Editor’s Note: We certainly celebrate that, at last, mainstream voices like Gene Robinson and Paul Krugman are coming out with strong pronouncements on the issue of global warming. But reading a worthy column like this it reminds me that something is missing in this picture of awakened liberals. Most vociferous climate deniers at this very late hour in an ineluctable process that may well end the world as we know it can be safely dismissed as corporate shills—of the witting or unwitting type—and we can expect them to do little or nothing about the problem. But what about those prominent individuals in our political system who do not profess such Luddite denialism? More specifically, what has Barack Obama, supposedly a man who does not doubt the reality of anthropogenic climate change, done about it? Beyond some window dressing policy moves and some occasional rhetoric: nothing.
Obama’s record in this regard is as painful to examine as in other major issues where he has put (or not put) his stamp. On his watch, there have been several attempts at getting the family of nations to collaborate on a rapid, aggressive program of remedies for global warming, and soon, when the methane bomb goes off, global heating, a much higher and horrendous magnitude few humans are ware of. In an ideal world, where corporadoes do not count (or do not exist) and corrupt politicians have become history, one might have expected the American president, representing the most powerful nation on earth, and chief contributor to the rising ecological scourge, to provide vital leadership and support for urgent corrective policies. In the event, what Obama did is again typical of his brand of pseudo leadership: his agents at such conferences have been busy blackballing and watering already feeble proposals.
It is within such historical and political framework that we must place pronouncements issuing from highly visible liberals like Gene Robinson or Krugman: useful as they are, they still studiously fail to castigate Obama and the Democrats for their treachery.±PG
By Eugene Robinson, The Washington Post
For the clueless or cynical diehards who deny global warming, it’s getting awfully cold out there.
The latest icy blast of reality comes from an eminent scientist whom the climate-change skeptics once lauded as one of their own. Richard Muller, a respected physicist at the University of California, Berkeley, used to dismiss alarmist climate research as being “polluted by political and activist frenzy.” Frustrated at what he considered shoddy science, Muller launched his own comprehensive study to set the record straight. Instead, the record set him straight.
“Global warming is real,” Muller wrote last week in The Wall Street Journal.
Rick Perry, Herman Cain, Michele Bachmann and the rest of the neo-Luddites who are turning the GOP into the anti-science party should pay attention.
“When we began our study, we felt that skeptics had raised legitimate issues, and we didn’t know what we’d find,” Muller wrote. “Our results turned out to be close to those published by prior groups. We think that means that those groups had truly been careful in their work, despite their inability to convince some skeptics of that.”
In other words, the deniers’ claims about the alleged sloppiness or fraudulence of climate science are wrong. Muller’s team, the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project, rigorously explored the specific objections raised by skeptics — and found them groundless.
Muller and his fellow researchers examined an enormous data set of observed temperatures from monitoring stations around the world and concluded that the average land temperature has risen 1 degree Celsius — or about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit — since the mid-1950s.
This agrees with the increase estimated by the United Nations-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Muller’s figures also conform with the estimates of those British and American researchers whose catty e-mails were the basis for the alleged “Climategate” scandal, which was never a scandal in the first place.
The Berkeley group’s research even confirms the infamous “hockey stick” graph — showing a sharp recent temperature rise — that Muller once snarkily called “the poster child of the global warming community.” Muller’s new graph isn’t just similar, it’s identical.
Muller found that skeptics are wrong when they claim that a “heat island” effect from urbanization is skewing average temperature readings; monitoring instruments in rural areas show rapid warming, too. He found that skeptics are wrong to base their arguments on the fact that records from some sites seem to indicate a cooling trend, since records from at least twice as many sites clearly indicate warming. And he found that skeptics are wrong to accuse climate scientists of cherry-picking the data, since the readings that are often omitted — because they are judged unreliable — show the same warming trend.
Muller and his colleagues examined five times as many temperature readings as did other researchers — a total of 1.6 billion records — and now have put that merged database online. The results have not yet been subjected to peer review, so technically they are still preliminary. But Muller’s plain-spoken admonition that “you should not be a skeptic, at least not any longer” has reduced many deniers to incoherent grumbling or stunned silence.
Not so, I predict, with the blowhards such as Perry, Cain and Bachmann, who, out of ignorance or perceived self-interest, are willing to play politics with the Earth’s future. They may concede that warming is taking place, but they call it a natural phenomenon and deny that human activity is the cause.
It is true that Muller made no attempt to ascertain “how much of the warming is due to humans.” Still, the Berkeley group’s work should help lead all but the dimmest policymakers to the overwhelmingly probable answer.
We know that the rise in temperatures over the past five decades is abrupt and very large. We know it is consistent with models developed by other climate researchers that posit greenhouse gas emissions — the burning of fossil fuels by humans — as the cause. And now we know, thanks to Muller, that those other scientists have been both careful and honorable in their work.
Nobody’s fudging the numbers. Nobody’s manipulating data to win research grants, as Perry claims, or making an undue fuss over a “naturally occurring” warm-up, as Bachmann alleges. Contrary to what Cain says, the science is real.
It is the know-nothing politicians — not scientists — who are committing an unforgivable fraud.
___________________
Eugene Robinson writes about politics and culture in twice-a-week columns and on the PostPartisan blog.
eugenerobinson@washpost.com
Let’s keep this award-winning site going!
Yes, audiences applaud us. But do you?If yes, then buy us a beer. The wingnuts are falling over each other to make donations…to their causes. We, on the other hand, take our left media—the only media that speak for us— for granted. Don’t join that parade, and give today. Every dollar counts. |
---|
Use the DONATE button below or on the sidebar. And do the right thing. Even once a year. |
Use PayPal via the button below.
THANK YOU.