A brick through Australia's AGW window

This article from the Sydney Morning herald came with the message from Bruce saying:  “a brick through the AGW window in Australia”. After reading it, and seeing that it is based on a book Heaven and Earth soon to be released by prominent Australian geologist Dr. Ian Plimer, I’ll have to agree. But as usually happens, he’ll probably be labeled a “denier” or an “advocate” as Gavin calls them, and ignored. Still, it is worth reading, since the journalist that has written it seems to question his own past writings. – Anthony

Beware the climate of conformity

Paul Sheehan Sydney Morning Herald

April 13, 2009

What I am about to write questions much of what I have written in this space, in numerous columns, over the past five years. Perhaps what I have written can withstand this questioning. Perhaps not. The greater question is, am I – and you – capable of questioning our own orthodoxies and intellectual habits? Let’s see.

The subject of this column is not small. It is a book entitled Heaven And Earth, which will be published tomorrow. It has been written by one of Australia’s foremost Earth scientists, Professor Ian Plimer. He is a confronting sort of individual, polite but gruff, courteous but combative. He can write extremely well, and Heaven And Earth is a brilliantly argued book by someone not intimidated by hostile majorities or intellectual fashions.

The book’s 500 pages and 230,000 words and 2311 footnotes are the product of 40 years’ research and a depth and breadth of scholarship. As Plimer writes: “An understanding of climate requires an amalgamation of astronomy, solar physics, geology, geochronology, geochemistry, sedimentology, tectonics, palaeontology, palaeoecology, glaciology, climatology, meteorology, oceanography, ecology, archaeology and history.”

The most important point to remember about Plimer is that he is Australia’s most eminent geologist. As such, he thinks about time very differently from most of us. He takes the long, long view. He looks at climate over geological, archaeological, historical and modern time. He writes: “Past climate changes, sea-level changes and catastrophes are written in stone.”

Much of what we have read about climate change, he argues, is rubbish, especially the computer modelling on which much current scientific opinion is based, which he describes as “primitive”. Errors and distortions in computer modelling will be exposed in time. (As if on cue, the United Nations’ peak scientific body on climate change was obliged to make an embarrassing admission last week that some of its computers models were wrong.)

Plimer does not dispute the dramatic flux of climate change – and this column is not about Australia’s water debate – but he fundamentally disputes most of the assumptions and projections being made about the current causes, mostly led by atmospheric scientists, who have a different perspective on time. “It is little wonder that catastrophist views of the future of the planet fall on fertile pastures. The history of time shows us that depopulation, social disruption, extinctions, disease and catastrophic droughts take place in cold times … and life blossoms and economies boom in warm times. Planet Earth is dynamic. It always changes and evolves. It is currently in an ice age.”

If we look at the last 6 million years, the Earth was warmer than it is now for 3 million years. The ice caps of the Arctic, Antarctica and Greenland are geologically unusual. Polar ice has only been present for less than 20 per cent of geological time. What follows is an intense compression of the book’s 500 pages and all their provocative arguments and conclusions:

Is dangerous warming occurring? No.

Is the temperature range observed in the 20th century outside the range of normal variability? No.

The Earth’s climate is driven by the receipt and redistribution of solar energy. Despite this crucial relationship, the sun tends to be brushed aside as the most important driver of climate. Calculations on supercomputers are primitive compared with the complex dynamism of the Earth’s climate and ignore the crucial relationship between climate and solar energy.

“To reduce modern climate change to one variable, CO2, or a small proportion of one variable – human-induced CO2 – is not science. To try to predict the future based on just one variable (CO2) in extraordinarily complex natural systems is folly. Yet when astronomers have the temerity to show that climate is driven by solar activities rather than CO2 emissions, they are dismissed as dinosaurs undertaking the methods of old-fashioned science.”

Over time, the history of CO2 content in the atmosphere has been far higher than at present for most of time. Atmospheric CO2 follows temperature rise. It does not create a temperature rise. CO2 is not a pollutant. Global warming and a high CO2 content bring prosperity and longer life.

The hypothesis that human activity can create global warming is extraordinary because it is contrary to validated knowledge from solar physics, astronomy, history, archaeology and geology. “But evidence no longer matters. And any contrary work published in peer-reviewed journals is just ignored. We are told that the science on human-induced global warming is settled. Yet the claim by some scientists that the threat of human-induced global warming is 90 per cent certain (or even 99 per cent) is a figure of speech. It has no mathematical or evidential basis.”

Observations in nature differ markedly from the results generated by nearly two dozen computer-generated climate models. These climate models exaggerate the effects of human CO2 emissions into the atmosphere because few of the natural variables are considered. Natural systems are far more complex than computer models.

The setting up by the UN of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 1988 gave an opportunity to make global warming the main theme of environmental groups. “The IPCC process is related to environmental activism, politics and opportunism. It is unrelated to science. Current zeal around human-induced climate change is comparable to the certainty professed by Creationists or religious fundamentalists.”

Ian Plimer is not some isolated gadfly. He is a prize-winning scientist and professor. The back cover of Heaven And Earth carries a glowing endorsement from the President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Klaus, who now holds the rotating presidency of the European Union. Numerous rigorous scientists have joined Plimer in dissenting from the prevailing orthodoxy.

Heaven And Earth is an evidence-based attack on conformity and orthodoxy, including my own, and a reminder to respect informed dissent and beware of ideology subverting evidence.

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April 15, 2009 11:14 pm

Suppose we decarbonize the American economy and India and China do not?
Should be a big boost to their economies.

James P
April 16, 2009 4:00 am

idlex (03:48:02) :
If he is lending his support to the global warming scam, it’s almost certainly because he’s been put under pressure to do so.

By the BBC, no doubt (who never now show us Dr David Bellamy, who was almost as common a sight on our screens as David Attenborough at one time, but who is now outcast as an unbeliever in AGW).

James P
April 16, 2009 2:27 pm

The Bellamy article also has a wonderful picture of the Goracle looking like a cross between an overfed cat and a used car salesman… 🙂

James P
April 16, 2009 2:33 pm

So how he could accuse the BBC of not allowing his views any airtime, starting from the mid-ninties, because of a position he didn’t hold until 5-6 years later is beyond me. I’ll admit I may have the exact dates out by a year or two, as I don’t have time to google right now, but I’ll welcome any clarification on this.
No need to Google, Matt – it’s in the article: “It was in 1996 that I criticised wind farms while appearing on Blue Peter and I also had an article published in which I described global warming as poppycock.”

lweinstein
April 18, 2009 3:52 pm

Look at: http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dnc49xz_0fb228shr&hl=en
for an objective view of the issue

J W Finger
April 29, 2009 5:10 am

I am not a highly educated man, yet I am not a fool. Common sense would agree with the good doctor that the largest energy source to our world is indeed the sun. That the energy emitted by the sun is absorbed by the planet and in absorbing this energy quite a bit would be converted to other forms of energy, one of these being heat energy. Those who ignore these simple facts are guilty of a sort of ‘scientific malfeasance’ in that they eschew the obvious as being too obvious and in turn search for an arcane, more devious answer that provides them with an intellectual superiority and thus empower them to make those who don’t possess this ‘knowledge’ subservient to their whims. These pseudo intellectuals (or as in the case of Al Gore ‘Sumo Intellectuals’) are seeking control of our lives because ‘they know better’. I’m beginning to see these folks as a throwback to the geocentric ideas of Ptolemy and Aristotle and as such suspect their ideas will be refuted in the future. But, will that occur in time to prevent them from sending our civilization back to the times of those two sages?

ginckgo
June 8, 2009 8:42 pm

Plimer has done good skeptical work in other fields, but methinks he has become overzealous on this one. The book is apparently full of errors and the numerous sources he cites tend not to show what he thinks they show.
http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2009/05/the_australians_war_on_science_39.php
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25434629-7583,00.html
And ‘most eminent Australian geologist’? I’ve never heard him referred to as that, and I’m an Australian geologist.

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