THE climate is changing – but not in the style prognosticated by the global warmist fanatics.
As the bottom falls out of the man-made climate
change industry, those who were among its most bullish investors at the
height of the scam are now covering their positions in a bear market.
Great
damage was done to this much-hyped imposture by Climategate (“Hide the
decline!”), by the discredited “hockey stick”, by the farce over
“melting” Himalayan glaciers and the “decrease” in the polar bear
population from 5,000 in 1970 to 25,000 today. Yet what has chiefly
discredited the climate change superstition is the basic, inescapable
fact that there has been no global warming since 1997.
The official face-saving
response is that this is a “pause” in an otherwise menacing trend – a
pause of a decade and a half. The warmist fanatics will freeze to death
in their solar bunkers before they will admit defeat; but the more
worldly wise, especially scientists anxious to preserve a vestige of
academic credibility, are now striving to effect a withdrawal in good
order.
Even the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change began
to ratchet down its more extravagant predictions as early as 2007. In
2010 the Royal Society reviewed its stance on the Anthropogenic Global
Warming theory and assumed a more neutral position. Since then, it has
been like the retreat from Moscow: last month Oxford scientists, albeit
in Delphic language, moderated forecasts of climate disaster.
Last
week the ultimate warmist zealot among the political class, Tim Yeo MP,
executed a spectacular volte-face. In 2009 Yeo said: “The dying gasps
of the deniers [sic] will be put to bed. In five years’
time no-one
will argue about a man-made contribution to climate change.” Now, four
years later, he is saying: “Although I think the evidence that the
climate is changing is now overwhelming, the causes are
not absolutely
clear. There could be natural causes, natural phases that are taking
place.” Within the Anthropogenic Global Warming hierarchy, that
retraction is broadly akin to Richard Dawkins joining the Cistercian
Order.
The global warming hysteria began in the 1880s but was
discredited when its prediction that CO2 would increase the mean global
temperature by more than 1C by 1940 was not borne out. What gave it
fresh life over the past two decades was the realisation by governments
that it could provide a pretext for taxing citizens to unprecedented
levels and by private entrepreneurs that government subsidies could
supply a dripping roast. Of all the damage that politicians have
inflicted on the public, the “green” scam has been among the most
extreme.
The Renewables Obligation, introduced in Scotland in
2002, was scheduled to end in 2027, by which time UK energy customers
will have been robbed of £32 billion. It has now been extended to 2037
for new projects. By 2011 Ofgem confirmed that 10 per cent of every
electricity bill went towards “renewables”. Proliferating wind turbines
are blighting the landscape despite being a wholly inefficient source of
energy. Turbines operate at just 24 per cent of capacity – for more
than a third of the time at only 10 per cent – and conventional power
stations have to remain in service as backup: two energy systems
pointlessly working in tandem.
South of the Border a modicum of
sanity has entered government thinking since UK energy minister John
Hayes’ “Enough is enough” remarks. In England and Wales turbines are
falling out of favour.
Not so in Scotland. Alex Salmond is a
born-again renewables fanatic – understandably, since he has always had
an affinity with wind. At the Scottish Low Carbon Investment Conference
in Edinburgh in 2011, in the hallowed presence of Al Gore, Salmond
described Scotland’s renewables policy: “It’s a turning point, like the
discovery of a new world or the change from hunter-gathering to
agriculture.” He forecast the low carbon sector would create 130,000 new
jobs in Scotland by 2020. Last March an expert told Holyrood’s economy,
energy and tourism committee the actual number of new jobs would be
between 300 and 1,100.
Local objections to wind farms are
routinely overruled by central government (that would be the listening,
accountable Scottish Nationalist government). At the end of last year
only ten out of Scotland’s 32 local authorities admitted to knowing how
many wind turbines were sited in their areas.
They could cover
every inch of Scottish soil with Martian whirligigs and the lights will
still go out, due to the SNP’s refusal to replace Hunterston B, due to
close in 2016, and Torness, closing in 2023. All this to satisfy a
superstition: if all mankind stopped producing CO2 (try selling that
idea in China and India), 96.5 per cent would remain. The climate
Anabaptists will never recant, but their mad creed is doomed all the
same. «
http://www.scotsman.com/news/gerald-warner-wind-of-change-is-blowing-1-2951945
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
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