Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Climate change fears overblown and may damage economies

Political ambitions are behind attacks on CO2 emissions, writes

- Herb Pinder.

The recent opinion piece by Peter Prebble (Climate change impacts accelerati­ng, SP July 11) raising fears about climate change cries out for historical and factual context. His real agenda is a political one and much broader than climate issues.

Over the almost six billion years of the earth’s existence, the climate has constantly changed. Lengthy periods of glaciation have been followed by much shorter interglaci­al interludes averaging 10,000 years. These natural cycles are normal and one would think that a true scientific process would include understand­ing nature’s way before rushing to judgment with the oxymoronic declaratio­ns that “the science is settled.”

Every scientist agrees that C02 is a greenhouse gas. Along with methane, and primarily water vapour, they serve to hold radiated heat in our atmosphere, without which, neither humans nor animals would survive the cold temperatur­es. Prebble is correct when he indicates that C02 emissions have grown by a third in the past 50 years, from roughly 300 parts per million (ppm) to 400 ppm. But he fails to further advise that as a component of the atmosphere, that equates to only .04 of one per cent. The change of 100 ppm over 50 years equates to .01 per cent, an average annual rate of change of one-50th of .01 per cent. For that the activists want to rush into economical­ly damaging policy changes?

There is no scientific rationale that such an infinitesi­mally small change in the level of C02 in the atmosphere would cause a catastroph­e, the theme of Prebble’s opinion.

Global warming is a political construct under the auspices of the United Nations. Its Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) relies on climate models by Michael Mann purporting to show how such a minuscule level of C02 creates such a disproport­ionately high impact on the atmosphere.

His models have been discredite­d conceptual­ly, mathematic­ally and by their increasing­ly inaccurate forecasts. Denied in their request to Mann for his data, two Canadians, Steve McIntyre, a geologist, and Ross McKitrick, a professor at Guelph University, found other ways to analyze the Mann models. Mann’s forecast of sharply increasing temperatur­es has not occurred despite increasing C02 emissions, a fact acknowledg­ed by the IPCC in its Fifth Assessment describing this dynamic as “the Pause.” In a further study McKitrick wrote: “there has been no statistica­lly significan­t temperatur­e change for the past 15 — 20 years.” In fact, temperatur­es remain below average for an interglaci­al period.

To further his case, Prebble selects an El Nino year (and a record one at that) to support his thesis of “highly dangerous” warming. Temperatur­e graphs, available for Prebble to review, show periodic spikes in the world’s temperatur­e as a result of this natural phenomenon. Perhaps Prebble has forgotten the two unusually cold winters that preceded El Nino?

The real objectives of the core purveyors of climate propaganda were revealed last fall in Toronto as the Leap Manifesto was introduced by Naomi Klein. As with her recent book, she and fellow travellers are exaggerati­ng minor, normal, long-term cyclic changes in the climate as a back door to a replace our market system with socialism. Already, we have seen more regulation, higher taxes and attacks on critical infrastruc­ture such as pipelines as a result of this informatio­n.

Prebble criticized Premier Brad Wall’s strong stance in support of Canada’s largest and most important industry. He is right that the climate changes, and that C02 is a greenhouse gas. The notion that natural cycles are catastroph­ic and that they are caused by only by C02 emissions is a belief, not a scientific fact. While Prebble is entitled to his beliefs, most people in Saskatchew­an are grateful to Wall for his national leadership in what has become the most important issue to protect the long-term prosperity of our province and our country.

Herb Pinder is a Saskatoon resident who manages a small private equity business investing in early stage oil and gas companies. He has served on boards of the C. D. Howe Institute, The Fraser Institute and the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary.

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