Blog

A Tide Turning?

by Iain Murray on January 20, 2009

in Science

Very interesting new poll from Rasmussen that suggests a significant reversal in public opinion over the causes of global warming.

Forty-four percent (44%) of U.S. voters now say long-term planetary trends are the cause of global warming, compared to 41% who blame it on human activity.

Seven percent (7%) attribute global warming to some other reason, and nine percent (9%) are unsure in a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.

Fifty-nine percent (59%) of Democrats blame global warming on human activity, compared to 21% percent of Republicans. Two-thirds of GOP voters (67%) see long-term planetary trends as the cause versus 23% of Democrats. Voters not affiliated with either party by eight points put the blame on planetary trends.

In July 2006, 46% of voters said global warming is caused primarily by human activities, while 35% said it is due to long-term planetary trends.

In April of last year, 47% of Americans blamed human activity versus 34% who viewed long-term planetary trends as the culprit. But the numbers have been moving in the direction of planetary trends since then.

I must put in the obligatory disclaimer here: I believe that the weight of the scientific evidence points towards human activity having an effect on climate. However, I also believe that this effect is minor and that it is likely to remain minor. Which means that I believe these 44% are wrong. But what is and isn’t true actually isn’t the case here.

The truth is that political action in a democracy depends on what people believe, not on what actually is fact. This significant reversal trend suggests that it will be much harder to justify significant costs – particularly at household level – to combat global warming.

The new Administration and Congress would therefore be wise to step away from expensive anti-energy measures and concentrate instead on improving the resiliency and adaptive capacity of those who are most vulnerable should global warming turn out to be a problem. Otherwise, they run the risk of the electorate reacting like Batman.

When President Bush leaves office today, will the capital be warmer or colder than when he was sworn in eight years ago?

It’s not scientifically meaningful, but it is interesting.

Bush has been heavily criticized for doing precious little to curb our emissions of carbon dioxide. During his eight years in office, atmospheric CO2 levels climbed by over four percent.

So what did Bush’s dilly-dallying produce in terms of deadly global warming? The temperature at noon in Washington DC will give us one factoid. It’s a scientifically meaningless factoid, since the local temperature on any one day, let alone any one hour, tells us nothing about long-term temperature trends, but it’s heavy in symbolism.

When Bush was first sworn in, in 2001, the temperature at noon in DC was 36 degrees F. What will it be today, when he leaves office? Will the capital be warmer or colder than when he took office eight years ago?

Don’t be surprised if it’s colder. Today’s forecast is for relatively low temperatures. More importantly, despite steady increases in atmospheric CO2, and despite everything you’ve heard about climate catastrophe, there’s been no warming for about the last decade, and the planet has actually cooled over the last three years. (This is from the British Hadley Centre’s data on land and sea surface temperatures. The Centre’s global surface temperature graph shows this in somewhat compressed form, but you can easily graph its data yourself to get a better idea.)

That should lead us to ask where’s the warming?

But first, let’s see what the temperature is at noon, when President Obama is sworn in.

And I repeat–this is scientifically meaningless, but I think it’s interesting.

(As for Bush’s failure to curb CO2 emissions, I doubt that even stringent curbs would have had any effect on atmospheric CO2 levels.  More importantly, that failure was, I believe, a good thing in terms of affordable energy and human wefare.  And the CO2 curbs that Bush did support and which will soon go into effect, such as higher fuel efficiency standards for cars, will prove extremely harmful to both consumers and the auto industry.  But that’s off topic, sort of.)

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nzvYLrkRwY 285 234]

The carbon footprint of Barack Obama's inauguration could exceed 575 million pounds of CO2. According to the Institute for Liberty, it would take the average U.S. household nearly 60,000 years of naughty ecological behavior to produce a carbon footprint equal to the largest self-congratulatory event in the history of humankind.

Please pay no attention to the evidence right outside your windows! Despite the fact that we are experiencing the coldest weather in decades, Kevin Grandia blogging at the Huffington Post wants you to ignore this and start worrying about the growing trend of global warming skepticism. According to Grandia, questioning the holy theology of the Church of Global Warming is a seriously disturbing heresy. He even catalogued the increased levels of global warming skepticism by analyzing Google search stats in excruciating detail:

He boasts his own self-declared army and the support of 13 governors, 53 congressmen and 180 mayors, along with the Sierra Club and the American Lung Association. He has plugged his cause on countless news shows and spent $60 million of his own money on a massive ad spree.

Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, the Republican who wore the black hat during the congressional debate on bailing out Detroit's automakers, visited the North American International Auto Show Tuesday to see firsthand what automobiles mean to Detroit. It would have been more useful had Congress sent U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

Paul Chesser, Climate Strategies Watch

Our friends at the Institute for Liberty and The Chilling Effect have cobbled together some “conservative” estimates of how much carbon will be emitted at next week’s swearin’ (in) of the green new president. They came up with a total of 575 million pounds of CO2 as the likely figure.

Will anyone of eco-conscience decide not to go now based on their principles?

Paulson on Energy Rationing

by Julie Walsh on January 15, 2009

in Blog

Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson took time out of his busy schedule wasting 700 billion dollars of taxpayer money (and thereby turning a credit crisis into a depression) to speak at Resources for the Future on Monday afternoon on the subject of how markets can address climate change and other environmental problems. What he meant of course is, how can markets be manipulated by government to achieve outcomes desired by government? He looked somber and did not laugh or smile at the pleasantries made when he was being introduced, but he didn’t look exhausted, worried, or baffled, either. I guess spending other people’s money, even when getting so little for such stupendous amounts, is always fun.

Despite good questions from RFF President Phil Sharp, Paulson spoke in generalities and didn’t give anything away. He did say that the science on global warming was clear and overwhelming. Paulson defended President Bush’s record and said that he didn’t think the president had gotten credit for changing the global debate on what to do about global warming in three important ways. First, Bush had convinced the world that any actions to reduce emissions must involve all major emitting nations and not just the developed nations. Second, he had convinced people that developing new technologies was the key to reducing emissions. And third, Bush had emphasized the role of trade.

Paulson said that Treasury would play a key role in developing climate policies because the critical thing was getting the price signal right, which was something Treasury knew about. He commended Billy Pizer, whom Paulson hired away from RFF and who was in the audience, and the team Pizer has assembled at Treasury on their work designing possible regulatory regimes to constrain carbon dioxide emissions. He added that the work Pizer and crew had done meant that the next administration would be much better prepared to take action than he had been.

Getting the price signal right–that is, raising energy prices just the right amount–will give companies the incentive they need to develop the new energy technologies that were needed, according to Paulson. But although he was a leading promoter of cap-and trade while heading Goldman Sachs, Paulson would not say whether he preferred a carbon tax or cap-and-trade. If it’s done right, the effect of cap-and-trade will be indistinguishable from a carbon tax. The choice would be up to the next administration and Congress. Whether the price signal is conveyed through a tax or a cap-and-trade program, Paulson said that price increases must be gradual and incremental and predictable, so that companies would know what they needed to do.

As for those new technologies, Paulson said that while he had learned from his time in Washington that many problems were intractable because the politics were so complex, he had found one bright spot. The scientists at the Department of Energy had convinced him that the technological breakthroughs needed to solve our energy and climate problems had already been made or were on the verge of being made.

It struck me as odd that Paulson talked about the price signal providing an incentive to develop new technologies without referring to the experience of the European Union’s Emissions Trading Scheme. There, although the costs to consumers are apparent, it appears that companies are too busy scrambling to round up enough rationing coupons to meet this year’s quota to spend any time developing breakthrough technologies.

Paulson noted that countries would not be willing to take action to reduce emissions (that is, raise energy prices and thereby reduce economic growth) unless there was sustained economic growth. He did not see and therefore did not address the conundrum he had created. It is a common blind spot among the energy rationers.

Questions from the audience had to be written on cards, which were then culled by Ray Kopp of RFF. I was surprised that my question was not selected. I did note in parenthesis at the bottom of the card under my name and affiliation that CEI was proud that we had opposed his confirmation, but my question was friendly: I asked whether he thought the purpose of cap-and-trade was not reducing emissions but rather transferring wealth to special interests such as investment bankers acting as middlemen in the trading of rationing coupons.

Paulson’s most interesting answer was in reply to a question about how he planned to be involved in environmental issues after he left office next week. He said that he would give some thought to it before deciding what he was going to do next and then added that his various involvements with conservation organizations had all been at the urging of his wife, Wendy, who was in the audience, and that his next steps would be taken with her guidance as well. When Paulson was chairman of Goldman Sachs, he also served as chairman of the Nature Conservancy, one of the world’s most sinister organizations.

The natural gas crisis in Europe continued Wednesday as the standoff between Russia and Ukraine left millions of homes without heating fuel for another day.