Saturday, October 20, 2007

"Global Warming Delusions"

Wall Street Journal article by Daniel B. Botkin here.

Excerpts:
You might think I must be one of those know-nothing naysayers who believes global warming is a liberal plot. On the contrary, I am a biologist and ecologist who has worked on global warming, and been concerned about its effects, since 1968. I've developed the computer model of forest growth that has been used widely to forecast possible effects of global warming on life -- I've used the model for that purpose myself, and to forecast likely effects on specific endangered species.

I'm not a naysayer. I'm a scientist who believes in the scientific method and in what facts tell us. I have worked for 40 years to try to improve our environment and improve human life as well. I believe we can do this only from a basis in reality, and that is not what I see happening now. Instead, like fashions that took hold in the past and are eloquently analyzed in the classic 19th century book "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds," the popular imagination today appears to have been captured by beliefs that have little scientific basis.

Some colleagues who share some of my doubts argue that the only way to get our society to change is to frighten people with the possibility of a catastrophe, and that therefore it is all right and even necessary for scientists to exaggerate. They tell me that my belief in open and honest assessment is naïve. "Wolves deceive their prey, don't they?" one said to me recently. Therefore, biologically, he said, we are justified in exaggerating to get society to change.
...
My concern is that we may be moving away from an irrational lack of concern about climate change to an equally irrational panic about it.

Many of my colleagues ask, "What's the problem? Hasn't it been a good thing to raise public concern?" The problem is that in this panic we are going to spend our money unwisely, we will take actions that are counterproductive, and we will fail to do many of those things that will benefit the environment and ourselves.

"For solar power, the future looks bright"

Fortune article here.

The article states:
[T.J.] Rodgers is a rarity: a caustic enviro-skeptic and alternative energy tycoon.
An excerpt:
...And CEOs like GE's Jeff Immelt, Wal-Mart's Lee Scott, and Peter Darbee of PG&E, who worry about climate change? "Every one of the names you just mentioned would flunk his ass in the most rudimentary test about global warming." Rodgers notes that he and Immelt both went to Dartmouth. (Rodgers is a trustee, currently battling the college administration over who elects the board.) "Jeff Immelt played football," he says. "I graduated No. 1 in physics."

Today's links

1. "Recovering a ghost" from Don Hendershot here.

2. "I still believe" here.

3. Some quotes from Ken Levenstein are here.

4. A blog covering "a very narrow niche - only the news and views about the Ivory-Billed Woodpacker" is mentioned here.

5. Bobby Harrison's site has apparently been updated. His "Become a Member" page is here.

His news page is here; NBC's "Fleecing of America" IBWO story didn't make the cut.