Yesterday I had the honor of co-presenting a seminar with Dr. John Christy of the University of Alabama, Huntsville, when he visited Chico State University. He had relatives to visit in town but had asked to be able to make a rebuttal presentation is response to Dr. Ben Santer’s presentation a couple of weeks ago which I had attended and written about here.
Dr. James Pushnik, moderator for the Santer event at CSUC, graciously allowed Dr. Christy and myself to make a rebuttal presentation yesterday and I thank him sincerely for the opportunity. Dr. Christy ended his essay with the title of this post saying “Don’t demonize energy, because without energy, life is brutal and short”. Dr. Christy writes this from his firsthand experiences in Africa, where he watched the native people just trying to survive and where wood carried for miles was the energy source for their society. I thought those were good words to consider, especially since we have activist maniacs like weepy Bill McKibben out to demonize energy on a daily basis. McKibben and his followers, not possessing the intelligence to fully understand what they are doing, think “they won“.
Bottom line: that tar sands oil is going to be burned somewhere, in other countries willing to buy it. Stopping a pipeline has no effect on Canada’s export of the oil, only on American jobs, but McKibben and his 350.org is cluelessly ecstatic over this. I like how he’s brainwashed these poor souls into thinking they have to cut back.
Along the same lines and coincidentally about the same time as all this was happening, I was asked by WUWT reader Paul Homewood if I’d be interested in carrying this essay from his blog “Not a lot of people know that” about how difficult life was during the time of the little ice age.
Today, I’m thankful for two things: 1) Our freedom, secured by veterans we honor today and 2) Our wonderful energy infrastructure, without which, I couldn’t bring you this essay and Bill McKibben would be chopping wood in Vermont just to keep warm.
Here’s Paul’s essay on life in the Little Ice Age in England:
In Part I we started to review the book “The Little Ice Age” by Brian Fagan, a Professor of Archaeology. If you have missed it, you can catch up with Part I here.
Everything that follows is based on the book.
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Storms and Floods
Drawing by Hans Moser in 1570 of Scheldt flood
It was not only the cold that was a problem during the Little Ice Age.Throughout Europe, the years 1560-1600 were cooler and stormier, with late wine harvests and considerably stronger winds than those of the 20th Century. Storm activity increased by 85% in the second half of the 16th Century and the incidence of severe storms rose by 400%.
Perhaps the most infamous of these storms was the All Saints Flood in November 1570, which worked its way northeast up the North Sea.The storm brought enormous sea surges ashore in the Low Countries, flooding most of Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Dordrecht and other cities and drowning at least 100,000 people. In the River Ems further north in Germany, sea levels rose an incredible four and a half meters above normal.
In 1607 another storm caused even greater floods in the Bristol Channel with flood waters rising 8 meters above sea level miles inland.
Later in the 17th Century, great storms blew millions of tonnes of formerly stable dunes across the Brecklands of Norfolk and Suffolk, burying valuable farm land under meters of sand. This area has never recovered and is heathland. A similar event occurred in Scotland in 1694. The 1400 hectare Culbin Estate had been a prosperous farm complex next to the Moray Firth until it was hit by another huge storm which blew so much sand over it that the farm buildings themselves disappeared. A rich estate had become a desert overnight and the owner, the local Laird, died pauper three years later.
The Great Storm of 1703 is recognized as the most powerful storm ever recorded in England and caused immense damage there as well as across the North Sea in Holland and Denmark.
Cold, Snow and Ice
Between 1680 and 1730, the coldest cycle of the Little Ice Age, temperatures plummeted and the growing season in England was about five weeks shorter than now. The winter of 1683/4 was so cold that the ground froze to a depth of more than a meter in parts of south west England and belts of ice appeared off the Channel coast of England and northern France. The ice lay up to 30 miles offshore along the Dutch coast and many harbours were so choked with ice that shipping halted throughout the North Sea.
Another exceptional winter was that of 1708/9. Deep snow fell in England and lasted for weeks while further East people walked from Denmark to Sweden on the ice as shipping was again halted in the North Sea. Hard frosts killed thousands of trees in France, where Provence lost most of its orange trees and vineyards were abandoned in northern France, not to be recultivated until the 20th Century. In 1716 the Thames froze so deep that a spring tide raised the ice fair on the river by 4 meters! The summer of 1725 in London was the coldest in the known temperature record and described as “more like winter than summer”.
After a warm interlude after 1730, when eight winters were as mild as the 20th Century, the cold returned. The temperature of the early 1740’s was the lowest in the Central England Temperature record for the entire period from 1659. Even in France thousands died of the cold and when the thaw came “great floods did prodigious mischief”.
Although temperatures started to gradually increase in the mid 19th Century, another cold snap in 1879 brought weather that rivalled the 1690’s. After a below freezing winter, England experienced a cold spring and one of the wettest and coldest summers on record. In some parts of East Anglia, the harvest was still being brought in after Christmas. The late 1870’s were equally cold in China and India , where up to 18 million died from famines caused by cold, drought and monsoon failure.
The cold snap persisted into the 1880’s and 1890’s when large ice floes formed on the Thames.
Fishing and Sea Conditions
During the 17th Century conditions around Iceland became exceptionally severe. Sea ice often blocked the Denmark Strait throughout the summer. In 1695, ice surrounded the entire coast of Iceland for much of the year, halting all ship traffic. The inshore cod fishery failed completely, partly because the fish may have moved offshore into slightly warmer water. On several occasions between 1695 and 1728, inhabitants of the Orkney Islands were startled to see an Inuit in his kayak paddling off their coasts. These solitary hunters must have spent weeks marooned on large ice floes. As late as 1756, sea ice surrounded much of Iceland for as many as thirty weeks a year.
The cod fishery off the Faeroe Islands failed completely as the sea surface temperature became 5C cooler than today, while enormous herring shoals deserted Norwegian waters for warmer seas further south.
Famine
As climatic conditions deteriorated, a lethal mix of misfortunes descended on a growing European population. Crops failed and cattle perished by diseases caused by abnormal weather. Famine followed famine bringing epidemics in their train, bread riots and general disorder. Witchcraft accusations soared, as people accused their neighbours of fabricating bad weather.
Farming was just as difficult in the fledgling European colonies of North America where there were several severe drought cycles between 1560 and 1612 along the Carolina and Virginia coasts.
From 1687 to 1692, cold winters and cool summers led to a series of bad harvests. Alpine villagers lived on bread made from ground nutshells, whilst in France, wine harvests were delayed till as late as November. Widespread blight damaged many crops, bringing one of the worst famines in Europe since 1315. Finland lost perhaps as much as a third of its population to famine and disease in 1696-7.
Things did not improve. 1739 brought more problems, ruining grain and wine harvests over much of western Europe, while winter grain yields were well down because the ground was too hard to plough for weeks.
By 1815, Europe was struggling with yet another cold spell, when the Tambora eruption made matters a whole lot worse. The following year was described as “ The year without a summer”. In France the grain harvest was half its normal level and southern Germany suffered a complete harvest failure. In Switzerland grain and potato prices tripled, and 30000 were breadless, without work and resorted to eating “sorrel,moss and cats”.
Inevitably such suffering brought with it social unrest, pillaging, rioting and criminal violence. The famine encouraged many to emigrate to America, although in Saint John’s, Newfoundland, 900 were sent back to Europe because there was so little food in town.
The crisis of 1816/7 was the last truly extensive food dearth in the Western world and its effects ranged from the Ottoman Empire, to parts of North Africa, large areas of Switzerland and Italy, western Europe and even New England and Canada. Other parts of the world were also badly affected such as China. Death tolls are hard to calculate but 65000 may have perished in Ireland, while in Switzerland the death rate could have doubled. The death toll would have been much worse in England and France but for the availability of and ability to efficiently distribute reserve stocks of food.
For anyone who wishes to explore this period further, Brian Fagan’s book is available here.
I grew up on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain. As a young man I read Samuel de Champlain’s journal and found this entry about the discovery of the lake to be very interesting:
July 1609
“… Continuing our course over this lake on the western side, I noticed, while observing the country, some very high mountains on the eastern side, on top of which there was snow. ”
The mountains on the eastern side (Vermont) extend only to about ~4000ft and are snow free by the first week in June today.
There have been some good points made in this thread, but you are all missing some critical parts to this story. First, it’s no surprise that Nebraska is opposed to Keystone, even though it already has about 6,000 km of existing pipeline running through Oglala already. Nebraska is up to its eyebrows in ethanol subsidies. The more oil there is supplying Texas refineries, the less need there is for burning food for fuel.
Second, some of the American backers of TransCanada Pipeline’s Keystone project are large financial supporters of the Republican Party. Canning Keystone is one good way to put a spoke in their wheels, ie. the Koch brothers.
Now there has been some talk about Canada building its Gateway pipeline to Kitimat and supplying oil directly to Asia. Here again however, you Yanks are trying to close all the doors. Tides Foundation has already bought Vancouver Mayor Glenn Robertson, and it’s shoveling money like mad into Western Canadian ENGOs and aboriginal groups such as the Dene alliance.
If I didn’t know much better, this looks an awful lot like the US creating an economic blockade of Canadian oil exports. Why do I suspect this? The US has been conducting economic warfare against Canada over forest products, softwood lumber, for about 30 years, mostly driven by Montana Senator Max Baucus and the US domestic wood industry. This year, China displaced the US as Canada’s largest customer for wood, and they’re paying $20 more than US prices. Canadian oil sold in Asia will sell for much higher prices than available in the US.
So any reasonably intelligent and machiavellian US strategist would want to make sure that Canada doesn’t have any alternatives for marketing ‘key strategic resources’. The fact that such a strategy only infuriates the best and closest ally of the United States is a mere irrelevancy.
Make no mistake, many thinking Canadians regard Obama’s actions as thoroughly hostile, compelling as it does billions of dollars in losses on TransCanada Pipelines. The problem in this day and age is there’s no real compensation for government malice, particularly when it’s a foreign government.
Get the Book-its very enlightening!
Mark S said Because it’s a well-know fact that most climate scientists (i) hate energy (ii) would have us return to caves.
There is more truth in that than you know. I did a research paper in the mid `90’s and discovered that the leaders of the environmental movement who are now whipping the horses of the CAGW band wagon felt “Mankind is a cancer on the face of the Earth,” and “The optimum population of the planet is 200 million.”
McKibbin’s victory is hollow.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/keystone-delay-unlikely-to-stall-big-oil-companies/2011/11/11/gIQAKzPiDN_story.html
The oil companies aren’t going to miss a beat. They are putting bigger pumps on existing pipelines which can increase throughput enough to keep up with increasing output from the tar sands for many years. They have time on their side. They’ll just get the permit when there’s a more cooperative administration in Washington and make some appropriate campaign contributions to move that along in the right direction.
Actually, as a victim of eminent domain myself just last month (an above-ground water pipeline crossing my property where I was forced against my will to grant an easement) I’m glad to see this public land-grab get beat down at least temporarily if there other options. It sounds to me as if the oil companies already had other options they were just going for a less expensive option.
Politically this is probably a poor move for Obama. A lot of out-of-work blue collar types get good jobs on big pipeline projects. They were expecting the work. Now they got the rug pulled out from under them and the oil is still going to get to Texas so the greenies lose too. The ONLY winners are the people whose private property didn’t get taken by eminent domain. This should not be allowed in this case. Private property should NEVER be taken by eminent domain and turned over to a private corporation. That’s unconstitutional and until a few years ago after one of worst SCOTUS decisions I’ve ever seen it WAS unconstitutional. I was livid over that decision. I think we ought to amend the constitution so that USSC justices can be more easily removed. They’re as out of control as congress.
Brutish, dirty, shallow thinkers, useful fools. Sounds like an accurate description of the “Occupy 99ers”.
Plentiful energy is the foundation of civilizations. Fuel or slaves, chose the one that you want. The Obamanation just stopped 20,000 shovel ready jobs and billions in new tax revenue for local and federal coffers and insured continued requirement for middle eastern oil.
When a bureaucrat or political postpones a needed decision it means that they have decided against you but wants to tell you later when it is to late for you to change the outcome.
China needs that oil and the Arabs need the dollars. Guess who is working for whom. pg
If you think the LIA was bad, try running the same model – this time with a population of 7 billion!
UNSPEAKABLE! – GK
“So any reasonably intelligent and machiavellian US strategist would want to make sure that Canada doesn’t have any alternatives for marketing ‘key strategic resources’. The fact that such a strategy only infuriates the best and closest ally of the United States is a mere irrelevancy.”
Let me get this straight. Canada would sell resources critical to the defense of the North American continent to Red China if the U.S. can’t take it off your hands fast enough.
With friends like you who needs enemies?
Colin says:
November 11, 2011 at 8:05 pm
There have been some good points made in this thread, but you are all missing some critical parts to this story………..
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Colin, I understand where you’re coming from, but it isn’t entirely correct. First and foremost, I know you fellows in Canada have a lot of trees, but so do we. (Us in the U.S.) So, you exporting lumber to China more than you exporting to the U.S. makes sense, but that’s only because we have enough lumber to supply ourselves. Recently, our government attempted to put a fee on our Christmas trees, upon my inspection, I found where we actually import “Christmas trees” from Canada! OMG!! I’d love to have your oil. I wish we had the wherewithal to drill our own and not need yours. But trees and lumber? I do wish our closest friends all the best, but we don’t need your wood. We’ve plenty ourselves. Us buying your lumber would make as much sense as you buying ours.
I would state, you are entirely correct about the ethanol. You’ll have to give me some time on this one. Seems the farmers like the concept. All I’ve got to do is convince them that their gain is our loss and try to convince them that it is in their best interests to stop this madness. It’s a hard sell. Fortunately, all that needs to happen is the end of the subsidies. Then, it won’t be worth their while…… if we finish the pipeline, it will happen. We’re looking at 2014.
No, there is no compensation for foreign government malice…….. welcome to our world. Please understand, we had to suffer through some pretty hostile Canadian governments…..we always knew much of the Canadian populace didn’t hold the same malice. A bit of return, in kind, isn’t beyond the realm, I believe. Yes, Obama seems to have a disdain for our Western society. This, too, will pass.
James
Dave Springer says:
November 11, 2011 at 8:46 pm
……….I think we ought to amend the constitution so that USSC justices can be more easily removed. They’re as out of control as congress.
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Perhaps, but I believe we should move to ensure that, “Private property should NEVER be taken by eminent domain and turned over to a private corporation.”
I wholeheartedly agree that this should never happen. And, I think it would pass the states test. Now, all we have to do is find a politician or two that hasn’t been bought to sponsor such an idea. Those people that forced you to sell, they should be publicly horse-whipped. I fully believe there is a special place in hell for such people.
Buzz B says:
November 11, 2011 at 4:53 pm
“Really Mr. Watts? McKibbon “lacks the intelligence” to understand what he’s doing?! And we poor souls interested in his views are “brainwashed”? I try hard to read both sides of the climate equation (since I teach both sides of the equation), but that over-the-top rhetoric just causes me to tune out.”
One side’s teachin’ and the other side’s preachin’.
Pray with me, brother!
Al Gore is my shepherd. I shall not consume.
He maketh me lie down in green pastures filled with wind turbines.
He leadeth me beside waters polluted by his zinc mine.
He selleth my soul for carbon offsets.
He leadeth me in the path of bankruptcy so his green investments may profit.
Yea, though I drive through the Valley of the Shadow of Interstate 5, I will fear no evil.
For Al Gore art with me.
His hockey stick and 20 room mansion with compact fluorescent lighting, they comfort me.
He preparest a table on his private jet in the presence of mine Hollywood elite.
He annointest my head with
oilsubsidized biofuel.My wallet runneth short.
Surely the moonbats and #occupiers shall follow me all the days of my life,
and I will dwell in the House of the Carbon Neutral forever.
Amen.
James Sexton says:
November 11, 2011 at 9:30 pm
“Those people that forced you to sell, they should be publicly horse-whipped. I fully believe there is a special place in hell for such people.”
Thanks for the support but in my case it’s a municipal water utility that got the easement not a private corporation. That’s more legit but it still amounted to a legal theft. It was a city in another county that got the public benefit. And the public need was questionable since this just gives them a source of marginally less expensive water in case of extreme drought when their usual supply dries up. They could have paid more to get the water they needed through existing emergency supply contracts and existing pipelines. In other words a strip of my land (and 10 of my neighbors) got condemned so the residents of a town in another county can have lower water bills. There was never any danger they wouldn’t have adequate affordable water for drinking and sanitation. The compensation wasn’t anywhere near the value I placed on the loss of my use of the property. If they’d offered 10 times the amount on the open market I don’t think I’d have sold. I probably would have caved for 20 times the offer. The problem was it would have cost us 10 times the offer to fight it and there would still be a good chance we’d lose. The lawyers for the city knew exactly what they were doing so we had little choice but to bend over and get f**ked.
What was happening to the people in the Keystone path is a thousand times worse because that land is being taken and given over to private oil companies. That’s not right but that’s exactly what the 2005 SCOTUS decision made possible.
http://articles.cnn.com/2005-06-24/justice/scotus.property_1_eminent-domain-tax-revenue-susette-kelo?_s=PM:LAW
Dave Springer, that’s great! However, regarding the Mini Ice Age. Actually the planet started to cool after the medieval warm period. One of my units involved comparing technology and communication methods observed during human evolution and climate from 2 million years ago to modern day. The Mini Ice Age was very bad for most Northern Hemisphere countries. The wine industry was effected but wait for it, the first printing presses were converted wine presses. So I suspect, although we were deprived of our grog, we learned to communicate and pass on wisdom to the masses by reading books.
Another factor too. After you American’s gained your independence, you no longer accepted convicts from UK. People were desperate in UK, there was a generation of petty thieves developing, and the few police (Bow Street Runners) they had then, didn’t dare enter some parts of London. The enclosure of common lands displaced people from rural areas into the growing industrial towns. The dreaded Black Satanic Mills? They had only hulks to keep convicts in, so they decided to ship them to Australia instead. Well it was warmer here in 1788. There is no evidence for this period of any glaciers in Australia other than in Tasmania and in the Alps during the glacial maximum. But they still had problems growing things here because of droughts and they nearly starved during the first years of settlement. So we are right, we have more to fear from ice than of fire. The next mini ice age is beginning, it will take a while to set in, but seismic
activity, volcanic eruptions, violent storms are to be accepted. Before the last ice age ended say about 10,000 years ago, although joined to mainland Asia, Japan was not habitable because of seismic and volcanic activity. And it is becoming increasingly volatile isn’t it?
You may think I jest, you carbon sinners, about the church of the environment. I kid you not.
http://www.economist.com/node/7252897
Not only does the Grand Exalted Mystic Poobah of the Church of Carbon Sin (Al Gore) excuse his obscenely extravagent lifestyle through the purchase of carbon
indugencescredits, he’s a large shareholder in the company which sells him theindulgencescredits. This is sort of like the Pope hearing his own confession and forgiving himself. Or something equally bizarre.The reality, is that one barrel of oil is 100,000 man hours of work. Delete the oil, and none of that work gets done.
Your only other option, to ensure the work is done and civilisation continues (people are fed and housed), is to reinstate slavery. In the absence of oil and oil powered machines, that is how the Roman’s powered their great civilisation.
Is that what the Greens want?
.
bushbunny says:
November 11, 2011 at 11:03 pm
“Dave Springer, that’s great!”
Of course it is. Everything I write is great.
Which particular great thing are you referring to?
Dave Springer says:
November 11, 2011 at 10:52 pm
James Sexton says:
November 11, 2011 at 9:30 pm
“Those people that forced you to sell, they should be publicly horse-whipped. I fully believe there is a special place in hell for such people.”
Thanks for the support but in my case it’s a municipal water….
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Yes, well, I was quoting you, but I see the confusion. I wasn’t aware that Keystone was having this sort of difficulty. No, it isn’t right. The owners should get paid for their land…… I’m sure they can find people that are willing to sell or lease. We’ve people leasing lands to windmills and gas wells alike in the area I live. This case should be no different. In fact, the land up there is all but useless. Still, I’d stand with them if they don’t wish to lose their land to a private entity. That isn’t what this nation is about.
bushbunny says:
November 11, 2011 at 11:03 pm
“They had only hulks to keep convicts in, so they decided to ship them to Australia instead.”
Yes, I’m aware of that. I travelled to Australia once. At customs they were asking me the usual questions about how much money I was carrying, did I have any fresh fruit or vegetables, and that sort of thing. Then the customs agent asked “Have you ever been convicted of a felony?”. I replied, “No, I haven’t. Is it still a requirement?”
Hahaha – I kid you guys. Australia is a loyal ally we can always count on through thick and thin. No lack of respect for you here in the states. Your current goverment is a bit bonkers but hey, that’s just one more thing we have in common! It’s like a flu virus that’s going around.
Dave Springer said:
November 11, 2011 at 9:05 pm
Let me get this straight. Canada would sell resources critical to the defense of the North American continent to Red China…
————————————————————-
The US should invade Canada, eh.
Sorry to spoil the party, but:
is not now thought to be a weather phenomenon, but rather a tsunami caused by some geological event.
See this for a discussion:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Channel_floods,_1607
There was a fairly recent UK television program that examined this catastophe in some depth, although I can’t find a reference to give a link here – there is a link to a BBC web page with some audio & video in that Wikipedia page above.
Dave Springer @ur momisugly 11.15 pm on Nov 11th.
Of course I was referring initially to your prayer to Al Gore, but reading further posts I have to agree with you – you are very perceptive in my mind.
RE: Dave Springer: (November 11, 2011 at 9:05 pm)
“Let me get this straight. Canada would sell resources critical to the defense of the North American continent to Red China if the U.S. can’t take it off your hands fast enough.”
Former Canadian CIBC chief economist Jeff Rubin and author of the book, “Why Your World is About to Get a Whole Lot Smaller,” (which I have not read) said as much in a recent article in the Globe and Daily Mail. He has been predicting seven dollar a gallon gasoline prices by 2012 unless the recession continues. He appears to be making a living by writing and speaking about the consequences of declining petroleum availability.
This is presented only as a heads-up example of what is being said abroad.
THE GLOBE AND DAILY MAIL
Economy Lab
China, not U.S., will be tar sands’ market
Globe and Mail Update
Posted on Wednesday, May 19, 2010 6:15 AM EDT
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/commentary/jeff-rubins-smaller-world/china-not-us-will-be-tar-sands-market/article1572674/
Mark and two Cats says:
November 11, 2011 at 11:28 pm
The US should invade Canada, eh.
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It might be a case of third time lucky. The US does not have a good record in this regard.
Chris B – thanks for spotting typo – fixed now.
Mike Edwards – Re the Bristol Channel Floods – the jury seems to be out on that one. It could have been a tsunami, but there were also floods around the coast in Norfolk which would suggest otherwise. I guess we will never know!!
Michael Palmer – I am not aware of any studies of North Sea floods which might show correlation with LIA or MWP. However according to Brian Fagan there was a ” notable increase in storminess and wind strengths in the English Channel and North Sea” in the 14thC and in the 16thC ” the incidence of severe storms rose by 400%”
jack morrow says:
November 11, 2011 at 3:12 pm
It can Happen again.
Brilliant. And allow me to add for everyone’s information that the Pope is Catholic.