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STRASSEL: The
Climate Change
Climate Change
Friday, June 26,
2009
Posted by Matt
Dempsey
matt_dempsey@epw.senate.gov
In Case You Missed It...
The Wall Street
Journal
The Climate Change
Climate Change
The number
of skeptics is
swelling everywhere.
By KIMBERLEY A.
STRASSEL
POTOMAC WATCH
JUNE 26, 2009
Link to Column
U. S. Senate
Minority Report:
More Than
700 International
Scientists Dissent
Over Man-Made Global
Warming Claims
Steve Fielding
recently asked the
Obama administration
to reassure him on
the science of
man-made global
warming. When the
administration
proved unhelpful,
Mr. Fielding decided
to vote against
climate-change
legislation.
If you haven't
heard of this
politician, it's
because he's a
member of the
Australian Senate.
As the U.S. House of
Representatives
prepares to pass a
climate-change bill,
the Australian
Parliament is
preparing to kill
its own country's
carbon-emissions
scheme. Why? A
growing number of
Australian
politicians,
scientists and
citizens once again
doubt the science of
human-caused global
warming.
Among the many
reasons President
Barack Obama and the
Democratic majority
are so intent on
quickly jamming a
cap-and-trade system
through Congress is
because the global
warming tide is
again shifting. It
turns out Al Gore
and the United
Nations (with an
assist from the
media), did a little
too vociferous a job
smearing anyone who
disagreed with them
as "deniers." The
backlash has brought
the scientific
debate roaring back
to life in
Australia, Europe,
Japan and even, if
less reported, the
U.S.
In April, the
Polish Academy of
Sciences published a
document challenging
man-made global
warming. In the
Czech Republic,
where President
Vaclav Klaus remains
a leading skeptic,
today only 11% of
the population
believes humans play
a role. In France,
President Nicolas
Sarkozy wants to tap
Claude Allegre to
lead the country's
new ministry of
industry and
innovation. Twenty
years ago Mr.
Allegre was among
the first to trill
about man-made
global warming, but
the geochemist has
since recanted. New
Zealand last year
elected a new
government, which
immediately
suspended the
country's weeks-old
cap-and-trade
program.
The number of
skeptics, far from
shrinking, is
swelling. Oklahoma
Sen. Jim Inhofe now
counts more than 700
scientists who
disagree with the
U.N. -- 13 times the
number who authored
the U.N.'s 2007
climate summary for
policymakers. Joanne
Simpson, the world's
first woman to
receive a Ph.D. in
meteorology,
expressed relief
upon her retirement
last year that she
was finally free to
speak "frankly" of
her nonbelief. Dr.
Kiminori Itoh, a
Japanese
environmental
physical chemist who
contributed to a
U.N. climate report,
dubs man-made
warming "the worst
scientific scandal
in history."
Norway's Ivar
Giaever, Nobel Prize
winner for physics,
decries it as the
"new religion." A
group of 54 noted
physicists, led by
Princeton's Will
Happer, is demanding
the American
Physical Society
revise its position
that the science is
settled. (Both
Nature and Science
magazines have
refused to run the
physicists' open
letter.)
The collapse of
the "consensus" has
been driven by
reality. The
inconvenient truth
is that the earth's
temperatures have
flat-lined since
2001, despite
growing
concentrations of
C02. Peer-reviewed
research has
debunked doomsday
scenarios about the
polar ice caps,
hurricanes, malaria,
extinctions, rising
oceans. A global
financial crisis has
politicians taking a
harder look at the
science that would
require them to
hamstring their
economies to rein in
carbon.
Credit for
Australia's own era
of renewed
enlightenment goes
to Dr. Ian Plimer, a
well-known
Australian
geologist. Earlier
this year he
published "Heaven
and Earth," a
damning critique of
the "evidence"
underpinning
man-made global
warming. The book is
already in its fifth
printing. So
compelling is it
that Paul Sheehan, a
noted Australian
columnist -- and
ardent global
warming believer --
in April humbly
pronounced it "an
evidence-based
attack on conformity
and orthodoxy,
including my own,
and a reminder to
respect informed
dissent and beware
of ideology
subverting
evidence."
Australian polls
have shown a sharp
uptick in public
skepticism; the
press is back to
questioning
scientific dogma;
blogs are having a
field day.
The rise in
skepticism also came
as Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd, elected
like Mr. Obama on
promises to combat
global warming, was
attempting his own
emissions-reduction
scheme. His
administration was
forced to delay the
implementation of
the program until at
least 2011, just to
get the legislation
through Australia's
House. The Senate
was not so easily
swayed.
Mr. Fielding, a
crucial vote on the
bill, was so alarmed
by the renewed
science debate that
he made a
fact-finding trip to
the U.S., attending
the Heartland
Institute's annual
conference for
climate skeptics. He
also visited with
Joseph Aldy, Mr.
Obama's special
assistant on energy
and the environment,
where he challenged
the Obama team to
address his doubts.
They apparently
didn't.
This week Mr.
Fielding issued a
statement: He would
not be voting for
the bill. He would
not risk job losses
on "unconvincing
green science." The
bill is set to
founder as the
Australian
parliament breaks
for the winter.
Republicans in
the U.S. have, in
recent years, turned
ever more to the
cost arguments
against climate
legislation. That's
made sense in light
of the economic
crisis. If Speaker
Nancy Pelosi fails
to push through her
bill, it will be
because rural and
Blue Dog Democrats
fret about the
economic
ramifications. Yet
if the rest of the
world is any
indication, now
might be the time
for U.S. politicians
to re-engage on the
science. One thing
for sure: They won't
be alone.
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