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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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20
January 2007
A
Royal Commission on Climate Change
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This year will see more of the government’s expensive
initiatives to combat the so-called threat of anthropogenic
(man-made) global warming passing into law. The bill to
introduce the carbon trading scheme which exposes New Zealand
to the volatile international price of carbon, and the energy
strategy bill designed to increase our reliance on expensive
renewable energy sources, are now in front of Select
Committees (the deadline for submissions is Feb 29 - to see
details click here>>>).
Both of these pieces of legislation will significantly
increase the cost of living as the escalating price of power
is passed on to householders. The Kyoto Protocol debt,
estimated to be as much as $2 billion, also hangs over our
heads.
These financial liabilities are being imposed on New
Zealanders because of the blind adherence of the government to
the theory that man-made greenhouse gas emissions will have a
calamitous effect on our climate, and that policies to reduce
emissions must be implemented – no matter what the cost.
No-one really knows what the economic consequences of these
policy decisions will be as a comprehensive cost benefit
analysis has not been carried out. Worse, all of this comes at
a time when the whole scientific basis for man-made global
warming is increasingly under dispute.
What isn’t disputed is that over the history of our planet,
there have been times when the earth has been far hotter than
it is today and far colder, and when the atmosphere has
contained far greater concentrations of carbon dioxide and far
less.
Formed some 4.5 billion years ago, the earth is constantly changing. We are now on
our third atmosphere, which was formed around 3.3 billion
years ago when the first living organisms used photosynthesis
to convert the sun’s energy into food, producing oxygen as a
by-product. Over time this led to the formation of an
atmosphere that could block out harmful radiation and sustain
life on earth.
The earth's atmosphere extends for
around 100 km upwards into outer space. The first 11km
is the troposphere, which contains three-quarters of all the
mass of our atmosphere. The all-important ozone layer, which
partially shields the earth from damaging ultraviolet light,
is found in the stratosphere, the next layer up.
Atmospheric gases are made up of 77 percent nitrogen,
21 percent oxygen and 2 percent greenhouse gases. Greenhouse
gases consist largely of water vapour, with 0.038 percent of
carbon dioxide, 0.00015 percent of methane, and traces of
other minor gases. They play a key role in the “greenhouse
effect”, which helps to keep the earth at an
average temperature of 15 degrees Celsius rather than minus 18
degrees Celsius, if the greenhouse gases were absent.
As the sun’s energy passes through the atmosphere, much of
it is reflected or absorbed by the clouds and other
atmospheric particles. Only around a half reaches the ground
where it heats the earth. A portion is then radiated back into
the atmosphere where it is largely absorbed by greenhouse
gases, creating an insulation layer around the earth.
Seventy-one percent of the earth’s surface is covered by
oceans. The land floats on huge tectonic plates, which
collide and separate over time, uplifting and eroding
mountains as well as opening and closing ocean basins.
There have been times throughout our history when the earth
has been so warm that it has been completely ice free. During
those periods, which last many millions of years, the oceans
are higher, covering around a third of the earth’s present
land surface. Eventually, however, the earth starts to cool,
snow falls on mountains and reflects the heat from the sun,
the poles begin to freeze over, glacial ice starts to cover
the land, sea levels fall, and an ice age begins. Within
an ice age there are cycles of warmer weather called
interglacial periods, where the earth’s temperature
increases but permanent snow and ice remain present. These are
followed by colder glacial periods where the temperature cools
and glacial ice sheets advance.
At the present time, the earth is in an interglacial period
within an ice age. Interglacial periods last for around 10,000
years, to be followed by glacial periods of around 100,000
years. With the present interglacial period having already
lasted for some 10,500 years, we are now overdue for a new
glacial period.
We are reminded of the power of nature on a regular basis -
there are a dozen lightening strikes every second, giant
cyclones wreak havoc every four days, major earthquakes occur
every ten days, volcanic eruptions every two weeks, and
tsunamis every two months. Those who think they can influence
nature – like the global warming scaremongerers - are surely
misguided.
Just before Christmas the United Nations held a global warming
conference in Bali to develop a ‘roadmap’ for a future
international agreement based on the predictions of the United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). One
hundred prominent scientists from around the world used the
Conference as an opportunity to present their objection to the
IPCC’s conclusions in an open letter to the
Secretary-General of the United Nations:
“It is not possible to stop climate change, a natural
phenomenon that has affected humanity through the ages.
Geological, archaeological, oral and written histories all
attest to the dramatic challenges posed to past societies from
unanticipated changes in temperature, precipitation, winds and
other climatic variables. We therefore need to equip nations
to become resilient to the full range of these natural
phenomena by promoting economic growth and wealth
generation.”
The scientists believe that “it is not established that it
is possible to significantly alter global climate through cuts
in human greenhouse gas emissions” and that attempts to
control the climate are futile and represent “a tragic
misallocation of resources” that would be better spent on
adapting to the earth’s changing climate and dealing with
humanity's real and pressing problems. (To read the scientist’s letter click
here >>>. To see the list of the 100 prominent
signatories click
here >>>)
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is British
conservationist Professor David Bellamy, who decries the
global warming propaganda: “In a recent survey 41% of
children questioned said they were losing sleep due to the
man-made global warming scare. Is that acceptable given the
entire scare is based solely on politically funded computer
models which can be programmed to suggest whatever politicians
require? Mind you those same politicians are so worried that
the truth will out that they are doing everything in their
power and a lot that isn’t, to erode the roots and the
routes of democracy before their term of office comes to an
end”.
He goes on to say, “Many genuine climate scientists who do
their best to enlighten the world that our climate is governed
by solar variation and orbital changes - the well known
Milankovitch Cycles - are vilified as “deniers” and
“flat-earthists”. This is surely the conduct of gutter
politics not scientific debate”. (Click here to read his guest
column >>>)
Dr Zbigniew Jaworowski, a senior advisor at the Warsaw Central
Laboratory for Radiological Protection, calls what is going on
the greatest scientific scandal of our time: “We find
ourselves in the situation that the entire history of man-made
global warming – with its repercussions for science, and its
important consequences for politics and the global economy –
is based on ice core studies that provided a false picture of
atmospheric CO2 levels. Meanwhile, more than 90,000 direct
measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere… made by top
scientists, including two Nobel Prize winners, were completely
ignored by [IPCC] climatologists - and not because they were
wrong. The only reason for rejection was that these
measurements did not fit the hypothesis of anthropogenic
climate warming. I regard this as perhaps the greatest
scientific scandal of our time.” (To read the report click
here >>>)
Anyone who claims that the science on global warming is
settled is wrong. There is now growing evidence that that the
earth is not warming but cooling: since the 1970s the glaciers
of the Arctic, Greenland, and the Antarctic have been growing,
and since 1998 average world temperatures have been
falling with 2006 cooler than 2005 and 2007 cooler still.
This uncertainty means that governments like our own, that are
making significantly costly policy decisions based on the
existence of man-made global warming, are acting recklessly.
Surely, rather than adopting costly “remedies” like the
Kyoto Protocol, carbon trading, and an over-reliance on
expensive renewable energy, a more reasoned approach is
needed.
Often, when governments are faced with major controversial
decisions, a Royal Commission of Inquiry is established to
thoroughly investigate the issue and make a series of
recommendations. If a Royal Commission into man-made global
warming was to be held, it could determine firstly, whether
the threat is in fact real, and secondly, whether the cost of
taking a proactive approach justifies the potential benefits.
This would need to be carried out in conjunction with a
moratorium on all global warming policy initiatives.
The fact that these matters were not
properly addressed before we signed Kyoto, and before the
dubious energy strategy and emissions trading scheme were
introduced, is surely a grave indictment of the Labour
Government.
The poll
this week asks: Do
you believe that a Royal Commission should be established to
investigate whether anthropogenic (man-made) global warming is
a real threat and to quantify the benefits and costs to New
Zealand of actively pursuing global warming reduction policies?
Go
to Poll >>>
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
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