Guest essay by Dr. Tim Ball
The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed and hence clamorous to be led to safety by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.
– H.L.Mencken
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) failed to prove human CO2 is causing global warming as evidenced by their incorrect projections. Their hypothesis said global temperature would rise as CO2 levels increased. It hasn’t for 15+ years. It doesn’t matter where the heat went, their hypothesis that human CO2 is driving temperature and climate is disproved. The null hypothesis that it isn’t CO2, which they ignore, is proved.
CO2 was the premeditated IPCC target because it was the exhaust of industrialized developed nations. Maurice Strong said those nations were the problem for the planet and it’s our responsibility to get rid of them? Show their exhaust is causing runaway warming and you achieve the goal. The IPCC failure means CO2 and climate lost their potential as the vehicle for political change. What’s next?
Exploitation of fear about environmental problems kept shifting from ozone depletion, acid rain, desertification, rainforest destruction, global warming, sea level rise, climate change, and climate crisis, among others. In Farad Manjoo’s[1] post-fact society, water, like all previous environmental issues is used to push an ideology or political agenda with experts providing the ‘facts’. A synopsis of his book wonders,
“Why has punditry lately overtaken news? Why do lies seem to linger so long in the cultural subconscious even after they’ve been thoroughly discredited? And why, when more people than ever before are documenting the truth with laptops and digital cameras, does fact-free spin and propaganda seem to work so well?”
Once the problem is falsely established, control is not far behind. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) needs a replacement. It must be a natural global resource, little understood by most so they can easily mislead transcend national boundaries and quickly raise passions and concerns. The target, water, is already in play.
Figure 1
UNEP, the agency that brought you Agenda 21 and the IPCC established The International Decade for Action ‘WATER FOR LIFE’ 2005-2015. On the 20th anniversary of World Water Day UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon said, “Water holds the key to sustainable development,” “We must work together to protect and carefully manage this fragile finite resource.” The UN established a base of declining water quality, not of quantity, as shown in Figure 1. The focus is quality because there are no water shortages. There are regions of deficit and surplus, which change over time.
Environment Canada (EC) produced the map information, but their credibility is close to zero because of involvement in the IPCC from the start. (Notice “Insufficient data” is the largest region.) EC Assistant Deputy Minister Gordon McBean chaired the founding meeting of the IPCC in Villach, Austria in 1985. He was also instrumental in creation of the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) that provided most of the IPCC 2007 Report on that region. It is a very inadequate Report.
Recently Gregory showed on Watts Up With That how EC’s climate model is the worst of any used by the IPCC. EC display their failures on their web page. Figure 2 shows their 12 month precipitation forecast on the top half and a map of the accuracy of previous forecasts on the bottom. Notice it is ”Not significantly better than chance” for over 90 percent of the map. Publishing these results shows either an incomprehensible level of arrogance or knowledge they won’t be held accountable.
Figure 2
As a climatologist I learned early that droughts are the most devastating climate events. One list of the top 20 world weather disasters of the 20th century illustrates the point. Two extremes dominated, first drought and second flooding. This led to teaching a Water Resources course at university for 20+ years. I served on the Manitoba Water Commission for 17 years resolving water conflicts. I was appointed Chair of the Assiniboine River Management Advisory Board charged with developing a management strategy for an entire drainage basin. The need was triggered by the severe drought of 1988/89 that produced the lowest flow on the river in 90+ years of record. Fortuitously, the river’s highest flow occurred just six years later, providing the basis for planning for natural extremes.
Figure 3
Water is not lost, only taken out of the Water Cycle (Figure 3) in one place and returned elsewhere. Like with the Carbon Cycle, we have virtually no measures of any segment. I discussed the limitations of precipitation data previously. They are worse for river flows, lake volumes or any other water data.
At the 2011 Heartland Institute Sixth International Conference on Climate Change in Washington, DC somebody asked about the next major environmental scare. I said, overpopulation would continue as the underlying theme, as it has from Malthus to the Club of Rome (COR) to Agenda 21, but water was the next target.
Malthus argued population would outgrow food supply. The COR argued it would outgrow all resources accelerated by industry, hence the demonizing of CO2 to achieve Maurice Strong’s goal. Paul Ehrlich linked food and water in his completely flawed book The Population Bomb. The COR listed water third after pollution and global warming as its target in the 1991 publication The First Global Revolution.
“The common enemy of humanity is man. In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit the bill. All these dangers are caused by human intervention, and it is only through changed attitudes and behavior that they can be overcome. The real enemy then, is humanity itself.”
In UN’s Agenda 21 it’s a separate category in Chapter 18 – The Water Page.
18.3. The widespread scarcity, gradual destruction and aggravated pollution of freshwater resources in many world regions, along with the progressive encroachment of incompatible activities, demand integrated water resources planning and management.
It’s a false claim, like most assumptions made when environment and science are used for a political agenda. However, if the science doesn’t work there’s the standard fall back of the precautionary principle covered in Agenda 21, Principle 15.
In order to protect the environment, the precautionary approach shall be widely applied by States according to their capabilities. Where there are threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation.
They define “lack of full scientific certainty” and it becomes a conflict between genuine uncertainty and what is required to promote the political agenda.
All the terminology familiar to the CO2 issue is now in use for water. The Water Footprint of a product is the volume of freshwater appropriated to produce the product, taking into account the volumes of water consumed and polluted in the different steps of the supply chain. Like the Carbon Footprint it is a totally contrived and meaningless measure, but allows environmental guilt finger pointing.
Peak Oil was created to imply we were running out of the resource – as the COR Limits to Growth predicted. The term Peak Water has been put forward as a concept to help understand growing constraints on the availability, quality, and use of freshwater resources. Neither “Peak” is valid.
World Water Day was established at Rio 1992 but implemented first on 22 March 1993. On Water Day June 2012 in conjunction with Rio +20 they identified the following objectives as they already knew climate change was not unfolding as they predicted.
• Demonstrate to the broad range of stakeholders, particularly decision makers, that some of the major challenges facing humanity today relate to water management; this will be based on findings of the major UN-Water reports.
• Identify major water issues that connect with the themes of the Rio+20 Conference, particularly its link with the notion of green economy.
• Focus on the means of implementation, especially the action areas where UN organizations and agencies can act together through UN-Water.
These are similar global policy directions and takeovers promoted by the IPCC through the Summary for Policymakers (SPM).
In the US recently the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began the process of control over water similar to the one they followed for CO2. One commentator says this is ongoing.
A full scale attack by EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers to take control of all water from any source whatsoever is under way. What these agencies are attempting is an end run around water and land rights. These agencies are constructing regulations and fictional jurisdictional control.
Calling it carbon then defining it as a pollutant created deliberate confusion over CO2. The Canadian government listed it as a toxic substance – the terminology changes to suit the legal definitions in place. The EPA defined it as a “harmful substance” and arranged for the US Supreme Court to agree on that term thereby giving them control. The focus with water is quality under existing laws.
According to senior EPA officials, the rule, crafted by both the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers, will provide greater clarity about which waters are subject to Clean Water Act (CWA) jurisdiction and greater certainty about which activities require CWA permits.
Environmentalism was a necessary new paradigm hijacked by a few for a political agenda. The goal was political control with subjugation of individuals and their rights to a world government through the UN. Elaine Dewar, author of The Cloak of Green explained,
“Strong was using the U.N. as a platform to sell a global environment crisis and the Global Governance Agenda.”
Neil Hrab wrote,
“What’s truly alarming about Maurice Strong is his actual record. Strong’s persistent calls for an international mobilization to combat environmental calamities, even when they are exaggerated (population growth) or scientifically unproven (global warming), have set the world’s environmental agenda.”
Strong appeared to achieve his goal with CO2 through the UN, particularly the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) that gave the IPCC effective control of national weather agencies and therefore national policy. Global warming seemed like an easy control agenda until nature took over. Instead of acknowledging their science was wrong the UNEP, IPCC and national environment agencies simply moved the goalposts to climate change and more recently to climate crisis. Now that is failing a move to a new goalpost, water, is underway to pursue the real objective – total control. As always it is cloaked in righteousness (green). Who could oppose a desire for clean air or water?
[1] Manjoo, F., 2008, True Enough: Learning to Live in a Post-fact Society.
Steven Mosher says:
November 1, 2013 at 3:42 pm
“The null hypothesis that it isn’t CO2, which they ignore, is proved.”
illiterate.
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Simple then, prove it.
Can you?
Of course you can’t.
Who’s the fool then?
You speak of things you know nothing of. The SARIN owned by Saddam had Cyrillic serial numbers so fact one dead. The cluster bomb units do not come in “yellow plastic bags”, they are loose packed inside a metal shell, so if there were booby-trapped relief bags, they did not come from the US. The USSR was a first world military riding on a 2nd world country (not quite 3rd), and was a threat – ask those in Eastern Europe that Roosevelt condemned to Soviet Rule. Nothing you cited had even a grain of truth in it, but you have a right to say whatever drivel you want and we have the right to refute it.
Build more dams. Maybe even stick a turbine on it.
I know that won’t solve all the water and power problems everywhere but it would help in some places. Why aren’t the Enviros pushing for them? A three-spotted mollusk might have to live somewhere else?
u.k.(us), I have done many difficult things in my lifetime including many involving water. I start with a technical and economic feasibility study. I don’t assume that something can be done as you seem to. It took millions of years to charge many of the major aquifers in food and fodder growing areas in our world. Humans don’t live millions of years.
I really wish people would stop stating that tempos have stopped rising for ’15 years’. This makes it look as if it is starting from a cherry-picked 1998. This is easy for warmists to refute.
As I understand it, it has been 17 years, and is not from 1998.
JaffP says:
November 1, 2013 at 5:52 pm
Interestingly every barrel of oil burned produces 1.5 barrels of water vapour into the environment
That is an excellent point! For anyone that may be interested, the balanced equation for the complete combustion of gasoline is 2C8H18 +25O2 –> 16CO2 + 18H2O. So since our added CO2 does not cause catastrophic warming, should we be encouraged to burn as much gasoline as possible to increase the global water supply?
Good presentation!
I suggest that there IS a problem of excess depletion of certain aquifers, for example the Ogallala.
Regards, Allan
Ogallala Aquifer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Ogallala Aquifer is a vast, shallow water table aquifer located beneath the Great Plains in the United States. One of the world’s largest aquifers, it underlies an area of approximately 174,000 mi² (450,000 km²) in portions of eight states: (South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas). It was named in 1898 by N.H. Darton from its type locality near the town of Ogallala, Nebraska. The aquifer is part of the High Plains Aquifer System, and rests on the Ogallala Formation, which is the principal geologic unit underlying 80% of the High Plains.[1]
About 27 percent of the irrigated land in the United States overlies the aquifer, which yields about 30 percent of the ground water used for irrigation in the United States. Since 1950, agricultural irrigation has reduced the saturated volume of the aquifer by an estimated 9%. Depletion is accelerating, with 3% lost between 2001 and 2008 alone. Certain aquifer zones are now empty; these areas will take over 100,000 years to replenish naturally through rainfall.
There is enough waste heat produced in nuclear fission plants to provide a great deal of fresh water. The water and electricity problems could both be solved by additional nuclear power stations (oh, say pebble bed reactor technology for instance) configured to desalinate water with its cooling water stream. Then pump the water inland and inject the excess into the aquifer far inland – instantly solving both the electricity shortage and the water shortages.
(Pebble bed reactors are salt cooled, with the salt used to heat water to generate electricity, which has to be cooled to complete the Carnot cycle for the next round about the system, that cooling water could be salt water flashed into steam and condensed for distilled water feeding the fresh water system. Effectively, this gives fresh water as a bonus to the production of mains power. Of course, you still have to pump it up hill to the mountain river/aquifer source, so some losses go to this component.)
???
One wonders a) where you picked that up (secondary ed, HS, college, self-study, 6 O’clock news, The Beeb, The Daily Worker, your ‘union local’, etc) and b) what military crises? Can you name four or five in chronological order?
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Water problems, whether in supply or treatment, are regional, not global.
Man can do something about about that.
(Maybe we will when Al Gore figures out a way to make a buck from it.)
Owen in GA says:
November 1, 2013 at 6:26 pm
Magicjava says:
November 1, 2013 at 4:54 pm
You speak of things you know nothing of. The SARIN owned by Saddam had Cyrillic serial numbers so fact one dead.
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The CIA had already warned that Iraq was using chemical weapons almost daily. But Mr Rumsfeld, at the time a successful executive in the pharmaceutical industry, still made it possible for Saddam to buy supplies from American firms.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-153210/Rumsfeld-helped-Iraq-chemical-weapons.html#ixzz2jRuHwGyJ
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2402174/CIA-helped-Saddam-Hussein-make-chemical-weapons-attack-Iran-1988-Ronald-Reagan.html
The cluster bomb units do not come in “yellow plastic bags”, they are loose packed inside a metal shell, so if there were booby-trapped relief bags, they did not come from the US.
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Because of their bright yellow color, the bomblets often attract children. Some Afghans have mistaken the bombs for relief supplies because they are the same color as food packets dropped by American cargo planes.
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2002-02-06/news/0202060324_1_cluster-bombs-explode-aid-agencies
(I stand corrected that the cluster bombs didn’t come in plastic bags. But they were still easily mistaken for food packages.)
The USSR was a first world military riding on a 2nd world country (not quite 3rd), and was a threat – ask those in Eastern Europe that Roosevelt condemned to Soviet Rule. Nothing you cited had even a grain of truth in it, but you have a right to say whatever drivel you want and we have the right to refute it.
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List of countries defeated by USSR:
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Georgia
Estonia
Kazakhstan
Latvia
Lithuania
Moldova
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
Poland (with help from Germany)
Germany (with aid from U.S., Britain, et al)
Japan (with aid from U.S., Britain, et al)
Korea (North)
Hungary
Czechoslovakia
Their only major accomplishments came with a large degree of help from Western allies.
You can add their communist allies to the list, Cuba, Vietnam, etc, and it’s still a big pile of nothing, militarily speaking. Even China had little more than regional influence until it recently incorporated elements of capitalism into their system.
JFD says:
November 1, 2013 at 6:21 pm
magicjava, there is a humongous amount of data available on water resources.
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Then post a few links so those of us not familiar with the data you speak of can have a look.
We’re taking care of it, in Texas anyway … we, the voters in the state, have up before us a proposition on the November ballot a measure to appropriate $2 billion from the economic stabilization fund to water projects … links below have more info.
http://www.twdb.state.tx.us/newsmedia/swift/index.asp
http://www.texasfuture.com/proposition-6-questions-answers/
.
Next the UN will insist we ban the use of DHMO as it is the number one chemical found in our water.
The gas is dissipating. When the liquid flows away, will they turn to rocks?
JFD says:
November 1, 2013 at 6:32 pm
“……It took millions of years to charge many of the major aquifers in food and fodder growing areas in our world. Humans don’t live millions of years.”
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Millions of humans don’t make it thru their first year, millions more never reach their potential due to a lack of basic necessities, millions more due to political strife.
Maybe we should remove the roadblocks, instead of building more.
Owen in GA, both nuclear and coal fired power plants need cooling water but the problem is in the quantities of water used. Here is a quote relative to quantities:
“Despite many coal and nuclear plants using wet cooling towers, in the USA electric power generation accounts for only about 3% of all freshwater consumption, according to the US Geological Survey – some 15.2 gigalitres per day (5550 GL/yr).”
Three percent is not to be sneezed at but replacing fresh water used for production of food and fodder is a tough one since the quantities and flow rates are so high.
How many here played monopoly on those rainy days and what did you learn. What I learnt was that the bank never gave out a loan when you went broke so the game eventually ended with one winner . And guess what we are closing in on the end of the game. Lending money is the only thing that’s keeping the game going. While your in debt you have to play the game and will do anything it takes to protect your toys from being repoed by your lender. You become a slave to your dept NO freedom when were enslaved. Governments are the farmer that farm humans and understand animal husbandry and control us through our emotions. The media is the place that is letting us all down. It’s become nothing more then a PROPAGANDA machine. We think in pictures not words, we have to convert written and spoken words into pictures to create understanding. TV is the biggest tool because it uses pictures. Have you ever heard the phrase a picture paints a thousand words, that’s why climate science like to use graphs , just look how much mileage they got from the hockey stick scam. If you control were water falls from the sky you also control food production along with animal farming, without water both are not going to produce a desirable outcome. Hydroelectric dams have been spraying the sky above dam catchments for years NO water no electricity provided. If you control water you control life on this planet.
The Maurice Strong discussed here wouldn’t happen to be the same Maurice Strong who received a cozy $1,000,000 check from Tariq Aziz for the purpose of shepherding favorable treatment through the UN for Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, would it? Nah, couldn’t be. An environmental savior wouldn’t do such a fraudulent thing. Accept a bribe? No way. Must’ve been a different Maurice Strong at the UN.
magicjava, start your reading with this one, which also has an extensive set of references.
http://na.unep.net/geas/getUNEPPageWithArticleIDScript.php?article_id=76
JFD says:
November 1, 2013 at 7:48 pm
magicjava, start your reading with this one, which also has an extensive set of references.
http://na.unep.net/geas/getUNEPPageWithArticleIDScript.php?article_id=76
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Thanks, JFD.
u.k.(us), not recognizing a problem is the biggest obstacle to solving the problem. Many in this forum have been pooh poohing the problem, which is classic road block building. A few have recognized the problem exists, for example in the Ogallala that runs from West Texas to southern South Dakota. At one time, the Ogallala Aquifer had 10% of the fresh water in the world but has been in substantial decline now several decades. You might want to read this:
http://www.naturalnews.com/031658_aquifer_depletion_Ogallala.html
JDF, may I suggest that you check out this http://home.comcast.net/~ewerme/wuwt/index.html so that it’s easier to tell when you’re quoting a comment or adding a response? You do very well but sometimes quotation marks aren’t as clear as “blockquotes”.
PS Don’t confuse “fresh” water with “potable” water. “Potable” water is “fresh” water suitable for drinking after treatment.
When you turn on your tap you don’t want “fresh” water. You want potable water.
Thanks, Gunga Din.