Manmade 'climate disruption' – the hype and reality

Distractions, agendas, false realities, and policies that bring much harm but few benefits

Guest essay by Paul Driessen

The White House has released its latest National Climate Assessment. An 829-page report and 127-page “summary” were quickly followed by press releases, television appearances, interviews and photo ops with tornado victims – all to underscore President Obama’s central claims:

Human-induced climate change, “once considered an issue for the distant future, has moved firmly into the present.” It is “affecting Americans right now,” disrupting their lives. The effects of “are already being felt in every corner of the United States.” Corn producers in Iowa, oyster growers in Washington, maple syrup producers in Vermont, crop-growth cycles in Great Plains states “are all observing climate-related changes that are outside of recent experience.” Extreme weather events “have become more frequent and/or intense.”

It’s pretty scary sounding. It has to be.

It’s pretty scary sounding. It has to be. First, it is designed to distract us from topics that the President and Democrats do not want to talk about: ObamaCare, the IRS scandals, Benghazi, a host of foreign policy failures, still horrid jobless and workforce participation rates, and an abysmal 0.1% first quarter GDP growth rate that hearkens back to the Great Depression.

Second, fear-inducing “climate disruption” claims are needed to justify job-killing, economy-choking policies like the endless delays on the Keystone XL pipeline; still more wind, solar and ethanol mandates, tax breaks and subsidies; and regulatory compliance costs that have reached $1.9 trillion per year – nearly one-eighth of the entire US economy.

Third, scary hyperventilating serves to obscure important realities about Earth’s weather and climate, and even in the NCA report itself. Although atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have been rising steadily for decades, contrary to White House claims average planetary temperatures have not budged for 17 years.

No Category 3-5 hurricane has made landfall in the United States since 2005, the longest such period since at least 1900. Even with the recent Midwestern twisters, US tornado frequency remains very low, and property damage and loss of life from tornadoes have decreased over the past six decades.

Sea levels are rising at a mere seven inches per century. Antarctic sea ice recently reached a new record high. A new report says natural forces could account for as much as half of Arctic warming, and warming and cooling periods have alternated for centuries in the Arctic. Even in early May this year, some 30% of Lake Superior was still ice-covered, which appears to be unprecedented in historical records. Topping it off, a warmer planet and rising CO2 levels improve forest, grassland and crop growth, greening the planet.

Press releases on the NCA report say global temperatures, heat waves, sea levels, storms, droughts and other events are “forecast” or “projected” to increase dangerously over the next century. However, the palm reading was done by computer models – which are based on the false assumption that carbon dioxide now drives climate change, and that powerful natural forces no longer play a role. The models have never been able to predict global temperatures accurately, and the divergence between model predictions and actual measured temperatures gets worse with every passing year. The models cannot even “hindcast” temperatures over the past quarter century, without using fudge factors and other clever tricks.

Moreover, much of the White House and media spin contradicts what the NCA report actually says. For example, it concludes that “there has been no universal trend in the overall extent of drought across the continental U.S. since 1900.” Other trends in severe storms, it states, “are uncertain.”

Climate change, Johnstown Floods, Dust Bowls, extreme weather events and forest fires have been part of Earth and human history forever – and no amount of White House spin can alter that fact. To suggest that any changes in weather or climate – or any temporary increases in extreme weather events – are due to humans is patently absurd. To ignore positive trends and the 17-year absence of warming is abominable.

Fourth, sticking to the “manmade climate disaster” script is essential to protect the turf, reputations, funding and power of climate alarmists and government bureaucrats. The federal government doles out some $2.6 billion annually in grants for climate research – but only for work that reflects White House perspectives. Billions more support subsidies and loans for renewable energy programs that represent major revenue streams for companies large and small, and part of that money ends up in campaign war chests for (mostly Democrat) legislators who support the climate regulatory-industrial complex.

None of them is likely to admit any doubts, alter any claims or policies, or reduce their increasingly vitriolic attacks on skeptics of “dangerous manmade global warming.” They do not want to risk being exposed as false prophets and charlatans, or worse. Follow the money.

Last, and most important, climate disruption claims drive a regulatory agenda that few Americans support. Presidential candidate Obama said his goal was “fundamentally transforming” the United States and ensuring that electricity rates “necessarily skyrocket.” On climate change, President Obama has made it clear that he “can’t wait for an increasingly dysfunctional Congress to do its job. Where they won’t act, I will.” His Environmental Protection Agency, Department of the Interior, Department of Energy and other officials have steadfastly implemented his anti-hydrocarbon policies.

Chief Obama science advisor John Holdren famously said: “A massive campaign must be launched to … de-develop the United States … bringing our economic system (especially patterns of consumption) into line with the realities of ecology and the global resource situation.… [Economists] must design a stable, low-consumption economy in which there is a much more equitable [re]distribution of wealth.”

(The President also wants to ensure that neither a Keystone pipeline approval nor a toned-down climate agenda scuttles billionaire Tom Steyer’s $100-million contribution to Democrat congressional candidates.)

This agenda translates into greater government control over energy production and use, job creation and economic growth, and people’s lives, livelihoods, living standards, liberties, health and welfare. It means fewer opportunities and lower standards of living for poor and middle class working Americans. It means greater power and control for politicians, bureaucrats, activists and judges – but with little or no accountability for mistakes made, damage done or penalties deliberately exacted on innocent people.

A strong economy, modern technologies, and abundant, reliable, affordable energy are absolutely essential if we are to adapt to future climate changes, whatever their cause – and survive the heat waves, cold winters, floods, droughts and vicious weather events that will most certainly continue coming.

The Obama agenda will reduce our capacity to adapt, survive and thrive. It will leave more millions jobless, and reduce the ability of families to heat and cool their homes properly, assure nutritious meals, pay their rent or mortgage, and pursue their American dreams.

America’s minority and blue collar families will suffer – while Washington, DC power brokers and lobbyists will continue to enjoy standards of living, housing booms and luxury cars unknown in the nation’s heartland. Think Hunger Games or the Politburo and nomenklatura of Soviet Russia.

Worst, it will all be for nothing, even if carbon dioxide does exert a stronger influence on Earth’s climate than actual evidence suggests. While the United States slashes its hydrocarbon use, job creation, economic growth and international competitiveness, China, India, Brazil, Indonesia – and Spain, Germany, France and Great Britain – are all increasing their coal use … and CO2 emissions.

President Obama and White House advisor John Podesta are convinced that Congress and the American people have no power or ability to derail the Administration’s determination to unilaterally impose costly policies to combat “dangerous manmade climate disruption” – and that the courts will do nothing to curb their executive orders, regulatory fiats and economic disruption.

If they are right, we are in for some very rough times – and it becomes even more critical that voters learn the facts and eject Harry Reid and his Senate majority, to restore some semblance of checks and balances.

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.

 

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Latitude
May 11, 2014 3:47 pm

good times…
truth hurts
excellent and spot on Paul………..

May 11, 2014 3:58 pm

D
“America’s minority and blue collar families will suffer…”
Unfortunately, not many in those groups will read this.

Michael John Elliott
May 11, 2014 4:24 pm

Re. “not many of those groups will read this”, I left school at 14 years, it was 1942 and the UK government was more concerned at winning the war, than futhering my education. So I educated myself. Reading is the number one thing, it opens the window as it were to all available knowledge. Regards Michael Elliott, vk5ell40@gmail.com

Chris Riley
May 11, 2014 4:49 pm

The White House has gotten far out ahead of all but the most Lysenkoist of scientists with this fictional report. I expect to see a split in the alarmist camp. Younger scientists may not want to continue further down a path that can only lead to to the status of a laughingstock long before they reach retirement age.

Bad News Quillan
May 11, 2014 4:52 pm

Baruq is off to a strong start for “Climate Duplicicist of the Year” for 2014.
— Bad News

David Riser
May 11, 2014 4:54 pm

I just looked at the PDF I downloaded earlier, its 841 pages. Might want to fix that at the top of the post. Otherwise what your saying is all valid.
v/r,
David Riser

Jimbo
May 11, 2014 4:54 pm

Worst, it will all be for nothing,…..

Tut, tut. It will all be for more taxes, control, cash for climastrologists, activists more cash and influence, profits for windmill makers, etc. It’s about money and control. It’s as simple as that.
One example. Look at the activist infiltrators in the IPCC.
Here is one example of one of the activist groups in the IPCC – the WWF.
(which was founded by a cigarette baron named Dr. Anton Rupert from South Africa)
http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/2011/09/23/how-the-wwf-infiltrated-the-ipcc-%E2%80%93-part-1/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/01/24/the-scandal-deepens-ipcc-ar4-riddled-with-non-peer-reviewed-wwf-papers/
Then there is the temptation of the huge funding trough for the Climastrologists. He who pays the piper…………. Pal review.
When will this scandal end!

Jimbo
May 11, 2014 5:03 pm

Human-induced climate change, “once considered an issue for the distant future, has moved firmly into the present.” It is “affecting Americans right now,” disrupting their lives. The effects of “are already being felt in every corner of the United States.”

Climate change and the weather has ALWAYS been felt in every corner of the United States. What the heck is his point? My point can be read HERE and HERE. Each of those links has a list of terrible weather / ‘climate change’ for ONE YEAR!
I could go on about Holocene climate extremes. To put things into perspective take a look at the some of the dire effects on man of the Little Ice Age in
America and beyond. It was a terrible time of Great Storms disease, crop failures leading to famine and witch hunts, century-scale droughts in East Africa, increases in flood magnitude in mid-continent North America, malaria epidemics, mass migration, cod migrations north stunted, food price inflation, increased frequency of boreal forest fires, drought in equatorial Africa, social unrest and dynastic transition in ancient China, substantial decline in rural prosperity in Norway, decline in average height of northern Europeans, aridity in the circum-Caribbean region, agro-ecological, socioeconomic, and demographic catastrophes, the demise of the Norse Western Settlement in Greenland etc.

emsnews
May 11, 2014 5:07 pm

To be frank, when my ancestors came to the Hudson Valley in the 1600’s, taking over was easy after the Little Ice Age hammered the natives very hard. This is why Europe could so easily invade, frankly.
My family dealt with beaver furs. This was due to the need to have waterproof hats in Europe. Thanks to the cold, wet weather.

Jimbo
May 11, 2014 5:08 pm

Nature does not have 97% confidence in the models predicting extreme weather.

Nature – 19 September 2012
Better models are needed before exceptional events can be reliably linked to global warming.
But without the computing capacity of a well-equipped national meteorological office, heavily model-dependent services such as event attribution and seasonal prediction are unlikely to be as reliable.
http://www.nature.com/news/extreme-weather-1.11428

Abstract
“Little change in global drought over the past 60 years”
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v491/n7424/full/nature11575.html

and so on………………………. Hurricanes, floods, droughts, forest fires, tornadoes, nada, ziltch.

SIGINT EX
May 11, 2014 5:10 pm

Does seem that Obama and Wife will fawn endlessly about Nigerians (caught in the global sex slave trade economy) yet care nothing for New Orleansians still struggling after ‘Katrina.’
Where fore out thou, Bush.
Bush, “right hereis I wax’n my favorite Yell’ar Chevy Camera in TexMex Dallas TX yall.”

Bob Diaz
May 11, 2014 5:16 pm

In the future, I wonder how people will look back at all the hype and think? Will they admit they were fooled or will the people fooled lie about it and say they were never fooled?

May 11, 2014 5:22 pm

Progressives deny history and human nature.
Hence their fascination with the central command philosophy, while they keep changing the label.
Being blind to history and ignorant of the forces that motivate men they will always act in these ways.
We continually tell our local ones why their stupid ideas will not work, what the consequences will be…But no, they must press on wasting everyones assets.
When the expected happens, they blame obstructionists, saboteurs and imaginary enemies..Or the class “If only we had spent more wealth on it”.
What is needed is a form of self selection to herd these nasty fools into living alone with the consequences.
I believe if government adherence to the law is selective, then taxes shall be elective.

KenB
May 11, 2014 5:22 pm

So in effect it is all now back to weather, that changeable unpredictable “not seen in our lifetime” living memory type of weather event, but all wrapped up in the authority of , “it is what it is” because we say it, and backed up by the false lies of a dreamed up, 97% agreement of a selected sub group of scientists who “believe” in their beliefs.
Pure climate propaganda designed to exploit the known natural and unpredictable world weather patterns, the scary something we know we cannot resolve, therefore open to exploitation and political manipulation in the hope of doing something sometime in the future in the minds of human voters.
What an extraordinary but brilliant strategy that defeats logic, sets aside the scientific method, and allows anything even harsh dictates to be wrapped in a cloak of we need this in order to safe the [……..] insert whatever short term political goal we can sell to our gullible faithful, as it is that gullible ever trusting majority that will elect us and crush our opposition, with a religious zeal.
Arguing logic, science, observations and fact alone cannot defeat such propaganda, only time and realisation of the inevitable loss of whatever that class of humanity holds dear will shake that trust and support of the gullible faithful. Perhaps what is needed is a counter scare campaign as a predictor of the future personal loss to that voter should they follow such a leader into economic disaster and political chaos. Nothing like the stark reality of “I am worse than I was before”, to motivate the “average” intelligent voter from gullible slumber.
That is why so much political effort was put into discrediting the TEA parties, but plenty of Joe the plumbers who might be enlisted in a groundswell of public reaction are still out there and they know it.
Forgive the pun, but weather they [the silent majority?] can be motivated by science, facts, knowledge, that is still to be ascertained. We argue the toss with those known facts, they tell untruths supported by a compliant media? Who will win the battle of the hearts and minds, for that is the true target for sceptics to consider. Will logic and observable facts be enough before loss writes its own bottom line on history.
Its your country, your politics, and choice while you have it.
Good luck!

Ed Mertin
May 11, 2014 5:44 pm

Spin? Uh, a few things. Yes, the first quarter GDP was only 0.1% as exports fell, mostly due to the bad weather. Consumer demand rose though, and to tell the whole story, fourth qtr GDP growth was 3.2% – third quarter was 4.1%. Those were pretty good compared to ‘trickle down economic growth numbers’. Population growth +16,000/month, job growth 200,000/month. Nixon, GOP adopted bad trade policy sent jobs to China, talk about redistribution, they can dodge more taxes & steal your wealth to boot. Labor participation rate went down all the Bush W administration also. Benghazi, why so silent when Bush Jr had ten Benghazi’s, really 13. http://i289.photobucket.com/albums/ll215/beautifulevenin/76578A29-27D7-406B-91B8-9328E1CA1678-5068-000003F69756AF59_zps9e05edb7.jpg Who are you cats to lecture about intelligence? Planes flew into sky scrapers in NYC. Foreign policy failures, the neocon script is for foreign policy failure, and they are still in there running the State Dept.
Now I agree with much of the climate/energy stuff Paul has to say, but using spin to go after spin, people are sick of that.

Jimbo
May 11, 2014 5:58 pm

Obama needs to talk to the EPA and NASA ASAP.
EPA ‘likely’ speculation and fact
“Scientific studies also indicate that extreme weather events such as storms, floods, and hurricanes are likely to become more intense. However, because these extremes already vary naturally, it may be difficult over short time periods to distinguish whether changes in their intensity and frequency can be attributed to larger climate trends caused by human influences.”
Please read this Mr. President.
“What’s the Difference Between Weather and Climate?”
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/noaa-n/climate/climate_weather.html

Windsong
May 11, 2014 6:17 pm

Follow the money. Warren Buffett, Chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, on CNBC in early March: “… insuring against hurricanes in the U.S. has been extremely profitable in the past five years because few storms have made landfall.” Perhaps a rate reduction/rebate would be in order.

May 11, 2014 6:29 pm

Did Obama get the socialist peace prize for declaring war on the American dream and the American middle class?

Louis
May 11, 2014 6:41 pm

@Ed Mertin – I find it interesting that you give the initial estimated value for 4th quarter GDP instead of the final value that was revised down to 2.6%. Before you brag about labor participation rates during the Obama years compared to the Bush years, keep in mind that those rates are much worse now than they were then. There was also a record 52 straight months of job growth under Bush that came to an end in his last year with the onset of the recession and the implementation of bills passed by a House and Senate under new Democratic management. While I am not a fan of the high spending under Bush, the highest deficit spending came under a Democrat controlled Congress. It should also be noted that the lowest spending numbers during the Obama years have come during the time Republicans have controlled Congress.

RoHa
May 11, 2014 6:41 pm

Anyone who believes a government report about anything is hopelessly naïve. All governments lie, not just the US government. (Though in the context of foreign policy the US has been pumping some particularly egregious ones in the last ten years or so.) And these days the mass media repeat the official line regardless of how obvious false or twisted it is. (These days? In the 1920s Humber Wolfe wrote
You cannot hope
to bribe or twist,
thank God! the
British journalist.
But, seeing what
the man will do
unbribed, there’s
no occasion to.)
Fortunately, we can tease out a bit of the truth by reading conspiracy blogs written by the tin-foil hat brigade. They are impervious to the pressures that keep the respectable journos in line. Even the lizard people can’t intimidate them.
The best policy is the old standard: “Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.”
(Attributed variously to Claud Cockburn and Otto von Bismarck.)

James the Elder
May 11, 2014 6:44 pm

Ed Mertin says:
May 11, 2014 at 5:44 pm
I don’t have the years left to waste refuting this bovine scat. From that “neo-con” website Bloomberg:http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-05-06/first-quarter-u-s-economic-slump-looking-uglier-by-the-day.html
So, now conservative Jews run the State Department?
You sir are a bloviating idiot who should not be allowed out of Mom’s basement.

May 11, 2014 6:46 pm

Excellent points in this article. Almost none of the statements regarding extreme weather and climate can be supported with data.
Here is one measure “U.S. state temperature extremes”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._state_temperature_extremes
Note: The decade with the most extreme heat in the US was easily the 1930’s. This was also the decade with the most severe droughts.
Very few all time record high state temperature records have been set since the increase in CO2 has become significant.
Before global warming stalled out, it effected night time temperatures the most and also, higher latitudes the most. This would cause the diurnal temperature range to be slightly less, as well as the meridional(north to south) temperature disparity to be less.
Both those, especially the later would contribute to LESS extreme weather in most cases.
There is a great deal of uncertainty regarding how increasing amounts of water vapor in the atmosphere effect warming. The mathematical equations in the models have been picked with the belief it causes a positive feedback.
I think a nice real world laboratory has existed over the past 25 years in the Cornbelt.
Increased density of corn planting and evapotranspiriation during that period, has resulted in a “micro climate” to the extent that at times, dew points have increased by 5+ F vs what they were under similar conditions prior to this period.
https://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/opinion/4997/corn-and-climate-sweaty-topic
From 1988 to 2012, 24 straight years without a widespread drought and the best growing conditions in corn’s history were at least partially the result of the increase in this low level moisture.
Lifting condensation levels were lowered, cumulus/low level clouds increased and developed earlier in the day, rains increased. This also reduced day time temperatures, especially the high end values. It did however, increase night time temperatures as well as heat index values, especially at night to humans.
Again, this was not caused by increasing CO2 but was from increased density of corn plants and was several orders of magnitude greater than what empirical data indicates has taken place on the planet.
I believe the increase in CO2 and resulting boom to vegetative health, has increased evapotranspiriation on a global scale, so some of these effects are relevant.
Dr. Spencer has a nice graph of US Cornbelt temperatures during the key growing season months of June-July-August from 1900-2013 vs model forecasts.
http://www.drroyspencer.com/page/3/
Several things are clear:
1. The decade with the most crop threatening heat(by far) was the 1930’s as evidenced by the state record highs from above. A distant 2nd, was the 1950’s.
2. There is zero evidence to show global warming has had any effect on temperatures in this region of the world that results in the highest crop yields on the planet.
3. Climate models are flat out wrong with their upward projection of temperatures…and by an amount that means anybody using them that are aware of this data, are knowingly committing fraud……….. unless the intent is to show the complete lack of skill that climate models have in forecasting temperatures for the Cornbelt during the growing season.

DayHay
May 11, 2014 7:02 pm

Dear Ed,
The job growth numbers need to be 115,000 per month JUST to keep up with new workers entering the work force. So, 200k is squat. The real amazing fact is how BAD things are and we are still making things work. The next fall is really going to be a killer, thank you libtards. Pretty soon no one is going to give a crap about CAGW.

joeldshore
May 11, 2014 7:07 pm

Ed Mertin says:

Now I agree with much of the climate/energy stuff Paul has to say, but using spin to go after spin, people are sick of that.

Maybe you’ll eventually come to realize that the spin pervades his climate/energy stuff too. Really has very little to do with science and a lot to do with Right-wing ideology.

ossqss
May 11, 2014 7:11 pm

When interpolation overtakes observation as “fact”, nothing good could possibly come from it.
Think about it.
Regards, Ed

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