Gorey Truths
http://article.nationalreview.com/print/?q=YmFiZDAyMWFhMGIxNTgwNGIyMjVkZjQ4OGFiZjFlNjc
June 22, 2006, 5:35 a.m.
25 inconvenient truths for Al Gore
By Iain Murray
With An
Inconvenient Truth, the companion book to former Vice President Al
GoreÕs global-warming movie, currently number nine in Amazon sales rank, this
is a good time to point out that the book, which is a largely pictorial
representation of the movieÕs graphical presentation, exaggerates the evidence
surrounding global warming. Ironically, the former Vice President leaves out
many truths that are inconvenient for his argument. Here are just 25 of them.
1. Carbon DioxideÕs Effect on Temperature. The relationship
between global temperature and carbon dioxide (CO2), on which the
entire scare is founded, is not
linear. Every molecule of CO2 added to the atmosphere contributes
less to warming than the previous one. The bookÕs graph on p. 66-67 is
seriously misleading. Moreover, even the historical levels of CO2
shown on the graph are disputed. Evidence from plant fossil-remains suggest
that there was as much CO2 in the atmosphere about 11,000 years ago
as there is today.
2. Kilimanjaro. The snows of Kilimanjaro are melting not
because of global warming but because of a local climate shift that began 100
years ago. The authors of a report in the
International Journal of Climatology Òdevelop a new concept for
investigating the retreat of KilimanjaroÕs glaciers, based on the physical
understanding of glacier–climate interactions.Ó They note that, ÒThe
concept considers the peculiarities of the mountain and implies that
climatological processes other than air temperature control the ice recession
in a direct manner. A drastic drop in atmospheric moisture at the end of the
19th century and the ensuing drier climatic conditions are likely forcing
glacier retreat on Kilimanjaro.Ó
3. Glaciers. Glaciers around the world have been receding at
around the same pace for over 100 years. Research
published by the National Academy of Sciences last week indicates that the
Peruvian glacier on p. 53-53 probably disappeared a few thousand years ago.
4. The Medieval Warm Period. Al Gore says that the Òhockey
stickÓ graph that shows temperatures remarkably steady for the last 1,000 years
has been validated, and ridicules the concept of a Òmedieval warm period.Ó
ThatÕs not the case. Last year, a team
of leading paleoclimatologists said, ÒWhen matching existing temperature
reconstructionsÉthe timeseries display a reasonably coherent picture of major
climatic episodes: ÔMedieval Warm Period,Õ ÔLittle Ice AgeÕ and ÔRecent
Warming.ÕÓ They go on to conclude, ÒSo what would it mean, if the reconstructions
indicate a largerÉor smallerÉtemperature amplitude? We suggest that the former
situation, i.e. enhanced variability during pre-industrial times, would result
in a redistribution of weight towards the role of natural factors in forcing
temperature changes, thereby relatively devaluing the impact of anthropogenic
emissions and affecting future temperature predictions.Ó
5. The Hottest Year. Satellite temperature measurements say
that 2005 wasn't the hottest year on record — 1998 was — and that temperatures
have been stable since 2001 (p.73). HereÕs the satellite graph:

6.
Heat Waves.
The summer heat wave that struck Europe in 2003 was caused by an atmospheric
pressure anomaly; it had nothing to do with global warming. As the United
Nations Environment Program reported in September 2003, ÒThis extreme wheather
[sic] was caused by an anti-cyclone firmly anchored over the western European
land mass holding back the rain-bearing depressions that usually enter the
continent from the Atlantic ocean. This situation was exceptional in the
extended length of time (over 20 days) during which it conveyed very hot dry
air up from south of the Mediterranean.Ó
7. Record Temperatures. Record temperatures — hot and
cold — are set every day around the world; thatÕs the nature of records.
Statistically, any given place will see four record high temperatures set every
year. There is evidence that daytime high temperatures are staying about the
same as for the last few decades, but nighttime lows are gradually rising.
Global warming might be more properly called, ÒGlobal less cooling.Ó (On this,
see Patrick J. Michaels book, Meltdown:
The Predictable Distortion of
Global Warming by Scientists, Politicians, and the Media.)
8.
Hurricanes.
There is no overall global trend of hurricane-force storms getting stronger
that has anything to do with temperature. A recent
study in Geophysical Research Letters found: ÒThe data indicate a
large increasing trend in tropical cyclone intensity and longevity for the
North Atlantic basin and a considerable decreasing trend for the Northeast
Pacific. All other basins showed small trends, and there has been no
significant change in global net tropical cyclone activity. There has been a
small increase in global Category 4–5 hurricanes from the period
1986–1995 to the period 1996–2005. Most of this increase is likely
due to improved observational technology. These findings indicate that other
important factors govern intensity and frequency of tropical cyclones besides
SSTs [sea surface temperatures].Ó
9. Tornadoes. Records for numbers of tornadoes are set because
we can now record more of the smaller tornadoes (see, for instance, the Tornado
FAQ at Weather Underground).
10. European Flooding. European flooding is
not new (p. 107). Similar flooding happened in 2003. Research from Michael
Mudelsee and colleagues from the University of Leipzig published in Nature
(Sept. 11, 2003) looked at data reaching as far back as 1021 (for the Elbe) and
1269 (for the Oder). They concluded that there is no upward trend in the
incidence of extreme flooding in this region of central Europe.
11. Shrinking Lakes. Scientists investigating
the disappearance of Lake Chad (p.116) found that most of it was due to human
overuse of water. ÒThe lakeÕs decline probably has nothing to do with global
warming, report the two scientists, who based their findings on computer models
and satellite imagery made available by NASA. They attribute the situation
instead to human actions related to climate variation, compounded by the ever
increasing demands of an expanding populationÓ (ÒShrinking
African Lake Offers Lesson on Finite Resources,Ó National Geographic,
April 26, 2001). Lake Chad is also a very shallow lake that has shrunk
considerably throughout human history.
12. Polar Bears. Polar bears are not becoming
endangered. A leading Canadian polar bear biologist wrote
recently, ÒClimate change is having an effect on the west Hudson population
of polar bears, but really, there is no need to panic. Of the 13 populations of
polar bears in Canada, 11 are stable or increasing in number. They are not
going extinct, or even appear (sic) to be affected at present.Ó
13. The Gulf Stream. The Gulf Stream, the
ocean conveyor belt, is not at risk of shutting off in the North Atlantic (p.
150). Carl Wunsch of MIT wrote to the journal Nature in 2004 to say,
ÒThe only way to produce an ocean circulation without a Gulf Stream is either
to turn off the wind system, or to stop the EarthÕs rotation, or bothÓ
14. Invasive Species. GoreÕs worries about
the effect of warming on species ignore evolution. With the new earlier
caterpillar season in the Netherlands, an evolutionary advantage is given to
birds that can hatch their eggs earlier than the rest. ThatÕs how nature works.
Also, Òinvasive speciesÓ naturally extend their range when climate changes. As
for the pine beetle given as an example of invasive species, Rob Scagel, a
forest microclimate specialist in British Columbia, said,
ÒThe MPB (mountain pine beetle) is a species native to this part of North
America and is always present. The MPB epidemic started as comparatively small
outbreaks and through forest management inaction got completely out of hand.Ó
15. Species Loss. When it comes to species
loss, the figures given on p. 163 are based on extreme guesswork, as the late
Julian Simon pointed
out. We have documentary evidence of only just over 1,000 extinctions since
1600 (see, for instance, Bj¿rn LomborgÕs The
Skeptical Environmentalist, p. 250).
16. Coral Reefs. Coral reefs have been around
for over 500 million years. This means that they have survived through long
periods with much higher temperatures and atmospheric CO2
concentrations than today.
17. Malaria and other Infectious Diseases. Leading disease
scientists contend that climate change plays only a minor role in the spread of
emerging infectious diseases. In ÒGlobal Warming and Malaria: A Call for
AccuracyÓ (The Lancet, June 2004), nine leading malariologists
criticized models linking global warming to increased malaria spread as
ÒmisleadingÓ and Òdisplay[ing] a lack of knowledgeÓ of the subject.
18. Antarctic Ice. There is controversy over whether the
Antarctic ice sheet is thinning or thickening. Recent scientific studies have
shown a thickening in the interior at the same time as increased melting along
the coastlines. Temperatures in the interior are generally decreasing. The
Antarctic Peninsula, where the Larsen-B ice shelf broke up (p. 181) is not
representative of what is happening in the rest of Antarctica. Dr. Wibjšrn
KarlŽn, Professor Emeritus of Physical Geography and Quaternary Geology at
Stockholm University, acknowledges,
ÒSome small areas in the Antarctic Peninsula have broken up recently, just like
it has done back in time. The temperature in this part of Antarctica has
increased recently, probably because of a small change in the position of the
low pressure systems.Ó According to a forthcoming report from the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, climate models based on
anthropogenic forcing cannot explain the anomalous warming of the Antarctic
Peninsula; thus, something natural is at work.
19. Greenland Climate. Greenland was warmer
in the 1920s and 1930s than it is now. A recent study by Dr. Peter Chylek of
the University of California, Riverside, addressed the question of whether man
is directly responsible for recent warming: ÒAn important question is to what
extent can the current (1995-2005) temperature increase in Greenland coastal
regions be interpreted as evidence of man-induced global warming? Although
there has been a considerable temperature increase during the last decade (1995
to 2005) a similar increase and at a faster rate occurred during the early part
of the 20th century (1920 to 1930) when carbon dioxide or other greenhouse
gases could not be a cause. The Greenland warming of 1920 to 1930 demonstrates
that a high concentration of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases is not a
necessary condition for period of warming to arise. The observed 1995-2005
temperature increase seems to be within a natural variability of Greenland
climate.Ó (Petr Chylek et al., Geophysical Research Letters, 13 June
2006.)
20. Sea Level Rise. The United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change does not forecast sea-level rises of
Ò18 to 20 feet.Ó Rather, it says, ÒWe project a sea level rise of 0.09 to 0.88
m for 1990 to 2100, with a central value of 0.48 m. The central value gives an
average rate of 2.2 to 4.4 times the rate over the 20th century...It is now
widely agreed that major loss of grounded ice and accelerated sea level rise
are very unlikely during the 21st century.Ó Al GoreÕs suggestions of much more
are therefore extremely alarmist.
21. Population. Al Gore worries about
population growth; Gore does not suggest a solution. Fertility in the developed
world is stable or decreasing. The plain fact is that we are not going to
reduce population back down to 2 billion or fewer in the foreseeable future. In
the meantime, the population in the developing world requires a significant
increase in its standard of living to reduce the threats of premature and
infant mortality, disease, and hunger. In The
Undercover Economist, Tim Harford writes, ÒIf we are honest, then, the
argument that trade leads to economic growth, which leads to climate change,
leads us then to a stark conclusion: we should cut our trade links to make sure
that the Chinese, Indians and Africans stay poor. The question is whether any
environmental catastrophe, even severe climate change, could possibly inflict
the same terrible human cost as keeping three or four billion people in
poverty. To ask that question is to answer it.Ó
22. Energy Generation. A specific example of this is GoreÕs
acknowledgement that 30 percent of global CO2 emissions come from
wood fires used for cooking (p. 227). If we introduced affordable, coal-fired
power generation into South Asia and Africa we could reduce this considerably
and save over 1.6 million lives a year. This is the sort of solution that Gore
does not even consider.
23. Carbon-Emissions Trading. The European Carbon Exchange Market,
touted as ÒeffectiveÓ on p. 252, has crashed.
24. The ÒScientific Consensus.Ó On the supposed Òscientific
consensusÓ: Dr. Naomi Oreskes, of the University of California, San Diego, (p.
262) did not examine a Òlarge random sampleÓ of scientific articles. She got
her search terms wrong and thought she was looking at all the articles when in
fact she was looking at only 928 out of about 12,000 articles on Òclimate
change.Ó Dr. Benny Peiser, of Liverpool John Moores University in England, was
unable to replicate her study. He says,
ÒAs I have stressed
repeatedly, the whole data set includes only 13 abstracts (~1%) that explicitly
endorse what Oreskes has called the Ôconsensus view.Õ In fact, the vast
majority of abstracts does (sic) not mention anthropogenic climate change.
Moreover — and despite attempts to deny this fact — a handful of
abstracts actually questions the view that human activities are the main
driving force of Ôthe observed warming over the last 50 years.ÕÓ In addition, a
recent survey of scientists following the same methodology as one published in
1996 found that about 30 percent of scientists disagreed to some extent or
another with the contention that Òclimate change is mostly the result of
anthropogenic causes.Ó Less than 10 percent Òstrongly agreedÓ with the
statement. Details of both the survey and the failed attempt to replicate the
Oreskes study can be found here.
25. Economic Costs. Even if the study Gore cites is right (p.
280-281), the United States will still emit massive amounts of CO2
after all the measures it outlines have been realized. Getting emissions down
to the paltry levels needed to stabilize CO2 in the atmosphere would
require, in GoreÕs own words, Òa wrenching transformationÓ of our way of life. This
cannot be done easily or without significant cost. The Kyoto Protocol, which
Gore enthusiastically supports, would avert less than a tenth of a degree of
warming in the next fifty years and would cost up to $400 billion a year to the
U.S. All of the current proposals in Congress would cost the economy
significant amounts, making us all poorer, with all that that entails for human
health and welfare, while doing nothing to stop global
warming.
Finally, Gore quotes Winston Churchill (p. 100) — but he should read what
Churchill said when he was asked what qualities a politician requires: ÒThe
ability to foretell what is going to happen tomorrow, next week, next month and
next year. And to have the ability afterwards to explain why it didn't happen.Ó
—Iain Murray is a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.