Parting the green clouds
By S. Fred Singer
Copyright 1999 Washington Times
January 10, 1998
As is our custom, here is the year-end Environmental Myth
Report of the Science
& Environmental Policy Project, our modest contribution to the
edification of
the public:
* El Nino and global warming: Any connection? It's been a
hot year, thanks to
El Nino. (According to weather satellite data, the first half of
1998 ranked
well above the average of the last two decades; 1999 though is
likely to be
quite cold.) Much to the frustration of environmental activists,
however,
responsible climate scientists have steadfastly refused to blame
the unusually
strong El Nino on man-made greenhouse gases. They have also denied
any
relationship between global
warming and hurricanes, putting the lie to politicians who were
quick to blame
Hurricane Mitch and other weather disasters on the greenhouse
effect.
Lots of environmental scares exist without any scientific
foundation, but
global warming must take the cake when it comes to hype. The late
Aaron
Wildavsky referred to it as the
"mother of all environmental scares." It certainly is the
most expensive - potentially. If the Kyoto Protocol for
cutting CO2 emissions and energy use were ever ratified by the U.S.
Senate and
enforced by the United Nations, there go jobs and prosperity - all
because of
the feverish imagination of environmental
activists and some computer printouts that don't relate to what's
really
happening in the atmosphere.
* The climate-aerosol debacle: The U.N. science advisory
group, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), has a big
credibility
problem. Its 1996 report, the basis for Kyoto, had to admit that
the rapid
warming predicted by computer models was not occurring. So they
hit on an
explanation to account for the discrepancy: Sulfate aerosols,
particles created
from the burning of coal and other sulfur-containing substances,
were supposed
to reflect incident sunlight and create an offsetting cooling -
forcing an
agreement with the observations that show no warming trend.
Unfortunately for
the IPCC, the details don't
match. The Southern Hemisphere, containing fewer aerosols, should
be warming
more rapidly -but it isn't.
The final blow has just been dealt to the IPCC
house-of-cards by NASA climate
scientist Dr. James Hansen, an IPCC stalwart (who revived the
global warming
scare a
decade ago when he blamed the 1988 U.S. drought on the greenhouse
effect.)
Now, he's back, writing in the Proceedings of the august National
Academy of
Sciences:
"The forcings that drive long-term climate change aerosols,
clouds, land-use
patterns are not known with an accuracy sufficient to define
future climate change." Why then should one trust the
predictions of climate models?
* The carbon dioxide-warming connection:
cause and effect? It has become an article of faith that CO2
increases are the
cause of the warmings marking the end of the ice ages observed in
the climate record
in the past million years.
Now comes news from precise Antarctic ice-core data that while
warmings and CO2
increases are indeed correlated, the CO2 increases lag the warmings
by about
1,000 years. So much for the
cause-effect relationship so dear to the hearts of global-warming
promoters.
* Sea
level Rise from global warming? Don't believe it: First of all,
sea level has
been rising at average rate of about 7 inches per century for
several
centuries, and nobody quite knows why. But it is certainly not due
to climate
changes or any human
influences.
The climate did warm sharply between 1900 and 1940,
recovering from the
previous cold centuries of the
"Little Ice Age"; can we trace the effect ofthis warming
on sea level? Many glaciers are still
melting as a result of the higher temperatures compared to 100
years ago.
Also, ocean
water expanded, as most substances do when their temperature is
raised. But
the sea-level data taken during this period suggest that both of
these effects
were overcome by an increased evaporation from the ocean surface,
followed by
more rain -which turned to ice over the polar regions and increased
ice
accumulation there. The
net result: a transfer of water from the ocean to the polar ice
caps, and a
slowing down of the ongoing sea-level rise.
There is a lesson to be learned here. Should the climate
warm again for any
reason - it is likely to further depress sea-level rise.
* The bugs are coming: Really?: Activists
allege that climate warming promotes the spread of mosquitoes
carrying
frightful tropical diseases; but rapid and widespread air travel is
a likely
dominating factor. Now they've been trumped by Professor Peter
McEwen of the
University of Wales who predicts an invasion of cockroaches and
other nasties
that
will inundate Great Britain,
"steal our food and suck our blood."
At the Kyoto conference (December 1997) everything bad was
blamed on global
warming - even though it is not happening. The prize goes to the
Japan
Environmental Times ("All the Earth News Without Fear or
Favor")
report that deadly Australian
"red-back" spiders were found by a factory worker in
Osaka (which boasts an international
airport).
"Scientists attribute the first discovery of the species in
Japan to the warmer
climate." (Comment: Maybe the little beasts swim faster when
the ocean is warmer. It's
a thought.)
* Health effects from pollutants: The good news: Some good
news for a change:
Judge Samuel C. Poynter of the U.S. District Court in Alabama
appointed a
panel of independent scientists to investigate and report on the
health effects
of breast implants; they found
none worth mentioning. In North Carolina, U.S. District Court
Judge Thomas
Osteen threw out the EPA claim
"secondhand" cigarette smoke
causes lung
cancer. Smoke may be irritating and obnoxious, but that's not
quite the same as
evidence for lung
cancer: the correlation is
"not statistically significant." Meanwhile, the American
Council on Science and Health has published Facts vs.
Fears, a review of the greatest unfounded health scares of recent
times; they
range from the 1959
"Cranberry Scare" to DDT, Love Canal, asbestos in
schools, and cellular phones causing brain
tumors.
Other good news: There finally may be a detection technique
to measure directly
the damage to DNA, the genetic material in human cells, from minute
quantities
of chemicals or radiation. The first experiments, published in
Science in
1998, indicate the existence of a
"threshold," below which any
damage is repaired by the cell's own repair mechanism. Too bad
that this
result didn't appear earlier; a lot of laboratory rats had to die
after being
exposed to megadoses of suspected carcinogens.
* The ozone layer revisited: Where are the casualties? And
some more good news
- sort of: The 1987 Montreal Protocol that
led to the ban on chlorofluorocarbons ("Freons") was
based on studies that predicted dire health consequences (to the
tune of $32 trillion(!), according to the EPA -from even a 5
percent depletion in the
stratospheric ozone layer. Well, the ozone layer has now thinned
by about that
amount, but where are the
feared consequences - the millions of skin
cancers, cataracts and impaired immune systems leading to
uncontrollable epidemics?
Could it be that the Environmental Protection Agency exaggerated
just a tiny
little bit in order to promote the CFC ban? Far be it for me to
suggest that
EPA would engage in such a
dastardly scheme or even intimate that AIDS is spread by ozone
depletion.
There's so much more to tell; but there is no space left.
Better explore the
web at www.sepp.org
S. Fred Singer, an atmospheric physicist, is the president
of the Science
& Environmental Policy Project
based in Fairfax. He is emeritus professor of environmental
sciences at the
University of Virginia and former director of the U.S. Weather
Satellite
Service.
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