by Robert Williams
Robert
Williams is a researcher based in the United States
September 10, 2023
from
GatestoneInstitute Website
"Climate models have many shortcomings
and are
not remotely plausible as policy tools.
They...
ignore the fact that
enriching the atmosphere with
CO2 is beneficial...
There
is no statistical evidence
that
global warming is intensifying
hurricanes, floods, droughts and suchlike natural disasters,
or
making them more frequent."
From
the declaration,
"There
is no Climate Emergency,"
signed
by 1,609 scientists.
(Image
source: iStock)
-
More
than 1,600 scientists, including two Nobel laureates, have
signed a declaration saying that,
"There
is no Climate Emergency"...
-
The
declaration is unlikely to get any attention from the
mainstream media, unfortunately, but it is important for
people to know about: the mass climate hysteria and the
destruction of the US economy in the name of climate change
need to stop.
-
"Climate
science should be less political, while climate policies
should be more scientific," states the declaration signed by
the 1,609 scientists, including Nobel laureates John F.
Clauser from the US and Ivar Giaever from Norway/US.
-
"Climate
policy relies on inadequate models. Climate models have many
shortcomings and are not remotely plausible as policy tools.
They... ignore the fact that enriching the atmosphere with
CO2 is beneficial... There is no statistical evidence that
global warming is intensifying hurricanes, floods, droughts
and suchlike natural disasters, or making them more
frequent." - 1,609 scientists,
There is no Climate Emergency - Clintel.org.
-
"I was
taught that you tell the whole truth [as a scientist]...."
Koonin said. He noted as well the immorality of asking the
developing world to cut down emissions, when so many do not
even have access to electricity and the immorality of
scaring the younger generations.... - Steven E. Koonin,
former Undersecretary for Science at the U.S. Department of
Energy; current professor at New York University, fellow at
the Hoover Institution, and author of Unsettled
- What Climate Science Tells Us, What It Doesn't and Why
It Matters. - Hoover Institution, August 15, 2023.
-
Of
course it would be helpful to research what can be done to
relieve the problems brought about by man, such as the "hole
in the ozone layer," which is now closing, but climate
change is not an apocalyptic emergency and needs to be
attended to without bringing devastation to the hundreds of
millions of people already in extreme poverty.
-
The
Biden administration,
however, appears not to be concerned about the widespread
poverty and massive starvation that will be caused by the
unavailability of cheap and reliable energy in
underdeveloped countries, or the inflation caused by the
skyrocketing prices that are crushing Americans "barely able
to afford one meal a day".
-
These
are man-made problems, created by importing expensive
(nearing $100 a barrel again) - often dirtier - oil from
adversaries of the United States, such as Russia and
Venezuela, instead of extracting it far less expensively at
home.
-
The
Biden administration also does not seem concerned that it is
killing wildlife, sea life and the fishing industry by
installing offshore wind turbines along the Atlantic
seaboard, or that mandating electric vehicles will throw
virtually the entire auto maintenance industry out of work (EVs
do not need routine maintenance), or that lithium batteries
not only explode but cost thousands of dollars to replace.
The administration even wants military equipment, such as
tanks, to be electric, as if there were charging stations in
the middle of foreign deserts in the event of a conflict.
Moreover, according to NBC News, volcanoes, unimpressed with
executive orders, "Dwarf Humans for CO2 Emissions."
-
The
Biden administration does not even bother to act on its own
climate findings: In March, the White House released a
report about the impact of climate change on the US economy.
"Its findings undermine any claims of an ongoing climate
crisis or imminent catastrophe" Koonin wrote in July. "The
report's authors should be commended for honestly delivering
likely unwelcome messages... Exaggerating the magnitude,
urgency and certainty of the climate threat encourages
ill-considered policies that could be more disruptive and
expensive than any change in the climate itself." - Steven
E. Koonin,
Wall Street Journal, July 6, 2023.
-
Never
mind that much of climate change is apparently caused by sun
flares, about which we can do nothing, and which, unlike
commercial industries, do not offer grants; or that major
wildfires are, ironically, exacerbated by
"environmentalists" for refusing to let tinderbox brush be
cleared lest the creatures there be disturbed other than by
a wildfire.
-
Climate
expert Bjørn Lomborg suggests that the trillions of dollars
needed to address climate change might be put to better use:
-
"This isn't an argument to do nothing but just to be
smarter. To ensure we can transition from fossil fuels,
we need to ramp up research and development to innovate
down the price of green energy. We should invest across
all options including fusion, fission, storage, biofuel
and other sources."
-
"Only when green energy is cheaper than fossil fuels
will the world be able and willing to make the
transition. Otherwise, today's energy prices are just a
taste of things to come."
More than 1,600
scientists, including two Nobel laureates, have signed a declaration
saying that "There
is no Climate Emergency."
The declaration is
unlikely to get any attention from the mainstream media,
unfortunately, but it is important for people to know about:
the mass climate
hysteria and the destruction of the US economy in the name of
climate change need to stop.
"Climate science
should be less political, while climate policies should be
more scientific," states the declaration signed by the 1,609
scientists, including Nobel laureates John F. Clauser
from the US and Ivar Giaever from Norway/US.
The statement adds:
"Scientists should
openly address uncertainties and exaggerations in their
predictions of global warming, while politicians should
dispassionately count the real costs as well as the imagined
benefits of their policy measures...
"The geological archive reveals that Earth's climate has varied
as long as the planet has existed, with natural cold and warm
phases.
The
Little Ice Age ended as recently as 1850...
Therefore, it is no
surprise that we now are experiencing a period of warming.
"Warming is far slower than predicted...
"The gap between the real world and the modeled world tells us
that we are far from understanding climate change.
"Climate models have many shortcomings and are not remotely
plausible as policy tools. They do not only exaggerate the
effect of greenhouse gases, they also ignore the fact that
enriching the atmosphere with CO2 is beneficial...
"Global warming has not increased natural disasters. There is no
statistical evidence that global warming is intensifying
hurricanes, floods, droughts and suchlike natural disasters, or
making them more frequent.
However, there is
ample evidence
that CO2 mitigation measures are as
damaging as
they are costly.
"Climate policy must respect scientific and economic realities.
There is no climate emergency.
Therefore, there is no cause for
panic and alarm.
We strongly oppose
the harmful and unrealistic net-zero CO2 policy proposed for
2050. Go for adaptation instead of mitigation; adaptation works
whatever the causes are."
Professor Steven Koonin, former Undersecretary for Science at
the U.S. Department of Energy under the
Obama administration,
current professor at New York University, and fellow at the Hoover
Institution, authored the 2021 bestseller,
Unsettled - What Climate
Science Tells Us, What It Doesn't, and Why It Matters.
In it, he states that
what the largely unreadable (for laymen) and complicated science
reports say on climate change is completely distorted by the time
their contents are filtered through a long line of summary reports
of the research by the media and the politicians.
"There are abundant
opportunities to get things wrong - both accidentally and on
purpose - as the information goes through filter after filter to
be packaged for various audiences...
It's not only the public
that is ill-informed about what the science says about
climate..."
Koonin adds:
"Government and UN
press releases and summaries do not accurately reflect the
reports themselves... Distinguished climate experts (including
report authors themselves) are embarrassed by some media
portrayals of the science."
In a
recent interview, Koonin noted that his colleagues' reactions to his book had been
that he should not be telling the public or the politicians
the truth about climate change...
"I was taught that
you tell the whole truth [as a scientist]. And you let the
politicians make the value judgments and the cost effectiveness
trade-offs and so on," Koonin said.
He noted as well the
immorality of asking the developing world to cut down emissions when
so many do not even have access to electricity, and the immorality
of scaring the younger generations:
84% of American
teenagers believing, as of January 2022, that if climate change
is not addressed,
"it will be too
late for future generations, making some part of the planet
unlivable."
Of course it would be
helpful to research what can be done to relieve the problems brought
about by man, such as the "hole in the ozone layer," which is now
closing.
But climate change is not an
'apocalyptic emergency' and,
needs to be attended to without bringing devastation to the
hundreds
of millions of people already in
extreme poverty.
The
Biden administration, however, appears not to be concerned about
the
widespread poverty and massive starvation that will be caused by,
These are man-made problems, created by importing expensive (nearing
$100 a barrel again) - often dirtier - oil from adversaries of the
United States, such as
Russia and
Venezuela,
instead of extracting
it far less expensively at home...
The Biden administration
also does not seem concerned that so long as
China and India keep
burning coal.
The Chinese Communist Party is permitting
two new
coal-power plants a week, easily cancelling out whatever benefits
the US might be providing, and reportedly
exceeding,
"all developed
nations combined" in carbon emissions.
The Biden administration
also does not seem concerned,
-
that it is killing
wildlife,
sea life
and the
fishing industry by installing offshore wind turbines along
the Atlantic seaboard
-
that mandating electric vehicles will
throw virtually the entire auto maintenance industry out of work (EVs
do not need routine maintenance)
-
that lithium batteries not only
explode but cost thousands of dollars to replace...
The administration even
wants
military equipment, such as tanks, to be
electric, as if there
were charging stations in the middle of foreign deserts in the event
of a conflict.
Moreover, according to
NBC News, volcanoes,
unimpressed with executive orders,
"Dwarf Humans for CO2
Emissions"...
The Biden administration
does not even bother to act on its own climate findings:
In March, the White
House
released a report about the impact of climate change on
the US economy.
"Its findings
undermine any claims of an ongoing climate crisis or
imminent catastrophe" Koonin
wrote in July.
"The report's authors should be commended for honestly
delivering likely unwelcome messages, even if they didn't
make a show of it.
The rest of the
Biden administration and its climate-activist allies should
moderate their apocalyptic rhetoric and cancel the climate
crisis accordingly.
Exaggerating the
magnitude, urgency and certainty of the climate threat
encourages ill-considered policies that could be more
disruptive and expensive than any change in the climate
itself."
But facts will not stop
the Biden administration from forging ahead with its radical
policies:
"I don't think
anybody can deny the impact of the climate crisis anymore,"
Biden, commenting on Hurricane Idalia, told reporters at the
White House on August 30.
"Just look around.
Historic floods. I mean, historic floods. More intense droughts,
extreme heat, significant wildfires have caused significant
damage..."
Never mind that much of
climate change is apparently caused by
sun flares, about which we
can do nothing, and which, unlike commercial industries, do not
offer grants.
Major wildfires are,
ironically, exacerbated by "environmentalists" for refusing to let
tinderbox brush be cleared lest the creatures there be disturbed
other than by a wildfire.
Climate expert Bjørn Lomborg
suggests that the trillions of
dollars needed to address climate change might be put to better use:
"This isn't an
argument to do nothing but just to be smarter.
To ensure we can
transition from fossil fuels, we need to ramp up research and
development to innovate down the price of green energy.
We should invest
across all options including,
fusion, fission, storage, biofuel
and other sources...
"Only when
green energy is cheaper than fossil fuels will the
world be able and willing to make the transition. Otherwise,
today's energy prices are just a taste of things to come."
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