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Green Is The New Red

by "00ZNB" <00ZNB@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 7, 2008 at 04:14 PM

Gorbachev are you there?





The REAL inconvenient truth: Zealotry over global warming could damage 
our Earth far more than climate change

NIGEL LAWSON

5th April 2008



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=557374&in_page_id=1770



Over the past half-century, we have become used to planetary scares. In 
the late Sixties, we were told of a population explosion that would lead 
to global starvation.



Then, a little later, we were warned the world was running out of 
natural resources. By the Seventies, when global temperatures began to 
dip, many eminent scientists warned us that we faced a new Ice Age.



But the latest scare, global warming, has engaged the political and 
opinion-forming cl***** to a greater extent than any of these.



The readiness to embrace this fa****onable belief has led the present 
Labour Government, enthusiastically sup****ted by the Conservatives and 
Liberal Democrats, to commit itself to a policy of drastically cutting 
back carbon dioxide emissions - at huge cost to the British economy and 
to the living standards not merely of this generation, but of our 
children's generation, too.



That is why I have written a book about the subject.



Now, I readily admit that I am not a scientist; but then neither are the 
vast majority of those who espouse the currently fa****onable madness. 
Moreover, most of those scientists who speak with such certainty about 
global warming and climate change are not climate scientists, or Earth 
scientists of any kind, and thus have no special knowledge to 
contribute.



Those who have to take the key decisions aren't scientists either. They 
are politicians who, having listened cto the opinions of relevant 
scientists and having studied the evidence, must reach the best 
decisions they can - just as I did when I was Energy Secretary in 
Margaret Thatcher's first government in the early Eighties.



But science is only part of the story. Even if the climate scientists 
can tell us what is happening, and why they think it is happening, they 
cannot tell us what governments should be doing about it. For this, we 
also need an understanding of the economics: of what the economic 
consequences of any warming might be, and, if there is a problem, the 
best way of dealing with it.



First, then, what is happening? Given that nowadays pretty well every 
adverse development in the natural world is automatically attributed to 
global warming, perhaps the most surprising fact about it is that it is 
not, in fact, happening at all. The truth is that there has so far been 
no recorded global warming at all this century.



The world's temperature rose about half a degree centigrade during the 
last quarter of the 20th century; but even the Hadley Centre for Climate 
Prediction and Research - part of Britain's Met Office and a citadel of 
the current global warming orthodoxy - has now conceded that recorded 
temperature figures for the first seven years of the 21st century reveal 
there has been a standstill.



The centre now officially expects global warming to resume at some point 
between 2009 and 2014.



Maybe it will. But the fact that the present lull was not predicted by 
any of the complex computer models upon which the global warming 
orthodoxy relies is clear evidence that the science of what determines 
the world's temperature is distinctly uncertain and far from "settled".



Genuine climate scientists admit that Earth's climate is determined by 
hugely complex systems, and reliable prediction is impossible.



That does not mean, of course, that we know nothing. We know that the 
planet is made habitable only thanks to the warmth we receive from the 
rays of the sun. Most of this heat bounces back into space; but some of 
it is



trapped by the so-called greenhouse gases which exist in the Earth's 
atmosphere. If it were not for that, our planet would be far too cold 
for man to survive.



The most im****tant greenhouse gas is water vapour, including water 
suspended in clouds. Rather a long way behind, the second most im****tant 
is carbon dioxide.



The vast bulk of the carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere is 
natural - that is, nothing to do with man. But there is no doubt that 
ever since the Industrial Revolution in the latter part of the 19th 
century, man has added greatly to atmospheric concentrations of carbon 
dioxide by burning carbon - first in the form of coal, and subsequently 
in the form of oil and gas, too.



So it is reasonable to suppose that, other things being equal, this will 
have warmed the planet, and that further man-made carbon dioxide 
emissions will warm it still further.



But in the first place, other things are very far from equal. And in the 
second place, even if they were, there is no agreement among reputable 
climate scientists over how much this contributed to the modest 
late-20th century warming of the planet, and thus may be expected to do 
so in future.



It is striking that during the 21st century, carbon dioxide emissions 
have been growing faster than ever - thanks in particular to the rapid 
growth of the Chinese economy - yet there has been no further global 
warming at all.



Carbon dioxide, like water vapour and oxygen, is not only completely 
harmless but is an essential element in our life sup****t system.



Not only do we exhale carbon dioxide every time we breathe (indeed, an 
im****tant cause of the increased amount of carbon dioxide in the 
atmosphere is simply the huge increase in the world's population), but 
plants need to absorb carbon dioxide in order to survive. Without carbon 
dioxide, there would be no plant life on the planet. And without plant 
life, there would be no human life either.



While climate scientists disagree about how much further warming 
continued carbon dioxide emissions might cause, there is an established 
majority view.



This is articulated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 
(IPCC), an offshoot of the United Nations, whose view is that 'most' of 
the modest (0.5 per cent) late-20th century warming was "very likely" 
caused by man-made carbon dioxide emissions.



And if the growth of such emissions continues unabated, their 'best 
guess' is that in 100 years' time, the planet will be somewhere between 
1.8 and 4 per cent warmer than it is today, with a mid-point of a shade 
under 3 per cent. (Incidentally, this was published before the early 
21st century warming standstill was officially acknowledged, so was not 
taken into account.)



Alistair Darling told us in his recent Budget speech that this would 
have "catastrophic economic and social consequences". But that is just 
alarmist poppycock.



Let's look at just two of the alleged "catastrophic" consequences of 
global warming: the threat to food production, leading to mass 
starvation; and the threat to human health, leading to disease and 
death.



So far as food production is concerned, it is not clear why a warmer 
climate would be a problem at all. Even the IPCC concedes that for a 
warming of anything up to 3 per cent, "globally, the potential for food 
production is projected to increase". Yes: increase.



As to health, in its most recent re****t, the IPCC found only one outcome 
which they ranked as "virtually certain" to happen - and that was 
"reduced human mortality from decreased cold exposure".



This echoes a study done by our own Department of Health which predicted 
that by the 2050s, the UK would suffer an increase in heat-related 
deaths by 2,000 a year, and a decrease in cold-related mortality of 
20,000 deaths a year - something that ministers have been curiously 
silent about.



The IPCC systematically exaggerates the likely adverse effects of any 
warming that might occur because estimates of the likely impact of the 
global warming it projects for the next 100 years are explicitly based 
on two assumptions, both of them absurd.



The first is that while the developed world can adapt to warming, the 
developing world cannot.



The second is that even in the developed world, the capacity to adapt is 
constrained by the limits of existing technology. In other words, there 
will be no technological development over the next 100 years.



So far as the first of these two assumptions is concerned, if necessary, 
the developed world will focus its overseas aid on ensuring that the 
developing countries acquire the required ability to adapt. The second 
is, of course, ludicrous - notably in the case of food production, 
where, with the development of bio-engineering and genetic modification, 
the world is currently in the early stages of a genuine revolution in 
agricultural technology.



All in all, given that global warming produces benefits as well as 
costs, it is far from clear that the currently projected warming, far 
from being "catastrophic", will do any net harm at all.



To which it will be replied that while that may be so for the world as a 
whole, the people in the developing world will indeed suffer.



But the greatest curse of the developing world is mass poverty, and the 
malnutrition, disease and unnecessary death that poverty brings. To 
impede their escape from poverty by denying them the benefits of cheap 
carbon-based energy would damage them far more than global warming ever 
could.



Nonetheless, on the basis of its deeply flawed assumptions, the IPCC 
predicts that if the warming is as much as 4 degrees centigrade by the 
end of this century, then the economic cost would be a cut of between 1 
per cent and 5 per cent of what world output (GDP) would otherwise have 
been - with the developed world suffering much less, and the developing 
world much more than this.



But supposing the developing world suffers as much as a 10 per cent loss 
of GDP from what it would have been in 100 years' time.



That means that by the year 2100, people in the developing world, 
instead of being some 9.5 times better off than they are today, will be 
'only' 8.5 times better off (which, incidentally, will still leave them 
better off than people in the developed world today). And, remember, all 
this is on the basis of the IPCC's own grotesquely inflated estimate of 
the likely damage from further warming.



So the fundamental question is: how big a sacrifice should the present 
generation make now in the hope of avoiding this?



The cost of the drastic reduction in carbon dioxide emissions which we 
are told is necessary would be huge. The Government has introduced 
legislation to force us to cut emissions by between 60 per cent and 80 
per cent by 2050, and Tony Blair, as self-appointed head of a group of 
"experts", last month declared that "emissions in the richer countries 
will have to fall close to zero".



One thing is clear: the "feelgood" measures so popular among some 
sections of the middle cl*****, from driving a hybrid car and having a 
wind turbine on one's roof to not leaving the television set on standby, 
are trivial to the point of total irrelevance. What would be required is 
for all trans****t to be 100 per cent electric, and all electricity to be 
generated by nuclear power.



To cut back carbon dioxide emissions on the scale the present Labour 
Government (sup****ted by the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats) is 
demanding would require a fundamental restructuring of the economy, 
involving a rise in the cost of energy dwarfing anything we have seen so 
far.



No doubt we could afford this hard****p if it made sense. But does it? 
The UK accounts for only 2 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions. 
Even if the entire European Union adopted this policy, that accounts for 
only 15 per cent of global emissions.



By contrast, China - which has already overtaken the U.S. as the biggest 
single emitter - has said that there is no way it will agree to a cap on 
its carbon dioxide emissions for the foreseeable future. And India has 
said precisely the same.



Both of them point out that it was the industrialised West, not they, 
that caused the increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations 
during the last century, and that it is now their turn to catch up.



Also, that their emissions per head of population, although rising fast, 
are still well below those of the U.S. and Europe; and that their 
overriding priority is - quite rightly - the fastest possible rate of 
economic growth, and thus the most rapid emancipation of their people 
from poverty. One good reason why there will not be any effective global 
agreement.



So the chief consequence of decarbonising here, and making energy much 
more expensive, would simply be to accelerate the exodus of industry 
from the UK and Europe to China and elsewhere in the developing world - 
with, as a result, little or no reduction in overall global emissions.



And even if there were a global agreement to cut drastically carbon 
dioxide emissions, the economic cost of doing so would far exceed any 
benefit.



So does all this mean that we should do nothing about global warming? 
Well, not quite. (Although doing nothing is better than doing something 
stupid.)



We do need to monitor as accurately as we can what is happening to 
temperatures across the globe, and we do need to assist the developing 
countries to adapt to a warmer temperature, should (one day) the need 
arise.



It makes sense, too, to invest in research in the hoped-for technology 
of generating electricity using commercial carbon capture (so that 
carbon dioxide emissions might be "captured" before they can escape into 
the atmosphere) and also, as the U.S. is already doing, in the 
technology of geoengineering to cool the planet artificially.



But that is about the size of it. This is not the easiest message to get 
across - not least because the issues surrounding global warming are so 
often discussed in terms of belief rather than reason.



There may be a political explanation for this. With the collapse of 
Marxism and, to all intents and purposes, of other forms of socialism 
too, those who dislike capitalism and its foremost exemplar, the United 
States, with equal passion, have been obliged to find a new creed.



For many of them, green is the new red. And those who wish to order us 
how to run our lives, faced with the uncomfortable evidence that 
economic prosperity is more likely to be achieved by less government 
intervention rather than more, naturally welcome the emergence of a new 
licence to intrude, to interfere, to tax and to regulate: all in the 
great cause of saving the planet from the alleged horrors of global 
warming.



But there is something much more fundamental at work. I suspect that it 
is no accident that it is in Europe that eco-fundamentalism in general 
and global warming absolutism in particular has found its most fertile 
soil. For it is Europe that has become the most secular society in the 
world, where the traditional religions have the weakest hold.



Yet people still feel the need for the comfort and higher values that 
religion can provide; and it is the quasi-religion of green alarmism, of 
which the global warming issue is the most striking example, which has 
filled the vacuum, with reasoned questioning of its mantras regarded as 
little short of sacrilege.



Does all this matter? Up to a point, no.



Unbelievers should not be dismissive of the comfort that 'religion' can 
bring. If people feel better when they drive a hybrid car or ride a 
bicycle to work, and like to parade their virtue in this way, then so be 
it.



Nonetheless, the new and unattractively intolerant religion of 
eco-fundamentalism and global warming presents real dangers. The most 
obvious is that the governments of Europe may get so carried away by 
their own rhetoric as to impose measures that do serious harm to their 
economies. That is a particular danger at the present time in the UK.



Another danger is that even if the governments do not go too far and 
damage their own economies, they may still cause great damage to the 
developing world by engaging in what might be termed green 
protectionism. The movement to make us feel guilty about buying overseas 
produce because of the "food miles" involved is just one example of 
this.



And France's President Sarkozy is currently urging the European Union to 
impose trade barriers against those countries that are not prepared to 
limit their carbon dioxide emissions.



It should not need pointing out that a lurch into protectionism, and a 
rolling back of globalisation, would do far more damage to the world 
economy - and in particular to living standards in the developing 
countries - than could conceivably result from the projected 
continuation of global warming.



But even if this danger can be averted, it is clear that the would-be 
saviours of the planet are, in practice, the enemies of poverty 
reduction in the developing world.



So the new religion of global warming, however convenient it may be to 
the politicians, is not as harmless as it may appear. Indeed, the more 
one examines it, the more it resembles a Da Vinci Code of 
environmentalism. It is a great story, and a phenomenal bestseller. It 
contains a grain of truth - and a mountain of nonsense.



And that nonsense could be very damaging indeed.



We appear to have entered a new age of unreason, which threatens to be 
as economically harmful as it is profoundly disquieting. It is from 
this, above all, that we really do need to save the planet.



.. AN Appeal To Reason: A Cool Look At Global Warming by Nigel Lawson is 
published by Duckworth on April 10 at £9.99. To order a copy (p&p free), 
call 0845 606 4206.
-- 



Warmest Regards

Bonzo

"Attributing global climate change to human CO2 production is akin to 
trying to diagnose an automotive problem by ignoring the engine 
(analogous to the Sun in the climate system) and the transmission (water 
vapour) and instead focusing entirely, not on one nut on a rear wheel, 
which would be analogous to total CO2, but on one thread on that nut, 
which represents the human contribution." Dr. Timothy Ball, Chairman of 
the Natural Resources Steward****p Project (NRSP.com), Former Professor 
Of Climatology, University of Winnipeg
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
Green Is The New Red
"00ZNB" <00Z  2008-04-07 16:14:53 
Re: Green Is The New Red
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-04-09 10:14:24 

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tan12V112 Wed Dec 3 14:03:18 CST 2008.