Will global warming
alarmists ever set aside their hypotheses, hyperbole, models and ideologies
long enough to acknowledge what is actually happening in the real world outside
their windows? Will they at least do so before setting off on another misguided
adventure? Before persuading like-minded or naïve people to join them? Before
forcing others to risk life and limb to transport – and rescue – them? If
history is any guide, the answer is: Not likely.
The absurd misadventures
of University of New South Wales climate professor Chris Turney is but the
latest example. He and 51 co-believers set out on the (diesel-powered) Russian
charter ship Akademik Shokalskiy to prove manmade global warming is
destroying the East Antarctic ice sheet. Perhaps they’d been reading Dr.
Turney’s website, which claims “an increasing body of evidence” shows “melting
and collapse” across the area. (It is, after all, summer in Antarctica, albeit
a rather cold, icy one thus far.)
Instead of finding open
water, they wound up trapped in record volumes of unforgiving ice, from Christmas
Eve until January 2 – ensnared by Mother Nature’s sense of humor and their own
hubris. The 52 climate tourists were finally rescued by a helicopter sent from
Chinese icebreaker Xue Long, which itself became locked in the ice. The
misadventurers were transferred to Australian icebreaker Aurora Australis,
but the Shokalskiy remains entombed, awaiting the arrival of US Coast
Guard icebreaker Polar Star. (Meanwhile, Tourney hopes to get more
grants to study manmade global warming, to help him make more money from his
Carbonscape company, which makes “green” products from CO2 recovered from the
atmosphere.)
As to his expertise, Dr.
Tourney couldn’t even gauge the ice conditions the 74 crewmen and passengers
were about to sail into. And yet we are supposed to believe his alarmist
forecasts about Earth’s climate.
NASA reports that
Antarctic sea ice is now the largest expanse since scientists began measuring its extent in 1979: 19.5
million square kilometers (4,806,000,000 acres) – 2.1 times the size of the
entire United States. Another report says ocean melting of western Antarctica’s
huge Pine Island Glacier ice shelf is at the lowest level ever recorded, and less than half of what it was in 2010.
Reminding us of Monty Python’s pet store clerk, Turney nonetheless insists that the sea ice is
actually melting, and his communications director says the record sea ice is due to … global warming!
(As they say, fiction has to make sense.)
Equally amazing, the Shokalskiy
was apparently not equipped with adequate wind and weather monitoring and
forecasting capabilities. The expedition had to contact climate realists John Coleman, Anthony Watts and Joe D’Aleo for
information that would allow them to plan their helicopter rescue.
All of this raises serious
questions that most media have ignored. How could Tourney put so many lives and vessels at risk – people he persuaded to join this expedition, the
ship and crew they hired, the ships and helicopter and crews that came to their
rescue? How did he talk the Russian captain into sailing into these dangerous
waters? Who will pay for the rescue ships and their fuel and crews? What if
one of the ships sinks – or someone dies? What is Tourney’s personal liability?
This may be the most
glaring example of climate foolishness. But it is hardly the first.
In 2007, Ann Bancroft and
Liv Arnesen set off across the Arctic in the dead of winter, “to raise
awareness about global warming,” by showcasing the wide expanses of open water
they were certain they would encounter. Instead, temperatures inside their tent
plummeted to -58 F (-50 C), while outside the nighttime air plunged to -103 F
(-75 C). Facing frostbite, amputated fingers and toes or even death, the two were airlifted out a bare 18 miles into their 530-mile expedition.
The next winter it was
British swimmer and ecologist Lewis Gordon Pugh, who planned to breast-stroke
across open Arctic seas. Same story. Then fellow Brit Pen Hadow tried, and
failed. In 2010 Aussie Tom Smitheringale set off to demonstrate “the effect
that global warming is having on the polar ice caps.” He was rescued and flown
out, after coming “very close to the grave,” he confessed.
Hopefully, all these
rescue helicopters were solar-powered. Hardcore climate disaster adventurers
should not be relegated to choppers fueled by evil fossil fuels. They may be
guilty of believing their own alarmist press releases – but losing digits or
ideological purity is a high price to pay.
All these intrepid
explorers tried to put the best spin on their failures. “One of the things we
see with global warming is unpredictability,” Bancroft-Arnesen expedition
coordinator Anne Atwood insisted. “But global warming is real, and with it can
come extreme unpredictable changes in temperature,” added Arnesen. “Global
warming can mean colder. It can mean wetter. It can mean drier. That’s what
we’re talking about,” Greenpeace activist Stephen Guilbeault chimed in.
It’s been said insanity is
hitting your thumb repeatedly with a hammer, expecting it won’t hurt the next time.
It’s also believing hype, models and delusions, instead of real world
observations. Or thinking taxpayers are happy to pay for all the junk science
behind claims that the world faces dangerous manmade global warming. Or that
they are delighted that the EPA and IPCC are increasingly regulating our
lives, livelihoods, liberties, living standards and life spans, in the name of
preventing climate change.
The fact is, Antarctic ice
shelves have broken up many times over the millennia. Arctic ice has rebounded
since its latest low ebb around September 2007. Despite steadily rising
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, average global temperatures have been stable
or declining since 1997. Seas are rising at barely seven inches per century.
And periods of warmer or colder global and polar climates are nothing new.
Vikings built homes, grew
crops and raised cattle in Greenland between 950 and 1300, before they were frozen
out by the Little Ice Age and encroaching pack ice and glaciers. Many warm
periods followed, marked by open seas and minimal southward extent of Arctic
sea ice, as noted in ships’ logs and discussed in scientific papers by Torgny
Vinje and other experts. But warm periods of 1690-1710, 1750-1780 and
1918-1940, for instance, were often preceded and followed by colder
temperatures, severe ice conditions and maximum southward ice packs, as during
1630-1660 and 1790-1830.
“Not only in the summer,
but in the winter the ocean [in the Bering Sea region] was free of ice,
sometimes with a wide strip of water up to at least 200 miles away from the
shore,” Swedish explorer Oscar Nordkvist reported in 1822, in a document
rediscovered by astrophysicist Willie Soon.
“We were astonished by the
total absence of ice in the Barrow Strait,” Francis McClintock, captain of the Fox, wrote in 1860. “I was here
at this time in 1854 – still frozen up – and doubts were entertained as to the
possibility of escape.”
In 1903, during the first
year of his three-year crossing of the Northwest Passage, Roald Amundsen noted
that his party “had made headway with ease,” because ice conditions had been
“unusually favorable.”
The 1918-1940 warming also
resulted in Atlantic cod increasing in population and expanding their range
some 800 miles, to the Upernavik area of Greenland, fisheries biologist Ken
Drinkwater has reported.
Climate change is
certainly real. It’s been real throughout Earth and human history – including
the Roman and Medieval Warm Periods, Little Ice Age and Dust Bowl, and through
countless other cycles of warming and cooling, flood and drought, storm and calm,
open polar seas and impassable ice.
Humans clearly influence
weather and climate on a local scale – through heat and emissions from cities
and cars, our clearing of forests and grasslands, our diversion of rivers. But
that is not the issue. Nor is it enough to say – as President Obama has – that
the climate is changing and mankind is contributing to it.
The fundamental issue is
this: Are humans causing imminent, unprecedented, global
climate change disasters? And can we prevent those alleged
disasters, by drastically curtailing hydrocarbon use, slashing living
standards, and imposing government control over industries and people’s lives?
If you look at actual evidence – instead of computer model forecasts and
“scenarios” – the answer is clearly: No.
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