Even as the case for alarm over CO2 is being shredded by experts and by Mother Nature herself, new ways are being sought to push that alarm into schoolchildren. Here is one being funded by the EU this year:
“The Institute
of Education at the University of Reading is welcoming more than 300 school
children for an exciting and innovative programme of climate change activities
which combine science, maths, history and modern languages.”
The insinuation that carbon dioxide released by human
actions is a major driver of climate change is a shibboleth of some standing in
political and educational circles. The
EU in particular has seized upon it, despite the harm such beliefs have already
brought to European countries.
Climate dogma from the EU
“Climate change is happening now:
temperatures are rising, rainfall patterns are shifting, glaciers and snow are
melting, and the global mean sea level is rising. We expect that these changes
will continue, and that extreme weather events resulting in hazards such as
floods and droughts will become more frequent and intense.”
Source: European Environment Agency
Let us examine each phrase in sequence:
“Climate change is happening now:” This statement has been true since the Earth
had an atmosphere. Our climate varies on
all relevant space and time scales. The
remark, in other words, is a platitude.
“temperatures are rising,”
No doubt, somewhere they are, and somewhere they are not. They never stay
the same anywhere over any time period. Estimates of global mean temperatures show two similar periods with rising trends in the 20th C, a period of relative cooling in between, and more recently a flattening out.
“rainfall patterns are shifting,” They always do – they are part of the
variability in our climate system. For
scientific studies showing that recently observed changes do not match those
promoted by climate alarmists, see CO2 Science's subsection on precipitation. For example:
“Australian researchers report discovering that "on
average, dry regions/months became wetter and wet regions/months became drier
over the 1940-2009 period," and they say that "this conclusion holds
in all available databases and also holds for 1940-1999." In addition,
they further remark that the patterns observed "show no relationship to
local or global changes in temperature," and that "if anything, these
results constitute a slight decline in meteorological drought over the last 70 ears."
“glaciers and snow are melting,” Of course they are. They do this every year. But nothing much by way of systematic change can be seen in data on snow coverage, and the major ice mass in Antarctica continues to grow as found, for example, in this study:
“At this point in time, however, we can safely conclude that
the climate-alarmist claim of dramatic global flooding of earth's coastal areas
in response to the melting of polar ice due to global warming has been
thoroughly discredited, for during the period of time that they claim the
planet experienced the warmest temperatures of the past two millennia,
Antarctica experienced a net buildup of ice that actually removed water from
earth's seas.”
“With respect to the results of their analysis, Jevrejeva et al. say their findings show that "global sea level rise is irregular and varies greatly over time," noting that "it is apparent that rates in the 1920-1945 period are likely to be as large as today's." In addition, they report that their "global sea level trend estimate of 2.4 ± 1.0 mm/yr for the period from 1993 to 2000 matches the 2.6 ± 0.7 mm/yr sea level rise found from TOPEX/Poseidon altimeter data."
With respect to what Jevrejeva et al. describe as "the discussion on whether sea level rise is accelerating," their results pretty much answer the question in the negative; and in further support of this conclusion, they note that "Church et al. (2004) pointed out that with decadal variability in the computed global mean sea level, it is not possible to detect a significant increase in the rate of sea level rise over the period 1950-2000," as is clearly evident from the bottom portion of the above figure[shown here on the left].”
“We expect that these changes will continue,” There will certainly continue to be
changes. That is merely another
platitude. If they are instead expecting
recent trends to continue, they presumably expect cooler temperatures, reduced
hurricane activity, more greening of the Sahara, improved crop yields in India and China, further reduction in the rate of sea level rise, further increases in the polar bear population, increased ice mass, more snow in the northern hemisphere and so on. These trends are not the friends of the climate dogmatists.
“and that extreme weather events resulting in hazards such
as floods and droughts will become more frequent and intense.” They have not done so far, and there are
good grounds to believe that they would be worse in a cooler climate than in a
warmer one. Here is some informed
commentary on the matter:
“In spite of all the media hype about the rising economic
impact of each new year's normal share of weather and climate extremes (which
many insurance companies love to hype as well), there is really nothing unusual
about the weather and climate extremes themselves. Consequently, if the
globe truly is warming (for whatever reason), it must therefore be concluded,
on the basis of this empirical evidence, that warming does not bring an
increase in extreme weather or climate events. And if this be true, which
it is, where are all the catastrophic consequences we are regularly told must
assuredly follow increasing global temperatures? Like the emperor's new
clothes, they're just not there.”
Climate outreach funded by the
EU in schools
The above example of EU propaganda does not bode well for the content of anything they would willingly fund about climate for our schools. Here is more about the Reading University initiative which has been been funded by the EU (hat-tip Tom Nelson):
Be Afraid Ye Little One! |
The activities see children working in teams with coloured balls to simulate the way that carbon moves between atmosphere, ocean and plants in the carbon cycle. Washing up liquid bubbles filled with methane are exploding in a burst of brilliant yellow flame to give a dramatic demonstration of the amount of energy in fossil fuels (all within Health and Safety – of course).
But what of the substantial content of this programme? We can learn about it here in a progress report in 2012 coordinated by Oversby himself. Here is an extract from the Executive Summary, and it reveals this as just another effort to produce 'little climate activists':
'The impact of global warming arises primarily from our usage of fossil fuel at local level such as in heating our homes or providing our transport as a by-product of their combustion is carbon dioxide. It is this gas together with other greenhouse gases which congregate in the upper atmosphere and by absorbing some of the earth’s radiation, results in global warming. Consequently changing with the climate is likely to be the defining global concern of the 21st Century. The world is likely to build so many fossil-fueled power stations, energy guzzling factories and inefficient buildings in the next five years that it will become impossible to hold global warming to safe levels, and the chance of combating dangerous climate change will be lost forever.
This network has therefore been initiated to link students in both primary and secondary schools across Europe to discuss, engage and commit to undertake actions to limit the change in climate.
The network comprises schools and teachers in six European countries willing to include climate change topics and issues within their school lessons. With the support of the network partners and associate members, this will result in a deeper understanding of a global concern and lead to actions which will initiate the transition to a more sustainable use of energy.'
What is to be done about the dogma?
In an excellent article published a few days ago (hat-tip
Greenie Watch), and well worth reading for further support to the perspective
being made in this post, Paul Driessen concludes as follows:
‘We need to save our environment from environmentalists and
EPA - and safeguard our liberties, living standards and lives against the
arrogance of too-powerful politicians and bureaucrats. How we achieve this,
while protecting our lives and environment from real risks, is one of
the greatest challenges we face.’
To modify this for the context of this post, I would use ‘the EU’ instead of the EPA, and I would add ‘children’ to the list of what we need to safeguard.
Our climate dogmatists
can be refuted by Mother Nature. Already
it is the case that no child in school has experienced a world with ‘global
warming’ in their lifetime. Further warming
may of course resume, and if it does, no doubt a big deal will be made of it –
a deal far bigger, far far bigger than the ‘deal’ being made about the modest cooling
we have seen in recent years. Given the
harm that lower temperatures can bring, it seems harsh to wish for the
downward trend to continue for a few more years. But what more effective way is there to rid
the political world, and then the educational one, of the hideous dogma of CO2-driven
alarmism?
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