From The Viscount Monckton of Brenchley in Copenhagen

In the Grand Ceremonial Hall of the University of Copenhagen, a splendid Nordic classical space overlooking the Church of our Lady in the heart of the old city, rows of repellent, blue plastic chairs surrounded the podium from which no less a personage than Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, was to speak.
I had arrived in good time to take my seat among the dignitaries in the front row. Rapidly, the room filled with enthusiastic Greenies and enviro-zombs waiting to hear the latest from ye Holy Bookes of Ipecac, yea verily.
The official party shambled in and perched on the blue plastic chairs next to me. Pachauri was just a couple of seats away, so I gave him a letter from me and Senator Fielding of Australia, pointing out that the headline graph in the IPCC’s 2007 report, purporting to show that the rate of warming over the past 150 years had itself accelerated, was fraudulent.
Would he use the bogus graph in his lecture? I had seen him do so when he received an honorary doctorate from the University of New South Wales. I watched and waited.
Sure enough, he used the bogus graph. I decided to wait until he had finished, and ask a question then.
Pachauri then produced the now wearisome list of lies, fibs, fabrications and exaggerations that comprise the entire case for alarm about “global warming”. He delivered it in a tired, unenthusiastic voice, knowing that a growing majority of the world’s peoples – particularly in those countries where comment is free – no longer believe a word the IPCC says.
They are right not to believe. Science is not a belief system. But here is what Pachauri invited the audience in Copenhagen to believe.
1. Pachauri asked us to believe that the IPCC’s documents were “peer-reviewed”. Then he revealed the truth by saying that it was the authors of the IPCC’s climate assessments who decided whether the reviewers’ comments were acceptable. That – whatever else it is – is not peer review.
2. Pachauri said that greenhouse gases had increased by 70% between 1970 and 2004. This figure was simply nonsense. I have seen this technique used time and again by climate liars. They insert an outrageous statement early in their presentations, see whether anyone reacts and, if no one reacts, they know they will get away with the rest of the lies. I did my best not to react. I wanted to hear, and write down, the rest of the lies.
3. Next came the bogus graph, which is featured three times, large and in full color, in the IPCC’s 2007 climate assessment report. The graph is bogus not only because it relies on the made-up data from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia but also because it is overlain by four separate trend-lines, each with a start-date carefully selected to give the entirely false impression that the rate of warming over the past 150 years has itself been accelerating, especially between 1975 and 1998. The truth, however – neatly obscured by an ingenious rescaling of the graph and the superimposition of the four bogus trend lines on it – is that from 1860-1880 and again from 1910-1940 the warming rate was exactly the same as the warming rate from 1975-1998.

4. Pachauri said that there had been an “acceleration” in sea-level rise from 1993. He did not say, however, that in 1993 the method of measuring sea-level rise had switched from tide-gages to satellite altimetry against a reference geoid. The apparent increase in the rate of sea-level rise is purely an artefact of this change in the method of measurement.
5. Pachauri said that Arctic temperatures would rise twice as fast as global temperatures over the next 100 years. However, he failed to point out that the Arctic was actually 1-2 Celsius degrees warmer than the present in the 1930s and early 1940s. It has become substantially cooler than it was then.
6. Pachauri said the frequency of heavy rainfall had increased. The evidence for this proposition is largely anecdotal. Since there has been no statistically-significant “global warming” for 15 years, there is no reason to suppose that any increased rainfall in recent years is attributable to “global warming”.
7. Pachauri said that the proportion of tropical cyclones that are high-intensity storms has increased in the past three decades. However, he was very careful not to point out that the total number of intense tropical cyclones has actually fallen sharply throughout the period.
8. Pachauri said that the activity of intense Atlantic hurricanes had increased since 1970. This is simply not true, but it appears to be true if – as one very bad scientific paper in 2006 did – one takes the data back only as far as that year. Take the data over the whole century, as one should, and no trend whatsoever is evident. Here, Pachauri is again using the same statistical dodge he used with the UN’s bogus “warming-is-getting-worse” graph: he is choosing a short run of data and picking his start-date with care so as falsely to show a trend that, over a longer period, is not significant.
9. Pachauri said small islands like the Maldives were vulnerable to sea-level rise. Not if they’re made of coral, which is more than capable of outgrowing any sea-level rise. Besides, as Professor Morner has established, sea level in the Maldives is no higher now than it was 1250 years ago, and has not risen for half a century.
10. Pachauri said that if the ice-sheets of Greenland or West Antarctica were to melt there would be “meters of sea-level rise”. Yes, but his own climate panel has said that that could not happen for thousands of years, and only then if global mean surface temperatures stayed at least 2 C (3.5 F) warmer than today’s.
11. Pachauri said that if temperatures rose 2 C (3.5 F) 20-30% of all species would become extinct. This, too, is simply nonsense. For most of the past 600 million years, global temperatures have been 7 C (13.5 F) warmer than today, and yet here we all are. One has only to look at the number of species living in the tropics and the number living at the Poles to work out that warmer weather will if anything increase the number and diversity of species on the planet. There is no scientific basis whatsoever for Pachauri’s assertion about mass extinctions. It is simply made up.
12. Pachauri said that “global warming” would mean “lower quantities of water”. Not so. It would mean larger quantities of water vapor in the atmosphere, hence more rain. This is long-settled science – but, then, Pachauri is a railroad engineer.
13. Pachauri said that by 2100 100 million people would be displaced by rising sea levels. Now, where did we hear that figure before? Ah, yes, from the ludicrous Al Gore and his sidekick Bob Corell. There is no truth in it at all. Pachauri said he was presenting the results of the IPCC’s fourth assessment report. It is quite plain: the maximum possible rate of sea-level rise is put at just 2 ft, with a best estimate of 1 ft 5 in. Sea level is actually rising at around 1 ft/century. That is all.
14. Pachauri said that he had seen for himself the damage done in Bangladesh by sea-level rise. Just one problem with that. There has been no sea-level rise in Bangladesh. At all. In fact, according to Professor Moerner, who visited it recently and was the only scientist on the trip to calibrate his GPS altimeter properly by taking readings at two elevations at least 10 meters apart, sea level in Bangladesh has actually fallen a little, which is why satellite images show 70,000 sq. km more land area there than 30 years ago. Pachauri may well have seen some coastal erosion: but that was caused by the imprudent removal of nine-tenths of the mangroves in the Sunderban archipelago to make way for shrimp-farms.
15. Pachauri said we could not afford to delay reducing carbon emissions even by a year, or disaster would result. So here’s the math. There are 388 ppmv of CO2 in the air today, rising at 2 ppmv/year over the past decade. So an extra year with no action at all would warm the world by just 4.7 ln(390/388) = 0.024 C, or less than a twentieth of a Fahrenheit degree. And only that much on the assumption that the UN’s sixfold exaggeration of CO2’s true warming potential is accurate, which it is not. Either way, we can afford to wait a couple of decades to see whether anything like the rate of warming predicted by the UN’s climate panel actually occurs.
16. Pachauri said that the cost of mitigating carbon emissions would be less than 3% of gross domestic product by 2030. The only economist who thinks that is Lord Stern, whose laughable report on the economics of climate change, produced for the British Government, used a near-zero discount rate so as artificially to depress the true cost of trying to mitigate “global warming”. To reduce “global warming” to nothing, one must close down the entire global economy. Any lesser reduction is a simple fraction of the entire economy. So cutting back, say, 50% of carbon emissions by 2030, which is what various extremist groups here are advocating, would cost around 50% of GDP, not 3%.
17. Pachauri said that solar and wind power provided more jobs per $1 million invested than coal. Maybe they do, but that is a measure of their relative inefficiency. The correct policy would be to raise the standard of living of the poorest by letting them burn as much fossil fuels as they need to lift them from poverty. Anything else is organized cruelty.
18. Pachauri said we could all demonstrate our commitment to Saving The Planet by eating less meat. The Catholic Church has long extolled the virtues of mortification of the flesh: we generally ate fish on Fridays in the UK, until the European Common Fisheries Policy meant there were no more fish. But the notion that going vegan will make any measurable impact on global temperatures is simply fatuous.
It is time for Railroad Engineer Pachauri to get back to his signal-box. About the climate, as they say in New York’s Jewish quarter, he knows from nothing.
“Gubbi (02:31:37) :
I don’t know why this man is being taken so seriously. Look at his solution to preventing AIDS. Obnoxious.”
Well, based on the scare tactics played by the media, scientists and politicians at the time, it was not a too unreasonable stance. How would you “control” such viral infections that were (Laugh) “predicted” to obliterate mankind by 2000? Before that was the ice age, then global warming, then came Y2K, then SARS, the bird ‘flu, then swine ‘flu. And given your position on Monckton’s views about how to control the spread of such the AIDS virus, what are your views on “authorities” control procedures to control the spread of the H1N1 virus?
Pot, kettle, black.
Any of you out there still holding Carbon Credits should sell them off before they have zero value.
Well done Monckton , you really are saving the world.
I would urge the writer to desist from denigrating somebody because of their profession – you reduce your credibility and lower yourself to the level of those who use phrases like ‘flat-earther’ etc.
Wow! Look at all the news articles poopig up today about the solar minimum.
NASA Shows Quiet Sun Means Cooling of Earth’s Upper Atmosphere
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nasa-shows-quiet-sun-means-cooling-of-earths-upper-atmosphere-79432252.html
http://news.google.com/news/search?aq=f&um=1&cf=all&ned=us&hl=en&q=solar+minimum
Lord Monckton, keep up the good work.
You wish. It isn’t Pachauri’s political agenda I would look at . Try his financial interests. As somebody (Plato says) pointed out earlier they will make your eyes water.
I felt a little sorry (not too much though) for the protesters freezing away on the streets while Raj and his chums carve up the Turkey and toast their good fortune.
Look up Barbados. IIRC it is a big terraced mound of Coral (three terraces?). Didn’t look to hard (kept running into ppv science) but there looks to be plenty of literature.
Lord Monckton is terrific and makes a powerful case. I just wish he would tone it down just a wee a bit. When you have truth on your side, you don’t need to over emphasise. But well done M’lord. Keep up the good work. Your letter to Pacauri is first rate. We await with baited breath for the reply.
We were subjected to utter drivel on last night’s BBC Newsnight programme, with a couple of buffons, the BBC’s Justin Rowlatt and ‘Sir’ David King, trying to prove global warming with two plastic bottles and a Blue Peter type experiment with some CO2 in Rowlatt’s kitchen. Jaw droppingly pathetic. Its time to have a mass refusal to pay the licence fee. The BBC was clearly in breach of its charter by not having any sceptical view represneted. I will be lodging a formal complaint to the BBC Trustees.
Brevity, as well as sober understatement, can help in making a case. Let them use the rhetoric and ad hominem stuff. Ultimately folk see thorugh that. But thank God for his Lordship. The sceptical voice is hardly heard in the Mainstream as everyone on WUWT knows all to well.
Greenies think most people are too stupid or selfish to care. To some extent that is true, but you have to use a scale of 0 to 10, not a scale of 0 to 1.
On a scale of 0 to 1, you have the average person at 0 and the environmentalists putting themselves at 1. ie. average person doesn’t care (0), greenies care (1).
But on a scale of 0 to 10, you could find that most Westerners are actually, thanks to living a comfortable life, somewhere at 5 on the care scale, and environmentalists are somewhere at 6, but some might even be at 4 or 3 (think the sort who turn up to protests just to smash stuff, or who advocate draconian controls).
The interesting thing is that, on the care scale, there are people at 7 who care more than most people, and because they care more, they are more careful about truth, and they just disagree with what the average environmentalist at 6 would think.
See, caring about the environment is also caring about other things, like human health, and social health, and so on. The big criticism against many environmentalists is that they don’t care enough about humans. This is partly a problem of perspectives. Ecologists take a view on the whole planet and as they gaze upon the whole planet, we humans look like we are just another species, and where other species kill with their teeth, we kill with nukes and radiation, so as a species, we’re like a cancer, in the eyes of ecologists. But ecologists know as much about humanity as does a dentist. It is just another scientist taking a particular perspective, looking using a particular method, and missing the depth of understanding that can come from other viewpoints.
If you take the ecologist’s perspective, that we are just a species with numbers and resources, then you miss the profound depth that humanity has psychologically. (You wouldn’t ask your dentist about poetry or psychology or religious guidance, so why do we expect ecologists to guide our human development?) We write poetry to try to express our depth. Lions and tigers don’t. Of course we should care for nature, but that begins with care for ourselves, and that begins with recognising our own depth for caring.
But ecologists just think humans are selfish, scientists just look at humans “objectively” and come up with ideas like “the selfish gene” and argue that all human behavior is reducible to self interest. That’s like your dentist planning your entire life around the priority of having healthy gums. When you reduce humans that far, to mere selfish machines, it is as if greenies believe that we are all, at heart, no better than nazis.
It is a terribly narrow and limited view of humanity. It completely negates the thousands of years of progress towards ever greater levels of social integration that humans have been making. But greenies are stuck in their notion that humans are “the worst species”. Funny how the greenies themselves seem to have risen above humanity’s base morality, and somehow do actually care…
I’ve just offered RC a way out LOL. But no seriously there are may scientists there who probably believed in it and got carried away.. there is a future for long term forecasting as most meteorologists would agree? Posted on RC see if it stays there…
17 December 2009 at 4:19 AM
If you guys would just give up on the C02 story
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/BOMBSHELL.pdf
You could have a wonderful career future in long term forecasting and “climate change”. This will come back to haunt you and it is not going to go away.. so adapt. Its becoming very obvious that there has been manipulating of data to show the agenda (and I as a scientist do understand this as I was “forced” to comply with the “agenda” at that time). The truth will out and the fact that this site appears to be accepting dissent augurs well for your future. Good luck.
Now the only question that remains is;
Will Obama read the Red Teleprompter or will he read the Blue Teleprompter?
I hope James Delingpole of the Telegraph.co.uk uses this as a headline in his next article.
Martin Brumby (01:26:43) :
“The eco-warriors will be absolutely furious that the ‘fat cats and the Western governments have put their profits before saving the planet’.”
Don’t forget that the “eco-warriors” are also in it for money and power. They merely parasitize the idealism of others by creating a false persona in order to trick elicit support.
Nope they did not post it (RC) so they are digging their own grave LOL. That’s it they are finito…
one answer, one question.
if you’re ever lucky enough to dive on a corl reef, you’ll hear a constant but quiet crunching noise. check out the fish and you’ll see them eating the coral at one end …. and depositing perfect coral sand out the other. it quite takes the romance out of a moonlit stroll on a perfect coral beach, to know you’re strolling through hundreds of years of fish poo…..
question. in Lord M’s enumeration above, how can items 9 and 13 both be true at the same time? I feel another climatalogical Schroedinger’s cat coming on…..
Reply: I believe that generally applies only to Parrot Fish. Here’s a clip of them eating coral and excreting coral sand. ~ ctm
Russian weather data cherry picked by UK climatologists – report
http://rt.com/Top_News/2009-12-17/data-cherry-picked-climatologists.html
Formation of coral atolls
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atoll
I still cant figure when this farago of lies will bring this anthropogenic global warming nonsense to its knees. Politicians of most persuasians are wedded to the concept. How long before they realise that it’s Y2K all over again.
Dominic (01:20:07) :
Cheers for the link. Missed it last night as watching the football.
Very informative how – not for the first time, the BBC was falling over itself to ‘prove’ AGW. The reporter, the scientist and Sir David King made for quite a holy trinity of unopposed AGW bias, without so much as an ounce of balance from a sceptic to even things a little. Nothing changes there. then.
The kitchen table experiment ‘proved’ nothing beyond the facts that applying some heat to 100% concentrations of Co2 in a closed jar causes some warming within that closed jar, and that coffee-drinking laymen in a BBC reporters kitchen can be easily duped.
The clearest signal from that show was the Alarmist brigade are fully aware that they’re losing momentum – and the backing of the people, over the entire debate.
PS. The worried frowns from Miliband and Susan Watts were a splendid sight. Copenhagen is collapsing into an abject farce. Next up; the Fallout. Should be interesting…
It doesn’t matter what the Big Media prints any more.
They are not the sole voice or the Mainstream Media.
This Internet is, and it confirms to most what they now suspect: The world is no longer warming.
Monckton and others have suceeded in alerting enough people in the right places to the Scam of AGW. It’s base of support is crumbling, and even should it’s Agenda succeed, it will have rebellion pre-sown into the hearts of those it seeks to subjugate.
You are assuming that they don’t. Let me ask which seems more plausible to you.
a) Politicians (and their thousands of advisors) are are all idiots who haven’t recognised the “conflicts of interest”, the bad science and the complete conflict inherent in much of the science.
b) Politicians know exactly what the game is – they created it, set the rules and are there to ensure that they, and their clients, get their cut.
Think Robber Barons meeting to carve up next years harvest and deciding who to invade come the Spring. They have been at this game for centuries. Only the faces change.
You wouldn’t be the first to ask that question. Environmentalist, to me, is now synonymous with directionless wild eyed ranting, the hard left and scamming the public out of vast sums of money with pictures of cute furry animals. I think the days of them acting on real problems are long gone. Seem’s that some of the “founding fathers” of organisations such as Greenfleece believe that too and promptly jumped ship.
He can probably do it in Latin if required, the Koran too, I suspect. No harm in a broad education.
I’ve just watched a Bloomberg TV report on the Jokenhagen summit and to illustrate ‘climate chenge’ they were showing footage of the 2004 tsunami.
Gordon Bennett!
Well said Lord Monckton. Re point 18, a world population feasting on beans, pulses and cabbage will have an impact on methane levels in the troposphere I think!
18. Pachauri said we could all demonstrate our commitment to Saving The Planet by eating less meat. The Catholic Church has long extolled the virtues of mortification of the flesh: we generally ate fish on Fridays in the UK, until the European Common Fisheries Policy meant there were no more fish. But the notion that going vegan will make any measurable impact on global temperatures is simply fatuous.
I can’t believe the IPCC guy has the audacity to argue for eating less meat in the hope to prevent ‘imminent, irreversible and catastrophic AGW’. A dazzling example of absurdity. It just shows the AGW can be used to advance any petty cause imaginable.
Lord Monckton pointing out depleted fisheries as a null alternative to meat sources is also what I first thought about. My second thought was whether we could do away with milk products even if we ate less meat. It is a pity that no one has calculated how many hundreds of millions of lives would be at risk with less cattle roaming over the planet.
But a commenter in the rival Real Climate blog, Joseph Sobry, has written perhaps the most devastating argument I have read about the absurdity of the fewer greenhouse gas emitting cattles argument. Note that the commenter is of pro-AGW theory persuasion. But his ‘defence’ of moderate amounts of nice juicy beef for all is worth reading. For example, did you know that mainly Hindu India has the biggest percentage of cattle in the world? Or what ‘animal husbandry’ mean for some people? 😉
Excerpts:
Here is the rest:
http://www.realclimate.org/?comments_popup=2351#comment-149635
@ur momisugly Mohib (00:28:12) :
[/quote]And MANN again [926010576.txt]:
I trust that history will give us all proper credit for what we’re doing here.[/quote]
Turns out Mann actually made a statement that I agree with. We can only hope that history will truly give them all the proper credit that they are due.
Charlie K
[Note: BB code doesn’t work here. Use HTML arrow brackets around commands. ~dbstealey, moderator]
Mr Pachauri has been fisked.
An Engineer (02:54:07) :
I would urge the writer to desist from denigrating somebody because of their profession – you reduce your credibility and lower yourself to the level of those who use phrases like ‘flat-earther’ etc.
Ordinarily, I’d second the sentiment. But here, it serves to draw out a point of hypocrisy in the alarmist camp where claim that is that the IPCC is reaching a “scientific” conclusion, and where they routinely dismiss the word of anybody who (a) isn’t a “climate scientist” or (b) hasn’t published in journals they control. Well, Pachauri is neither a climate scientist, nor is he author of scientific papers in climate science (excluding here anything derivative of his role as Chairman of the IPCC). His academic background is industrial engineering and economics. I assume that Monckton knows this, and the “railroad” reference is a mocking reference to his engineering background. As someone else said, Monckton, can be a bit OTT, but that’s intentional, I think. It probably comes off differently, a bit like British humour, or the ragging on the Prime Minister by the House of Commons, to those not used to British ways.