Notice I use the English spelling and not
the American (skeptic) for those who may think I can’t spell (although I’m not
infallible).
Not so long ago, North Carolina passed a bill to ‘bar state agencies from considering accelerated sea level rise in
decision-making until 1 July 2016’. Apparently, this is a watered-down version
of the original bill, which I believe didn’t have the 4 year moratorium. I
learnt about it because it was reported in the Letters section of New
Scientist. What worries me is the mentality behind this: the belief that we
can legislate against nature. In
other words, if scientists start making predictions about sea-level rise, it’s
forbidden. The legislation doesn’t state that sea level rise can’t happen but
that any science-based predictions must be ignored.
This mentality also exists in Australia
where there seems to be an unspoken yet tacit belief that we can vote against
climate-change politically. There is a serious disconnect here: nature doesn’t
belong to any political party; it’s not a constituency. The current leader of
the opposition in Australian Federal politics, Tony Abbott, won his position
(within the Party or Cabinet room) over the incumbent, on this very issue. The
incumbent leader, Malcolm Turnbull, felt so strongly over the moral issue of
human-induced climate-change he put his leadership on the line and lost, by 1
vote (in 2009).
This interview with Climate Central's chief climatologist, Heidi Cullen, from Princeton University, helps to put this issue
into perspective. We don’t live at the poles where evidence of climate change
is most apparent. The signs are there and we need to trust the people who can
read the signs, whom we call scientists. Malcolm Turnbull, who lost his job
over this, made the point that there is something wrong with a society when we can't trust our scientists – they are our brains trust.
In Australia, the sceptics argue that this
is a global conspiracy by climatologists to keep themselves in jobs and maintain
an influx of funding. In other words, as long as they keep maintaining that
there is a problem, governments will keep giving them money, whereas, if they
tell the ‘truth’ the funding will stop. This is so ludicrous one can’t waste
words on it. In Australia, scientists working on climate-change were sent
death-threats, which demonstrates the mentality of the people who oppose it.
Again, there is an irrational-held belief that if only scientists would write
the right reports that tell us climate-change is a furphy, then it won’t happen
– the problem will simply go away.
Addendum: I learnt today (8 Sep 2012) that the NSW government has done something similar: revoked local council laws indicating coastal properties which may be subject to sea-level rise based on IPCC predictions.
Addendum: I learnt today (8 Sep 2012) that the NSW government has done something similar: revoked local council laws indicating coastal properties which may be subject to sea-level rise based on IPCC predictions.
2 comments:
You made some good points there. I checked on the internet for additional information about the issue and found most individuals will go along with your views on
this website.
My website > global warming
Hi Anonymous,
For some reason your comment went to spam.
Regards, Paul.
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