Once again, an argument broke out in the Senate about
“extreme weather” caused by global warming.
Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions slammed EPA Chief Administrator Gina McCarthy for pushing global
warming regulations that will cost billions of dollars while being ignorant to
whether or not extreme weather has gotten worse. Senators on the Environment and Public Works
Committee grilled McCarthy over the agency’s 2016 budget proposal which asks for $8.6 billion — $452
million more than the agency got in 2015.
The budget request includes $4 billion to reward states that go along
with the EPA’s plan to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. The
EPA’s plan to regulate carbon emissions has been heavily opposed by
Republicans, including Sessions……
Sessions: “When we go to our states,
the group we have the most complaints about from our constituents—whether it’s
highway people, whether it’s farmers, whether it’s energy people—is the
Environmental Protection Agency. It’s an [agency of] extraordinary overreach.
And you apparently are unaware of the pushback that’s occurring in the real
world … So now you say that we’ve got a crisis and there are dangers out there.
Let me ask you this. There was an article from Mr. [Bjorn] Lomborg … from the
Copenhagen Institute. He says, along with Dr. Pielke from Colorado, that we’ve
had fewer droughts in recent years. Do you dispute that?”
McCarthy: “I don’t know in
what context he’s making statements like that, but I can certainly tell you
about the droughts are happening today.”
Sessions: “I’m asking you what
what other data you know about … world-wide data about whether we are having
fewer or less droughts?”
McCarthy: “I’d be happy to
provide it, but I certainly am aware that droughts are becoming more extreme
and frequent.
Sessions: “Are you aware that the
IPCC has found that moisture content of the soil is, if anything, slightly
greater than it has been over the last decade. It’s in their report, are you
aware of that?
McCarthy: “I don’t know
what you’re referring to Senator, but I’m happy to respond…”
Sessions: “Well you need to know
because you’re asking this economy to sustain tremendous costs and you don’t
know whether the soil worldwide is more moist or less moist.”
Sessions: “What about hurricanes.
Have we had more or less hurricanes in the last decade?”
McCarthy: “In terms of landing
those hurricanes on land, I cannot answer that question. It’s a very
complicated issue.”
Sessions: “It’s not complicated
on how many have landed. We’ve had a dramatic reduction in the number. We’ve
gone a decade without a hurricane [Category] 3 or above … Would you acknowledge
that over the last 18 years, that the increase in temperature has been very
little, and that it is well below, matter of fact 90 percent below most of the
environmental models that showed how fast temperature would increase?”
McCarthy: “I do not know
what the models actually are predicting that you are referring to…”
Sessions: “This is a stunning
development, that the head of the Environmental Protection Agency—who should
know more than anybody else in the world, who is imposing hundreds of billions
of dollars in cost to prevent this climate temperature increase—doesn’t know
whether their projections have been right or wrong.
Watch the exchange here:
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