2008

Following in the footsteps of an earlier study, government scientists on Tuesday said warmer oceans should translate to fewer Atlantic hurricanes striking the United States.

The reason: As sea surface temperatures warm globally, sustained vertical wind shear increases. Wind shear makes it difficult for storms to form and grow.

Twenty of the 100 highest-grossing U.S. law firms have started practices advising companies on climate change, according to a Bloomberg survey of the firms' Web sites. The attorneys help clients finance clean-energy projects and lobby Congress, typically billing $500 to $700 an hour.

Five GOP state lawmakers disputing the idea that humans are the cause of global warming distributed books supporting their argument to colleagues in an effort to stop the Legislature from passing new measures intended to combat climate change.

“Wake Up, America!”

by Julie Walsh on January 23, 2008

Today the Financial Times has a little piece mentioning the gloating in the halls of Brussels over current U.S. financial controversies, with one Eurocrat after another preening that the U.S. adopted reckless policies, didn’t pay heed to Europe – and it’s projected 1.5-1.8% growth, by the way – and has only itself to blame.  FT pompously passed along the call to “wake up, America!.

OK, so let’s pay attention to Europe.

* Yesterday, the European Confederation of Iron and Steel Industries pleaded with the Commission to stop the hemorrhaging from their carbon-cap-n-trade scheme which put their industry at a big competitive disadvantage compared to Chinese, Russian and U.S.

* The day before that, the European Roundtable of Industrialists begged the Commission for the same thing, saying it could destroy the competitive position of European industry.  The letter was signed by the CEO of Royal Dutch Shell, which had pushed the scheme.

These policies were put in place at the behest of businesses convinced that they can ride the back of the tiger of energy rationing policies and not end up on the inside; certain that if their political buddies impose a system it will be the one they design with plans to profit from – on ratepayers’ and consumers’ backs – and maintain control of.

 

  • As a result of just three years of this experiment, yesterday the President of the European Council, Barosso, vowed to impose trade sanctions on countries that haven’t adopted Europe’s rationing scheme – in which I’ve documented they’re cheating, by the way – which is the most direct way you will ever hear them admit that the scheme is doing precisely as we warned, and killing their economy.
  • Remember this when you hear it sold domestically as creating “green collar jobs”: nonsense–some brokerages have done real well, and utilities and some oil companies have been given windfall profits in the trillions, at the cost of chasing real jobs away due to high energy costs.  They have even driven steel jobs HERE.

By coincidence, also this week Greenwire (password required) reported that former RNC chief Ken Mehlman is being paid by rent-seeking industry to convince the administration to adopt this scheme, as are the spinner Tucker Eskew and other former Bushies.

A Bloomberg story yesterday cited Mehlman’s firm, Akin Gump, as an example of lawyers getting $700 an hour to advocate just such things.

Finally, this week, we are also told by our few friends in the White House that there is a new urgency because the long running campaign to get the President to do this is gaining traction, this campaign that is still driven by the Goldman Sachs contingent, which is still driven by Josh Bolten with a little help from Treasury, et al. (Goldman being heavily invested in the project and in on the game since the early days when it teamed up with Enron on it).

We’re told they’ve got a pending recommendation to announce this in the President's State of the Union address.  As Cyrano said about a fiscally reckless move characterized as stupid: “But what a gesture!”

Invoking executive privilege, the Environmental Protection Agency on Friday refused to provide lawmakers with a full explanation of why it rejected California's greenhouse gas regulations.

UK Rejects Carbon Tariffs

by William Yeatman on January 22, 2008

in Blog

Antarctica Snowfall Increase

by Julie Walsh on January 22, 2008

in Blog

The ice caps hold a special place in the cold hearts of the global warming advocates who are all too quick to insist that our ice caps are currently melting at an unprecedented rate. We suspect that they will not be particularly thrilled to learn that a paper has just appeared in Geophysical Research Letters entitled “A doubling in snow accumulation in the western Antarctic Peninsula since 1850.”

Less than a year after challenging the world to a race to stop global warming, European Union nations are bickering over who should carry the biggest burden in the EU's push to cut greenhouse gases.

German industrialists estimate the measures could endanger one million jobs.