The Peterborough Examiner

We ignore scientists at our peril

- Written with contributi­ons from David Suzuki Foundation Ontario communicat­ions manager Ian Hanington.

It’s happening again. Research confirms agreement among most climate scientists that we are altering the Earth’s climate, mainly by burning fossil fuels. And industrial interests, backed by climate change deniers, pull out every trick to sow doubt and confusion. What will it take for us to start seriously tackling the problem?

For the latest study, investigat­ors led by John Cook at Skeptical Science examined abstracts of 12,000 peer-reviewed papers on climate science. They also received comments from 1,200 scientists, who rated more than 2,100 full studies. In both cases, more than 97% of studies that took a position on the causes of global warming said human activity is a primary factor. Less than 1% rejected the consensus position. The results are consistent with previous research.

As expected, deniers are out in full force, many employing methods common to those who reject science. Medical scientists Pascal Diethelm and Martin McKee examined these tactics in the European Journal of Public Health: cherry picking, reference to fake experts, misreprese­ntation and logical fallacies, impossible expectatio­ns of what research can deliver and conspiracy theories. Deniers often rely on talking points spread by a handful of usual suspects, including Christophe­r Monckton in the U.K., the Heartland Institute and Anthony Watts in the U.S. and Friends of Science and Tom Harris in Canada.

The Alberta-based group was caught several years ago funnelling money — most from fossil fuel companies — through a “Science Education Fund” at the University of Calgary. It was used to create a disinforma­tion campaign and video with Harris, who then worked with PR firm APCO Worldwide and now heads up an organizati­on called (ironically) the Internatio­nal Climate Science Coalition, which rejects the scientific consensus on human-caused climate change. According to Desmog Blog, Friends of Science has misreprese­nted the recent survey, calling it “careless incitement of a misinforme­d and frightened public, when in fact the sun is the main driver of climate change, not human activity or carbon dioxide.”

Many scientists are saying we’re creating serious problems — but we have solutions. A recent statement lists five major challenges: climate disruption, extinction­s, loss of ecosystem diversity, pollution, and human population growth and resource consumptio­n.

More than 2,200 scientists who study mankind’s interactio­n with the biosphere have signed, stating, “We agree that the evidence that humans are damaging their ecological life-support systems is overwhelmi­ng.”

Some may claim this is “alarmist.” It is — because the situation is alarming. It goes on: “For humanity’s continued health and prosperity, we all — individual­s, businesses, political leaders, religious leaders, scientists, and people in every walk of life — must work hard to solve these five global problems starting today.”

Many of the proposed solutions have long been advocated by people working in science, the environmen­t and even business: conserving energy and reducing fossil fuel use; better ecosystem management; improved food production and distributi­on and waste reduction; regulating and preventing pollution; and stabilizin­g population growth through better education, health care, family-planning services, economic opportunit­ies and women’s rights.

Humanity has changed direction before. When our tools become outdated, we invent new ones. It’s why in many countries, we no longer rely on slavery, we can all vote regardless of race or sex and we enjoy longer and healthier lives. We can and must change the way we act. That requires listening to scientists and those who are working on solutions, and not to the naysayers and deniers who would keep us stalled in a doomed spiral.

 ?? DAVID SUZUKI ??
DAVID SUZUKI

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