
Utah House Passes Resolution Implying Climate Change Conspiracy
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Utah’s House of Representatives passed a resolution on Tuesday that implies climate change science is a conspiracy and urges the EPA to stop all carbon dioxide reduction policies and programs.
As a resolution, it holds no legal weight, but it sends a message from — and about — Utah’s lawmakers.
Among other things, the resolution claims there is "a well organized and ongoing effort to manipulate global temperature data in order to produce a global warming outcome."
A last-minute amendment removed the words “conspiracy,” “gravy train” and “tricks," but the statements remaining are still inflammatory, echoing the claims of conservative groups such as the Heartland Institute, Science and Public Policy Institute (SPPI), and Utah’s Sutherland Institute.
A group of Brigham Young University scientists were so disturbed by the wording of the resolution, HJR 12, that they wrote to the legislature last week highlighting several inaccuracies and urging the legislature to reconsider.
“Even if all the political solutions proposed so far are flawed, this does not justify politicians in attacking the science that indicates there is almost certainly a serious problem," the scientists told lawmakers.
The Utah capitol has become a hostile venue for scientists when it comes to climate change, though.
Robert Davies, an associate physics professor from Utah State University, discovered the danger last fall when, answering a reporter’s question about climate science, he said former NASA scientist Roy Spencer’s conclusions from computer modeling on clouds had been discredited in the scientific community and his analysis deemed "fringe." Republican Rep. Mike Noel, who had invited Spencer to testify to the legislature, responded by calling the president of Utah State University, a state-funded school, to complain about Davies.
Eighteen BYU scientists wrote to the legislature then, expressing their concern about the treatment of science and scientists by lawmakers during that hearing.
"We feel it is irresponsible for some of our legislators to attempt to manipulate the scientific evidence in order to support a political agenda," they wrote.
More recently, Noel tried to twist the words of a University of Utah bioengineering professor who was the only person to publicly speak out against HJR 12 at last week’s committee hearing. The professor, Joseph Andrade, said he worried that the legislature was encouraging fossil fuel use and slowing efforts to diversify the state's portfolio with clean energy sources. That led to this exchange:
Rep. Noel: "Are you stating on record that CO2 is a pollutant? Are you saying that CO2, carbon dioxide, is a pollutant, are you saying that?”
Professor Andrade: "I'm saying that carbon dioxide has a unique molecular structure which absorbs infrared radiation, and that that is in part responsible for the effects that you're concerned with, Representative Gibson is concerned with, and Representative ...."
Noel: "I want to get this on the record, ok? Are you saying that we have to rid the planet of carbon dioxide?"
Andrade: "Of course not!"
Noel: "It's not a pollutant then, it's not going to kill you. It's not going to kill plants. Is that correct? I also have a degree too, professor. So I want to get this straight. Is it a pollutant?"
(The conversation becomes a verbal skirmish, and the committee chairman breaks it up.)
Noel: "I'm sorry, I'm sorry ... It got out of hand."
Whose Conspiracy?
The resolution begs the question, who’s conspiring and why? At one point during last week’s hearing, the only member to vote against the resolution in committee, Rep. Phil Riesen, asked that.
Noel’s response involved a book from the 1970s about population co-authored by presidential science advisor John Holdren.
“If you can’t see a connection to that, you’re absolutely blind to what’s going on,” Noel said. “This is a conspiracy to limit population, not only in this country, but across the globe.”
The resolution’s sponsor, Rep. Kerry Gibson, responded to the conspiracy question:
“I’m not sure we even know the depths of it.”
During the hearing, Kerry turned the microphone over to Utah Farm Bureau Federation CEO Randy Parker to explain the resolution item by item and its more inflammatory declarations.
Parker, who called on the BYU scientists to apologize for their letter, also went into economic issues, saying farmers would be forced out of business and the U.S. would be left relying on Mexico and China for food. The president of the Utah Mining Association and the executive director of the Utah Rural Electric Association also spoke in favor of the bill.
Coal's Hold on Utah
Agriculture and energy are powerful lobbies in Utah. Close to 90 percent of Utah’s electricity comes from coal. The state’s coal and gas production account for about 2 percent of the nation’s total, and its oil accounts for about 1 percent.
That high rate of coal use is part of the reason cap-and trade is unpopular in Utah, explained Sarah Wright, executive director of Utah Clean Energy and a member of former Gov. Jon Huntsman, Jr.,’s 2007 advisory council on climate change, a committee Parker also sat on.
“Many in Utah feel they will be paying double to reduce their carbon emission because they have to pay the allocations and change out our current electrical generation to non-carbon form. They feel it’s a transfer of wealth from coal producing to states with hydro and nuclear,” Wright explained.
Wright’s group, which has been promoting a shifting to clean energy and greater energy efficiency in Utah for close to a decade, believes it is important for Utah to reduce its carbon emissions in ways that work for the state and to stay engaged in the Western Climate Initiative, a regional group of states and Canadian provinces that has been discussing climate change solutions.
“We are moving on clean energy and we are moving on energy efficiency," she said, noting the state's first wind farms were built in the last fews years and the state had added incentives for renewables. "But there is a sort of faction that will want to keep the status quo,” she said.
House Minority Leader David Litvack, a Democrat, also noted the state’s progress toward more clean energy with its renewable energy zones, UStar program, and Utah State University’s work with algae as biofuel.
The language of the resolution was “unfortunate. It does nothing but shut the door to dialogue,” he said, adding that the House minority whip was working behind the scenes to try to bring cooler heads to the issue.
Utah, Post-Huntsman
Much of the state's progress on clean energy and climate came under the leadership of Huntsman, the former Republican governor who resigned last year to become U.S. ambassador to China. In contrast, his successor, Gary Herbert, openly questions the science.
“The Utah Legislature was probably not ready for Gov. Jon Huntsman’s stance on climate issues,” said Utah Sierra Club's Mark Clemens.
The legislature is highly ideological and conservative, he explained, and the resolution “probably does reflect the state of mind of the Utah legislature, which is generally speaking completely influenced by fossil fuels.”
With resolutions like HJR 12 and HJR 21, which urges the new governor to pull out of the Western Climate Initiative, they’re “sending a message to the fossil fuels industry that we are behind you 100 percent,” Clemens said.
Noel conveyed that message during last week's hearing, telling his committee colleagues,
“Sometimes we need to have the courage to do nothing.”
He also made his allegiance with the anti-climate action think tanks clear when he went after the BYU professors. On March 23, British business and policy consultant Lord Christopher Monckton will be in Utah, Noel said, and “we” have challenged the BYU professors to a debate.
It was SPPI, which promotes Monckton and other climate "skeptics", that challenged the scientists, with a letter phrased in a way that made the scientists think twice about agreeing to step into that forum. Monckton is a regular commentator against climate science who in Copenhagen drew attention by calling young climate activists “Nazi youth."
Noel didn't stop there. Forget Exxon's lobbying, it is scientists, he said, who have a vested interest. (This was the alleged "gravy train" removed from the resolution.)
“It sometimes takes an Einstein to disprove thousands and thousands of scientists,” he said.
Science and the Resolution
The resolution passed by the Utah House specifically urges the EPA to “immediately halt its carbon dioxide reduction policies and programs and withdraw its ‘Endangerment Finding’ and related regulations until a full and independent investigation of the climate data and global warming science can be substantiated.” The amendment approved on the House floor deleted a word from the original version, which had read: “climate data conspiracy.”
The reasoning for the resolution starts out with concerns about climate legislation resulting in “significantly higher energy costs to American consumers, business, and industry.”
It then declares that the EPA's endangerment finding is “based on flawed climate data and would place significant regulatory and financial burdens on all sectors of the nation's economy at a time when the nation's unemployment rate exceeds 10%.” (National unemployment was 9.7% in January, down from 10% in December; the bill was filed on Jan. 25, a week and a half before the January number was released. Utah’s unemployment rate was 8.3% in December.)
The resolution goes on to claim that there is “a well organized and ongoing effort to manipulate global temperature data in order to produce a global warming outcome,” and it cites the hacked emails between scientists at the Climate Research Unit at University of East Anglia and their colleagues.
The BYU scientists took on this point on in their latest letter.
“This is truly a case of a mountain made from a molehill,” the scientists write.
“With regard to the entire 'Climategate' issue, if investigation reveals that serious scientific misconduct occurred, we expect that appropriate actions will be taken. However, the influence of increasing greenhouse gas concentrations on global climate is well substantiated by careful research outside the Climate Research Unit.
“It is unwise for the Legislature to disregard the work of these scientists on the basis of allegations made against unrelated workers.”
The resolution also claims that “global temperatures have been level and declining in some areas over the past 12 years,” and that “climate alarmists’ carbon dioxide-related global warming hypothesis is unable to account for the current downturn in global temperatures.”
“This claim belies a serious misconception about climate research,” the BYU scientists write. “Scientists refer to ‘weather’ as the short-term swings in temperature, precipitation, etc., and it depends on so many random factors that it is very difficult to accurately predict over long periods. 'Climate' is the long-term average of weather, and is much easier to assess.
“Even on a year-to-year time scale, however, the weather deviates somewhat randomly from the average. That is why, when discussing trends in global average temperature, climate scientists typically average each data point over the surrounding 30-year period. “
The resolution also suggests that chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) affect climate much more strongly than CO2. Yes, CFCs are powerful greenhouse gases — and they are easily measured, the scientists write. But "unless CFCs contribute to warming by some mechanism nobody has yet discovered, this assertion is physically impossible.”
And the resolution claims that Michael Mann’s “hockey stick” graph has been “discredited,” to which the scientists note: "Although the 'hockey stick' has been challenged, it certainly has not been discredited. In fact, it has been essentially reproduced almost a dozen times by several independent groups, using a number of different types of proxy data.”
They take issue with this statement in the resolution as well: The resolution states, “There has been a concerted effort by climate change alarmists to marginalize those in the scientific community who are skeptical of global warming by manipulating or pressuring peer-reviewed publications to keep contrary or competing scientific viewpoints and findings on global warming from being reviewed and published.”
“Science, like many other fields, can be contentious,” the BYU scientists write. “Personal biases may play a role, and it is sometimes easy to treat opponents in a debate unfairly. However, it is equally true that when your paper is rejected it is sometimes easier to ascribe the rejection to others’ personal biases than to carefully consider potential flaws pointed out by the reviewers. In our experience, many of the positions taken by so-called ‘climate skeptics’ have had serious flaws.
“Sound scientific investigation, over many years and by many scientists, strongly supports the idea that emitting large amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere poses considerable risk to humans and their environment."
They add: "Debate is healthy, but since science never brings absolute certainty, debate about complex issues like climate change will likely never end. It is, therefore, irresponsible to expect absolute agreement among all climate scientists before addressing the risks that have been identified. And whatever society decides about how to address those risks, the decisions should be based on the most reliable information available.”
The resolution was approved 56-17 by the House and sent to the Senate, where it was introduced this morning.
See also:
Latest Science Shows Climate Change Outpacing Previous Projections
In Congressional Hearings, Amateurs Invited to Confuse Climate Science
A Climate Deception Revisited: What's Behind the Signatures of 31,478 Skeptical "Scientists"
James Hansen on Climate Tipping Points and Political Leadership
Skeptics Exaggerating Science Scandal to Derail Copenhagen Climate Talks
What Those Hacked Climate E-Mails Really Say




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Look at the CO river!
So, if climate change is not real, then why is the Colorado River at the lowest levels in centuries?
Colorado River
Maybe this will give you a clue:
In 1990 6.7 million acre-feet of water were siphoned off for the 7 states in the upper and lower Colorado River basins. That is expected to increase to 7.5 million acre feet this year.
Centuries ago their were no dams.
The Science Behind "global warming" is false.
This paper (http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0707/0707.1161v4.pdf) by German scientists describe global warming theories and why they are impossible. Physics - real science - explains the impossibility of global warming junk science.
good grief
Anything can be a poison or dangerous.
Custard powder can cause explosions. So the fact that CO2 can cause warming, is hardly surprising.
It's good to see the scientist (Prof Andrade) explaining basic molecular science to the politician (Noel), most politicians need basic science lessons. I think the politician may have had a brain failure if the scientist started talking about bond vibrations. Or maybe that was why Noel lost the plot?
I mis-spoke in my last
I mis-spoke in my last comment.
"No one says CO2 is a pollutant or that it isn't a benficial compound. Indeed, it is perhaps the most important compound in our world."
What I should have said, is that carbon is perhaps the most imortant element in our world.
Who's Using Inflammatory Language?
To accuse The Heartland Institute and other non-alarmist groups of using inflammatory language is seriously calling the kettle black.
Top alarmist James Hansen laces his speeches with Holocaust-style references. Grist magazine writer David Roberts called for Nuremberg-style trials. Robert Davies, an "associate physics professor at Utah State University," as you note, deems as "fringe" the work of Dr. Roy Spencer, principal research scientist at the University of Alabama-Huntsville and former Senior Scientist for Climate Studies at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center.
The science on the climate change issue is far from settled, and the Utah legislature was wise to protest EPA intervention that will destroy jobs, cut incomes, and do nothing to address the natural and moderate climate change that's taking place.
Re: Global Warming Debunked!
After I did some examination on how Monckton cherry-picks his statistics, I wouldn't trust _anything_ he says - on global warming or otherwise.
http://jhubert.livejournal.com/181274.html
Call for algae research grant investigations
The US Government has spent over $2.5 billion dollars on algae research in the last 35 years and all we have to show for it are shelves full of useless patents. Algae have been researched at universities and in laboratories in the US for over 50 years, financed in significant part by government funds. One of the largest problems is that the research has been done in laboratories and at universities, using federal funds, and there is fear at that level that commercialization will ‘ruin it for them’. What it will ruin is the steady stream of ‘free’ money flowing from the DOE, NREL, the DOD, DARPA and other Washington-based agencies to University Row. It was most disconcerting to hear from more than one agency that the funds it awards are, by Congressional mandate, restricted to research. If we could invest one years’ worth of awards into commercialization instead of research, we could easily move this industry into commercialization. The research would be needed to improve technologies, but Microsoft and the American Petroleum Industry, among others, can confirm that this is a necessary component of any industry growth.
According to my sources. another large problem is, in order to be a grant award recipient, the algae technologies must be investigated and approved by NREL, and that NREL is not particularly supportive of the private initiative. NREL is the same government agency that ran out of money and stopped the otherwise successful Aquatic Species Program after 18 years of federal funding. After the Consortium grant announcement, sources at various government agencies, including NREL itself, shared the fact that grants would only be awarded to proposed groups that included government agencies in their consortia. The truth of that statement lies in the fact that one of the groups that recently received an award is led by NREL and the other by the David Danforth Plant Science Center, and includes two national laboratories (one of which is also a participant in the NREL award) and 11 universities. According to its website, “Scientists at the Danforth Center receive more than half of their funding from federal agencies via competitive grant programs, with the rest of the funding coming from private companies and foundations. In addition to the USDA and the NSF, other federal granting agencies that fund research at the Center include the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the U.S. Department of Energy, and the Environmental Protection Agency…”. In the last 2 years, it has received grants from the Department of Transportation and the National Sciences Foundation relating to biofuels, in addition to housing one of the DOE’s Energy Frontier Research Centers.
Federal agencies are incapable of commercializing anything. The only ones that are even remotely designed to earn money are those that regulate the financial institutions, and we all know that the American banking system has failed us miserably. Until someone in Washington who has power and authority to stop this steady stream of funding to nowhere, listening as the algae researchers continue to claim that they are 3-5 years away from completing their research, it’s too expensive and they need more time and money, they will receive grant money from the DOE, NREL, DOD and DARPA. Nothing will ever get commercialized at the university level. Until there is an industry, there is no value to the results of the research. Until development of this industry is taken out of the hands of the research community, and put into the hands of the business, not corporate, community, this industry will never support reducing our dependence on foreign oil.
The question you need to be asking is " Does the US really want to get off of foreign oil or do we want to continue to fund the algae researchers at the universities." The problem is we can grow, harvest and extract algae today with all "off-the-shelf" proven technology. We no not need genetic modification at all when there are existing algae strains currently on the market with 30-60% oil content. Algae production requires far less land and water than any other terrestrial crop (see page 194 of the DOE’s National Algal Biofuels Technology Roadmap), which has the farmers in an uproar right now. The ethanol credits went away, allegedly shutting down an industry – can it really be that without the tax credit, years of time, effort and expense will be for naught, leaving us with unedible genetically modified corn fields? The DOE is still awarding grants for algae pond research when it was established years ago that all algae ponds get contaminated and will never produce enough algae to get us off of foreign oil. Stop wasting monies on research. We need algae production!
whsmith You are completely
whsmith
You are completely confused and befuddled. Scientists think CO2 remains in the atmostphere 100 years or more. Where are you coming up with 400,000 years? Maybe that's someone's hypothesis, but it is light years away from being any kind of scientific theory or consensus. Even if what you say was true, that will not help humans much in the meantime. The ice melt and other effects that we are seeing now, with only a 1.4 degreeF rise in temps, is just a precurser of what will follow, if we continue with business as usual, in which case that number could triple in this century to a 6 degrees F increase. The increase in the arctic is already about 5 F.
What you are saying is idiotic, to say the least. No one says CO2 is a pollutant or that it isn't a benficial compound. Indeed, it is perhaps the most important compound in our world. So what? That does not change the fact that it is a greenhouse gas, and that what humans are doing is unprecedented in the history of the planet.
Say what? you say
Yes I'm serious. Do you know what carbon sequestration is? As in clean coal technolgy? Pumping CO2 into the earth? Mother nature has been sequestering CO2 for a long time. The coal that we burn took 65 million years to accumulate (be sequestered) in the earth. That process removes carbon from the short term carbon cycle, (which involves living things, the atmosphere, topsoil, water etc) and in so doing, it helps keep the short term carbon cycle in a balance that has supported life as we know it for millions of years. We are now reversing that process and pumping that 65 million years of accumulated carbon back into the atmosphere and back into the short term carbon cycle in a few hundred years, or a geological nanosecond.
No creature on earth has ever done that before. It is completely unprecendented.
It is NOT a natural cycle.
climate science and the Utah legislature.
The Utah legislature has resolved that the EPA should cease its attempts to label CO2 a pollutant and to reduce CO2 production. This was done against the advice of a number of BYU scientists!
But, the BYU scientists surely agree with the case made by the global warming proponents such as Caldeira, et al. who have proposed that a large fraction of anthropogenic CO2 remains in the atmosphere out to even 400,000 years, potentially forestalling the Milankovic cycles. This scenario results in millions, even billions, more people being supported on the warm Earth, rather than dying or never being born as the frigid climate conditions of glaciations envelope humanity.
So, paradoxically, global warming proponents justify the Utah legislature's resolution.
Burning coal then has a benefit due to its enhanced carbon footprint, and just as certainly, SO2 can be removed to reduce atmospheric pollution. CO2 itself is a beneficial gas, not a pollutant, as the EPA wishes to designate it so it can be taxed to fill the coffers of the government and the pockets of those positioned to benefit from the EPA imposed rules.
Global Warming Debunked!
FLASH!!
This Brand New Video Blows a Huge Gaping Hole in Obama's Cap and Tax Scheme: http://www.youtube. com/watch?v=BVm5-6H_sH4
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