http://spectator.org/articles/55208/...global-warming
The False Alert of Global Warming
         By 
Tom Bethell – From the 
May 2005 issue
GLOBAL WARMING BECAME the environmentalists cause celebre in the late  1980s. They had turned on a dime, for only a few years earlier global  cooling had been their mantra. They didn't know what had caused that  earlier "cooling trend," but its effects were sure to be bad. "The drop  in food output could begin quite soon, perhaps only in ten years," 
Newsweek reported in 1975. "The resulting famines could be catastrophic." 
Now warming is the specter, with its melting glaciers, inundated cities,  and the Gulf Stream reversing course. But I doubt if the enviros can  keep on fomenting the scare much longer. It has been based on little  more than extrapolated temperatures and spurious charts. What are the  facts? Surface temperature measurements show a global warming period  from about 1910 to 1940, followed by a cooling period until 1975. Since  then we have experienced a slight warming trend. These three periods add  up to a surface-temperature increase of perhaps one-degree Fahrenheit  for the entire 20th century.
Satellite measurements of atmospheric temperatures do not agree,  however. They began only in 1979, and have shown no significant increase  over the last quarter century. Balloon readings did show an abrupt,  one-time increase in 1976-1977. Since then, those temperatures have  stabilized.
Environmentalists believe that the 20th-century warming was caused by  human activity, primarily the burning of fossil fuels. That produces  carbon dioxide—one of several "greenhouse gases." The argument is that  their release into the atmosphere wraps the Earth in an invisible  shroud. This makes the escape of heat into outer space slightly more  difficult than its initial absorption from sunlight. This is the  Greenhouse Effect. So the Earth warms up.
But whether man-made carbon-dioxide emissions have caused measurable  temperature increases over the last 30 years is debated. Carbon dioxide  is itself a benign and essential substance, incidentally. Without it,  plants would not grow, and without plant-life animals could not live.  Any increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere causes plants, trees,  and forests to grow more abundantly. It should be a treehugger's  delight.
The surface data suggest that man-made carbon dioxide has not in fact  increased global temperatures. From 1940 to 1975, coal-fired plants  emitted fumes with great abandon and without restraint by Greens. Yet  the Earth cooled slightly in that time. And if man-made global warming  is real, atmospheric as well as surface temperatures should have  increased steadily. But they haven't. There was merely that one-time  increase, possibly caused by a solar anomaly. In addition, an "urban  heat island effect" has been identified. Build a tarmac runway near a  weather station, and the nearby temperature readings will go up.
Global warming became the focus of activism at the time of the Earth  Summit in Rio, in 1992. Bush the elder signed a climate-change treaty,  with signatories agreeing to reduce carbon dioxide emissions below 1990  levels. The details were worked out in Kyoto, Japan. But America was the  principal target, everyone knew it, and Clinton didn't submit the  treaty to the Senate for ratification. The 1990 date had been carefully  chosen. Emissions in Germany and the Soviet Union were still high;  Germany had just absorbed East Germany, then still using inefficient  coal-fired plants. After they were modernized, Germany's emissions  dropped, so the demand that they be reduced below 1990 levels had  already been met and became an exercise in painless moralizing.
The same was true for the Soviet Union. After its collapse, in 1991,  economic activity fell by about one-third. As for France, most of its  electricity comes from nuclear power, which has no global-warming  effects but has been demonized for other reasons. If the enviros were  serious about reducing carbon dioxide they would be urging us to build  nuclear power plants, but that is not on their agenda. They want  windmills (whether or not they kill golden eagles).
Under the Kyoto Protocol, U.S. emissions would have to be cut so much  that economic depression would have been the only certain outcome. We  were expected to reduce energy use by about 35 percent within ten years,  which might have meant eliminating one-third of all cars. You can see  why the enviros fell in love with the idea. 
Third World countries are exempt, as are China and India. Australia,  like the U.S., has refused to ratify. Thirty-five countries, mostly in  Europe, have agreed to reduce emissions. But there are no enforcement  mechanisms, the potential for cheating is unlimited, and the principal  irritation today is that the main enemy, the United States, slipped the  noose.
Any unusual event is now likely to be linked to climate change. Within  24 hours of the tsunami in December, the CBS evening news displayed a  graphic that had only the words "global warming" and "tsunamis." Citing  unnamed "climate experts," Dan Rather intoned:
The claim that the globe is warming depends on knowing earlier  temperatures. Such information can only be obtained indirectly. Climate  scientists depend on tree rings, bore holes, ice cores, the skeletons of  marine organisms. The graph that was most effective in persuading  policy-makers became known as the hockey stick. The temperature line is  mostly horizontal, perhaps declining slightly for 900 years, then  abruptly heading up into a warmer range over the last 100 years. The 900  years are the handle, the last hundred are the blade.
THE "HOCKEY STICK " was first published in 1998 by the climatologist  Michael Mann of the University of Virginia, and co-authors. It was  immediately used by the United Nations to promote the idea that we have  an unprecedented crisis on our hands. But the chart also aroused  suspicions, because for years there had been a broad agreement among  climatologists that global temperatures had not been as unvarying as the  chart implied. There had been something called the Medieval Warm  Period, which persisted until the "Little Ice Age" took hold in the 14th  and 15th centuries. Both periods lasted for several hundred years.
The warmer period, accompanied by a flowering of prosperity, knowledge,  and art in Europe, seems to have been wholly beneficial. Agricultural  yields increased, marshes and swamps—today called wetlands— dried up,  removing the breeding grounds of malaria-spreading mosquitoes. Infant  mortality fell, the population grew. Greenland was settled by the  Vikings, who reached a peak of prosperity in the 12th and 13th  centuries. They began declining in the late 14th century, with the colder weather. Then the settlements perished.
The warm period has been recognized in the climate textbooks for  decades, and it was an obvious embarrassment to those claiming that the  20th-century warming was a true anomaly. Also, the earlier changes  occurred when fossil-fuel consumption could hardly have been the  culprit. They would prove that warming could occur without human  intervention. 
Consider, in this context, the experience of David Deming with the  University of Oklahoma's College of Geosciences. In 1995, he published a  paper in the journal 
Science, reviewing the evidence showing  that bore hole data showed a warming of about one degree Celsius in  North America over the last 100 to 150 years
Whether intentionally or not, that is exactly what Mann's "hockey stick" did. 
Once doomsayers convince us that we are experiencing something new, they  feel free to claim that we face a catastrophe. They can extrapolate  from the minor and beneficial warming that we may (or may not) have  experienced in the last generation and argue that temperatures will keep  on rising until the ice caps melt and cities flood.
Then the hockey stick was challenged by a Toronto minerals consultant  named Stephen McIntyre, who, remarkably, had no credentials as a  climatologist. He spent two years and $5,000 of his own money trying to  uncover Mann's methods. Mann at first did give him some information, but  then cut him off saying he didn't have time to respond to "every  frivolous note" from nonscientists. McIntyre was joined by another  Canadian, and in 2003 they published a critical article. Mann had "used  flawed methods that yield meaningless results. "
In a rebuttal, Mann revealed new information that had not appeared in  his original paper. It had been published in the British journal 
Nature,  which later published a correction. McIntyre thinks there may be more  errors but still doesn't know how the graph was generated. Mann has  refused to release his secret formula. A Wall Street Journal reporter  doggedly pursued the matter and contacted Mann. He told the reporter:  "Giving them the algorithm would be giving in to the intimidation  tactics that these people are engaged in."
Michael Mann now concedes it is plausible that past temperature  variations may have been larger than thought. Fred Singer, a leading  critic of warming scares and founder of the Science and Environmental  Policy Project, says that "the hockey stick is dead." He was recently  nominated by warmists to receive the First Annual Flat Earth Award for  being "the year's most prominent global warming denier." Nominated along  with him were Rush Limbaugh and Michael Crichton, the thriller writer.
In his recent book 
State of Fear, Crichton unexpectedly emerged  as a powerful critic of modish conclusions about global warming. He  studied the subject for a couple of years before writing his recent  hook, to which he added an appendix comparing global-warming science to  eugenics. Earlier, in a speech at Caltech, he had compared it to the  search for extraterrestrials (which he says is based on bogus science).  There may have been some warming as a part of a natural trend, Crichton  allows. But "no one knows how much of the present trend might be natural  or how much man-made."
"Open and frank discussion" of global warming is being suppressed, he  believes. One indication is that "so many of the outspoken critics of  global warming are retired professors." They can speak freely because  they are no longer seeking grants or facing colleagues "whose grant  applications and career advancement may be jeopardized by their  criticisms."
Environmentalists have become adept at de-legitimizing their opponents  by saying they are "supported by industry," but studies funded by  environmentalist organizations are "every bit as biased," Crichton  added. They have become a special interest like any other, with  legislative goals and millions spent on lobbying.
Myron Ebell, who works for the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) in  Washington, D.C., one of the few groups that examines global-warming  claims skeptically, says that environmentalism is now a $1.5 billion  industry. In Washington, skeptics (like himself) are outnumbered by  global warming advocates perhaps by a margin of 300 to one. Yet CEI,  greatly underfunded by comparison with groups like the Sierra Club,  tends to be characterized in the media as "industry supported." The  enviros' problem is that they have "everything going for them except the  facts, " Ebell says. 
Some environmentalists have begun to echo the complaint that they are a  special interest. A few months ago, Michael Shellenberger and Ted  Norhaus wrote a widely circulated 14,000-word essay called "The Death of  Environmentalism." It "provoked a civil war among tree huggers,"  Nicholas D. Kristof wrote in the 
New York Times. In effect, it  was a cry of anguish: Why have we been unable to win on our top issues,  especially global warming? They called it "the world's most serious  ecological crisis," which "may kill hundreds of millions of human beings  over the next century." They looked back to their golden age in the  1970s–the time when they began "using science to define the problem as  'environmental.' "
"Using science" is what they were doing, all right, and the rest of us  were blinded by it, for about 25 years. But the problem wasn't that the  use of science had led them to propose unattractive "technical fixes,"  when they should have been appealing to something larger in the human  spirit. The problem was that their science was never very good to begin  with. And as its inadequacies became more apparent, their scare tactics  became more apparent, too. 
To keep the money rolling in, environmentalists always need a crisis. It looks as though they will have to cook up a new one.