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U.S. Senate
Report: Over 400 Prominent Scientists Disputed Man-Made Global
Warming Claims in 2007
Senate Report Debunks "Consensus"
Report
Released on December 20, 2007
Attachment
Number One:
Full Text of open letter, December 13, 2007:
Over 100
Prominent International Scientists Warn UN Against 'Futile'
Climate Control Efforts in a December 13, 2007 open letter.
Complete Letter
with all signatories - As published in Canada's National Post on
December 13, 2007:
The National Post
Don't Fight,
Adapt; We Should Give Up Futile Attempts to Combat Climate
Change
Dec. 13, 2007
Link
to Letter:
Key Quote from
Scientists' Letter to UN: "Attempts to prevent global
climate change from occurring are ultimately futile, and
constitute a tragic misallocation of resources that would be
better spent on humanity's real and pressing problems."
His Excellency
Ban
Ki-MoonSecretary-General,
United Nations
New York, N.Y.
Dear Mr.
Secretary-General,
Re: UN climate
conference taking the World in entirely the wrong direction
It is not
possible to stop climate change, a natural phenomenon that has
affected humanity through the ages. Geological, archaeological,
oral and written histories all attest to the dramatic challenges
posed to past societies from unanticipated changes in
temperature, precipitation, winds and other climatic variables.
We therefore need to equip nations to become resilient to the
full range of these natural phenomena by promoting economic
growth and wealth generation.
The United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has
issued increasingly alarming conclusions about the climatic
influences of human-produced carbon dioxide (CO2), a
non-polluting gas that is essential to plant photosynthesis.
While we understand the evidence that has led them to view CO2
emissions as harmful, the IPCC's conclusions are quite
inadequate as justification for implementing policies that will
markedly diminish future prosperity. In particular, it is not
established that it is possible to significantly alter global
climate through cuts in human greenhouse gas emissions. On top
of which, because attempts to cut emissions will slow
development, the current UN approach of CO2 reduction is likely
to increase human suffering from future climate change rather
than to decrease it.
The IPCC
Summaries for Policy Makers are the most widely read IPCC
reports amongst politicians and non-scientists and are the basis
for most climate change policy formulation. Yet these Summaries
are prepared by a relatively small core writing team with the
final drafts approved line-by-line by government representatives.
The great majority of IPCC contributors and reviewers, and
the tens of thousands of other scientists who are qualified to
comment on these matters, are not involved in the preparation of
these documents. The summaries therefore cannot properly be
represented as a consensus view among experts.
Contrary to the
impression left by the IPCC Summary reports:
*Recent
observations of phenomena such as glacial retreats, sea-level
rise and the migration of temperature-sensitive species are not
evidence for abnormal climate change, for none of these changes
has been shown to lie outside the bounds of known natural
variability.
*The average rate
of warming of 0.1 to 0. 2 degrees Celsius per decade recorded by
satellites during the late 20th century falls within known
natural rates of warming and cooling over the last 10,000 years.
*Leading
scientists, including some senior IPCC representatives,
acknowledge that today's computer models cannot predict climate.
Consistent with this, and despite computer projections of
temperature rises, there has been no net global warming since
1998. That the current temperature plateau follows a late
20th-century period of warming is consistent with the
continuation today of natural multi-decadal or millennial
climate cycling.
In stark contrast
to the often repeated assertion that the science of climate
change is "settled," significant new peer-reviewed
research has cast even more doubt on the hypothesis of dangerous
human-caused global warming. But because IPCC working groups
were generally instructed ( http://ipcc-wg1.ucar.edu/wg1/docs/wg1_timetable_2006-08-14.pdf
) to consider work published only through May, 2005, these
important findings are not included in their reports; i.e., the
IPCC assessment reports are already materially outdated.
The UN climate
conference in Bali has been planned to take the world along a
path of severe CO2 restrictions, ignoring the lessons apparent
from the failure of the Kyoto Protocol, the chaotic nature of
the European CO2 trading market, and the ineffectiveness of
other costly initiatives to curb greenhouse gas emissions.
Balanced cost/benefit analyses provide no support for the
introduction of global measures to cap and reduce energy
consumption for the purpose of restricting CO2 emissions.
Furthermore, it is irrational to apply the "precautionary
principle" because many scientists recognize that both
climatic coolings and warmings are realistic possibilities over
the medium-term future.
The current UN
focus on "fighting climate change," as illustrated in
the Nov. 27 UN Development Programme's Human Development Report,
is distracting governments from adapting to the threat of
inevitable natural climate changes, whatever forms they may
take. National and international planning for such changes is
needed, with a focus on helping our most vulnerable citizens
adapt to conditions that lie ahead. Attempts to prevent global
climate change from occurring are ultimately futile, and
constitute a tragic misallocation of resources that would be
better spent on humanity's real and pressing problems.
Yours faithfully,
The following are
signatories to the Dec. 13th letter to the Ban Ki-moon,
Secretary-General of the United Nations on the UN Climate
conference in Bali [List of signatories: LINK]:
Don Aitkin, PhD,
Professor, social scientist, retired Vice-Chancellor and
President, University of Canberra, Australia
Syun-Ichi
Akasofu,
PhD, Professor of Physics, Emeritus and Founding Director,
International Arctic Research Center of the University of Alaska
Fairbanks, U.S.
William
J.R.
Alexander, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Dept. of Civil and
Biosystems Engineering, University of Pretoria, South Africa;
Member, UN Scientific and Technical Committee on Natural
Disasters, 1994-2000
Bjarne Andresen,
PhD, physicist, Professor, The Niels Bohr Institute, University
of Copenhagen, Denmark
Geoff L. Austin,
PhD, FNZIP, FRSNZ, Professor, Dept. of Physics, University of
Auckland, New Zealand
Timothy
F. Ball,
PhD, environmental consultant, former climatology professor,
University of Winnipeg, Canada
Ernst-Georg Beck,
Dipl. Biol., Biologist, Merian-Schule Freiburg, Germany
Sonja A. Boehmer-Christiansen,
PhD, Reader, Dept. of Geography, Hull University, UK; Editor,
Energy & Environment journal
Chris C. Borel,
PhD, remote sensing scientist, U.S.
Reid
A. Bryson,
Ph.D. D.Sc. D.Engr., UNEP Global 500 Laureate; Senior Scientist,
Center for Climatic Research; Emeritus Professor of Meteorology,
of Geography, and of Environmental Studies, University of
Wisconsin, U.S.
Dan
Carruthers,
M.Sc., wildlife biology consultant specializing in animal
ecology in Arctic and Subarctic regions, Alberta, Canada
Robert
M. Carter,
PhD, Professor, Marine Geophysical Laboratory, James Cook
University, Townsville, Australia
Ian
D. Clark,
PhD, Professor, isotope hydrogeology and paleoclimatology, Dept.
of Earth Sciences, University of Ottawa, Canada
Richard S.
Courtney, PhD, climate and atmospheric science consultant, IPCC
expert reviewer, U.K.
Willem de Lange,
PhD, Dept. of Earth and Ocean Sciences, School of Science and
Engineering, Waikato University, New Zealand
David Deming, PhD
(Geophysics), Associate Professor, College of Arts and Sciences,
University of Oklahoma, U.S.
Freeman J. Dyson,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Institute for Advanced
Studies, Princeton, N.J., U.S.
Don
J. Easterbrook,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Geology, Western Washington
University, U.S.
Lance
Endersbee,
Emeritus Professor, former Dean of Engineering and Pro-Vice
Chancellor of Monasy University, Australia
Hans
Erren, Doctorandus, geophysicist and climate specialist, Sittard, The
Netherlands
Robert H.
Essenhigh, PhD, E.G. Bailey Professor of Energy Conversion,
Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State University, U.S.
Christopher
Essex, PhD, Professor of Applied Mathematics and Associate
Director of the Program in Theoretical Physics, University of
Western Ontario, Canada
David Evans, PhD,
mathematician, carbon accountant, computer and electrical
engineer and head of 'Science Speak', Australia
William Evans,
PhD, Editor, American Midland Naturalist; Dept. of Biological
Sciences, University of Notre Dame, U.S.
Stewart Franks,
PhD, Associate Professor, Hydroclimatologist, University of
Newcastle, Australia
R. W. Gauldie,
PhD, Research Professor, Hawai'i Institute of Geophysics and
Planetology, School of Ocean Earth Sciences and Technology,
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Lee C. Gerhard,
PhD, Senior Scientist Emeritus, University of Kansas; former
director and state geologist, Kansas Geological Survey, U.S.
Gerhard
Gerlich,
Professor for Mathematical and Theoretical Physics, Institut für
Mathematische Physik der TU Braunschweig, Germany
Albrecht
Glatzle,
PhD, sc.agr., Agro-Biologist and Gerente ejecutivo, INTTAS,
Paraguay
Fred Goldberg,
PhD, Adj Professor, Royal Institute of Technology, Mechanical
Engineering, Stockholm, Sweden
Vincent
Gray,
PhD, expert reviewer for the IPCC and author of The Greenhouse
Delusion: A Critique of 'Climate Change 2001,' Wellington, New
Zealand
William M. Gray,
Professor Emeritus, Dept. of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State
University and Head of the Tropical Meteorology Project, U.S.
Howard Hayden,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Physics, University of Connecticut,
U.S.
Louis Hissink
M.Sc. M.A.I.G., Editor AIG News and Consulting Geologist, Perth,
Western Australia
Craig D. Idso,
PhD, Chairman, Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global
Change, Arizona, U.S.
Sherwood B. Idso,
PhD, President, Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and
Global Change, AZ, USA
Andrei Illarionov,
PhD, Senior Fellow, Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity,
U.S.; founder and director of the Institute of Economic
Analysis, Russia
Zbigniew
Jaworowski, PhD, physicist, Chairman - Scientific Council of
Central Laboratory for Radiological Protection, Warsaw, Poland
Jon Jenkins, PhD,
MD, computer modelling - virology, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Wibjorn Karlen,
PhD, Emeritus Professor, Dept. of Physical Geography and
Quaternary Geology, Stockholm University, Sweden
Olavi Kärner,
Ph.D., Research Associate, Dept. of Atmospheric Physics,
Institute of Astrophysics and Atmospheric Physics, Toravere,
Estonia
Joel M. Kauffman,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, University of the Sciences
in Philadelphia, U.S.
David
Kear, PhD,
FRSNZ, CMG, geologist, former Director-General of NZ Dept. of
Scientific & Industrial Research, New Zealand
Madhav Khandekar,
PhD, former Research Scientist Environment Canada; Editor
"Climate Research" (03-05); Editorial Board Member
"Natural Hazards, IPCC Expert Reviewer 2007
William
Kininmonth M.Sc., M.Admin., former head of Australia's National
Climate Centre and a consultant to the World Meteorological
organization's Commission for Climatology
Jan J.H. Kop,
M.Sc. Ceng FICE (Civil Engineer Fellow of the Institution of
Civil Engineers), Emeritus Professor of Public Health
Engineering, Technical University Delft, The Netherlands
Professor
R.W.J. Kouffeld, Emeritus Professor, Energy Conversion, Delft
University of Technology, The Netherlands
Salomon
Kroonenberg, PhD, Professor, Dept. of Geotechnology, Delft
University of Technology, The Netherlands
Hans H.J. Labohm,
PhD, economist, former advisor to the executive board,
Clingendael Institute (The Netherlands Institute of
International Relations), The Netherlands
The Rt. Hon. Lord
Lawson of Blaby, economist; Chairman of the Central Europe
Trust; former Chancellor of the Exchequer, U.K.
Douglas
Leahey,
PhD, meteorologist and air-quality consultant, Calgary, Canada
David R. Legates,
PhD, Director, Center for Climatic Research, University of
Delaware, U.S.
Marcel
Leroux,
PhD, Professor Emeritus of Climatology, University of Lyon,
France; former director of Laboratory of Climatology, Risks and
Environment, CNRS
Bryan Leyland,
International Climate Science Coalition, consultant - power
engineer, Auckland, New Zealand
William
Lindqvist,
PhD, consulting geologist and company director, Tiburon,
California, U.S.
Richard
S. Lindzen,
PhD, Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology, Dept. of Earth,
Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, U.S.
A.J. Tom van
Loon, PhD, Professor of Geology (Quaternary Geology), Adam
Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland; former President of the
European Association of Science Editors
Anthony
R. Lupo,
PhD, Associate Professor of Atmospheric Science, Dept. of Soil,
Environmental, and Atmospheric Science, University of
Missouri-Columbia, U.S.
Richard Mackey,
PhD, Statistician, Australia
Horst
Malberg,
PhD, Professor for Meteorology and Climatology, Institut für
Meteorologie, Berlin, Germany
John Maunder,
PhD, Climatologist, former President of the Commission for
Climatology of the World Meteorological Organization (89-97),
New Zealand
Alister
McFarquhar, PhD, international economist, Downing College,
Cambridge, U.K.
Ross
McKitrick,
PhD, Associate Professor, Dept. of Economics, University of
Guelph, Canada
John McLean,
Climate Data Analyst, computer scientist, Melbourne, Australia
Owen
McShane, B.
Arch., Master of City and Regional Planning (UC Berkeley),
economist and policy analyst, joint founder of the International
Climate Science Coalition, Director - Centre for Resource
Management Studies, New Zealand
Fred
Michel,
PhD, Director, Institute of Environmental Sciences and Associate
Professor of Earth Sciences, Carleton University, Canada
Frank
Milne, PhD,
Professor, Dept. of Economics, Queen's University, Canada
Asmunn Moene,
PhD, former head of the Forecasting Centre, Meteorological
Institute, Norway
Alan Moran, PhD,
Energy Economist, Director of the IPA's Deregulation Unit,
Australia
Nils-Axel
Morner,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Paleogeophysics & Geodynamics,
Stockholm University, Sweden
Lubos Motl, PhD,
physicist, former Harvard string theorist, Charles University,
Prague, Czech Republic
John
Nicol, PhD,
physicist, James Cook University, Australia
Mr. David Nowell,
M.Sc., Fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society, former
chairman of the NATO Meteorological Group, Ottawa, Canada
James J. O'Brien,
PhD, Professor Emeritus, Meteorology and Oceanography, Florida
State University, U.S.
Cliff
Ollier,
PhD, Professor Emeritus (Geology), Research Fellow, University
of Western Australia
Garth W.
Paltridge, PhD, atmospheric physicist, Emeritus Professor and
former Director of the Institute of Antarctic and Southern Ocean
Studies, University of Tasmania, Australia
R.
Timothy Patterson,
PhD, Professor, Dept. of Earth Sciences (paleoclimatology),
Carleton University, Canada
Al
Pekarek, PhD,
Associate Professor of Geology, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Dept., St. Cloud State University, Minnesota, U.S.
Ian
Plimer, PhD,
Professor of Geology, School of Earth and Environmental
Sciences, University of Adelaide and Emeritus Professor of Earth
Sciences, University of Melbourne, Australia
Brian Pratt, PhD,
Professor of Geology, Sedimentology, University of Saskatchewan,
Canada
Harry N.A.
Priem,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Planetary Geology and Isotope
Geophysics, Utrecht University; former director of the
Netherlands Institute for Isotope Geosciences
Alex Robson, PhD,
Economics, Australian National University
Colonel
F.P.M. Rombouts, Branch Chief - Safety, Quality and Environment, Royal
Netherlands Air Force
R.G. Roper, PhD,
Professor Emeritus of Atmospheric Sciences, School of Earth and
Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, U.S.
Arthur
Rorsch,
PhD, Emeritus Professor, Molecular Genetics, Leiden University,
The Netherlands
Rob
Scagel,
M.Sc., forest microclimate specialist, principal consultant,
Pacific Phytometric Consultants, B.C., Canada
Tom V. Segalstad,
PhD, (Geology/Geochemistry), Head of the Geological Museum and
Associate Professor of Resource and Environmental Geology,
University of Oslo, Norway
Gary D. Sharp,
PhD, Center for Climate/Ocean Resources Study, Salinas, CA, U.S.
S. Fred Singer,
PhD, Professor Emeritus of Environmental Sciences, University of
Virginia and former director, U.S. Weather Satellite Service
L. Graham Smith,
PhD, Associate Professor, Dept. of Geography, University of
Western Ontario, Canada
Roy W. Spencer,
PhD, climatologist, Principal Research Scientist, Earth System
Science Center, The University of Alabama, Huntsville, U.S.
Peter
Stilbs,
TeknD, Professor of Physical Chemistry, Research Leader, School
of Chemical Science and Engineering, KTH (Royal Institute of
Technology), Stockholm, Sweden
Hendrik Tennekes,
PhD, former Director of Research, Royal Netherlands
Meteorological Institute
Dick
Thoenes,
PhD, Emeritus Professor of Chemical Engineering, Eindhoven
University of Technology, The Netherlands
Brian G
Valentine, PhD, PE (Chem.), Technology Manager - Industrial
Energy Efficiency, Adjunct Associate Professor of Engineering
Science, University of Maryland at College Park; Dept of Energy,
Washington, DC, U.S.
Gerrit J. van der
Lingen, PhD, geologist and paleoclimatologist, climate change
consultant, Geoscience Research and Investigations, New Zealand
Len Walker, PhD,
power engineering, Pict Energy, Melbourne, Australia
Edward
J. Wegman,
Bernard J. Dunn Professor, Department of Statistics and
Department Computational and Data Sciences, George Mason
University, Virginia, U.S.
Stephan
Wilksch,
PhD, Professor for Innovation and Technology Management,
Production Management and Logistics, University of Technology
and Economics Berlin, Germany
Boris
Winterhalter, PhD, senior marine researcher (retired),
Geological Survey of Finland, former professor in marine
geology, University of Helsinki, Finland
David E. Wojick,
PhD, P.Eng., UN IPCC Expert Reviewer, energy consultant,
Virginia, U.S.
Raphael
Wust,
PhD, Lecturer, Marine Geology/Sedimentology, James Cook
University, Australia
Zichichi, PhD,
President of the World Federation of Scientists, Geneva,
Switzerland; Emeritus Professor of Advanced Physics, University
of Bologna, Italy.
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