Environmentalists' Wild Predictions

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The Media and Reporting on the Environment

From Realclearpolitics.com

April 05, 2006
The Media and Reporting on the Environment
By David Mastio

Next time you read a magazine cover story like the one Time just published ("Be Worried. Be VERY Worried. Polar Ice Caps Are Melting ... More And More Land Is Being Devastated ... Rising Waters Are Drowning Low-Lying Communities... The climate is crashing, and global warming is to blame") you should remember one little fact: U.S. media companies, including Time Warner, donate more to the environmental movement than any other industry. Companies like The New York Times, Gannett, Tribune, ABC, CBS and NBC have donated more than a half-billion worth of ad space since the 1990s to raise money for some of the nation's most extreme environmental groups. And yes, that was billion with a B.

To put that number in perspective, America's media companies donate more to environmental groups every year than the much-feared Olin Foundation's spent annually in its effort to build the institutional foundation of the conservative movement.

The deal works like this: The Ad Council endorses and distributes ads that encourage people to give money to "Earth Share," a fundraising front group whose members include dozens of groups from the moderate Nature Conservancy to the radical Friends of the Earth. Media companies donate vast amounts of air time and ad space, assuming that Ad Council campaigns follow the charity's standards such as the rule that campaigns must be "non-commercial, non-denominational, non-partisan, and not be designated to influence legislation." (http://www.adcouncil.org/default.aspx?id=319)

That rule may be important to our non-partisan media, but the Ad Council treats it like a joke. Earth Share's Fall 2005 newsletter, released at the same time as the latest round of Ad Council ads, brags that its members helped "defeat numerous efforts to pass legislation." (http://www.earthshare.org/news_resources/sharing_news.html)

Environmental ads' dubious facts

And the ads sponsored by Earth Share, endorsed by the Ad Council and fueled by media donations are not exactly examples of truth in advertising. Here's the text of one radio ad released last fall:

"Place your hand on your heart ... measure the beats ... 1...2...3...4...5... That's how long it takes to protect your child's life. Five heart beats. That's how long it takes to learn about the dangers of pesticides that could be in your child's classroom. Asthma, lower IQ scores and cancer have all been linked to prolonged exposure to these toxins ..."

Want to know the number of national medical and public health organizations that consider classroom chemical exposure a significant cause of cancer. Z-E-R-O. Want to know the number of scientific groups that blame classroom chemical exposure for asthma and low IQs? Yep, zilch. (Indeed, if you take the time to look it up, average IQ scores are rising.)

An agenda bigger than environmentalism

By giving free space to environmentalists' fundraising campaign, the press is not just broadcasting deceptive messages that stoke public anxiety, they're also laundering the image of environmentalism. The Ad Council name gives the fundraising a patina of non-partisanship. The Earth Share name gives the campaign a soft-focus that hides the full agenda of its member groups.

If you've given money to Earth Share, you might believe, as Harrison Ford says in some of Earth Share's Ad Council sponsored ads, there's "one environment and one simple way to care for it" - give some cash to Earth Share.

The reality is less simple. There may be one environment, but there are many other causes that can hijack your money: Efforts to stop missile defense testing (Union of Concerned Scientists), running attack ads against Senators who opposed campaign finance reform (Sierra Club) and derailing global trade negotiations or trying to give Bill Bradley the Democratic presidential nod instead of Al Gore (Friends of the Earth) are all causes supported by Earth Share members.

Earth Share members also tend to take a knee-jerk anti-technology stance, even when the new technology may benefit the environment. For instance, Earth Share's membership is almost universally opposed to biotechnology because "Frankenfood" genes may contaminate the environment or harm someone, somewhere, somehow. Who knows, they may be right. But while they raise these hypothetical concerns, they ignore concrete environmental benefits. Genetic engineering has significantly raised crop yields, allowing farmers to feed more people with less land. That leaves more room for wildlife. Genetic engineering also increases resistance to plant pests allowing farmers to slash their use of chemicals.

And now onto global warming

Which brings us to the latest news from the nexus between extreme environmentalism and the "non-partisan" Ad Council: The launch of a new campaign aimed at raising public awareness of our global warming crisis. The web site for the campaign (www.fightglobalwarming.com) makes things pretty clear: "Global warming is the most serious environmental issue of our time."

If those are the stakes, then the Ad Council would surely want the most persuasive messenger to bring this important information to the public, right?

And since "most respected scientific organizations have stated unequivocally that global warming is happening, and people are causing it ...," it should be easy for the Ad Council to find a non-partisan scientific messenger, then right?

Well, for some reason, no. The Ad Council has given us exactly the opposite: Their messenger is Environmental Defense (formerly known as the Environmental Defense Fund), a group with a reputation for crying wolf. Right now on their web page, ED asks parents to click to find out whether their children are in "danger" from dirty air. Nowhere can parents find the more comforting fact that, no matter where they live, kids today are breathing cleaner air than they did 50 years ago.

Just to add to their credibility, ED also has a reputation for partisanship, regularly adding its name to anti-Bush administration attacks ads and featuring the wife of the last Democratic presidential aspirant on its board.

And true to form, Environmental Defense takes a reasonable case - we should do something about global warming - and turns it into a joke: "While the world itself will not end, the world as we know it may disappear," ED intones in a Q & A on the site.

Saving the climate by stopping wind power

And that's where this whole Ad Council/Earth Share/Environmental Defense tangle gets impossible to follow.

We know, because the Ad Council tells us so, that "global warming is the most serious environmental issue of our time." The world as we know it is at stake. We also know, because the Ad Council tells us so, that there is "one simple way" to care for the environment - give money to Earth Share.

We also know, that in the short term, there are four kinds of energy society can use that are a) widely available and b) will lower our impact on the global climate: Hydro-electric, wind power, nuclear energy and natural gas.

Yet in every case, the Ad Council is using its vast resources to raise money that makes turning to those sources of power harder, not easier.

Earth Share members, such as the Union of Concerned Scientists, have filed complaints asking the government to shutter dozens of nuclear power plants across the U.S., they're standing in the way of opening a central repository for nuclear waste and they're opposing regulatory changes that would streamline the permitting process so that the United States could add new zero-climate impact nuclear power for the first time in a generation.

Today, the United States is among the top three nations in the world in producing climate-friendly hydro-electric power. It might not stay that way. In an effort to protect endangered trout and salmon, Earth Share members, such as Defenders of Wildlife, have pushed repeatedly - and in some cases successfully -- to "breach" hydro-electric dams as a way to restore fish habitat.

Of fossil fuel power sources, natural gas is the cleanest and, because it is also the most efficient, it has the least impact on climate. Yet all over the United States environmental groups both local and national are fighting to stop its use. In the mountain West, Earth share members are fighting to stop exploration for and production of natural gas. If we can't produce natural gas in the United States, then we'll need to import it. That can't happen either because Ad Council-funded groups such as the U.S. PIRG, People for the Narragansett Bay and Save the Sound, are fighting to stop the infrastructure projects that would allow that.

Which brings us to the most bizarre case of all - wind power. If there's one thing you'd think would be mom and apple pie for environmentalists, wind power would be it, but its not.

For the most part, environmentalists are embarrassed by the fact that they can't even stomach the development of wind turbines. For that reason, environmentalists are letting the local NIMBY's do most of the heavy lifting, while national environmental groups such as Earth Share's Audubon Society quietly push for greater regulations under the cover of protection for endangered bats and birds. If you talk to wind power executives, they'll tell you that one-two punch of angry locals and quietly influential national groups have stalled and scaled bank wind farms from Vermont to California.

It may be true that every single one of the environmental concerns raised to block hydro-power, wind energy, nuclear plants and natural gas development are all valid. But if global warming is really, really the "most serious environmental issue of our time," shouldn't environmentalists be willing to put their other concerns aside until we deal with the dangers of runaway climate change?

Maybe if our largest television networks, newspapers and magazines weren't the largest fundraisers for these same environmental groups, they'd be in a position to ask.

David Mastio has been an environmental reporter for The Detroit News, a speechwriter for the Bush administration, an editorial writer for USA Today and one of the founding editors of The Washington Examiner. He is also the founder of InOpinion.com.

(c) 2000-2006 RealClearPolitics
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

A film trailer, hosted by Al Gore...

www.climatecrisis.net

<embed style="width:400px; height:326px;" id="VideoPlayback" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=2078944470709189270"> </embed>
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

GET YOU HOT said:
A film trailer, hosted by Al Gore...

www.climatecrisis.net

<embed style="width:400px; height:326px;" id="VideoPlayback" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=2078944470709189270"> </embed>
Please address the issues raised in the posted article.

And BTW, as I have said before, there has been NO accurate prediction regarding global warming yet, and last year (2005) was a DEAD AVERAGE year for global cyclones.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Anyone over the age of 1day old of age has witnessed the deterioration of our envirnonment, first hand; That goes without saying...
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

GET YOU HOT said:
Anyone over the age of 1day old of age has witnessed the deterioration of our envirnonment, first hand; That goes without saying...
:smh: Typical response. :smh:
Then why don't you get rid of the computer you typed that message on (the plastics used required the generation of PCB's, the electricity used to power it most likely came from CO2 and acid rain generating coal). And a whole bunch of other things that create pollution.
The point is that of course there has been degredation of the enviroment. That is why we have gotten MUCH more energy efficient. None more so than the US. The same amount of gas that used to power an Impala 20-25 years ago now powers an SUV. The average refrigerator uses 35-50% less energy than 20 years ago. I could go on and on. The biggest polluters (not energy producers, but polluters) are India and China. But I don't hear SHIT about them. Fuck, the Kyoto protocols WOULD NOT EVEN APPLY TO THEM.
Sheesh, why don't some of you panic mongers kill yourselves and rid us of the greenhouse gas (hot air) that you're producing.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Damn ... sitting here holding by damn <s>breath</s> hot air ... LOL. GYH, its gone take a hellava response to what he just said ...

QueEx
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Fuckallyall said:
:smh: Typical response. :smh:
Then why don't you get rid of the computer you typed that message on (the plastics used required the generation of PCB's, the electricity used to power it most likely came from CO2 and acid rain generating coal). And a whole bunch of other things that create pollution.
The point is that of course there has been degredation of the enviroment. That is why we have gotten MUCH more energy efficient. None more so than the US. The same amount of gas that used to power an Impala 20-25 years ago now powers an SUV. The average refrigerator uses 35-50% less energy than 20 years ago. I could go on and on. The biggest polluters (not energy producers, but polluters) are India and China. But I don't hear SHIT about them. Fuck, the Kyoto protocols WOULD NOT EVEN APPLY TO THEM.
Sheesh, why don't some of you panic mongers kill yourselves and rid us of the greenhouse gas (hot air) that you're producing.


And what does this have to do with the media? I posted an upcoming movie trailer and you chose to go off on a tangent...

F.Y.I...The Norhwest is on the cutting edge of environmental consciousness...................................................................
I contribute to preserving the environment with recycling aluminum cans & cardboard, ridesharing, bicycling or walking, water conservation, donations of clothing & household goods, using plastic or paper grocery bags for trash, I don't use a dishwasher, etc

As for Panic, Why don't some of you bottom feeders contribute to society in a positive way instead of steadily pointing the finger at others when they are actually the ones' consciousness you are living off of?

Green...Peace! :)
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

GET YOU HOT said:
And what does this have to do with the media? I posted an upcoming movie trailer and you chose to go off on a tangent...

F.Y.I...The Norhwest is on the cutting edge of environmental consciousness...................................................................
I contribute to preserving the environment with recycling aluminum cans & cardboard, ridesharing, bicycling or walking, water conservation, donations of clothing & household goods, using plastic or paper grocery bags for trash, I don't use a dishwasher, etc

As for Panic, Why don't some of you bottom feeders contribute to society in a positive way instead of steadily pointing the finger at others when they are actually the ones' consciousness you are living off of?

Green...Peace! :)

Once again, YOU HAVE NOT ADRESSED THE ORIGINAL ARUGEMENT THAT THE MEDIA DOES NOT ACCURATELY REPORT ENVIRMENTAL INFORMATION !!!.

Now, you went on a tangent posting a trailer. Not I.

On to the rest. You are not the only one recycling. Metal recycling started waaaayyyyy before you self righteous nanny's came on the scene. It takes 1/4 the amount of energy to recycle metal than to smelt from ore.

Recycling cardboard/paper has mixed results. For one, it takes a good amount of fuel to re-pulp, and you create alot of polluted water because you have to bleach the paper during the process. It is my and some enviromentalists opinion that we would be better off composing instead of recycling paper. Trees grow back sweetie, and that compost is the perfect food for them.

And don't be so proud of washing with you hands. You actually are very likely to use MORE water than a dishwasher, while putting you (and your loved ones, especially young and old/sick) in danger because you cannot wash in hot enough water to sanitize the food recepticle.

And you panic mongers criticize what the inventors have done, not the other way around. Did the inventors/industrialists criticize your ilk when they made the railroads (which is what allowed your area of the country to be populated in the first place), or did you bitch and moan (with some good reason of course) because of the smoke ? Come on now, get real.
All many of you guys do is bitch and moan about the same things you use on a daily basis. It's just bullshit hypocricy plain and simple. Even the co-founder of Greenpeace left thee organization he started because of the self-righteous and delusional madness perpatrated by the lunatic fringe which you seem to be a member of.

Because of the thought pattern you and your ilk have, MILLIONS of africans die neddlessly every year from Malaria. Look it up, you might just learn something.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

I said Green....Peace :) not GREENPEACE :lol:

This is Green...
http://www.green.org/

This is the Peace Sign...

PalPeaceFlag.gif


peace-in-our-time.jpg
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Pertaining to Malaria, I don't need to look it up.

I just completed an Anthropology course.

We studied the orgins of man amongst other subjects...

One of them interestingly enough was the subject of Malaria and how many Africans have been born with a genetic "trigger" of sorts called Sickle Cell Anemia...you look it up.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

GET YOU HOT said:
Pertaining to Malaria, I don't need to look it up.

I just completed an Anthropology course.

We studied the orgins of man amongst other subjects...

One of them interestingly enough was the subject of Malaria and how many Africans have been born with a genetic "trigger" of sorts called Sickle Cell Anemia...you look it up.
1. I knew about Sickle Cell being a mutation to ward off Malaria from childhood. I had two friends with it, and one of them died from an embolism because of it (or something to that effect). I didn't have to go to school to learn it, I experienced it and had to cope. Which is a BIG distinction.
2. What I was referring to is that because of the arrogance of folks of your mindset, who think they know whats best for others, whether those others agree or not, cause thier suffering. The ban of UN funds for ANYTHING to do with DDT causes Hundreds of thousands of Africans to die. See the attached article.
3. You STILL did not address the points made in my original post. I don't let go. Those that think like you have run amok for long enough. Somebody must meet your hysterics with reason. I do love the enviroment, and enjoy it reguarly on my camping and occasional hunting trips. But the stuff you pop is wrong and dangerous. Sadly, you have more policy pull than you should.

THE HEARTLAND INSTITUTE
19 South LaSalle Street #903
Chicago, IL 60603
phone 312/377-4000 · fax 312/377-5000
http://www.heartland.org


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Africa Marks Malaria Day; U.S. Rethinking DDT



Author: Roy Innis
Published: The Heartland Institute 06/01/2006


Every year, Africa Malaria Day--April 25--is marked by promises to bring malaria under control. But every year the calls for action turn out to be mere bombast, as health care agencies refuse to go beyond bed nets and "capacity building;" radical greens continue to obstruct proven solutions; and disease and death rates climb. This year, however, Africa Malaria Day proved changes may finally be coming.


400 Million Afflicted

More than 400 million African mothers, fathers, and children are afflicted with acute malaria. That's as many victims as there are people in the United States and Mexico combined.

Fevers, chills, vomiting, diarrhea, delirium, and unconsciousness leave them unable to work, cultivate fields, attend school, or care for their families, for weeks on end. Many are permanently brain-damaged. Nearly one million die each and every year. No wonder sub-Saharan Africa is one of the most impoverished regions on Earth.


Use of DDT Essential

Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore, and hundreds of physicians, clergy, and human rights advocates have joined me in demanding that DDT be put back into the malaria control arsenal. The U.S. Congress, Republicans and Democrats alike, now supports indoor DDT spraying as a vital component of any successful malaria control program, and the U.S. Agency for International Development has initiated DDT and other insecticide spraying programs in several countries.

Sprayed in small quantities, just twice a year, on the walls and eaves of mud-and-thatch or cinderblock homes, DDT keeps 90 percent of mosquitoes from entering, and it irritates any that do come in, so they rarely bite. No other insecticide at any price does that. DDT also kills mosquitoes that land on walls.

Used this way, virtually no DDT ever reaches the environment. But the health results are astounding.

Within two years of starting DDT programs, South Africa, Mozambique, Zambia, Madagascar, and Swaziland slashed their malaria rates by 75 percent or more. With fewer people getting sick, they could get scarce ACT drugs to nearly all victims, cutting rates even further. By contrast, bed nets might reduce malaria rates by only 20 percent.


EU, Activists Oppose DDT

Other countries want to launch similar programs. However, the European Union (EU) is again warning of possible agricultural export sanctions against Uganda, Kenya, and other countries that use DDT to save lives. Previous threats were pointed and direct; the latest are more oblique.

"Nothing will happen, at least on the official side, if they decide to use DDT in strict compliance with the Stockholm Convention" on chemicals, the EU's trade representative to Uganda said recently. But the EU has "no control" over environmental and consumer organizations that might pressure supermarkets to stop selling agricultural products from those nations, he claimed.

In other words, if callous activists want to exaggerate the risks from trace amounts of insecticides and ignore the very real, life-or-death dangers those insecticides could prevent, the EU's hands are tied. It can't even do anything as simple as issuing an official statement attesting that DDT is safe and effective and represents no threat to EU consumers. If more Africans get sick and die, that's a shame, but we Europeans have our own concerns--that's the EU's position.

The struggle for human rights--especially the fundamental right to life itself--is obviously not over.


Successful in America, Europe

Malaria once killed thousands of Americans annually, from New York to California, from Florida and Louisiana to Michigan and Alaska. It sent Jamestown colonists to early graves and, even in the 1930s, reduced the industrial output of America's southern states by a third.

It arrived in Europe 2,600 years ago. Hippocrates described it, Cromwell died from it, and Charles II and Louis XIV nearly perished from it. From Italy and Romania to Poland and the English Channel, malarial mosquitoes ruled over Europe for centuries. Malaria was not eradicated in Germany until 1950, in the Netherlands until 1959.

Aggressive interventions, including widespread use of DDT, finally ended malaria's deadly grip. Once the United States and Europe became malaria-free, however, they began to impose restrictions that have perpetuated malaria elsewhere, especially in Africa.

The United States and Europe banned DDT while grudgingly leaving a rarely honored exception in the Stockholm Convention. With few exceptions, aid agencies refused to supply or support the use of insecticides, especially DDT. They still promote bed nets and education while awaiting a vaccine that's still a decade away, and awaiting mud-and-thatch huts miraculously becoming modern homes with doors and window screens.


Ban Created New Holocaust

Not surprisingly, there has been another holocaust of Africans every few years, and malaria deaths since the 1972 DDT ban may in fact exceed the entire World War II death toll. The West's policy on DDT has been a travesty worse than colonialism ever was, a human rights violation of monstrous proportions.

I have seen this devastation with my own eyes. Malaria destroyed the lives of my wife's African friends and family members. Last Christmas, my nephew returned to a Ugandan school that he sponsors, to find that 50 of its 500 young students had died from malaria in just 12 months. My daughter-in-law lost two sisters, two nephews, and her little son.


Time for Action

It's time for Europe to end its deadly policies. Individual countries and the EU Parliament must issue an unequivocal declaration:


supporting DDT as a vital component of any malaria control program;


affirming the right of every country's health minister to decide which weapons to use in combating disease;


agreeing to support insecticide spraying programs;


saying trade bans and lethal supermarket campaigns will not be tolerated; and


pledging to penalize any country or organization that tries to block lifesaving insecticide programs.

For too long, the European Union, environmental groups, and health care agencies let horribly misguided policies perpetuate malaria's global reign of terror. They have it within their power to save millions of lives and improve health and economic conditions for billions.

If they can find the necessary moral clarity and political willpower, countless mothers and daughters, fathers and sons will be spared the ravages of this killer disease. And by the next Africa Malaria Day, there will actually be something to celebrate--not just in Africa but also in Asian and Latin American countries that are still plagued by this ancient, deadly disease.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

the stuff you pop is wrong and dangerous. Sadly, you have more policy pull than you should.

One last thought for you....

TRUTHS ARE ONLY HALF TRUTHS, APPLY EXPERIENCE & KNOWLEDGE WILL COME TO YOU, FULL CIRCLE- GET YOU HOT
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

GET YOU HOT said:
One last thought for you....

TRUTHS ARE ONLY HALF TRUTHS, APPLY EXPERIENCE & KNOWLEDGE WILL COME TO YOU, FULL CIRCLE- GET YOU HOT
1. You should start by taking your own advice, and applying this quoute to what you think you know.

2. Thought for you.

"Virtue is more to be feared than vice, because its excesses are not subject to the regulation of conscience."

Adam Smith, economist, philospher, and the thinker behind the free market system.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

I choose not to divulge all I know idiot, this is the internet :lol:

This is you, Fuckallyall, In the Black Ops in New Orleans thread responding to Makeherhappy...now STFU.


Actually I try to be a dis-disinformer. Don't get mad, get educated.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

GET YOU HOT said:
I choose not to divulge all I know idiot, this is the internet :lol:

This is you, Fuckallyall, In the Black Ops in New Orleans thread responding to Makeherhappy...now STFU.
Hey, easy with the name calling. This is not the main board. If you want to go there, fine with me. But while we are here, let's keep it right.

Now, what the hell are you talking about with that post. That I try to be a dis-disinformer. That means I am trying to disrupt disinformation. It's a play on words, get it!

Probably not.

But anyway, you still have not addressed any of the points issued in my original post. You are sure being enviromentally inefficient here, ranting and repeadedly going off topic, using all that energy posting hysterics.

Keept the focus, if you can. I like to argue, as you can probably tell. But I like to discuss while I am arguing, which is why I am on a discussion board.

:dance: HOLLA!!! :dance:
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

If in your opinion the argument stating the burning of fossil fuels causes global warming and global warming is a threat to the environment is overstated. What is the harm in this overstatement. Is it your belief that fossil fuels are not a harm to the environment?

The article was pretty pointless to me. Especially given how right-wingers hate conspiracy theories it seems kind of odd that they would devlop a very tenuous link between donations to environmental groups and reporting on environmental issues. Exactly what does the media have to gain from overstating the environmental impact of fossil fuel?

The bottom line is the burning of fossil fuels is detrimental to the environmnet and I doubt anyone would argue otherwise. Whether or not this will cause a dramatic climatic event in the near or far future is unknown at this time. But if you care about the environment why fight over the overtstating of a known harm. Would you rather it be understated and people care less?
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Temujin said:
If in your opinion the argument stating the burning of fossil fuels causes global warming and global warming is a threat to the environment is overstated. What is the harm in this overstatement. Is it your belief that fossil fuels are not a harm to the environment?

The article was pretty pointless to me. Especially given how right-wingers hate conspiracy theories it seems kind of odd that they would devlop a very tenuous link between donations to environmental groups and reporting on environmental issues. Exactly what does the media have to gain from overstating the environmental impact of fossil fuel?

The bottom line is the burning of fossil fuels is detrimental to the environmnet and I doubt anyone would argue otherwise. Whether or not this will cause a dramatic climatic event in the near or far future is unknown at this time. But if you care about the environment why fight over the overtstating of a known harm. Would you rather it be understated and people care less?
First, you are true to form in not addressing the issues originally presented.

But I digress.


The burning of fossil fuels does harm the evironment. So does volcanoes, cattle and termite flatulence, forest fires and many other things. But the environment adjusts to those pathogens, and uses them in the carbon cycle. The release of hydocarbons in one place leads to the capture of it in another place (usually the creation of carbohydrates [via photosynthesis]). All we are doing for the most part is releasing the sunlight catpured millions of years ago. Should we release them as fast as we are ? I do not think so. Have we (being the Western word, in particular America) taken steps to ameliorate the situation? Yes. And as far as America is concerned, we have done the most.

As for overstatement of the problem, your logic, as usual, fails. ANY problem is best addressed using the best information possible. Therefore, accuracy is what is required, not the choice of which way you should be dishonest. Panic often causes as much or more damage than the crisis that set it off, and you said as much in expressing you stance on immigration.

Also, you being a businessman can't agree that if you cannot predict the outcome, that you should not take action.

What I am stating is that NONE of the models used are accurate, that we do not know why what is happening is happening, and if what is happening is not normal. What we DO know is that nothing that is going on is unprecidented in Earth's climatologic history. We also know that the biggest offenders are two countries whose name never comes out of any american liberals (or most anybody else's): China and India. Why, because you know they do not giva a fuck about what you say. So, you attack the country that has done the most and make it look like they have done the least.

And I won't tolerate it.

And what do YOU do for a zero emission world?
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Actually as usual you have no point other then to weakly attempt an argument.

The point is the environment. Helping the environment.

If you want to help the environment you should promote fuel alternatives and the decrease in use of fossil fuels PERIOD.

Regardless if I say that fossil fuels will cause the world to end tomorrow or 1,000 years from now their harm is evident. Everybody knows cigarettes are harmful but should I keep smoking cigarettes because nobody can tell me when I am going to die from them. Give me a break. You want to alleviate Americas culpabability in the pollution of the environment by using the EVERYBODIES DOING IT argument. Are we in elementary school. Give me a break.

Now onto overstating the environmental damage of fossil fuels. First off let me state that I do not think the argument is overstated. Secondly in order to present to you the pointlessness of your crusade against the overstatement of the harm of fossil fuels let me explain something about risk and risk managment.

When analyzing known risks (like excess burning of fossil fuels) it is always better to overstate the risk then to understate the risk. You always give the worst case scenerio because it is always better to be overprepared then underprepared. Can you comprehend this. When you go to the doctor the doctor does this when you go to the lawyer the lawyer does this when you go to an accountant the accountant does this. In the professional world risks are things to be avoided so overstating a risk is only harmful when the method taking to alleviate the risk would cause more harm.

Would a decreasing our burning of fossil fuels be harmful to the environment.

NO.

So your crusade against overstating a known risk in this case is pointless and stupid. Instead of fighting for zero emissions you are fighting for what nothing. An accurate analysis of a risk. As usual you have a pointless battle over semantics which in this case is even more illogical then usual.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

Temujin said:
Actually as usual you have no point other then to weakly attempt an argument.

The point is the environment. Helping the environment.

If you want to help the environment you should promote fuel alternatives and the decrease in use of fossil fuels PERIOD.

Regardless if I say that fossil fuels will cause the world to end tomorrow or 1,000 years from now their harm is evident. Everybody knows cigarettes are harmful but should I keep smoking cigarettes because nobody can tell me when I am going to die from them. Give me a break. You want to alleviate Americas culpabability in the pollution of the environment by using the EVERYBODIES DOING IT argument. Are we in elementary school. Give me a break.

Now onto overstating the environmental damage of fossil fuels. First off let me state that I do not think the argument is overstated. Secondly in order to present to you the pointlessness of your crusade against the overstatement of the harm of fossil fuels let me explain something about risk and risk managment.

When analyzing known risks (like excess burning of fossil fuels) it is always better to overstate the risk then to understate the risk. You always give the worst case scenerio because it is always better to be overprepared then underprepared. Can you comprehend this. When you go to the doctor the doctor does this when you go to the lawyer the lawyer does this when you go to an accountant the accountant does this. In the professional world risks are things to be avoided so overstating a risk is only harmful when the method taking to alleviate the risk would cause more harm.

Would a decreasing our burning of fossil fuels be harmful to the environment.

NO.

So your crusade against overstating a known risk in this case is pointless and stupid. Instead of fighting for zero emissions you are fighting for what nothing. An accurate analysis of a risk. As usual you have a pointless battle over semantics which in this case is even more illogical then usual.
HOLY SHIT !!!! Mark the day !!! You made a coherent arguement !!!! I'm going to play the lottery !!!!

Here is where I differ. While I do agree we need to preserve the Earths ability to sustain us, I don't want to base my actions on half-truths or untruths. We often cause more harm than good that way. For example, we did not want to see or smell the forest burning. We also thought that the forest needed to "preserved". We then made it our business to keep the forest from burning, and putting out fires whenever they sprang up. Bad idea. Because we had to "save" the forest, there is so much fire fuel (called "duff" in forestry terms), that when it goes, whoa nelly !! The fire burns so hot that it kills healthy trees and the soil, And it takes far longer for the land to recover.

Also, we have to have good info because we are usually balancing economics with conservation. And if we degrade the ability to function as a society, aren't we ultimately just as imperiled as is we made the planet so hot that we could not grow enough food for the society.

And further more, a good doctor or good lawyer does not overly caution you. The use accurate risk assesment. For example, have you ever wondered why Obstetricians usually only recommend Amniocenticis(sp) exams for pregnant women over 35 ? It's because the risk of a chromosomal disorder for a fetus at that age is 1 in 200. The risk of the Amnio causing premature labor is 1 in 200. See ??? Now would you as an expecting parent want the doctor to overstate the risk of either one?

Now back to the subject at hand. The earth is not dying. Even if we are on the verge of some cataclysmic shift in weather patters (which happens often on a geologic scale), the reason that is given for these phenomona are simply not truthfully stated. And the reason why they are not truthfully stated, IMHO, is because the elites like you and your ilk think you need to "protect" others against themselves, whether they want that help or not.

I have also had to suffer at the hands of "do-gooders" during my life, and witness the incredible suffering the actions of those who share your thought pattern bring.

And it's time to stop it.
 
Re: The Media and Reporting on the Environment

<font size="5"><center>Science, Policy and the Media</font size></center>

By Bart Mongoven
July 27, 2006
Strategic Forecasting

Panels of journalists and scientists gathered July 25 at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington to discuss the mainstream media's reporting on climate change. The consensus was that the media have not covered the issue well. According to both panels, the greatest shortcoming has been in persistent portrayals of the issue as one of contentious scientific debate: In reality, the assembled scientists said, man-made climate change is generally accepted throughout the scientific community as a reality.

Most of the time at the conference was dedicated to examining the media's portrayal of the issue and explaining how it came into being. The root of the problem, most participants agreed, is that climate change has been covered primarily as a political rather than a scientific issue -- and thus, the media have focused on the political debate rather than the science behind it.

In the background of this discussion loomed a larger issue: The mainstream media, recognizing that there is more to the story, now are struggling with ways to change their portrayal of the climate change issue. Arguments are emerging that the scientific debate has now been concluded, "industry" has lost and the new debate is about policy options. Though this line of thinking is nearer to the truth, it does not entirely close the gap. The fact is that industry all but stopped contesting the premise of man-made climate change two years ago, but the media's preoccupation with the traditional battle lines -- industry versus environmentalists -- continues to obscure the complexity of the issue and the positions of various players.

The issue is worthy of examination because the media portrayals have some impact as public policy is formed. To be sure, the media are consumers of a complex discussion between mainstream scientific institutions, industry and activists -- each of whom approaches scientific debates with completely different outlooks, values and goals. At the same time, however, the "fourth estate" is positioned to break the complicated scientific matters into terms that both the public and politicians can understand. Reporters' ability to do so, as well as any tendencies to overlook or oversimplify aspects of the debate, can be felt down the road as regulations are formed. As editors and reporters come to recognize this, the media likely will assume a more important role in the shaping of public discourse and policy development.

The Importance of Scale

The portrayal issue is becoming particularly relevant at this time because the regulatory questions that are emerging at the nexus of science and politics are unlike any that have come before. Scientific knowledge and human ingenuity are producing technologies and results of incredible power and scale: Industrialization has reached a point at which the Earth's protective ozone layer has been threatened, and the planet's climate is likely being affected. At the same time, chemists are finding ways to work on an incredibly small scale -- developing nanotechnologies that could revolutionize medicine, consumer products and lifestyles.

With this remarkable scale (at both ends of the spectrum) comes unprecedented complexity -- and new challenges for the media that report on these issues. A layman easily can grasp the notion that vapor feedback mechanisms contribute to the Earth's climate (and even that these mechanisms counteract some of the warming that likely results from increased carbon in the atmosphere); however, the details of how these feedback mechanisms work are beyond the understanding of most nonspecialists. Meanwhile, sciences like toxicology are undergoing quiet revolutions: The interactions of specific substances and specific genes are being studied to determine whether some substances can have particularly beneficial or (more emphatically) particularly damaging effects on people with certain genetic makeups. These types of investigations (known as "toxicogenomics") are as complicated and involved -- yet as important in the scientific debate -- as climate feedback loops.

In the middle of all this, lawmakers, regulators and (increasingly) consumers are being asked to draw conclusions about such issues as the threat of climate change and the risks posed by nanoparticles. In addition to making these assessments, with the continuing trend toward deregulation, consumers and businesses are also being asked to weigh these risks against the benefits of cheap energy and emerging technologies.

The media play an important role in this process: Ultimately, they have the power to translate scientific debates and findings into words consumers and their representatives in government can understand. The way these issues are reported often dictates how certain issues are addressed in public policies.

To be fair, editors at major news organizations in industrialized countries appear to take this role very seriously. While not unheard of, unjustified consumer scares are surprisingly rare in industrialized countries, and when they do occur they generally result from intricate intentional campaigns to fool the media. Still, the media are in a difficult position as they report on complicated scientific issues: Their challenge is to navigate through the interplay between the scientific establishment, industry and policy advocates. And, it is important to note, the approaches and roles of these groups are changing in new and interesting ways.

The Industry Stance

Industry's view of the science behind public policy has changed markedly in recent years. As institutions, businesses crave stability and certainty. The regulations by which they are governed are important, but the predictability of the regulatory system is even more important in their eyes. Industry historically has preferred that public policy be determined by national governments and that policies give clear guidance as to what will and will not be allowed in the future.

For the most part, industry wants regulation that is based on firm unchanging scientific grounds -- and it wants regulatory language to be as unambiguous as possible. In most cases, it also wants regulations to be protective of health or the environment. For some companies, this is a very highly held social ethic. For others, it stems merely from fear of U.S. tort law. In either case, the tendency has been for companies to call for deliberate scientific investigation that justifies a regulation, while simultaneously acknowledging the importance of regulation.

This traditional approach is changing, however. As the problems of scale we already have discussed increasingly come into play, the trajectory of regulation is growing uncertain and difficult to chart. Further complicating matters is the deregulatory ethic in Congress and within the Bush administration, which has allowed issues to be debated in the public sphere but left businesses to work out the resolutions in private. The climate change debate in the United States, for example, shifted as it became clear to many companies that policies likely were forthcoming -- but the nature of these regulations remained opaque. The uncertainty this produced stymied company planning, research and development efforts. Uncertain which way the regulators would go, businesses erred on the side of conservatism and began to adopt very stringent self-regulatory policies in efforts to move past the impasse.

The perspective extends to more than just climate change, however. To cite another example, computer manufacturers have begun to phase certain substances out of their products -- not because the substances are illegal or because they have been found to cause health problems, but because allegations that the substances may be harmful might crop up. Rather than fight these allegations or potential class-action lawsuits, manufacturers prefer to build products and design processes with the certainty that their substances will not become controversial. The revolutions in medicine, genetics and toxicology that are now under way will only drive more of this kind of thinking as companies conclude that the regulatory stability they crave can be created only by taking extremely precautionary approaches.

Activists and Science

The activist organizations that advocate regulatory change -- whether increased regulation or decreased regulation of industry -- were established to change the world in a specific way. Activist groups on both sides of the political and ideological spectrum tend to view science as a tool: They use it only when it is helpful to their cause. Many groups spend a great deal of time and money looking at scientific questions, but their objectives nonetheless are political, not scientific.

For example, think tanks and activist groups created to fight regulatory action on climate change sometimes make scientific arguments; at other times, they try to move beyond science to place the issue in economic, ideological or political terms.

Consider the array of nongovernmental organizations that previously have pressed for stringent national regulations: Many of these have shifted their approach in light of the emerging concerns about scale. As expressed in both the climate risk and chemical risk issue debates, groups are beginning to play up uncertainty -- scientific and regulatory -- and press for businesses to adopt new management styles that effectively amount to self-regulation.

Because the media continue to write about these matters as political issues -- debates between two interested parties -- the scientific questions at the center of campaigns on climate change, the relative risk of various chemicals and substances and the risks posed by genetically modified organisms have been relegated to the backburner. Rather than being the focus in the policy debates, the science is used as a tactic in a communications and public relations battle.

Enter the Media

As the journalists and scientists who attended the Wilson Center event agreed, the mainstream media in the United States have not kept pace with the changes that are under way. Though they have been responsible in avoiding massive consumer scares, there is still a tendency for the media to report on scientific issues as they pertain to policy change -- using traditional terms that pit industry against activists in a fight over the interpretation of very complex science. The back-and-forth makes headlines.

At its root, the politicization of the scientific debate closely resembles the mainstream media's election reporting -- and the criticisms of it are much the same as well. In politics, the standard criticism is that the media focus on the horse race (polls, one-line zingers and sound bites) rather than on the issues and candidates' positions. In regulatory battles and politics, mano-a-mano sells -- complexity does not.

For the news media, much is at stake in this discussion -- particularly if deregulatory trends continue. As science-based policy battles continue to play out on the field of consumer opinion rather than in regulatory agencies and courts, the media will face the decision of whether -- and how -- to change the way they report on the issues. The decision will not be an easy one, particularly since journalism is itself a business: In de-emphasizing the political and focusing on the technical aspects of the issues, a news outlet runs the risk of boring the public and losing sales.

On the other hand, a shift in this direction also could dramatically increase the media's relevance in the policymaking process.
Send questions or comments on this article to analysis@stratfor.com.
 
From Americanthinker.com

October 29, 2007
The Environmentalist Fires
By John Berlau

Last week, CNN delayed for a few hours the scheduled Tuesday night broadcast debut of its much-hyped documentary series "Planet in Peril" due to live coverage of the tragic wildfires that have displaced more than 500,000 people in Southern California. But that didn't keep CNN "golden boy" reporter Anderson Cooper from using the tragedy to tout the program he starred in as much as he could.


Cooper constantly claimed during the week that the fires provided further confirmation of the documentary's prediction of an eco-catastrophe. Cooper said that higher temperature due to global warming may have been a factor. It was a "timely documentary," Cooper said last Tuesday on CNN's "Larry King Live", because "California certainly seems to be in peril."


But ironically, much of the reason California is in peril is due not to climate change, but to the very environmental policies championed by Cooper's documentary and our new Nobel laureate, Al Gore. While, in its statement praising Gore, the Nobel Committee said that global warming may "threaten the living conditions of much of mankind," the current wildfires show that the more immediate threat to man comes from the champions of the gnatcatcher, kangaroo rat, and the Delhi Sands Flower-Loving fly.


Environmental mandates have made fire safety for humans take a back seat to the well-being of the aforementioned California creatures, as well as that of every bug and rat lucky enough to be listed as an "endangered species" under federal and state law. For over a decade, environmentalists have hamstrung Californians in their efforts to clear the dry brush that is providing the fuel for this massive fire. If any of these endangered or even "threatened" species are found in shrubs or bushes on public or private property, it becomes very difficult to give this vegetation even the slightest haircut. This is true even if city codes require firebreaks to be built.


An example of the legal strait jacket that homewoners faced in the areas hit by the fires is the "brush management guide" on the City of San Diego web site. The confusing instructions state that vegetation within 100 feet of homes in canyon areas "must be thinned and pruned regularly." But then, the same sentence goes on to state that this must be achieved "without harming native plants, soil or habitats."


Then in fine print at the bottom of the page, the real kicker comes in:

"Brush management is not allowed in coastal sage scrub during the California gnatcatcher nesting season, from March 1st through August 15th. This small bird only lives in coastal sage scrub and is listed as a threatened species by the federal government. Any harm to this bird could result in fines and penalties."
Coastal sage scrub is a low plant ubiquitous near coastal California that grows like a weed under almost any condition. And since gnatcatcher nesting season lasts almost six months, there could be much buildup of sage scrub that becomes hard for homeowners to control. Especially since the maintenance rules severely restrict the use of mechanical brush-clearing devices even when gnat nesting season is over.


The tragedy is that this shows that not much has changed even after previous warnings from experts that environmental rules were on a collision course with fire safety in California and many other places, because they prevented the removal of "excess fuel" for fires from dense stands of trees and vegetation. Southern California homes were lost in 1993 after the federal Fish and Wildlife Service told homeowners that mechanical clearing of brush would likely violate the Endangered Species Act. The reason: it could alter the habitat of a newly-listed endangered species called the Stephens kangaroo rat.


Some exemptions were made, and clarifications were issued, but landowners still face the lingering risk that the simple act of building a firebreak can send them down the river if an endangered species is anywhere near their property. California's Blue Ribbon Fire Commission, which had been created after wildfires in 2003 by then-Governor Gray Davis and whose members included Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., as well as state legislators of both parties, concluded that "habitat preservation and environmental protection have often conflicted with sound fire safe planning."


But did this bipartisan finding or any of the documented harms to fire safety from environmental rules make it into CNN's exploration of possible causes of the current fires? Not a gnatcatcher's chance. Instead, climate "expert" Cooper told viewers Wednesday night that the wildfires were "symptoms of a planet in peril. Fire, drought, deforestation; it's all connected."


Yet the data show that temperature for areas hit by the fire was well within average ranges, and came nowhere near the record highs. On Monday the 23rd, for instance the high temperature in Escondido was 84 degrees, and the high in Santa Ana was 87 degrees. According to temperature statistics from the National Weather Service, the mean high in both cities for that date is 79 degrees. What's more, the record high for that date is 102 degrees in Escondido (in 1929) and 103 degrees in Santa Ana (in 1965). So tell us again, Anderson, how global warming is to blame, when the weather where the fires struck was not nearly as hot as it was more than 40 years ago and almost 80 years ago!


What about those harsh Santa Ana winds? Well, they are pretty strong. Here's one writer's description: "It was one of those hot dry Santa Anas that come down through the mountain passes and curl your hair and make your nerves jump and your skin itch."


Woooo! What a great description of the winds last week. Except that this passage wasn't written last week, last month, or last year. It was written by detective fiction master Raymond Chandler to describe the Santa Ana winds of about 70 years ago. It's in the opening paragraph of his famous short story "Red Wind," first published in 1938. So rough winds are nothing new under the California sun!


What's really changing the "climate" in Southern California is that there is more fuel for fires, since much less of the brush, as well as disease-infested trees, can be cleared, thanks to environmental mandates.


The problem is even worse on land owned by the federal and state governments. To satisfy the feds, San Diego has placed more than 170,000 acres off limit to development for the exclusive purpose, in the city's words, of "protect[ing] habitat for over 1,000 native and non-native plant species and more than 380 species of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals." Hugh Hewitt, the California radio talk show host and author who is also a real estate attorney, has noted in the Weekly Standard:

"The land that has passed into ‘conserved' status is at even greater risk of fire than private land that is home to a protected species because absolutely no one cares for its fire management policy. The scrum of planners, consultants and G-11s that put together these plans should be monitoring these areas closely. Instead, they regulate and move on to savage the property rights of the next region."
And enviro groups also get more and more land locked up by conveniently finding more species to petition the government to protect. In California, as in other places, it's often a case of creative subdividing of essentially the same species. First it was the Stephens kangaroo rat whose designation as endangered put much brush clearance off limits. Then, in 1998, the San Bernardino kangaroo rat got listed. Also under federal protection is the Fresno kangaroo rat. And so on and so on.


Across the country, fires have become more destructive as trees and shrubs gain "protected" status preventing them form being cleared. As Bill Croke noted last week in American Thinker, In the last two decades annual timber production on the national forests in the West has decreased from roughly 12 billion board feet to less than 3 billion today. This has resulted in brush-choked forests with large "fuel loads."


The ironic thing is that all this "protection" at the expense of humans doesn't necessarily work out for the gnatcatchers -- not to mention more majestic creatures -- anyway. According to the Associated Press, the fires struck close to the San Diego Wild Animal Park, threatening condors, a cheetah, and many other animals. The Blue Ribbon Fire Commission found that the 2003 wildfires resulted in "the loss of valuable watershed, wildlife, and critical environmental habitats."


Of course, saving species never really was the objective of many enviros. It's just a subterfuge for their main interest of controlling the human species.


Endangered Species Act abuses, including those that prevented fire breaks in Southern California, were an issue that helped get the GOP in power in 1994. But with some exceptions like former Rep. Richard Pombo of California, Republicans began to abandon this issue, lest they be branded as anti-green. It's time for the GOP, as well as truly moderate Democrats, to befriend again the threatened species known as the beleaguered property owner.


And if the Nobel Committee really wanted to give an award to folks preventing a hazard threatening mankind, they should rescind Al Gore's prize and hand it to the brave California firefighters whose jobs have been made so much harder by the nonsensical practices of the environmental movement.


John Berlau is the author of the Amazon best-selling book Eco-Freaks. He is director of the Center for Entrepreneurship at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.

Page Printed from: http://www.americanthinker.com/2007/10/the_environmentalist_fires.html at October 30, 2007 - 01:33:24 PM EDT
 
Re: The Environmentalist Fires

Good post.

This is all a push to convince Americans that white people control the weather. And because people are so gullible, they are falling for it.

-VG
 
From Townhall.com

Environmentalists' Wild Predictions
Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Now that another Earth Day has come and gone, let's look at some environmentalist predictions that they would prefer we forget.

At the first Earth Day celebration, in 1969, environmentalist Nigel Calder warned, "The threat of a new ice age must now stand alongside nuclear war as a likely source of wholesale death and misery for mankind." C.C. Wallen of the World Meteorological Organization said, "The cooling since 1940 has been large enough and consistent enough that it will not soon be reversed." In 1968, Professor Paul Ehrlich, Vice President Gore's hero and mentor, predicted there would be a major food shortage in the U.S. and "in the 1970s ... hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death." Ehrlich forecasted that 65 million Americans would die of starvation between 1980 and 1989, and by 1999 the U.S. population would have declined to 22.6 million. Ehrlich's predictions about England were gloomier: "If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000."

In 1972, a report was written for the Club of Rome warning the world would run out of gold by 1981, mercury and silver by 1985, tin by 1987 and petroleum, copper, lead and natural gas by 1992. Gordon Taylor, in his 1970 book "The Doomsday Book," said Americans were using 50 percent of the world's resources and "by 2000 they [Americans] will, if permitted, be using all of them." In 1975, the Environmental Fund took out full-page ads warning, "The World as we know it will likely be ruined by the year 2000."

Harvard University biologist George Wald in 1970 warned, "... civilization will end within 15 or 30 years unless immediate action is taken against problems facing mankind." That was the same year that Sen. Gaylord Nelson warned, in Look Magazine, that by 1995 "... somewhere between 75 and 85 percent of all the species of living animals will be extinct."

It's not just latter-day doomsayers who have been wrong; doomsayers have always been wrong. In 1885, the U.S. Geological Survey announced there was "little or no chance" of oil being discovered in California, and a few years later they said the same about Kansas and Texas. In 1939, the U.S. Department of the Interior said American oil supplies would last only another 13 years. In 1949, the Secretary of the Interior said the end of U.S. oil supplies was in sight. Having learned nothing from its earlier erroneous claims, in 1974 the U.S. Geological Survey advised us that the U.S. had only a 10-year supply of natural gas. The fact of the matter, according to the American Gas Association, there's a 1,000 to 2,500 year supply.

Here are my questions: In 1970, when environmentalists were making predictions of manmade global cooling and the threat of an ice age and millions of Americans starving to death, what kind of government policy should we have undertaken to prevent such a calamity? When Ehrlich predicted that England would not exist in the year 2000, what steps should the British Parliament have taken in 1970 to prevent such a dire outcome? In 1939, when the U.S. Department of the Interior warned that we only had oil supplies for another 13 years, what actions should President Roosevelt have taken? Finally, what makes us think that environmental alarmism is any more correct now that they have switched their tune to manmade global warming?

Here are a few facts: Over 95 percent of the greenhouse effect is the result of water vapor in Earth's atmosphere. Without the greenhouse effect, Earth's average temperature would be zero degrees Fahrenheit. Most climate change is a result of the orbital eccentricities of Earth and variations in the sun's output. On top of that, natural wetlands produce more greenhouse gas contributions annually than all human sources combined.



Copyright © 2008 Salem Web Network. All Rights Reserved.
 

Environmentalists' Wild Predictions​
Are the Opinions Coalescing?
________________________________________​



Threat from global warming heightened in latest U.N. report



r




YOKOHAMA, Japan
Monday, March 31, 2014


Reuters) - Global warming poses a growing threat to the health, economic prospects, and food and water sources of billions of people, top scientists said in a report that urges swift action to counter the effects of carbon emissions.

The latest report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">the effects of warming are being felt everywhere, fuelling potential food shortages, natural disasters and raising the risk of wars.</span>

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"The world, in many cases, is ill-prepared for risks from a changing climate,"</span> the IPCC said on Monday, after the final text of the report was agreed.

More warming increased the chance of harsh, widespread impacts that could be surprising or irreversible, it added.

The report projects global warming may cut world economic output by between 0.2 and 2.0 percent a year should mean temperatures rise by 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit), estimates that many countries say are too low.

"Over the coming decades, climate change will have mostly negative impacts," said Michel Jarraud, Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), citing cities, ecosystems and water supply as being among the areas at risk.

"The poor and vulnerable will be most affected," he added.

The IPCC was set up in 1988 by the WMO and the United Nations Environment Programme.

RISK EMPHASIS

The report emphasizes the risks, and portrays cuts to greenhouse gas emissions as an insurance policy for the planet.

"Climate change is really a challenge of managing risks," Christopher Field, co-chair of the IPCC group preparing the report, told Reuters before its release on Monday.

The risks range from death to disrupted livelihoods in low-lying coastal zones and small islands, due to storm surges, coastal flooding, and sea-level rise, the report said.

Immediate action is needed, says the report, which follows a warning that humans are probably responsible for global warming thought to cause droughts, colder weather and rising sea levels.

"Unless we act dramatically and quickly, science tells us our climate and our way of life are literally in jeopardy," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said in a statement. "Denial of the science is malpractice."

Still, many governments have pleaded for greater scientific certainty before making billion-dollar investments in everything from flood barriers to renewable energies.

"There are those who say we can't afford to act. But waiting is truly unaffordable. The costs of inaction are catastrophic," Kerry said.

Global warming will worsen health threats, damage crop yields and bring floods, the report says. It could also deepen poverty and worsen economic shocks at the heart of conflict.

The report is the second in a four-part IPCC series meant to guide governments that have promised to agree a pact in 2015 to slow climate change. The first, in September, raised to least 95 percent the probability that most global warming is man-made, from 90 percent in 2007.

The panel's credibility faces scrutiny after one of its reports, in 2007, exaggerated the melt of Himalayan glaciers, but reviews said the error did not undermine key findings.

Climate scientists say they are more certain than ever that mankind is the main culprit behind global warming and warned the impact of greenhouse gas emissions would linger for centuries.

The report pulls together the work of hundreds of scientists but skeptics have been emboldened by the fact that temperatures have risen more slowly recently, despite rising emissions.

One of the authors, Professor Richard Tol of Sussex University in England, pulled out of the writing team last week, saying he thought the report was too alarmist.

The United Nations urged governments to step up work for a deal to fight climate change.

"This report requires and requests that everyone accelerate and scale up efforts towards a low carbon world and manage the risks of climate change," the United Nations climate chief, Christiana Figueres, said in a statement.

(Reporting by Aaron Sheldrick and Chris Meyers; Editing by Richard Pullin and Clarence Fernandez)



http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/31/us-climate-ipcc-idUSBREA2U00E20140331


 
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