Psychiatrists have detected the first case of "climate change delusion"

From Andrew Bolt at the Herald Sun:

PSYCHIATRISTS have detected the first case of “climate change delusion” – and they haven’t even yet got to Kevin Rudd and his global warming guru.

Writing in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, Joshua Wolf and Robert Salo of our Royal Children’s Hospital say this delusion was a “previously unreported phenomenon”.

“A 17-year-old man was referred to the inpatient psychiatric unit at Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne with an eight-month history of depressed mood . . . He also . . . had visions of apocalyptic events.”

(So have Alarmist of the Year Tim Flannery, Profit of Doom Al Gore and Sir Richard Brazen, but I digress.)

“The patient had also developed the belief that, due to climate change, his own water consumption could lead within days to the deaths of millions of people through exhaustion of water supplies.”

But never mind the poor boy, who became too terrified even to drink. What’s scarier is that people in charge of our Government seem to suffer from this “climate change delusion”, too.

Here is Prime Minister Kevin Rudd yesterday, with his own apocalyptic vision: “If we do not begin reducing the nation’s levels of carbon pollution, Australia’s economy will face more frequent and severe droughts, less water, reduced food production and devastation of areas such as the Great Barrier Reef and Kakadu wetlands.”

And here is a senior Sydney Morning Herald journalist aghast at the horrors described in the report on global warming released on Friday by Rudd’s guru, Professor Ross Garnaut: “Australians must pay more for petrol, food and energy or ultimately face a rising death toll . . .”

Wow. Pay more for food or die. Is that Rudd’s next campaign slogan?

Of course, we can laugh at this — and must — but the price for such folly may soon be your job, or at least your cash.

Rudd and Garnaut want to scare you into backing their plan to force people who produce everything from petrol to coal-fired electricity, from steel to soft drinks, to pay for licences to emit carbon dioxide — the gas they think is heating the world to hell.

The cost of those licences, totalling in the billions, will then be passed on to you through higher bills for petrol, power, food, housing, air travel and anything else that uses lots of gassy power. In some countries they’re even planning to tax farting cows, so there’s no end to the ways you can be stung.

Rudd hopes this pain will make you switch to expensive but less gassy alternatives, and — hey presto — the world’s temperature will then fall, just like it’s actually done since the day Al Gore released An Inconvenient Truth.

But you’ll have spotted already the big flaw in Rudd’s mad plan — one that confirms he and Garnaut really do have delusions.

The truth is Australia on its own emits less than 1.5 per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide. Any savings we make will make no real difference, given that China (now the biggest emitter) and India (the fourth) are booming so fast that they alone will pump out 42 per cent of the world’s greenhouse gases by 2030.

Indeed, so fast are the world’s emissions growing — by 3.1 per cent a year thanks mostly to these two giants — that the 20 per cent cuts Rudd demands of Australians by 2020 would be swallowed up in just 28 days. That’s how little our multi-billions of dollars in sacrifices will matter.

And that’s why Rudd’s claim that we’ll be ruined if we don’t cut Australia’s gases is a lie. To be blunt.

Ask Rudd’s guru. Garnaut on Friday admitted any cuts we make will be useless unless they inspire other countries to do the same — especially China and India: “Only a global agreement has any prospect of reducing risks of dangerous climate change to acceptable levels.”

So almost everything depends on China and India copying us. But the chances of that? A big, round zero.

A year ago China released its own global warming strategy — its own Garnaut report — which bluntly refused to cut its total emissions.

Said Ma Kai, head of China’s powerful State Council: “China does not commit to any quantified emissions-reduction commitments . . . our efforts to fight climate change must not come at the expense of economic growth.”

In fact, we had to get used to more gas from China, not less: “It is quite inevitable that during this (industrialisation) stage, China’s energy consumption and CO2 emissions will be quite high.”

Last month, India likewise issued its National Action Plan on Climate Change, and also rejected Rudd-style cuts.

The plan’s authors, the Prime Minister’s Council on Climate Change, said India would rather save its people from poverty than global warming, and would not cut growth to cut gases.

“It is obvious that India needs to substantially increase its per capita energy consumption to provide a minimally acceptable level of wellbeing to its people.”

The plan’s only real promise was in fact a threat: “India is determined that its per capita greenhouse gas emissions will at no point exceed that of developed countries.”

Gee, thanks. That, of course, means India won’t stop its per capita emissions (now at 1.02 tonnes) from growing until they match those of countries such as the US (now 20 tonnes). Given it has one billion people, that’s a promise to gas the world like it’s never been gassed before.

So is this our death warrant? Should this news have you seeing apocalyptic visions, too?

Well, no. What makes the Indian report so interesting is that unlike our Ross Garnaut, who just accepted the word of those scientists wailing we faced doom, the Indian experts went to the trouble to check what the climate was actually doing and why.

Their conclusion? They couldn’t actually find anything bad in India that was caused by man-made warming: “No firm link between the documented (climate) changes described below and warming due to anthropogenic climate change has yet been established.”

In fact, they couldn’t find much change in the climate at all.

Yes, India’s surface temperature over a century had inched up by 0.4 degrees, but there had been no change in trends for large-scale droughts and floods, or rain: “The observed monsoon rainfall at the all-India level does not show any significant trend . . .”

It even dismissed the panic Al Gore helped to whip up about melting Himalayan glaciers: “While recession of some glaciers has occurred in some Himalayan regions in recent years, the trend is not consistent across the entire mountain chain. It is, accordingly, too early to establish long-term trends, or their causation, in respect of which there are several hypotheses.”

Nor was that the only sign that India’s Council on Climate Change had kept its cool while our Rudd and Garnaut lost theirs.

For example, the Indians rightly insisted nuclear power had to be part of any real plan to cut emissions. Rudd and Garnaut won’t even discuss it.

The Indians also pointed out that no feasible technology to trap and bury the gasses of coal-fired power stations had yet been developed “and there are serious questions about the cost as well (as) permanence of the CO2 storage repositories”.

Rudd and Garnaut, however, keep offering this dream to make us think our power stations can survive their emissions trading scheme, when state governments warn they may not.

In every case the Indians are pragmatic where Rudd and Garnaut are having delusions — delusions about an apocalypse, about cutting gases without going nuclear, about saving power stations they’ll instead drive broke.

And there’s that delusion on which their whole plan is built — that India and China will follow our sacrifice by cutting their throats, too.

So psychiatrists are treating a 17-year-old tipped over the edge by global warming fearmongers?

Pray that their next patients will be two men whose own delusions threaten to drive our whole economy over the edge as well.

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Evan Jones
Editor
July 9, 2008 7:35 pm

Them shrinks is pretty durn slow on the uptake.

Pofarmer
July 9, 2008 8:07 pm

Ya know. This isn’t really funny. My oldest (8) is terrified of global warming. They’ve obviously talked about it at school, and if anything comes on the news about it or whatever he throws a fit. I’ve done about all the deprogramming I can do and it has helped. But, if this junk wasn’t taught in the first place, it wouldn’t be a problem, and he goes to a parochial school..

July 9, 2008 8:20 pm

Global warming is a real phenomenon. And yes, human activity has contributed to it.

Tom Klein
July 9, 2008 8:30 pm

It is interesting that the two giants of the developing world, China and India reject any caps on their carbon dioxide emission. If I knew nothing else, this information alone would pre-dispose me to reject AGW. You see these countries are smart enough to compete in business and technology with the developed world, but they have not been rich and self-indulgent enough to embrace soft-headed distructive ideas like AGW. They are not decadent – and stupid – enough to ignore their own economic self interest

July 9, 2008 8:31 pm

It’s already happened. Here in the states, we’ve just started paying for the lunacy expounded. We’ve haven’t built a new oil refinery since 1976. We’ve decided not to drill oil where we KNOW oil is. Food supply was diverted to the fuel we decided we didn’t need. Corn has sold as much as $8/bushel. You figure it out. In Kansas, my own state, our governor blocked the building of coal fired electric producing plants, advocating windmills instead. (Apparently, she didn’t understand that one can’t mandate the wind to blow.) If Australia is following the same path, then Mr. Rudd may be correct. We don’t have to lessen our fuel supply, we don’t have to lessen our power supply, we don’t have to lessen our food supply, we just simply choose to do so. By all means, we should choose a whacked out climate theory above human suffering. But then, the goal never was climate stability.

Leon Brozyna
July 9, 2008 8:45 pm

They’ve only just now detected the first case? This is international hysteria on a far greater scope then that which occurred from Mr. Welles’ radio dramatization in 1938 of The War of the Worlds. At least then they at least had a credible actor in the lead, unlike today’s flaky stars such as Gore, Hansen, DiCaprio…

Gary
July 9, 2008 8:46 pm

Isn’t mass hysteria wonderful? There’s only one problem with a stampede, though. Once it gets going, nobody can control where it goes.

crosspatch
July 9, 2008 9:01 pm

I need to count the number of references I hear to “fighting global warming” in one commute to work.
I saw an article today, I will see if I can locate it, that finally grasped the scale of what is going on. They noted that the cuts Australia wants to make between now and 2020 at the cost of billions of dollars will be made up by increases in Chinese emissions by August. This August. The cuts represent 28 days worth of China’s INCREASE in emissions.

Editor
July 9, 2008 9:08 pm

crosspatch (21:01:01) :
“I saw an article today, I will see if I can locate it, that finally grasped the scale of what is going on. They noted that the cuts Australia wants to make between now and 2020 at the cost of billions of dollars will be made up by increases in Chinese emissions by August. This August. The cuts represent 28 days worth of China’s INCREASE in emissions.”
That might be this article – at the top:

Indeed, so fast are the world’s emissions growing — by 3.1 per cent a year thanks mostly to these two giants — that the 20 per cent cuts Rudd demands of Australians by 2020 would be swallowed up in just 28 days. That’s how little our multi-billions of dollars in sacrifices will matter.

crosspatch
July 9, 2008 9:10 pm

Oh, heh, it was the same article 🙂

AB TOSSER
July 9, 2008 9:40 pm

Please US readers. Have pity on us here in Australia as we appear to have an inordinate number of AGW believers! The US has a ‘GREEN CARD’ system that prevents thinkers entering there, from this country that is spiraling into third world status. I did mention in an earlier post to beware of the utterings of ‘ The Sydney Morning Herald’! (Can you not change that term ‘Green’, as future historians will associate it with the worse excesses of the 20th century!).

BUCKO36
July 9, 2008 9:50 pm

Michael (20:20:09)
What is the source of your profond “uninformed” statement and please quantify the amount of impact caused by “man as opposed to nature”.

Evan Jones
Editor
July 9, 2008 10:05 pm

Isn’t mass hysteria wonderful? There’s only one problem with a stampede, though. Once it gets going, nobody can control where it goes.
We get is going in a circle.
If that fails, we get it headed towards the nearest cliff.
(I confess I am beginning to care less and less which.)

swampie
July 9, 2008 10:09 pm

Don’t worry, Kansas, our Florida governor has also denied permits for coal-fired generating stations and is also forcing building wind turbines where wind does not blow hard enough to generate power (except in a hurricane).

crosspatch
July 9, 2008 10:20 pm

“orcing building wind turbines where wind does not blow hard enough to generate power (except in a hurricane).”
You know, there are a lot of abandoned railroad tunnels that would make great wind turbine locations … not the kind of turbine you are used to seeing that look like a propeller … but more like a turbine used in a jet engine.
You could have turbine blades that would spin even when the wind is at speeds too great to use conventional turbines and it wouldn’t matter which way the wind blew through the tunnels.

john cramer
July 9, 2008 10:53 pm

Is this all not just a prestige thing. Rudd wants to be a leader.
Or would the weather over Australia suddenly improve if Garnaut’s ideas were suddenly enforced?

Max
July 9, 2008 10:59 pm

This isn’t restricted to Australia and America. This week the UK government led by Gordon Brown issued a report which proposes that the British people should pay higher food prices where methane is produced as a by product of food production.
The words used are something like……”The Department of Food and Rural Affairs is looking for a mechanism for internalising the external greenhouse gas costs of agriculture that would put a price on the environmental consequences of farming.”
In other words the British government is seriously considering taxing cow flatulence.
Max

neilo
July 9, 2008 11:12 pm

Pfft. Here in Sydney, Australia, we’re getting a desalination plant. IT was originally going to be powered by 100% green energy, but that’s go by the wayside. So, I’m guessing it’s going to be powered from the grid. Which means the extra water costs all Sydney residents are going to be slugged with to pay for the wretched thing (it’s raining… the dams are filling. Why not build more dams?) is going to be increased because of the carbon tax.
The irony is delicious… we’re going to pay a carbon tax to offset the emissions of the evil greenhouse-causing CO2 in order to create the most potent greenhouse gas of all!
Oh, wait… I live here 🙁 The irony sucks 🙁

randomengineer
July 9, 2008 11:33 pm

One wonders what Hari Seldon would have made of this…

Philip_B
July 9, 2008 11:39 pm

CO2 emissions growing by 3.1 per cent a year thanks mostly to these two giants
Actually, the main culprit is the Kyoto Protocol, which drove energy intensive industries out of energy efficient countries into energy inefficient countries, plus a large increase in the energy used in transportation, which caused a surge in economic growth in these countries. So now it takes 50% more energy to produce a ton of steel in India and China than it did in Germany or Japan and transportation is far less efficient requiring yet more energy.

Grass Cutter
July 10, 2008 1:07 am

Andrew
Thanks you for clear thinking and accurate reporting of the real story. No doubt you are aware of the 31000+ eminent scientists who have signed the partition indicating that the so called global warming has plateaued in recent times. There seems to be a total lack of understanding by the doom sayers that the earth needs CO2, every living plant, trees, vegitables all food, need CO2 to survive. Also the grass and food eaten by herbivores giving of gas recycles into the food they eat.
Basic scientific principals seem to be non existant in the political rush to attempt re election. Or is there a more sinister adgenda.

July 10, 2008 1:18 am

This is potentially a great source of revenue and an exciting new field for those involved in psychiatry and counselling. What can we call this syndrome, though? “Climate change delusion” sounds good, but doesn’t begin to address all the ramifications – someone might be obsessional and guilt-wracked about composting or plastic packaging, for example, but it might relate to climate change only in a general way. “Ecochondria”? “General Environment Dysphoric Disorder”? We need a proper name for this unfortunate condition.

July 10, 2008 2:08 am

No laughing matter – it’s deadly serious.

Paulus
July 10, 2008 2:27 am

Randomengineer – what exactly is your Foundation for mentioning Hari Seldon?
Apologies for going OT, but have you read Wolfbane by Frederick Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth, by the way? If it hadn’t been written in 1959 I would have said it was a satire on AGW, with the highly ironic conclusion that it’s exactly Man’s destructive nature that will eventually lead to his salvation.

July 10, 2008 2:42 am

Michael May: I will agree with you that “Global warming is a real phenomenon. And yes, human activity has contributed to it.” But if human activity has contributed only 2 to 7% of the 0.6 to 0.7 deg C rise in global temperature, is that contribution worth causing irreparable harm to the mental health of children? Note: My 2 to 7% includes all anthropogenic sources.

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