"Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

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Xamonas Chegwé
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Xamonas Chegwé » Wed Feb 24, 2010 10:13 pm

Subject: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"
Fact-Man wrote:
Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Fact Man & Mysturji,

I think you both got off to a bad start in this thread.

This is not RD.net. We prefer our members not to be as aggressive and derisory in the defense of their posts. There was emotion, hyperbole and offhand dismissal of the others arguments from both sides here. Please try and simmer it down a bit. Remember that neither of you were debating with ranting fundies here, but with another intelligent and knowledgeable person that just didn't share all of your views. Please treat each other in that manner.

Thanks,

XC
Well, my apologies if I violated either letter or the spirit of the rules here.

I tried to make clear what the purpose of the thread was and Mysturji's post cut right across them right out of the box, as though he hadn't even read the OP. He was being antagonistic. That was bothersome enough and then he proceeded with a rather rambling rant that added nothing and was much less than cogent (IMHO). I merely responded to that and did so in a gentlemanly manner, or at least what I consider to be a gentlemanly manner.

I cannot share your view that I was "debating with another intelligent and knowledgeable person that just didn't share all of" my views. That wasn't the case at all ... because I had not set forth any views that Mysturji may have either shared or not shared. All I had done was write an OP and set some groundrules for the thread. From that, he leaped to a lot of erroneous assumptions and made a lot of irrelevant claims in what amounted to an incoherent rant. :doh:

He even admitted it was a rant by including [/rant] at the end of his post.

It is not my intention here to either violate the rules of the house nor to engage in flame wars. But when I encounter a spade I'll call it a spade and do so forthrightly and with some vigor where necessary.

Cheers (anyway)! :roll:
If you get too 'forthright and vigorous', we will have problems. Our key rule here is "Play Nice". This is a fun forum where like-minded individuals can relax and chat about whatever they feel like.

We do have serious forums (such as this one) where we try to keep things on topic but we do not insult other members unless it is clearly in fun - not the case here. It is also not customary here to place such draconian restrictions on what can and cannot be discussed in threads. And it is certainly not customary to belittle and deride those that break those restrictions.

You have just replied to my post with an apology for breaking the letter or spirit of the rules here and then continued to say that you don't consider Mysturji to be intelligent or knowledgeable. You also accused him of a rambling rant. To my mind, an apology that is immediately followed by a repeat of the original offence is insincere.

Add to this the fact that Mysturji has not responded further. My first post was directed towards both of you but now you are the only one that is continuing to issue insults. Please drop it.

I urge you to consider the wording of your future posts in light of what I have said and to familiarise yourself with our forum rules. By all means defend your position but do it without any personal attacks, including oblique ones.
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Fact-Man » Thu Feb 25, 2010 6:13 am

Reverend Blair wrote:
2020 is a long way off scientifically and technologically because we are advancing at such a high rate, but it's just around the corner politically and economically because we are mired in systems that haven't changed much for at least a couple of centuries. The vested interests don't want us advancing.

I believe the potential for political change is there, and I have no doubt that both the science and resulting technology will advance by leaps and bounds. More than that, as you know, I keep on pushing for political and economic change. I've been banging my head against that particular wall since before I was old enough to get a fake ID though, and I don't hold out much hope for us doing what's necessary in time.

Lets say, just for argument sake, and no I don't subscribe to the conspiracy theory I'm about to use as an example, that tomorrow I wandered out into my garage, finally got around to cleaning out the crap under the workbench, and found Tesla's secret, magic plans for sucking free electricity out of the earth with an iron stick. Our emissions would cut massively immediately. Or would they?

First I'd have to prove it was safe and everybody from Manitoba Hydro (pretty clean hydro energy) to the monster of big coal and oil would be lining up to slow things down. Building codes would have to be re-written and tradesmen would have to be trained in the installation of Tesla's Magic Stick.

Then I'd need to develop some kind of cash backing, since it's unlikely trading in the empties in my porch would produce the necessary capital. That means convincing rich guys, many of them heavily vested in the current system, to back me. Complicating that is that the market for Tesla's Magic Stick is pretty finite...you can sell everybody one once. There are no continuing revenues from accessories or fuel.

It would also be pretty easy to copy, and who, if anyone, owned the copyright would be contested. Knock-offs would abound, Again, all that limits revenues and makes start-up revenue tough to get.

Then there would be a public outcry. What happens to all the coal miners and linesmen and guys who get paid to hang out wearing hard hats? Somebody has to find something for them out of this. Government is going to have to slow me down, or they'll get de-elected.

Once it goes on the market, it's going to take a while to become pervasive in the marketplace. People will cling to the old technology for as long as they can because that's what people do.

So, even assuming I don't have to go through the whole R&D process, we're looking at a decade to get it onto the market in any meaningful way.

And that's the problem, I think. My guess is that warming is going to happen sooner rather than later. We've already pretty much written off the north because the massive changes have already advanced so far. We simply don't have enough time.
Warming is happening as we speak, adhering to a trend line that will take it to somewhere around +2C or +6C in the year 2100, depending on what we might do between now and about 2030..

Your story about Tesla's stick is quite clearly embedded in today economic milieu and I'd dismiss it as being irrelevant because I don't think today's economic milieu will hold up over time. It's already on its knees and no one I know of is predicting that it's oing to regain its former glories any time soon. The prospect of enduring high unemployment is a very big concern right now among our economists, who see it as presenting a huge drag on the one hand and the potential for social unrest on the other.

In any case, it does not occur to me that our 17th century economic system is capable of dealing with the fast emerging crisis nature of high GHG emissions ... and hence I'm expecting that some quite fundamental changes in economy will be forced upon us whether we like it or not. Which is to say, in part, that what the "vested interests" think isn't going to matter.

Check the landscape, we have flopped like tunas on this issue for 25 years and made zero progress toward achieving any kind of progress. Instead, we have a monstrous "debate" going on as to whether the science of AGW is correct and valid or it's a "hoax," as some have suggested, e.g., Senator Inhof, a "debate" in which hard won reputations of scientists are being piloried by journos who wouldn't know climate science if it walked up and kissed them on the lips.

Is that not a fair assessment of the present situation?

I think it is.

And hence if we've made zero progress toward some kind of a solution and now find ourselves bogged down in a huge media embroglio that's producing a tsunami of confusion and doubt among the public ... then how could one ever expect this to change any time soon to an extent that'd be sufficient to actually making progress?

When I extrapolate the present situation ten years ahead in time all I see is a worse mess. What has inarguably gotten worse will likely only become worse. It's the nature of such beasts, they do not tend to self-correct.

So that gets us to 2020.

A time at which my prognostications of where the science will be show that we'll have enormously improved resolutions, much greater fidelity, and much clearer pictures of where we are and where we're headed. And, the physical evidence of progressive warming will be stacked even higher than it is today, and it's already stacked pretty high.

So there we are in 2020, facing a science that's become undeniable to all but the most vociferously recalcitrant telling us we have to go on a crash program to reducve GHG emissions as fast as it's humanly possible to do so, to go, as UNSECGEN Ban Ki-Moon said recently, on a "war footing" to get that job done.

What happens then?

Does anyone really think that existing economic systems would be up to that job? Or do we think that some very serious and far reaching changes to our economic schema would become necessary, even mandatory?

Our backs will truly be up against the wall then. Desperate times will be upon us and they will force us to adopt desperate measures, one of which will probably include a complete re-ordering of our economic way of life, as dictated not by men but by circumstances and men who recognize those circumstances for what they are and for what they truly represent.

We are not quite "out of time" just yet. Here's what researchers at the University of New South Wales in Austraia had to say about this:
The turning point must come soon: If global warming is to be limited to a maximum of 2ºC above pre-industrial values, global emissions need to peak between 2015 and 2020 and then decline rapidly. To stabilize climate, a decarbonized global society – with near-zero emissions of CO2 and other long-lived greenhouse gases – need to be reached well within this century. More specifically, the average annual per-capita emissions will have to shrink to well under 1 metric ton CO2 by 2050. This is 80-95% below the per-capita emissions in developed nations in 2000.

See at http://www.copehgagendiagnosis.com
A tall order? Oh indeed, in fact it's the tallest order mankind's ever been presented with.

But I think we can see that it portends a time when the present miasma simply will not serve and we will be forced to make big changes in the way we do things, again, whether we like it or not.
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by JimC » Thu Feb 25, 2010 6:32 am

So much of the response to the problem is fiddling with economic models. I want straight-forward, practical things to happen, like:

* building real solar power stations in logical places
* by subsidies or planning controls, getting photovoltaics on the roofs of homes, factories & businesses ASAP, adding solar hot water where possible
* building more wind farms
* instead of talking about them, actually building geothermal power stations
* for existing coal fired power stations, trying CO2 sequestration
* build more nuclear power plants
* further push for efficiency in appliances and cars

I know this means committments from governments to invest, and use some tax money. Perhaps Govt/private partnerships are the go...

Less hot air, more engineering!
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Fact-Man » Thu Feb 25, 2010 6:49 am

JimC wrote:So much of the response to the problem is fiddling with economic models. I want straight-forward, practical things to happen, like:

* building real solar power stations in logical places
* by subsidies or planning controls, getting photovoltaics on the roofs of homes, factories & businesses ASAP, adding solar hot water where possible
* building more wind farms
* instead of talking about them, actually building geothermal power stations
* for existing coal fired power stations, trying CO2 sequestration
* build more nuclear power plants
* further push for efficiency in appliances and cars

I know this means committments from governments to invest, and use some tax money. Perhaps Govt/private partnerships are the go...

Less hot air, more engineering!
Indeed such things would be nice, they would be progressive, they could set the stage for bigger and better things to follow.

However, they aren't happening with any degree of reality or impetus, and that can only be attributed to one thing, the economy isn't sufficiently incentivised to do them, isn't sufficiently arranged to get them going, isn't, at bottom, interested in doing them.

And that makes it an economic problem not a technological problem. For the most part, we have the technologies, but we do not have the right kind of economy in which they might flourish, and hence they are not flourishing they are languishing.
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Mysturji » Thu Feb 25, 2010 8:00 am

I did get of to a bad start, and I offer my apologies to fact-man for that.
What set me off was the admonitions in the OP about "No denial here! No-no! We must all agree about points one through nine" that pissed me off, on top of the other stress of the last few days, and I read in that all of the other dogmatic, fundamentalist type behaviour that kept me out of these kind of threads at RDF. I felt more at home here, and thought I would be more likely to get a word in, because over there (it seemed to me the last time I tried to post in a CC thread) that anyone who doesn't completely toe the AGW Party line (even just a "yes, but...") is immediately shouted down by a pack of rabid wolves and dissed as completely ignorant of all science in all it's forms. The peanut gallery then chips in with a flurry of ad-homs, they pat each other on the back, then the wannabe Cali's step in with links to 23,971 peer-reviewed papers and say "See: Proof! Go away and don't come back until you're read it!". Because unlike the original version, they can't "Blind them with science" or construct a valid argument, so they BURY the poor fucker in cut&paste science for DARING to say "Yes, but...".
It has become something of a cliche over at RDF, because fundies keep saying it, but in some cases it is true: To some people, science (especially the science of climate change) is a religion. They appear to have complete and utter faith in something they don't understand, and they act like science has all the answers.
People like that piss me off for being as ignorant as they accuse me of being, just for saying "yes, but..."
In the face of behaviour like that, I have rolled my eyes and bitten my tongue. I thought it would have been different here. My mistake.
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Reverend Blair » Thu Feb 25, 2010 3:00 pm

Okay, first a song, because it's morning and I crave death banjo music. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3rVfIBWnDk

Ah, that's better. Now to get caught up.
Fact Man wrote:Your story about Tesla's stick is quite clearly embedded in today economic milieu and I'd dismiss it as being irrelevant because I don't think today's economic milieu will hold up over time. It's already on its knees and no one I know of is predicting that it's oing to regain its former glories any time soon. The prospect of enduring high unemployment is a very big concern right now among our economists, who see it as presenting a huge drag on the one hand and the potential for social unrest on the other.
I hope you are right, and I keep trying to make myself wrong, but I'm essentially fighting the same economic battles my Grandmother was fighting during the Depression, so I don't see the milieu changing anytime soon.
Fact Man wrote:In any case, it does not occur to me that our 17th century economic system is capable of dealing with the fast emerging crisis nature of high GHG emissions ... and hence I'm expecting that some quite fundamental changes in economy will be forced upon us whether we like it or not. Which is to say, in part, that what the "vested interests" think isn't going to matter.

Check the landscape, we have flopped like tunas on this issue for 25 years and made zero progress toward achieving any kind of progress. Instead, we have a monstrous "debate" going on as to whether the science of AGW is correct and valid or it's a "hoax," as some have suggested, e.g., Senator Inhof, a "debate" in which hard won reputations of scientists are being piloried by journos who wouldn't know climate science if it walked up and kissed them on the lips.

Is that not a fair assessment of the present situation?

I think it is.

It's a fair assessment of the present situation, except that you forget the economy failed in the late 1800's, again in the 1930's. again in the 1980's (everybody skips that one, but it was pretty brutal if you look at it) and again now. For each of the first three predictions of a new system were cast and some slow, small progress was made, then clawed back as the robber barons/corporations again gained power. That 17th century system that never really worked for anybody but the very rich is pretty tenacious.

JimC wrote:So much of the response to the problem is fiddling with economic models. I want straight-forward, practical things to happen, like:

* building real solar power stations in logical places
* by subsidies or planning controls, getting photovoltaics on the roofs of homes, factories & businesses ASAP, adding solar hot water where possible
* building more wind farms
* instead of talking about them, actually building geothermal power stations
* for existing coal fired power stations, trying CO2 sequestration
* build more nuclear power plants
* further push for efficiency in appliances and cars

I know this means committments from governments to invest, and use some tax money. Perhaps Govt/private partnerships are the go...

Less hot air, more engineering!
All of that takes money though, JimC, and there simply isn't the political will to produce that money.

Look at it this way...everything you've listed there is an existing technology. Each of those technologies should have taken off during the energy crisis of the 1970s, and should be far more developed by now. Our economic system pushed back though, and the result is that those technologies are really just coming into use 30 years later, and are coming into that use very, very slowly.

The world economy has been based on fossil fuels since shortly after WWI and pretty much has a stranglehold over things as a result. It controls, to a large extent, not just who gets elected, but who gets to run for election. Its friends in the press push the current system constantly. The result is that there has been little change over the life of this issue, and what change has come has been severely hampered by their efforts.

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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Fact-Man » Thu Feb 25, 2010 5:57 pm

Reverend Blair wrote:Okay, first a song, because it's morning and I crave death banjo music. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3rVfIBWnDk

Ah, that's better. Now to get caught up.
Fact Man wrote:Your story about Tesla's stick is quite clearly embedded in today economic milieu and I'd dismiss it as being irrelevant because I don't think today's economic milieu will hold up over time. It's already on its knees and no one I know of is predicting that it's oing to regain its former glories any time soon. The prospect of enduring high unemployment is a very big concern right now among our economists, who see it as presenting a huge drag on the one hand and the potential for social unrest on the other.
I hope you are right, and I keep trying to make myself wrong, but I'm essentially fighting the same economic battles my Grandmother was fighting during the Depression, so I don't see the milieu changing anytime soon.
Fact Man wrote:In any case, it does not occur to me that our 17th century economic system is capable of dealing with the fast emerging crisis nature of high GHG emissions ... and hence I'm expecting that some quite fundamental changes in economy will be forced upon us whether we like it or not. Which is to say, in part, that what the "vested interests" think isn't going to matter.

Check the landscape, we have flopped like tunas on this issue for 25 years and made zero progress toward achieving any kind of progress. Instead, we have a monstrous "debate" going on as to whether the science of AGW is correct and valid or it's a "hoax," as some have suggested, e.g., Senator Inhof, a "debate" in which hard won reputations of scientists are being piloried by journos who wouldn't know climate science if it walked up and kissed them on the lips.

Is that not a fair assessment of the present situation?

I think it is.
It's a fair assessment of the present situation, except that you forget the economy failed in the late 1800's, again in the 1930's. again in the 1980's (everybody skips that one, but it was pretty brutal if you look at it) and again now. For each of the first three predictions of a new system were cast and some slow, small progress was made, then clawed back as the robber barons/corporations again gained power. That 17th century system that never really worked for anybody but the very rich is pretty tenacious.
Tenacious is probably an understatement! :ask:

I haven't forgotten the history of economy, I just didn't mention those particular failures, which are now essentially irrelevant because we face a situation that's entirely unique and different and affects things much more broadly and more fundamentally than what occurred in those debacles.

The system didn't need a whole lot of rejiggering to get going again after the debacles that occurred before 1929; it needed a fair bit of rejiggering after that one, mainly involving the introduction of credit: before 1929 about the only thing one could buy on credit was land, today we buy almost everything on credit, even what we purchase at the local 7-11.

The New Deal was interrupted by War II and didn't get going until after 1946. Between that year and late 2008 a couple of bubble driven hiccups occurred (1988 S&L, 2001 dot com) and then in October 08 it really collapsed behind a bursting housing bubble and enormous indebtedness among the banks and AIG. To prevent utter collapse, Paulson and Bernanke were forced to do the unthinkable, get $700 billion of taxpayer dollars from the Congress and infuse the banking system with it, along with another several $trillion they made available through the Fed's own lines of credit.

They saved the system but barely and today we're in the midst of the worst economic times since the Great Depression and the future looks anything but bright.

As you noted in your response to JimC's post, "All of that takes money ... and there simply isn't the political will to produce that money," which is true as far as it goes ... but it doesn't consider the fact that there is no money to be had, assuming the political will was there to seek it (which it isn't, as you note). But I think it's key to understanding what might happen over the coming decade to realize there is no money or very damned little of it, with the US facing an $11 trillion national debt, their Chinese credit card about maxed out, and annual federal budget deficits running around a $trillion.

When I looked ahead to 2020 and thought about what might be done at that time in the face of an overwhelming science case, I didn't see a whole lot of money available for doing anything, all I saw was an empty national bank account and a national debt that'll probably be pushing $20 trillion. There will be loads of private money around, the fossil fuel industry alone stands to earn several $trillion itself between now and then. But of course much of that will have long since been distributed to shareholders and it's doubtful we can expect private money to fund the demise of its own system.

I agree with you that the "vested interests" will fight to the last breath to keep its myriad cash cows functioning, the system is unquestionably, and as you noted, a tenacious beast. But think for a moment what a President and a Congress will be faced with when the science plops a report on their collective desks that says, 'act now or die," or words to that effect.

I call that moment "crunch time," and for all practical purposes it is inevitably in our future, because, as you know, the physics and chemistry of GW just keep rolling, not caring a whit about what we do or don't do or think, and the temp curve will just keep rising ... until we stop emitting.

The handwriting, as we say, is on the wall, and more than a few luminaries have connected these dots in recent weeks and made some rather surprising and startling comments about the situation, Bill Gates declared in his recent TED speech that we "have to cut emissions to zero by 2050," UNSECGEN Ban Ki-Moon said we "have to go on a war footing," and you saw in my last post what climate researchers at Australia's UNSW had to say about things, and that report had no fewer than 26 co-authors, including ...

Ian Allison, Nathan Bindoff, Robert Bindschadler, Peter Cox, Nathalie de Noblet-Ducoudre, Matthew England, Jane Francis,
Nicolas Gruber, Alan Haywood , David Karoly , Georg Kaser, Corinne Le Quéré, Tim Lenton, Michael Mann, Ben McNeil,
Andy Pitman, Stefan Rahmstorf , Eric Rignot, Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, Stephen Schneider, Steven Sherwood, Richard
Somerville, Konrad Steffen, Eric Steig, Martin Visbeck, and Andrew Weaver,

all of whom are noted scientists and some of whom are noted climatologists, Mann and Steig in particular.

The war between the science and the vested interests, most notably the fossil fuel bloc, has only continued to gain in intensity, with the latter now engaging in what appears to be criminal activities (CRU hack) to further its agenda and even as liberal a publication as the UK's Guardian in the midst of publising a series of falsehood-laden articles attacking the science and some of its most noted practitioners.

As a writer, I'd describe this as the "war now being fully engaged."

Where does that war end?

What will it's culminating battle be?

I'm saying it'll be the crunch time mentioned above, which appears to me to be set for sometime around the year 2020, when the science case has become overwhelming and completely undeniable ... and government will be forced to act by the circumstances, as created by the lack of any further deniability. Crunch time!

And in that moment government will face a massive project to cut emissions very quickly in very big ways, which means a hugely accelerated transition from fossil to renewable/nuclear that simply could not be tackled within the existing economic structure ... and hence we'll see fundamental economic change, again, whether anyone likes it or not.

When your back's against the wall you do what you have to do.

Otherwise, you die.

Carry on and do enjoy! :D
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Fact-Man » Fri Feb 26, 2010 1:40 am

As an added note to my last post and to illustrate the intensity of the war being perpetrated on AGW science by "vested interests" and their apologists, this piece reports on activities currently underway in the US Senate, courtesy of Senator James Inhof, Republican of Oklahoma (an oil rich State).
Sen. Inhofe inquisition seeking ways to criminalize and prosecute 17 leading climate scientists

Posted on Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Post by Rick Piltz
http://www.climatesciencewatch.org/inde ... cientists/

Senator James Inhofe, ranking Republican on the Environment and Public Works Committee, has gone a step beyond promoting his long-notorious global warming denialist propaganda. He is now using the resources of the Senate committee to seek opportunities to criminalize the actions of 17 leading scientists who have been associated with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment reports. A report released by Inhofe’s staff on February 23 outlines this classic Joe McCarthyite witch-hunt: page after page of incorrect and misleading statements, a list of federal laws that allegedly may make scientists subject to prosecution by the U.S. Justice Department, and a list of names and affiliations of 17 “key players” in the “CRU Controversy” over stolen e-mails and their connections with IPCC reports.

See our February 23 post: Scientists ill-equipped to deal with all-out war on climate science community http://www.climatesciencewatch.org/inde ... community/

Inhofe’s committee minority report: ‘Consensus’ Exposed: The CRU Controversy (United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, Minority Staff, February 2010) http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm? ... b7df1a0b63

Inhofe press release: “Senate EPW Minority Releases Report On CRU Controversy—Shows Scientists Violated Ethics, Reveals Major Disagreements On Climate Science” http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm? ... &Issue_id=

From the Executive Summary of Inhofe’s report:
In this report, Minority Staff of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works examine key documents and emails from the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit (CRU). We have concluded:

• The emails were written by the world’s top climate scientists, who work at the most prestigious and influential climate research institutions in the world.

• Many of them were lead authors and coordinating lead authors of UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, meaning that they had been intimately involved in writing and editing the IPCC’s science assessments. They also helped write reports by the United States Global Change Research Program (USGCRP).

• The CRU controversy and recent revelations about errors in the IPCC’s most recent science assessment cast serious doubt on the validity of EPA’s endangerment finding for greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act. The IPCC serves as the primary basis for EPA’s endangerment finding for greenhouse gases.

• Instead of moving forward on greenhouse gas regulation, the Agency should fully address the CRU controversy and the IPCC’s flawed science.

The scientists involved in the CRU controversy violated fundamental ethical principles governing taxpayer-funded research and, in some cases, may have violated federal laws.

In our view, the CRU documents and emails reveal, among other things, unethical and potentially illegal behavior by some of the world’s preeminent climate scientists. [boldface added]

In a section titled “The CRU-IPCC Connection” (pages 25-26; also see pages 35-37), Inhofe names the targets of his witch-hunt to be investigated for possible referral to the U.S. Justice Department for prosecution. Inhofe’s targets include, in alphabetical order:

Raymond Bradley
Keith Briffa
Timothy Carter
Edward Cook
Malcolm Hughes
Phil Jones
Thomas Karl
Michael Mann
Michael Oppenheimer
Jonathan Overpeck
Benjamin Santer
Gavin Schmidt
Stephen Schneider
Susan Solomon
Peter Stott
Kevin Trenberth
Thomas Wigley

Those of you who know the climate science community will note that the list includes some of the very best—individuals whose contribution to scientific understanding and science communication would be lionized in a society that was seeing things clearly.

In a section titled “Legal and Policy Issues in the CRU Controversy” (pages 29-31), Inhofe’s report says:

These and other issues raise questions about the lawful use of federal funds and potential ethical misconduct. Discussed below are brief descriptions of the statutes and regulations that the Minority Staff believe are implicated in this scandal. In our investigation, we are examining the emails and documents and determining whether any violations of these federal laws and policies occurred.

The rest of the section discusses each of the following:

Freedom of Information Act …
Shelby Amendment …
OSTP Policy Directive …
President Obama’s Transparency and Open Government Policy …
Federal False Statements Act …
The False Claims Act (Criminal)
Obstruction of Justice: Interference with Congressional Proceedings …

Inhofe’s allegations were raised at a February 23 hearing of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, on the President’s Proposed EPA Budget for FY 2011. (The link to the hearing page includes opening statements by committee chair Sen. Barbara Boxer and Inhofe, written testimony by EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, and an archived webcast. See at: http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm? ... 96628c6d00)

RealClimate (http://www.realclimate.org), an invaluable website for clarifying current climate science issues in more-or-less plain English, has a February 14 post (“IPCC errors: facts and spin”) that looks at the various allegations about errors in the IPCC 2007 report, sorts the wheat from the chaff, and asks “what does it all mean, for the IPCC in particular, and for climate science more broadly?” Of course, Inhofe and whoever writes his material are not into setting the record straight, they are waging political war, and thus can be presumed to be essentially uneducable on science issues.

Inhofe’s witch-hunt against a named list of climate scientists echoes Rep. James Sensenbrenner’s demand that scientists whose names appear in the stolen Climatic Research Unit e-mail file be blacklisted from the IPCC, on which we posted earlier:

CSW post December 9, 2009: Sensenbrenner IPCC witch-hunt: Attempt to blacklist climate scientists must be rejected

Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wisconsin), ranking Republican on the House global warming committee, has sent a letter to Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, calling for scientists whose names appear in the e-mails stolen from the U.K. Climatic Research Unit to be blacklisted from participating as contributors or reviewers of the forthcoming IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. ... Denialists are throwing up a smokescreen of propaganda in an attempt to legitimize their refusal to come to grips with scientific evidence on global climatic disruption and its implications. This is a power play. ...

We call on the Obama Administration and in particular the President’s science adviser John Holdren to fully support the U.S. climate science community in this matter. ... Seeking an IPCC purge is just the next step. This attack, using guilt-by-association and demagogy, will go as far as it can to delegitimize the entire climate science and assessment enterprise if it is not exposed and thwarted. ...
IMHO, this involves behavior that's but a step away from the outright drawing guns and shooting. Talk about a war on science, this is it! :doh:
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by JimC » Fri Feb 26, 2010 6:20 am

JimC wrote:
So much of the response to the problem is fiddling with economic models. I want straight-forward, practical things to happen, like:

* building real solar power stations in logical places
* by subsidies or planning controls, getting photovoltaics on the roofs of homes, factories & businesses ASAP, adding solar hot water where possible
* building more wind farms
* instead of talking about them, actually building geothermal power stations
* for existing coal fired power stations, trying CO2 sequestration
* build more nuclear power plants
* further push for efficiency in appliances and cars

I know this means committments from governments to invest, and use some tax money. Perhaps Govt/private partnerships are the go...

Less hot air, more engineering!
All of that takes money though, JimC, and there simply isn't the political will to produce that money.

Look at it this way...everything you've listed there is an existing technology. Each of those technologies should have taken off during the energy crisis of the 1970s, and should be far more developed by now. Our economic system pushed back though, and the result is that those technologies are really just coming into use 30 years later, and are coming into that use very, very slowly.

The world economy has been based on fossil fuels since shortly after WWI and pretty much has a stranglehold over things as a result. It controls, to a large extent, not just who gets elected, but who gets to run for election. Its friends in the press push the current system constantly. The result is that there has been little change over the life of this issue, and what change has come has been severely hampered by their efforts.
I certainly agree that politcal will is needed to open the public purse a little more, but I hope that at least some money and political effort can be directed to east make some progress in those areas. We don't have to stay stuck in the political and economic climate of the past.That is where an educated voting public can make a difference...

But my main point was that all the spin and talk is about economic modelling, rather than putting at least some bricks and mortar towards energy related projects. I will vote for people who will promise to commit a solid increase of public money with the aim of getting at least some tried and tested renewable energy projevts on the ground.

(or under it, in the case of geothermal... ;) )
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Fact-Man » Fri Feb 26, 2010 7:37 am

JimC wrote:
JimC wrote:
So much of the response to the problem is fiddling with economic models. I want straight-forward, practical things to happen, like:

* building real solar power stations in logical places
* by subsidies or planning controls, getting photovoltaics on the roofs of homes, factories & businesses ASAP, adding solar hot water where possible
* building more wind farms
* instead of talking about them, actually building geothermal power stations
* for existing coal fired power stations, trying CO2 sequestration
* build more nuclear power plants
* further push for efficiency in appliances and cars

I know this means committments from governments to invest, and use some tax money. Perhaps Govt/private partnerships are the go...

Less hot air, more engineering!
All of that takes money though, JimC, and there simply isn't the political will to produce that money.

Look at it this way...everything you've listed there is an existing technology. Each of those technologies should have taken off during the energy crisis of the 1970s, and should be far more developed by now. Our economic system pushed back though, and the result is that those technologies are really just coming into use 30 years later, and are coming into that use very, very slowly.

The world economy has been based on fossil fuels since shortly after WWI and pretty much has a stranglehold over things as a result. It controls, to a large extent, not just who gets elected, but who gets to run for election. Its friends in the press push the current system constantly. The result is that there has been little change over the life of this issue, and what change has come has been severely hampered by their efforts.
I certainly agree that politcal will is needed to open the public purse a little more, but I hope that at least some money and political effort can be directed to east make some progress in those areas. We don't have to stay stuck in the political and economic climate of the past.That is where an educated voting public can make a difference...

But my main point was that all the spin and talk is about economic modelling, rather than putting at least some bricks and mortar towards energy related projects. I will vote for people who will promise to commit a solid increase of public money with the aim of getting at least some tried and tested renewable energy projevts on the ground.

(or under it, in the case of geothermal... ;) )
This would appear to suggest that you actually think there is money available that could or might be devoted to such uses. I wish I could be so confident.

But when I look at the nation's finances, I just don't see a lot of money there, or very damned much of it at any rate. Usually what happens is the government guarantees loans made by the private sector to investors, and in those cases, the government isn't putting up any cash money. So there's some room there. I'm not sure if the Obama admin's recent $8 billion funding for two new nuclear power plants is in the form of cash or loan guarantees, but my suspicion would be that it's the latter (one could likely visit DOE's website and find out).

The fact that the economy is in such a mess certainly doesn't help matters, federal revenues have plummeted, pushing annual budget deficits to the $trillion mark, which pushes the national debt higher and adds more drag.

Congresspersons and Senators are so bought and paid for these days, they're free to say just about anything to get elected, then sit back and do their lobbyist's bidding ... and leave those who voted for them because of one of their disingenuos promises in the lurch.

Be careful you don't get victimized in this all too common manner.

Obama did come in behind a promise to get green tech going. But it is a struggle with Big Oil and Big Coal standing in the way, with their 5,000 lobbyists hard at work befuddling attempts at legislating anything. This will only get worse with the recent SCOTUS decision that corporations are the same as humans and have the same rights of free speech, and that money is a form of speech.

Next thing ya know, our Congresspersons and Senators will be wearing corporate logos on their suits and ball caps. :pissed:
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by JimC » Fri Feb 26, 2010 7:49 am

^^^^^^

I'm really thinking of my home country Australia, where there is so much opportunity to run both large and small scale solar power, with enough political will and tax concessions to get the ball rolling...

But I must admit, neither the present government or the opposition fill me with much confidence, and the Greens are mostly run by technology fearing luddites who think that crystals have healing energy... :roll:

I want a hard-nosed, pragmatic, techno-savvy enviromentalist party, but I doubt I'm going to get it... :(
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by blackarmada » Fri Feb 26, 2010 8:01 am

Reverend Blair wrote:Well, this is certainly starting out well. Perhaps we should all have a beer and think things through.

We know that the climate is changing because the scientists tell us it is.

No, that is not argument from authority. It is simply recognition that those who do the work...the research, the measuring, you know, the science...have found certain things, and that one of those things is that we are warming the climate. The science reaches back to the 19th century and has been tested and retested. It's supported by reams of data from more scientific disciplines and sub-disciplines than most of us know exist.

We may not be experts in all of those fields...nobody is...but the reality is that the science is well-supported. To disavow ourselves of that science we would have to rewrite the textbooks on physics, biology (much of evolution) all of the atmospheric sciences, etc. I can't think of anybody capable of doing that and, since I don't believe in god, see no possibility of an entity capable of such a thing actually existing.

So how do we deal with it?

Well, cap and trade might work if it wasn't distorted. Too late for that though.

Carbon taxes will work, but the problem becomes that governments will then be dependent on them for funds. The governments will then either have to keep carbon emissions up (not a real option) or slowly reduce services as we reduce emissions. Likely not going to work either in the long run, but not a bad plan in the short term.

We could just cap emissions. If we lived in a dictatorship, that is. Not really workable.

We could create a magical Star Trek technology and a magical Star Trek economy to go with it. I haven't taken drugs in a very long time though, so I have my doubts.

My personal feeling is that we're pretty much doomed. We'll do too little too late, suffer some pretty horrific consequences, and then go looking for a real solution.
Personally i would go with the Rev on this one.

I see that only the Western nations would have the technical capability to get this going but how is one going to gain a consensus in a democracy when it would harm the interests of so many? Intellectually a lot of people would vote for change but since such a change requires them to make monumental changes to their lives they would most likely immediately switch their vote to the other guy once the going gets tough.

The Chinese and Indians still have parents that lived in a world where cars were a rarity and owning one was a fantasy, their entire infrastructure could still be made to function with minimum fossil fuel input. It's not going to be as tough to ask them to go back to point one and start over. Would the citizens of the Western nations especially the USA be able to accept that possibility? Could basic essentials like food, water and medicine be maintained without having a personal vehicle to drive out, purchased and transported back?

There is indeed the technical ability to make some significant changes but i think it's going to be unavoidable that a natural disaster has to happen to a country or city on a scale that was previously unimaginable. And it has to happen to a Western country/city. If it happened to some countries like Bhagladesh, Thailand, Vietnam, India or China alot of other things would be blamed for it, AGW would only be a minor possibility.

I don't think the human race is doomed, but a lot of the Third World countries are going to experience some drastic depopulation. With the loss of the worker class, the First World countries would feel the pain as well.

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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by macdoc » Fri Feb 26, 2010 10:43 am

I see that only the Western nations would have the technical capability to get this going but how is one going to gain a consensus in a democracy when it would harm the interests of so many? Intellectually a lot of people would vote for change but since such a change requires them to make monumental changes to their lives they would most likely immediately switch their vote to the other guy once the going gets tough.
Yet nations like Sweden and Norway are fully committed and on the road to carbon neutral by mid century.
The "major change" aspect is in my view a bit of nonsense put over by the fossil interests.
How is moving to a clean carbon neutral nation "harming so many".

Low carbon solutions are all over the place...I've dropped my footprint perhaps in half in 2 years and yeah my electricity costs 10% more than buying non-carbon neutral but is that crippling??? No. And that's both my business and personal.
Some clients ae off the grid entirely and one runs his 15,000 sq' light manufacturing and office facility on $500 worth o electricity a month...that's his total energy bill....and his electricity is 100% no carbon to produce ( Bullfrog )
http://www.bullfrogpower.com/

Transport is an issue but EV and PHEV are coming in droves and with peak cheap oil approaching and the strategic risks that depending on others for energy represents...nations and people and organizations are moving to carbon neutral or low carbon far more rapidly than many realize..and often moving at regional and city level.

There are only a handful of nations that represent the problem of C02 emissions, ALL are nuclear powers, France leads the way with both huge nuclear and a strong electric ( high speed trains ) transport system that will only improve with EVs.

IF electricity was priced in such a way as to reflect the true cost of coal power - leveling the field in terms of environment controls that say nuclear must face....then more efficient building practices, lighting etc as exists in Europe would be more prevalent.

The world HAS to move carbon neutral as acidification is a real issue and fossil sources are dwindling...put resources to it now makes it CHEAPER in the long run.
Even the World Bank has recognized that reality.

It's vested interests - King Coal in particular that offer a formidable barrier...and knee jerk unfounded fear of nuclear power to replace coal.
Coal owns many politicians.

This was a very interesting thread at dawkins
http://forum.richarddawkins.net/viewtop ... 17&t=94863

To his credit after quite a long exchange of information and dialogue, with some who were actually in the nuclear energy field he changed his mind and understood why many climate scientists strongly favour nuclear energy...
It shows even the most rabid anti-nuke...and he was rabid if you read the OP....can be shifted when evidence and information is steadily applied.

Third world is not the issue and will only benefit from first world tech - just as they have skipped over traditional hard wired phone networks into wireless and cell.
THEY are not the cause of the problem...the first world built it's wealth oi cheap fossil energy and now must spend some of that cleaning up just as mining and chemical production has had to do.

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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by Fact-Man » Fri Feb 26, 2010 10:46 am

blackarmada wrote:
Personally i would go with the Rev on this one.

I see that only the Western nations would have the technical capability to get this going but how is one going to gain a consensus in a democracy when it would harm the interests of so many? Intellectually a lot of people would vote for change but since such a change requires them to make monumental changes to their lives they would most likely immediately switch their vote to the other guy once the going gets tough.
If it's presented to them in the appropriate light, they'll get it.

First, nobody's going to have to suffer a lot of harm nor will they necessarily have to make "monumental" changes in their lives. That sounds like denialist scare mongering, you wanna know the truth.

We can't do a greatly accelerated transition from fossil to renewable/nuclear and bring harm to people in the process. there's be no point to doing that. The big difference is one people won't even notice, instead of their electricity coming from a coal or gas or oil fired generating station it will come to them from a wind farm or a solar array or a new nuke. The electricity itself is the same. Users can't tell where their juice comes from or how it is generated, it comes off the grid, and the grid is fed by myriad sources of supply.

The transition must be carried out so there's no diminution in available power. That's an economic necessity if nothing else.

People are simply not going to have to endure hardships or "monumental changes" in their lives.

Assured of that how do you think they'd vote? :o

The benefit is that they and their children and their children get to enjoy a decent climate. Not a bad trade-off when ya think about it.
blackarmada wrote:
The Chinese and Indians still have parents that lived in a world where cars were a rarity and owning one was a fantasy, their entire infrastructure could still be made to function with minimum fossil fuel input. It's not going to be as tough to ask them to go back to point one and start over. Would the citizens of the Western nations especially the USA be able to accept that possibility? Could basic essentials like food, water and medicine be maintained without having a personal vehicle to drive out, purchased and transported back?
What if that personal vehicle were electric powered or a hybrid? Or what if a public transit system were put in place to serve their transportation needs? Or people car pooled? Or if grocers delivered, using a biodiesel-powered truck?

There's tons of ways to solve these kinds of issues. They are almost frivolous.
blackarmada wrote:
There is indeed the technical ability to make some significant changes but i think it's going to be unavoidable that a natural disaster has to happen to a country or city on a scale that was previously unimaginable. And it has to happen to a Western country/city. If it happened to some countries like Bhagladesh, Thailand, Vietnam, India or China alot of other things would be blamed for it, AGW would only be a minor possibility.
Except in very indirect ways, GW won't induce "natural disasters." It's called global warming ... because it affects the entire planet simultaneously, albeit more intensely in some regions, e.g., the Arctic, and less intensively in other regions;

GW is a widely distributed affect.

Now, AGW does predict more powerul weather events, hurricanes and typhoons especially because a warmed ocean contains more energy to drive these storms; more precip in some places, e.g. the American NE right now, the UK all winter; and less precip in other regions. This means there could be big weather events that hit countries hard.

However, keep in mind what I said about the science and how by 2020 it will possess much greater resolution than it does today, with greatly improved fidleity and much better views of where we are and where we're headed, which will make it much easier to demonstrate the causes of unruly weather and better explain and predict ongoing sea level rise, ocean acidification, melting of the cryosphere, spreading desertification, and other physical manifestations of warming.

The physical evidence of warming is already stacked pretty high, by 2020 it will become overwhelming and, in conjunction with much improved science, deniability will become impossible, even to the most loutish among us.
blackarmada wrote:
I don't think the human race is doomed,
It probably is if we let the GMAT go to +6C or more by 2100, however. And +6C is one of the IPCC's forecasts. The "worst case scenario" in AR4, published in spring, 2007. They've not been inclned to reduce that forecast after much ongoing study since 2006.
blackarmada wrote:
but a lot of the Third World countries are going to experience some drastic depopulation. With the loss of the worker class, the First World countries would feel the pain as well.
The West can get by without a lot of the trinketry it has been buying from China and the Far East. And what China and the Far East can no longer make, the US and other consumer countries will pull back home and make themselves, perhaps in Mexico or Latin America. But with unemployment where it's at and where it's predicted to stay, America could do for some manufacturing jobs.

There are other factors at play besides GW in the equation of world food supply, diminished croplands for one, and water issues. Loss of good topsoils is fast becoming a crucial issue; paving over good ag land another. GW contributes to this malaise but it is a complex affair with many drivers. We probably are in for some diebacks.

It's kinda funny in a way, I base my prognostication of future events vis-a-vis what we will likely do on my experience and observations of what happened in 1941-42 in America, when a slumbering nation, still infected by high enployment, was rocked by the Japanese attack on Pearl and suddenly jerked awake to face a world nobody had ever imagined could become real. And Adolph's troops were pouring into Russia and already held France and all of Europe and a good chunk of Africa.

Talk about a wake up call!

Talk about sacrifice and hardships and the pains of losses (420,000 US soldiers KIA). Everyone's life was disrupted, there were few exceptions, if any. My life was most assuredly disrupted, my families lives. Some didn't survive.

But what did the American people do? They rolled up their sleeves and went to work, and they pulled off a miracle in producing the weapons and stuff of war, manufacturing no fewer than 100,000 airplanes in the ensuing 3.5 years and building several thousand ships and producing hundreds of thousands of tanks and arty pieces and producing an enormity of ordnance.

Rolled up their sleeves and went to work.

They knew they had little choice.

The spirit that drove that great historical undertaking can be rekindled to power us through the great accelerated program of transitioniong society from fossil to renewable/nuclear. When you've seen it happen, when you've been there and done that, it gives you great confidence that it can be done again.

And that's why I think it will be done again.

Cheers, eh? :tup:
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Re: "Climate Change - Doubts, Denials, Scepticism, and Politics"

Post by JimC » Fri Feb 26, 2010 10:59 am

Fact-Man wrote:

Talk about sacrifice and hardships and the pains of losses (420,000 US soldiers KIA). Everyone's life was disrupted, there were few exceptions, if any. My life was most assuredly disrupted, my families lives. Some didn't survive.

But what did the American people do? They rolled up their sleeves and went to work, and they pulled off a miracle in producing the weapons and stuff of war, manufacturing no fewer than 100,000 airplanes in the ensuing 3.5 years and building several thousand ships and producing hundreds of thousands of tanks and arty pieces and producing an enormity of ordnance.

Rolled up their sleeves and went to work.

They knew they had little choice.

The spirit that drove that great historical undertaking can be rekindled to power us through the great accelerated program of transitioniong society from fossil to renewable/nuclear. When you've seen it happen, when you've been there and done that, it gives you great confidence that it can be done again.

And that's why I think it will be done again.

Cheers, eh?
Good call, good analogy; :tup:

if the wake up shock occurs... :?

And, to harp on my point, they didn't do economic modelling, they started fucking building tanks and planes!
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