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Dr.
Bob Carter
Research Professor at James Cook University,
Queensland, Australia.
About Bob
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Guest Forum
Professor Dr Bob Carter
5 April 08
The
IPCC – On the Run at Last
A
soprano thrillingly hits her top-A, sighs with relief at
achieving the desired effect, and moves on. But not the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) whose climate
alarmism started to crescendo in 2001 in the Third Assessment
Report (3AR) with the statement that “most of the observed
warming over the last 50 years is likely (>66% probable) to
have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas
concentrations”.
Recently, in their Fourth Assessment Report (4AR), and faced
with their failure to convince the public that the sky is
falling, the IPCC delivers even more preposterous advice in
ever shriller tones, saying that “Most of the observed
increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th
century is very likely (>90% probable) due to the observed
increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations”.
The wobble around top-A is clearly discernible.
The press, most of whom have firmly identified with the
alarmist cause, continues to appease the Green gods by
faithfully running IPCC’s now unrealistic scientific
propaganda, thereby stoking public alarm; the science is a
done deal, they say, and the time has come to stop talking.
According to
UK
journalist, Geoffrey Lean, all that is lacking to solve the
global warming “crisis” is political will from
governments.
Well, thank the Lord for that lack. For the IPCC’s 2007
final Summary for Policymakers shows that the climate
alarmists are at last on the run. Their evidence for
dangerous, human-caused global warming, always slim, now lies
exposed in tatters for all to see.
In
contrast, the alternative, persuasive and non-alarmist view of
climate change is well summarized in two recently issued and
readily available documents. The first is a letter to the
Secretary General of the United Nations, which was released at
the UN’s
Bali
conference last December, supported by the signatures of 103
eminent professional persons. The second is the Manhatten
Declaration on Climate Change, the release of which coincided
with the launch of the International Climate Science Coalition
at a major climate rationalist conference in
New York
in early March.
The evidence for dangerous global warming adduced by the IPCC
has never been strong on empirical science. Endless
circumstantial scare campaigns have been run about melting
glaciers, more droughts and storms and floods, sea-level rise
and polar bears, but all founder on one inescapable problem
– as does Mr. Al Gore’s over-hyped science fiction film.
And that is that we live on a naturally variable planet.
Change is what planet Earth does on all scales, and so far not
one of the alleged effects of human-caused global warming has
been shown to lie outside normal planetary variation.
Sea-level rising? Sure, it happens. And the appropriate
response is adaptation, as the Dutch have known for centuries.
Stuck with the absence of empirical evidence for dangerous
warming or abnormal change, in 2001 the IPCC turned to
graphmanship, giving prominence in its 3AR to the so-called
“hockey-stick” record of temperature over the last 1000
years. The hockey-stick graphic, which appeared to show
dramatic increases of temperature during the 20th century
compared with earlier times, has now been exposed as
statistical chicanery and, thankfully, is nowhere to be seen
in the 4AR.
No hockey-stick and no empirical evidence, what is a man to
do? Well, obviously, turn to virtual reality rather than real
reality: PlayStation 4 here we come.
The IPCC’s expensive and complex computer models can be
programmed to produce any desired result, and it is therefore
not surprising that they uniformly predict warming since 1990.
Meanwhile, the real-world global average temperature has
stubbornly refused to obey this stricture. It exhibits no
significant increase since 1998, and the preliminary 2007
year-end temperature confirms the continuation of a
temperature plateau since 1998 to which is now appended a
cooling trend over the last 3 years.
Is
global cooling next?
Lower atmosphere global temperature differences (0C)
from 1979 – 1998 average

Global
warming theory indicates that temperature rise due to
increasing carbon dioxide emissions should be most prominent
at heights of 5-10 km in the lower atmosphere; instead, more
warming is occurring at the surface. For the lower atmosphere,
the satellite data indicate that, since the 1998 El Nino when
temperatures spiked 10C due to a rise in water
vapour emissions (the principal “greenhouse gas”), global
temperatures dropped sharply, then stabilized and now show
signs of continuing down - is global cooling next? (data
courtesy of Professors John Christy and Roy Spencer,
University
of
Alabama
,
Huntsville
; a best-fitted spline curve represents longer term
temperature trends).
That there is a mismatch between model prediction and 2007
climate reality is again unsurprising. For as IPCC senior
scientist Kevin Trenberth noted recently: ". . . there
are no (climate) predictions by IPCC at all. And there never
have been"; instead there are only "what if"
projections of future climate that correspond to certain
emissions scenarios. Trenberth continues, "None of the
models used by IPCC is initialized to the observed state and
none of the climate states in the models corresponds even
remotely to the current observed climate”.
Knowing that their models are non-predictive and that despite
their exhortations world temperature isn’t currently
increasing, the IPCC has the effrontery to argue in 4AR that a
decline in the sun’s activity and increased eruptions from
volcanoes would “likely have produced cooling” of the
planet were it not for offsetting human-caused warming. And
this when there have been no recent volcanic eruptions of
global import, and after 15 years during which the warming
alarmists have consistently denied that solar activity is a
significant cause of recent climate change. The self-serving
nature of these arguments is breathtaking, and transparently
the alarmists are now positioning themselves to explain away
any continuation of the downturn in temperature that is now
underway short-term.
Such stunts deny scientific method, because they fly in the
face of Occam’s Razor, or the principle of parsimony. Of
course volcanic dust or other aerosols might have affected the
global temperature over the last few years. But only persons
who are searching desperately to save a favourite hypothesis
make such assertions in the absence of reliable evidence.
To avoid acknowledging the recent flat-lining of global
temperature, IPCC alarmists have another favourite pea and
thimble - or is it elephant and circus tent – trick, which
is to assert some variation on the statement that “eleven of
the last twelve years (1995-2006) rank among the twelve
warmest years in the instrumental record”. Given the
cyclicity of the climate record, and that the planet is
probably now poised near the peak of an ascending temperature
cycle, this statement is no more useful than observing that
over an annual cycle the hottest days each year cluster around
midsummer’s day.
Having failed to convince the world that human-caused warming
of the atmosphere is dangerous, IPCC has been casting around
for new causes to espouse. A Royal Society of London report in
2005 on “Ocean acidification due to increasing atmospheric
carbon dioxide” has proved to be good feedstock, because of
its claim that the average pH of the oceans will fall by 0.5
units by 2100 if global emissions keep rising at their current
rate. That this estimate is known to be exaggerated by a
factor of about 3 has not prevented the IPCC and others from
recently publicizing the ocean acidification legend. Clearly,
they now seek to move the epicentre of the climate scare from
the atmosphere, which stubbornly refuses to warm, to the
ocean, whose depths doubtless still contain many scientific
surprises.
The roughly 50 computer experts and scientists who form the
core advisory group for the IPCC’s stance must have realized
for several years now that the game was up. There is indeed
copious evidence that climate is changing, as it always has;
and that natural biological and physico-chemical systems -
again as always - are changing in response. But as to human
causation – the evidential cupboard is bare.
For
the last three years, satellite-measured average global
temperature has been declining. Given the occurrence also of
record low winter temperatures and massive snowfalls across
both hemispheres this
year, IPCC members have now entered panic mode, the whites of
their eyes being clearly visible as they seek to defend their
now unsustainable hypothesis of dangerous, human-caused global
warming.
To try to top “The Ring of the Niebelung”, composers after
Wagner abandoned classical key structures and turned to the
apparent aural chaos of atonalism. Similarly, to pursue the
higher cause of saving the planet, the IPCC has now largely
abandoned classical (empirical) science and adopted the
sophistry of deterministic computer modelling. The result is
neither melodious nor meaningful, let alone useful for
sensible environmental planning. The time has surely arrived
for the
New Zealand
government to commission an independent reassessment of the
UN’s hysterical global warming scare.
Prof Carter is currently
on a lecture tour of New Zealand - for details of the meetings
click here>>>
Professor
Robert (Bob) M. Carter
Bob
Carter is a marine geologist and environmental scientist with
forty years professional experience, with degrees from the
University of Otago (New Zealand) and Cambridge University
(England). He has held academic positions at Otago University
and the University of Adelaide, and is currently a Research
Professor at James Cook University (Queensland), where he was
Head of School of Earth Sciences between 1981 and 1999. He is
a former Director of the Australian Office for the Ocean
Drilling Program (ODP), the premier, world-best-practice
research program for environmental and earth sciences.
Bob
has served on many national and international research
committees, including the Australian Research Council. He is a
former Chairman of the Marine Science and Technologies Award
Committee and the National Committee on Earth Sciences. He is
an overseas Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of New
Zealand.
Bob
Carter's current research on climate change, sea-level change
and stratigraphy is based on field studies of Cenozoic
sediments (last 65 million years) from the Southwest Pacific
region, especially the Great Barrier Reef and New Zealand, and
includes the analysis of marine sediment cores collected
during Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 181 in the South
Pacific Ocean east of New Zealand.
Bob's research has been supported by grants from competitive
public research agencies, especially the Australian Research
Council (ARC) who in 1998 awarded him a Special Investigator
grant. He receives no research funding from special interest
organisations such as environmental groups, energy companies
or government departments.
Bob
Carter has published more than 100 papers in international
refereed science journals. He is also an established opinion
writer for newspapers such as The Australian, The Brisbane
Courier Mail, The Financial Review and The Sunday
Telegraph, and makes regular appearances on radio (ABC
Science Show; Michael Duffy, John Laws, Alan Jones and Glen
Beck radio shows) and television. Bob has acted as an
expert witness on climate change for the U.S. Senate
Committee of Environment and Public Works (Washington,
2006) and for the U.K. High Court (London, 2007; Dimmock
v. the Queen).
See
http://members.iinet.net.au/~glrmc
for more detailed information on seminars, media contributions
and publications, and research papers.
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