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The Australian (news site) has an interesting interview on global warming that counters some of the global warming hysteria. I've snipped some of the content to archive here and linked to the original source.
It has delicious comments like this ...
With catastrophe off the agenda, for most people the fog of millennial
gloom will lift, at least until attention turns to the prospect of the
next ice age. Among the better educated, the sceptical cast of mind
that is the basis of empiricism will once again be back in fashion.
Partial edits
My favorite part was near the end ...
"Well-meaning intellectual movements, from communism to
post-structuralism, have a poor history of absorbing inconvenient fact
or challenges to fundamental precepts. We should not ignore or suppress
good indicators on the environment, though they have become extremely
rare now. It is tempting to the layman to embrace with enthusiasm the
latest bleak scenario because it fits the darkness of our soul, the
prevailing cultural pessimism. The imagination, as Wallace Stevens once
said, is always at the end of an era. But we should be asking, or
expecting others to ask, for the provenance of the data, the
assumptions fed into the computer model, the response of the peer
review community, and so on. Pessimism is intellectually delicious,
even thrilling, but the matter before us is too serious for mere
self-pleasuring. It would be self-defeating if the environmental
movement degenerated into a religion of gloomy faith. (Faith,
ungrounded certainty, is no virtue.)"
Another snippet ...
Last Monday - on ABC Radio National, of all places - there was a
tipping point of a different kind in the debate on climate change. It
was a remarkable interview involving the co-host of Counterpoint,
Michael Duffy and Jennifer Marohasy, a biologist and senior fellow of
Melbourne-based think tank the Institute of Public Affairs. Anyone in
public life who takes a position on the greenhouse gas hypothesis will
ignore it at their peril.
Duffy asked Marohasy: "Is the Earth stillwarming?"
She replied: "No, actually, there has been cooling, if you take 1998
as your point of reference. If you take 2002 as your point of
reference, then temperatures have plateaued. This is certainly not what
you'd expect if carbon dioxide is driving temperature because carbon
dioxide levels have been increasing but temperatures have actually been
coming down over the last 10 years."
Duffy: "Is this a matter of any controversy?"
Marohasy: "Actually, no. The head of the IPCC (Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change) has actually acknowledged it. He talks about
the apparent plateau in temperatures so far this century. So he
recognises that in this century, over the past eight years,
temperatures have plateaued ... This is not what you'd expect, as I
said, because if carbon dioxide is driving temperature then you'd
expect that, given carbon dioxide levels have been continuing to
increase, temperatures should be going up ... So (it's) very
unexpected, not something that's being discussed. It should be being
discussed, though, because it's very significant."
Duffy: "It's not only that it's not discussed. We never hear it, do
we? Whenever there's any sort of weather event that can be linked into
the global warming orthodoxy, it's put on the front page. But a fact
like that, which is that global warming stopped a decade ago, is
virtually never reported, which is extraordinary."
Duffy then turned to the question of how the proponents of the
greenhouse gas hypothesis deal with data that doesn't support their
case. "People like Kevin Rudd and Ross Garnaut are speaking as though
the Earth is still warming at an alarming rate, but what is the
argument from the other side? What would people associated with the
IPCC say to explain the (temperature) dip?"
Marohasy: "Well, the head of the IPCC has suggested natural factors
are compensating for the increasing carbon dioxide levels and I guess,
to some extent, that's what sceptics have been saying for some time:
that, yes, carbon dioxide will give you some warming but there are a
whole lot of other factors that may compensate or that may augment the
warming from elevated levels of carbon dioxide.
"There's been a lot of talk about the impact of the sun and that
maybe we're going to go through or are entering a period of less
intense solar activity and this could be contributing to the current
cooling."
Source story link in The Australian - by Christopher Pearson
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