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New Global Warming Report: Less Scary, More Politics

The U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change officially released the executive summary of its fifth climate change report today.  The takeaway headline seems to be:  Scientists are 95 percent certain that humans are responsible for at least half the earth’s warming over the past 50 years.

Putting that in perspective, since the earth has warmed about 1.3 degrees over the past 150 years, with just over half of that warming coming since 1979, that means that scientists are 95 percent certain that humans are responsible for 25 to 30 percent of the earth’s recent temperature increase.  If they are correct, then humans are hardly driving the recent temperature rise but rather are responsible for a small share of a modest temperature increase.  Put this way, the IPCC’s report hardly merits the headlines it’s getting.

The report acknowledges, finally, that the temperature has plateaued for 16 years now, which the scientists admit they can’t explain.   However, as with past reports, due to political pressure, scientists removed all mention of the fact that all the computer models upon which the IPCC relies upon to make its predictions missed the continuing lull in the temperature rise and that on average the models have overestimated  the amount of warming that the planet should have experienced by double what has actually occurred.

Thus even the small portion of the present measured warming that scientists with 95 percent confidence believe is due to human activities is based on models that demonstrably overstate global warming by more than double, models that get past and present temperatures wrong by more than a degree.  How much faith should legislators or the average citizen place in such predictions.

And if, as skeptics have long argued, and the IPCC is now grudgingly admitting may be true, the earths’ temperature is less sensitive to CO2 levels than previously predicted shouldn’t the projections of future catastrophes from a further modest warming also be moderated considerably.  Indeed, most of the harms predicted based on much higher temperatures are very unlikely to occur because they were the result of the higher temperature ranges.

I had a piece in Investor’s Business Daily today that runs through some of the things we do know – and what we do know is hardly alarming. For instance:

  • ·         Despite IPCC prophecies of more — and more intense — hurricanes, the actual number and intensity of hurricanes has declined on average for seven years and has never strayed beyond the natural range of variability.
  • ·         Sea levels are rising, yes — as they have consistently done since the end of the last ice age. But at just 2/16 of an inch per year, sea levels are rising at a far slower rate now than they have on average for the past 17,000 years.
  • ·         Weather-related deaths are lower now than at any time in history, with fewer than 19,000 per year. Compared to 485,000 annual weather-related deaths in the 1920s or 74,000 weather-related deaths in the 1970s (when the next ice age was the weather scare du jour), this is a tremendous, felicitous decline.

Rather than inspiring fear, these facts should inform us to keep our collective head.  We’ve got time to figure out what is going on and what our response should be.

On Guns: Obama’s Moment of Futility

Critics of Republican attempts to attach a repeal/defund-Obamacare rider to must pass legislation complain that it, and all the votes to do the same before it, were futile and a waste time and effort since these provisions and/or the bills they are attached to will never pass the Senate or get by a promised veto by the President.

Where are these critical voices now that the Secretary of State John Kerry signed a controversial U.N. gun control treaty which U.S. Senators have warned for years is dead on arrival.

For any treaty to become binding on the U.S. or for the President to impose regulations and rules to make a treaty effective, it must be ratified by 2/3 of the Senate – 67 votes.  Earlier this year, President Obama and his anti-gun allies in the Senate were unable to muster the 60 votes necessary to pass universal background checks, much less a simple majority to ban assault weapons.  So what makes him think the Senate would go along with a U.N. sponsored treaty that could be used to do even more harm individuals’ right to keep and bear arms?  Especially after multiple Senators have repeatedly stated that the treaty can’t pass the Senate.

Quite aside from the politics, as I have written before, that the treaty is bad as a matter of policy, so it’s good, in this case, that we have the Senate to check the administration’s ambitions.

I only wish more Administration rules, regulations and laws required a 2/3 majority to become the law of the land – that could result in the truly limited government our founders envisioned.

New CO2 regulation ignores energy needs and evolving understanding of climate

As a Presidential candidate, President Obama promised to bankrupt the coal industry and now, despite his administration’s protestations to the contrary, he seems set to deliver on that promise.  The new CO2 regulation that the Environmental Protection Agency is issuing today, if it stands, could be the final nail in the coffin of future coal-fired electric power generation.

In its initial stage the new regulation would require any new coal-fired power plants to install expensive technology to capture carbon dioxide and bury it underground.  Eventually the rule would expand to limit emissions from the existing coal fired power plants.  The problem is, these technologies aren’t just expensive, they haven’t been shown to work.  Commercial success with carbon capture is a long way off.  And over the long-term, even if carbon capture becomes feasible, there is limited reservoir space – we pump out far more CO2 than we have space to store it.  Thus, carbon-capture is neither a short-term nor long-term solution for the problem of carbon emissions; which means it’s also not solution that makes coal-fired electricity viable.

It seems the Obama administration is bent of following Germany’s lead in making electricity a luxury item.  Germany has already constrained coal power, is closing its nuclear power plants and is propping up expensive, unreliable renewable power sources, and in doing so is creating a crisis for electric power users.  Do without power or do without other basic material goods.

In order to gin up support for their costly energy rationing schemes leaked e-mails have shown that the German and U.S. governments tried to get the IPCC to suppress its findings that global warming seems to have halted for 16 years.  Climategate II anyone?

It’s hardly surprising that governments would step in in an attempt to censor science – since for years they’ve argued the science is settled – and suppress the inconvenient truth of the collapsing evidence of catastrophic human caused climate change.  After all, it undercuts the need for big government solutions and greater centralized control over the economy and peoples personal choices, something most politicians and bureaucrats have craved since time immemorial.

All of these political shenanigans come in the face growing public skepticism concerning the need to “do something” about global warming in the face of continued missed predictions concerning the harmful impacts of climate change.

Environment Policy Digest and the Global Warming Primer: For those who need to read!

It’s time I did some long overdue promoting of the entire gamut of the environmental work that the NCPA does.  If you are reading this, then you already know about my blog so I won’t dwell on it further.

First, I want to take a second chance to promote the NCPA’s new, updated edition of its best-selling Global Warming Primer.  This paper provides a great response to alarmists’ claims about the coming climate apocalypse.  It is a great educational publication for kids and adults.  You can download copies for free or you can get a hard copy for a small donation to the NCPA.  We have discounted rates for bulk orders (good for school presentations).  See the video first then explore the Primer online.

Second, if you don’t already, you should subscribe to Daily Policy Digest, the NCPA’s daily summary of the top five or six policy stories from papers, magazines and research papers each day.  Along with the daily short summaries, every week on Thursday you will receive a summary of the week’s environment policy stories – Environment Policy Digest.  This week’s issue can be found at the previous link.  Take time, look it over and look at the archives.  Good quick reading.

Finally, I’d like to promote the NCPA’s environment publications.  Like the blog, we publish work from the best scholars and researchers around the globe – experts in their fields.  Each publication is concise, easy to read and packed with information.

Enjoy!

On Climate Change: President Obama goes one way, the world goes another

Flying under the media radar largely due to the ongoing Syrian crisis, President Obama has in the past two weeks signed on to three multinational climate agreements.  Grist, the popular online environmental newsite and blog, reports that two agreements would further limit powerful greenhouse gasses under the 1987 Montreal Protocol for the phase out of CFC’s and other greenhouse gasses that also affect the Ozone layer.  A third, Pacific regional agreement would set concrete goals and offer $24 million to help poor coastal communities vulnerable to sea level rise.

Meanwhile, elsewhere around the world, other countries are backing off their climate commitments.  Europe seems disposed to dumping or modifying their airline tax.  The Australian people elected a Conservative government, in part, based on its promise to dump its carbon tax among other costly, ineffective measures targeting climate change.  Europe is slashing its green energy subsidies. Finally, the Kyoto climate change treaty’s time has passed with no back up plan to replace it.

And the world goes on its merry way continuing to confound the climate sages and their models.  Despite predictions of the total loss of ice in the arctic by 2013, the arctic ice cap grew by 60 percent over the summer of 2013.  And rather than increasing in frequency or power, the Atlantic Hurricane season is experiencing one of its quietest years.  None of the climate models predicted either of these trends.

What to think?  If you’d like to learn more about what’s going on see our new, updated version of The Global Warming Primer.  It is an easy to read booklet that highlights the what is known and unknown about earth’s climate and lets the reader decide what to think.  I believe anyone who reads it will find it worthwhile.  In addition, we have a short video that condenses the primer to a few key points.  Fun educational viewing for the entire family.

 

Carbon Tax: A loser for Australia — lesson for U.S.!

On July 1, 2012 the Australian government enacted a $23 (Australian dollars) per ton tax on greenhouse gases on a CO2 equivalent basis.  This tax rose to  $24.15/ton on July 1, 2013. At the behest of the Institute of Energy Research, Dr. Alex Robson, an economics professor from Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia, has written an instructive new study  with lessons for U.S. and other policymakers.

The results were not surprising.  As I’ve argued across a number of publications, carbon taxes are bound to inhibit growth, costs jobs, the taxpayers and have a negative effect on government revenue.  A carbon tax may, overtime if it is high enough, make a country carbon neutral, but only at the expense of impoverishing the nation that enacts it.

The numbers from Australia bear out my arguments.  Among the study’s findings:

  • ·         In the year after Australia’s carbon tax was introduced, household electricity prices rose 15%, including the biggest quarterly increase on record.
  • ·         Currently 19% of the typical household’s electricity bill is due to Australia’s carbon tax and other “green” programs such as a renewable energy mandate.
  • ·         Before the carbon tax, Australia’s unemployment had held steady, fluctuating between 620,000 and 640,000, but since July 2012 the number of unemployed workers in Australia has risen by more than 10 per cent, from 636,564 to 705,421, with the unemployment rate rising from 5.2 per cent to 5.7 per cent over the same period.
  • ·         A negative fiscal impact of more than $4 billion in 2015.
  • ·         Ironically, carbon emissions spiked after the cap was put in place and are higher now that any time in history.

And the numbers just get worse in future years.

This report is worth reading in full, especially for anyone who thinks a carbon tax is a viable approach dealing with the risks posed by carbon dioxide emissions.

Obama Puts Politics ahead of People on Guns

On guns, President Obama is either willfully ignorant or just doesn’t get it.  According to a report commissioned by his own CDC,

  • ·         Most indices of crime and gun violence are getting better, not worse.
  • ·         Handguns, not so called assault weapons, are the tools of criminals. 
  • ·         Mass shootings aren’t a problem. 
  • ·         Gun suicide is a bigger killer than gun homicide. 
  • ·         Guns are used for self-defense often and effectively. 
  • ·         It isn’t true that most gun acquisitions by criminals can be blamed on a few bad dealers.

More recently, a study in the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy makes the compelling case that neither banning nor reducing the number of firearms would reduce the number of murders or suicides.  This study examined both domestic and international data and found no link between violence and firearms ownership.

So Harvard and the Administration’s agency have come out against the myth that guns cause crime yet that Administration persists in pushing ineffective gun control policies as a salve to the grief of the public affected by violence committed by evil people with firearms.

Why ineffective?  Because the two new executive orders would do nothing to prevent criminals from using firearms.  One order would end the import of military surplus weapons – not machine guns, mind you, but military looking semi-automatic rifles.  More than 250,000 of these weapons have been imported and sold since 2005 and not a single one has been linked to a crime.

Second, Obama would force corporate board members and officers to undergo background checks if a gun was to be registered to the corporation, foundation or trust.  Once again, when is the last time anyone has heard of a foundation trustee or CFO use a gun registered to a corporation in the commission of a crime.  The answer – never.  Certainly, not in any of the mass shootings that have prompted the current flurry attempted gun control measures.

Once again President Obama seems intent on trumping fundamental rights based on political calculations concerning the public’s emotional reaction, not a reasoned assessment of the facts.

One shouldn’t be surprised since the President’s administration long ago broke Obama’s promise to be the most transparent and open administration in history and to follow science, not politics, in matters where science can comment.

Imperial President Rules through Regs

According to The Hill, President Obama is determined not to let the people’s representatives have their say on climate change legislation.  Rather than allow Congress to work its will — or not act as they see fit — the President is pushing a number of costly regulations intended to limit greenhouse gasses from power plants.  These regulations will be tied up in court long after the President’s term has ended and may never come into effect, but if they do, the only thing we can be fairly certain of is that they will be costly.  They will drive up the price of electricity as older, paid for, coal fired power plants are forced to shut down.  The regulations will also make everyone’s power supply less reliable since under Obama’s rule, we will attempt to replace reliable baseload coal plants with intermittent wind and solar power — better hope we don’t have many cloudy days with little or no wind.  Finally, because the majority of greenhouse gasses are now coming from China and other developing countries, even if you believe humans are causing potentially dangerous global warming, these rules will do nothing to prevent rising temperatures (which they haven’t for 16 years) or other climate changes.

The President is more concerned about his legacy than the Constitutional separation of powers.  One more lose, lose policy by the Imperial President.

Subsidizing Green Energy is Throwing Good Money After Bad

Another one of the Obama backed green energy companies is sinking fast.  ECOtality Inc. which received $100 million in federal stimulus grants has laid off all it employees and is facing two class action lawsuits, trying to recoup investors’ money by selling the company’s assets.  One hundred million here, half a billion there, a billion over there; pretty soon we are talking about real money being wasted on President Obama’s green energy fantasy.  When will Congress call a halt to these programs?  And how much more will be added to the deficit in the meantime?

What you need to know about the main problem with climate science

Over the years I have written a number of pieces critiquing the state of climate science.  I’ve examined the missed predictions, the contrary evidence and the contradictory models.  However, an overarching criticism of the way climate science has been practiced by U.S. government agencies and the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, has been that it has been practiced as more political science or a religion than as a real scientific endeavor.

For instance, for a symposium by the National Review I wrote concerning climate gate:

Twenty years ago, Steve Schneider of Stanford stated that to be effective advocates on the issue of global warming, scientists would have to “offer up scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might have.” His disciples have tried to suppress criticism of the “hockey stick” graph; when that proves impossible and researchers such as Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick expose the graph’s deep flaws, they settle for ignoring or downplaying the problem.

And all of this with the cooperation of the mainstream media. Even when errors are found and admitted to, “legitimate journalists” such as those at the New York Times and the Washington Post, rather than asking hard questions of the scientists who have made the errors or conducting independent investigations, have simply given these scientists a platform to say, “Yeah, we were wrong, but the error was not important.” The reporters never question the claim that the errors aren’t important.

Then again I wrote about climate science as being akin to a religion since it seems to be unfalsifiable:

I placed the word “theory” in quotes because I am reluctantly coming to the conclusion that the idea that humans are causing global warming is really more akin to a religious belief–a revealed truth about human sins (fossil fuel use) and their consequences (all manner of calamities)–rather than a testable scientific explanation.

A couple of points lead me to this conclusion: the way climate scientists skeptical of the claims that humans are causing climate change are treated, and the fact that the theory seems to violate the scientific method by being unfalsifiable.

The term “skeptic” has historically been a badge of honor proudly worn by scientists as indicating their commitment to the idea that, in the pursuit of truth, nothing is beyond question, every bit of knowledge is open to improvement and/or refutation as new evidence or better theories emerge.

However, in the topsy-turvy field of climate science, “skeptic” is a term of opprobrium and to be labeled a skeptic is to be dismissed as a hack. Being a skeptic concerning global warming today is akin to being a heretic in the Middle Ages–you may not be literally burned at the stake, but your reputation will be put to flames.

Concerning the scientific method, progress is made in science by proposing a hypothesis, and developing a theory, to explain or understand certain phenomena and then testing the hypothesis against reality. A particular hypothesis is considered superior to others when, through testing, it is shown to have more explanatory power than competing theories or hypotheses and when other scientists running the same testing regime can reproduce the results of the original test. Every theory or hypothesis must be disconfirmable in principle, such that, if the theory predicts that “A” will occur under certain conditions, but instead, “B” and sometimes “C” result, then the theory has problems.  The more a hypothesis’s predictions prove inconsistent with or diametericaly opposed to the results that occur during testing, the less likely the hypothesis is to be correct.

The theory that humans are causing global warming does not work this way. No matter what the climate phenomenon, if it can in someway be presented as being unusual by global warming alarmists, it is argued to be “further evidence of global warming,” even if it contradicts earlier phenomena that were pointed to by the same people as evidence of global warming.

What the effects will be seem to depend on which scientist one consults and which model they use. In realm of climate change research, different models looking at the same phenomenon applying the same laws of physics with the same inputs produce dramatically varied results.

 

Also there is the little noted fact that the only some of the “scientists” on the IPCC are actual climate scientists rather than economist and other social scientists.  Indeed, the IPCC is made up of leaders appointed by politicians and their work is ultimately edited by politicians.

Recently, another scholar has picked up on the same theme and his views are worth reading.  Dr. Timothy Ball recently wrote:

A major reason the science isn’t settled is because the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) never practiced science. They didn’t even look at climate change, only the possible human causes of climate change. Now they are victims of what T. H. Huxley identified over 100 years ago,

 “The great tragedy of science – the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact.”

Most often the “ugly fact” is that the predictions derived from the hypothesis are wrong.

He continues:

Science has specific rules. It requires you determine the error in the work and either make adjustments or accept the null hypothesis. This does not mean you are wrong, it just means that the opposite to what you hypothesized is occurring.

A hypothesis is generally defined as “a supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation.”

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) created what is generally known as the Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) hypothesis. All hypotheses are based on a set of assumptions and are only as valid as those assumptions. For AGW they are;

– CO2 is a so-called greenhouse gas that reduces rate of heat energy escape to space.

– If atmospheric CO2 increases the global temperature will increase.

– CO2 will increase because of human activities, especially industrial processes.

– this will cause devastating global warming.

Scientific method requires scientists act as skeptics to disprove the hypothesis by challenging the assumptions. Karl Popper referred to this as “Science as Falsification”. With the IPCC they chose to prove their hypothesis because it was for a political rather than scientific agenda. They began with a very narrow definition of climate change as only those changes caused by humans. The dilemma is you cannot determine human causes unless you know and can explain natural changes. They built computer models designed to “prove” their hypothesis. In a classic circular argument, they programmed temperature to increase with a CO2 increase then argued that the model output proved their assumption.

His broadside is worth reading in full.

I leave you with Eisenhower after warning of the military-industrial complex, he warns of the scientific-government complex. (approx. 9 min. 5 sec. in the speech).