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6
April 2008
Exposing
the Climate Change Agenda
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The
climate change debate is forever shifting as science casts
long shadows of doubt on the predictions of global
catastrophe.
The
debate gathered a world-wide audience when climate alarmists
gained control of the climate science agenda. Its
popularisation has given it a political momentum that is
proving difficult to halt.
At first
the alarmists tried to scare us with those exaggerated claims
that man-made greenhouse gas emissions were causing the
earth’s temperature to rise. They said there was a direct
causal relationship between industrialisation (and therefore
CO2 emissions) and global temperatures, and that link was so
serious that mankind would bring about its own demise if
immediate action were not taken
These
prophets of doom initially ignored the fact that while
concentrations of man-made greenhouse gases have continued to
rise, global temperatures stopped rising ten years ago.
However, with the growing weight of scientific data now
indicating the globe could be cooling, not warming, the
alarmists are now talking of a ‘climate change’ crisis.
They have broadened their rhetoric to accommodate all forms of
extreme weather change - in order to hedge their bets!
When
will these alarmists stop, you might well ask?
My
answer is they won’t. Those promoting the global warming
cause will adapt their reasoning in whatever way is necessary
to remain credible in the eyes of the public. Let’s not
forget there are powerful vested interests benefiting from
global warming alarmism with vast profit opportunities and
political reputations at stake. They will hang on as long as a
gullible public allows them to.
And big
money there is. All around the world, carbon offset schemes
– many of extremely dubious quality - are growing like
topsy. Companies like Al Gore’s Generation Investment
Management, which makes money from investing in
“sustainable” businesses, now has $5 billion in funds
under management.
The runaway success of his movie “An Inconvenient Truth”
would have done the inflow of money into that fund no harm at
all! (For more details see the New
York Times >>> )
This
global warming juggernaut, fuelled by United Nations
propaganda and promoted by populist politicians who see
“Green” issues as instrumental to their electoral success,
will continue relentlessly until the public recognise that the
ill-advised climate change policies that are being foisted on
them will do nothing to change the climate, but will cost them
dearly. Ironically these policies will have the greatest
impact on the poorest in our community – those Labour and
the Greens claim to protect and foster.
The
reality is that the earth is constantly changing. While we are
presently living in temperate times, throughout history the
climate has been both many times hotter and many times colder
than it is today. Claims that mankind is a significant enough
force to change the earth’s climate cycles are exaggerated:
the largest proportion of the earth’s surface - 71 percent -
is controlled by ocean systems; a single volcanic eruption
could dwarf all of mankind’s emissions; and even our
presence on earth is overstated when one considers that if
every man, woman and child on the planet stood next to each
other the whole human population could easily fit onto an area
the size of Stewart Island.
Professor
Bob Carter, an environmental scientist at Queensland’s James
Cook University and this week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, is
presently in New Zealand on a lecture tour. Professor Carter
was called as an expert witness on climate change by the US
Senate and by the UK High Court in the case which opposed the
showing of Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth” in British
Schools (For more details see Politics
in Schools on Trial >>> ). In his opinion piece
“The IPCC: On the Run At Last”, Bob explains how the
United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change used
unrealistic scientific propaganda to stoke public alarm.
“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”.
Professor
Carter goes on to suggest, “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 read the article
– and see details of Prof Carter’s lecture tour - click
here >>>
These
issues are extremely important for New Zealand. On the basis
of the IPCC’s propaganda and the self-serving hype of Al
Gore’s convenient misrepresentations, as well as the UN’s
flawed Kyoto Protocol, our government is about to introduce a
range of climate change policies that are not only totally
unnecessary, but will cause huge damage to our economy and our
livelihoods. On the agenda is the introduction of the
mandatory use of biofuels, an emissions trading scheme, and a
10-year ban on the building of new base-load thermal power
stations. These are all radical policies that will put New
Zealand out on a limb. No other government is planning to
introduce such harsh initiatives which will pass such massive
costs onto businesses and ultimately consumers.
In
signing up to Kyoto, Labour made a commitment that New Zealand
would emit no more than 1990 levels of greenhouse gases during
the period from 2008 to 2012 and that credits would be bought
for any emissions over this amount. At the time Labour claimed
that the deal would result in $500 million gain for the
government. But their calculation turned out to be wrong and
on current Treasury estimates, that windfall gain has become a
massive $963 million liability. In a report “How should we
pay for our Kyoto liability”, Business NZ explains that the
government is rushing through its climate change policies in
order to ensure that the cost of its political decision to
sign up to the Kyoto Protocol is passed onto the public.
Business
NZ believes that since the government planned to pocket the
$500 million windfall gain from Kyoto, so it should be
required to pay the liability out of the consolidated account
- instead of trying to force the cost of that political
miscalculation onto the productive sector.
In
Canada in 2006 the Conservative Party won the election on a
platform which included scrapping the Kyoto Protocol. They
said the cost to the country of Kyoto commitments was too
high.
That
is still an option for New Zealand. The Kyoto Protocol came
into force on 16 February 2005, but under Article 27, any
country can withdraw after three years of it coming into
force. This means as from 16 February 2008 New Zealand is free
to withdraw – without any penalties.
In their
paper, Business NZ makes a further point about the cost of the
Kyoto liability. They estimate that by transferring the cost
from the state onto the private sector, the total liability to
New Zealand will increase seven-fold, because the private
sector does not have the international purchasing power of a
government. That means that the government will be responsible
for the effective loss of several billion dollars from our
economy. (To read the report click
here >>>)
There is
some hope. Forces against the Government’s radical agenda
are now slowly starting to rally. On Thursday New Zealand’s
Commissioner for the Environment, Dr Jan Wright, told
Parliament’s Environment Select Committee that the Biofuel
Bill is flawed and should be scrapped.
The Bill
imposes a mandatory regime for the introduction of biofuel
blends. Under the Bill, from July, land transport fuels must
contain 0.53 percent of biofuels rising to 3.4 percent by
2012. But the problem is that the use of biofuels is now
threatening world food production. Crops, traditionally grown
for food supplies are being converted into biofuel production
causing food riots in Mexico, Indonesia, Pakistan, Egypt,
Africa and the Philippines. The World Bank has estimated that
more than 30 countries around the world face potential social
unrest because of food shortages.
The
biofuel craze has also sparked mass de-forestation, with rain
forests in Central and South America being razed to make way
for biofuel production. This has brought a strong reaction
from the British Government’s chief science advisor who
stated “The idea that you cut down rainforest to grow
biofuels seems profoundly stupid”. The British
Government’s top environmental scientist agreed, calling the
policy “totally insane”. Meanwhile the German Government
scrapped their biofuel policy when they realised that older
cars would have trouble running on the biofuel blend, forcing
poorer car owners to buy more the more expensive fuel option.
(see
>>>)
The
Emissions Trading Bill that is currently being rushed through
the Select Committee process will expose New Zealand
businesses to the most costly carbon trading scheme in the
world. The scheme, which has been hastily put together and is
totally untested, will fully expose New Zealand businesses to
the volatile world price of carbon. A survey carried out by
the Greenhouse Policy Coalition of
41 firms across a range of sectors indicates that the increase
in costs from the Bill will put at risk 3000 existing jobs and
700 new jobs. With every tonne of carbon having to face the
full international price of carbon some $1.6 billion of new
investment will no longer go ahead if the Bill is passed.
With
huge concerns also being raised over the security of New
Zealand’s future electricity supplies and the excessive
power price rises being predicted as a result of the moratorium
on new thermal power generation contained in the Bill, the
government’s claims that its climate change programme will
have a minimal impact on the country is patently false.
The
timing of these onerous climate change measures could not be
worse. Helen Clark is about to sign a free trade agreement
with China, a country that has no intention of signing up to
Kyoto or imposing emission controls on industry. That will put
New Zealand businesses, trying to compete
with low cost imported goods, at an even greater disadvantage.
The most sensible move for a New Zealand Government would be
to follow the lead of Canada and serve notice of our intention
to withdraw from Kyoto on the basis that the cost to New
Zealand is too high and the effects on the climate
non-existent.
The
poll this week asks: Do you think New Zealand should follow the lead
of Canada and withdraw from the Kyoto Protocol? Go
to Poll >>> (The result will be sent to the
Leaders of all the Parliamentary Parties.
)
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
>>>
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