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« The Fifth's first fiddle | Main | AR5 full report »
Tuesday
Oct012013

Hysteria 

Environmentalists are a never-ending source of fascination for me. There is hardly a day that passes without them whipping themselves into a frenzy over something somebody said somewhere.

Take Owen Paterson's unexceptionable observation that there will be upsides to any global warming as well as downsides, which has been greeted by industrial-scale hysterics from the usual suspects:

Professor Kevin Anderson, of Manchester University, told the Independent: “His view that we can muddle through climate change is a colonial, arrogant, rich person’s view.”

And Professor Myles Allen of Oxford University, one of the authors of the report, said: “I find it very worrying that this person is charged with adapting [Britain] to climate change. I do think it is a good idea for whoever is planning for adaptation to have a realistic understanding of what the science is saying.”

One can't help but think that politicians' understanding of the science might be helped if scientists, including Professor Allen, had tried to write a clear explanation of it rather than trying to obfuscate any difficulty that might distract from the message of doom.

However, that aside, we know from Tol's review of the literature that the net effect of small amounts of global warming are expected to be positive (note that the temperatures given are above the present, rather than the more normal pre-industrial baseline). And as estimates of climate sensitivity fall, the timescales for reaching the scarier scenarios at higher temperatures stretch further into the future.

I can't see how anyone can argue then that Paterson has not stated something that is unequivocally true. Saying true things seems, however, to be considered beyond the pale by Kevin Anderson, who apparently went on to describe Paterson as "immoral".

To see a senior academic frothing at the mouth in this way is not, after all the years, much of a surprise. It is nevertheless a continuing source of wonder that anyone should take them seriously.

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Reader Comments (54)

Einstein, in activist mode, pushed idiocratic extremist policies. Fortunately for us all, few took his non-science advocacy seriously.
Sadly for us, a group of mediocre scientists have become gifted advocates pushing their idiocratic 'solutions' to the climate 'crisis'. We are all suffering from their banal incompetency.

Oct 1, 2013 at 8:50 PM | Unregistered Commenterhunter

"colonial, arrogant, rich person’s view". Everyone I know wants to either get a little richer, or to be rich. It does make you wonder who he thinks his audience is as he's alienating almost everybody with this statement.

Oct 1, 2013 at 10:10 PM | Unregistered CommenterGreg Cavanagh

I still believe my old supervisor who I respect a lot is still co director with kevin anderson for the Greenstone trust. The last time I looked they paid the directors a fair bit still but had no staff.......?????

Oct 1, 2013 at 11:05 PM | Unregistered CommenterRob Burton

"I mean there are some things in science, you know, gravity will remain roughly the same, there will be lots of things in science that remain the same. And therefore we can say quite a lot about the physical makeup of the world. And if you know there’s 9 million billion people in there about how they may respond.” Professor Kevin Anderson 2009

http://endisnighnot.blogspot.co.uk/2011/06/living-with-four-degrees.html

Oct 2, 2013 at 4:22 AM | Unregistered CommenterBrent Hargreaves

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