Greenpeace Co-Founder Tells Congress To Ignore UN’s Latest Extinction Warning

Patrick_Moore_Greenpeace-e1552484501406From The Daily Caller

9:39 AM 05/22/2019 | Energy

Michael Bastasch | Energy Editor

  • Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore will testify before Congress on the U.N.’s alarming biodiversity report.
  • Moore says the report’s “highly exaggerated claims” are “a front for a radical political, social, and economic ‘transformation’ of our entire civilization.”
  • The U.N. report warned that 1 million plant and animal species could be at risk of extinction due to human development and global warming.

Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore will tell House lawmakers an alarming United Nations report on biodiversity is political activism masquerading as credible science, according to written testimony.

“It is clear that the highly exaggerated claims of the [U.N.] are not so much out of concern for endangered species as they are a front for a radical political, social, and economic ‘transformation’ of our entire civilization,” Moore will tell lawmakers Wednesday, according to written testimony The Daily Caller News Foundation obtained.

Moore is set to testify in front of the House Committee on Natural Resources, sitting alongside U.N. scientists who recently issued an alarming report warning that 1 million species were threatened with extinction.

“Their recommendation for an end to economic growth alone condemns the developing world to increased poverty and suffering, and economic stagnation in the developed countries,” Moore wrote.

Experts on the U.N.’s biodiversity panel, called the IPBES, will likely present a different picture than Moore. Sir Robert Watson, a British chemist who led the most recent IPBES assessment, called the report an “ominous warning.” (RELATED: Media Company Came Up With A New Term For Climate Change. Critics Say It’s Just More Fear-Mongering)

Scientists of the IPBES Hien Ngo, Eduardo Brondizio, Anne Larigauderie, Chair of the IPBES Robert Watson, Sandra Diaz, Josef Settele and Paul Leadley attend a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, May 6, 2019. Michel Euler/Pool via REUTERS
Scientists of the IPBES Hien Ngo, Eduardo Brondizio, Anne Larigauderie, Chair of the IPBES Robert Watson, Sandra Diaz, Josef Settele and Paul Leadley attend a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, May 6, 2019. Michel Euler/Pool via REUTERS

“The health of ecosystems on which we and all other species depend is deteriorating more rapidly than ever,” Watson said on the assessment’s release in early May.

The IPBES report generated apocalyptic media headlines. A CNN correspondent summarized the report as humans need to be “consuming less, polluting less and having fewer children.”

“This is not a new phenomenon,” Moore says. “The so-called Sixth Great Extinction has been predicted for decades. It has not come to pass, similar to virtually every doomsday prediction made in human history.”

Moore is skeptical of IPBES’s extinction warning, which is an extrapolation of data gathered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Moore put more weight behind the IUCN numbers.

The IUCN has evaluated roughly 98,500 plant and animal species since 2000. Of those, the IUCN considers about 27,100 threatened with extinction, but that also includes “vulnerable species” with a small chance of extinction this century.

IPBES assessed that “an average of around 25 percent of species in assessed animal and plant groups are threatened, suggesting that around one million species already face extinction, many within decades, unless action is taken.” That’s based on highly uncertain estimates there are 8 million species on Earth.

Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO and former IPBES Chair Robert Watson attend a news conference on the launching of a landmark report on the damage done by modern civilisation to the natural world by the IPBES at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, France, May 6, 2019. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO and former IPBES Chair Robert Watson attend a news conference on the launching of a landmark report on the damage done by modern civilisation to the natural world by the IPBES at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, France, May 6, 2019. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

“This is highly unprofessional,” Moore says. “Scientists should not — in fact, cannot — predict estimates of endangered species or species extinction based on millions of undocumented species.”

“The IBPES claims there are 8 million species,” Moore says. “Yet only 1.8 million species have been identified and named. Thus the IBPES believes there are 6.2 million unidentified and unnamed species. Therefore one million of the unknown species could go extinct overnight and we would not notice it because we would not know they had existed.”

The IUCN admits its assessments focus “on those species that are likely to be threatened” and that any extrapolation “would be heavily biased” — in other words, an overestimate.

When reached for comment, however, the IUCN said “it is wholly appropriate for scientific researchers such as the IPBES assessment authors to” extrapolate extinction threats based on their limited data. IUCN experts worked on the IPBES report, the group said.

The IPBES told TheDCNF its experts “conservatively” extrapolated out the extinction based on methods “that have been subjected to no fewer than two full rounds of open international peer-review over a three year period.”

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observa
May 25, 2019 8:00 am

“This is highly unprofessional,” Moore says. “Scientists should not — in fact, cannot — predict estimates of endangered species or species extinction based on millions of undocumented species.”

It sure is unprofessional pulling numbers out of your derriere-

‘Scientists have identified about 120,000 species of fungi so far, but estimate there are as many as 3.3 million species in all. By comparison, all living mammals comprise fewer than 6,400 species.’
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/techandscience/how-did-life-arrive-on-land-a-billion-year-old-fungus-may-hold-clues/ar-AABL0dO

Amber
May 25, 2019 1:49 pm

Patrick Moore was a Green Peace co founder (I know because he was a main reason I joined as a kid . ) He was also one if not the only scientist at the time . Green Peace is a corporate bull shit machine now .
The UN has been hijacked by socialist worshipers who crave one world government and massive government intervention in the affairs of sovereign nations .
Maurice Strong , a Canadian was very pro China , went to live there , and wanted to use scary climate as a means to fund the globalist ambitions .
The UN can be a force for good but it has strayed from the core mission to be a front for stealing countries autonomy . Guess who will be pulling the strings ? It sure won’t be the USA who just gets stuck with most of the bill .

Rudolf Huber
May 26, 2019 9:25 am

Once upon a time, I worked as the Head of Business Development in a gas trading company. As a direct report to the MD I sat in on a weekly meeting where the leading managers of the company discussed the status of things. At one of those meetings, we were presented a market assessment with lots of linear growth predictions. Of course, in proper bureaucratic fashion, they put in high growth, low growth, and a median scenario. It immediately struck me as foolish so I asked if they had even considered something non-linear or, god forbid, no growth but rather market contraction. You should have seen the looks I got. I hardly need to mention that I was not very popular after this. That was when European gas was still on a drug called “endless growth”. Lots of assumptions and projections in this and it all turned out to be garbage. I am happy Dr. Moore brings a bit of sanity to this madness. Projections and assumptions are opinions, no facts. Time for that to sink in.