what may be possible … and the potential opportunity for
Britain. And to start a debate about how Britain gets its gas in
the coming decades. We welcome all feedback on our report, as part of
that debate.
Biofuelwatch have challenged some elements of our report, and we are happy to respond to those here.
1)
Biofuelwatch said: “According to Government figures total domestic
demand for natural gas across the UK amounted to 292.4TWh.”
Ecotricity
response: “That is the UK’s current annual domestic gas demand.
However, our projections for the potential of green gas are not based on
replacing current domestic gas demand – partly because growth in Green
Gas won’t happen overnight and partly because our current consumption of
gas has to change – we must be more efficient with it as with all forms
of energy. We stated clearly in the report that we have used a
level of domestic gas demand in 2035 – of 219TWh. National Grid go
even further in their Future Energy Scenarios report, forecasting under
their ‘Gone Green’ scenario that domestic gas demand could be reduced
to 189TWh by 2030.”
Biofuelwatch comments:
“Our
report highlights the fact that Ecotricity’s figures rely on the
assumption that future domestic gas use will significantly
decline. We had realised this after studying Ecotricity’s detailed
“green gas” report, but we are concerned that this has not been made
clear in much of the company’s publicity. Thus, their “Campaign
for Green Gas” webpage states: “We can generate enough gas to
power around 97% of Britain’s homes in our Green Gasmills, using a
resource that will never run out – grass”. It fails to say “…but
only in several decades’ time and only if future Government policies
drastically cut domestic gas use first”.
Ecotricity’s
petition claims: “We have a new option for making the gas we need, right
here in Britain.” – rather than “a small proportion of the gas burned
in the UK”, given that Ecotricity’s figure only relate to domestic gas
use, which accounts for less than 40% of all gas burned in the UK, and
then only to an optimistic forecast of greatly reduced future domestic
gas demand. Those claims appear misleading to us, and we hope that
Ecotricity will update all their publicity materials, as well as their
petition text. We would also point out that Ecotricity’s ‘optimistic’
figure still relies on more UK land being used to grow grass for
biomethane than is used to grow agricultural crops today.”Biofuelwatch
said: “Ecotricity’s forecast relies heavily on the assumption that
domestic gas use will significantly decline between now and 2035.”
Ecotricity
response: “Our report is clear on this; our calculations are based on
this projected figure. This forecast is based on a future scenario
whereby Britain embraces wide-ranging energy efficiency measures in
domestic homes. One of the main ‘aims and purposes’ of
Biofuelwatch is to “prioritise energy conservation and efficiency”. We
share that aim. And while we agree that current government
policies on energy efficiency are not good enough, we believe that
Britain can deliver the energy efficiency needed if the political will
(and economic reality) is there. We believe it to be a realistic
scenario.
Biofuelwatch comments:
“Yes,
we believe that UK energy use can and must be reduced significantly,
although the Government’s energy policies are sadly moving us in the
wrong direction. In the heating sector, Energy conservation and
efficiency are by far the most effective ways of cutting greenhouse gas
emissions – and they also address fuel poverty at the same time. Of
course, there will always be a residual demand for heating.
Biofuelwatch believes that there are far better ways for meeting this
than converting more than the UK’s total annual cropland area to
biomethane.”Biofuelwatch says: “Ecotricity’s planning
application refers to a single peer-reviewed study, one which focuses on
the potential for producing biomethane from grass in Ireland. According
to that study, it would be possible to produce biomethane with an
energy content of 103.7 Gigajoules (=28.81 MWh) from one hectare of
Irish grassland per year.”
Ecotricity response: “Actually our
calculations are not based on this Irish study from 2009 but are based
on the latest real-world experience of technology providers in 2016 with
whom we are in discussions, which show that a standard Green Gas Mill
will produce around 44MWh per hectare of grass. Even so, our
calculations do fall within the parameters of this Irish study.
In
paragraph 3.27 the study bases their dry solids yield from grassland on
a 22% dry matter basis (220g/kg) while acknowledging that a dry matter
content as high as 33% (330g/kg) would be feasible. Through much of our
calculations we have assumed a dry matter content of 32%, so out
findings operate within the studies range. For example, the report
assumed 12 tDS/ha based on 22% dry matter; we are however working on
17.5 tDS/ha based on 32% dry matter. Every other assumption is the same,
but the result is a much larger biomethane yield in MWh/ha.
Biofuelwatch comments:
“We
have now changed the briefing. It no longer says that Ecotricity
relies on any peer-reviewed science. Thank you for clarifying that
the company’s figures rely entirely on unpublished industry
statements.”Biofuelwatch says: “Based on the figure from
the Irish grass-to-biomethane study, 10.2 million hectares of land would
be needed to replace all of the natural gas used for domestic heating
and hot water with biomethane.”
Ecotricity response: “We have not
used the Irish study to calculate the amount of land it would take to
meet domestic gas demand but calculated it based on the real world
experience of the latest technology providers showing a Green Gas Mill
could produce around 44MWh per hectare and the projected 2035 demand
figure of 219TWh. This gives a figure of just over 6 million hectares of
land to produce the amount of green gas needed for domestic demand by
2035, (or less if we used National Grid’s 2030 figure of 189TWh).”
Biofuelwatch comments:
“By comparison, the UK currently grows agricultural crops on 4.78 million hectares of land.” Biofuelwatch
says: “Grassland accounts for 72% of agricultural land in the UK, and
the 10.2 million hectares needed to realise Ecotricity’s vision would
require 92% of it.”
“Growing enough grass to heat our homes would
therefore make the UK almost completely dependent either on meat and
dairy imports, or on factory farming inside the UK with virtually all of
the animal feed imported from abroad.”
More
HERE ‘Trump’s energy U-turn will benefit developing nations’President Trump’s fossil fuel policy U-turn will benefit developing nations and the fuel poor.
That’s
according to Myron Ebell, former Head of President Trump’s
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Transition Team, who told ELN he
expected the President to follow through on his promise to pull out of
the Paris Agreement.
Speaking at a press conference earlier
today, he said: “President Trump promised during the campaign that the
US would withdraw from the Paris Climate Treaty, so I assume he will do
that. He seems very intent on keeping his promises so I have no reason
to think that he won’t.
“I think that this is a very hopeful sign
for the world. Not only is the US changing direction but I think it
offers hope for a brighter future for people all around the world
particularly those in developing countries who do not have access to
modern energy or have very limited access to modern energy.”
Mr Ebell
felt that despite criticism from environmentalists and even other
governments, President Trump would not change his mind and was not
worried about any economic fallout from the decision as he believes the
markets will always drive investment.
“If any new energy
technology is better and cheaper than coal, oil and natural gas, the
market will take care of it. You don’t need government action, you don’t
need government policies – if wind and solar power or some other
renewable technology becomes a better buy than fossil fuels, then they
will come to dominate the market quite quickly. That’s the way free
markets work.”
Mr Ebell told ELN he expected huge staff cuts at the EPA, either voluntarily or via redundancy.
He
also suggested that Donald Trump could pull the US out of the Paris
Agreement signed by former-President Obama last year as soon as possible
and probably by using an executive order.
SOURCE ***************************************
For more postings from me, see DISSECTING LEFTISM, TONGUE-TIED, EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC and AUSTRALIAN POLITICS. Home Pages are here or here or here. Email me (John Ray) here.
Preserving
the graphics: Most graphics on this site are hotlinked from
elsewhere. But hotlinked graphics sometimes have only a short life
-- as little as a week in some cases. After that they no longer
come up. From January 2011 on, therefore, I have posted a monthly
copy of everything on this blog to a separate site where I can host text
and graphics together -- which should make the graphics available even
if they are no longer coming up on this site. See here or here*****************************************
IN BRIEF
Home (Index page)
Context for the minute average temperature change recorded: At any
given time surface air temperatures around the world range over about
100°C. Even in the same place they can vary by nearly that much
seasonally and as much as 30°C or more in a day. A minute rise in
average temperature in that context is trivial if it is not meaningless
altogether. Scientists are Warmists for the money it brings in, not
because of the facts
This site is in favour of things that ARE good for the environment. That
the usual Greenie causes are good for the environment is however
disputed. Greenie policies can in fact be actively bad for the
environment -- as with biofuels, for instance
This Blog by John Ray (M.A.; Ph.D.), writing from Brisbane, Australia.
I am the most complete atheist you can imagine. I don't believe in Karl
Marx, Jesus Christ or global warming. And I also don't believe in the
unhealthiness of salt, sugar and fat. How skeptical can you get? If
sugar is bad we are all dead
And when it comes to "climate change", I know where the skeletons are buried
Antarctica is GAINING mass
Warmists depend heavily on ice cores for their figures about the
atmosphere of the past. But measuring the deep past through ice cores
is a very shaky enterprise, which almost certainly takes insufficient
account of compression effects. The apparently stable CO2 level of
280ppm during the Holocene could in fact be entirely an artifact of
compression at the deeper levels of the ice cores. . Perhaps the gas
content of an ice layer approaches a low asymptote under pressure. Dr
Zbigniew Jaworowski's criticisms of the assumed reliability of ice core
measurements are of course well known. And he studied them for over 30
years.
The world's first "Green" party was the Nazi party -- and Greenies are
just as Fascist today in their endeavours to dictate to us all and in
their attempts to suppress dissent from their claims.
Was Pope Urban VIII the first Warmist? Below we see him refusing to
look through Galileo's telescope. People tend to refuse to consider
evidence— if what they might discover contradicts what they believe.
Warmism is a powerful religion that aims to control most of our lives. It is nearly as powerful as the Catholic Church once was
Believing in global warming has become a sign of virtue. Strange in a skeptical era. There is clearly a need for faith
Climate change is the religion of people who think they're too smart for religion
Some advice from the Buddha that the Green/Left would do well to think
about: "Three things cannot be long hidden: The Sun, The Moon and The
Truth"
Leftists have faith that warming will come back some day. And they mock
Christians for believing in the second coming of Christ! They
obviously need religion
Global warming has in fact been a religious doctrine for over a century.
Even Charles Taze Russell, the founder of Jehovah's Witnesses,
believed in it
A rosary for the church of global warming (Formerly the Catholic
church): "Hail warming, full of grace, blessed art thou among climates
and blessed is the fruit of thy womb panic"
Pope Francis is to the Catholic church what Obama is to America -- a mistake, a fool and a wrecker
Global warming is the predominant Leftist lie of the 21st century. No
other lie is so influential. The runner up lie is: "Islam is a
religion of peace". Both are rankly absurd.
"When it comes to alarmism, we’re all deniers; when it comes to climate change, none of us are" -- Dick Lindzen
The EPA does everything it can get away with to shaft America and Americans
Cromwell's famous plea: "I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think
it possible you may be mistaken" was ignored by those to whom it was
addressed -- to their great woe. Warmists too will not consider that
they may be wrong ..... "Bowels" was a metaphor for compassion in those
days
The plight of the bumblebee -- an egregious example of crooked "science"
Inorganic Origin of Petroleum: "The theory of Inorganic Origin of
Petroleum (synonyms: abiogenic, abiotic, abyssal, endogenous, juvenile,
mineral, primordial) states that petroleum and natural gas was formed by
non-biological processes deep in the Earth, crust and mantle. This
contradicts the traditional view that the oil would be a "fossil fuel"
produced by remnants of ancient organisms. Oil is a hydrocarbon mixture
in which a major constituent is methane CH4 (a molecule composed of one
carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms). Occurrence of methane is
common in Earth's interior and in space. The inorganic
theory contrasts with the ideas that posit exhaustion of oil (Peak Oil),
which assumes that the oil would be formed from biological processes
and thus would occur only in small quantities and sets, tending to
exhaust. Some oil drilling now goes 7 miles down, miles below any fossil
layers
As the Italian chemist Primo Levi reflected in Auschwitz, carbon is ‘the
only element that can bind itself in long stable chains without a great
expense of energy, and for life on Earth (the only one we know so far)
precisely long chains are required. Therefore carbon is the key element
of living substance.’ The chemistry of carbon (2) gives it a unique
versatility, not just in the artificial world, but also, and above all,
in the animal, vegetable and – speak it loud! – human kingdoms.
David Archibald: "The more carbon dioxide we can put into the
atmosphere, the better life on Earth will be for human beings and all
other living things."
WISDOM:
"It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn't matter how
smart you are. If it doesn't agree with experiment, it's wrong." --- Richard P. Feynman.
Consensus is invoked only in situations where the science is not solid enough - Michael Crichton
"The growth of knowledge depends entirely on disagreement" -- Karl Popper
"Science is the belief in the ignorance of the experts" – Richard Feynman
"The desire to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it" -- H L Mencken
'Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action' -- Goethe
“Doubt is not a pleasant condition, but certainty is absurd.” -- Voltaire
Lord Salisbury: "No lesson seems to be so deeply inculcated by
experience of life as that you should never trust experts. If you
believe doctors, nothing is wholesome; if you believe theologians,
nothing is innocent; if you believe soldiers, nothing is safe."
Calvin Coolidge said, "If you see 10 troubles coming down the road, you can be sure that nine will run into the ditch before they reach you." He could have been talking about Warmists.
Some advice from long ago for Warmists: "If ifs and ans were pots and pans,there'd be no room for tinkers".
It's a nursery rhyme harking back to Middle English times when "an"
could mean "if". Tinkers were semi-skilled itinerant workers who fixed
holes and handles in pots and pans -- which were valuable household
items for most of our history. Warmists are very big on "ifs", mays",
"might" etc. But all sorts of things "may" happen, including global
cooling
Bertrand Russell knew about consensus: "The fact that an opinion has
been widely held is no evidence whatever that it is not utterly absurd;
indeed in view of the silliness of the majority of mankind, a
widespread belief is more likely to be foolish than sensible.”
There goes another beautiful theory about to be murdered by a brutal gang of facts. - Duc de La Rochefoucauld, French writer and moralist (1613-1680)
"Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate" -- William of Occam
Was Paracelsus a 16th century libertarian? His motto was: "Alterius non sit qui suus esse potest"
which means "Let no man belong to another who can belong to himself."
He was certainly a rebel in his rejection of authority and his reliance
on observable facts and is as such one of the founders of modern
medicine
"In science, refuting an accepted belief is celebrated as an advance in knowledge; in religion it is condemned as heresy". (Bob Parks, Physics, U of Maryland). No prizes for guessing how global warming skepticism is normally responded to.
"Almost all professors of the arts and sciences are egregiously conceited, and derive their happiness from their conceit" -- Erasmus
"The improver of natural knowledge absolutely refuses to
acknowledge authority, as such. For him, scepticism is the highest of
duties; blind faith the one unpardonable sin." -- Thomas H. Huxley
Time was, people warning the world "Repent - the end is
nigh!" were snickered at as fruitcakes. Now they own the media and run
the schools.
"One of the sources of the Fascist movement is the desire to avoid a too-rational and too-comfortable world" -- George Orwell, 1943 in Can Socialists Be Happy?
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics
are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts -- Bertrand Russell
“Affordable energy in ample quantities is the lifeblood of
the industrial societies and a prerequisite for the economic development
of the others.” -- John P. Holdren, Science Adviser to President Obama. Published in Science 9 February 2001
The closer science looks at the real world processes involved in
climate regulation the more absurd the IPCC's computer driven fairy tale
appears. Instead of blithely modeling climate based on hunches and
suppositions, climate scientists would be better off abandoning their
ivory towers and actually measuring what happens in the real world.' -- Doug L Hoffman
Something no Warmist could take on board: "Knuth once warned a correspondent, "Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it." -- Prof. Donald Knuth, whom some regard as the world's smartest man
"To be green is to be irrational, misanthropic and morally defective.
They are the barbarians at the gate we have to stand against" -- Rich Kozlovich
“We’ve got to ride this global warming issue. Even if the theory of
global warming is wrong, we will be doing the right thing in terms of
economic and environmental policy.“ – Timothy Wirth,
President of the UN Foundation
“Isn’t the only hope for the planet that the industrialized
civilizations collapse? Isn’t it our responsibility to bring that
about?” – Maurice Strong, founder of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP)
Leftists generally and Warmists in particular very commonly ascribe
disagreement with their ideas to their opponent being "in the pay" of
someone else, usually "Big Oil", without troubling themselves to provide
any proof of that assertion. They are so certain that they are right
that that seems to be the only reasonable explanation for opposition to
them. They thus reveal themselves as the ultimate bigots -- people with
fixed and rigid ideas.
ABOUT:
This is one of TWO skeptical blogs that I update daily. During my
research career as a social scientist, I was appalled at how much
writing in my field was scientifically lacking -- and I often said so in
detail in the many academic journal articles I had published in that
field. I eventually gave up social science research, however, because
no data ever seemed to change the views of its practitioners. I hoped
that such obtuseness was confined to the social scientists but now that I
have shifted my attention to health related science and climate
related science, I find the same impermeability to facts and logic.
Hence this blog and my FOOD & HEALTH SKEPTIC
blog. I may add that I did not come to either health or environmental
research entirely without credentials. I had several academic papers
published in both fields during my social science research career
Update: After 8 years of confronting the frankly childish standard of
reasoning that pervades the medical journals, I have given up. I have
put the blog into hibernation. In extreme cases I may put up here some
of the more egregious examples of medical "wisdom" that I encounter.
Greenies and food freaks seem to be largely coterminous. My regular
bacon & egg breakfasts would certainly offend both -- if only
because of the resultant methane output
Since my academic background is in the social sciences, it is
reasonable to ask what a social scientist is doing talking about global
warming. My view is that my expertise is the most relevant of all. It
seems clear to me from what you will see on this blog that belief in
global warming is very poorly explained by history, chemistry, physics
or statistics.
Warmism is prophecy, not science. Science cannot foretell the future.
Science can make very accurate predictions based on known regularities
in nature (e.g. predicting the orbits of the inner planets) but Warmism
is the exact opposite of that. It predicts a DEPARTURE from the known
regularities of nature. If we go by the regularities of nature, we are
on the brink of an ice age.
And from a philosophy of science viewpoint, far from being "the
science", Warmism is not even an attempt at a factual statement, let
alone being science. It is not a meaningful statement about the world.
Why? Because it is unfalsifiable -- making it a religious, not a
scientific statement. To be a scientific statement, there would have to
be some conceivable event that disproved it -- but there appears to be
none. ANY event is hailed by Warmists as proving their contentions.
Only if Warmists were able to specify some fact or event that would
disprove their theory would it have any claim to being a scientific
statement. So the explanation for Warmist beliefs has to be primarily a
psychological and political one -- which makes it my field
And, after all, Al Gore's academic qualifications are in social science also -- albeit very pissant qualifications.
A "geriatric" revolt: The scientists who reject Warmism tend to
be OLD! Your present blogger is one of those. There are tremendous
pressures to conformity in academe and the generally Leftist orientation
of academe tends to pressure everyone within it to agree to ideas that
suit the Left. And Warmism is certainly one of those ideas. So old
guys are the only ones who can AFFORD to declare the Warmists to be
unclothed. They either have their careers well-established (with
tenure) or have reached financial independence (retirement) and so can
afford to call it like they see it. In general, seniors in society
today are not remotely as helpful to younger people as they once were.
But their opposition to the Warmist hysteria will one day show that
seniors are not completely irrelevant after all. Experience does count
(we have seen many such hysterias in the past and we have a broader
base of knowledge to call on) and our independence is certainly an
enormous strength. Some of us are already dead. (Reid Bryson and John Daly are particularly mourned) and some of us are very senior indeed (e.g. Bill Gray and Vince Gray) but the revolt we have fostered is ever growing so we have not labored in vain.
A Warmist backs down: "No one knows exactly how far rising carbon concentrations affect temperatures" -- Stefan Rahmstorf, a scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
Jimmy Carter Classic Quote from 1977: "Because we are now running out
of gas and oil, we must prepare quickly for a third change, to strict
conservation and to the use of coal and permanent renewable energy
sources, like solar power.
SOME POINTS TO PONDER:
Today’s environmental movement is the current manifestation of the
totalitarian impulse. It is ironic that the same people who condemn the
black or brown shirts of the pre WW2 period are blind to the current
manifestation simply because the shirts are green.
Climate is just the sum of weather. So if you cannot forecast the
weather a month in advance, you will not be able to forecast the climate
50 years in advance. And official meteorologists such as Britain's Met
Office and Australia's BOM, are very poor forecasters of weather. The
Met office has in fact given up on making seasonal forecasts because
they have so often got such forecasts embarrassingly wrong. Their
global-warming-powered "models" just did not deliver
Here's how that "97% consensus" figure was arrived at
97% of scientists want to get another research grant
Hearing a Government Funded Scientist say let me tell you the truth, is
like hearing a Used Car Salesman saying let me tell you the truth.
A strange Green/Left conceit: They seem to think (e.g. here)
that no-one should spend money opposing them and that conservative
donors must not support the election campaigns of Congressmen they
agree with
David Brower, founder Sierra Club: “Childbearing should be a punishable
crime against society, unless the parents hold a government license"
To Greenies, Genghis Khan was a good guy, believe it or not. They love that he killed so many people.
Greenie antisemitism
After three exceptionally cold winters in the Northern hemisphere, the
Warmists are chanting: "Warming causes cold". Even if we give that a
pass for logic, it still inspires the question: "Well, what are we
worried about"? Cold is not going to melt the icecaps is it?"
It's a central (but unproven) assumption of the Warmist "models" that
clouds cause warming. Odd that it seems to cool the temperature down
when clouds appear overhead!
To make out that the essentially trivial warming of the last 150 years
poses some sort of threat, Warmists postulate positive feedbacks that
might cut in to make the warming accelerate in the near future. Amid
their theories about feedbacks, however, they ignore the one feedback
that is no theory: The reaction of plants to CO2. Plants gobble up CO2
and the more CO2 there is the more plants will flourish and hence
gobble up yet more CO2. And the increasing crop yields of recent years
show that plantlife is already flourishing more. The recent rise in CO2
will therefore soon be gobbled up and will no longer be around to
bother anyone. Plants provide a huge NEGATIVE feedback in response to
increases in atmospheric CO2
Every green plant around us is made out of carbon dioxide that the
plant has grabbed out of the atmosphere. That the plant can get its
carbon from such a trace gas is one of the miracles of life. It
admittedly uses the huge power of the sun to accomplish such a vast
filtrative task but the fact that a dumb plant can harness the power of
the sun so effectively is also a wonder. We live on a rather
improbable planet. If a science fiction writer elsewhere in the
universe described a world like ours he might well be ridiculed for
making up such an implausible tale.
Greenies are the sand in the gears of modern civilization -- and they intend to be.
The Greenie message is entirely emotional and devoid of all
logic. They say that polar ice will melt and cause a big sea-level
rise. Yet 91% of the world's glacial ice is in Antarctica, where the
average temperature is around minus 40 degrees Celsius. The melting
point of ice is zero degrees. So for the ice to melt on any scale the
Antarctic temperature would need to rise by around 40 degrees, which
NOBODY is predicting. The median Greenie prediction is about 4 degrees.
So where is the huge sea level rise going to come from? Mars? And
the North polar area is mostly sea ice and melting sea ice does not
raise the sea level at all. Yet Warmists constantly hail any sign of
Arctic melting. That the melting of floating ice does not raise the
water level is known as Archimedes' principle. Archimedes demonstrated
it around 2,500 years ago. That Warmists have not yet caught up with
that must be just about the most inspissated ignorance imaginable. The
whole Warmist scare defies the most basic physics. Yet at the opening
of 2011 we find the following unashamed lying by James Hansen:
"We will lose all the ice in the polar ice cap in a couple of
decades". Sadly, what the Vulgate says in John 1:5 is still only very
partially true: "Lux in tenebris lucet". There is still much darkness in the minds of men.
The repeated refusal of Warmist "scientists" to make their raw
data available to critics is such a breach of scientific protocol that
it amounts to a confession in itself. Note, for instance Phil Jones'
Feb 21, 2005 response to Warwick Hughes' request for his raw climate
data: "We have 25 years or so invested in the work. Why should I make
the data available to you, when your aim is to try and find something
wrong with it?" Looking for things that might be wrong with a given
conclusion is of course central to science. But Warmism cannot survive
such scrutiny. So even after "Climategate", the secrecy goes on.
Most Greenie causes are at best distractions from real
environmental concerns (such as land degradation) and are more
motivated by a hatred of people than by any care for the environment
Global warming has taken the place of Communism as an absurdity
that "liberals" will defend to the death regardless of the evidence
showing its folly. Evidence never has mattered to real Leftists
‘Global warming’ has become the grand political narrative of
the age, replacing Marxism as a dominant force for controlling liberty
and human choices. -- Prof. P. Stott
Comparing climate alarmist Hansen to Cassandra is WRONG.
Cassandra's (Greek mythology) dire prophecies were never believed but
were always right. Hansen's dire prophecies are usually believed but are
always wrong (Prof. Laurence Gould, U of Hartford, CT)
The modern environmental movement arose out of the wreckage of
the New Left. They call themselves Green because they're too yellow to
admit they're really Reds. So Lenin's birthday was chosen to be the
date of Earth Day. Even a moderate politician like Al Gore has been
clear as to what is needed. In "Earth in the Balance", he wrote that
saving the planet would require a "wrenching transformation of
society".
For centuries there was a scientific consensus which said that
fire was explained by the release of an invisible element called
phlogiston. That theory is universally ridiculed today. Global warming
is the new phlogiston. Though, now that we know how deliberate the
hoax has been, it might be more accurate to call global warming the New Piltdown Man. The Piltdown hoax took 40 years to unwind. I wonder....
Motives: Many people would like to be kind to others so
Leftists exploit that with their nonsense about equality. Most people
want a clean, green environment so Greenies exploit that by inventing
all sorts of far-fetched threats to the environment. But for both, the
real motive is generally to promote themselves as wiser and better
than everyone else, truth regardless.
Policies: The only underlying theme that makes sense of all
Greenie policies is hatred of people. Hatred of other people has been a
Greenie theme from way back. In a report titled "The First Global
Revolution" (1991, p. 104) published by the "Club of Rome", a Greenie
panic outfit, we find the following statement: "In searching for a
new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the
threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit
the bill.... All these dangers are caused by human intervention... The
real enemy, then, is humanity itself." See here for many more examples of prominent Greenies saying how much and how furiously they hate you.
After fighting a 70 year war to destroy red communism we face another
life-or-death struggle in the 21st century against green communism.
The conventional wisdom of the day is often spectacularly wrong. The
most popular and successful opera of all time is undoubtedly "Carmen" by
Georges Bizet. Yet it was much criticized when first performed and the
unfortunate Bizet died believing that it was a flop. Similarly, when
the most iconic piece of 20th century music was first performed in
1913-- Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring" -- half the audience walked out.
Those of us who defy the conventional wisdom about climate are actually
better off than that. Unlike Bizet and Stravinsky in 1913, we KNOW that
we will eventually be vindicated -- because all that supports Warmism
is a crumbling edifice of guesswork ("models").
Al Gore won a political prize for an alleged work of science. That rather speaks for itself, doesn't it?
Jim Hansen and his twin
Getting rich and famous through alarmism: Al Gore is well-known but note
also James Hansen. He has for decades been a senior, presumably
well-paid, employee at NASA. In 2001 he was the recipient of a $250,000 Heinz Award. In 2007 Time magazine designated him a Hero of the Environment. That same year he pocketed one-third of a $1 million Dan David Prize. In 2008, the American Association for the Advancement of Science presented him with its Scientific Freedom and Responsibility Award. In 2010 he landed a $100,000 Sophie Prize. He pulled in a total of $1.2 million in 2010. Not bad for a government bureaucrat.
See the original global Warmist in action here: "The icecaps are melting and all world is drowning to wash away the sin"
I am not a global warming skeptic nor am I a global warming
denier. I am a global warming atheist. I don't believe one bit of it.
That the earth's climate changes is undeniable. Only ignoramuses
believe that climate stability is normal. But I see NO evidence to say
that mankind has had anything to do with any of the changes observed --
and much evidence against that claim.
Seeing that we are all made of carbon, the time will come when
people will look back on the carbon phobia of the early 21st century as
too incredible to be believed
Meanwhile, however, let me venture a tentative prophecy.
Prophecies are almost always wrong but here goes: Given the common
hatred of carbon (Warmists) and salt (Food freaks) and given the fact
that we are all made of carbon, salt, water and calcium (with a few
additives), I am going to prophecy that at some time in the future a
hatred of nitrogen will emerge. Why? Because most of the air that we
breathe is nitrogen. We live at the bottom of a nitrogen sea. Logical
to hate nitrogen? NO. But probable: Maybe. The Green/Left is mad
enough. After all, nitrogen is a CHEMICAL -- and we can't have that!
UPDATE to the above: It seems that I am a true prophet
The intellectual Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius (AD 121-180)
must have foreseen Global Warmism. He said: "The object in life is not
to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the
ranks of the insane."
The Holy Grail for most scientists is not truth but research
grants. And the global warming scare has produced a huge downpour of
money for research. Any mystery why so many scientists claim some
belief in global warming?
For many people, global warming seems to have taken the place of
"The Jews" -- a convenient but false explanation for any disliked
event. Prof. Brignell has some examples.
Global warming skeptics are real party-poopers. It's so wonderful to believe that you have a mission to save the world.
There is an "ascetic instinct" (or perhaps a "survivalist
instinct") in many people that causes them to delight in going without
material comforts. Monasteries and nunneries were once full of such
people -- with the Byzantine stylites perhaps the most striking example.
Many Greenies (other than Al Gore and his Hollywood pals) have that
instinct too but in the absence of strong orthodox religious
committments they have to convince themselves that the world NEEDS them
to live in an ascetic way. So their personal emotional needs lead them
to press on us all a delusional belief that the planet needs "saving".
The claim that oil is a fossil fuel is another great myth and
folly of the age. They are now finding oil at around seven MILES
beneath the sea bed -- which is incomparably further down than any
known fossil. The abiotic oil theory is not as yet well enough
developed to generate useful predictions but that is also true of fossil
fuel theory
Help keep the planet Green! Maximize your CO2 and CH4 output!
Global Warming=More Life; Global Cooling=More Death.
The inconvenient truth about biological effects of "Ocean Acidification"
Medieval Warm Period: Recent climatological data assembled from around
the world using different proxies attest to the presence of both the MWP
and the LIA in the following locations: the Sargasso Sea, West Africa,
Kenya, Peru, Japan, Tasmania, South Africa, Idaho, Argentina, and
California. These events were clearly world-wide and in most locations
the peak temperatures during the MWP were higher than current
temperatures.
Both radioactive and stable carbon isotopes show that the real
atmospheric CO2 residence time (lifetime) is only about 5 years, and
that the amount of fossil-fuel CO2 in the atmosphere is
maximum 4%.
Cook the crook who cooks the books
The great and fraudulent scare about lead
Green/Left denial of the facts explained: "Rejection lies in this,
that when the light came into the world men preferred darkness to light;
preferred it, because their doings were evil. Anyone who acts
shamefully hates the light, will not come into the light, for fear that
his doings will be found out. Whereas the man whose life is true comes
to the light" John 3:19-21 (Knox)
Against the long history of huge temperature variation in the
earth's climate (ice ages etc.), the .6 of one degree average rise
reported by the U.N. "experts" for the entire 20th century (a rise so
small that you would not be able to detect such a difference personally
without instruments) shows, if anything, that the 20th century was a
time of exceptional temperature stability.
Recent NASA figures
tell us that there was NO warming trend in the USA during the 20th
century. If global warming is occurring, how come it forgot the USA?
Warmists say that the revised NASA figures do not matter because
they cover only the USA -- and the rest of the world is warming nicely.
But it is not. There has NEVER been any evidence that the Southern
hemisphere is warming. See here. So the warming pattern sure is looking moth-eaten.
The latest scare is the possible effect of extra CO2 on the
world’s oceans, because more CO2 lowers the pH of seawater. While it is
claimed that this makes the water more acidic, this is misleading. Since
seawater has a pH around 8.1, it will take an awful lot of CO2 it to
even make the water neutral (pH=7), let alone acidic (pH less than 7).
In fact, ocean acidification is a scientific impossibility.
Henry's Law mandates that warming oceans will outgas CO2 to the
atmosphere (as the UN's own documents predict it will), making the
oceans less acid. Also, more CO2 would increase calcification rates. No
comprehensive, reliable measurement of worldwide oceanic acid/base
balance has ever been carried out: therefore, there is no observational
basis for the computer models' guess that acidification of 0.1 pH units
has occurred in recent decades.
The chaos theory people have told us for years that the air
movement from a single butterfly's wing in Brazil can cause an
unforeseen change in our weather here. Now we are told that climate
experts can "model" the input of zillions of such incalculable variables
over periods of decades to accurately forecast global warming 50 years
hence. Give us all a break!
If
you doubt the arrogance [of the global warming crowd, you haven't seen
that Newsweek cover story that declared the global warming debate over.
Consider: If Newton's laws of motion could, after 200 years of unfailing
experimental and experiential confirmation, be overthrown, it requires
religious fervor to believe that global warming -- infinitely more
untested, complex and speculative -- is a closed issue
Scientists have politics too -- sometimes extreme politics. Read this: "This
crippling of individuals I consider the worst evil of capitalism... I
am convinced there is only one way to eliminate these grave evils,
namely through the establishment of a socialist economy, accompanied by
an educational system which would be oriented toward social goals. In
such an economy, the means of production are owned by society itself and
are utilized in a planned fashion. A planned economy, which adjusts
production to the needs of the community, would distribute the work to
be done among all those able to work and would guarantee a livelihood to
every man, woman, and child." -- Albert Einstein
The "precautionary principle" is a favourite Greenie idea -- but
isn't that what George Bush was doing when he invaded Iraq? Wasn't
that a precaution against Saddam getting or having any WMDs? So Greenies all agree with the Iraq intervention? If not, why not?
A classic example of how the sensationalist media distort science to create climate panic is here.
There is a very readable summary of the "Hockey Stick" fraud here
The Lockwood & Froehlich paper
was designed to rebut Durkin's "Great Global Warming Swindle" film.
It is a rather confused paper -- acknowledging yet failing to account
fully for the damping effect of the oceans, for instance -- but it is
nonetheless valuable to climate atheists. The concession from a
Greenie source that fluctuations in the output of the sun have driven
climate change for all but the last 20 years (See the first sentence of
the paper) really is invaluable. And the basic fact presented in the
paper -- that solar output has in general been on the downturn in
recent years -- is also amusing to see. Surely even a crazed Greenie
mind must see that the sun's influence has not stopped and that
reduced solar output will soon start COOLING the earth! Unprecedented
July 2007 cold weather throughout the Southern hemisphere might even
have been the first sign that the cooling is happening. And the fact
that warming plateaued in 1998 is also a good sign that we are moving
into a cooling phase. As is so often the case, the Greenies have got
the danger exactly backwards. See my post of 7.14.07 and very detailed critiques here and here and here for more on the Lockwood paper and its weaknesses.
As the Greenies are now learning, even strong statistical correlations may disappear if a longer time series is used. A remarkable example from Sociology: "The
modern literature on hate crimes began with a remarkable 1933 book by
Arthur Raper titled The Tragedy of Lynching. Raper assembled data on the
number of lynchings each year in the South and on the price of an
acre’s yield of cotton. He calculated the correlation coefficient
between the two series at –0.532. In other words, when the economy was
doing well, the number of lynchings was lower.... In 2001, Donald Green,
Laurence McFalls, and Jennifer Smith published a paper that demolished
the alleged connection between economic conditions and lynchings in
Raper’s data. Raper had the misfortune of stopping his analysis in
1929. After the Great Depression hit, the price of cotton plummeted and
economic conditions deteriorated, yet lynchings continued to fall. The
correlation disappeared altogether when more years of data were added."
So we must be sure to base our conclusions on ALL the data. In the
Greenie case, the correlation between CO2 rise and global temperature
rise stopped in 1998 -- but that could have been foreseen if
measurements taken in the first half of the 20th century had been
considered.
Relying on the popular wisdom can even hurt you personally: "The scientific consensus of a quarter-century ago turned into the arthritic nightmare of today."
Greenie-approved sources of electricity (windmills and solar
cells) require heavy government subsidies to be competitive with normal
electricity generators so a Dutch word for Greenie power seems graphic
to me: "subsidieslurpers" (subsidy gobblers)
Many newspaper articles are reproduced in full on this blog despite
copyright claims attached to them. I believe that such reproductions
here are protected by the "fair use" provisions of copyright law. Fair
use is a legal doctrine that recognises that the monopoly rights
protected by copyright laws are not absolute. The doctrine holds that,
when someone uses a creative work in way that does not hurt the market
for the original work and advances a public purpose - such as education
or scholarship - it might be considered "fair" and not infringing.
DETAILS OF REGULARLY UPDATED BLOGS BY JOHN RAY:
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To be continued ....
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