Paul Driessen
Anyone who thought “manmade climate cataclysm” rhetoric
couldn’t possibly exceed Obama era levels should read the complaint
filed in the “public nuisance” lawsuit that’s being argued before Federal
District Court Judge William Alsup
in a California courtroom: Oakland v BP and other oil companies.
The allegations read at times like they were written by a
Monty Python comedy team and a couple of first year law students. Defendant
companies “conspired” to produce dangerous fuels, the complaint asserts, and
“followed the Big Tobacco playbook” to promote their use, while paying
“denialist front groups” to question “established” climate science, “downplay”
the “unprecedented” risks of manmade global warming, and launch “unfounded
attacks on the integrity” of leading “consensus” scientists.
“People of color” and other “socially vulnerable”
individuals will be most severely affected, it continues. (They’ll be far more
severely impacted by climate policies that drive up energy and food prices.)
Oakland’s lawyers excoriate astrophysicist Wei Hock
“Willie” Soon for committing the unpardonable sin of suggesting the sun might
have something to do with climate change. They couldn’t even get his PhD degree
right. They call him an “aerospace engineer,” and claim he personally received
$1.2 million that was actually paid to Harvard University (as multiple, easily
accessible documents make
clear).
They don’t even mention the billions of
taxpayer dollars that have been divvied up year after year among
researchers and activists who promote alarmist views on global warming and
renewable energy.
Oakland and its fellow
litigants expect the court to accept their claims at face value, as
“established” science, with no need to present real-world evidence to support
them. They particularly emphasize rising seas and the resulting “imminent
threat of catastrophic storm surges” that are “projected” by computer
models that assume carbon dioxide from fossil fuels is now the
primary or sole driver of climate change, replacing the sun, cosmic rays, ocean
currents and other powerful natural forces that did so “previously.”
In suing the five major oil companies, they ignore the
fact that the companies burn very few of the hydrocarbon fuels they produce. It
is the plaintiff city governments and their constituents who have happily
burned oil and natural gas for over a century, to fuel their cars, heat, cool,
light and electrify their offices and homes, and make their industries,
communications, health and living standards possible.
In the process, it is they who have generated the plant-fertilizing CO2 that is allegedly
causing the unprecedented global warming, melting ice caps and rising seas.
Hydrocarbons also fuel essential backup electricity generators for California’s
wind and solar facilities – and provide raw materials for fabrics, plastics,
paints, pharmaceuticals and countless other products the litigants use every
day.
Equally problematical for the plaintiffs, the
“established, consensus” science asserted throughout their complaint and
courtroom presentations is increasingly uncertain and hotly debated. As Heartland
Institute scholar Joe Bast
points out, even the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change now
expresses numerous doubts and uncertainties about rates of sea
level rise, the role of CO2, the cause and duration of a global
warming “pause” that has now lasted some
23 years. Indeed, the temperature spike caused by the 2015-16 El
NiƱo has now almost disappeared, as the oceans and atmosphere continue to cool
once again.
The oil companies decided not to present much climate
science in the courtroom. However, expert materials prepared by Christopher
Monckton, Will Happer, Richard Lindzen and colleagues addressed questions about
equilibrium
climate sensitivity and related issues in amicus curiae filings for
the court.
Oakland’s claim that the oil companies “conspired” to
hide and misrepresent “the science” on global warming and climate change is on
thin ice. Some reports say Judge Alsup dismissed the claim or ruled that
plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that there was a conspiracy. In any event, a
decision on the merits will eventually be made, the losing party will appeal,
and the case will likely end up in the US Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, climate chaos claims continue causing
consternation in some circles. Too much money, power, prestige, control and
wealth redistribution is at stake for anything else to happen.
Indeed, many in the $1.5-trillion-a-year Climate
Industrial Complex are determined to use this issue (and equally
malleable “sustainability”
mantras) to replace free enterprise capitalism with totalitarian one-world
governance; fossil fuel and nuclear power (the source of 85% of US and global
energy) with expensive, land-intensive wind, solar and biofuel energy; and the hopes and
dreams of poor people everywhere with policies that permit their
living standards to improve only minimally, at the margins.
Actually, climate chaos hype-potheses now blame not just
carbon dioxide and methane for runaway global warming, but also asthma
inhalers and meat diets. The results aren’t just rising seas, warmer
and colder weather, wetter and drier seasons, forest fires,
nonexistent mass extinctions and the other oft-cited pseudo-cataclysms. They
also include shrinking
animals, a worse opioid
crisis, and the endless litany of often amusing afflictions and
disasters chronicled in The Warmlist
and its video
counterpart.
The “solution” isn’t just keeping fossil fuels in the
ground. It also includes accepting profound
lifestyle changes and dining on climate
friendly insects (not ruling elites; just the rest of us).
And the real effects of manmade climate cataclysm fears
are not just soaring prices for less available, less reliable,
grid-destabilizing “green” electricity. They also include having to rescue
adventurers who try to sail, snowmobile or trek across supposedly
melting Arctic and Antarctic ice packs – only to become stranded and
frostbitten or have their ships trapped in rapidly freezing ice.
So, what should climate disaster stalwarts do, when
temperatures and sea levels refuse to cooperate with Al Gore speeches
and computer model “projections” and “scenarios”? Or when forecasts of more
hurricanes are followed by a record 12-year absence of any Category 3-5 storms
hitting the US mainland?
One strategy is refusing to debate anyone who challenges
the dire hypotheses, data or conclusions. Another involves “homogenizing,”
“correcting” and manipulating original data, to make Dust Bowl era temperatures
less warm – and this year’s long and bitterly cold winter not nearly so frigid,
by adjusting
records from local temperature stations by as much as 3.1 degrees
Fahrenheit (1.7 Celsius).
As to the numerous articles and studies published on WattsUpWithThat.com,
DrRoySpencer.com, ClimateDepot.com,
ClimateChangeReconsidered.org
and other sites that focus on evidence-based climate studies and research, and
challenge assertions like those relied on in the Oakland complaint – the
increasingly preferred strategy is to employ algorithms and other tactics that
relegate their work to the bottom of search engine results. Long lists of
alarmist claims, articles and perspectives appear first, unless a student or
other researcher enters very specific search terms. Even the major shortcomings
of wind power are hard to find, if you don’t know precisely what you
are looking for.
Google, Facebook, You Tube and other search, information
and social media sites appear determined to be the arbiters of
what information, facts and realities we can access, what our
children can learn. They help stigmatize and bully
scientists whose research or views do not hew to accepted liberal
perspectives, and have even enlisted corporate advertisers into policing the
speech of political opponents.
All this from the champions of free speech,
tolerance, diversity and inclusion. Just bear in mind:
The issue is not whether our planet is warming, or
whether climate and weather are changing. The issue is what is causing those
fluctuations, how much is due to fossil fuels versus to natural forces, and
whether any coming changes will be as catastrophic as natural forces have
caused multiple times in the past. (Imagine what would happen to cities, farms
and humanity if we had another Pleistocene ice age.)
All of this once again underscores why America and the
world need “Red Team” climate science exercises, more evidence-based climate
education, and a reversal of the Obama EPA’s unsupported finding
that carbon dioxide emissions somehow endanger human health and welfare.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee
For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org)
and author of books and articles on energy and environmental policy.
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