Saturday, March 10, 2007

Replying to a Climate Change denier

Here is an opinion piece from The Whig-Standard, Kingston, Ontario's local newspaper, followed by my reply to the paper. I can't believe the editorial board allowed the piece to be published!

Some inconvenient questions about global climate change

Opinion by George Luck
Monday, March 05, 2007 -

Environmental Stories - OPINION

The “cause du jour” for this year seems to be the dreaded “man-made global warming.” You cannot turn on a TV or read a news paper without being bombarded with the most dire forecasts of doom and gloom. Isn’t it funny that we rarely hear from those who call for caution in this headlong rush to Kyoto? Isn’t it odd that we are urged to accept that any scientist who disagrees with the concept of imminent man-made global catastrophe is in the pocket of big oil? Yet nobody seems to be asking where the global alarmists are getting their funding and what it might mean to their findings.

Before we all jump on the Kyoto bandwagon, there are some serious questions that need to be asked about “man-made global warming.” Unfortunately, any brave academic who dares to question prevailing thought on the subject is quickly shouted down. In fact, there are several instances of outright dismissal for this heinous crime. But the questions remain.

Here are some real inconvenient truths that the global warming alarmists do not want to address:

• It is an undisputed fact that water vapour is the main culprit in any supposed global warming. In fact, it is calculated that up to 95 per cent of the warming effect is due to water vapour, with the dreaded CO2 responsible for as little as .5 per cent. And yet carbon dioxide is held out as the “great Satan.”

• Since the 1940s, the number of hurricane landfalls on the coastline of the United States has actually decreased, from 23 in that decade to 14 in the period 1990 -2000. The strength of these hurricanes has actually decreased, not increased. The supporters of the “global warming is causing more and stronger storms” school of thought
often refer to the hurricane that devastated the Gulf Coast as a Category 5 storm. In fact, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported this storm as a strong Category 3 hurricane.

• Supporters of the global warming theory often refer to the loss of ice and snow from Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa as more proof of global warming. In fact, the snow and ice have been receding since the late 1800s. It is now postulated that this may be due to the deforestation of the lands around the mountain, which prevents the formerly moist winds from creating snow at the top.

• There are about 167,000 glaciers on our planet, and only 79 of them have actually been studied with any real
accuracy. Now math is not my forte, but that means that “experts” are claiming that the glaciers are melting based on a sampling of .0473 per cent of the total. That is not scientific research. That is not even a good guess. To say that the glaciers are melting based on a .0473-per-cent sampling is, if not misleading, then downright untruthful.

• If this were CO2-driven warming, it should have started in 1940 and risen strongly from there. In fact, warming started in 1850 and rose sharply until 1940, then decreased for 35 years. The total warming since measurements have been attempted is thought to be about 0.6 degrees Centigrade. At least half of the estimated temperature increment occurred before 1950, prior to significant change in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.

• Greenland got its name from the verdant pastures that attracted the Norse settlers under Eric the Red in 986. They carried on their normal way of life (based on cattle, grain, hay and herring) for 300 years until the time of the Little Ice Age, when they were driven off by the encroaching ice and the Inuit took over. The ice and the Inuit are still there.

And, of course, the entire man- made global warming issue is based on computer-generated models that in themselves are based on so many assumptions that their accuracy must be questioned.

Perhaps most shocking of all is the summary issued recently by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Even this body, which is largely responsible for the hysteria over the global warming issue, has backed away from many of its previously outrageous claims about rising sea levels, global temperature increases and destruction of sea ice, to name a few. And, worst of all, the actual

report on global warming, which has not been released yet, is being edited to agree with this clearly political document. But then, should we expect anything less from the United Nations “experts” who have a vested interest in ensuring that their funding remains intact?

Probably the most important point to be made here is that for every report, speech or movie shrilly screaming about the impending doom to be caused by “man-made global warming,” there is an equal number of scientists, reports, speeches and movies that claim that the “man-made global warming” issue is a dangerous charade. (An interesting question is, why does the press not give equal time to these sources?) So before we spend billions of dollars and probably beggar the economies of the West (but not China and India, which did not sign the Kyoto Protocol) we should demand a fair and equal hearing of all the facts.

Of course, this column probably ends my chances of winning the Nobel Peace Prize, but if that is what it takes to make people think for themselves, then so be it.

George Luck is a member of the Whig-Standard’s Community Editorial Board. He lives in Lansdowne.


Here is my reply which, unfortunately, did not get published:

The “Cause du Jour” is a Well Considered Cause

A response to the column on the environment by Mr. George Luck entitled, “Some inconvenient questions about global climate change”, The Kingston Whig-Standard, Monday, March 5, 2007.

I am, by nature, a cautious person. So I sympathize with George Luck when he wishes to be cautious about accepting the danger posed by climate change. But in this case Mr. Luck is wrong – not only wrong in his facts and arguments, but erring on the wrong side of caution.

Let us consider his points one by one.

  • Why are we being ‘bombarded’ by reports in the media about climate change? I think the fact is that opposition to the reality of climate change has fallen apart in the last few years. From Evangelical Christians to the Conservative Party of Canada, more and more groups have joined the voices of those that accept that something needs to be done to tackle this real and serious problem.
  • Is water vapour is responsible for most of the global warming? Water vapour does help trap heat but when there is a lot of water vapour it is easily removed from the atmosphere. It rains. Human activities aren’t increasing the global concentrations of water vapour in the atmosphere. But when extra carbon dioxide enters the atmosphere, it takes a century or so to remove it. In the meantime, the carbon dioxide heats up the earth.
  • Has the number of hurricanes decreased since the 1940s? The number of named tropical storms in the North Atlantic was relatively constant from 1850 to 1990 with about 10 per year. In the last ten years the average has been 14. Mr. Luck claimed that Hurricane Katrina was not a category 5 storm, but instead a category 3 storm. In fact, Katrina was a Category 5 storm but fortunately decreased to category 3 before it made landfall the next day.
  • Haven’t only a few glaciers been studied “with any real accuracy”? Let us be very generous and accept Mr. Luck’s figure that only 79 of 167,000 glaciers have been studied with any real accuracy. Are glaciers in retreat or not? Think of it this way. Suppose I am blindfolded and presented with a big, big bowl of Smarties. I’m told that either 90% are red Smarties and 10% are green Smarties, or there an equal mix of red and green Smarties. I pick 79 Smarties out of this big, big bowl, then take off my blindfold and look at the Smarties I picked out. I think the reader would agree that I could probably tell whether 90% of the Smarties were red or not. It doesn’t matter at all that I picked them out of a big, big bowl. What really matters is that 79 is a good sized sample of Smarties. We can tell from 79 glaciers whether glaciers are retreating or not. In fact more than that have been studied.
  • Did warming start in 1850 and decrease for 35 years after 1940? One must look at a bigger picture. Global temperatures have indeed been rising since global industrialization in the nineteenth century and this rise sticks out clearly in a graph of global temperatures, say, over the last 1000 years, no accident in retrospect. Pointing to the decrease in temperature from 1940 to 1975 is rather like pointing to the great depression and wondering whether the world economy has really been growing over the last couple of centuries.
  • Didn’t Greenland used to be green? Greenland was never lush and the Norse settlements only occurred in a few protected fjords. Scientists have been unable to generalize what happened there to the global climate. Consider the strange fact that there are palm trees in Lugano, Switzerland. Palm trees thrive there because Lugano is situated on the north shore of an alpine lake with steep hills to keep in the warmth. Don’t expect to deduce much about the climate in Switzerland from the climate in Lugano.
  • Couldn’t the computer models be inaccurate? Global warming and carbon dioxide concentrations have been measured. You may use computer models to project into the future, but you don’t use them to measure the temperature and carbon dioxide concentration today.
  • Isn’t the final IPCC report being edited before release? The latest IPCC report, like its predecessors, will be a conservative document that only makes claims for which a broad scientific consensus has been reached. If anything its statements are written to underestimate the strength of conclusions on climate change.
  • Are there an equal number of scientists claiming that, “man-made global warming” is a dangerous charade? In plain fact, no. UC San Diego history of science professor Naomi Oreskes looked at hundreds of peer-reviewed papers published between 1993 and 2003. They all supported the reality of man-made global warming and none denied it. If we don’t trust that study, then I would propose to Mr. Luck that he find some scientists at Queen’s who are willing to sign their name to a statement that, “the ‘man-made global warming’ issue is a dangerous charade”. For every name that I see, I’ll go and get ten Queen’s scientists to say that it’s not a dangerous charade.

My final point is that Mr. Luck is not being cautious. Carbon Dioxide levels in the atmosphere are rising far above what they have ever been during the time that human beings have been on this planet. If you want to be cautious, Mr. Luck, put the burden of proof on those who say, “Don’t worry”.

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