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Tuesday
Apr082008

The Peak Oil issue just went away

 

America is sitting on top of a super massive 200 billion barrel Oil Field that could potentially make America Energy Independent and until now has largely gone unnoticed. Thanks to new technology the Bakken Formation in North Dakota could boost America’s Oil reserves by an incredible 10 times, giving western economies the trump card against OPEC’s short squeeze on oil supply and making Iranian and Venezuelan threats of disrupted supply irrelevant.

 

To put this in perspective, Saudi reserves are put here at 260 bn barrels.  

Full article here.

(H/T NC Media Watch.)

Tuesday
Apr082008

BBC stealth edit policy

Nature's general science blog, The Great Beyond, rounds up the Harrabin/Abbess story for its readers and adds a little titbit that shows the BBC in a pretty poor light. Author Daniel Cressey points to a BBC editor's blog post which outlines the corporation's approach to stealth edits:

When we make a major change or revision to a story we republish it with a new timestamp, indicating it’s a new version of the story. If there’s been a change to a key point in the story we will often point this out in the later version (saying something like "earlier reports had said...").

But lesser changes - including minor factual errors, corrected spellings and reworded paragraphs - go through with no new timestamp because in substance the story has not actually progressed any further. This has led to accusations we are "stealth editing" - a sinister-sounding term that implies we are actively trying to hide what we are doing. We’re not. It’s just that continually updating the timestamp risks making it meaningless, and pages of notes about when and where minor revisions are made do not make for a riveting read.

Cressey helpfully shows us some of the revisions made so we can judge for ourselves how well Roger Harrabin is adhering to this policy. Here's one of them:

Old version

This would mean global temperatures have not risen since 1998, prompting some to question climate change theory. But experts say we are still clearly in a long-term warming trend - and they forecast a new record high temperature within five years.

New version 

But this year's temperatures would still be way above the average - and we would soon exceed the record year of 1998 because of global warming  induced by greenhouse gases.

Now I don't know about you, but to me, this doesn't look to me like "minor factual errors, corrected spellings and reworded paragraphs". It's a complete change to the meaning. So as well as caving in to minor threats from a slightly loopy environmentalist, Roger Harrabin appears to be in breach of BBC policy on revising his articles.

 

Tuesday
Apr082008

Cold weather due to global warming

Economist Paul Krugman, writing in the New York Times, has a bizarre position on the recent cold weather around the world.

[B]ad weather, especially the Australian drought, is probably related to climate change. So politicians and governments that have stood in the way of action on greenhouse gases bear some responsibility for food shortages.

Except that a lot of the crop failures have been due to cold weather. And anybody who has looked at the climate change issue for longer than thirty seconds knows you can't blame short-term weather fluctuations on climate change anyway. He's really just showing that he's a talking head rather than someone who has looked at the issues.

Jeepers. This is supposed to be one of the great American eminences grises.
 

Monday
Apr072008

More on Jo Abbess

A commenter on the previous post suggests that climate activist Jo Abbess is a "fascist bitch". I don't think so, actually. If you Google her name she makes some revealing contributions to a thread on Comment is Free which show that she is something much less sinister.

Like this one 

The new thinking has to be something like this :-
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
The only way we make it out of here alive is if we believe, and act as if
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies
There are no enemies.

 Or this one

Love, children, love. It's not *all* you need, but it's a start 

I mean, far out man! But is our Jo a complete space cadet or has she got some more earth-bound opinions? Of course she has - she does political opinion too. Here's her opinions on Tony Blair:

he is in reality a sensitive, spiritual family man, navigating the tightrope of public presence with a skill that should make you marvel. he hit the water running, remember.

One can but wonder what it was that our Jo hit, but I think we can be sure that it's not the water. It seems plain to me that "misguided space cadet" is probably a better description than "fascist bitch".

All the same, it's a remarkable set of comments, revealing of the deep, incisive intelligence that was able to get the logical colossus that is the BBC's Roger Harrabin to roll over and beg to have his tummy tickled. 

Monday
Apr072008

Harrabin gotcha!

My favourite BBC environment correspondent, Roger Harrabin, seems to have been caught napping. A green activist called Jo Abbess wrote an email to Harrabin asking him to change an article he wrote to make it more acceptable to green opinion. Harrabin promptly wrote back to see if his changes were acceptable to her! Abbess doesn't seem to be the sharpest tool in the box, because she promptly posted the correspondence up on a website. The full correspondence is here.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Apr072008

Hansen the hysterical

Hansen the hysterical is at it again, his latest pronouncement of doom getting full play on the pages of the Guardian.

One of the world's leading climate scientists warns today that the EU and its international partners must urgently rethink targets for cutting carbon dioxide in the atmosphere because of fears they have grossly underestimated the scale of the problem.

There is nothing new here, just a need to counter recent stories about global temperatures flatlining and a growing public awareness that the facts and the rhetoric are out of kilter with each other.

The only useful bit of apocalyptic news for the alarmists in recent weeks has been a bit of the West Antarctic peninsula breaking off, so the story is wheeled out, yet again.

Satellite technology available over the past three years has shown that the ice sheets are melting much faster than expected, with Greenland and west Antarctica both losing mass.

As many people now realise, West Antarctica is a pensinsula which sticks out from the continent - it's not representative of the region as a whole. In fact the continent as a whole has been cooling for years, and it has been putting on mass rather than losing it. This NASA picture shows the cooling trend for 1982 to 2003 over the continent. Blue is cooling:

Antarctica%20NASA%20copy%20.jpg 

I do wonder when they are going to start being straight with us.

Sunday
Apr062008

A Dunning resolution

John Redwood is inviting readers to suggest the wording for a new Dunning resolution. And if, like me, you'd never heard of one of these before it's probably worth your reading it on those grounds alone.

Sunday
Apr062008

First victims of the greens

Media attention is finally starting to focus on the implications of the drive for biofuels.

The Observer worries if food riots will be sparked by the continuing rises in rice prices.

Food riots fear after rice price hits a high

Shortages of the staple crop of half the world's people could bring unrest across Asia and Africa, reports foreign affairs editor Peter Beaumont

Mr Beaumont clearly has his finger somewhere other than on the pulse because AFP is reporting that the trouble has already started:

Forty people died during price riots in Cameroon in February, there has also been deadly troubles in Ivory Coast and Mauritania and other violent demonstrations in Senegal and Burkina Faso -- where a nationwide strike against price rises is to start Tuesday.

The trouble is not limited to these countries either. In Egypt, there have been outbreaks of violence in bread queues, with as many as seven people dying. We've also seen unrest in Mexico and Argentina.

The deaths of so many poor people is sad enough, but when it's all so unnecessary it's doubly depressing. Whatever your views on global warming, grain-based ethanol was never going to be part of the answer. Using all of your agricultural land to provide a fraction of your fuel needs is so plainly barmy that anyone except an green or a politician would reject it out of hand.

It's unforgiveable. The fact of the deaths caused by their religion should be rammed down the throats of green activists and politicians every time they dare to put their heads above the parapet.     

Friday
Apr042008

Freedom of expression

There's a rather important article at the International Humanist and Ethical Union.

For the past eleven years the organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC), representing the 57 Islamic States, has been tightening its grip on the throat of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Yesterday, 28 March 2008, they finally killed it.

Found via the UK Libertarian Party Forums

Thursday
Apr032008

More fun at the schools ministry

Apropos of the last-but one posting on the new logo for the Department for Children, Schools and Families, some readers may have thought that the picture of a paint-bespattered Ed Balls was a crudely photoshopped fraud. I present below further recent evidence of activities in Mr Balls' department.

balls2.jpg 

Thursday
Apr032008

Ellee on biofuels

Via Peter Risdon, Ellee Seymour's latest venture into the world of climate science is a shocker.

Ellee links approvingly to Conservative MEP Robert Sturdy's letter extolling the (alleged) virtues of biofuels.

This is, not to put too fine a point on it, quite mad and possibly evil too. The lemming-like dash towards biofuels has driven world grain prices inexorably upwards, leading to price inflation and all the suffering that brings. The reaction of governments in many producer countries has been to slap export taxes on grain exports - for example China, Argentina - or imposing export quotas like Vietnam. This has made things even worse. Unrest is becoming widespread -

Clashes over bread in Egypt killed at least two people last week, and similar food riots broke out in Burkina Faso and Cameroon this month.

Farmers in Argentina have pledged to continue a nationwide protest after the government refused to back down on tax rises on agricultural exports.

See also Mexico, Italy (!), etc.

Everybody with the slightest bit of sense is jumping off the biofuels bandwagon post-haste:

The government's chief environmental scientist has called for a halt to their deployment. 

A UN specialist on food availability says that biofuels are a crime against humanity

Even the not-very-bright people in the government are starting to backtrack. 

Everyone who gives a damn is against biofuels, so why on earth is Robert Sturdy for them? Can he really not have heard that  they're a disaster. Or could it possibly be because he is a big arable farmer who will derive huge benefits from high grain prices? Tell me it ain't so.

So when I say everyone who gives a damn, what I should have said was "everyone who gives a damn about people other than themselves".

Wednesday
Apr022008

Whose logo is this?

dcsf_masthead_new.gif

It's your local nursery isn't it?

So whose logo is it really? Well actually, it's the new logo for the Department for Children, Schools and Families.

Is this meant to be reassuring? Have you ever been inside a nursery school? It's a great place to be if you're under the age of five. There's lots of yelling and screaming and chucking of drinks and wiping of bottoms and mewling and puking and running round like nutters. But no decisiveness or cerebration or anything like that.

So doesn't this logo conjure up completely the wrong mental images? 

dcsf.jpg 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oh, and the logo cost a cool £5k. Cheap by government standards, but I reckon you could have got it done by Logoworks for a couple of hundred. Still, better twenty times too expensive than the usual hundred or so times.

Tuesday
Apr012008

Any economists out there?

The other day I was flicking idly through the channels on the telly when I chanced upon BBC Parliament, which was showing recorded coverage of Adair Turner's evidence to the Environment Food and Rural Affairs Committee. This is not something any self-respecting citizen should be watching, of course, but  it represented a welcome respite from the children.

During his evidence, Lord Turner said something which appeared to my untutored ear to be a load of old codswallop. He seemed to be saying that the Stern review had stated that reducing carbon emissions by 60 - 80 % would only reduce GDP by 2.5% - ie a one-off hit of 2.5%. On the face of it, this is highly implausible, but it none of the MPs picked him up on it. I made a note to look into it when I got the chance.

I've now located the transcript. While it's uncorrected, what I read there is pretty much as I recall from the television. This is what he said:

I think there is a very compelling case which is set out in Lord Stern's report and other reports that the developed, rich economies, and ultimately the whole world, can run on a fraction of the carbon emissions that they have at the moment. They can reduce it by 60 or 80 per cent from present per capita levels in, for instance, Europe, and the estimates that he produced are that the cost of that might be between minus 0.5 per cent, ie you do a set of things and we are actually better off at the end of the day, through to plus 2.5 per cent, ie we do all these things and the GDP in 2050 and ever thereafter is 2.5 per cent below what it would otherwise be but, as I made the point earlier, that simply means that you have slipped by a year the rate of increase.

[Emphasis mine] Can this possibly be right? Doesn't he mean that the rate of growth in GDP will be 2.5% less than it would have been otherwise?

Here is an excerpt from the conclusions of the Stern Review:

This is a major challenge, but sustained long-term action can achieve it at costs that are low in comparison to the risks of inaction. Central estimates of the annual costs of achieving stabilisation between 500 and 550ppm CO2e are around 1% of global GDP, if we start to take strong action now.

[Again, emphasis added]. This looks pretty damning to me, but I'd prefer a trained economist to confirm that I'm understanding this correctly.

Mind you, Lord Turner is a trained economist too (as he states elsewhere in his evidence). If he has got it wrong, I'm not sure what excuses might be available to him.

Tuesday
Apr012008

Sir David King flounces out

There's a lovely anecdote doing the rounds of climate sceptic blogs about Sir David King, the climate alarmist and former chief scientific adviser to the British government.

It seems that President Putin asked some of his leading scientists to meet Sir David when he went to Moscow as part of the entourage of the foreign secretary. King apparently launched into his standard spiel about how we're all going to fry, but was a bit taken aback when the assembled scientists told him he was talking rubbish. When they had the temerity to list all the scientific evidence which refuted his claims of impending armageddon, our man was left looking a bit of a ninny and turned on his heels and stormed out of the room.

The story is doubly interesting because it's related by someone called RCE Wyndham in a letter in which he tells Robin Butler, the master of University College, Oxford, that the college can expect no donations from him this year because the appointment of King to head Oxford's Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.

The letter can be read here.  

Sunday
Mar302008

Hadley numbers

One of the most annoying things about the Hadley numbers is that if it was, contrary to appearances, an honest oversight then it was all completely avoidable. Hadley is famously secretive about the data behind the HADCRUT index, only releasing the raw data to carefully selected people. They even have even stood firm in the face of Freedom of Information requests.

To that end I've written to Derek Twigg, the minister responsible for the Met Office and Hadley to ask him to do something about it. I wonder if he will try to convince me that it's something to do with national security.

Dear Mr Twigg

I am writing to you in your capacity as minister responsible for the Met Office.

I note that the Met Office’s Hadley Centre has today announced that it has found an error in the way it calculates its important HADCRUT3 global temperature index. I’m sure it will have been very embarrassing to everyone at the Met Office, and to yourself, to find that the figures reported to the public for so long have been erroneous.

For many years now, many members of the public have tried unsuccessfully to obtain the raw data and computer code used in the calculation of the HADCRUT index. As I understand it, all such requests are refused, even when via a FoI request.

I would therefore like to know the answer to three questions:

  1. Do you agree that climate change is an issue of overwhelming public importance?
  2. Do you agree that making the raw data and code widely available is the best defence against the propagation of errors such as those reported by Hadley?
  3. Will you now be telling the Hadley Centre to publish the raw data and code on their website?

I will publish your response on my own website at bishophill.squarespace.com, unless you request otherwise.

Yours sincerely

Bishop Hill 

 

Update: Thanks to the Adam Smith Insitute for linking to this story. If any readers feel like contacting Mr Twigg too, I'm sure it would help to keep the pressure on.