AEF Climate News -  December 2018

A review and commentary on topical matters concerning the science, economics, and governance associated with climate change developments.

By Alan Moran

1 December 2018

Developments in the Science of Climate Change

A paper published in Nature by Resplendy et al received much publicity with the claim that the oceans are warming as a precursor to atmospheric warming.  However Nicholas Lewis, “based only on published information” uncovered “apparently serious (but surely inadvertent) errors in the underlying calculations” which negate the paper’s conclusions. One of the paper’s co-authors, Ralph Keeling has acknowledged the paper’s mistakes.

 

The global warming hysteria depends upon a half life of CO2 at 200 or so years but, based on analysis of atomic bomb tests, NZ research has indicated that it is only 10 years.  Hence it takes only 20 years rather than 400 for three quarters of today's emissions to be naturally removed from the atmosphere. 

 

Governor Brown says climate change caused California’s wild fires but the chart below places them in perspective.

This article explains why it is governments that are culpable because they resist burn-offs.  Federal Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said, “When lawsuit after lawsuit by, yes, the radical environmental groups that would rather burn down the entire forest than cut a single tree or thin the forest, then it’s easy to find who is suing and who promulgates these destructive policies. Take a look at who’s suing — every time there’s a thinning project”.

 

But yet another report, which the President does not believe, by US catastrophian scientists (including Obama hangovers) predicts doom unless climate change is stopped.  Among its absurdities is the prophesy that continued use of coal and other fossil fuels will eliminate 10 percent of the GDP by the end of the century. Even if true, the Wall Street Journal points out that at a modest growth of 1.6 per cent per annum, the economy would be three times richer in the 70 years that the costs would take to occur.  Roger Pielke addresses 15 incorrect statements in the report. The study overlooked data showing no change in hurricanes and their damage over the course of the past 120 years. Nor did it benefit from research by a doyenne of the scientific community, Judith Curry, which concludes that the sea level rises since 1993 have been on the same trend since the mid 19th century.

International Politics and Diplomacy

Over the coming days the next round of global climate talks takes place in Katowice, Poland. Agitprop for the meeting is at full bore with green groups claiming coal killed 7,600 people in Europe during 2016. The Katowice assembly is preceded by the G20 meeting in Argentina, which has only a weak endorsement of the Paris Agreement.

 

Not unsurprisingly, a meeting of foreign ministers from the EU and several smaller Asian countries, endorsed the merits of peace, free trade and female equality, and called “for urgent and effective action in line with the Paris Agreement”. The EU continues its pursuit of economic self-destruction with a plan for zero net emissions by 2050. Naturally, the plan is accompanied by the normal assumption-driven modelling that "proves", in addition to environmental benefits, there will be higher income levels (2 per cent) as a result of following the course it advocates. 

 

However UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres is despondent about the Katowice meeting’s outcome and blames the rise of “nationalism”. The US is undermining the agreement’s massive aid provisions and has been joined by Brazil in hostility to emission restraints, the new foreign minister calling cIimate change a marxist fraud. Among major signatories ($) to the Paris Agreement, China is not only permitted a vast expansion of emissions but is reneging on its promises to curtail coal.  Few countries have set out formal commitments sufficient to meet their Paris pledges.  According to the UN Environment Program, that leaves only Japan (which has 30 new coal power stations planned!), among the top 20 economies ostensibly on track to meet pledged reductions in CO2.

 

The activist World Resources Institute provides this handy guide.

Ahead of the Katowice meeting, the monster UN Emissions Gap report provides an agenda for taxing everything to reduce CO2.  The IEA produced data that demonstrated little chance of the world’s emissions declining. According to Bloomberg, even if a massive increase in electrification takes place with spending on clean energy at $2.4 trillion per year (that is 25 per cent above ALL current energy spending and 12 per cent of total investment spending) and elimination of coal. Here is a summary of the possible trajectories.

As part of the diplomatic tussle between China and the West, Papua New Guinea ($) is to get aid for electrification but the choice is hydro and coal with allegedly low cost “modern” wind and solar a non-starter!

National Political Developments 

Washington State’s voters rejected (56-44) a proposal to introduce a carbon tax, which according to its sponsors, would create jobs and cut pollution.  The state Governor, Jay Inslee, is known as “the climate guy”.  Passage of the initiative would have brought the first US carbon tax.  Billionaire liberal activist Tom Steyer funded a proposition in Arizona to require 50 per cent wind/solar for electricity which was also rejected (70-30) by voters.  Colorado rejected a proposition (though 43 per cent voted for it) that would have restrained fracking technology, putting 85 per cent of the state off limits. 

 

In spite of the massive resources promoting these proposals Vox’s spin was, “Fossil fuel money crushed clean energy ballot initiatives across the country”.

 

In Quebec, activist lawyers are suing Ontario on behalf of children. A similar case is falling apart in California. The Canadian case follows Ontario’s rejection of a carbon tax with some doctors joining the condemnation. Ontario is, however, unwisely considering a variation of Australia’s “direct action” including buyouts of emissions, real and imagined, a policy I addressed here. 

 

The EU is concerned that Brexit might mean UK weakening its impositions targeted at preventing the human-induced climate change myth and, to avoid loss of competitiveness, is insisting on the UK maintaining EU policies. There seems little risk of a departure from these under the UK Environment Minister Michael Gove who cites WWF as a credible source, rehearses the usual litany of climatic disasters (floods, droughts, hurricanes, rising oceans, etc) and commits £6 billion to help developing countries avoid or mitigate these outcomes. 

 

But spontaneously hi-viz yellow jacketed demonstrations have erupted in France against the constant hiking of fuel prices to reduce carbon dioxide “pollution”.  In pursuit of an “energy transition” from fossil fuels and nuclear, the Macron government has also banned fracking and any extraction of fossil fuels.

 

Ireland may face its own unrest having discovered that it will need to raise its per capita carbon impost from the current €100 to €1,500. That’s based on a CO2 tax of €300 per tonne, though the formulae of the IPCC report shows the tax required in 2030 for the 1.5ºC of warming pathway would vary between $US135 and $5,500 per tonne (the 2013 repealed Australian carbon tax was a mere $24 per tonne).

 

The Australian electorate is generally hostile to coal and under the Greens policy, it would no longer be legal to dig, burn or ship thermal coal by 2030. But even if the most ambitious plans for introducing renewables were to be met, there would need to be economically crippling 35 per cent cuts in emissions from agriculture and transport ($). Australia met its commitments to reduce emissions under the Kyoto Protocol, which it ratified in 2007, by using planning laws at the expense of farmers and agriculture generally. That approach would now require cuts in agricultural output and force farmers to return their land to wilderness. 

 

Half of recent Australian emission increases are caused by one natural gas project (Gorgon) which has not implemented an impossibly expensive and worthless carbon-capture-and-storage adjunct to its production. The Greens prefer to forego the project’s $80 billion in investment and $100 billion in taxes. Australia is the world’s largest producer of liquified natural gas, which has half coal’s CO2 emissions.

 

The electorally confident Australian Labor Party launched its energy and environment policy. It features massive new subsidies for renewables to lift their electricity market share to 50 per cent, and a comical support plan for household batteries; the measures also seek to limit political damage by promising to retrain displaced coal energy workers. I commented on the policy here and  here. 

Whimsy

Heatwaves are said to be wiping out beetles by reducing their fertility which the Guardian says “could … also be a warning to humankind” and could, of course, be linked to global warming.  Sperm counts are lower in hot countries and yet these are the ones showing population increases!  Here are the countries, all of them hot, with the highest fertility rates.

Those pesky polar bears supposedly threatened by global warming are growing into plague proportions and cull programs in Canada are under consideration.

 

Elsewhere we learn that an academic got a grant to prove that, though research had previously shown that the Pacific oyster’s taste might not be adversely affected by future climate change, there may be an impact on its nutritional value. 

 

Australian scientist Terry Hughes has had his research funding discontinued but he did get the Guardian’s John Maddox prize for inventing the Great Barrier Reef bleaching concerns and condemning the Adani coal mine (now under way). The prize is named after a journalist-scientist who once described AIDS as a "perhaps non-existent condition".

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