[Rhodes22-list] TGGW
john Belanger
jhnblngr at yahoo.com
Tue Dec 26 22:42:11 EST 2006
may sound crazy but has anyone ever examined the effect on global warming and pollution from the use of firearms?
Bob Keller <r22yankeeclipper at hotmail.com> wrote: Just my made-up acronym for "Thank God for Global Warming" since I am
planning to go sailing the next two days and the temps will be 60 tomorrow
and 70 on Thursday...
Here's some light reading:
UN Report Pours 'Cold Water' on Global Warming, Senator Says
By Randy Hall
CNSNews.com Staff Writer/Editor
December 12, 2006
(CNSNews.com) - A United Nations study due for release early next year will
reportedly lower estimates of mankind's impact on the earth's climate by 25
percent, a development a leading climate change skeptic in the U.S. Senate
says will pour "cold water" on "global warming alarmism."
"We are all skeptics now," Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), chairman of the U.S.
Senate Environment & Public Works Committee, said in response to media leaks
on a report by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC),
which is set to be published next February.
London's Telegraph reported Sunday that the IPCC draft report reduces its
overall estimate of the human impact on global warming by one-fourth, and
halves its predictions for rises in sea-level by 2100.
The IPCC's new figures are attributed to "a refinement due to better data on
how climate works."
The panel's report "says that the overall human effect on global warming
since the industrial revolution is less than had been thought, due to the
unexpected levels of cooling caused by aerosol sprays, which reflect heat
from the sun," the paper said.
Furthermore, "large amounts of heat have been absorbed by the oceans,
masking the warming effect."
Copies of the document, which was sent by the IPCC to climate experts and
participating governments on Oct. 28, were obtained by several news
organizations in Britain.
"Climate science is always going through these 'refinements,'" Inhofe said
in a statement. "The media has alternated between four separate global
cooling and warming scares since 1895," including "the erroneous prediction
of a coming ice age in the 1970s," he said.
"Each climate scare eventually faded away due to similar 'refinements due to
better data,'" Inhofe said.
That global warming alarmism was "more hype than fact" should not surprise
those who have heard the more than 10 speeches on climate change Inhofe has
given, the senator said.
"Even the U.N. appears to now be sobering up and dousing much-needed cold
water on the global warming alarmism promoted by much of the mainstream
media, Hollywood, NASA scientist James Hansen and former Vice President Al
Gore," Inhofe added.
"Eventually, even the peddlers of climate alarmism will have to concede that
the hoopla over man-made catastrophic global warming and the proposed
solutions like the costly and ineffective Kyoto Protocol will prove to be
one of the history's most misguided concerns."
However, despite the IPCC's reported reassessment, according to the Sunday
Telegraph, the U.N. body maintains that "there can be little doubt that
humans are responsible for warming the planet."
It said the IPCC report also "warns that carbon dioxide emissions have risen
during the past five years by three percent, well above the 0.4 percent a
year average of the previous two decades."
"The authors also state that the climate is almost certain to warm by at
least 1.5 C during the next 100 years," the Telegraph said.
While calls seeking response from representatives of the IPCC were not
returned by press time, according to the IPCC website a report compilation
process is still underway, the deadline for submitting comments regarding
the final draft having only passed on Friday, Dec. 8.
Earlier this year, IPCC Secretary Renate Christ issued a press release
cautioning members of the media against reporting "findings" in the study
until it had been finalized by the working group in 2007.
"In wake of several premature reports that have appeared recently in the
media concerning 'findings'" from the IPCC, Christ said at the time the
process leading up to the 2007 release was "long, complicated and far from
complete."
Nevertheless, the Telegraph reported that "one leading U.K. climate
scientist, who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity surrounding the
report before it is published, said: 'The bottom line is that the climate is
still warming while our greenhouse gas emissions have accelerated, so we are
storing up problems for ourselves in the future.'"
Inhofe saw a different "bottom line" in the leaked information, however.
"With the continued scientific demise of man-made catastrophic global
warming fears, the environmentalists, publicity- and grant-seeking
scientists and many in the media may now have to find another dubious
environmental doomsday cause to scare the public and policymakers," Inhofe
said.
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