Osborne is wrong about green taxes
September 17, 2007
Kyoto Anniversary: What it Means Today
July 25, 2007
Letter to the Editor: EU talk no match for US action on emissions
June 12, 2007
Politics
IPCC Chair Trots Out Hitler
Dr. Rajendra K. Pachauri, the chairman of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), compared Bjørn Lomborg, Danish statistician and author of The Skeptical Environmentalist, to Adolf Hitler in an interview with Jyllandsposten, a leading Danish newspaper (Apr. 21).
Pachauri said, “What is the difference between Lomborg's view of humanity and Hitler's? You cannot treat people like cattle. You must respect the diversity of cultures on earth. Lomborg thinks of people like numbers. He thinks it would be cheaper just to evacuate people from the
The Skeptical Environmentalist’s longest chapter is devoted to global warming. In it, Lomborg accepts the IPCC’s scientific assessment reports as the basis of his analysis. What Pachauri apparently objects to is that Lomborg concludes that the Kyoto Protocol would do almost nothing to reduce the rate of global warming, but at enormous expense. For a fraction of the costs of
In searching for other resemblances between Lomborg and Hitler, it is to be noted that both are vegetarians, although Pachauri may be as well. Unlike Hitler or Pachauri, Lomborg has been awarded the Julian Simon Prize by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, so in that respect it could be concluded that Pachauri has more in common with Hitler than does Lomborg.
This is not the first time Pachauri has launched an ad hominem attack on his critics since becoming chairman of the IPCC. In December in
Public Opinion Cools on Warming
According to a series of
The Aspen Times reported (Apr. 22), “A national poll conducted to coincide with Earth Day today shows that Americans are well aware of global warming. They just aren't very concerned about it. The
“About 47 percent of respondents both this year and last said they worry ‘only a little’ or ‘not at all’ about global warming, according to the Gallup Tuesday Briefing, a branch of the famed national pollster.”
Although the figures suggest a majority of Americans are still concerned about the issue, the Aspen Times was right to play down this aspect of the poll as it has a margin of error of ±3 percent, meaning that the two groupings of concern levels overlap in their confidence intervals. It is perfectly possible that more Americans are unconcerned than concerned about the issue.
Another
The poll found that 62 percent of Americans worry a great deal or a fair amount about environmental quality, down from 77 percent in March 2001.
Summarizing recent polls and their relationship to the presidential election, AEI scholar Karlyn Bowman wrote in Roll Call (Apr. 28), “Democrats lead the GOP as the party better able to handle the environment. Given the Democrats’ strength on the issue, it’s surprising that Bush’s marks on handling it have been pretty even during his presidency. In the March Gallup poll, 41 percent thought the president was doing a good job handling the environment and 46 percent a poor job, down from 44 percent to 43 percent in March 2003. Bush’s ratings on the environment at a couple of points during the presidency have been similar to Bill Clinton’s at the same stage of his presidency.
“Bush’s relatively even ratings may derive from the fact that other issues such as the economy,
EPA to Delay Final Mercury Rule
On April 29th, EPA Administrator Mike Leavitt announced that the deadline on the final regulation controlling mercury emissions from power plants would be extended to
Leavitt has proposed a mercury trading system, but earlier this month 45 Senators urged him to drop this strategy in favor of a new rule that uses the Clean Air Act’s Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) provisions. This would require state-of-the-art pollution controls on all of the nation’s 1,100 coal- and oil-fired utilities. John Kerry was among the 45 senators who asked Leavitt to drop the trading proposal. With a desire to stick to his plan, Leavitt has rejected this request and, when asked, stated that the presidential election’s implications on the regulation would be minimal as “[EPA is] moving toward concluding [the] decision in an even-handed and proper way.”
EPA’s top air pollution official, Jeff Holmstead, has stated that the technologies needed to meet MACT provisions will not be commercially available by the deadline for utilities to reduce emissions. Accordingly, Scott Segal, director of the Electric Reliability Coordinating Council, said his group would remain “committed to working with EPA to highlight the need for realistic assumptions about the current state of mercury control technology. An inflexible mercury control program can result in unacceptable fuel-switching from coal to natural gas, hurting American consumers, the elderly, and industrial workers.”
On the other hand, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) said that he would continue to call on EPA to drop its trading plan. “Extending the deadline on this deeply flawed rule moves us back for now from the brink of getting this indefensible plan, but what Administrator Leavitt still needs to do is to withdraw this proposal and produce a new one, grounded in science and in the public's interest,” Leahy said. “We need a mercury plan that honors instead of insults the Clean Air Act.” (Greenwire, April 30).
The European Parliament agreed April 20 to the directive expanding the scope of the new emissions trading scheme within the EU from
EUpolitix.com reported, “A full sitting of MEPs has backed a report on emissions trading which would mean heavily industrialized EU countries could pay the developing world to pass on its CO2 quotas, dictated by the Kyoto Protocol on climate change. And, according to amendments made by parliament, the scheme would be compulsory even if the international
“Alexander de Roo—the Dutch MEP responsible for the proposal in parliament—argues that such a move is necessary for industry to learn how to fight climate change, even without the Russian ratification necessary to make
De Roo also commented on a notable omission, “Emissions rights from nuclear activities are explicitly excluded…. This legislation is ever greener than the Kyoto Protocol.”
EU Environment Commissioner Margot Wallstrom argued that the directive would be good for business: “The linking of the
In related news, Irish electricity prices are expected to rise by 6 percent initially as a result of the new trading scheme. According to Ireland.com (Apr. 17), the Irish electricity supply company ESB, “has warned of significant rises in electricity prices because of new requirements on carbon dioxide emissions. The company has claimed that its quota allocation under the proposed CO2 emissions trading system for
“This would in turn result in domestic prices rising by up to 20 percent if the increased costs of production are passed on in full. Electricity industry sources have indicated a probable rise for consumers of six per cent in the coming years.”
NGOs Demand Closure of World Bank Climate Change Fund
A press release issued by NGO Carbon Trade Watch on April 19 called for the closure of one of the first funds set up to help developing countries cope with the costs of fighting global warming. The release read, “More than 50 environmental and social justice NGOs and other groups have sent a letter of protest to the World Bank calling for the closure of its new emissions trading fund, The Prototype Carbon Fund.
“In the year of the World Bank’s 60th anniversary and in the run-up to intense protests in Washington, D.C. at their annual meeting this month, the groups state that the Bank’s new fund is destructive greenwash and has in fact created extra problems for communities and the environment. The fund was set up in 1999 to facilitate the new trade in greenhouse gases created under the Kyoto Protocol. The groups state that so far the fund has exacerbated existing human rights violations and furthered environmental destruction.
“One of the fund’s model projects is located in
“The World Bank will fund the expansion of these plantations in order to generate ‘carbon credits’ for the international trade in greenhouse gases. However, on top of the impacts upon the local environment and peoples, there is no guarantee that the project will actually have a permanent positive effect on the climate.
“Marcelo Calazans from local Brazilian NGO, FASE-ES, states, ‘This and many other projects have terrible negative impacts on local people and environments and it is still unclear if there is any real benefits for the climate. We believe that the Prototype Carbon Fund should cease operations and close down immediately.’”
IPCC Faces Criticism for Bad Economics in
Lord Lawson, a former British Chancellor of the Exchequer, took the opportunity of an April 21 debate in the United Kingdom’s House of Lords to accuse the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change of operating “an environmentalist closed shop that is unsullied by any acquaintance with economics, statistics or, indeed, economic history.” The debate was initiated by Lord Taverne, a former minister in previous Labour governments, who asked the government whether they were satisfied by the economic and statistical work of the IPCC.
Lawson said that Taverne had “put his finger on what is potentially a major scandal.” The basis for this assessment is the criticism made by Ian Castles and David Henderson of the economic assumptions used by the IPCC (see lead story). This view is upheld by a new report from the International Policy Network, which assesses the way in which the IPCC predicts future climate change.
According to the IPN report, the IPCC appears to have exaggerated its estimates of temperature increases by using highly implausible scenarios of future growth in emissions of ‘greenhouse gases.’ It has done so by underestimating technological advancement and greatly overestimating gains in economic growth. In order to gain credibility, the report argues that the IPCC should rely more heavily on the work of economic historians and statisticians. (International Policy Network, Apr. 23).
Day After Tomorrow Will Never Come
Following on from the comments by MIT’s Carl Wunsch that the Gulf Stream is safe as long as the wind blows and the Earth turns, several other scientists have used the pages of Science magazine (Apr. 16) to pour scorn on the conceit behind the forthcoming movie, The Day After Tomorrow. The movie is predicated on the idea that unchecked global warming will cause an abrupt climate shift that will cause a new ice age in the
Canadian scientists Andrew Weaver of the
The scientists’ review of the literature concluded that, “It is certainly true that if the AMO [Atlantic Meriodonal Oscillation] were to become inactive, substantial short-term cooling would result in western Europe, especially during the winter. However, it is important to emphasize that not a single coupled model assessed by the 2001 IPCC Working Group I on Climate Change Science (4) predicted a collapse in the AMO during the 21st century. Even in those models where the AMO was found to weaken during the 21st century, there would still be warming over
Pointing out that models that do show AMO collapse are not “flux-adjusted” like newer models, they conclude, “Even the recent observations of freshening in the
“In light of the paleoclimate record and our understanding of the contemporary climate system, it is safe to say that global warming will not lead to the onset of a new ice age. These same records suggest that it is highly unlikely that global warming will lead to a widespread collapse of the AMO—despite the appealing possibility raised in two recent studies—although it is possible that deep convection in the
In the same issue, pioneering oceanographer Wallace Broecker dismisses the recent report rejected by the Pentagon that is predicated on a similar scenario. He comments in his letter, “Exaggerated scenarios serve only to intensify the existing polarization over global warming.”
A Feverish Fate for Scientific Truth?
Dr. Patrick J. Michaels, a climatologist at the
Nevertheless, another article in the same issue uses this defective technique of “regional climate modeling” to conclude that, “The Greenland ice-sheet (covering 0.4 percent of the planet) is likely to be eliminated by anthropogenic climate change unless much more substantial emission reductions are made than those envisaged by the IPCC.”
In response to these contradictions, Michaels states that, “Nature published an alarming and completely misleading article predicting the melting of the entire Greenland ice cap in 1,000 years…using a regional climate projection.” He continues, “If the models are no good over the U.S., they’re worse over Greenland…. This is nothing but tragic, junk science, published by what is (formerly?) the most prestigious science periodical in the world.” (
Etc.
Poor People Don’t Need to Fly
In a peculiar echo of the Duke of Wellington’s famous remark that the railways were a bad idea because they let the poor move around the country, Guardian columnist Jackie Ashley suggested on April 15 that something had to be done about poor and middle class Britons flying too much.
She wrote, “And yes, it would mean…charging the real environmental cost of cheap air travel, either levied on airports or aviation fuel, or both. We should recognise that this reduces human happiness for the millions who benefit from it. As with the congestion charge, we should accept that this would hit some poorer people's mobility, stealing a recent freedom away from them. But we should remember that the boom in air travel is mainly fuelled by middle-class people flying more frequently.”
The
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