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	<title>The Fox Report &#187; Fred Singer Articles</title>
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		<title>Fred singer speaks out in science integrity</title>
		<link>http://foxreport.org/wordpress/2010/12/19/fred-singer-speaks-out-in-science-integrity/</link>
		<comments>http://foxreport.org/wordpress/2010/12/19/fred-singer-speaks-out-in-science-integrity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Dec 2010 03:13:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fred Singer Articles]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ December 19th 2010 American Thinker</p> <p>It doesn&#8217;t matter whether you smoke or not, or don&#8217;t like the smell of smoke or not, you don&#8217;t have the right to lie about the smoke.  Nor do you have the right to lie about nuclear energy, global warming, DDT, radiation, ozone holes, acid rain, and many [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<table style="height: 17px;" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="799">
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<td align="left">December 19th 2010 American Thinker</p>
<p>It doesn&#8217;t matter whether you smoke or not, or don&#8217;t like the smell of smoke or not, you don&#8217;t have the right to<br />
lie about the smoke.  Nor do you have the right to lie about nuclear energy, global warming, DDT, radiation,<br />
ozone holes, acid rain, and many others.  We want the truth without the agendas.</td>
<td valign="top"></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<h1>Secondhand Smoke, Lung Cancer, and the Global Warming Debate</h1>
<p><strong>By</strong> <a href="http://www.americanthinker.com/s_fred_singer/"><strong>S. Fred Singer</strong></a></p>
<div>
<p>In 1993, the EPA published a report claiming that secondhand smoke<strong> (</strong>SHS  &#8212; also sometimes known as environmental tobacco smoke or ETS) causes  three thousand deaths from lung cancer every year.  Anyone doubting this  result has been subject to attack and depicted as a toady of the  tobacco lobby.  The attacks have been led by a smear blog called  DeSmogBlog, financed by the Canadian PR firm of James Hoggan, and have  been taken up with great enthusiasm by self-styled &#8220;science historian&#8221;  Professor Naomi Oreskes.</p>
<div>The tobacco smoking issue has also become a favorite tool for discrediting climate skeptics.  A prime example is the book <em>Merchants of Doubt</em> by Oreskes and Eric Conway, which attacks several well-known senior  physicists, including the late Dr. Fred Seitz, a former president of the  U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the American Physical Society, and  (most recently) Rockefeller University.</div>
<div>No matter what  the environmental issue &#8212; ozone depletion, acid rain, pesticides, etc.  &#8212; any and all scientific opposition based on objective facts is blamed  on an imagined involvement with tobacco companies.  None of this is  true, of course.  Oreskes and Conway claim to be academic historians,  yet they have consistently ignored factual information, have not  bothered to consult primary sources, have never interviewed any of the  scientists they try to smear, and generally have operated in a  completely unprofessional way.</div>
<div>Oreskes&#8217; and Conway&#8217;s  science is as poor as their historical expertise.  To cite just one  example, their book blames lung cancer from cigarette smoking on the  radioactive oxygen-15 isotope.  They cannot explain, of course, how O-15  gets into cigarettes, or how it is created.  They seem to be unaware  that its half-life is only 122 seconds.  In other words, they have no  clue about the science, and apparently, they assume that the burning of  tobacco creates isotopes &#8212; a remarkable discovery worthy of  alchemists.  As an aside, when not engaged in smearing scientists by  linking them to the tobacco lobby, Oreskes&#8217; and Conway&#8217;s book claims  that opposition to environmental regulation of greenhouse gases and  other &#8220;pollutants&#8221; is based on anti-communism!</div>
<div>The  ultimate aim of these attacks, at least in my case, has been to  discredit my work and publications on global warming.  I am a nonsmoker,  find SHS to be an irritant and unpleasant, have certainly not been paid  by Philip Morris and the tobacco lobby, and have never joined any of  their front organizations.  And I serve on the advisory board of an  anti-smoking organization.  My father, who was a heavy smoker, died of  emphysema while relatively young.  I personally believe that SHS, in  addition to being objectionable, cannot possibly be healthy.</div>
<div>So  what is the truth about SHS and lung cancer?  I am neither an  oncologist nor a chemical toxicologist, but I do know some statistics,  which allows me to examine the EPA study without bias.  I can  demonstrate that the EPA fudged their analysis to reach a predetermined  conclusion &#8212; using thoroughly dishonest procedures.  EPA &#8220;scientists&#8221;  made three major errors: 1) They ignored &#8220;publication bias.&#8221;  2) They  arbitrarily shifted the statistical &#8220;confidence intervals.&#8221;  3) They  drew unjustified conclusions from a risk ratio that was barely greater  than 1.0.</div>
<ul>
<li>Since none of the epidemiological studies  provided the clear answer they wanted, the EPA carried out a  &#8220;meta-analysis,&#8221; lumping together a selected group of studies.   Unfortunately, this approach ignores publication bias &#8212; i.e., the  tendency for investigators not to publish their studies if they do not  find a positive result.</li>
<li>The EPA, in order to calculate a  positive risk ratio, relaxed the confidence intervals from the generally  accepted 95% standard to 90% &#8212; and admitted this openly.</li>
<li>Even  so, their &#8220;Risk Ratio&#8221; was just a little above 1.0 &#8212; whereas careful  epidemiologists, because of the presence of confounding factors,  generally ignore any result unless the RR exceeds 2.0.</li>
</ul>
<div>To  sum up this somewhat technical discussion, while I cannot give specific  answers about lung cancer or other medical issues connected with SHS, I  can state with some assurance that the EPA analysis &#8212; to paraphrase my  former teacher, Nobel physicist Wolfgang Pauli &#8212; is &#8220;not only wrong,  but worthless.&#8221;</div>
<div>My assessments are independently confirmed  by the Congressional Research Service (in report CRS-95-1115) and by a  lengthy judicial analysis in 1998 by Judge William Osteen &#8212; all  available on the internet.  Science journalist Michael Fumento  presented, in 1993, a well-researched and eminently readable account in  Investors Business Daily.</div>
<div>In the largest (in terms of  statistical power), most detailed (in terms of results presented), and  most transparent (in terms of information about its conduct)  epidemiologic paper on SHS and mortality ever published in a major  medical journal (in the May 17, 2003 issue of the British Medical  Journal),<em> </em>UCLA Prof. James Enstrom found no significant  relationship between secondhand smoke and lung cancer.  It is worth  noting also that the World Health Organization, in a just-completed  study reported in the British medical journal Lancet, gives a  lung-cancer death rate (for US, Canada, and Cuba) of barely six hundred  per year, only a fraction of the EPA number of <em>U.S.</em> deaths.  An  independent study, published in BioMed Central (2010) and supported by  the Canadian National Cancer Institute and Canada&#8217;s Cancer Society,  found no noticeable lung-cancer effect from SHS in nonsmokers; however,  there was a significant effect from welding, use of paint thinners and  solvents, and exposure to diesel exhaust, soot, and smoke from sources  other than tobacco.</div>
<div>But just when we thought that nothing  could top the EPA claims, along comes this bombshell from Obama&#8217;s  surgeon general Regina Benjamin: &#8220;Even brief exposure to secondhand  smoke can cause cardiovascular disease and could trigger acute cardiac  events like heart attack.&#8221;  Not just long-term exposure to SHS &#8212; just a  whiff can kill you, asserts the surgeon general&#8217;s media release of Dec.  9, 2010.  Of course, there is no evidence cited to back up this wild  claim &#8212; just the usual and undisputed evidence about the health  consequences to actual (primary) smokers.</div>
<div>So what does it  all mean?  The issue is not whether SHS is healthy; it obviously is  not.  One issue is the use of the &#8220;tobacco weapon&#8221; to attack the  credibility of climate scientists &#8212; in place of using scientific  arguments.  It bespeaks of the desperation of those who don&#8217;t have any  valid scientific arguments and wish to avoid public debate.  (Imagine,  if you will, Oreskes attacking the validity of the notorious &#8220;hockey  stick&#8221; temperature curve by linking its author, Michael Mann, to tobacco  company Philip Morris, instead of describing his faulty use of  statistics.)</div>
<div>The other issue is the conduct of science  and the integrity of the science process: the intrusion of government  political agenda &#8212; worthy or not &#8212; on the way science is done and  reported to the public.  The corruption of science in a <em>worthy</em> cause is still corruption, and it has led to its further corruption in an <em>unworthy</em> cause &#8212; the ideologically driven claim of anthropogenic global warming.</div>
<div><strong><em>Atmospheric  physicist S. Fred Singer is professor emeritus of environmental  sciences at the University of Virginia and founding director of the US  Weather Satellite Service.  His book </em>Unstoppable Global Warming &#8211; Every 1500 Years<em> (Rowman &amp; Littlefield, 2007) presents the evidence for natural  climate cycles of warming and cooling and became a New York Times  bestseller.  He is the organizer and chairman of NIPCC (Non-governmental  International Panel on Climate Change), whose reports reach conclusions  that contradict those of the U.N.-supported IPCC.</em></strong></div>
</div>
<p><strong>Page Printed from: http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/12/second_hand_smoke_lung_cancer.html</strong> at December  19, 2010 &#8211; 05:54:03 PM CST</p>
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		<title>Aug. 9, 2008</title>
		<link>http://foxreport.org/wordpress/2008/08/10/aug-9-2008/</link>
		<comments>http://foxreport.org/wordpress/2008/08/10/aug-9-2008/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Aug 2008 23:08:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fred Singer Articles]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://foxreport.org/wordpress/?p=20</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Week That Was (Aug 9, 2008) brought to you by SEPP</strong></p>
<p><strong>Quote of the Week:</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Weather: Change we all believe in!&#8221; <em>Bumper sticker</em></p>
<p>****************************</p>
<p><strong>Last week we told you about the horrors of the EPA staff&#8217;s plan to control CO2 (aka as controlling</strong></p>
<p><strong>your life, all the way down to the use of lawnmowers). To view the EPA-ANPR (and read at least the</strong></p>
<p><strong>first few pages) go to </strong>http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-16432.pdf<span id="more-20"></span></p>
<p><strong>This week, the NOAA activists, lacking adult supervision, released for comment the draft of what&#8217;s</strong></p>
<p><strong>called the Unified Synthesis Product (USP) from a decade or so of federal efforts called the Climate</strong></p>
<p><strong>Change Science Program that have so far cost about $20 billion of your tax money. The USP is</strong></p>
<p><strong>supposed to provide the scientific underpinnings for the EPA&#8217;s proposed rulemaking. To see this</strong></p>
<p><strong>shining exemplar of propaganda trumping science, visit</strong></p>
<p>http://downloads.climatescience.gov/sap/usp/usp-prd-all.pdf</p>
<p><strong>1. Fake &#8211; and not even accurate: A critical view of the CCSP-USP</strong></p>
<p><strong>2. Chamber asks NOAA to withdraw CCSP-USP report </strong><em>(08/04/2008)</em></p>
<p><strong>3. Pelosi stonewalls drilling in US; wants to save the world</strong></p>
<p><strong>4. Does the &#8220;future of civilization&#8221; depend on giving up fossil fuels? Do Gore and Obama agree?</strong></p>
<p><strong>5. David King fights coal plants to save penguins</strong></p>
<p><strong>6. Industry sees GW as a moneymaker</strong></p>
<p><strong>7. Climate hysterics v heretics</strong></p>
<p><strong>8. A &#8220;geriatric&#8221; revolt: &#8220;Greenie Watch&#8221; explains why seniors tend to be climate skeptics</strong></p>
<p><strong>9. GW blamed for natural disasters</strong></p>
<p><strong>*****************************************</strong></p>
<p><strong>NEWS YOU CAN USE</strong></p>
<p>More on the EPA-ANPR, from Chamber of Commerce site ACCESS</p>
<p>http://www.uschamber.com/CO2/default</p>
<p>Most consumers aren&#8217;t aware of the extent to which staff members at the Environmental Protection Agency</p>
<p>want to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking released by EPA</p>
<p>staff July 11, 2008, lays out a strategy to regulate emissions right down to household items and gardening</p>
<p>equipment. These rules don&#8217;t simply apply to an amorphous American business sector; they apply to the</p>
<p>basic American consumer, us at home. They carry significant implications for how we recreate and even</p>
<p>tend to our daily household chores.</p>
<p>Some of EPA&#8217;s Suggestions:</p>
<p><strong>In the Weeds</strong>. [E]ach application could require a different unit of measure tied to the machine&#8217;s mission or</p>
<p>output&#8211; such as grams per kilogram of cuttings from a standard lawn for lawnmowers and grams per</p>
<p>kilogram-meter of load lift for forklifts. Such application-specific standards would provide the clearest</p>
<p>metric for GHG emission reductions. (EPA-ANPR, p. 337)</p>
<p>2</p>
<p><strong>Adrift: </strong>A number of innovative alternatives are under development for providing power on marine vessels.</p>
<p>These alternative power sources include fuel cells, solar power, wind power, and even wave power. While</p>
<p>none of these technologies are currently able to supply the total power demands of larger, ocean-going</p>
<p>vessels, they may prove to be capable of reducing GHG emissions through auxiliary power or power-assist</p>
<p>applications. (EPA-ANPR, p. 345)</p>
<p>************************************</p>
<p>Jonathan David Carson re-visits the Hockeystick</p>
<p>http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/08/fake_but_accurate_science.html</p>
<p>Chip Knappenberger comments on the CCSP-USP in the World Climate Report</p>
<p>http://www.worldclimatereport.com/index.php/2008/08/05/ccsp-climate-impacts-report-a-perversion-of-science/</p>
<p>***********************</p>
<p>http://www.capitalresearch.org/pubs/pdf/v1217525953.pdf</p>
<p>Al Gore&#8217;s Carbon Empire: Cashing in on Climate Change. Al Gore says everyone will benefit when new</p>
<p>government rules require companies to pay to reduce global warming. But some people will benefit more</p>
<p>than others, as will some companies. Benefiting most are those like the ex-vice president who can set up</p>
<p>and invest in companies that will profit from the federal regulations imposing heavy costs on others.</p>
<p>********************************</p>
<p>Dr. Takeda Kunihiko, vice-chancellor of the Institute of Science and Technology Research at Chubu</p>
<p>University. His book &#8220;Hypocritical Ecology&#8221; has been flying off shelves at the speed of 100,000 a month</p>
<p>since being published this June 2008. Kunihiko is one of the world&#8217;s leading authorities on both uranium</p>
<p>enrichment and recycling and is a member of just about every prestigious academic and governmental</p>
<p>entity, he has stayed independent and made a career out of challenging the establishment. He was also vice</p>
<p>deputy president at the Shibaura Institute of Technology before joining Nagoya  University in 2002.</p>
<p>Another top Japanese scientist, Dr. Kiminori Itoh, called warming fears the worst scientific scandal in</p>
<p>history (June 27, 2008). Itoh, an award-winning environmental physical chemist who specializes in optical</p>
<p>waveguide spectroscopy from the Yokohama National University, also contributed to the 2007 UN IPCC</p>
<p>AR4 (fourth assessment report) as an expert reviewer. http://climatesci.org/2008/06/17/guest-weblog-bydr-</p>
<p>kiminori-itoh-of-yokohama-national-university</p>
<p>***********************</p>
<p><strong>UNDER THE BOTTOM LINE</strong></p>
<p>The California Attorney General&#8217;s office is leading a group of state attorneys general and environmental</p>
<p>groups that will sue the Environmental Protection Agency for failing to regulate greenhouse gases from</p>
<p>ships, planes, and agricultural and industrial equipment. Now that greenhouse gases are considered air</p>
<p>pollutants under the Clean Air Act, they maintain, the EPA is obligated to regulate their emissions from</p>
<p>such sources. News coverage from Reuters and AP.</p>
<p>***********************************</p>
<p>&#8220;These jellyfish near shore are a message the sea is sending us saying, &#8216;Look how badly you are treating</p>
<p>me.&#8217;&#8221; &#8211; DR. JOSEP-MARA GILI, one of the world&#8217;s leading jellyfish experts.</p>
<p>The explosion of jellyfish populations reflects overfishing, rising sea temperatures and pollution,</p>
<p>scientists say. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/03/science/earth/03jellyfish.html?th&amp;emc=th</p>
<p>#############################</p>
<p>3</p>
<p><strong>1. FAKE &#8211; AND NOT EVEN ACCURATE</strong></p>
<p><em>SFS/8/7/2008</em></p>
<p>Remember &#8220;Rathergate&#8221; and the iconic NY Times headline &#8220;Fake but Accurate&#8221; from the presidential</p>
<p>campaign of 2004? We now have a government report on global warming that peddles inaccurate climate</p>
<p>scares and uses some fakes to support them.</p>
<p>The Unified Synthesis Product (USP) of the US Climate Change Science Program (CCSP) is supposed to</p>
<p>be the culmination of a $20 billion program of a decade or so of climate research. The only reason the USP</p>
<p>might be important is that it is supposed to provide the scientific underpinnings for an ambitious allencompassing</p>
<p>rulemaking venture of the EPA to control emissions of carbon dioxide.</p>
<p>It is agreed by all that CO2, a greenhouse (GH) gas second in importance only to water vapor, is a</p>
<p>nontoxic, natural component of the atmosphere, and that its level has been increasing because of energy</p>
<p>generation from fossil fuels. According to a Supreme Court decision of April 2007, EPA must regulate</p>
<p>CO2 under the terms of the Clean Air Act or demonstrate that it is not a threat to health and human welfare.</p>
<p>The USP, currently in draft form and out for comment, tries to demonstrate such a threat.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP is supposed to summarize the conclusions of 21 underlying CCSP reports, most of which</li>
</ul>
<p>have not yet been published. Many have not even been submitted for review and are unevaluated.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP authors claim (pg. 15) that they used &#8220;expert judgment&#8221; and &#8220;best available evidence.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p>They don&#8217;t reveal, however, that they ignore evidence, even though widely available and credible,</p>
<p>that contradicts their &#8220;expert judgment.&#8221;</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP&#8217;s editors main conclusion, like that of the UN IPCC&#8217;s, is that climate warming is</li>
</ul>
<p>produced by human activity, specifically by the burning of fossil fuels. Here they conveniently</p>
<p>ignore not only the conclusion of the NIPCC report &#8220;Nature not Human Activity Rules Climate</p>
<p>Activity,&#8221; widely available on the Internet; they also misrepresent their own CCSP 1.1 Report of</p>
<p>April 2006, which shows a clear and significant disparity between observations and the results of</p>
<p>greenhouse (GH) models.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP even claims that their conclusion is &#8220;unequivocal&#8221; (pg. 5); here they ignore the</li>
</ul>
<p>conclusion of a National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council Report of 2001 that</p>
<p>says the opposite.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> As in most other matters the USP relies on the IPCC but ignores the countervailing evidence of the</li>
</ul>
<p>NIPCC. For example, the USP features the notorious &#8220;hockey-stick&#8221; curve that had been used by</p>
<p>the IPCC to claim that the 20th century was somehow &#8220;unusual,&#8221; and the warmest of the past 1000</p>
<p>years. While not exactly a fake, the hockey-stick result has been exposed as a case of incompetent</p>
<p>statistical analysis. However, its use now by the USP borders on fraud and cannot be excused.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP claims that the climate system shows a high sensitivity to GH gases like carbon dioxide</li>
</ul>
<p>but ignores published analyses that demonstrate conclusively the existence of a &#8220;negative</p>
<p>feedback&#8221; in the atmosphere, which reduces the sensitivity to insignificant levels.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP talks about weather extremes, heat wave deaths, storms, floods, droughts, but ignores the</li>
</ul>
<p>conclusions of its own underlying report CCSP 3.3.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP predicts extreme levels of sea level rise for the 21st century, and even opines a rise of</li>
</ul>
<p>between two and five feet &#8211; again without giving any justification except some flawed theoretical</p>
<p>speculations. Here, the USP even departs from the latest IPCC Report, which shows values well</p>
<p>below the USP claim.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> Since sea level rise and inundation from flooding are generally considered a greater hazard than a</li>
</ul>
<p>simple temperature rise, the USP tries to drive this point home by including a picture of a house</p>
<p>that&#8217;s flooded. This picture, however, turns out to have been photo-shopped &#8211; in other words an</p>
<p>outright fake. The USP editors likely were unaware of this attempt at deception, but it does tell</p>
<p>you something about the due diligence exercised by them.</p>
<p>The USP Report is labeled as a &#8220;first draft.&#8221; One wonders, however, if the final product will look any</p>
<p>different. More important, what kind of mischief will be created by circulating such a shoddy piece of</p>
<p>4</p>
<p>work, containing mostly propaganda and so little science. The only good thing about it: It may lead to a</p>
<p>&#8220;Gore-gate&#8221; and serve to discredit the rulemaking initiative of the EPA, which has the potential of</p>
<p>destroying our economy and damage the United States, perhaps irreparably.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p><em>Atmospheric physicist S. Fred Singer is Professor Emeritus of Environmental Sciences at the University of</em></p>
<p><em>Virginia and former director of the US Weather Satellite Service. His most recent book &#8220;Unstoppable</em></p>
<p><em>Global Warming &#8211; Every 1500 Years&#8221; (Rowman &amp; Littlefield, 2007) presents the evidence for natural</em></p>
<p><em>climate cycles of warming and cooling and became a NY Times best-seller. He is the organizer of NIPCC</em></p>
<p><em>(Non-governmental International Panel on Climate Change) and editor of the NIPCC report &#8220;Nature, Not</em></p>
<p><em>Human Activity, Controls the Climate&#8221; [2008], which responds to the claims of the UN-IPCC.</em></p>
<p><em>http://www.sepp.org/publications/NIPCC_final.pdf </em><em>He has served as a reviewer of several CCSP reports.</em></p>
<p><em>As a reviewer for the IPCC, he shares the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore and some 2000 others.</em></p>
<p>***************************************************</p>
<p><strong>2. INDUSTRY GROUP ASKS NOAA TO WITHDRAW MAJOR CLIMATE</strong></p>
<p><strong>REPORT</strong></p>
<p><em>Lauren Morello, ClimateWire reporter</em></p>
<p>Five years after complaints about data quality quashed the first federal assessment of climate change in the</p>
<p>United   States, an industry group is resurrecting the tactic. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce asked the</p>
<p>government to withdraw a major Climate Change Science Program report released in May. The group</p>
<p>argued that the analysis violates a federal law that requires agencies to employ &#8220;sound science&#8221; because it</p>
<p>relies on unpublished information.</p>
<p>Environmental groups blasted the move, calling it an attempt to cast doubt on climate science. But</p>
<p>Chamber officials maintained that the report includes references to unpublished federal climate studies,</p>
<p>which leave the public unable to determine whether its conclusions are valid.</p>
<p>&#8220;The public cannot presently judge the reliability and objectivity of the synthesis report, because the public</p>
<p>cannot access the underlying documents on which the synthesis report is based,&#8221; the group wrote in official</p>
<p>comments it filed Friday with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency, the lead agency that</p>
<p>produced the analysis.</p>
<p>The report &#8212; the second national climate assessment &#8212; predicts that the United States will &#8220;very likely&#8221;</p>
<p>experience rising sea levels and increasing droughts, heat waves, intense storms and resulting illness and</p>
<p>premature death over the next century as climate change intensifies. The document also concludes it is</p>
<p>&#8220;likely that there has been a substantial human contribution to surface temperature increases in North</p>
<p>America.&#8221;</p>
<p>Bill Kovacs, the chamber&#8217;s vice president for environment, technology and regulatory affairs, said the</p>
<p>group wants the federal government to withdraw the report until the unpublished studies are completed and</p>
<p>publicly available. Some of the studies &#8212; a series of 21 reports planned by the Climate Change Science</p>
<p>Program &#8212; are not scheduled for release until November.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re asking them to withdraw until such a time as they can put everything out as a comprehensive</p>
<p>whole,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They can withdraw it, finish the publication and put it back out. It&#8217;s not a permanent</p>
<p>action.&#8221;</p>
<p>But Kovacs also hinted that the industry group&#8217;s complaints run deeper, extending to the scientific validity</p>
<p>of climate models and peer-reviewed studies cited in the report. In addition to work by the Climate Change</p>
<p>Science Program, the report references analyses published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate</p>
<p>Change and scientific journals.</p>
<p>5</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re viewing this as part of the scientific evidence that is going to be put in the public record&#8221; as part of</p>
<p>EPA&#8217;s ongoing rulemaking process that will determine whether the agency regulates carbon dioxide</p>
<p>emissions under the Clean Air Act, he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s all the same science that&#8217;s being relied upon.&#8221;</p>
<p>Environmentalists who participated in a lawsuit last year that forced the Bush administration to publish the</p>
<p>report said they believed the Chamber of Commerce&#8217;s aim is to suppress findings designed to help</p>
<p>policymakers at the federal, state and local levels plan for climate change.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Chamber of Commerce is pursuing a last-century, head-in-the-sand strategy to suppress climate</p>
<p>information,&#8221; said Brendan Cummings, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. &#8220;They are</p>
<p>doing a disservice to all the businesses and communities they purport to represent. Climate models have</p>
<p>been the best available science for decades now.&#8221; Kert Davies, research director of Greenpeace USA,</p>
<p>called the request to withdraw the climate report &#8220;more of the same.&#8221;</p>
<p>At the heart of the chamber&#8217;s withdrawal request is the Data Quality Act. Also known as the Information</p>
<p>Quality Act, the law requires federal agencies to ensure the integrity of the information they use and</p>
<p>distribute. It also allows outside parties to petition to force the correction of information they believe is</p>
<p>wrong.</p>
<p>Between 2000 and 2003, the Competitive Enterprise Institute used the act to successfully challenge the first</p>
<p>national climate assessment, released in 2000, which it called &#8220;junk science.&#8221; The group said the report&#8217;s</p>
<p>reliance on uncertain climate computer models rendered its conclusions useless and argued that it was not</p>
<p>subject to certain laws governing the convening and conduct of advisory panels.</p>
<p>In the end, the Bush administration settled the group&#8217;s legal challenges by agreeing to place a disclaimer on</p>
<p>the national assessment report Web site stating the document was not subject to Data Quality Act</p>
<p>guidelines (Greenwire, Oct. 3, 2006).</p>
<p>Environmentalists said they see echoes of that effort in the challenge to the new report. &#8220;They&#8217;re essentially</p>
<p>recycling the same climate denier arguments that CEI used eight years ago,&#8221; said Cummings of the Center</p>
<p>for Biological Diversity. &#8220;That strategy worked for the first national assessment. We don&#8217;t believe it can</p>
<p>work here. Global warming has become so severe and so impossible to deny that even under the Data</p>
<p>Quality Act, these arguments should go nowhere.&#8221;</p>
<p>The comment period on the report ends Aug. 14.</p>
<p>**********************************</p>
<p><strong>3. PELOSI: SAVE THE PLANET, LET SOMEONE ELSE DRILL</strong></p>
<p><em>By Charles Krauthammer, August 1, 2008</em></p>
<p>House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opposes lifting the moratorium on drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife</p>
<p>Refuge and on the Outer Continental Shelf. She won&#8217;t even allow it to come to a vote. With $4 gas having</p>
<p>massively shifted public opinion in favor of domestic production, she wants to protect her Democratic</p>
<p>members from having to cast an anti-drilling election-year vote. Moreover, given the public mood, she</p>
<p>might even lose. This cannot be permitted. Why? Because, as she explained to Politico: &#8220;I&#8217;m trying to save</p>
<p>the planet; I&#8217;m trying to save the planet.&#8221;</p>
<p>A lovely sentiment. But has Pelosi actually thought through the moratorium&#8217;s effects on the planet?</p>
<p>Consider: 25 years ago, nearly 60 percent of U.S. petroleum was produced domestically. Today it&#8217;s 25</p>
<p>percent. From its peak in 1970, U.S. production has declined a staggering 47 percent. The world consumes</p>
<p>86 million barrels a day, the United States, roughly 20 million. We need the stuff to run our cars and planes</p>
<p>and economy. Where does it come from?</p>
<p>6</p>
<p>Places such as Nigeria, where chronic corruption, environmental neglect and the resulting unrest and</p>
<p>instability lead to pipeline explosions, oil spills and illegal siphoning by the poverty-stricken population &#8211;</p>
<p>which leads to more spills and explosions. Just this week, two Royal Dutch Shell pipelines had to be shut</p>
<p>down because bombings by local militants were causing leaks into the ground.</p>
<p>Compare the Niger Delta to the Gulf of Mexico, where deep-sea U.S. oil rigs withstood Hurricanes Katrina</p>
<p>and Rita without a single undersea well suffering a significant spill. The United States has the highest</p>
<p>technology to ensure the safest drilling. Today, directional drilling &#8212; essentially drilling down, then</p>
<p>sideways &#8212; allows access to oil that in 1970 would have required a surface footprint more than three times</p>
<p>as large. Additionally, the United States has one of the most extensive and least corrupt regulatory systems</p>
<p>on the planet.</p>
<p>Does Pelosi imagine that with so much of America declared off-limits, the planet is less injured as drilling</p>
<p>shifts to Kazakhstan and Venezuela and Equatorial Guinea? That Russia will be more environmentally</p>
<p>scrupulous than we in drilling in the Arctic? The net environmental effect of Pelosi&#8217;s no-drilling</p>
<p>willfulness is negative. Outsourcing U.S. oil production does nothing to lessen worldwide environmental</p>
<p>despoliation. It simply exports it to more corrupt, less efficient, more unstable parts of the world &#8212; thereby</p>
<p>increasing net planetary damage.</p>
<p>Democrats want no oil from the American OCS or ANWR. But of course they do want more oil. From</p>
<p>OPEC. From where Americans don&#8217;t vote. From places Democratic legislators can&#8217;t see. On May 13 Sen.</p>
<p>Chuck Schumer &#8212; deeply committed to saving just those pieces of the planet that might have huge reserves</p>
<p>of American oil &#8212; demanded that the Saudis increase production by a million barrels a day. It doesn&#8217;t occur</p>
<p>to him that by eschewing the slightest disturbance of the mating habits of the Arctic caribou, he is calling</p>
<p>for the further exploitation of the pristine deserts of Arabia. In the name of the planet, mind you.</p>
<p>The other panacea, yesterday&#8217;s rage, is biofuels: We can&#8217;t drill our way out of the crisis, it seems, but we</p>
<p>can greenly grow our way out. By now, however, it is blindingly obvious even to Democrats that biofuels</p>
<p>are a devastating force for environmental degradation. It has led to the rape of &#8220;lungs of the world&#8221; rain</p>
<p>forests in Indonesia and Brazil as huge tracts have been destroyed to make room for palm oil and sugar</p>
<p>plantations.</p>
<p>Here in the United States, one out of every three ears of corn is stuffed into a gas tank (by way of ethanol),</p>
<p>causing not just food shortages abroad and high prices at home but intensive increases in farming, with all</p>
<p>of the attendant environmental problems (soil erosion, insecticide pollution, water consumption, etc.). This</p>
<p>to prevent drilling on an area in the Arctic one-sixth the size of Dulles Airport that leaves undisturbed a</p>
<p>refuge one-third the size of Britain.</p>
<p>There are a dizzying number of economic and national security arguments for drilling at home: a $700</p>
<p>billion oil balance-of-payments deficit, a gas tax (equivalent) levied on the paychecks of American workers</p>
<p>and poured into the treasuries of enemy and terror-supporting regimes, growing dependence on unstable</p>
<p>states of the Persian Gulf and Caspian basin. Pelosi and the Democrats stand athwart, shouting: We don&#8217;t</p>
<p>care. We come to save the planet! They seem blissfully unaware that the argument for their drill-there-nothere</p>
<p>policy collapses on its own environmental terms</p>
<p>===========================================</p>
<p><strong>PELOSI&#8217;S ENERGY STONEWALL</strong></p>
<p><em>WSJ, August 1, 2008</em></p>
<p>Hell &#8212; otherwise known as Congress &#8212; has officially frozen over. For the first time since the 1950s,</p>
<p>Members will skip town today for the August recess without either chamber having passed a single</p>
<p>appropriations bill. Then again, Democrats appear ready to sacrifice their whole agenda, even spending,</p>
<p>rather than allow new domestic energy production.</p>
<p>7</p>
<p>Or even a mere debate about energy. The Democratic leadership is stonewalling any measure that might</p>
<p>possibly relax the Congressional ban on offshore drilling. Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid know that they</p>
<p>would lose if a vote ever came to the floor, and they&#8217;re desperate to suppress an insurrection among those</p>
<p>Democrats who are pragmatic about one of the top economic issues. Behind this whatever-it-takes</p>
<p>obstructionism is an ideological commitment to high energy prices. The rulers of the Democratic Party</p>
<p>want prices to keep rising.</p>
<p>A good gauge of the radicalism of their energy blockade is the lowest common denominator of this energy</p>
<p>fight: The effort to blame &#8220;speculators&#8221; for $4 gas was promoted by both Barack Obama and John McCain,</p>
<p>as well as nearly everybody else in Washington. Sure enough, the House voted 276-151 on Wednesday for</p>
<p>a bill that would have driven oil futures trading overseas.</p>
<p>But the legislation actually failed to become law &#8212; by design. It needed a two-thirds majority because</p>
<p>Speaker Pelosi suspended the rules to prevent Republicans from offering amendments, drilling among</p>
<p>them. Ms. Pelosi had decreed that she would not permit a roll-call vote under any circumstances, even if it</p>
<p>stopped her own goal of wrecking the U.S. futures market.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the Senate is locked down over its own antispeculation bill. Majority Leader Reid briefly</p>
<p>agreed to allow four amendments on GOP policy alternatives, but he withdrew the offer after he was</p>
<p>subjected to the fury of the environmental lobby and Ms. Pelosi. To prevent a vote on offshore drilling this</p>
<p>week, Senate Democrats also let fail a bill providing home heating assistance for the poor. Same thing for</p>
<p>tax subsidies for wind and solar energy.</p>
<p>Other liberal inspirations, including suing OPEC and a windfall profits tax on the oil industry, also ended</p>
<p>up in the Congressional dumpster. And of course, Democrats long ago shut down the normal budget</p>
<p>process in both the Senate and the House to avoid any vote. Normally, the spending hiatus would be a</p>
<p>useful byproduct of Congressional bickering. But in this case the shutdown is malign neglect. Surging</p>
<p>energy prices act like a huge tax increase on the economy, since energy demand is relatively fixed over the</p>
<p>short term. The price spike is imposing genuine hardships on middle-income and working-class voters</p>
<p>across the country.</p>
<p>The Democratic leadership isn&#8217;t oblivious to this man-at-the-pump reality. But Al Gore&#8217;s vision of the</p>
<p>apocalyptic tides of climate change perfectly expresses their mentality: Ms. Pelosi and Mr. Reid see soaring</p>
<p>prices as a public good &#8212; the mechanism that will force energy enlightenment on the U.S. If anything, they</p>
<p>think the price of gas is too low. As recently as June, the Senate debated a multi-trillion-dollar carbon taxand-</p>
<p>regulation scheme that was designed to boost energy costs. A new version will be a priority in the next</p>
<p>Administration.</p>
<p>If nothing else, this summer&#8217;s oil drilling stonewall is giving voters an insight into this ideology, which</p>
<p>recoils at any oil, natural gas or coal production &#8212; oh, and nuclear besides. That puts 93% of all U.S.</p>
<p>energy off limits for expansion. Back in the real world, and barring a cold fusion or other miracle, the U.S.</p>
<p>will remain dependent on fossil fuels for decades. A fresh round of domestic oil-and-gas exploration would</p>
<p>ease the long-term pressures that supply and demand are exerting on prices, plus bolster energy security.</p>
<p>And those not bound by anticarbon theology are coming around. Broad margins of the American public &#8211;</p>
<p>now even a slim majority of Californians &#8212; favor increasing domestic production. Many Congressional</p>
<p>Democrats are working below the radar to craft a compromise that couples drilling with conservation and</p>
<p>programs to prop up renewable alternatives. But the leadership won&#8217;t bend even a bit, and so Ms. Pelosi</p>
<p>and Mr. Reid have spent the summer using every parliamentary deception to evade debating the issue that</p>
<p>the American public cares most about. Short of cutting off the air conditioning on Capitol Hill, Democrats</p>
<p>won&#8217;t get the message until voters make them &#8212; perhaps in November.</p>
<p>********************************</p>
<p><strong>4. THE GREEN HORNET</strong></p>
<p><em>WSJ, August 6, 2008</em></p>
<p>Al Gore said the other day that &#8220;the future of human civilization&#8221; depends on giving up fossil fuels within a</p>
<p>decade &#8212; and was acclaimed as a prophet by the political class. Obviously boring reality doesn&#8217;t count for</p>
<p>8</p>
<p>much these days. Even so, when Barack Obama wheels out an energy agenda nearly as grandiose as Mr.</p>
<p>Gore&#8217;s, shouldn&#8217;t it receive at least <em>some </em>media scrutiny?</p>
<p>On Monday, Mr. Obama said that the U.S. must &#8220;end the age of oil in our time,&#8221; with &#8220;real results by the</p>
<p>end of my first term in office.&#8221; This, he said, will &#8220;take nothing less than a complete transformation of our</p>
<p>economy.&#8221; Mark that one down as the understatement of the year. Maybe Mr. Obama really is the Green</p>
<p>Hornet, or some other superhero of his current political myth.</p>
<p>The Senator calls for $150 billion over 10 years to achieve &#8220;energy independence,&#8221; with elevated subsidies</p>
<p>for renewable alternatives and efficiency programs. He also says he&#8217;ll &#8220;leverage billions more in private</p>
<p>capital to build a new energy economy,&#8221; euphemistically referring to his climate plan to tax and regulate</p>
<p>greenhouse gases. Every President since Nixon has declared &#8220;energy independence,&#8221; as Mr. Obama noted.</p>
<p>But this time, he says, things will change.</p>
<p>They won&#8217;t. And not because of &#8220;the old politics,&#8221; or whatever. Currently, alternative sources &#8212; wind, solar,</p>
<p>biomass, hydroelectric and geothermal &#8212; provide less than 7% of yearly domestic consumption. Throw out</p>
<p>hydro and geothermal, and it&#8217;s only 4%. For the foreseeable future, renewables simply cannot provide the</p>
<p>scale and volume of energy needed to meet growing U.S. demand, which is expected to increase by 20%</p>
<p>over the next two decades. Even with colossal taxpayer subsidies, renewables probably can&#8217;t even slow the</p>
<p>rate of growth of carbon-based fuel consumption, much less replace it.</p>
<p>Take wind power, which has grown rapidly though still only provides about two-thirds of 1% of all U.S.</p>
<p>electricity. The Energy Department optimistically calculates that ramping up merely to 20% by 2030 would</p>
<p>require more than $2 trillion and turbines across the Midwest &#8220;wind corridor,&#8221; plus multiple offshore</p>
<p>installations. And we&#8217;ll need a new &#8220;transmission superhighway system&#8221; of more than 12,000 miles of</p>
<p>electric lines to connect the wind system to population centers. A mere $150 billion won&#8217;t cut it. Mr.</p>
<p>Obama also didn&#8217;t mention that this wind power will be more expensive than traditional sources like coal.</p>
<p>Wind, too, is intermittent: It isn&#8217;t always blowing and can&#8217;t be accessed on demand when people need</p>
<p>electricity. Since there&#8217;s no cost-effective way to store large amounts of electricity, wind requires &#8220;spinning</p>
<p>reserve,&#8221; or non-alternative base-load power to avoid blackouts. That base-load power is now provided</p>
<p>largely by coal, nuclear and natural gas, and wind can&#8217;t displace much. The same problem afflicts solar</p>
<p>energy &#8212; now one-hundredth of 1% of net U.S. electric generation. One of the top uses of solar panels is to</p>
<p>heat residential swimming pools.</p>
<p>Mr. Obama also says he wants to <em>mandate </em>that all new cars and trucks are &#8220;flexible fuel&#8221; vehicles, meaning</p>
<p>that they can run on higher concentrations of corn ethanol mixed with gasoline, or second-generation</p>
<p>biofuels if those ever come onto the market. Like wind and solar, this would present major land use</p>
<p>problems: According to credible estimates, land areas larger than the size of Texas would need to be</p>
<p>planted with fuel feedstocks to displace just half the oil America imports every day. Meanwhile, the</p>
<p>economic distortions caused by corn ethanol &#8212; such as higher food prices &#8212; have been bad enough.</p>
<p>And yet there&#8217;s more miracle work to do. Mr. Obama promises to put at least one million plug-in electric</p>
<p>vehicles on the road by 2015. That&#8217;s fine if consumers want to buy them. But even if technical battery</p>
<p>problems are overcome, this would only lead to &#8220;fuel switching&#8221; &#8212; if cars don&#8217;t use gasoline, the energy</p>
<p>still has to come from somewhere. And the cap-and-trade program also favored by Mr. Obama would</p>
<p>effectively bar new coal plants, while new nuclear plants are only now being planned after a 30-year hiatus</p>
<p>thanks to punishing regulations and lawsuits.</p>
<p>Problems like these are the reality of &#8220;alternative&#8221; energy, and they explain why every &#8220;energy</p>
<p>independence&#8221; plan has faltered since the 1970s. But just because Mr. Obama&#8217;s plan is wildly unrealistic</p>
<p>doesn&#8217;t mean that a program of vast new taxes, subsidies and mandates wouldn&#8217;t be destructive. The U.S.</p>
<p>has a great deal invested in fossil fuels not because of a political conspiracy or because anyone worships</p>
<p>carbon but because other sources of energy are, right now, inferior.</p>
<p>Consumption isn&#8217;t rising because of wastefulness. The U.S. produces more than twice as much GDP today</p>
<p>per unit of energy as it did in the 1950s, yet energy use has risen threefold. That&#8217;s because energy use is</p>
<p>9</p>
<p>tethered to growth, and the economy continues to innovate and expand. Mr. Obama seems to have other</p>
<p>ideas.</p>
<p>**********************</p>
<p><strong>5. FORMER CHIEF SCIENTIST, SIR DAVID KING, ATTACKS NEW COAL</strong></p>
<p><strong>POWER STATION PLANS</strong></p>
<p><em>By Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent , Telegraph (UK) 01/08/2008</em></p>
<p>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2008/08/01/eapower101.xml</p>
<p>The former Government chief scientist has launched a stinging attack on plans for Britain&#8217;s first new coalfired</p>
<p>power station in 20 years &#8211; as thousands of climate change activists gather for a week of protests at the</p>
<p>site. Professor Sir David King, who stood down at the end of last year, warned that a return to coal-fired</p>
<p>power risked returning the planet to the pre-ice age era, when &#8220;the Antarctic was a tropical forest&#8221;.</p>
<p>A week-long protest called &#8220;Climate Camp&#8221; begins on Sunday at the site of the plant, at Kingsnorth in</p>
<p>Kent, where the energy firm E.on plans to set up two new units at a cost of £1.5 billion.</p>
<p>In an interview with the Ecologist&#8217;s Film Unit, Sir David warned that it made little sense for the private</p>
<p>sector to invest in coal-fired power, given plans to increase taxes on carbon emissions. He said &#8220;There&#8217;s</p>
<p>little doubt that if we burn all of the coal that sits below the earth&#8217;s surface, we can return the planet to the</p>
<p>condition it was in 50 million years ago when the Antarctic was a tropical forest and much of the rest of the</p>
<p>planet would be pretty difficult for human beings to live on. &#8230;We&#8217;ve got to see that coal is not a useful</p>
<p>resource to burn unless we can recapture the carbon that is produced by burning it.</p>
<p>&#8220;We therefore need to work positively towards carbon capture and storage. If we can manage that, then of</p>
<p>course we can continue to use coal to drive our economies &#8211; but frankly, I haven&#8217;t seen the proof that that</p>
<p>can be done. This is still unproven technology and I think until it&#8217;s proven, it&#8217;s dangerous to assume that we</p>
<p>can continue to use coal.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think those power stations are going to be priced out of the market as carbon dioxide pricing goes up. So</p>
<p>I quite simply don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s a good private sector decision to invest in coal-fired power stations.&#8221;</p>
<p>But Macolm Wicks, the Energy Minister, described opponents of the scheme as &#8220;naive&#8221;. In an interview</p>
<p>with the Financial Times, he said that the &#8220;lay person&#8221; might think that energy policy was &#8220;about</p>
<p>windmills,&#8221; but: &#8220;The rather boring fact is that the world is going to be burning lots of coal. &#8220;Whatever</p>
<p>people might wish, whatever people singing in the sunshine at summer camps might idealise, the world is</p>
<p>going to be using lots of coals in future.&#8221;</p>
<p>Greenpeace has released its own study in conjunction with WWF that concludes that energy needs created</p>
<p>as old power stations closed down could be met by the expansion of renewables, primarily through wind</p>
<p>power.</p>
<p>**********************************</p>
<p><strong>6. CEOs TELL G-8 DIPLOMATS TO GET GREEN SUBSIDIES FLOWING</strong></p>
<p>http://blogs.wsj.com/environmentalcapital/2008/06/20/pay-me-ceos-tell-g-8-diplomats-to-get-greensubsidies-</p>
<p>flowing/trackback/</p>
<p>If politicians can&#8217;t come up with a global climate-change strategy, world business leaders are ready to</p>
<p>goose them into action, because they stand to gain from it. CEOs from 99 of the world&#8217;s biggest</p>
<p>companies-representing about 10% of global market capitalization-urged G-8 countries to take ambitious</p>
<p>action to fight climate change, including curbing global greenhouse-gas emissions by 50% mid 2050.</p>
<p>10</p>
<p>That&#8217;s the first time that many high-profile international business leaders have called for concrete action on</p>
<p>climate change. In the U.S., about 30 big corporations in the U.S. Climate Action Partnership have been</p>
<p>clamoring for the government to fight global warming. That&#8217;s partly so they&#8217;ll have a hand in designing</p>
<p>regulations many already see as inevitable, and partly to juice their own businesses, like clean-technology.</p>
<p>The international group, which includes Alcoa, Shell, British Airways, Deutsche Bank, Duke Energy, BP,</p>
<p>and Citibank, is no different. It calls on the G-8, meeting this weekend in Japan to map out some global</p>
<p>climate-change targets for rich countries, to design an &#8220;environmentally effective and economically</p>
<p>efficient&#8221; scheme that will avert catastrophic climate change.</p>
<p>Among the key proposals? Any global plan has to include all big economies &#8212; that means the U.S. as well</p>
<p>as China and India, though developing countries will get a leg-up at first. It also has to include all sectors of</p>
<p>the economy-previous plans, like one in Europe, that left out big chunks of the economy like transportation.</p>
<p>The group also wants near-term emissions-cutting targets to make sure all the plans aren&#8217;t just hot air, and</p>
<p>it wants a global, liquid carbon market to make it all work.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s anything but a case of corporate altruism &#8212; just the chance to get in on the ground floor of what it calls</p>
<p>a &#8220;green revolution.&#8221; Or, as the group says: &#8220;Business cannot fully capitalize on these new opportunities in</p>
<p>an international policy vacuum.&#8221; &#8220;We see enormous opportunities for the financial industry, beyond the</p>
<p>challenge we face as global citizens,&#8221; said Caio Koch-Weser, vice chairman of Deutsche Bank. &#8220;If</p>
<p>leadership is there to create a Kyoto successor that is based on cap and trade, then it creates a global carbon</p>
<p>market &#8211; and then we are in business.&#8221;</p>
<p>But a market for carbon is &#8220;necessary but not sufficient&#8221; to launch a clean-technology revolution, the group</p>
<p>says. That&#8217;s why it also calls on governments to mandate greater use of the kind of things many those</p>
<p>companies sell, from wind turbines to clean-coal facilities.</p>
<p>How about in the meantime? The group says it is has products and services to help the world adapt to</p>
<p>climate change taking place now, and could do even more &#8212; if only governments will create &#8220;an economic</p>
<p>case&#8221; for the private sector to dream up more stuff.</p>
<p>What will be interesting to watch is what happens when the fight moves beyond grand G-8 rhetoric to the</p>
<p>gory details. Expect today&#8217;s corporate comity to fracture fast, as each company starts fighting against the</p>
<p>other for the policy details that benefit it.</p>
<p>***********************************</p>
<p><strong>7. CLIMATE HYSTERICS V HERETICS IN AN AGE OF UNREASON</strong></p>
<p><em>Arthur Herman | August 04, 2008</em></p>
<p>http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24122117-7583,00.html</p>
<p>IT has been a tough year for the high priests of global warming in the US. First, NASA had to correct its</p>
<p>earlier claim that the hottest year on record in the contiguous US had been 1998, which seemed to prove</p>
<p>that global warming was on the march. It was actually 1934. Then it turned out the world&#8217;s oceans have</p>
<p>been growing steadily cooler, not hotter, since 2003. Meanwhile, the winter of 2007 was the coldest in the</p>
<p>US in decades, after Al Gore warned us that we were about to see the end of winter as we know it.</p>
<p>In a May issue of Nature, evidence about falling global temperatures forced German climatologists to</p>
<p>conclude that the transformation of our planet into a permanent sauna is taking a decade-long hiatus, at</p>
<p>least. Then this month came former greenhouse gas alarmist David Evans&#8217;s article in The Australian, stating</p>
<p>that since 1999 evidence has been accumulating that man-made carbon emissions can&#8217;t be the cause of</p>
<p>global warming. By now that evidence, Evans said, has become pretty conclusive.</p>
<p>Yet believers in man-made global warming demand more and more money to combat climate change and</p>
<p>still more drastic changes in our economic output and lifestyle.</p>
<p>11</p>
<p>The reason is that precisely that they are believers, not scientists. No amount of empirical evidence will</p>
<p>overturn what has become not a scientific theory but a form of religion.</p>
<p>But what kind of religion? More than 200 years ago, Scottish Enlightenment philosopher David Hume put</p>
<p>his finger on the process. His essay, Of Superstition and Enthusiasm, describes how even in civilized</p>
<p>societies the mind of man is subject to certain unaccountable terrors and apprehensions when real worries</p>
<p>are missing. As these enemies are entirely invisible and unknown, like today&#8217;s greenhouse gases, people try</p>
<p>to propitiate them by ceremonies, observations, mortifications, sacrifices such as Earth Day and banning</p>
<p>plastic bags and petrol-driven lawnmowers.</p>
<p>Fear and ignorance, Hume concludes, are the true source of superstition. They lead a blind and terrified</p>
<p>public to embrace any practice, however absurd or frivolous, which either folly or knavery recommends.</p>
<p>The knaves today, of course, are the would-be high priests of the global warming orthodoxy, with former</p>
<p>US vice-president Gore as their supreme pontiff.</p>
<p>As Hume points out, the stronger mixture there is of superstition, with its ambience of ignorance and fear,</p>
<p>the higher is the authority of the priesthood. As with the Church in the Dark Ages or the Inquisition during</p>
<p>the Reformation, they denounce all doubters, such as Evans or Britain&#8217;s Gilbert Monckton as dangerous</p>
<p>heretics, outliers in Gore&#8217;s phrase: or as willing tools of the evil enemy of a healthy planet, Big Oil.</p>
<p>This is not the first time, of course, that superstition has paraded itself as science, or created a priesthood</p>
<p>masquerading as the exponents of reason. At the beginning of the previous century we had the fascination</p>
<p>with eugenics, when the Gores of the age such as E.A. Ross and Ernst Haeckel warned that modern</p>
<p>industrial society was headed for race suicide. The list of otherwise sensible people who endorsed this</p>
<p>hokum, from Winston Churchill to Oliver Wendell Holmes, is embarrassing to read today.</p>
<p>Then as now, money was poured into foundations, institutes, and university chairs for the study of eugenics</p>
<p>and racial hygiene. Then as now, it was claimed that there was a scientific consensus that modern man was</p>
<p>degenerating himself into extinction. Doubters such as German anthropologist Rudolf Virchow were</p>
<p>dismissed as reactionaries or even as tools of the principal contaminators of racial purity, the Jews. And</p>
<p>then as now, proponents of eugenics turned to the all-powerful state to avert catastrophe.</p>
<p>A credulous and submissive public allowed politicians to pass laws permitting forced sterilisation of the</p>
<p>feeble-minded, racial screening for immigration quotas, minimum wage laws (which Sidney and Beatrice</p>
<p>Webb saw as a way to force the mentally unfit out of the labor market) and other legislation which, in</p>
<p>retrospect, set the stage for the humanitarian catastrophe to come. In fact, when the Nazis took power in</p>
<p>1933, they found that the Weimar Republic had passed all the euthanasia legislation they needed to</p>
<p>eliminate Germany&#8217;s useless mouths. The next target on their racial hygiene list would be the Jews.</p>
<p>Real science rests on a solid bedrock of scepticism, a scepticism not only about certain religious or cultural</p>
<p>assumptions, for example about race, but also about itself. It constantly re-examines what it regards as</p>
<p>evidence, and the connections it draws between cause and effect. It never rushes to judgment, as race</p>
<p>science did in Germany in the 1930s and as the high priests of climate change are doing today.</p>
<p>Politicians everywhere should be forced to take an oath similar to the Hippocratic oath taken by doctors:</p>
<p>Above all else, do no harm. The debate in Australia on this issue is rapidly building to a climax. Before</p>
<p>they make decisions that could trim Australia&#8217;s gross domestic product by several percentage points a year</p>
<p>and impose heavy penalties on Australians&#8217; lifestyle, Labour and Liberal alike need to re-examine the</p>
<p>superstition of global warming. Otherwise, the only thing it will melt away is everyone&#8217;s civil liberty.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p><em>Arthur Herman is a historian and author, his most recent book is Gandhi and Churchill: The Epic Rivalry</em></p>
<p><em>That Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age.</em></p>
<p>*******************************</p>
<p>12</p>
<p><strong>8. A &#8220;GERIATRIC&#8221; REVOLT</strong></p>
<p><em>Dr John Ray (Australia)&#8217;s Greenie Watch (</em><em>http://antigreen.blogspot.com/</em></p>
<p>A &#8220;geriatric&#8221; revolt: The scientists who reject Warmism tend to be OLD! Your present blogger is one of</p>
<p>those. There are tremendous pressures to conformity in academe and the generally Leftist orientation of</p>
<p>academe tends to pressure everyone within it to agree to ideas that suit the Left. And Warmism is certainly</p>
<p>one of those ideas. So old guys are the only ones who can AFFORD to declare the Warmists to be</p>
<p>unclothed. They either have their careers well-established (with tenure) or have reached financial</p>
<p>independence (retirement) and so can afford to call it like they see it. In general, seniors in society today are</p>
<p>not remotely as helpful to younger people as they once were. But their opposition to the Warmist hysteria</p>
<p>will one day show that seniors are not completely irrelevant after all. Experience does count (we have seen</p>
<p>many such hysterias in the past and we have a broader base of knowledge to call on) and our independence</p>
<p>is certainly an enormous strength. Some of us are already dead. (Reid Bryson and John Daly are</p>
<p>particularly mourned) and some of us are very senior indeed (e.g. Bill Gray) but the revolt we have fostered</p>
<p>is ever growing so we have not labored in vain.</p>
<p><strong>****************************</strong></p>
<p><strong>9. GLOBAL WARMING AND NATURAL DISASTERS:</strong></p>
<p><em>Joel Achenbach, Wash Post, Aug 3, 2008.</em></p>
<p>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/01/AR2008080103014_pf.html</p>
<p>Somewhere along the line, global warming became the explanation for everything. Rightthinking</p>
<p>people are not supposed to discuss any meteorological or geophysical event &#8211; a</p>
<p>hurricane, a wildfire, a heat wave, a drought, a flood, a blizzard, a tornado, a lightning</p>
<p>strike, an unfamiliar breeze, a strange tingling on the neck &#8211; without immediately</p>
<p>invoking the climate crisis. It causes earthquakes, plagues and backyard gardening</p>
<p>disappointments. Weird fungus on your tomato plants? Classic sign of global warming.</p>
<p>Some people are impatient with even a token amount of equivocation. A science writer for Newsweek</p>
<p>recently flat-out declared that this year&#8217;s floods in the Midwest were the result of climate change, and in the</p>
<p>process, she derided the wishy-washy climatologists who couldn&#8217;t quite bring themselves to reach that</p>
<p>conclusion (they &#8220;trip over themselves to absolve global warming&#8221;).</p>
<p>Last week, we saw reports of more wildfires in California. Sure as night follows day,</p>
<p>people will lay some of the blame on climate change. But there&#8217;s also the minor matter of</p>
<p>people building homes in wildfire-susceptible forests, overgrown with vegetation due to</p>
<p>decades of fire suppression. That&#8217;s like pitching a tent on the railroad tracks.</p>
<p>The message that needs to be communicated to these people is: &#8220;Your problem is not</p>
<p>global warming. Your problem is that you&#8217;re nuts.&#8221;</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Week That Was (Aug 9, 2008) brought to you by SEPP</strong></p>
<p><strong>Quote of the Week:</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Weather: Change we all believe in!&#8221; <em>Bumper sticker</em></p>
<p>****************************</p>
<p><strong>Last week we told you about the horrors of the EPA staff&#8217;s plan to control CO2 (aka as controlling</strong></p>
<p><strong>your life, all the way down to the use of lawnmowers). To view the EPA-ANPR (and read at least the</strong></p>
<p><strong>first few pages) go to </strong>http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-16432.pdf<span id="more-20"></span></p>
<p><strong>This week, the NOAA activists, lacking adult supervision, released for comment the draft of what&#8217;s</strong></p>
<p><strong>called the Unified Synthesis Product (USP) from a decade or so of federal efforts called the Climate</strong></p>
<p><strong>Change Science Program that have so far cost about $20 billion of your tax money. The USP is</strong></p>
<p><strong>supposed to provide the scientific underpinnings for the EPA&#8217;s proposed rulemaking. To see this</strong></p>
<p><strong>shining exemplar of propaganda trumping science, visit</strong></p>
<p>http://downloads.climatescience.gov/sap/usp/usp-prd-all.pdf</p>
<p><strong>1. Fake &#8211; and not even accurate: A critical view of the CCSP-USP</strong></p>
<p><strong>2. Chamber asks NOAA to withdraw CCSP-USP report </strong><em>(08/04/2008)</em></p>
<p><strong>3. Pelosi stonewalls drilling in US; wants to save the world</strong></p>
<p><strong>4. Does the &#8220;future of civilization&#8221; depend on giving up fossil fuels? Do Gore and Obama agree?</strong></p>
<p><strong>5. David King fights coal plants to save penguins</strong></p>
<p><strong>6. Industry sees GW as a moneymaker</strong></p>
<p><strong>7. Climate hysterics v heretics</strong></p>
<p><strong>8. A &#8220;geriatric&#8221; revolt: &#8220;Greenie Watch&#8221; explains why seniors tend to be climate skeptics</strong></p>
<p><strong>9. GW blamed for natural disasters</strong></p>
<p><strong>*****************************************</strong></p>
<p><strong>NEWS YOU CAN USE</strong></p>
<p>More on the EPA-ANPR, from Chamber of Commerce site ACCESS</p>
<p>http://www.uschamber.com/CO2/default</p>
<p>Most consumers aren&#8217;t aware of the extent to which staff members at the Environmental Protection Agency</p>
<p>want to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking released by EPA</p>
<p>staff July 11, 2008, lays out a strategy to regulate emissions right down to household items and gardening</p>
<p>equipment. These rules don&#8217;t simply apply to an amorphous American business sector; they apply to the</p>
<p>basic American consumer, us at home. They carry significant implications for how we recreate and even</p>
<p>tend to our daily household chores.</p>
<p>Some of EPA&#8217;s Suggestions:</p>
<p><strong>In the Weeds</strong>. [E]ach application could require a different unit of measure tied to the machine&#8217;s mission or</p>
<p>output&#8211; such as grams per kilogram of cuttings from a standard lawn for lawnmowers and grams per</p>
<p>kilogram-meter of load lift for forklifts. Such application-specific standards would provide the clearest</p>
<p>metric for GHG emission reductions. (EPA-ANPR, p. 337)</p>
<p>2</p>
<p><strong>Adrift: </strong>A number of innovative alternatives are under development for providing power on marine vessels.</p>
<p>These alternative power sources include fuel cells, solar power, wind power, and even wave power. While</p>
<p>none of these technologies are currently able to supply the total power demands of larger, ocean-going</p>
<p>vessels, they may prove to be capable of reducing GHG emissions through auxiliary power or power-assist</p>
<p>applications. (EPA-ANPR, p. 345)</p>
<p>************************************</p>
<p>Jonathan David Carson re-visits the Hockeystick</p>
<p>http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/08/fake_but_accurate_science.html</p>
<p>Chip Knappenberger comments on the CCSP-USP in the World Climate Report</p>
<p>http://www.worldclimatereport.com/index.php/2008/08/05/ccsp-climate-impacts-report-a-perversion-of-science/</p>
<p>***********************</p>
<p>http://www.capitalresearch.org/pubs/pdf/v1217525953.pdf</p>
<p>Al Gore&#8217;s Carbon Empire: Cashing in on Climate Change. Al Gore says everyone will benefit when new</p>
<p>government rules require companies to pay to reduce global warming. But some people will benefit more</p>
<p>than others, as will some companies. Benefiting most are those like the ex-vice president who can set up</p>
<p>and invest in companies that will profit from the federal regulations imposing heavy costs on others.</p>
<p>********************************</p>
<p>Dr. Takeda Kunihiko, vice-chancellor of the Institute of Science and Technology Research at Chubu</p>
<p>University. His book &#8220;Hypocritical Ecology&#8221; has been flying off shelves at the speed of 100,000 a month</p>
<p>since being published this June 2008. Kunihiko is one of the world&#8217;s leading authorities on both uranium</p>
<p>enrichment and recycling and is a member of just about every prestigious academic and governmental</p>
<p>entity, he has stayed independent and made a career out of challenging the establishment. He was also vice</p>
<p>deputy president at the Shibaura Institute of Technology before joining Nagoya  University in 2002.</p>
<p>Another top Japanese scientist, Dr. Kiminori Itoh, called warming fears the worst scientific scandal in</p>
<p>history (June 27, 2008). Itoh, an award-winning environmental physical chemist who specializes in optical</p>
<p>waveguide spectroscopy from the Yokohama National University, also contributed to the 2007 UN IPCC</p>
<p>AR4 (fourth assessment report) as an expert reviewer. http://climatesci.org/2008/06/17/guest-weblog-bydr-</p>
<p>kiminori-itoh-of-yokohama-national-university</p>
<p>***********************</p>
<p><strong>UNDER THE BOTTOM LINE</strong></p>
<p>The California Attorney General&#8217;s office is leading a group of state attorneys general and environmental</p>
<p>groups that will sue the Environmental Protection Agency for failing to regulate greenhouse gases from</p>
<p>ships, planes, and agricultural and industrial equipment. Now that greenhouse gases are considered air</p>
<p>pollutants under the Clean Air Act, they maintain, the EPA is obligated to regulate their emissions from</p>
<p>such sources. News coverage from Reuters and AP.</p>
<p>***********************************</p>
<p>&#8220;These jellyfish near shore are a message the sea is sending us saying, &#8216;Look how badly you are treating</p>
<p>me.&#8217;&#8221; &#8211; DR. JOSEP-MARA GILI, one of the world&#8217;s leading jellyfish experts.</p>
<p>The explosion of jellyfish populations reflects overfishing, rising sea temperatures and pollution,</p>
<p>scientists say. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/03/science/earth/03jellyfish.html?th&amp;emc=th</p>
<p>#############################</p>
<p>3</p>
<p><strong>1. FAKE &#8211; AND NOT EVEN ACCURATE</strong></p>
<p><em>SFS/8/7/2008</em></p>
<p>Remember &#8220;Rathergate&#8221; and the iconic NY Times headline &#8220;Fake but Accurate&#8221; from the presidential</p>
<p>campaign of 2004? We now have a government report on global warming that peddles inaccurate climate</p>
<p>scares and uses some fakes to support them.</p>
<p>The Unified Synthesis Product (USP) of the US Climate Change Science Program (CCSP) is supposed to</p>
<p>be the culmination of a $20 billion program of a decade or so of climate research. The only reason the USP</p>
<p>might be important is that it is supposed to provide the scientific underpinnings for an ambitious allencompassing</p>
<p>rulemaking venture of the EPA to control emissions of carbon dioxide.</p>
<p>It is agreed by all that CO2, a greenhouse (GH) gas second in importance only to water vapor, is a</p>
<p>nontoxic, natural component of the atmosphere, and that its level has been increasing because of energy</p>
<p>generation from fossil fuels. According to a Supreme Court decision of April 2007, EPA must regulate</p>
<p>CO2 under the terms of the Clean Air Act or demonstrate that it is not a threat to health and human welfare.</p>
<p>The USP, currently in draft form and out for comment, tries to demonstrate such a threat.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP is supposed to summarize the conclusions of 21 underlying CCSP reports, most of which</li>
</ul>
<p>have not yet been published. Many have not even been submitted for review and are unevaluated.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP authors claim (pg. 15) that they used &#8220;expert judgment&#8221; and &#8220;best available evidence.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p>They don&#8217;t reveal, however, that they ignore evidence, even though widely available and credible,</p>
<p>that contradicts their &#8220;expert judgment.&#8221;</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP&#8217;s editors main conclusion, like that of the UN IPCC&#8217;s, is that climate warming is</li>
</ul>
<p>produced by human activity, specifically by the burning of fossil fuels. Here they conveniently</p>
<p>ignore not only the conclusion of the NIPCC report &#8220;Nature not Human Activity Rules Climate</p>
<p>Activity,&#8221; widely available on the Internet; they also misrepresent their own CCSP 1.1 Report of</p>
<p>April 2006, which shows a clear and significant disparity between observations and the results of</p>
<p>greenhouse (GH) models.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP even claims that their conclusion is &#8220;unequivocal&#8221; (pg. 5); here they ignore the</li>
</ul>
<p>conclusion of a National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council Report of 2001 that</p>
<p>says the opposite.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> As in most other matters the USP relies on the IPCC but ignores the countervailing evidence of the</li>
</ul>
<p>NIPCC. For example, the USP features the notorious &#8220;hockey-stick&#8221; curve that had been used by</p>
<p>the IPCC to claim that the 20th century was somehow &#8220;unusual,&#8221; and the warmest of the past 1000</p>
<p>years. While not exactly a fake, the hockey-stick result has been exposed as a case of incompetent</p>
<p>statistical analysis. However, its use now by the USP borders on fraud and cannot be excused.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP claims that the climate system shows a high sensitivity to GH gases like carbon dioxide</li>
</ul>
<p>but ignores published analyses that demonstrate conclusively the existence of a &#8220;negative</p>
<p>feedback&#8221; in the atmosphere, which reduces the sensitivity to insignificant levels.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP talks about weather extremes, heat wave deaths, storms, floods, droughts, but ignores the</li>
</ul>
<p>conclusions of its own underlying report CCSP 3.3.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> The USP predicts extreme levels of sea level rise for the 21st century, and even opines a rise of</li>
</ul>
<p>between two and five feet &#8211; again without giving any justification except some flawed theoretical</p>
<p>speculations. Here, the USP even departs from the latest IPCC Report, which shows values well</p>
<p>below the USP claim.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li> Since sea level rise and inundation from flooding are generally considered a greater hazard than a</li>
</ul>
<p>simple temperature rise, the USP tries to drive this point home by including a picture of a house</p>
<p>that&#8217;s flooded. This picture, however, turns out to have been photo-shopped &#8211; in other words an</p>
<p>outright fake. The USP editors likely were unaware of this attempt at deception, but it does tell</p>
<p>you something about the due diligence exercised by them.</p>
<p>The USP Report is labeled as a &#8220;first draft.&#8221; One wonders, however, if the final product will look any</p>
<p>different. More important, what kind of mischief will be created by circulating such a shoddy piece of</p>
<p>4</p>
<p>work, containing mostly propaganda and so little science. The only good thing about it: It may lead to a</p>
<p>&#8220;Gore-gate&#8221; and serve to discredit the rulemaking initiative of the EPA, which has the potential of</p>
<p>destroying our economy and damage the United States, perhaps irreparably.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p><em>Atmospheric physicist S. Fred Singer is Professor Emeritus of Environmental Sciences at the University of</em></p>
<p><em>Virginia and former director of the US Weather Satellite Service. His most recent book &#8220;Unstoppable</em></p>
<p><em>Global Warming &#8211; Every 1500 Years&#8221; (Rowman &amp; Littlefield, 2007) presents the evidence for natural</em></p>
<p><em>climate cycles of warming and cooling and became a NY Times best-seller. He is the organizer of NIPCC</em></p>
<p><em>(Non-governmental International Panel on Climate Change) and editor of the NIPCC report &#8220;Nature, Not</em></p>
<p><em>Human Activity, Controls the Climate&#8221; [2008], which responds to the claims of the UN-IPCC.</em></p>
<p><em>http://www.sepp.org/publications/NIPCC_final.pdf </em><em>He has served as a reviewer of several CCSP reports.</em></p>
<p><em>As a reviewer for the IPCC, he shares the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore and some 2000 others.</em></p>
<p>***************************************************</p>
<p><strong>2. INDUSTRY GROUP ASKS NOAA TO WITHDRAW MAJOR CLIMATE</strong></p>
<p><strong>REPORT</strong></p>
<p><em>Lauren Morello, ClimateWire reporter</em></p>
<p>Five years after complaints about data quality quashed the first federal assessment of climate change in the</p>
<p>United   States, an industry group is resurrecting the tactic. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce asked the</p>
<p>government to withdraw a major Climate Change Science Program report released in May. The group</p>
<p>argued that the analysis violates a federal law that requires agencies to employ &#8220;sound science&#8221; because it</p>
<p>relies on unpublished information.</p>
<p>Environmental groups blasted the move, calling it an attempt to cast doubt on climate science. But</p>
<p>Chamber officials maintained that the report includes references to unpublished federal climate studies,</p>
<p>which leave the public unable to determine whether its conclusions are valid.</p>
<p>&#8220;The public cannot presently judge the reliability and objectivity of the synthesis report, because the public</p>
<p>cannot access the underlying documents on which the synthesis report is based,&#8221; the group wrote in official</p>
<p>comments it filed Friday with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency, the lead agency that</p>
<p>produced the analysis.</p>
<p>The report &#8212; the second national climate assessment &#8212; predicts that the United States will &#8220;very likely&#8221;</p>
<p>experience rising sea levels and increasing droughts, heat waves, intense storms and resulting illness and</p>
<p>premature death over the next century as climate change intensifies. The document also concludes it is</p>
<p>&#8220;likely that there has been a substantial human contribution to surface temperature increases in North</p>
<p>America.&#8221;</p>
<p>Bill Kovacs, the chamber&#8217;s vice president for environment, technology and regulatory affairs, said the</p>
<p>group wants the federal government to withdraw the report until the unpublished studies are completed and</p>
<p>publicly available. Some of the studies &#8212; a series of 21 reports planned by the Climate Change Science</p>
<p>Program &#8212; are not scheduled for release until November.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re asking them to withdraw until such a time as they can put everything out as a comprehensive</p>
<p>whole,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They can withdraw it, finish the publication and put it back out. It&#8217;s not a permanent</p>
<p>action.&#8221;</p>
<p>But Kovacs also hinted that the industry group&#8217;s complaints run deeper, extending to the scientific validity</p>
<p>of climate models and peer-reviewed studies cited in the report. In addition to work by the Climate Change</p>
<p>Science Program, the report references analyses published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate</p>
<p>Change and scientific journals.</p>
<p>5</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re viewing this as part of the scientific evidence that is going to be put in the public record&#8221; as part of</p>
<p>EPA&#8217;s ongoing rulemaking process that will determine whether the agency regulates carbon dioxide</p>
<p>emissions under the Clean Air Act, he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s all the same science that&#8217;s being relied upon.&#8221;</p>
<p>Environmentalists who participated in a lawsuit last year that forced the Bush administration to publish the</p>
<p>report said they believed the Chamber of Commerce&#8217;s aim is to suppress findings designed to help</p>
<p>policymakers at the federal, state and local levels plan for climate change.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Chamber of Commerce is pursuing a last-century, head-in-the-sand strategy to suppress climate</p>
<p>information,&#8221; said Brendan Cummings, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. &#8220;They are</p>
<p>doing a disservice to all the businesses and communities they purport to represent. Climate models have</p>
<p>been the best available science for decades now.&#8221; Kert Davies, research director of Greenpeace USA,</p>
<p>called the request to withdraw the climate report &#8220;more of the same.&#8221;</p>
<p>At the heart of the chamber&#8217;s withdrawal request is the Data Quality Act. Also known as the Information</p>
<p>Quality Act, the law requires federal agencies to ensure the integrity of the information they use and</p>
<p>distribute. It also allows outside parties to petition to force the correction of information they believe is</p>
<p>wrong.</p>
<p>Between 2000 and 2003, the Competitive Enterprise Institute used the act to successfully challenge the first</p>
<p>national climate assessment, released in 2000, which it called &#8220;junk science.&#8221; The group said the report&#8217;s</p>
<p>reliance on uncertain climate computer models rendered its conclusions useless and argued that it was not</p>
<p>subject to certain laws governing the convening and conduct of advisory panels.</p>
<p>In the end, the Bush administration settled the group&#8217;s legal challenges by agreeing to place a disclaimer on</p>
<p>the national assessment report Web site stating the document was not subject to Data Quality Act</p>
<p>guidelines (Greenwire, Oct. 3, 2006).</p>
<p>Environmentalists said they see echoes of that effort in the challenge to the new report. &#8220;They&#8217;re essentially</p>
<p>recycling the same climate denier arguments that CEI used eight years ago,&#8221; said Cummings of the Center</p>
<p>for Biological Diversity. &#8220;That strategy worked for the first national assessment. We don&#8217;t believe it can</p>
<p>work here. Global warming has become so severe and so impossible to deny that even under the Data</p>
<p>Quality Act, these arguments should go nowhere.&#8221;</p>
<p>The comment period on the report ends Aug. 14.</p>
<p>**********************************</p>
<p><strong>3. PELOSI: SAVE THE PLANET, LET SOMEONE ELSE DRILL</strong></p>
<p><em>By Charles Krauthammer, August 1, 2008</em></p>
<p>House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opposes lifting the moratorium on drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife</p>
<p>Refuge and on the Outer Continental Shelf. She won&#8217;t even allow it to come to a vote. With $4 gas having</p>
<p>massively shifted public opinion in favor of domestic production, she wants to protect her Democratic</p>
<p>members from having to cast an anti-drilling election-year vote. Moreover, given the public mood, she</p>
<p>might even lose. This cannot be permitted. Why? Because, as she explained to Politico: &#8220;I&#8217;m trying to save</p>
<p>the planet; I&#8217;m trying to save the planet.&#8221;</p>
<p>A lovely sentiment. But has Pelosi actually thought through the moratorium&#8217;s effects on the planet?</p>
<p>Consider: 25 years ago, nearly 60 percent of U.S. petroleum was produced domestically. Today it&#8217;s 25</p>
<p>percent. From its peak in 1970, U.S. production has declined a staggering 47 percent. The world consumes</p>
<p>86 million barrels a day, the United States, roughly 20 million. We need the stuff to run our cars and planes</p>
<p>and economy. Where does it come from?</p>
<p>6</p>
<p>Places such as Nigeria, where chronic corruption, environmental neglect and the resulting unrest and</p>
<p>instability lead to pipeline explosions, oil spills and illegal siphoning by the poverty-stricken population &#8211;</p>
<p>which leads to more spills and explosions. Just this week, two Royal Dutch Shell pipelines had to be shut</p>
<p>down because bombings by local militants were causing leaks into the ground.</p>
<p>Compare the Niger Delta to the Gulf of Mexico, where deep-sea U.S. oil rigs withstood Hurricanes Katrina</p>
<p>and Rita without a single undersea well suffering a significant spill. The United States has the highest</p>
<p>technology to ensure the safest drilling. Today, directional drilling &#8212; essentially drilling down, then</p>
<p>sideways &#8212; allows access to oil that in 1970 would have required a surface footprint more than three times</p>
<p>as large. Additionally, the United States has one of the most extensive and least corrupt regulatory systems</p>
<p>on the planet.</p>
<p>Does Pelosi imagine that with so much of America declared off-limits, the planet is less injured as drilling</p>
<p>shifts to Kazakhstan and Venezuela and Equatorial Guinea? That Russia will be more environmentally</p>
<p>scrupulous than we in drilling in the Arctic? The net environmental effect of Pelosi&#8217;s no-drilling</p>
<p>willfulness is negative. Outsourcing U.S. oil production does nothing to lessen worldwide environmental</p>
<p>despoliation. It simply exports it to more corrupt, less efficient, more unstable parts of the world &#8212; thereby</p>
<p>increasing net planetary damage.</p>
<p>Democrats want no oil from the American OCS or ANWR. But of course they do want more oil. From</p>
<p>OPEC. From where Americans don&#8217;t vote. From places Democratic legislators can&#8217;t see. On May 13 Sen.</p>
<p>Chuck Schumer &#8212; deeply committed to saving just those pieces of the planet that might have huge reserves</p>
<p>of American oil &#8212; demanded that the Saudis increase production by a million barrels a day. It doesn&#8217;t occur</p>
<p>to him that by eschewing the slightest disturbance of the mating habits of the Arctic caribou, he is calling</p>
<p>for the further exploitation of the pristine deserts of Arabia. In the name of the planet, mind you.</p>
<p>The other panacea, yesterday&#8217;s rage, is biofuels: We can&#8217;t drill our way out of the crisis, it seems, but we</p>
<p>can greenly grow our way out. By now, however, it is blindingly obvious even to Democrats that biofuels</p>
<p>are a devastating force for environmental degradation. It has led to the rape of &#8220;lungs of the world&#8221; rain</p>
<p>forests in Indonesia and Brazil as huge tracts have been destroyed to make room for palm oil and sugar</p>
<p>plantations.</p>
<p>Here in the United States, one out of every three ears of corn is stuffed into a gas tank (by way of ethanol),</p>
<p>causing not just food shortages abroad and high prices at home but intensive increases in farming, with all</p>
<p>of the attendant environmental problems (soil erosion, insecticide pollution, water consumption, etc.). This</p>
<p>to prevent drilling on an area in the Arctic one-sixth the size of Dulles Airport that leaves undisturbed a</p>
<p>refuge one-third the size of Britain.</p>
<p>There are a dizzying number of economic and national security arguments for drilling at home: a $700</p>
<p>billion oil balance-of-payments deficit, a gas tax (equivalent) levied on the paychecks of American workers</p>
<p>and poured into the treasuries of enemy and terror-supporting regimes, growing dependence on unstable</p>
<p>states of the Persian Gulf and Caspian basin. Pelosi and the Democrats stand athwart, shouting: We don&#8217;t</p>
<p>care. We come to save the planet! They seem blissfully unaware that the argument for their drill-there-nothere</p>
<p>policy collapses on its own environmental terms</p>
<p>===========================================</p>
<p><strong>PELOSI&#8217;S ENERGY STONEWALL</strong></p>
<p><em>WSJ, August 1, 2008</em></p>
<p>Hell &#8212; otherwise known as Congress &#8212; has officially frozen over. For the first time since the 1950s,</p>
<p>Members will skip town today for the August recess without either chamber having passed a single</p>
<p>appropriations bill. Then again, Democrats appear ready to sacrifice their whole agenda, even spending,</p>
<p>rather than allow new domestic energy production.</p>
<p>7</p>
<p>Or even a mere debate about energy. The Democratic leadership is stonewalling any measure that might</p>
<p>possibly relax the Congressional ban on offshore drilling. Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid know that they</p>
<p>would lose if a vote ever came to the floor, and they&#8217;re desperate to suppress an insurrection among those</p>
<p>Democrats who are pragmatic about one of the top economic issues. Behind this whatever-it-takes</p>
<p>obstructionism is an ideological commitment to high energy prices. The rulers of the Democratic Party</p>
<p>want prices to keep rising.</p>
<p>A good gauge of the radicalism of their energy blockade is the lowest common denominator of this energy</p>
<p>fight: The effort to blame &#8220;speculators&#8221; for $4 gas was promoted by both Barack Obama and John McCain,</p>
<p>as well as nearly everybody else in Washington. Sure enough, the House voted 276-151 on Wednesday for</p>
<p>a bill that would have driven oil futures trading overseas.</p>
<p>But the legislation actually failed to become law &#8212; by design. It needed a two-thirds majority because</p>
<p>Speaker Pelosi suspended the rules to prevent Republicans from offering amendments, drilling among</p>
<p>them. Ms. Pelosi had decreed that she would not permit a roll-call vote under any circumstances, even if it</p>
<p>stopped her own goal of wrecking the U.S. futures market.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the Senate is locked down over its own antispeculation bill. Majority Leader Reid briefly</p>
<p>agreed to allow four amendments on GOP policy alternatives, but he withdrew the offer after he was</p>
<p>subjected to the fury of the environmental lobby and Ms. Pelosi. To prevent a vote on offshore drilling this</p>
<p>week, Senate Democrats also let fail a bill providing home heating assistance for the poor. Same thing for</p>
<p>tax subsidies for wind and solar energy.</p>
<p>Other liberal inspirations, including suing OPEC and a windfall profits tax on the oil industry, also ended</p>
<p>up in the Congressional dumpster. And of course, Democrats long ago shut down the normal budget</p>
<p>process in both the Senate and the House to avoid any vote. Normally, the spending hiatus would be a</p>
<p>useful byproduct of Congressional bickering. But in this case the shutdown is malign neglect. Surging</p>
<p>energy prices act like a huge tax increase on the economy, since energy demand is relatively fixed over the</p>
<p>short term. The price spike is imposing genuine hardships on middle-income and working-class voters</p>
<p>across the country.</p>
<p>The Democratic leadership isn&#8217;t oblivious to this man-at-the-pump reality. But Al Gore&#8217;s vision of the</p>
<p>apocalyptic tides of climate change perfectly expresses their mentality: Ms. Pelosi and Mr. Reid see soaring</p>
<p>prices as a public good &#8212; the mechanism that will force energy enlightenment on the U.S. If anything, they</p>
<p>think the price of gas is too low. As recently as June, the Senate debated a multi-trillion-dollar carbon taxand-</p>
<p>regulation scheme that was designed to boost energy costs. A new version will be a priority in the next</p>
<p>Administration.</p>
<p>If nothing else, this summer&#8217;s oil drilling stonewall is giving voters an insight into this ideology, which</p>
<p>recoils at any oil, natural gas or coal production &#8212; oh, and nuclear besides. That puts 93% of all U.S.</p>
<p>energy off limits for expansion. Back in the real world, and barring a cold fusion or other miracle, the U.S.</p>
<p>will remain dependent on fossil fuels for decades. A fresh round of domestic oil-and-gas exploration would</p>
<p>ease the long-term pressures that supply and demand are exerting on prices, plus bolster energy security.</p>
<p>And those not bound by anticarbon theology are coming around. Broad margins of the American public &#8211;</p>
<p>now even a slim majority of Californians &#8212; favor increasing domestic production. Many Congressional</p>
<p>Democrats are working below the radar to craft a compromise that couples drilling with conservation and</p>
<p>programs to prop up renewable alternatives. But the leadership won&#8217;t bend even a bit, and so Ms. Pelosi</p>
<p>and Mr. Reid have spent the summer using every parliamentary deception to evade debating the issue that</p>
<p>the American public cares most about. Short of cutting off the air conditioning on Capitol Hill, Democrats</p>
<p>won&#8217;t get the message until voters make them &#8212; perhaps in November.</p>
<p>********************************</p>
<p><strong>4. THE GREEN HORNET</strong></p>
<p><em>WSJ, August 6, 2008</em></p>
<p>Al Gore said the other day that &#8220;the future of human civilization&#8221; depends on giving up fossil fuels within a</p>
<p>decade &#8212; and was acclaimed as a prophet by the political class. Obviously boring reality doesn&#8217;t count for</p>
<p>8</p>
<p>much these days. Even so, when Barack Obama wheels out an energy agenda nearly as grandiose as Mr.</p>
<p>Gore&#8217;s, shouldn&#8217;t it receive at least <em>some </em>media scrutiny?</p>
<p>On Monday, Mr. Obama said that the U.S. must &#8220;end the age of oil in our time,&#8221; with &#8220;real results by the</p>
<p>end of my first term in office.&#8221; This, he said, will &#8220;take nothing less than a complete transformation of our</p>
<p>economy.&#8221; Mark that one down as the understatement of the year. Maybe Mr. Obama really is the Green</p>
<p>Hornet, or some other superhero of his current political myth.</p>
<p>The Senator calls for $150 billion over 10 years to achieve &#8220;energy independence,&#8221; with elevated subsidies</p>
<p>for renewable alternatives and efficiency programs. He also says he&#8217;ll &#8220;leverage billions more in private</p>
<p>capital to build a new energy economy,&#8221; euphemistically referring to his climate plan to tax and regulate</p>
<p>greenhouse gases. Every President since Nixon has declared &#8220;energy independence,&#8221; as Mr. Obama noted.</p>
<p>But this time, he says, things will change.</p>
<p>They won&#8217;t. And not because of &#8220;the old politics,&#8221; or whatever. Currently, alternative sources &#8212; wind, solar,</p>
<p>biomass, hydroelectric and geothermal &#8212; provide less than 7% of yearly domestic consumption. Throw out</p>
<p>hydro and geothermal, and it&#8217;s only 4%. For the foreseeable future, renewables simply cannot provide the</p>
<p>scale and volume of energy needed to meet growing U.S. demand, which is expected to increase by 20%</p>
<p>over the next two decades. Even with colossal taxpayer subsidies, renewables probably can&#8217;t even slow the</p>
<p>rate of growth of carbon-based fuel consumption, much less replace it.</p>
<p>Take wind power, which has grown rapidly though still only provides about two-thirds of 1% of all U.S.</p>
<p>electricity. The Energy Department optimistically calculates that ramping up merely to 20% by 2030 would</p>
<p>require more than $2 trillion and turbines across the Midwest &#8220;wind corridor,&#8221; plus multiple offshore</p>
<p>installations. And we&#8217;ll need a new &#8220;transmission superhighway system&#8221; of more than 12,000 miles of</p>
<p>electric lines to connect the wind system to population centers. A mere $150 billion won&#8217;t cut it. Mr.</p>
<p>Obama also didn&#8217;t mention that this wind power will be more expensive than traditional sources like coal.</p>
<p>Wind, too, is intermittent: It isn&#8217;t always blowing and can&#8217;t be accessed on demand when people need</p>
<p>electricity. Since there&#8217;s no cost-effective way to store large amounts of electricity, wind requires &#8220;spinning</p>
<p>reserve,&#8221; or non-alternative base-load power to avoid blackouts. That base-load power is now provided</p>
<p>largely by coal, nuclear and natural gas, and wind can&#8217;t displace much. The same problem afflicts solar</p>
<p>energy &#8212; now one-hundredth of 1% of net U.S. electric generation. One of the top uses of solar panels is to</p>
<p>heat residential swimming pools.</p>
<p>Mr. Obama also says he wants to <em>mandate </em>that all new cars and trucks are &#8220;flexible fuel&#8221; vehicles, meaning</p>
<p>that they can run on higher concentrations of corn ethanol mixed with gasoline, or second-generation</p>
<p>biofuels if those ever come onto the market. Like wind and solar, this would present major land use</p>
<p>problems: According to credible estimates, land areas larger than the size of Texas would need to be</p>
<p>planted with fuel feedstocks to displace just half the oil America imports every day. Meanwhile, the</p>
<p>economic distortions caused by corn ethanol &#8212; such as higher food prices &#8212; have been bad enough.</p>
<p>And yet there&#8217;s more miracle work to do. Mr. Obama promises to put at least one million plug-in electric</p>
<p>vehicles on the road by 2015. That&#8217;s fine if consumers want to buy them. But even if technical battery</p>
<p>problems are overcome, this would only lead to &#8220;fuel switching&#8221; &#8212; if cars don&#8217;t use gasoline, the energy</p>
<p>still has to come from somewhere. And the cap-and-trade program also favored by Mr. Obama would</p>
<p>effectively bar new coal plants, while new nuclear plants are only now being planned after a 30-year hiatus</p>
<p>thanks to punishing regulations and lawsuits.</p>
<p>Problems like these are the reality of &#8220;alternative&#8221; energy, and they explain why every &#8220;energy</p>
<p>independence&#8221; plan has faltered since the 1970s. But just because Mr. Obama&#8217;s plan is wildly unrealistic</p>
<p>doesn&#8217;t mean that a program of vast new taxes, subsidies and mandates wouldn&#8217;t be destructive. The U.S.</p>
<p>has a great deal invested in fossil fuels not because of a political conspiracy or because anyone worships</p>
<p>carbon but because other sources of energy are, right now, inferior.</p>
<p>Consumption isn&#8217;t rising because of wastefulness. The U.S. produces more than twice as much GDP today</p>
<p>per unit of energy as it did in the 1950s, yet energy use has risen threefold. That&#8217;s because energy use is</p>
<p>9</p>
<p>tethered to growth, and the economy continues to innovate and expand. Mr. Obama seems to have other</p>
<p>ideas.</p>
<p>**********************</p>
<p><strong>5. FORMER CHIEF SCIENTIST, SIR DAVID KING, ATTACKS NEW COAL</strong></p>
<p><strong>POWER STATION PLANS</strong></p>
<p><em>By Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent , Telegraph (UK) 01/08/2008</em></p>
<p>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2008/08/01/eapower101.xml</p>
<p>The former Government chief scientist has launched a stinging attack on plans for Britain&#8217;s first new coalfired</p>
<p>power station in 20 years &#8211; as thousands of climate change activists gather for a week of protests at the</p>
<p>site. Professor Sir David King, who stood down at the end of last year, warned that a return to coal-fired</p>
<p>power risked returning the planet to the pre-ice age era, when &#8220;the Antarctic was a tropical forest&#8221;.</p>
<p>A week-long protest called &#8220;Climate Camp&#8221; begins on Sunday at the site of the plant, at Kingsnorth in</p>
<p>Kent, where the energy firm E.on plans to set up two new units at a cost of £1.5 billion.</p>
<p>In an interview with the Ecologist&#8217;s Film Unit, Sir David warned that it made little sense for the private</p>
<p>sector to invest in coal-fired power, given plans to increase taxes on carbon emissions. He said &#8220;There&#8217;s</p>
<p>little doubt that if we burn all of the coal that sits below the earth&#8217;s surface, we can return the planet to the</p>
<p>condition it was in 50 million years ago when the Antarctic was a tropical forest and much of the rest of the</p>
<p>planet would be pretty difficult for human beings to live on. &#8230;We&#8217;ve got to see that coal is not a useful</p>
<p>resource to burn unless we can recapture the carbon that is produced by burning it.</p>
<p>&#8220;We therefore need to work positively towards carbon capture and storage. If we can manage that, then of</p>
<p>course we can continue to use coal to drive our economies &#8211; but frankly, I haven&#8217;t seen the proof that that</p>
<p>can be done. This is still unproven technology and I think until it&#8217;s proven, it&#8217;s dangerous to assume that we</p>
<p>can continue to use coal.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think those power stations are going to be priced out of the market as carbon dioxide pricing goes up. So</p>
<p>I quite simply don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s a good private sector decision to invest in coal-fired power stations.&#8221;</p>
<p>But Macolm Wicks, the Energy Minister, described opponents of the scheme as &#8220;naive&#8221;. In an interview</p>
<p>with the Financial Times, he said that the &#8220;lay person&#8221; might think that energy policy was &#8220;about</p>
<p>windmills,&#8221; but: &#8220;The rather boring fact is that the world is going to be burning lots of coal. &#8220;Whatever</p>
<p>people might wish, whatever people singing in the sunshine at summer camps might idealise, the world is</p>
<p>going to be using lots of coals in future.&#8221;</p>
<p>Greenpeace has released its own study in conjunction with WWF that concludes that energy needs created</p>
<p>as old power stations closed down could be met by the expansion of renewables, primarily through wind</p>
<p>power.</p>
<p>**********************************</p>
<p><strong>6. CEOs TELL G-8 DIPLOMATS TO GET GREEN SUBSIDIES FLOWING</strong></p>
<p>http://blogs.wsj.com/environmentalcapital/2008/06/20/pay-me-ceos-tell-g-8-diplomats-to-get-greensubsidies-</p>
<p>flowing/trackback/</p>
<p>If politicians can&#8217;t come up with a global climate-change strategy, world business leaders are ready to</p>
<p>goose them into action, because they stand to gain from it. CEOs from 99 of the world&#8217;s biggest</p>
<p>companies-representing about 10% of global market capitalization-urged G-8 countries to take ambitious</p>
<p>action to fight climate change, including curbing global greenhouse-gas emissions by 50% mid 2050.</p>
<p>10</p>
<p>That&#8217;s the first time that many high-profile international business leaders have called for concrete action on</p>
<p>climate change. In the U.S., about 30 big corporations in the U.S. Climate Action Partnership have been</p>
<p>clamoring for the government to fight global warming. That&#8217;s partly so they&#8217;ll have a hand in designing</p>
<p>regulations many already see as inevitable, and partly to juice their own businesses, like clean-technology.</p>
<p>The international group, which includes Alcoa, Shell, British Airways, Deutsche Bank, Duke Energy, BP,</p>
<p>and Citibank, is no different. It calls on the G-8, meeting this weekend in Japan to map out some global</p>
<p>climate-change targets for rich countries, to design an &#8220;environmentally effective and economically</p>
<p>efficient&#8221; scheme that will avert catastrophic climate change.</p>
<p>Among the key proposals? Any global plan has to include all big economies &#8212; that means the U.S. as well</p>
<p>as China and India, though developing countries will get a leg-up at first. It also has to include all sectors of</p>
<p>the economy-previous plans, like one in Europe, that left out big chunks of the economy like transportation.</p>
<p>The group also wants near-term emissions-cutting targets to make sure all the plans aren&#8217;t just hot air, and</p>
<p>it wants a global, liquid carbon market to make it all work.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s anything but a case of corporate altruism &#8212; just the chance to get in on the ground floor of what it calls</p>
<p>a &#8220;green revolution.&#8221; Or, as the group says: &#8220;Business cannot fully capitalize on these new opportunities in</p>
<p>an international policy vacuum.&#8221; &#8220;We see enormous opportunities for the financial industry, beyond the</p>
<p>challenge we face as global citizens,&#8221; said Caio Koch-Weser, vice chairman of Deutsche Bank. &#8220;If</p>
<p>leadership is there to create a Kyoto successor that is based on cap and trade, then it creates a global carbon</p>
<p>market &#8211; and then we are in business.&#8221;</p>
<p>But a market for carbon is &#8220;necessary but not sufficient&#8221; to launch a clean-technology revolution, the group</p>
<p>says. That&#8217;s why it also calls on governments to mandate greater use of the kind of things many those</p>
<p>companies sell, from wind turbines to clean-coal facilities.</p>
<p>How about in the meantime? The group says it is has products and services to help the world adapt to</p>
<p>climate change taking place now, and could do even more &#8212; if only governments will create &#8220;an economic</p>
<p>case&#8221; for the private sector to dream up more stuff.</p>
<p>What will be interesting to watch is what happens when the fight moves beyond grand G-8 rhetoric to the</p>
<p>gory details. Expect today&#8217;s corporate comity to fracture fast, as each company starts fighting against the</p>
<p>other for the policy details that benefit it.</p>
<p>***********************************</p>
<p><strong>7. CLIMATE HYSTERICS V HERETICS IN AN AGE OF UNREASON</strong></p>
<p><em>Arthur Herman | August 04, 2008</em></p>
<p>http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24122117-7583,00.html</p>
<p>IT has been a tough year for the high priests of global warming in the US. First, NASA had to correct its</p>
<p>earlier claim that the hottest year on record in the contiguous US had been 1998, which seemed to prove</p>
<p>that global warming was on the march. It was actually 1934. Then it turned out the world&#8217;s oceans have</p>
<p>been growing steadily cooler, not hotter, since 2003. Meanwhile, the winter of 2007 was the coldest in the</p>
<p>US in decades, after Al Gore warned us that we were about to see the end of winter as we know it.</p>
<p>In a May issue of Nature, evidence about falling global temperatures forced German climatologists to</p>
<p>conclude that the transformation of our planet into a permanent sauna is taking a decade-long hiatus, at</p>
<p>least. Then this month came former greenhouse gas alarmist David Evans&#8217;s article in The Australian, stating</p>
<p>that since 1999 evidence has been accumulating that man-made carbon emissions can&#8217;t be the cause of</p>
<p>global warming. By now that evidence, Evans said, has become pretty conclusive.</p>
<p>Yet believers in man-made global warming demand more and more money to combat climate change and</p>
<p>still more drastic changes in our economic output and lifestyle.</p>
<p>11</p>
<p>The reason is that precisely that they are believers, not scientists. No amount of empirical evidence will</p>
<p>overturn what has become not a scientific theory but a form of religion.</p>
<p>But what kind of religion? More than 200 years ago, Scottish Enlightenment philosopher David Hume put</p>
<p>his finger on the process. His essay, Of Superstition and Enthusiasm, describes how even in civilized</p>
<p>societies the mind of man is subject to certain unaccountable terrors and apprehensions when real worries</p>
<p>are missing. As these enemies are entirely invisible and unknown, like today&#8217;s greenhouse gases, people try</p>
<p>to propitiate them by ceremonies, observations, mortifications, sacrifices such as Earth Day and banning</p>
<p>plastic bags and petrol-driven lawnmowers.</p>
<p>Fear and ignorance, Hume concludes, are the true source of superstition. They lead a blind and terrified</p>
<p>public to embrace any practice, however absurd or frivolous, which either folly or knavery recommends.</p>
<p>The knaves today, of course, are the would-be high priests of the global warming orthodoxy, with former</p>
<p>US vice-president Gore as their supreme pontiff.</p>
<p>As Hume points out, the stronger mixture there is of superstition, with its ambience of ignorance and fear,</p>
<p>the higher is the authority of the priesthood. As with the Church in the Dark Ages or the Inquisition during</p>
<p>the Reformation, they denounce all doubters, such as Evans or Britain&#8217;s Gilbert Monckton as dangerous</p>
<p>heretics, outliers in Gore&#8217;s phrase: or as willing tools of the evil enemy of a healthy planet, Big Oil.</p>
<p>This is not the first time, of course, that superstition has paraded itself as science, or created a priesthood</p>
<p>masquerading as the exponents of reason. At the beginning of the previous century we had the fascination</p>
<p>with eugenics, when the Gores of the age such as E.A. Ross and Ernst Haeckel warned that modern</p>
<p>industrial society was headed for race suicide. The list of otherwise sensible people who endorsed this</p>
<p>hokum, from Winston Churchill to Oliver Wendell Holmes, is embarrassing to read today.</p>
<p>Then as now, money was poured into foundations, institutes, and university chairs for the study of eugenics</p>
<p>and racial hygiene. Then as now, it was claimed that there was a scientific consensus that modern man was</p>
<p>degenerating himself into extinction. Doubters such as German anthropologist Rudolf Virchow were</p>
<p>dismissed as reactionaries or even as tools of the principal contaminators of racial purity, the Jews. And</p>
<p>then as now, proponents of eugenics turned to the all-powerful state to avert catastrophe.</p>
<p>A credulous and submissive public allowed politicians to pass laws permitting forced sterilisation of the</p>
<p>feeble-minded, racial screening for immigration quotas, minimum wage laws (which Sidney and Beatrice</p>
<p>Webb saw as a way to force the mentally unfit out of the labor market) and other legislation which, in</p>
<p>retrospect, set the stage for the humanitarian catastrophe to come. In fact, when the Nazis took power in</p>
<p>1933, they found that the Weimar Republic had passed all the euthanasia legislation they needed to</p>
<p>eliminate Germany&#8217;s useless mouths. The next target on their racial hygiene list would be the Jews.</p>
<p>Real science rests on a solid bedrock of scepticism, a scepticism not only about certain religious or cultural</p>
<p>assumptions, for example about race, but also about itself. It constantly re-examines what it regards as</p>
<p>evidence, and the connections it draws between cause and effect. It never rushes to judgment, as race</p>
<p>science did in Germany in the 1930s and as the high priests of climate change are doing today.</p>
<p>Politicians everywhere should be forced to take an oath similar to the Hippocratic oath taken by doctors:</p>
<p>Above all else, do no harm. The debate in Australia on this issue is rapidly building to a climax. Before</p>
<p>they make decisions that could trim Australia&#8217;s gross domestic product by several percentage points a year</p>
<p>and impose heavy penalties on Australians&#8217; lifestyle, Labour and Liberal alike need to re-examine the</p>
<p>superstition of global warming. Otherwise, the only thing it will melt away is everyone&#8217;s civil liberty.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p><em>Arthur Herman is a historian and author, his most recent book is Gandhi and Churchill: The Epic Rivalry</em></p>
<p><em>That Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age.</em></p>
<p>*******************************</p>
<p>12</p>
<p><strong>8. A &#8220;GERIATRIC&#8221; REVOLT</strong></p>
<p><em>Dr John Ray (Australia)&#8217;s Greenie Watch (</em><em>http://antigreen.blogspot.com/</em></p>
<p>A &#8220;geriatric&#8221; revolt: The scientists who reject Warmism tend to be OLD! Your present blogger is one of</p>
<p>those. There are tremendous pressures to conformity in academe and the generally Leftist orientation of</p>
<p>academe tends to pressure everyone within it to agree to ideas that suit the Left. And Warmism is certainly</p>
<p>one of those ideas. So old guys are the only ones who can AFFORD to declare the Warmists to be</p>
<p>unclothed. They either have their careers well-established (with tenure) or have reached financial</p>
<p>independence (retirement) and so can afford to call it like they see it. In general, seniors in society today are</p>
<p>not remotely as helpful to younger people as they once were. But their opposition to the Warmist hysteria</p>
<p>will one day show that seniors are not completely irrelevant after all. Experience does count (we have seen</p>
<p>many such hysterias in the past and we have a broader base of knowledge to call on) and our independence</p>
<p>is certainly an enormous strength. Some of us are already dead. (Reid Bryson and John Daly are</p>
<p>particularly mourned) and some of us are very senior indeed (e.g. Bill Gray) but the revolt we have fostered</p>
<p>is ever growing so we have not labored in vain.</p>
<p><strong>****************************</strong></p>
<p><strong>9. GLOBAL WARMING AND NATURAL DISASTERS:</strong></p>
<p><em>Joel Achenbach, Wash Post, Aug 3, 2008.</em></p>
<p>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/01/AR2008080103014_pf.html</p>
<p>Somewhere along the line, global warming became the explanation for everything. Rightthinking</p>
<p>people are not supposed to discuss any meteorological or geophysical event &#8211; a</p>
<p>hurricane, a wildfire, a heat wave, a drought, a flood, a blizzard, a tornado, a lightning</p>
<p>strike, an unfamiliar breeze, a strange tingling on the neck &#8211; without immediately</p>
<p>invoking the climate crisis. It causes earthquakes, plagues and backyard gardening</p>
<p>disappointments. Weird fungus on your tomato plants? Classic sign of global warming.</p>
<p>Some people are impatient with even a token amount of equivocation. A science writer for Newsweek</p>
<p>recently flat-out declared that this year&#8217;s floods in the Midwest were the result of climate change, and in the</p>
<p>process, she derided the wishy-washy climatologists who couldn&#8217;t quite bring themselves to reach that</p>
<p>conclusion (they &#8220;trip over themselves to absolve global warming&#8221;).</p>
<p>Last week, we saw reports of more wildfires in California. Sure as night follows day,</p>
<p>people will lay some of the blame on climate change. But there&#8217;s also the minor matter of</p>
<p>people building homes in wildfire-susceptible forests, overgrown with vegetation due to</p>
<p>decades of fire suppression. That&#8217;s like pitching a tent on the railroad tracks.</p>
<p>The message that needs to be communicated to these people is: &#8220;Your problem is not</p>
<p>global warming. Your problem is that you&#8217;re nuts.&#8221;</p>
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