![]() |
|
April 25, 2006 |
| Climate & Environment Weekly is
brought to you by
The Center for Science and Public Policy
(CSPP). CSPP is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy
organization. CSPP relies on scientific experts in many nations and the vast body of peer-reviewed literature to help lawmakers, policy makers, and the media distinguish between scientific findings that are agenda-driven and those that are based on accepted scientific methods and practices. In a timely manner, the Center's Science Watch Team alerts policy makers, the media, and the public to unreliable scientific claims and unjustified alarmism which often lead to public harm. We strive for a fair and balanced examination of science. Review the science Two weeks ago on this page 60 scientists, most of them climate specialists who are skeptical of official global-warming theory, signed an open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper... >>Read More<< A load of hot air? Hardly a day goes by without a new dire warning about climate change. But some claims are more extreme than others, giving rise to fears that the problem is being oversold and damaging the issue... >>Read More<< Laurie David Raises Awareness of Global Warming "I am terrified," Laurie David said between bites of her Cobb salad, avocados on the side. "I'm terrified. I'm terrified. And fear is a great motivator." Ms. David was talking about her fears of global warming... >>Read More<< The Environmental Costs of Biofuel BUENOS AIRES, Apr 20 (IPS) - The passage of a law on biofuels in Argentina is both good and bad news for sustainable development. While the new law will foment the production and use of alternative sources of fuel, it will also give a boost to soybean production, which has come in for harsh criticism from environmentalists... >>Read More<< Foreign Experts Killing the African Dream This continent never had a joint dream. This, however, license NGOs from developed countries, think tanks and governments to mess up the great opportunity presented by modernism for Africans to create an African dream... >>Read More<< Yelling 'Fire' on a Hot Planet Polar bears are drowning; an American city is underwater; ice sheets are crumbling. Time magazine proclaimed that readers should be worried. Very worried. There are new hot-selling books and a batch of documentaries, including one starring former Vice President Al Gore and his climate-evangelist slide show that is touted as "the most terrifying movie you will ever see."... >>Read More<< CLIMATE CHANGE: A MODEL COCK-UP Researchers behind a much-hyped climate model downloaded by hundreds of thousands of home PC users have had to admit that many of their results are wrong because of errors in the program. And it's not just their software that's flawed... >>Read More<< Africa Malaria Day - action or bombast? Every year, over 400 million African mothers, fathers and children are stricken by acute malaria. That's as many victims as there are people in the United States and Mexico combined... >>Read More<< UN Luddites are failing the poor As self-appointed regulator of much of what goes on in the world, the United Nations has become a profoundly negative influence. While its attempts to attain and maintain international peace and are often slow and ineffective, the UN's ventures into public health and environmental protection frequently are wrong-headed, self-serving and counterproductive... >>Read More<< Al Gore's upcoming movie, "An Inconvenient Truth", is full of scares and untruths Issue: The movie "An Inconvenient Truth" is a "companion documentary" to Gore's book of the same name. According to pre-release information, Gore claims global warming is one of the "biggest issues facing future generations" and predicts one hundred million refugees from a twenty-foot rise in sea levels if glaciers continue to melt... >>Read More<< REQUIEM FOR ENVIRONMENTALISM This pronouncement might seem a touch premature, especially to the 500 million people who will celebrate the 37th Earth Day this weekend-a collective "not dead yet" wheeze... >>Read More<< Breathe Easier The world is getting cleaner, Al Gore notwithstanding. Today, April 22, is Earth Day, which has been marked each year since 1970 as a day of reflection on the state of the environment. At least that's the idea, so let's begin with some figures... >>Read More<< |
(c) 2003 - 2006 Center for
Science and Public Policy |
All rights reserved
For more information please contact: bferguson@ff.org |