The Show Must Go On
WHEN
the history of the global warming scare comes to be written, a chapter should
be devoted to the way the message had to be altered to keep the show on the
road. Global warming became climate change so as to be able to take the blame
for cold spells and wet seasons as well as hot days. Then, to keep its options
open, the movement began to talk about "extreme weather".
Part of
the problem was that some time towards the end of the first decade of the 21st
century it became clear that the Earth's average temperature just was not
consistently rising any more, however many "adjustments" were made to
the thermometer records, let alone rising anything like as rapidly as all the
models demanded.
So
those who made their living from alarm, and by then there were lots, switched
tactics and began to jump on any unusual weather event, whether it was a storm,
a drought, a blizzard or a flood, and blame it on man-made carbon dioxide
emissions. This proved a rewarding tactic, because people - egged on by
journalists - have an inexhaustible appetite for believing in the
vindictiveness of the weather gods. The fossil fuel industry was inserted in
the place of Zeus as the scapegoat of choice. (Scientists are the priests.)
The
fact that people have short memories about weather events is what enables this
game to be played. The long Australian drought of 2001-7, the Brisbane floods
of 2009-10 and the angry summer of 2012-13 stand out in people's minds. People
are reluctant to put them down to chance. Even here in mild England, people are
always saying "I have never known it so
cold/hot/mild/windy/wet/dry/changeable as it is this year". One Christmas
I noticed the seasons had been pretty average all year, neither too dry nor too
wet nor too cold nor too warm. "I have never known it so average," I
said to somebody. I got a baffled look. Nobody ever calls the weather normal.
So it
is deeply refreshing to read the new book called Taxing Air: Facts and
Fallacies About Climate Change by the internationally respected geologist Bob
Carter and illustrated by the cartoonist John Spooner, which puts climate
change exactly where it should be - in perspective. After demolishing many
other arguments for carbon taxes and climate alarm, Carter runs through recent
weather events, showing that there is nothing exceptional, let alone
unprecedented, about recent droughts, floods, heat waves, cyclones or changes
to the Great Barrier Reef.
How
come then that last week the World Meteorological Organisation produced a
breathless report claiming that "the decadal rate of increase (of world
temperature) between 1991-2000 and 2001-2010 was unprecedented"? It took
professor Ed Hawkins of Reading University a short time to point out that this
was no longer true if you compared 1993-2002 and 2003-2012 - ie, if you took
the most up-to-date records. In that case, the latest decade showed a smaller
increase over the preceding decade than either of the preceding decades did. In
other words, the temperature standstill of the past 16 years has begun to show
up in the decade-by-decade data.
And
this is even before you take into account the exaggeration that seemed to
contaminate the surface temperature records in the latter part of the 20th
century - because of urbanisation, selective closure of weather stations and
unexplained "adjustments". Two Greek scientists recently calculated
that for 67 per cent of 181 globally distributed weather stations they
examined, adjustments had raised the temperature trend, so they almost halved
their estimate of the actual warming that happened in the later 20th century.
Anyway,
by "unprecedented", the WMO meant since 1850, which is a micro-second
of history to a paleo-climatologist like Carter. He takes a long-term
perspective, pointing out that the world has been warming since 17,000 years
ago, cooling since 8000 years ago, cooling since 2000 years ago, warming since
1850 and is little changed since 1997. Consequently, "the answer to the
question 'is global warming occurring' depends fundamentally on the length of
the piece of climate string that you wish to consider". He goes on:
"Is today's temperature unusually warm? No - and no ifs or buts."
Carter
is a courageous man, because within academia those who do not accept that
climate change is dangerous are often bullied.
Indeed,
Carter, who retired from James Cook University before he got interested in the
global warming debate but remains an emeritus fellow, recently found himself
deprived of even an email address by colleagues resentful of his failure to toe
the line. As the old joke goes: what's the opposite of diversity? University.
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