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The Great Global Warming Collapse
In 2007, the most comprehensive report to date on global warming, issued by the respected United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, made a shocking claim: The Himalayan glaciers could melt away as soon as 2035.
These glaciers provide the headwaters for Asia's nine largest rivers and lifelines for the more than one billion people who live downstream. Melting ice and snow would create mass flooding, followed by mass drought. The glacier story was reported around the world. Last December, a spokesman for the World Wildlife Fund, an environmental pressure group, warned, “The deal reached at Copenhagen will have huge ramifications for the lives of hundreds of millions of people who are already highly vulnerable due to widespread poverty.” To dramatize their country's plight, Nepal's top politicians strapped on oxygen tanks and held a cabinet meeting on Mount Everest.
But the claim was rubbish, and the world's top glaciologists knew it. It was based not on rigorously peer-reviewed science but on an anecdotal report by the WWF itself.
When its background came to light on the eve of Copenhagen, Rajendra Pachauri, the head of the IPCC, shrugged it off.
But now, even leading scientists and environmental groups admit the IPCC is facing a crisis of credibility that makes the Climategate affair look like small change.
“The global warming movement as we have known it is dead,” the brilliant analyst Walter Russell Mead says in his blog on The American Interest. It was done in by a combination of bad science and bad politics.
The impetus for the Copenhagen
conference was that the science makes it imperative for us to act. But
even if that were true – and even if we knew what to do – a global deal
was never in the cards. As Mr. Mead writes, “The global warming
movement proposed a complex set of international agreements involving
vast transfers of funds, intrusive regulations in national economies,
and substantial changes to the domestic political economies of most
countries on the planet.” Copenhagen was never going to produce a
breakthrough. It was a dead end.
And now, the science scandals just keep on coming. First there was the
vast cache of e-mails leaked from the University of East Anglia, home
of a crucial research unit responsible for collecting temperature data.
Although not fatal
to the science, they revealed a snakepit of scheming to keep
contradictory research from being published, make imperfect data look
better, and withhold information from unfriendly third parties.
If science is supposed to be open and transparent, these guys acted as if they had a lot to hide.
Despite widespread efforts to play down the Climategate e-mails, they
were very damaging. An investigation by the British newspaper The
Guardian – among the most aggressive advocates for action on climate
change – has found that a series of measurements from Chinese weather
stations were seriously flawed, and that documents relating to them
could not be produced.
Meantime, the IPCC – the body widely regarded, until now, as the
ultimate authority on climate science – is looking worse and worse.
After it was forced to retract its claim about melting glaciers, Mr.
Pachauri dismissed the error as a one-off. But other IPCC claims have
turned out to be just as groundless.
For example, it warned that large tracts of the Amazon rain forest
might be wiped out by global warming because they are extremely
susceptible to even modest decreases in rainfall. The sole source for
that claim, reports The Sunday Times of London, was a magazine article
written by a pair of climate activists, one of whom worked for the WWF.
One scientist contacted by the Times, a specialist in tropical forest
ecology, called the article “a mess.”
Worse still, the Times has discovered that Mr. Pachauri's own Energy
and Resources Unit, based in New Delhi, has collected millions in
grants to study the effects of glacial melting – all on the strength of
that bogus glacier claim, which happens to have been endorsed by the
same scientist who now runs the unit that got the money. Even so, the
IPCC chief is hanging tough. He insists the attacks on him are being
orchestrated by companies facing lower profits.
Until now, anyone who questioned the credibility of the IPCC was
labelled as a climate skeptic, or worse. But many climate scientists
now sense a sinking ship, and they're bailing out. Among them is Andrew
Weaver, a climatologist at the University of Victoria who acknowledges
that the climate body has crossed the line into advocacy.
Even
Britain's Greenpeace has called for Mr. Pachauri's resignation. India
says it will establish its own body to monitor the effects of global
warming because it “cannot rely” on the IPCC.
None of this is to say that global warming isn't real, or that human
activity doesn't play a role, or that the IPCC is entirely wrong, or
that measures to curb greenhouse-gas emissions aren't valid. But the
strategy pursued by activists (including scientists who have crossed
the line into advocacy) has turned out to be fatally flawed.
By exaggerating the certainties, papering over the gaps, demonizing the
skeptics and peddling tales of imminent catastrophe, they've
discredited the entire climate-change movement. The political damage
will be severe. As Mr. Mead succinctly puts it: “Skeptics up, Obama
down, cap-and-trade dead.” That also goes for Canada, whose climate
policies are inevitably tied to those of the United States.
“I don't think it's healthy to dismiss proper skepticism,” says John
Beddington, the chief scientific adviser to the British government. He
is a staunch believer in man-made climate change, but he also points
out the complexity of climate science.
“Science
grows and improves in the light of criticism. There is a fundamental
uncertainty about climate change prediction that can't be changed.”
In
his view, it's time to stop circling the wagons and throw open the
doors. How much the public will keep caring is another matter.
[5Feb2010,
Last updated Feb. 06, 2010, Margaret Wente,
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/the-great-global-warming-collapse/article1458206/]
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