“Hockey stick” conjurer Michael Mann’s recent article bemoaned how, even on vacation, he couldn’t get away from his work. He traveled to Glacier National Park and was confronted with the “spectre of climate change” in the form of melting glaciers.
Climatologist David Legates, on the other hand, points out that those glaciers have been melting since around 1860! Instead of crying about Earth’s climate, he spent his vacation much more productively: celebrating the wondrous contributions that hydrocarbon energy has made in our lives and living standards over the last 150 years. He shares his experiences in this informative commentary.
What I did on my summer vacation – another climatologist’s perspective
by Dr. David R. Legates
I recently read an article in which “hockey stick” creator and climatologist Michael Mann discussed his summer vacation. Reporting on his travels to Montana, Dr. Mann lamented the fact that glaciers in Glacier National Park are receding. He blamed this on human-caused climate change. He said he tried to get away from work but just couldn’t, because the “spectre of climate change stares you in the face as you tour the park.”
I likewise did my level best to get away from life, but was no more successful. You see, I’m a not just a climatologist. I am also a human being, and am acutely aware of the life-long struggle for survival experienced by billions of destitute, desperate people on our planet – and of the innovative, determined human spirit that stares you in the face as you peruse the daily news and tour our nation’s museums.
Dr. Mann was viewing glaciers that have actually been receding since the end of the Little Ice Age, back around 1860. He got upset because he thinks (and wants us to believe) that they have been losing ice only since 1975 or so – and it’s our fault, because carbon dioxide emissions from our cars, factories, electricity generating plants, home heating units and other sources are causing “unprecedented” global warming.
I instead visited three museums that are within a one-hour drive from my home: the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania in Strasbourg, PA, the Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware, and the Chesapeake-Delaware Canal Museum in Chesapeake City, Maryland.
What I saw underscored how far we Americans have come since the Civil War and Industrial Revolution, in large part because of fossil fuel-driven technology – and how far billions of less fortunate people worldwide still have to go, to achieve a standard of living, health and welfare close to what we enjoy. Unfortunately, and unforgivably, they are being held back by policies that elevate misplaced concern about hydrocarbon energy and “dangerous manmade climate change” above the needs of people.
At the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania you see the impacts the railway had on building this great nation. From simple steam engines that could carry just two people, to huge steam locomotives that connected our country’s two far-flung shores, to the diesel and electric locomotives that built the industrial backbone of this country, the ingenuity of the last 150-plus years sits quietly on display as an historical reminder of our legacy.
The Air Mobility Command Museum is a testimony not just to aviation, but to air cargo transportation. The amazing machines, and the intrepid men and women who flew them, helped us move equipment and supplies to support troops, provide assistance in areas ravaged by natural disasters or human catastrophes, and keep freedom alive in places like West Berlin during the 1948-49 airlift.
They also stand as marvelous monuments to human innovation – and a testament to our ability and determination to support freedom and democracy, and lend assistance when needed to the plight of those less fortunate, even when located in the far reaches of our planet.
Connecting two important waterways, the Chesapeake-Delaware Canal is truly a miracle of human entrepreneurship. Originally dug by hand, the fourteen-mile-long canal connects the Chesapeake and Delaware Bays, reducing the shipping distance from Baltimore to Philadelphia by nearly 300 miles.
Eventually, the canal was deepened and its locks removed, to allow goods to be shipped directly by ocean-going vessels without having to offload them to a turnpike, or later the railway. This greatly increased the region’s economic viability and encouraged development of the mid-Atlantic area.
But as I looked these monuments, I did so with sadness. This ingenuity was brought about by forward-looking men and women who used their energies to develop machines and enhance their efficiency, with the ultimate goal of helping humankind.
Today, however, there are those who see this effort as wrong and (dare I say it?) even evil. They want to restrict energy and its availability, and thereby limit our ingenuity, innovation and progress by draining the very lifeblood that made these earlier developments possible. Without coal and oil, there would have been no railroads and no cargo transportation, either by air or by sea.
Democracy would likely have been but a distant memory in most of Europe and Southeast Asia – or maybe not even a memory at all. The United States would not have developed as it did, and it certainly would not be the world’s leader in innovative thinking that it is today. It is quite likely that we would not be far removed from the conditions in which Africa currently finds itself.
These three museums only offer a small glimpse at the myriad of marvels produced by human ingenuity, and the role that hydrocarbon energy has played in them since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution. The development of inexpensive energy led to phenomenal, previously unheard of increases in industrial output and worker efficiency, in wages and free time, in living standards and human health and welfare.
They also provided us with the weekend and vacation time, and the physical wherewithal, to experience the wonders of God’s creation — as well as the ability to attend to environmental stewardship.
It is all these opportunities that people in undeveloped and under-developed countries wish to emulate. But for that to happen, we must help keep the cost of energy low and shun policies and practices that make it expensive and unreliable. If we make energy so expensive that only the rich can afford it, the poor and the vulnerable will be denied access, and will be condemned to nasty, brutal and short lives marked by squalor, deprivation, starvation and disease.
I find it immoral to suggest that the abject poverty, disease and malnutrition that still afflict much of the world must be ignored, while we concern ourselves with “saving the planet from global warming.”
Are national park glaciers – whose existence and demise are affected primarily by the same natural forces that repeatedly spawned and melted mile-high, continent-wide Pleistocene ice fields – more important than the more unfortunate inhabitants of our planet? Assuming, of course, that by addressing greenhouse gas emissions we can positively alter the planet’s climate, or that we can know what climate is optimal.
It is ironic that it is our affluence – created by our technological innovations and use of hydrocarbons – which has allowed us to become environmentally conscious. When people are in dire need of food, clothing, shelter and other basic necessities of life, they cannot be concerned with environmental issues. To cite just one example of thousands, because the people of India and Bangladesh are so poor, the Ganges River serves as both their source of drinking water and their cesspool for untreated sewage. Their poverty prevents them from focusing on even the most basic environmental concerns.
Moreover, freedom and energy availability go hand-in-hand. Oppression thrives when subjects are kept poor and deprived of technological advancements. When people have the time and ability to travel and communicate, to be innovative, and to organize to produce a better way of life or fight a common enemy – freedom grows. Inexpensive energy is the key to ending both poverty and oppression.
More than two million people will visit Glacier National Park this year, to marvel at nature. I wonder how they would have gotten there … or whether they would have had the time to do so … if it were not for the transportation innovations that resulted from hydrocarbon fuels.
I would encourage them to visit these museums – or museums like them – to see what humans have built, and ponder what our future will likely be if backward-thinking policies cause their legacy to vanish. May they marvel at the wonders of nature, and perhaps lament the loss of glaciers. But may they also lament the loss of life caused by too little use of fossil fuels, not by too much of such life-enhancing fuels.
__________
David R. Legates, PhD, CCM, is a Professor of Climatology at the University of Delaware in Newark, Delaware, USA.
h/t to Paul Driessen
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Use the goathaunt.gov web cam
They have the current temp at the ranger stations up.
This hour there 34 F and that is at a low elevation.
They also have the dates they will close some roads due to expected snow.
Sept. 15th or so this year. When faced with facts they act.
When the msm will lie them a path they take the lie path.
Glacier Park has five or six web cams, when it snows you can see it.
It is not a Mann made hockey stick.
Yesterday was fine. Today is foul. I CAN SEE CLIMATE CHANGE FROM MY BACK YARD!!!
I must apologize to Michael Mann since it appears my getting in the car and driving to Glacier National Park for vacation has clearly been one contributing factor to his inability to enjoy getting on the plane and then driving (I don’t, for one second, believe he bicycled through the park) around Glacier National Park for his vacation.
Ok, it was more than a few years ago that I went there, but Carbon is forever.
Let thy conscience be quieted. Carbon (at least the carbon you’re referring to here) is NOT forever. As CO2 it cycles continually from the atmosphere into and out of various natural ‘carbon sinks’. I’m sure there are other commenters who can quote the exact figure of the time it takes CO2 to cycle in/out of the atmosphere. It’s a matter of mere single or low double digit years. Maybe you’re punning ‘diamonds are forever’. Diamonds, of course, are a crystalline structure of pure carbon atoms and like any other atom are indestructible unless subjected to thermonuclear processes (or enough heat and pressure to nearly duplicate them). So the CO2 you emitted all those years ago is pushing up daisies or trees somewhere. That’s a GOOD thing!
Michael Mann does not bicycle. He has a wooden tricycle. With wooden wheels. (You can count the tree-rings on them.)
NWS weather for Glacier Park area.
OK, today, high of 60 F lower elevations.
Tue, Wed. Thur. this week lows below freezing, snow with highs of 30 F.
Mike just needs to work more with Gore he is only off a week or so.
Had he waited he could have made a snowmann graph too.
Is this Mann’s first field work?
Kenny
September 6, 2014 at 7:05 am
Global Thermonuclear War? How about a nice game of chess? (j/k)
____________________________
***GGG***
“The only winning move is not to play.”
Thats what that abominable Mann and his bunch of deadheads have forgotten. They are trying to manipulate a self-regulating, well-working system because of their skewed ideas.
Michael Mann is such a gaseous clown. Of course he knew what he was going to see in Glacier National Park, and pretending that receding glaciers there are a phenomenon of human generated “climate change” in the past few decades is simply dishonest. Those glaciers have been retreating since the mid-19th century, as discussed above. The Manniac would have done better to expend more fossil fuels to get himself to Glacier Bay, Alaska, where he could view the dramatic retreat of glaciers since…. sometime after 1794 but long before 1879.
On John Muir’s visit there in 1879, he and his companions observed the dramatic changes since George Vancouver’s explorations of 1794:
[John Muir 1879]
[John Muir 1879]
changes from 1794 to 1916
For an example of Mannian method, there is this example of dishonesty by omission — no mention of Muir discussing the receding glaciers on our National Park Service’s page for John Muir. It is just about impossible to learn anything about John Muir’s 1879 visit and not know that he was so struck by the changes since Vancouver’s 1794 expedition. Yet, our National Park Service uses Muir without mention of the most dramatic aspect of his visit:
no mention of John Muir’s 19th century observations of dramatic retreat of glaciers in Glacier Bay
note: in my last paragraph “this example of dishonesty by omission” refers to the NPS page linked at the bottom of my comment
Love the web cams.
Mount Washington weather station at the top current.
http://www.mountwashington.org/weather/cam/deck/
Wind from West 54 mph
Temp 54F with a wind chill of 0
6800 ‘ up.
Memo for Michael Mann: Glaciers melt during the summer and accumulate snow in the winter. That is just how the system works.
Which is it, is Michael mann an incompetent scientist, a scumbag scientist or maybe just a scumbag.
He knows the receding glaciers in Glacier National Park have little if anything to do with human activity (he can’t be that stupid). I think he is just a run of the mill regular scumbag.
The Mann from UNCLE discovers SPECTRE melting glaciers?
United Nations Climate Lying Extrapolators
Skeptical People Enjoying Carbon, The Resultant Energy.
News flash Mikey Mann, its worse than we thought. Global warming has caused your brain to evaporate. Its been shrinking for years, but now it is all gone.
What I did on my summer vacation (2014) – a non-climatologist’s perspective
Cruise on the Thames River in London. I told my young daughter it used to freeze during winters in the 17th century. It stopped freezing since the 19th century.
Visited the Royal Observatory at Greenwich. One of the oldest observatories in the world where the Prime Meridian is located. The British invented the Greenwich Meridian Time (GMT) to accurately measure time to coordinate train schedules.
Visited the Museum of Science and Industry at Manchester. This city was at the heart of the Industrial Revolution. It had the first public railroad in the world – the Liverpool-Manchester railroad. Automated textile manufacturing and precision machine tools were invented in this city.
Visited the Museum of Natural History at Manchester University. Incredible dinosaur bones. They became extinct long before man walked on earth. Not all extinctions are due to man. The first stored-program computer was made in this University by Alan Turing et al.
I know just how the great mann feels. I recently took a trip to northern New Hampshire and was shocked – shocked I tell you – to find that the glaciers on the presidential range have melted completely away. Completely!
Not only that; some of the mountains in Coos county have eroded so much that they are now just hills. Some are now not even 2000ft. high. Something very serious is going on and it is far worse than we thought.