IPCC cranks out
another climate report and shows no sign of having learned its lesson. A lot of the material still comes across as
pretend science all pushing the ultimate conclusion that we must embrace
universal poverty for the good of mother earth.
What has changed
is that the IPCC’s reputation is so severely degraded, even the good science
will be ignored.
As I have posted
before, our climate is operating around a half degree over the Holocene mean
and does not wish to go higher. We are
more at risk from a precipitous decline than a sudden rise.
I also suspect
that to get a half degree lift which is possible, it will be necessary to
reforest the Sahara.
NIGEL LAWSON:
IPCC BRINGS THE GOOD NAME OF SCIENCE INTO DISREPUTE
Date: 29/09/13
Nigel Lawson, The Sunday Telegraph
The IPCC’s call to phase out fossil fuels is
economic nonsense and ‘morally outrageous’ for the developing world
Former chancellor Lord Lawson, now chairman of the
Global Warming Policy Foundation, gives his verdict on the IPCC report.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which
published on Friday the first instalment of its latest report, is a deeply
discredited organisation. Presenting itself as the voice of science on this
important issue, it is a politically motivated pressure group that brings the
good name of science into disrepute.
Its previous report, in 2007, was so grotesquely
flawed that the leading scientific body in the United States, the InterAcademy
Council, decided that an investigation was warranted. The IAC duly reported in
2010, and concluded that there were “significant shortcomings in each major
step of [the] IPCC’s assessment process”, and that “significant improvements”
were needed. It also chastised the IPCC for claiming to have “high confidence
in some statements for which there is little evidence”.
Since then, little seems to have changed, and the
latest report is flawed like its predecessor.
Perhaps this is not so surprising. A detailed
examination of the 2007 report found that two thirds of its chapters included
among its authors people with links to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and there
were many others with links to other ‘green’ activist groups, such as
Greenpeace.
In passing, it is worth observing that what these
so-called green groups, and far too many of the commentators who follow them,
wrongly describe as ‘pollution’ is, in fact, the ultimate in green: namely,
carbon dioxide – a colourless and odourless gas, which promotes plant life and
vegetation of all kinds; indeed, they could not survive without it. It is an
established scientific fact that, over the past 20 years, the earth has become
greener, largely thanks to increased atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Be that as it may, as long ago as 2009, the IPCC
chairman, Dr Rajendra Pachauri – who is a railway engineer and economist by
training, not a scientist, let alone a climate scientist – predicted that “when
the IPCC’s fifth assessment comes out in 2013 or 2014, there will be a major
revival of interest in action that has to be taken. People are going to say:
‘My God, we are going to have to take action much faster than we had planned.’”
This was well before the scientific investigation on which the latest report is
allegedly based had even begun. So much for the scientific method.
There is, however, one uncomfortable fact that the
new report has been – very reluctantly – obliged to come to terms with. That
is that global warming appears to have ceased: there has been no increase in
officially recorded global mean temperature for the past 15 years. This is
brushed aside as a temporary blip, and they suggest that the warming may still
have happened, but instead of happening on the Earth’s surface it may have
occurred for the time being in the (very cold) ocean depths – of which,
incidentally, there is no serious empirical evidence.
A growing number of climate scientists are coming to
the conclusion that at least part of the answer is that the so-called climate
sensitivity of carbon – the amount of warming that might be expected from a
given increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide (caused by the use of fossil
fuels: coal, oil, and gas) – is significantly less than was previously assumed to
be the case. [ how about
none whatsoever try to take it from there.
As I stated directly when we launched this blog in 2007, there are two
phenomena with substantial global drivers that must be treated separately. Linkage was simply a failed speculation. Arclein ]
It is no doubt a grudging acceptance of this that
has led the new report to suggest that the global warming we can expect by the
end of this century is probably rather less than the IPCC had previously
predicted: perhaps some 2.7ºF (1.5ºC) What they have not done, however, is to
accept that the computer models on which they base all their prognostications
have been found to be misleading. These models all predicted an acceleration in
the warming trend throughout the 21st century, as global carbon dioxide
emissions rose apace. In fact, there has been a standstill.
The true scientific method is founded on empirical
observation. When a theory – whether embedded in a computer program or not –
produces predictions that are falsified by subsequent observation, then the
theory, and the computer models which enshrine it, have to be rethought.
Not for the IPCC, however, which has sought to
obscure this fundamental issue by claiming that, whereas in 2007 it was 90 per
cent sure that most of the (very slight) global warming recorded since the
Fifties was due to man-made carbon emissions, it is now 95 per cent sure.
This is not science: it is mumbo-jumbo. Neither the
90 per cent nor the 95 per cent have any objective scientific basis: they are
simply numbers plucked from the air for the benefit of credulous politicians
and journalists.
They have thrown dust in the eyes of the media in
other ways, too. Among them is the shift from talking about global warming, as
a result of the generally accepted greenhouse effect, to ‘climate change’ or
‘climate disruption’. Gullible journalists (who are particularly prevalent
within the BBC) have been impressed, for example, by being told now that much
of Europe, and in particular the UK, is likely to become not warmer but colder,
as a result of increasing carbon dioxide emissions interfering with the Gulf
Stream.
There is nothing new about this canard, which has
been touted for the past 10 years or so. Indeed, I refer to it explicitly in my
book on global warming, An Appeal to Reason, which first came out five years
ago. In fact, there has been no disruption whatever of the Gulf Stream, nor is
it at all likely that there could be. As the eminent oceanographer Prof Karl
Wunsch has observed, the Gulf Stream is largely a wind-driven phenomenon, and
thus “as long as the sun heats the Earth and the Earth spins, so that we have
winds, there will be a Gulf Stream”.
So what is the truth of the matter, and what do we
need to do about it?
The truth is that the amount of carbon dioxide in
the world’s atmosphere is indeed steadily increasing, as a result of the
burning of fossil fuels, particularly in the faster-growing countries of the
developing world, notably China.
And it is also a scientific fact that, other things being equal, this will make
the world a warmer place. But there are two major unresolved scientific issues:
first, are other things equal?, and second, even if they are, how much warmer
will our planet become? There is no scientific basis whatever for talking about
‘catastrophic climate change’ – and it is generally agreed that if the global
temperature standstill soon comes to an end and the world is, as the IPCC is
now suggesting might well be the case, 1.5ºC warmer by the end of the century,
that would be a thoroughly good thing: beneficial to global food production and
global health alike.
So what we should do about it – if indeed, there is
anything at all we need to do – is to adapt to any changes that may, in the far
future, occur. That means using all the technological resources open to mankind
– which will ineluctably be far greater by the end of this century than those
we possess today – to reduce any harms that might arise from warming, while
taking advantage of all the great benefits that warming will bring.
What we should emphatically not do is what Dr
Pachauri, Lord Stern and that gang are calling for and decarbonise the global
economy by phasing out fossil fuels.
Before the industrial revolution mankind relied for
its energy on beasts of burden and wind power. The industrial revolution, and
the enormous increase in prosperity it brought with it, was possible only
because the West abandoned wind power and embraced fossil fuels. We are now –
unbelievably – being told that we must abandon relatively cheap and highly
reliable fossil fuels, and move back to wind power, which is both unreliable
and hugely costly.
This is clearly an economic nonsense, which would
condemn us to a wholly unnecessary fall in living standards.
But what moves me most is what this would mean for
the developing world. For them, abandoning the cheapest available form of
energy and thus seriously abandoning the path of economic growth and rising
prosperity on which, at long last, most of the developing world is now
embarked, would mean condemning hundreds of millions of their people to
unnecessary poverty, destitution, preventable disease, and premature death.
All in the name of seeking to ensure that distant
generations, in future centuries, might be (there is no certainty) slightly
better off than would otherwise be the case.
Not to beat about the bush, it is morally
outrageous. It is just as well that the world is unlikely to take the slightest
notice of the new IPCC report.
1 comment:
Have you read the IPCC AR5 WG1 report? If not, then how well informed is your opinion of that report?
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