Article re: Global warming (good read)

From Opinionjournal.com (part of Wall Street Journal)


Climate of Fear
Global-warming alarmists intimidate dissenting scientists into silence.

BY RICHARD LINDZEN
Wednesday, April 12, 2006 12:01 a.m.

There have been repeated claims that this past year's hurricane activity was another sign of human-induced climate change. Everything from the heat wave in Paris to heavy snows in Buffalo has been blamed on people burning gasoline to fuel their cars, and coal and natural gas to heat, cool and electrify their homes. Yet how can a barely discernible, one-degree increase in the recorded global mean temperature since the late 19th century possibly gain public acceptance as the source of recent weather catastrophes? And how can it translate into unlikely claims about future catastrophes?
The answer has much to do with misunderstanding the science of climate, plus a willingness to debase climate science into a triangle of alarmism. Ambiguous scientific statements about climate are hyped by those with a vested interest in alarm, thus raising the political stakes for policy makers who provide funds for more science research to feed more alarm to increase the political stakes. After all, who puts money into science--whether for AIDS, or space, or climate--where there is nothing really alarming? Indeed, the success of climate alarmism can be counted in the increased federal spending on climate research from a few hundred million dollars pre-1990 to $1.7 billion today. It can also be seen in heightened spending on solar, wind, hydrogen, ethanol and clean coal technologies, as well as on other energy-investment decisions.

But there is a more sinister side to this feeding frenzy. Scientists who dissent from the alarmism have seen their grant funds disappear, their work derided, and themselves libeled as industry stooges, scientific hacks or worse. Consequently, lies about climate change gain credence even when they fly in the face of the science that supposedly is their basis.





To understand the misconceptions perpetuated about climate science and the climate of intimidation, one needs to grasp some of the complex underlying scientific issues. First, let's start where there is agreement. The public, press and policy makers have been repeatedly told that three claims have widespread scientific support: Global temperature has risen about a degree since the late 19th century; levels of CO2 in the atmosphere have increased by about 30% over the same period; and CO2 should contribute to future warming. These claims are true. However, what the public fails to grasp is that the claims neither constitute support for alarm nor establish man's responsibility for the small amount of warming that has occurred. In fact, those who make the most outlandish claims of alarm are actually demonstrating skepticism of the very science they say supports them. It isn't just that the alarmists are trumpeting model results that we know must be wrong. It is that they are trumpeting catastrophes that couldn't happen even if the models were right as justifying costly policies to try to prevent global warming.
If the models are correct, global warming reduces the temperature differences between the poles and the equator. When you have less difference in temperature, you have less excitation of extratropical storms, not more. And, in fact, model runs support this conclusion. Alarmists have drawn some support for increased claims of tropical storminess from a casual claim by Sir John Houghton of the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that a warmer world would have more evaporation, with latent heat providing more energy for disturbances. The problem with this is that the ability of evaporation to drive tropical storms relies not only on temperature but humidity as well, and calls for drier, less humid air. Claims for starkly higher temperatures are based upon there being more humidity, not less--hardly a case for more storminess with global warming.

So how is it that we don't have more scientists speaking up about this junk science? It's my belief that many scientists have been cowed not merely by money but by fear. An example: Earlier this year, Texas Rep. Joe Barton issued letters to paleoclimatologist Michael Mann and some of his co-authors seeking the details behind a taxpayer-funded analysis that claimed the 1990s were likely the warmest decade and 1998 the warmest year in the last millennium. Mr. Barton's concern was based on the fact that the IPCC had singled out Mr. Mann's work as a means to encourage policy makers to take action. And they did so before his work could be replicated and tested--a task made difficult because Mr. Mann, a key IPCC author, had refused to release the details for analysis. The scientific community's defense of Mr. Mann was, nonetheless, immediate and harsh. The president of the National Academy of Sciences--as well as the American Meteorological Society and the American Geophysical Union--formally protested, saying that Rep. Barton's singling out of a scientist's work smacked of intimidation.

All of which starkly contrasts to the silence of the scientific community when anti-alarmists were in the crosshairs of then-Sen. Al Gore. In 1992, he ran two congressional hearings during which he tried to bully dissenting scientists, including myself, into changing our views and supporting his climate alarmism. Nor did the scientific community complain when Mr. Gore, as vice president, tried to enlist Ted Koppel in a witch hunt to discredit anti-alarmist scientists--a request that Mr. Koppel deemed publicly inappropriate. And they were mum when subsequent articles and books by Ross Gelbspan libelously labeled scientists who differed with Mr. Gore as stooges of the fossil-fuel industry.

Sadly, this is only the tip of a non-melting iceberg. In Europe, Henk Tennekes was dismissed as research director of the Royal Dutch Meteorological Society after questioning the scientific underpinnings of global warming. Aksel Winn-Nielsen, former director of the U.N.'s World Meteorological Organization, was tarred by Bert Bolin, first head of the IPCC, as a tool of the coal industry for questioning climate alarmism. Respected Italian professors Alfonso Sutera and Antonio Speranza disappeared from the debate in 1991, apparently losing climate-research funding for raising questions.

And then there are the peculiar standards in place in scientific journals for articles submitted by those who raise questions about accepted climate wisdom. At Science and Nature, such papers are commonly refused without review as being without interest. However, even when such papers are published, standards shift. When I, with some colleagues at NASA, attempted to determine how clouds behave under varying temperatures, we discovered what we called an "Iris Effect," wherein upper-level cirrus clouds contracted with increased temperature, providing a very strong negative climate feedback sufficient to greatly reduce the response to increasing CO2. Normally, criticism of papers appears in the form of letters to the journal to which the original authors can respond immediately. However, in this case (and others) a flurry of hastily prepared papers appeared, claiming errors in our study, with our responses delayed months and longer. The delay permitted our paper to be commonly referred to as "discredited." Indeed, there is a strange reluctance to actually find out how climate really behaves. In 2003, when the draft of the U.S. National Climate Plan urged a high priority for improving our knowledge of climate sensitivity, the National Research Council instead urged support to look at the impacts of the warming--not whether it would actually happen.





Alarm rather than genuine scientific curiosity, it appears, is essential to maintaining funding. And only the most senior scientists today can stand up against this alarmist gale, and defy the iron triangle of climate scientists, advocates and policymakers.
Mr. Lindzen is Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Atmospheric Science at MIT.


Copyright © 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 
Interesting article Bro. This global warming issue is getting intrestinger and interestinger.

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
Interesting article Bro. This global warming issue is getting intrestinger and interestinger.

QueEx
Quite. However, the boring truth is that with scientists being people and all, that they are often subject to the same bullshit most others are. And combine that with the conspiracy theory craze that's going around, and you get the bigger tragedy in the making, which is the systematic tear-down of the same society that has brought so much to the betterment of mankind. Not saying that it is perfect, but it is FAR better than what it replaced.

Holla.

BTW, how do I post a web page. I got a good one. THanks. in advance.
 
New data shows ocean cooling

New data shows ocean cooling
By DENNIS AVERY and ALEX AVERY
Thursday, August 17, 2006

The world's oceans cooled suddenly between 2003 and 2005, losing more than 20 percent of the global-warming heat they'd absorbed over the previous 50 years. That's a vast amount of heat, since the oceans hold 1,000 times as heat as the atmosphere. The ocean-cooling researchers say the heat was likely vented into space, since it hasn't been found stored anywhere on Earth.

John Lyman, of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, says the startling news of ocean cooling comes courtesy of the new ARGO ocean temperature floats being distributed worldwide. ARGOs are filling in former blank spots on the world's ocean monitoring system – and vastly narrowing our past uncertainty about sparsely measured ocean temperatures.

Lyman says the discovery of the sudden ocean coolings undercuts faith in global-warming forecasts because coolings randomly interrupt the trends laid out by the global circulation models. As Lyman puts it, "The cooling reflects interannual variability that is not well represented by a linear trend."

The new ocean cooling also recalls several NASA studies in the past five years that found a huge natural heat vent over the Pacific ocean's so-called warm pool, a band of water thousands of miles wide, roughly astride the equator. Studies coordinated by Bruce Weilicki, of NASA's Langley Research Center, found that when sea surface temperatures rise above 28 degrees C, Pacific rainfall becomes more efficient. More of the cloud droplets form raindrops, so fewer are left to form high, icy, cirrus clouds that seal in heat. As a result, the area of cirrus clouds is reduced, and far more heat passes out into space. This cools the surface of the warm pool, the world's warmest ocean water.

Weilicki's research teams say that the huge natural heat vent emitted about as much heat during the 1980s and 90s as would be expected from a redoubling of the carbon dioxide content in the air. They used satellites to measure cloud cover and long-range aircraft to monitor sea temperatures.

Layman says the sudden ocean coolings particularly complicate the problem of separating natural temperature changes from man-made impacts on the Earth's temperature. The impact of human-emitted CO2 has been assumed to accumulate in a straight-line trend over many decades.

Meanwhile, since the 1980s, the Earth's ice cores, seabed sediments and cave stalagmites have been revealing a moderate, natural 1,500-year climate cycle linked to solar irradiance. Temperatures jump suddenly and erratically 1 to 2 degrees C above the mean at the latitude of Washington, D.C., and New York City for centuries at a time, and more than that at the Earth's poles.

Temperatures vary hardly at all at the equator during the 1,500-year cycle, and Bruce Weilicki's NASA heat-vent findings seem to indicate why. The warm pool of the Pacific acts like a cooking pot, with its "lid" popping open to emit steam when the water gets too hot.

The more we look, the more we learn about the Earth's complex climate forces – though not much of the new knowledge comes from the huge, unverified global circulation models favored by the man-made warming activists.

http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/opinion/abox/article_1245606.php
 
Re: New data shows ocean cooling

The more I read the more interesting this whole thing about global warming gets. There seems to be so much conflicting information and the experts don't seem to be converging into agreement.

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Re: New data shows ocean cooling

<font size="5"><center>California takes lead in global-warming fight</font size>
<font size="4">But caps on greenhouse-gas emissions are largely symbolic</font size></center>

By Daniel B. Wood and Mark Clayton
Staff writers of The Christian Science Monitor

LOS ANGELES AND BOSTON – California's landmark deal to require a 25 percent cut in industrial greenhouse gases by 2020 is a largely symbolic victory with only a tiny impact on climate. But it's one that could prompt significant change in the nation's stance on global warming - and give the state a competitive edge in future years.
The agreement, which has not yet cleared the state legislature, would require industries - including oil refineries, chemical manufacturers, and utilities - to slash carbon-dioxide emissions.

Coming just two weeks after seven Northeast states officially approved a cap on CO2 emissions from electric utilities, California's far broader measure could presage a growing push among states to cut emissions.

Thus far, the Bush administration has resisted efforts to institute federal mandatory reductions on CO2 that might increase costs to business and harm the economy. Many California business groups also worry the measure will encourage businesses to locate elsewhere.

"We are very concerned that this bill will send the message to manufacturers in California and the rest of the world that it's going to be tougher to do business in California," says Dorothy Rothrock, vice president of government relations for the California Manufacturers and Technology Association. The mandate "goes way beyond measures that are cost effective," she adds.

California is the world's ninth-largest emitter of greenhouse gases. But even the major cuts it is proposing will have only a tiny effect because carbon emissions are growing so quickly, climate experts say.

"By itself it doesn't do much. It's main significance is in providing leadership," says Robert Dickinson, past president of the American Geophysical Union. "Even though this is just a little bit, a lot of little bits add up."

The US is the largest greenhouse gas emitter in the world, with 19 tons emitted per person per year, while California emits 12 tons per capita. If the US slashed per capita emissions to current California levels, the US would cut its output to 1.7 billion tons below the targets set by the international Kyoto agreement, state officials estimate.

The bill sets a cap on all of California's greenhouse gas emissions, and requires them to return to 1990 levels by 2020 - roughly a 25 percent cut compared to business as usual. The bill is not specific about how to achieve it, but it says regulators may adopt a trading scheme so that plants having trouble cutting emissions could buy emissions credits from plants that have made the cuts.

Despite some business concerns, others have gotten on board the energy efficiency train. Dow Chemical, which has four manufacturing sites in California, has slashed its energy use nationwide by 20 percent over the past decade. The company's new goal - a further 25 percent cut by 2015 - dovetails with California's effort.

"If we put together all the existing policies not yet fully implemented, that gets us a third of the way to meeting the new caps," says Jason Mark, California director of the Union of Concerned Scientists. "But new policies will be needed to get all the way there. That can include additional limits on other sources of emissions."

Despite the challenge getting to the goal, some experts say the push will make California more energy efficient, giving its industries an energy cost advantage and a leg up on their competition.

"In the long term, over the next decade, this is going to be a big plus for California's economy," says R. Neal Elliott, industrial program director at the American Council for Energy Efficient Economy in Washington. "Businesses in the state are going to be more competitive and less exposed to risk of volatile energy prices in the future."

While some worry the easy and inexpensive trims to CO2 emissions have been taken already, experts like Dr. Elliott say even California where much has already been done to trim energy use, there are still plenty of savings to be made. "In reality, we aren't anywhere close in any of these industries to tapping out our ability to save energy," he says. "It's really a situation of learning by doing, the more energy savings you look for, the more you find."

Cutting California's greenhouse emissions to 1990 levels by 2020 could boost the state's economy by $74 billion and create 88,000 new jobs, according to a new University of California at Berkeley study.

Some businesses have already made significant gains. DuPont, the big chemical company, has cut its greenhouse gas emissions by nearly 70 percent since 1990, saving about $2 billion. Similarly, IBM has saved nearly $800 million, thanks to its 65 percent cut in its emissions in the same period, the state's environmental protection agency reports.

Environmentalists cheered the deal, saying it would get the ball rolling nationally and bring other states on board.

"The big picture is that the rest of the world has been waiting around for years for the US to do something on global warming," says Bernadette Del Chiaro of Environment California, a nonprofit environmental group. "We have not seen any action on the national level and California is stepping up and joining the rest of the world in solving global warming."

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0901/p01s01-usgn.html
 
Re: New data shows ocean cooling

Q&A

<font size="5">What Bill Would Do, Who's Affected</font siize>

Los Angeles Times
By Janet Wilson and Marla Cone, Times Staff Writers
September 1, 2006


Amid concern about global climate change, the state Legislature gave final approval Thursday to AB 32, a bill to combat global warming.

What would the bill do?

AB 32 requires California's Air Resources Board to develop a program to reduce the state's greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, a cut of about 25% from today's levels. Reductions will be required starting in 2012.

What are greenhouse gases?

Greenhouse gases, which trap heat in the atmosphere, are identified in the bill as carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons and sulfur hexafluoride.

Where do they come from?

Globally, power plants and office buildings produce about two-thirds of greenhouse gas emissions, and cars and trucks produce much of the rest. In California, the percentage from mobile sources is slightly higher, both because we drive so much and because statewide energy efficiency standards exist for buildings but not vehicles.

What businesses would be affected?

Utility plants, oil and gas refineries, factories and cement kilns, among other major emitters of the gases.

How can the state reach 1990 levels?

Experts say emissions would have to be reduced by 174 million metric tons. The approaches for achieving those reductions could include mandatory limits on emissions from utilities, cement companies and other heavy industries; energy efficiency measures; and the establishment of a market-based emissions trading program.

What are the major challenges to meeting the goals?

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has declined to support a California tailpipe emissions-control law, which is being challenged in court by automakers. Moreover, the EPA has chosen not to classify greenhouse gas emissions as pollutants, a decision being challenged in court by the Sierra Club and several states.

If California were to meet its emission-reduction goal, what would the effect be on the state's climate?

Unless other states and nations follow suit, there would be little effect, according to Ken Caldeira, a climate scientist at the Carnegie Institution's department of global ecology at Stanford.

"While it's important for the United States and California to show leadership, the actual effect on California's climate of reducing the state's carbon dioxide emissions will be negligible," Caldeira said. "It would be an altruistic gift from California to the rest of the world."

But Dan Kammen, who heads UC Berkeley's Renewable and Appropriate Energy Lab, called the legislation a "big step because every trend until now has been toward ecological devastation, and this reverses that." He said there would be a multiplier effect because California buys 25% of its power from elsewhere and would require much of that power to be clean or its greenhouse emissions to be traded in a market-based cap-and-trade program.

Will consumers pay more or less for energy as a consequence of the state's efforts?

Experts disagree.

Kammen said costs would go down. He co-authored a 2004 study that found $20 billion in consumer benefits over the next few years from increased use of wind power and energy efficiency measures. But other researchers say reducing greenhouse gases just from power plants, which are major greenhouse gas emitters, will create costs in the billions of dollars. Sally Benson, a UC Berkeley geologist who is testing carbon sequestration technology, said studies show possible increases in electric bills of 15% to 20%.

Can the 2020 deadline be changed?

The bill allows the governor to extend the deadline by as much as one year, "in the event of extraordinary circumstances, catastrophic events or threat of significant economic harm." Of course, the Legislature could always pass a new bill to change the law.


http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-warmqa1sep01,1,1165828.story?coll=la-headlines-business
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
janet.wilson@latimes.com

marla.cone@latimes.com

Times researcher Scott Wilson contributed to this report.

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-warmqa1sep01,1,1165828.story?coll=la-headlines-business
 
Arctic ice melting rapidly, study says

Arctic ice melting rapidly, study says
By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer
7 minutes ago

Arctic sea ice in winter is melting far faster than before, two new NASA studies reported Wednesday, a new and alarming trend that researchers say threatens the ocean's delicate ecosystem.

Scientists point to the sudden and rapid melting as a sure sign of man-made global warming.

"It has never occurred before in the past," said NASA senior research scientist Josefino Comiso in a phone interview. "It is alarming... This winter ice provides the kind of evidence that it is indeed associated with the greenhouse effect."

Scientists have long worried about melting Arcticsea ice in the summer, but they had not seen a big winter drop in sea ice, even though they expected it.

For more than 25 years Arctic sea ice has slowly diminished in winter by about 1.5 percent per decade. But in the past two years the melting has occurred at rates 10 to 15 times faster. From 2004 to 2005, the amount of ice dropped 2.3 percent; and over the past year, it's declined by another 1.9 percent, according to Comiso.

A second NASA study by other researchers found the winter sea ice melt in one region of the eastern Arctic has shrunk about 40 percent in just the past two years. This is partly because of local weather but also partly because of global warming, Comiso said.

The loss of winter ice is bad news for the ocean because this type of ice, when it melts in summer, provides a crucial breeding ground for plankton, Comiso said. Plankton are the bottom rung of the ocean's food chain.

"If the winter ice melt continues, the effect would be very profound especially for marine mammals," Comiso said in a NASA telephone press conference.

The ice is melting even in subfreezing winter temperatures because the water is warmer and summer ice covers less area and is shorter-lived, Comiso said. Thus, the winter ice season shortens every year and warmer water melts at the edges of the winter ice more every year.

Scientists and climate models have long predicted a drop in winter sea ice, but it has been slow to happen. Global warming skeptics have pointed to the lack of ice melt as a flaw in global warming theory.

The latest findings are "coming more in line with what we expected to find," said Mark Serreze, a senior research scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colo. "We're starting to see a much more coherent and firm picture occurring."

"I hate to say we told you so, but we told you so," he added.

Serreze said only five years ago he was "a fence-sitter" on the issue of whether man-made global warming was happening and a threat, but he said recent evidence in the Arctic has him convinced.

Summer sea ice also has dramatically melted and shrunk over the years, setting a record low last year. This year's measurements are not as bad, but will be close to the record, Serreze said.

Equally disturbing is a large mass of water — melted sea ice — in the interior of a giant patch of ice north of Alaska, Serreze said. It's called a polynya, and while those show up from time to time, this one is large — about the size of the state of Maryland — and in an unexpected place.

"I for one, after having studied this for 20 years, have never seen anything like this before," Serreze said.

The loss of summer sea ice is pushing polar bears more onto land in northern Canada and Alaska, making it seem like there are more polar bears when there are not, said NASA scientist Claire Parkinson, who studies the bears.

The polar bear population in the Hudson Bay area has dropped from 1,200 in 1989 to 950 in 2004 and the bears that are around are 22 percent smaller than they used to be, she said.
___
On the Net:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2006/seaice_meltdown.html

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060913...eRI2ocA;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
 
Re: Arctic ice melting rapidly, study says

<font size="5"><center>Gore Unveils Global-Warming Plan</font size>
<font size="4">Cutting Emissions, Restructuring Industry and Farming Urged</font size></center>

Washington Post
By Michael Powell
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 19, 2006; Page A02

NEW YORK, Sept. 18 -- Former vice president Al Gore laid out his prescription for an ailing and overheated planet Monday, urging a series of steps from freezing carbon dioxide emissions to revamping the auto industry, factories and farms.

Gore proposed a Carbon Neutral Mortgage Association ("Connie Mae," to echo the familiar Fannie Mae) devoted to helping homeowners retrofit and build energy-efficient homes. He urged creation of an "electranet," which would let homeowners and business owners buy and sell surplus electricity.

"This is not a political issue. This is a moral issue -- it affects the survival of human civilization," Gore said in an hour-long speech at the New York University School of Law. "Put simply, it is wrong to destroy the habitability of our planet and ruin the prospects of every generation that follows ours."

Gore was one of the first U.S. politicians to raise an alarm about the dangers of global warming. He produced a critically well-received documentary movie, "An Inconvenient Truth," that chronicles his warnings that Earth is hurtling toward a vastly warmer future. Gore's speech was in part an effort to move beyond jeremiads and put the emphasis on remedies.

He took a veiled shot at the Bush administration: "The debate over solutions has been slow to begin in earnest . . . because some of our leaders still find it more convenient to deny the reality of the crisis." But he saluted a Republican, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, for helping to push through sharp reductions in carbon emissions.

Gore noted that few politicians of any party are willing to step into the "no politician zone" of tough steps needed to address global warming.

Gore cautioned against looking for a "silver bullet" policy reform that would address global warming, a view many scientists share.

"There are things that you can do today and in the midterm, and things to tend to in the long term," said Gavin A. Schmidt, a climate scientist at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. "You have to think on all the scales at once, and even that will only help you avoid the worst scenarios."

A spokeswoman for the President's Council on Environmental Quality said Monday that the Bush administration has committed $29 billion to climate research and programs and has reduced greenhouse gas intensity. That is not, however, the same matter as reducing total carbon emissions, which continue to rise.

Gore touched on nuclear power as a palliative for global warming but made it clear that this is at best a partial solution. Nuclear power inevitably raises questions of nuclear arms proliferation, he said.

And he warned against thinking that the recent drop in oil prices offers much help: "Our current ridiculous dependence on oil endangers not only our national security, but also our economic security."

Staff writer Juliet Eilperin in Washington contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/18/AR2006091801125.html?referrer=email
 
Re: Arctic ice melting rapidly, study says

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I applaud Gore and his environmental efforts, he has stayed the course, where as the shrub has no plan but discourse, of course...
 
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<font size="5"><center>Supreme Court hears first global warming case</font size></center>

29 Nov 2006 18:43:33 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Nov 29 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court considered its first global warming case on Wednesday, in a matter that pits environmental groups against the U.S. agency meant to shield Americans from pollution.

The case, known as Massachusetts v. EPA, was brought by a dozen states and 13 environmental organizations against the Environmental Protection Agency. The plaintiffs argue that the greenhouse gas emissions from cars, trucks and factories should be regulated by the U.S. government.

The EPA, along with 10 states, four motor vehicle trade associations and two coalitions of utility companies and other industries, maintain the agency lacks the authority to limit emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.

Even if EPA did have this authority, the science on global warming is so uncertain that no regulation should be made, the government's lawyer argued before the court.

At the heart of the case is a dispute over whether greenhouse gases fit the federal Clean Air Act's definition of a pollutant. The plaintiffs argue that if they do, the EPA then has the power to regulate them.

But Gregory Garre, the U.S. deputy solicitor general who argued the government's case, said the EPA has never determined that carbon dioxide, one of the greenhouse gases emitted by motor vehicles, endangers Americans by causing global warming.

"There is substantial scientific uncertainty surrounding global climate change," Garre repeatedly told the justices.

James Milkey, a Massachusetts assistant attorney general who argued the plaintiffs' case, said the dangers from global climate change were particularly keenly felt in his state.

IMMINENT HARM

Global warming has been blamed for rising seas, which could affect 200 miles (322 km) of Massachusetts coastline, Milkey said.

"Is this harm imminent?" Justice Antonin Scalia asked. "When is the predicted cataclysm?"

"It's not so much a cataclysm, it's more like ongoing harm," Milkey replied.

Emissions have risen steeply over the past century and many scientists see a connection between this rise and an increase in global average temperatures and a related increase in extreme weather, wildfires, melting glaciers and other damage to the environment.

This case is not a debate about whether these emissions are linked to global warming. The Bush administration, and in fact President George W. Bush himself, have acknowledged this link, and Bush told a summit of industrialized nations this year that human activities play a role in world climate change.

At issue is whether the U.S. government has the power to cap these emissions. Industry groups argue that it doesn't, and that carbon dioxide is a naturally occurring gas that does not fit the U.S. Clean Air Act's definition of a pollutant.

The Bush administration has consistently rejected capping greenhouse gas emissions as bad for business and U.S. workers.

Scalia prompted laughter when he questioned whether carbon dioxide was an air pollutant or a stratosphere pollutant.

"Respectfully, your honor, it is not the stratosphere. It's the troposphere," said Milkey, referring to atmospheric layers that can be affected by pollution.

"Troposphere, whatever," Scalia said as the normally silent gallery erupted in chuckles. "I told you before I'm not a scientist. That's why I don't want to have to deal with global warming."

The Supreme Court is expected to rule on this case by the middle of next year.


http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N29372625.htm
 
Thanks for keeping this alive, Que.

Quick fact for the crypto-wannabe tyrants.

NOAA, back on May, 22 (only six months ago), stated:

“80 percent chance of an above-normal hurricane season, a 15 percent chance of a near-normal season, and only a 5 percent chance of a below-normal season.” “a very active 2006 season, with 13-16 named storms, 8-10 hurricanes, and 4-6 major hurricanes.”


What happened ?

During the 2006 hurricane season there were only nine named-storms, five hurricanes, and two major hurricanes – none of which hit the U.S.

In the intervening time, NOAA put out a revised prediction list which took down the totals on the amount of storms predicted, but the actual amout were still lower than the forecasts. So low, that this past hurricane season (thankfully, especially for those hit by Katrina and the other big hurricane) is a "below normal season", which NOAA only gave a 5% chance of happening.

So, if they cannot get stuff right 6 months (or even 3 months, after the revised forecasts), how can we dare trust those same people to know what is going to happen a century from now.
 
Re: Arctic ice melting rapidly, study says

Very interesting! Thank you for sharing this article with the BGOL members.
 
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<font size="5"><center>
Washington Wakes Up to Global Warming</font size></center>



CLIMATE_CHANGE_AN_UPDATE.sff_NY433_20070127212826.jpg

An ice lake is seen in the Greenland ice cap, in this Aug. 17, 2005,
file photo. Scientists say the vast icy landscape is thinning, and
many blame global warming. (AP Photo/John McConnico/FILE)


Jan 28, 2:44 AM (ET)
Associated Press
By MATT CRENSON

NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe it's the weird winter weather, or the newly Democratic Congress. Maybe it's the news reports about starving polar bears, or the Oscar nomination for Al Gore's global warming cri de coeur, "An Inconvenient Truth." Whatever the reason, years of resistance to the reality of climate change are suddenly melting away like the soon-to-be-history snows of Kilimanjaro.

Now even George W. Bush says it's a problem.

For years, the president and his supporters argued that not enough was known about global warming to do anything about it. But during last week's State of the Union address Bush finally referred to global warming as an established fact.

"These technologies will help us be better stewards of the environment, and they will help us to confront the serious challenge of global climate change," Bush said in proposing a series of measures to reduce gasoline consumption by 20 percent in 10 years.


Environmentalists and scientists who study the problem say the nostrums Bush proposed Tuesday night will do little to prevent the serious environmental effects that the globe faces in coming decades.

Environmentalists favor imposing a mandatory cap on greenhouse gas emissions tied to a market-based emissions trading system. Several of the global warming bills that have been introduced to the new Democrat-controlled Congress would do exactly that. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has proposed creating a new global warming committee to consider the legislation.

"We want the pressure on. The pressure will drive the development of new technologies," said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who introduced one of the global warming bills.

Many industry leaders have come to realize that such measures may be more an opportunity than a hindrance. The day before Bush's speech the chief executives of 10 corporations, including Alcoa Inc. (AA), BP America Inc., DuPont Co. (DD), Caterpillar Inc. (CAT), General Electric Co. (GE) and Duke Energy Corp. (DUK), called for mandatory limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

"It must be mandatory, so there is no doubt about our actions," said Jim Rogers, chairman of Duke Energy. "The science of global warming is clear. We know enough to act now. We must act now."

And a week before the State of the Union address a dozen evangelicals called action against global warming a "moral imperative" in a joint statement with scientists from the Centers for Disease Control, NASA, Harvard and other institutions.

There is still plenty of opposition to action on global warming in both the evangelical and business communities, but the tide is clearly turning.

"You're seeing a major political shift that is fairly broad-based," said Robert Watson, a scientist at the World Bank and former chairman of the United Nations scientific panel responsible for evaluating the threat of climate change.

Scientists have been at the vanguard of the climate change issue for decades. As early as 1965 a scientific advisory board to President Johnson warned that increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide could lead to "marked changes in climate" by 2000.

In 1988 the United Nations created the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Though assailed by critics as an overly alarmist organization, the panel actually represents a relatively cautious assessment of global warming because it relies on input from hundreds of scientists, including well-known skeptics and industry researchers.

Every five or six years since 1990, the IPCC has released an updated assessment of the environmental threat posed by global warming. And every time, a single memorable and increasingly alarming statement has stood out from the thousands of pages of technical discussion.

The first report noted that Earth's average temperature had risen by 0.5 to one degree Fahrenheit in the past century, a warming consistent with the global warming predictions but still within the range of natural climate variability.

"The observed increase could be largely due to this natural variability," the scientists concluded.

But by 1995 that possibility had all but vanished: "The balance of evidence suggests a discernable human influence on global climate," the second IPCC report concluded.

Six years after that: "There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities."

Since then, scientists have accumulated abundant evidence that global warming is upon us. They have documented a dramatic retreat of the Arctic sea in recent summers, accelerated melting on the Greenland and Antarctic ice caps and the virtual collapse in mountain glaciers around the globe. They have found plants and animals well poleward of their normal ranges. They have recorded temperature records in many locations and shifts in atmospheric and oceanic circulation. Globally, the planet is the warmest it has been in thousands of years, if not more.

Emboldened by these discoveries, scientists just in the last month have issued some dire warnings. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, originally formed in response to the dangers of nuclear weapons, cited the climate change threat in moving its "doomsday clock" two minutes closer to midnight. And Britain's meteorological agency announced just three days into the year that 2007 has a 60 percent likelihood of being the warmest year on record, thanks to the combined effects of global warming and El Nino.

"You just can't explain the observed changes that we've seen in the last half of the 20th century by invoking natural causes," said Benjamin Santer, a U.S. government scientist who was involved in previous IPCC assessments.

The scientists who will gather in Paris this coming week to complete the first section of this year's IPCC report are not allowed to talk about the early drafts that have been circulating in recent months.

But there is little doubt that when the report is released on Friday it will include references to some of the specific environmental effects of global warming that have already been observed, and an even stronger statement about the imminent threat of global warming.

http://apnews1.iwon.com/article/20070128/D8MU59780.html
 
Re: Arctic ice melting rapidly, study says

<font size="4"><center>
"In conclusion, I can only say that there is absolutely no
credible evidence of significant human influence where
global warming is concerned."
</font size></center>



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From the Boston Globe

JEFF JACOBY
Chicken Little and global warming
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | February 7, 2007

YOU KNOW that big United Nations report on global warming that appeared last week amid so much media sound and fury? Here's a flash: It wasn't the big, new United Nations report on global warming.

Oddly enough, most of the news coverage neglected to mention that the document released on Feb. 2 by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was not the latest multiyear assessment report, which will run to something like 1,500 pages when it is released in May. It was only the 21-page "Summary for Policymakers," a document written chiefly by government bureaucrats -- not scientists -- and intended to shape public opinion. Perhaps the summary will turn out to be a faithful reflection of the scientists' conclusions, but it wouldn't be the first time if it doesn't.

In years past, scientists contributing to IPCC assessment reports have protested that the policymakers' summary distorted their findings -- for example, by presenting as unambiguous what were actually only tentative conclusions about human involvement in global warming. This time around, the summary is even more confident: It declares it "unequivocal" that the Earth has warmed over the past century and "very likely" -- meaning more than 90 percent certain -- that human activity is the cause.

That climate change is taking place no one doubts; the Earth's climate is always in flux. But is it really so clear-cut that the current warming, which amounts to less than 1 degree Celsius over the past century, is anthropogenic? Or that continued warming will lead to the meteorological chaos and massive deaths that alarmists predict? It is to the media. By and large they relay only the apocalyptic view: Either we embark on a radical program to slash carbon-dioxide emissions -- that is, to arrest economic growth -- or we are doomed, as NBC's Matt Lauer put it last week, to "what literally could be the end of the world as we know it."

Perhaps the Chicken Littles are right and the sky really is falling, but that opinion is hardly unanimous. There are quite a few skeptical scientists, including eminent climatologists, who doubt the end-of-the-world scenario. Why don't journalists spend more time covering all sides of the debate instead of just parroting the scaremongers?

Only rarely do other views pierce the media's filter of environmental correctness. A recent series by Lawrence Solomon in Canada's National Post looked at some of the leading global-warming dissenters, none of whom fits the easy-to-dismiss stereotype of a flat-Earth yahoo. There is, for example, Richard S.J. Tol -- IPCC author, editor of Energy Economics, and board member of the Centre for Marine and Climate Research at Hamburg University. Tol agrees that global warming is real, but he emphasizes its benefits as well as its harms -- and points out that in the short term, the benefits are especially pronounced.

Another dissident is Duncan Wingham, professor of climate physics at University College London and principal scientist of the European Space Agency's CryoSat Mission, which is designed to measure changes in the Earth's ice masses. The collapse of ice shelves off the northern Antarctic Peninsula is often highlighted as Exhibit A of global warming and its dangers, but Wingham's satellite data shows that the thinning of some Antarctic ice has been matched by thickening ice elsewhere on the continent. The evidence to date, Wingham says, is not "favorable to the notion we are seeing the results of global warming."

Still other scientists profiled by Solomon contend that the sun, not man, plays the dominant role in planetary climate change.

Henrik Svensmark of the Danish National Space Center, for instance,believes that changes in the sun's magnetic field, and the corresponding impact on cosmic rays, may be the key to global warming. Nigel Weiss, a past presidentof the Royal Astronomical Society and a mathematical aerophysicist at the University of Cambridge, correlates sunspot activity with changes in the Earth's climate. Habibullo Abdussamatov, who heads the space research laboratory at Pulkovo Astronomical Observatoryin Russia, points out that Mars is also undergoing global warming -- despite having no greenhouse conditions and no activity by Martians. In his view, it is solar irradiance, not carbon dioxide, that accounts for the recent rise in temperature.

Climate-change hyperbole makes for dramatic headlines, but the real story is both more complex and more interesting. Chicken Little may claim the sky is falling. A journalist's job is to check it out.
 
Good post again FAY. Perfect. Like I said in another post and I'll say it again here, for the scientific community, this is the big moneygrabbing fraud they are cultivating in the media. They continue trying different stuff until they can find the thing that sticks. Africanized bees, BirdFlu, and Spongiform Encephalopathy to name a few recent examples.

Back in the day, Sun Spots, according to many of those same scientists was going to be the death of man on earth. Billions were dumped into it until that lie dried up. To those people freezing their collective asses off in 15 degree temps in the northeast of the US, tell those politicians to give you a break.

-VG
 
Global-Warming Hype

<font size="5"><center>The Church of Climate Panic</font size></center>


By Rich Lowry
National Review Editor
February 9, 2007


Sophisticated people in Western societies don’t stand in public and shout, “The end is near!” the way a nutty preacher does. They don’t cut their scalps the way Shia Muslims do in a rite of self-flagellation to mark the Day of Ashura. They do none of these things, because they have the issue of global warming instead.

The planet is indeed getting warmer (by about .7 degrees Celsius during the 20th century), and carbon emissions are contributing to it. This is a problem that deserves study and debate about what realistically can be done about it. But it doesn’t justify the bizarre panic that suggests the issue has become a trendy vehicle for traditional fears of the apocalypse and for rituals of guilt and expiation.

The latest assessment of the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change — the Vatican of the Church of Climate Panic — prompted apocalyptic headlines worldwide. The New York Times dubbed it “a grim and powerful assessment of the future of the planet.” Actually, the summary report was less grim than prior reports, but grimness is the only acceptable mood when it comes to climate change.

Christopher Monckton, a former adviser to British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, points to the neglected data in the IPCC summary. It “more than halved its high-end best estimate of the rise in sea level by (the year) 2100 from 3 feet to just 17 inches.” In his scare-documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth,” Al Gore posited a catastrophic sea-level rise of more than 20 feet (feet, not inches).

Monckton notes that, “The U.N. has cut its estimate of our net effect on climate by more than a third,” and, “It now thinks pollutant particles reflecting sunlight back to space have a very strong cooling effect.” As for the increase in temperature, Monckton writes, the best estimate for the effect of the CO2 level reaching “560 parts per million, twice the level of 1750, was 3.5 C in the 2001 report. Now it is down to 3 C.”

But no editors are going to run blaring headlines, “IPCC Climbs Down Slightly From Direst Predictions.” The report was, in any case, crafted to avoid any such less-than-grim headlines. “I hope this report will shock people,” said the chairman of the IPCC.

Shock tactics inevitably mean simplifying in an area of unimaginable complexity. No one knows how to create a reliable model of the planet’s climate, and inconvenient anomalies muddy the story line of the warming zealots. From 1940 to 1975, the global temperature fell even as CO2 emission rose. Since 2001, global temperatures have only gone up a statistically insignificant 0.03 degrees Celsius. And in recent years, the oceans have actually gotten cooler.

None of this, obviously, is to deny global warming, but to introduce a note of caution about the calls for individual and collective self-denial that accompany the warming panic. If people feel better about using compact fluorescent light bulbs, so be it, but schemes to mandate drastic reductions in carbon emissions based on avoiding an entirely speculative calamity are folly.

Even the Kyoto Treaty, which would have only a slight effect on global climate even if fully implemented, is unrealistic. Earnest, well-meaning Canada would have to reduce its emissions by a whooping (and impossible) one third to meet its Kyoto target by 2012. That great climate scold, Europe, has been increasing its CO(2) emissions at a rate faster than ours, according to Christopher Horner of the Competitive Enterprise Institute. We can crack-down on our emissions as much as we like, but China will soon pass the U.S. as the world’s greatest polluter and is robustly unrepentant about it.

The sensible ways to try to mitigate global warming and counteract its effects in the long run are the development of new energy technologies in the West, as well as economic development and aid programs for those third-world countries that are most vulnerable to disease and sea-level rises. These solutions won’t, however, satiate the deeper atavistic urges behind the global-warming panic. For that, people will have to head to their nearest place of worship.

© 2007 by King Features Syndicate

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ODVlZGY5MTM0YmE3OTc5YmY0YjQ1ZTdlOWQ5NWI1NWY=
 
<font size="5"><center>March of the Lemmings</font size><font size="4">
Media shuns climate-change report’s good news on sea levels.</font size></center>

National Review
By Dana Joel Gattuso
February 22, 2007 7:00 AM

Remember the headlines last summer, spurred by the release of Al Gore’s film An Inconvenient Truth, warning that massive amounts of Antarctica’s ice sheets are melting, threatening to raise sea levels 20 feet worldwide and wipe out Antarctica’s emperor penguins and polar bears? Remember the alarming reports that Greenland’s glaciers are shrinking so rapidly that a third of Florida and the lower part of Manhattan could be swept away within the next 200 years?

Well guess what? The long awaited Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report summary released this month threw some badly needed cold water on that over-heated hype. According to the IPCC, based on the work of 2,500 scientists around the globe, Antarctica’s ice sheets will “remain too cold for widespread surface melting” and “is expected to gain in mass due to increased snowfall.”

The report summary also says there is no scientific consensus that Greenland’s ice caps are melting enough to contribute to increased sea levels. And while the writers do acknowledge unknowns, including some observed variability and local changes in glaciers in the polar regions that could contribute to future increased sea levels, it states that overall “there is no consensus on their magnitude.”

In spite of recent criticism by some complaining that the IPCC summary is “too conservative,” its conclusions are consistent with the findings presented this month in Science. The article’s authors, scientists with the Polar Science Center at the University of Washington and the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado, observe that two among the largest glaciers in Greenland, which were thought to have been melting rapidly and flowing into the sea, have now actually stabilized, bringing their rate of discharge back to previous levels. The scientists discovered that Greenland’s second- and third-largest glaciers, which have been making headlines recently for doubling the amount of discharge between 2000 and 2005, have over the past two years reversed course and actually increased in mass.

The authors attribute inaccurate assessments of the glaciers’ activity to “snapshots” scientists have been taking in the region: “Our main point is that the behavior of these glaciers can change a lot from year to year, so we can’t assume to know the future behavior from short records of recent changes.”

What does all this mean for future sea levels? The IPCC estimates seas globally will rise somewhere between 7 and 23 inches over the next 100 years, a lower estimate than presented by the IPCC in 2001, and a far cry from Al Gore’s prediction of 20 to 40 feet in An Inconvenient Truth.

To put the IPCC’s estimate in context, the average global sea-level rise during the 20th century was 6-8 inches, and it was 3-7 inches during the 19th century, although it is difficult for scientists to be precise.

But none of these factoids really matters. Our lawmakers and the media continue to warn us to head for the hills. Senator Feinstein calls the sea-level estimate “catastrophic,” warning that “low-lying nations and coastal communities will be lost to flooding.” ABC’s Good Morning America asks viewers via a graphic, just prior to the report’s release, “Will billions die from global warming: new details on thirst and hunger.” And numerous articles and news programs fabricate doom by highlighting what’s not in the IPCC report. As Bill Weir of ABC’s World News comments, “what we didn’t hear as much about…[in the] grim report about…a looming climate catastrophe is rising water. And…that may be the scariest part of all.”

Even some print media are inventing stories about climate change where none exist. A recent front-page article in the Washington Post blares in its headline: “Climate Change Is Linked to Damage, Destruction of Old Sites Around Chesapeake.” The article tells a disturbing tale of cemeteries along the Chesapeake Bay being washed away by rising bay waters. The inside page of the article reveals the main cause as a geological quirk that is causing the land in the region to sink and the soil to erode. But the front page attributes the gravesites’ damage to “rising water levels — an old problem, apparently accelerated by climate change” (emphasis added). The author provides no evidence to this claim, just a non sequitur that the IPCC reports sea-levels are expected to rise up to 23 inches in 100 years.

The good news is, the IPCC news isn’t so bad. The bad news is, you wouldn’t know it reading news reports. Climatologist Patrick Michaels got it right when he predicted “what’s not new in today’s IPCC report — that humans are warming the planet — will be treated as big news, while what is new — that sea levels are not likely to rise as much as previously predicted — will be ignored.”

The march of the media lemmings will continue. Perhaps the rest of us will manage to keep our cool.

— Dana Joel Gattuso is a senior fellow with the Washington, D.C.-based National Center for Public Policy Research.

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ZDBjNDVhNzljODYwYmIyNDFiNjUzNWQ2NTQ2MTQ5Mzg=
 
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Hey, Where Are The Folks Saying Global Warming Is Real, And We Are Causing It!!!! Please Come By To Explain How Noaa Was Sooo Wrong On Last Years Predictions !!! And On How Much Of The Ocean Surface Tempatures Actually Cooled Recently !!! Please, Let's Discuss/debate !!!!
 
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