Obama and Hatoyama Pledge 'Success' at Copenhagen Climate [Hoax] Summit
TOKYO, Japan, November 13, 2009 (ENS) - Meeting for the first time on Japanese soil, Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and President Barack Obama today committed their governments to "a new era in the global fight against climate change" by shifting to low-carbon growth and achieving "a successful outcome" at the UN climate conference next month.[In case you missed it]: Prof Ian Plimer: tenets of a climate change sceptic - Telegraph
Prime Minister Hatoyama said, "By 2050, we have set out this goal of an 80 percent reduction" in greenhouse gas emissions. "Both Japan and U.S. have agreed on this, and we want to make COP-15 a success, and we agreed to cooperate towards this end," he said...
In an interview with ABN Newswire in June he said: "Carbon dioxide has an effect on the atmosphere and it has an effect for the first 50 parts per million and once it's done its job then it's finished and you can double it and quadruple it and it has no effect because we've seen that in the geological past, and we've seen it in times gone by when the carbon dioxide content was 100 times the current content. We didn't have runaway global warming, we actually had glaciation."After spending binge, White House says it will focus on deficits - Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei - POLITICO.com
Democratic lobbyist Steve Elmendorf says the White House focus on deficit reduction could easily kill the cap-and-trade effort. “I think this means cap-and-trade has to go to the backburner,” he said.Kevin Rudd: A shape-shifter in the Lodge
But he is a shape shifter, all the same.[Typical alarmism: Mix natural variability, measurement error, and maybe some fraud, then multiply by 100; result still unimpressive] | Reuters
...
A public proponent of the "calm, methodical" approach to policy debate, who last Friday night capped off a week of such measured exhortations with a foaming, quasi-Biblical attack on climate change sceptics, whom he accused of conspiring to "destroy our children's future".
Greenland's current rate, of 0.75 mm a year, would be 7.5 cms if continued for 100 years. "This is...much more that previous estimates of the Greenland contribution," van den Broeke said.
No comments:
Post a Comment