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18
November 2007
Global
Mitigation or Adaptation?
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The
fourth and final report from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) was released today. Speaking at the
launch, the Secretary General of the United Nations stated
that climate change is putting the world on the edge of a
global “catastrophe”. Such scaremongering over climate
change appears to be par for the course.
Without
a doubt, the media love a good scare story: in 1924 the New
York Times warned readers that an ice age was coming, but by
1933 rising temperatures were the problem. By 1975 fears of a
major cooling had surfaced again, only to be followed by the
current panic over global warming. (For more information see
“Fire and Ice”, click
here >>> )
It
is at times like this that the sage words of acclaimed writer
Dr Michael Crichton come to mind: “The greatest challenge
facing mankind is the challenge of distinguishing reality from
fantasy, truth from propaganda. Perceiving the truth has
always been a challenge to mankind, but in the information age
it takes on a special urgency and importance. We must daily
decide whether the threats we face are real, whether the
solutions we are offered will do any good, whether the
problems we're told exist are in fact real problems, or
non-problems”. (To read his 2003 speech “Environmentalism
as a Religion”, click
here >>> )
Climate
change has been described as the defining issue of our times.
But as we watch our government roll-out its climate change
policies, many feel a sense of foreboding – not only over
the extent of the propaganda that has become entwined in this
global warming issue, but over the substantial damage that
these policies will inflict on families and our economy.
Many
New Zealanders fervently believe that man-made global warming
is a massive con-job, a remarkably clever strategy adopted by
modern day socialists to attack economic growth and prosperity
using the guise of environmentalism. Others are convinced that
climate change is being used by the United Nations as a means
of establishing global government. Then there are those that
believe that global warming is the biggest threat that mankind
has ever faced and that unless governments take decisive
action and everyone else does their bit, the world as we know
it will be destroyed.
With
such a divergence of views, it is useful to ask what is there
about climate change that has been largely agreed.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, Lord Nigel Lawson, the
former British Chancellor of the Exchequer, is in New Zealand
at the present time discussing these very issues. In a lecture
on Thursday, he stated:
“Let’s
start with the facts. It is customary to focus on three of
them. The first is that, over the past hundred years, the
earth has become slightly warmer.
To be precise, there has been a rise in global mean
annual temperature of some 0.7º centigrade.
“The
second is that, over the past hundred years, the amount of
carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere has risen sharply,
by well over 30 per cent, largely as a result of carbon-based
industrialisation – in particular, electricity generated in
coal- and oil-fired power stations and motorized transport.
“And the
third fact is that carbon dioxide is one of a number of
so-called greenhouse gases – of which far and away the most
important is water vapour, including water suspended in clouds
– which in effect trap some of the heat we receive from the
sun and thus keep the planet warmer than it would otherwise
be”.
Lord
Lawson then explained how the IPCC (the organisation
established by the UN in 1988 to find evidence of
human-induced climate change - see article by Dr
Vincent Gray >>> ) had concluded “on the basis
of very slender evidence, that ‘most’
of the warming that occurred during the last quarter of the 20th
century was very likely due to the growth of atmospheric
carbon dioxide concentrations”.
He
then went on to point out the fallacies in this argument - to
read Lord Lawson’s speech click
>>>.
The
reality is that while on one hand, the IPCC is claiming that
carbon dioxide levels are rising significantly, on the other
hand, we know that the earth’s temperature is no longer
warming. The last period of warming started in 1975 and
stopped around 1998. Before that, the earth warmed from 1920
to 1940, with records showing that a thousand years ago in the
medieval warm period, temperatures were probably higher than
today, and a thousand or so years before that, temperatures
were probably higher still.
It
is clear that these early periods of higher temperatures had
nothing whatsoever to do with man-made carbon dioxide. It is
therefore difficult to understand how any credible
organisation can possibly blame man-made CO2 emissions for
causing global temperatures to rise. Similarly, if Lord Lawson
is correct and carbon dioxide emissions are now rising quickly
as a result of industrialisation, then how on earth can the
IPCC explain the fact that global temperatures stopped rising
1998?
The
answer is that the
scientific models being used by the IPCC are based on carbon
dioxide as the driving force of climate change, so even though
the physical evidence shows that this assumption is not
credible, rather than admitting that it is wrong, the IPCC is
continuing to generate its flawed estimates. Further, because
of its charter, the IPCC can only look at man-made CO2 as
influencing climate change and has therefore ignored key
factors such as solar cycles, cosmic rays, magnetic
field variations, El Ninos and La Ninas. (For more information
see The Global Warming Myth by Prof
David Bellamy >>>)
While
the present-day focus on the environment serves to remind us
all that we should be conservation minded and take all
reasonable steps to reduce pollution, we must remember that
carbon dioxide is not a pollutant - as many people are now led
to believe - but the basis of all food on earth. That is why
it is so important that the debate about climate change
focuses on science and reason rather than propaganda and
hyperbole.
With
the science being far from settled, the real question that
needs to be asked is what, if anything, should our government
be doing about all of this. Should New Zealand be going down
the path of mitigation, taking extensive action to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions, or should we be taking the wait, see
and adapt if necessary approach?
Given
the massive uncertainties that surround this issue – whether
the earth is cooling or warming and whether man-made CO2 is
having any affect on that process – the wisest course for
our government would have been to wait and see.
Unfortunately
for us all, Helen Clark chose the mitigation path, declaring
that New Zealand would lead the world in sustainability.
The
cost to the country will be enormous. Our liability for the
Kyoto Protocol alone is estimated to be as much as $2 billion,
yet with Kyoto effectively being a dead duck since the major
emitters have refused to sacrifice economic growth by signing
up, the best thing that we could do is to enact Article 27 and
withdraw at the first opportunity, in February 2008.
Even
if every country in the world signed up, the Kyoto Protocol
would not make an appreciable difference to atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels: the National
Centre for Atmospheric Research has calculated that if Kyoto
was implemented by all industrial countries only 0.07°C of
global warming would be averted by 2050!
In
other words, Helen Clark is sacrificing New Zealand’s
economic growth to look good on the world stage. Further, her
recently announced emissions trading regime is destined to
become a massive scam – like all of the other such schemes
around the world - which will do absolutely nothing to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions. And we haven’t even considered the
anticipated massive cost to households and businesses of
Labour’s flawed energy strategy.
It
seems inevitable that in spite of every effort by governments
to implement policies to change the climate, mankind will have
to do what it has always done and adapt to temperature changes
if there are any. After all, we live with enormous temperature
variations on a daily basis: in the US alone the average
temperature in January in Anchorage in the State of Alaska is
minus 13.1º centigrade, while in August in Honolulu it is
31.5º centigrade – a 44 degrees difference! Given that the
IPCC is predicting a median rise of 3º centigrade over the
next 100 years if global warming occurs, adapting may not be
such a big challenge and will bring many benefits to many
climates.
To
paraphrase Dr Michael Crichton, perhaps a bigger challenge
facing New Zealand is distinguishing reality from fantasy,
truth from propaganda, and global warming is just one of the
deceptions.
The
poll this week asks:
Do you believe that New Zealand should withdraw from the Kyoto
Protocol after 16 February 2008 as provided for in Article 27? Go
to Poll >>>
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
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