Global Warming….Global Cooling….Climate Change….Science is DEFINITELY NOT Settled

 NASA Scientists Puzzled by Global Cooling on Land and Sea

Image: NASA Scientists Puzzled by Global Cooling on Land and Sea(iStock)

Monday, 06 Oct 2014

The deep ocean may not be hiding heat after all, raising new questions about why global warming appears to have slowed in recent years, said the US space agency Monday.

Scientists have noticed that while greenhouse gases have continued to mount in the first part of the 21st century, global average surface air temperatures have stopped rising along with them, said NASA.

Some studies have suggested that heat is being absorbed temporarily by the deep seas, and that this so-called global warming hiatus is a temporary trend.

But latest data from satellite and direct ocean temperature measurements from 2005 to 2013 “found the ocean abyss below 1.24 miles (1,995 meters) has not warmed measurably,” NASA said in a statement.

The findings present a new puzzle to scientists, but co-author Josh Willis of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) said the reality of climate change is not being thrown into doubt.

“The sea level is still rising,” said Willis.

“We’re just trying to understand the nitty-gritty details.”

A separate study in August in the journal Science said the apparent slowdown in the Earth’s surface warming in the last 15 years could be due to that heat being trapped in the deep Atlantic and Southern Ocean.

But the NASA researchers said their approach, described in the journal Nature Climate Change, is the first to test the idea using satellite observations, as well as direct temperature measurements of the upper ocean.

“The deep parts of the ocean are harder to measure,” said researcher William Llovel of NASA JPL.

“The combination of satellite and direct temperature data gives us a glimpse of how much sea level rise is due to deep warming. The answer is — not much.”

Read Latest Breaking News from Newsmax.comhttp://www.Newsmax.com/Newsfront/Science-US-climate-oceans/2014/10/06/id/598864/#ixzz3FTZYhwTG
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Unaffordable Electricity Prices, Scaring Away Manufacturing Jobs!

Ontario electricity policies hamper economic growth: Fraser Institute

In May 2014, the Fraser Institute, based in British Columbia, published a report authored by Professor Ross McKitrick and PhD candidate Elmira Aliakbari of the University of Guelph. The report, Energy Abundance and Economic Growth, endeavoured to answer an important question in economic research: does economic growth cause an increase in energy consumption or does an increase in energy availability cause an increase in economic activity, or both?

The question has important implications for government policy. Suppose GDP (i.e., national income) growth causes increased energy consumption, but is not dependent on it. In this view, energy consumption is like a luxury good (like jewelry), the consumption of which arises from increased wealth. If policy makers wanted to, they could restrict energy consumption without impinging on future economic and employment growth. The alternative view is that energy is a limiting factor (or essential input) to growth. In that framework, if energy consumption is constrained by policy, future growth will also be constrained, raising the economic costs of such policies. If both directions of causality exist (i.e., if economic growth causes increases in energy consumption and increases in the availability, and use of energy causes economic growth), it still implies that restrictions on energy availability or increases in energy prices will have negative effects on future growth.

The main contribution of the report, in terms of economic theory, is that it shows how new statistical methods have been developed that allow for investigation of whether the relationships between economic growth and growth in energy use are simply correlated or are causal in nature. The theoretical and methodological discussion in the report is quite complex, even for a trained economist, which is probably why the report received very little public attention. The clear conclusion of the analysis, however, is that growth and energy either jointly influence each other, or that the influence is one-way from energy to GDP. Further, of all the OECD countries studied, Canada shows the most consistent evidence on this, in that studies under a variety of methods and time periods have regularly found evidence that energy is a limiting factor in Canadian economic growth.

In other words, real per-capita income in Canada is definitely constrained by policies that restrict energy availability and/or increase energy costs, and growth in energy abundance leads to growth in Canadian GDP per capita.

The report concludes with a reference to Ontario’s electricity policies.

“These considerations are important to keep in mind as policymakers consider initiatives (especially related to renewable energy mandates, biofuels requirements, and so forth) that explicitly limit energy availability. Jurisdictions such as Ontario have argued that such policies are consistent with their overall strategy to promote economic growth. In other words, they assert that forcing investment in wind and solar generation systems – while making electricity more expensive overall – will contribute to macro-economic growth. The evidence points in the opposite direction. Policies that engineer energy scarcity are likely to lead to negative effects on future GDP growth.”

One can read the entire Fraser Institute report at:

http://www.fraserinstitute.org/uploadedFiles/fraser-ca/Content/research-news/research/publications/energy-abundance-and-economic-growth.pdf

Robert Lyman

Ottawa

Global Warming Alarmists Have an Agenda. Science Has NO Consensus!

The Corruption of Science

The late Dr. Michael Crichton in a speech at the California Institute of Technology made the following observation:

“I want to …talk about … the rise of what has been called consensus science. I regard consensus science as an extremely pernicious development that ought to be stopped cold in its tracks. Historically, the claim of consensus has been the first refuge of scoundrels; it is a way to avoid debate by claiming that the matter is already settled. …

“Let’s be clear: the work of science has nothing whatever to do with consensus. Consensus is the business of politics. Science, on the contrary, requires only one investigator who happens to be right, which means that he or she has results that are verifiable by reference to the real world. In science consensus is irrelevant. What is relevant is reproducible results … .

“There is no such thing as consensus science. If it’s consensus, it isn’t science. If it’s science, it isn’t consensus. … .”  … Consensus is invoked only in situations where the science is not solid enough. Nobody says the consensus of scientists agrees that E = mc². Nobody says the consensus is that the sun is 93 million miles away. It would never occur to anyone to speak that way.”

 In recent decades, the term consensus science has come to be associated with climate change/global warming.  The appeal to a consensus has been used to avoid honest and open debate about the extent of human influence on the climate system.  Climate change has become the poster child for the widely documented corruption in many fields of science resulting from competition for funding, tying funding to specific policy outcomes, and the increasing pressure to publish or perish.

Norman Rogers in the May 14 issue of the American Thinker began his article citing President Eisenhower’s farewell address warning that a “scientific-technological elite” dependent on government money would exert undue influence on government policy”. Scientific advice to policy makers has become heavily influenced by political agendas and rewards to organizations and scientists that provide the necessary scientific support for political objectives.  In the case of climate change, the influence can be traced back to the White House and Al Gore.

Climate change is the primary example of how science can be perverted by money and politics.  Today there is an international climate establishment that is supported annually by billions of dollars to advance a war on fossil energy, promote an agenda of fear, and undermine capitalism’s market driven system.  Anyone who does not subscribe to the climate orthodoxy is subjected intimidation and not to subtle threats to their careers.  Some climate advocates have called so called skeptics war criminals who should be jailed, the equivalent of holocaust deniers, flat earthers, and industry pawns.

The crime of these skeptics is to challenge the asserted consensus that human activities involving fossil energy and economic development are threatening the planet.  Advocates point to computer model results that project dramatic increases in global temperatures that will lead to extreme climate events—more intense hurricanes, extended droughts, and sea level rises that threaten coastal cities for example.

To increase their power and influence, the climate establishment has adopted the mantra that the “science is settled” and 97% of scientists agree that human activities are the primary cause of climate change over the past 50 plus years.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) does not claim that the science is settled.  Its latest report has a chart that shows level of understanding about major climate forcing processes.  Many are shown as low or medium levels of understanding.  Throughout its report, the IPCC refers to topics reflecting great uncertainty—natural variability, cloud formation, climate sensitivity, for example. The now 18-year pause in warming has so befuddled the establishment that it has come up with 52 different explanations.

In making projections of future global temperatures, the IPCC relies on over 50 models, each of which reflects different assumptions about how the climate system functions.  None of the models has been able to project actual temperatures or the pause. And, the only way these models can “back cast” past temperatures is by a process of adjustments. If climate science was settled, 50 plus models would be unnecessary and they would be highly accurate.

Finally, there is the claim that 97% of climate scientists agree that climate change is real and man-made. It is a bogus claim based on a paper by John Cook of the University of Queensland’s Climate Change Institute.  Reviews of Cook’s work demonstrate that is a case of cooking the books.  One of those critiques was by Richard Tol, a professor at the University of Sussex and an IPCC lead author, while the most detailed and quantitative was by Steve McIntyre—Climate Audit website.  Other critiques have included articles in the American Thinker, Debunking the 97% Consensus on Global Warming, February 4, 2014, The New American, Global Warming “Consensus: Cooking the Books, May 21, 2013, and a blog The Collapsing Consensus by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley.

The Cook paper is a classic example of what Darrell Huff wrote about in his book, How to Lie With Statistics.  The fact that the climate change establishment creates such misleading information to manipulate opinion is clear evidence that its scientific foundation doesn’t exist.  It is also evidence of desperation because the climate is not conforming to its orthodoxy of dread.

Science has provided the foundation for tremendous advances in technology, innovation that have contributed to advances in  human health and wealth.  Its corruption threatens to undermine the potential future advances that will benefit the generations of tomorrow.

Wind Relies on Exorbitant Subsidies, Special Favours, and lack of Regulation!

Time for Wind to Stand on Its Own

Susan Combs | 09/25/2014 |
Time for Wind to Stand on Its Own

We in Texas are proud of our economic successes over the past several years. One topic that keeps popping up is our energy sector. Texas consumes a great deal of electricity because of its energy-intensive industries. And of course, we have hot summers.

Regular consumers pay the price tag for their air conditioning and these taxpayers hope that there is a rational basis for their energy costs. But when government puts its thumb on the scale and tips the balance toward one energy source over another, things can go awry. Remember Solyndra? The federal government put more than their thumb on the scales on that one – they put $536 million on the scales to support a solar panel maker and the taxpayers had to foot the bill when it went belly up.

With the population and economy growing, and the demand thereby increasing in Texas, it is critical that taxpayers and consumers not be disadvantaged by government policy. My office just issued Texas Power Challenge, a report that looks at the various energy sources used for electricity in Texas. When it comes to the rich subsidies they receive from the state and federal governments, wind generators and their turbines tower above other sources of electricity generation – this is particularly troubling considering the actual electricity they generate, especially during the times when Texans really needs the power.

Texas made a bet on wind nearly 15 years ago by mandating that power companies provide a certain amount of power from wind. The challenge for wind is that it is well, windy, only sometimes. When it is not, it needs a more reliable partner.  That is most often natural gas. Nonetheless, we doubled our bet for wind by mandating extensive and very expensive transmission lines that are primarily for wind. When the wind is not blowing, the lines are not being used to their capacity.

The lines, built to provide transmission infrastructure from the Competitive Renewable Energy Zones in West Texas, were projected to cost about $5 billion, but instead spiked to nearly $7 billion (a 40 percent increase in cost to consumers). And consumers are going to be paying these costs for 15 to 20 years. Adding insult to injury, the bulk of wind farms here are least productive at the time of highest demand, in the middle of hot summer days. The Energy Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which manages system reliability for most of the state’s customers, says that summer capacity of wind is about 11,000 megawatts (MW), but it only counts on 963 MW because summer wind generation is so weak.

Subsidies and financial encouragement by states or federal agencies often look to fledgling industries that need a bit of help. With the wind capacity Texas now has, I would argue that market forces would produce a more efficient outcome and that the time for subsidies has passed. Texas has more than twice the amount of wind it originally mandated, and now has more subsidized wind power than any other state.

Because subsidies undoubtedly distort the market, caution should be used in their application. Texas has an economic development program that the wind industry has used extensively to limit property tax value on wind farms. For example, my office estimated in 2011 that wind projects qualified at that time under the property tax value limitation statute would receive nearly $850 million in total tax savings. Those wind projects were expected to create 480 jobs, which equates to about a $1.7 million tax benefit per job. That contrasts sharply with non-energy projects in the same program where the tax benefit per job was $195,565 — for 5,552 jobs. So instead of generating jobs and providing a reliable and consistent energy source, wind projects just generate higher costs. And there are increasing concerns about subsidies being used to encourage wind turbines close to homes, airports, military bases and migratory bird routes.

As the comptroller and chief financial officer of Texas, I worry about choices by policymakers that can have significant and adverse consequences. It seems to me that it is time for wind energy to stand on its own towers.

Susan Combs is the comptroller and chief financial officer of the state of Texas.

CO2 Enriched Air Used to Boost Medicinal Value of Endangered plant

The Climate Sceptics (TCS) Blog


CO2-Enriched Air Boosts Medicinal Value of an Endangered Plant

Posted: 04 Oct 2014 01:35 AM PDT

CO2 Science looks at a new Peer-reviewed paper published in Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture 118: 87-99.

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effects of forced ventilation and CO2 enrichment (360 or 720 μmol mol−1 CO2) on the in vitro growth and development of Pfaffia glomerata, an endangered medicinal species, under photomixotrophic or photoautotrophic conditions. P.glomerata nodal segments showed substantial differences in growth, relative water content and water loss from leaves, photosynthetic pigments, stomatal density, and leaf anatomical characteristics under these different treatments. CO2 enrichment led to increased photosynthetic pigments and reduced stomatal density of in vitro cultivated Pglomerata. A lack of sucrose in the culture medium increased 20-hydroxyecdysone levels, but the increase in CO2 levels did not further elevate the accumulation of 20-hydroxyecdysone. All growth increased in a CO2-enriched atmosphere. In addition, CO2 enrichment, with or without sucrose, gave a lower relative water loss from leaves. This finding indicates that either a photoautotrophic or photomixotrophic system in a CO2-enriched atmosphere may be suitable for large-scale propagation of this species.
Paper Reviewed

Saldanha, C.W., Otoni, C.G., Rocha, D.I., Cavatte, P.C., Detmann, K. da S.C.,, Tanaka, F.A.O., Dias, L.L.C., DaMatta, F.M. and Otoni, W.C. 2014. CO2-enriched atmosphere and supporting material impact the growth, morphophysiology and ultrastructure of in vitro Brazilian-ginseng [Pfaffia glomerata (Spreng.) Pedersen] plantlets. Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture 118: 87-99.
According to Saldanha et al. (2014), “Pfaffia glomerata (fafia, ginseng brasileiro), a medicinal plant that naturally grows in Brazil (Pott and Pott, 1994), has great economic importance due to the production of secondary metabolites such as ß-ecdysone (20E) (Festucci-Buselli et al. 2008),” as a result of its “anabolic, analgesic, anti-inflammatory, anti-mutigenic, aphrodisiac, sedative and muscle tonic properties,” which are described by Neto et al. (2005), Fernandes et al. (2005), Festucci-Buselli et al. (2008) and Mendes (2011). As a result of these facts, Saldanha et al. report that “many patents related to pharmacological and nutritional properties of genus Pfaffia have been published,” citing Shibuya et al. (2001), Bernard and Gautier (20005), Olalde (2008), Rangel (2008), Loizou (2009) and Higuchi (2011). Not surprisingly, therefore, Saldanha et al. further write that “because of its economic relevance, the propagation of P. glomerata plays an essential role in producing raw material for the pharmaceutical industry,” citing Saldanha et al. (2013). Against this backdrop, using two types of explant supports – either agar or Florialite (a mixture of vermiculite and cellulose) – the nine Brazilian scientists grew plantlets of P. glomerata in vitro within small acrylic chambers maintained at either 360 or 1,000 ppm CO2 for a period of 35 days, after which they assessed the plants’ aerial and root dry mass, as well as the accumulation of 20E in their leaves and stems.
Saldanah et al. report that the extra 640 ppm of CO2 increased the aerial dry mass of the plantlets by 246% in the agar treatment and by 219% in the Florialite treatment, while it increased the root dry mass by 100% and 443% in the agar and Florialite treatments, respectively. In addition, they say that “the plants with a higher biomass also produced higher amounts of 20E.” And in light of these findings Saldanah et al. state in the concluding sentence of their paper that their study highlights the fact that “a photoautotrophic system under CO2 enrichment may be attractive for the achievement of autotrophy by CO2, thus potentially being useful for the large-scale commercial production of Pfaffia seedlings or even for producing Pfaffia biomass containing high levels of ß-ecdysone.” And that would help the pharmaceutical industry to produce a lot more of the medicinal products derived from this plant.

Despite the Pause In Global Warming, Politicians Still Clinging To the Climate Money Grab!

Ben Santer’s 17 year itch, revisited – he and a whole stable of climate scientists have egg on their faces

Now that “the pause” has come of age, and has exceeded 18 years, it is time to revisit a post a made back in November 2011.

Ben Santer’s 17 year itch

Bill Illis reminded me in comments of this spectacular failure of peer reviewed climate science:

Let’s remember several years ago when all the heavy-weights of climate science produced a paper that said the lower troposphere pause had to be at least 17 years long before a clear signal that human-made CO2 warming theories should start to be questioned.

Carl Mears was the second author on that paper along Ben Santer (lead) [and Tom Wigley, Susan Solomon, Tom Karl, Gerald Meehl, Peter Stott, Peter Thorne, Frank Wentz].

Well, that time has now been exceeded and they all have egg on their face.

http://nldr.library.ucar.edu/repository/assets/osgc/OSGC-000-000-010-476.pdf

Alhough, if you read Carl Mears article carefully, he is starting the discussion that maybe the theories need to be revised. His use of the d’word may be needed just to keep him in the club and not being shown the door by his other compatriots who accept no questioning at all.

Santer_17yearsHere’s the current lower troposphere temperature from RSS:

clip_image002.png

Here’s the reminder press release boasting of their discovery. Emphasis mine.

Separating signal and noise in climate warming

LIVERMORE, Calif. — In order to separate human-caused global warming from the “noise” of purely natural climate fluctuations, temperature records must be at least 17 years long, according to climate scientists.

To address criticism of the reliability of thermometer records of surface warming, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory scientists analyzed satellite measurements of the temperature of the lower troposphere (the region of the atmosphere from the surface to roughly five miles above) and saw a clear signal of human-induced warming of the planet.

Satellite measurements of atmospheric temperature are made with microwave radiometers, and are completely independent of surface thermometer measurements. The satellite data indicate that the lower troposphere has warmed by roughly 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit since the beginning of satellite temperature records in 1979. This increase is entirely consistent with the warming of Earth’s surface estimated from thermometer records.

Recently, a number of global warming critics have focused attention on the behavior of Earth’s temperature since 1998. They have argued that there has been little or no warming over the last 10 to 12 years, and that computer models of the climate system are not capable of simulating such short “hiatus periods” when models are run with human-caused changes in greenhouse gases.

“Looking at a single, noisy 10-year period is cherry picking, and does not provide reliable information about the presence or absence of human effects on climate,” said Benjamin Santer, a climate scientist and lead author on an article in the Nov. 17 online edition of the Journal of Geophysical Research (Atmospheres).

Many scientific studies have identified a human “fingerprint” in observations of surface and lower tropospheric temperature changes. These detection and attribution studies look at long, multi-decade observational temperature records. Shorter periods generally have small signal to noise ratios, making it difficult to identify an anthropogenic signal with high statistical confidence, Santer said.

“In fingerprinting, we analyze longer, multi-decadal temperature records, and we beat down the large year-to-year temperature variability caused by purely natural phenomena (like El Niños and La Niñas). This makes it easier to identify a slowly-emerging signal arising from gradual, human-caused changes in atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases,” Santer said.

The LLNL-led research shows that climate models can and do simulate short, 10- to 12-year “hiatus periods” with minimal warming, even when the models are run with historical increases in greenhouse gases and sulfate aerosol particles. They find that tropospheric temperature records must be at least 17 years long to discriminate between internal climate noise and the signal of human-caused changes in the chemical composition of the atmosphere.

“One individual short-term trend doesn’t tell you much about long-term climate change,” Santer said. “A single decade of observational temperature data is inadequate for identifying a slowly evolving human-caused warming signal. In both the satellite observations and in computer models, short, 10-year tropospheric temperature trends are strongly influenced by the large noise of year-to-year climate variability.”

The research team is made up of Santer and Livermore colleagues Charles Doutriaux, Peter Caldwell, Peter Gleckler, Detelina Ivanova, and Karl Taylor, and includes collaborators from Remote Sensing Systems, the National Center for Atmospheric Research, the University of Colorado, the Canadian Centre for Climate Modeling and Analysis, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.K. Meteorology Office Hadley Centre, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

###

Source: http://www.llnl.gov/news/newsreleases/2011/Nov/NR-11-11-03.html


The lower troposphere temperature has been flat now for 18 years on one dataset, RSS. No human effects can be seen.  What say you Dr. Santer?

  1. Ignore your own folly?
  2. Say your paper was mistaken and publish a new goalpost mover paper saying that we really need 30 years?
  3. Or, will you simply admit that the posited warming isn’t happening?

I’m guessing you’ll go with #2.

Topics like Climate and Wind Turbines, really bring out the trolls…here’s why!

New paper says what we always suspected – and climate Internet trolls are some of the worst…

From Psychology Today: Internet Trolls Are Narcissists, Psychopaths, and Sadists(h/t to John Goetz)

Troll_closet_scr

Above: the Josh rendition of the troll known as “andthentheresphysics” who may have a rude awakening very soon. Image not to scale.

[NOTE: I’ve always believed that people who taunt others while hiding behind fake names aren’t really contributing anything except their own bile and hatred. The two people that came to mind when I read this article were Dr. Joshua Halpern of Howard University aka “Eli Rabett” and Miriam O’Brien aka Sou Bundanga/Hotwhopper. These people are supposed to be professionals, yet they position themselves as childish cowards, spewing invective from the safety of anonymity while taunting people who have the integrity and courage to put their real names to their words. The best way to combat people like this is to call them out by their name every time they practice their dark art. To that end, and not just for these two losers, I’m stepping up moderation on WUWT. If you want to rant/spew from the comfort of anonymity, find someplace else to do it, because quite frankly I’m in a position in my life where I don’t have the time to deal with this sort of juvenile crap. Be on your best behavior, otherwise its the bit bucket for you.Moderators, take note.. – Anthony]


Psychology Today:  Internet Trolls Are Narcissists, Psychopaths, and Sadists

A new study shows that internet trolls really are just terrible human beings.
 

In this month’s issue of Personality and Individual Differences, a study was published that confirms what we all suspected: internet trolls are horrible people.Let’s start by getting our definitions straight. An internet troll is someone who comes into a discussion and posts comments designed to upset or disrupt the conversation. Often, it seems like there is no real purpose behind their comments except to upset everyone else involved. Trolls will lie, exaggerate, and offend to get a response. 

What kind of person would do this?

Canadian researchers decided to find out. They conducted two internet studies with over 1,200 people. They gave personality tests to each subject along with a survey about their internet commenting behavior. They were looking for evidence that linked trolling with the Dark Tetrad of personality: narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and sadistic personality.

They found that Dark Tetrad scores were highest among people who said trolling was their favorite internet activity. To get an idea of how much more prevalent these traits were among internet trolls, check out this figure from the paper:

Look at how low the scores are for everyone except the internet trolls! Their scores for all four terrible personality traits soar on the chart. The relationship between this Dark Tetrad and trolling is so significant, that the authors write the following in their paper:

“… the associations between sadism and GAIT (Global Assessment of Internet Trolling) scores were so strong that it might be said that online trolls are prototypical everyday sadists.” [emphasis added]

Trolls truly enjoy making you feel bad. To quote the authors once more (because this is a truly quotable article):

“Both trolls and sadists feel sadistic glee at the distress of others. Sadists just want to have fun … and the Internet is their playground!”

Full article here: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/your-online-secrets/201409/internet-trolls-are-narcissists-psychopaths-and-sadists?tr=MostViewed


The paper:

Trolls just want to have fun

  • Erin E. Buckels ,Paul D. Trapnell, Delroy L. Paulhus

Abstract

In two online studies (total N = 1215), respondents completed personality inventories and a survey of their Internet commenting styles. Overall, strong positive associations emerged among online commenting frequency, trolling enjoyment, and troll identity, pointing to a common construct underlying the measures. Both studies revealed similar patterns of relations between trolling and the Dark Tetrad of personality: trolling correlated positively with sadism, psychopathy, and Machiavellianism, using both enjoyment ratings and identity scores. Of all personality measures, sadism showed the most robust associations with trolling and, importantly, the relationship was specific to trolling behavior. Enjoyment of other online activities, such as chatting and debating, was unrelated to sadism. Thus cyber-trolling appears to be an Internet manifestation of everyday sadism.

Steve Minick from Texas Association of Business on the EPA Clean Power Plan

This is a stunningly good letter that was presented to the Hearing of the Texas House on the latest EPA insanity–the Clean Power Plan. Wanna know what’s wrong with the EPA, read Minick’s letter for a place to start.

Minick takes the EPA big plan apart and shows it to be a empty portfolio of nonsense and bad policy making.

Minick is an important voice for Business in Texas–an eloquent and knowledgeable man.

I highlighted some of the important stuff.

September 29, 2014

The Honorable Patricia Harless, Chairman
Committee on Environmental Regulation
Texas House of Representatives
P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78768-2910

RE: Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed Clean Power Plan under Clean Air Act Section 111(d)

Chairman Harless:

The Texas Association of Business (TAB) appreciates the opportunity to discuss the Speaker’s charge to the committee to study the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) proposed Clean Power Plan. TAB is a broad-based, bipartisan organization representing more than 4,000 Texas employers and over 200 local chambers of commerce. As Texas’ leading employer organization for more than 90 years, TAB represents some of the largest multi-national corporations as well as small businesses in almost every community in the state. Our business members and local chambers of commerce have a vital interest in the outcome of any decision by EPA to fundamentally alter the management and operation of the state’s electric power system and the effects such a proposal represents for the reliability and cost of critical electric supply in Texas.

EPA’s proposal to impose existing source performance standards for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions under Clean Air Act §111(d) is yet another in a series of rulemakings from EPA that regrettably departs even further from the cooperative partnership between EPA and the states that Congress envisioned in the passage of the Clean Air Act. The Act states clearly that air pollution prevention at its source is the primary responsibility of States and local governments. In addition to being inconsistent with the fundamental principle of cooperative federalism, the proposed Clean Power Plan is equally inconsistent with other specific provisions of the Clean Air Act. Beyond its questionable legal basis, however, the Committee should also be made aware that this rule, if enacted, will impose significant costs on Texas businesses and consumers, severely test our electric grid and reliability of electric service and effectively relinquish control of our power system to the federal government. Incredibly, even EPA’s own analysis shows plainly that this rule, intended to address climate change by reducing emissions of GHGs, will have no measureable effect on climate change.

Background and Description of the Clean Power Plan
EPA’s proposal to impose existing source performance standards for GHGs follows directly the failure of the current administration to move cap and trade legislation through Congress and is a well-recognized step in EPA’s long range plan to remove coal as a source of fuel for power generation in this country. An earlier step in that plan is the imposition of GHG performance standards for new sources. That rule, which will ensure that no new coal-fired power plants are built, was proposed in September 2013.
This next step, proposed in June of 2014, will ensure the closure of many of the existing coal-fired plants. President Obama, in speaking to the San Francisco Chronicle in 2008 outlined without any confusion his plan for coal power:

“Under my plan of a cap and trade system, electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket. Coal-powered plants…would have to retrofit their operations. That will cost money. They will pass that money on to consumers.”

The Clean Power Plan bears a resemblance to another increasingly familiar aspect of rulemaking under the Clean Air Act – obscuring any technical justification or analysis of a proposed rule in more pages of background than can reasonably be read and understood by the average interested party, certainly any affected party with limited time and resources. In this case, the rule itself only occupies some 38 pages of text, but that is then followed by over 600 pages of preamble with references to some 350 footnotes. Then comes a lengthy regulatory impact analysis and multiple technical support documents and then references to some 620 supporting documents.

While those affected by the rule might hope to find at least clarity in the rule’s purpose and effect in this massive production, even many of those who are supportive of the rule have expressed concern and uncertainty as to what it means, how it will affect their jurisdictions and, perhaps most importantly, how it can possibly be implemented.

Basis of the Clean Power Plan Rule
Under the Clean Power Plan EPA proposes to impose performance standards for existing power plants for GHG emissions under Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act. In the previous 40 years EPA has used this authority in approximately five cases, and arguably never for any major source of emissions. Section 111(d) allows EPA to establish performance standards for existing sources of emissions and requires that any standards imposed reflect emission limitations achievable through what is defined as a Best System of Emission Reductions (BSER). But in this proposed rule, EPA abandons any rational definition of both source and system in the context of what Section 111(d) actually authorizes. Under the Clean Power Plan, emission reductions would apply not to a source of emissions (a power plant) but conceivably to every element of the state’s entire electric power system.

Further stretching the authority of 111(d), EPA does not propose any system of emission reduction technology, but instead, argues that each state can reach emission reduction targets through a variety of measures, including:

1. Improving efficiency of coal-fired electric generators by 6%;
2. Increasing the operation of natural gas-fired electric generators to 70% of current capacity;
3. Increasing the contribution of renewable energy sources up to 25%; and
4. Increasing the reductions in power consumption through demand response by 9-12%
An obvious observation of these “suggested” paths to compliance with GHG emission limitations is that, while they may indirectly affect emissions, none of them is actually a “system” of emission reductions applied to a “source” of emissions. In other words, EPA proposes to limit GHG emissions by not requiring any direct control of the emission of GHGs at their source. Put another way, the agency is proposing a rule under Section 111(d) that imposes requirements in no way authorized under Section 111(d). Within very specific conditions, EPA has authority to limit emissions by determining an appropriate system of controls for those emissions at their source.EPA does not have the authority to re-design our entire system for the generation, transmission, use or conservation of electric power to indirectly impact the production of GHGs.

Target Emission Rates
The key to the Clean Power Plan is target emission rates that EPA has determined for each affected state. Again, these are not targets applicable to actual sources of emissions (electric power plants) but overall targets applicable on a state-wide basis. In fact, it is accurate to acknowledge that under a statutory provision that authorizes control of sources of pollution, EPA is proposing a target for emission rates that is simply applied to an entire state, and not to any one source of pollution.

Beyond the obvious concern with the underlying statutory authority being cited, a major concern with the states’ emission targets is that the massive submission and supporting documentation still do not reveal any apparent rationale for the emission rates that are proposed. The rates assigned to individual states vary substantially and for reasons that are very difficult to comprehend. Somehow, under a rule presumably intended to reduce the emissions of a pollutant that we are told has serious negative implications for public welfare, some states are allowed to actually increase emissions of GHGs. Some observations of EPA’s proposed emission reduction targets may help to illustrate the difficulty in understanding a valid technical basis:

1. GHG emission reduction targets for the states range from an 83% reduction (for Washington) to a 37% increase (for Rhode Island).
2. Washington must reduce GHG emissions by 83%, Oregon by 42% and California by 7%.
3. Texas must reduce emissions by 42% and Oklahoma 41%, while Kansas and Nebraska can increase emissions by 10%.
4. South Dakota must decrease emissions by 4% but North Dakota can increase emissions by 1%.
5. Idaho has a reduction target of 49%, Wyoming 31%; Montana can increase emissions 8%.
6. Mississippi faces a target reduction of 62%, but Alabama 32%.
7. 3%.Virginia must reduce GHG emissions by 35%, West Virginia 0%.
8. Tennessee must reduce GHG emissions by 20%; Kentucky can increase emissions by 3%.
These examples are only some of the observations that clearly raise far more questions than EPA’s proposal provides answers.
The rationale of EPA appears to be an acknowledgment that each state is different and faces different challenges and opportunities for reducing GHG emissions. But in no provision of the Clean Air Act is EPA authorized to invent a plan for reducing emissions from existing sources without actually imposing requirements on existing sources and then allocate obligations to each of the states based on what in some opinion of EPA each state is capable of accomplishing. Beyond EPA’s questionable authority to impose such emission targets, it must also be recognized that the states on which fall the obligations to comply may lack much of the statutory authority to do what EPA outlines in its suggested “system” of emission reductions.

It must also be recognized that Texas is singled out for special treatment under this proposed rule. While Texas’ required percentage reduction in GHG emissions is not as large as some states (42%), when applied to the actual magnitude of Texas’ electric generation capacity the figures become very revealing of the real impact of the rule. Texas is clearly the largest producer and consumer of power in the U.S, but that status is merely a reflection of Texas’ position as a producer of fuel, manufactured goods and other products that meet the needs of the other states and our global trading partners. Under the Clean Power Plan, Texas is far and away the most significantly affected state:

• By 2030, Texas must reduce coal-fired electric generation by over 72 million megawatt hours (MWH), Florida is a distant second at just over 40 million MWH.
• Texas’ required GHG reductions by 2030 are almost three times greater than those required of second place Florida and dwarf the requirements for any other state.
To comply, Texas must reduce its coal-fired electric generation by over 53%; Indiana and Kentucky, the two closest states to Texas in terms of coal-fired generation, must reduce their generation from coal by 4.8% and 1%, respectively.
Texas leads the nation in the production of renewable energy. But by 2030, Texas must increase its use of renewable energy almost five times as much as the state closest to Texas in renewable energy capacity, California.
The significant variation and seemingly random allocation of emission targets to the different states, and certainly the significantly greater impact of the rule on Texas, are clearly impacts that demand a far more detailed and reasoned explanation before this rule receives any further consideration by EPA.

Costs and Benefits of the Clean Air Plan
There is no question that implementation of the Clean Air Plan will significantly affect the electric generation industry and consumers of power, from the largest industrial user to individual residential customers. The U. S. Chamber of Commerce has estimated compliance costs at approximately $50 billion. Other estimates of industry compliance costs are as “low” as $28 billion. These compliance costs to the electric industry are distinct from the actual costs to consumers which has been estimated to be a loss in disposable income of over $585 billion through 2030. Cost to manufacturers and others who use natural gas for purposes other than electric generation will also increase significantly as natural gas prices are projected to increase up to $50 billion. In addition to dollar impacts, the rule will result in some 178,000 lost jobs per year. Less easily quantified, but equally important, is the potential impact of a rule that will significantly put at risk the reliability of Texas’ electric grid, the failure of which can have extremely dramatic financial impacts, as well as public health and safety impacts.

One would assume that such a rule, with the potential for significant, negative economic consequences, would have to clearly provide benefits to public health and welfare at least as great, or even greater than the costs to justify serious consideration and certainly formal proposal. Quite surprisingly, the dramatic economic costs and potential risks to our electric power system will provide virtually no benefit whatsoever. EPA’s own analysis shows that the proposed rule will affect no more than .18 percent of global GHG emissions and offset the huge costs of its implementation by reducing global temperatures by between .01-.02 degrees C. and preventing a projected sea level rise of .016 inches.

EPA attempts to make up for the almost absurd lack of simple economic justification for the rule by suggesting that reducing operations and emissions from coal-fired power plants will have ancillary public health benefits. Even if such an unsupported position were rational, it is beyond reason to suggest that sufficient public health benefits could accrue to offset the significant costs of this rule. But the reality is that for several years and throughout EPA’s pursuit of its current air quality and energy policy agenda, the agency has continued time and again to cite ancillary benefits from reductions in emissions (e.g., PM2.5) where no public health benefit from the direct effect of the rule in question can be cited. The Clean Air Plan is simply the latest in a long line of air quality rulemaking where no public health benefit can be directly attributed to the pollutant the rule is intended to address.

Perhaps even more significant as a critique of EPA’s cost analysis is the fact that the cost/benefit equation ignores (as it does for essentially all such rules) the negative public health impacts of reducing the disposable income of those who are affected by the rule.
This rule if implemented will significantly impact the costs of electricity. That cost, particularly when borne by lower income ratepayers, will reduce the ability of those ratepayers to afford other essential goods and services that directly affect their health and welfare, including medical care, medicine, adequate food and housing and the expenses required to be sufficiently educated and prepared to acquire and maintain employment. The strongly positive correlation between income and public welfare and longevity has been well established and any cost/benefit analysis that ignores it cannot be considered to be valid or credible.

Other Impacts on Texas
It has been suggested by many in support of this rule that Texas should share that support due to the positive impact the rule will have on demand for natural gas, particularly as the prices for natural gas have declined and the incentives for more production have weakened. There is also at least the implication that Texas can benefit from this rule by simply building more gas-fired electric generation and easily mitigate the loss of any coal-fired facilities, while simultaneously benefiting from the economic effects of increased gas production. Missing from this presumptive analysis is the proper recognition of the role Texas’ competitive deregulated retail electric market plays in any theoretical scenario of how this state would attempt to implement EPA’s suggested methods of compliance. In Texas the Public Utility Commission, perhaps unlike in most other states, cannot simply set a price for electricity that will provide an incentive to build new gas-fired power plants to replace coal-fired plants. It is entirely uncertain that Texas’ electric market structure will be able to react as EPA assumes it can under any requirement to replace coal-fired with gas-fired generation.

The assumption that Texas can increase natural gas electric generation while benefiting from increased natural gas production also ignores the potential impact of other air quality rules being promulgated by EPA. The proposed reduction in the ozone national ambient air quality standard (NAAQS) can potentially bring large areas of Texas, including the major oil and gas production areas, into nonattainment status for ozone. Without a clearer picture of what a revised ozone NAAQS will be, what areas will be determined to be nonattainment and how such designation and subsequent ozone control measures will affect natural gas exploration and production, availability and price, it is impossible at this time to make assumptions that can dispel the many legitimate concerns about the loss of coal-fired electric capacity in Texas.

Conclusions
EPA’s proposed Clean Power Plan is poorly supported by current law and suffers from a thorough lack of technical and financial justification. It truly is a rule that on its face will have enormous costs and virtually zero benefit. It fulfills the administration’s goals for a cap and trade program by making cap and trade the only viable option for some states who simply cannot reengineer their electric power systems. In fact, the proposal will conceivably reward those states that have some type of cap and trade program by enabling those states with marketable credits to sell to other states, essentially establishing a wealth transfer from coal states to non-coal states. The proposal further supports the anti-coal agenda by imposing de facto federal renewable energy standards and federal energy efficiency standards – all in one rule.

It is appropriate to question EPA’s motives in proposing a rule that has such significant questions as to its legal foundation and for which the cost/benefit analysis so clearly shows that there are no benefits. Even the EPA leadership appears somewhat uncertain as to exactly what this rule is intended to do. In testimony before the Senate Public Works Committee, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy stated:

“The great thing about this [111(d)] proposal is that it really is an investment opportunity. This is not about pollution control. It’s about increased efficiency at our plants, no matter where you want to invest. It’s about investments in renewables and clean energy.”

However, Acting Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, Janet McCabe, before the House Energy and Power Subcommittee described the same rule quite differently:

“Chairman Upton, this is not an energy plan. This is a rule done within the four corners of 111(d) that looks to the best system of emission reduction to reduce emission… The rule is a pollution control rule, as EPA has traditionally done under section 111(d).”

If EPA admits that a rule to benefit climate change has no effect on climate and is yet still unclear as to what the rule is for, it would appear prudent to postpone any further consideration at this time.

Thank you for the opportunity to appear before the committee and share our thoughts on this subject. Please contact me at 512.637.7707 or sminick@txbiz.org if you have questions or need additional information.

Respectfully,

Stephen Minick
Vice President for Governmental Affairs
Texas Association of Business

Pointman Says it Best…..Energy Poverty is Killing People!!!

TELL ME WHY.

mal08

I posed some simple questions a number of articles back and I’d like to begin this piece by asking them again, because they’re fundamental.

Don’t they know how many of our own poor can no longer afford to heat their homes? Don’t they know how many millions die in the developing world from malaria because we won’t allow them access to DDT? Don’t they know that a million children a year die or are simply blinded for life by withholding the distribution golden rice? Don’t they know how many lives could be saved by supplying the poor with drought and disease resistant GM seeds? Don’t they know that switching from growing food staples to growing biofuel crops for cars only the rich can afford has more than doubled prices of basic foods? Don’t they know about the people killed in the food riots? Do they actually know anything? Do they care anyway?

There’s no oily sophistry about those questions, no sophistication, no tricky debating traps, no guile, no hidden agenda but always an essential inhumanity to the silence or uneasy evasiveness with which they’re met. I’ve raised an impolite subject. The truth is people are not dying, they’re being killed and we’re the ones through inaction doing the killing. I make no apology for being so blunt because they’re needed questions, simple questions, brutal even, and yet there’s always that awkward silence in response to them.

There really isn’t a party line on the moral dilemmas which are at the very heart of those questions, because morality is no longer about people or ones behaviour towards them, but simply about what’s good for the Earth or not. All else is secondary to that consideration. In a deeper sense though, any wider altruistic morality is now about nothing more than projecting a good image of oneself rather than any notion of common humanity.

What we’re talking about are the lives of the most vulnerable being needlessly sacrificed atop a green altar, because of an almost automatic obeisance to a new and terrible earth goddess called Gaia.

You might think those questions were addressed at the real climate fanatics, those who’re absolutely determined to save the Earth even if that means over the megadeath, rigour-mortised and stacked-high burning corpses of humanity, but you’d be wrong because as must be obvious by now, those zealots simply don’t care about such collateral damage. After all, a smaller, more “sustainable” number of people on the Earth is one of their oft expressed aspirations. Humanity is a plague on the Earth, to quote David Attenborough.

Those questions were originally directed at the religious bodies of our rich developed world but with the sure and certain expectation of nothing in reply, not only because they were rhetorical but because the churches are by now in denial or wilfully blind to the moral issues presented by those questions.

They’ve fallen so far down into the abyss of the governing elite’s unquestioned dogma, which puts the Earth before the human cost of protecting it, that they now effectively worship a graven but green image in their desert of moral desolation. They’ve lost touch with that most basic imperative of all religions – the duty of care we all have towards the poor and vulnerable. Common decency, if you will.

Those questions, like this article, are now being addressed to the footsoldier clergy of those churches; the priests and the pastors, the imams and the rabbis, the holy men, the human beings representing their respective faiths and trying to make a difference in the lives of their local congregations.

This issue is not about science, since climate science has long ago allowed itself to become a compliant and willing harlot to politics. It sucks greedily on the teat of notoriety and all integrity has long since fled. Political sentiment can be changed because it’s driven by the fickle beast of popular opinion, which you still have a measure of influence over. What can’t be changed is that this is at heart a basic moral issue and morality is an invariant which should never be subject to the passing vicissitudes of fashion or alarmed public opinion.

The killing of the innocents is wrong, standing idly by when that’s done for nothing better than a mistaken idea grown into a well-intentioned but homicidal monster or for a quick buck, is wrong. Don’t delude yourself, the moneylenders are busy at work in your temples, doing brisk business under the righteous cloak of that false goddess Gaia but in reality serving nothing other than their own god Mammon. Your silence is helping them.

I’ll pose some new questions just for you, but I’m going to help you out by giving you the answers to them.

Will you ever read this article? Probably not. Will you ever read past the first page of Google’s reassuring results from various well-heeled green NGOs about any of the above questions? No. Will you ever stop to wonder how we eradicated malaria in the developed world using DDT and still have plenty of birds and the bees? No. Will you ever try to calculate how many lives have been saved by us being malaria-free for over half a century? No. Will you think about why we’ve spent 800 billion dollars to fight global warming when the Earth’s temperature hasn’t risen in nearly two decades? No. Will you consider the effect that amount of money could have had on poverty relief around the world? No.

Will you at least admit that standing idly by and not speaking out means there’s some blood on your hands? Just a touch, a smidgen even? No.

You are this very day in the midst of a silent ongoing genocide, a slowmo invisible annihilation, a new shoah of such dimensions as to put the Nazis to shame and yet you will not acknowledge it or speak out about it. You do nothing. Nothing, nada, nada and nada every time. It’s Hemingway’s prayer and that’s the prayer of those who not only believe they’ve been abandoned by God, but have ceased to believe there can even be such an entity.

“Our nada who art in nada, nada be thy name thy kingdom nada thy will be nada in nada as it is in nada. Give us this nada our daily nada and nada us our nada as we nada our nadas and nada us not into nada but deliver us from nada; pues nada. Hail nothing full of nothing, nothing is with thee.”

Can there actually be a god? What sort of god could countenance such needless cruelty, suffering and callous waste of innocent lives? Deus irae? An angry god? Is there a reason? Do you have a reason? An excuse? Anything?

All those millions of preventable deaths are the direct result of political policies driven by nothing more than fashionable ideas about what our relationship with the Earth should be. In the midst of it all, you ignore the pressing issues, preferring instead to hotly debate schismatic irrelevances like female or gay priests. It’s no wonder that whole sections of churches in the developing word are considering decoupling themselves from what they consider to be out of touch mother churches in the developed nations, who simply won’t engage with real problems.

You plant saplings in leafy suburbs doing your bit to save the Earth while the poor in the developing countries are running out of shrubs to burn to keep themselves alive. You talk about living in harmony with God’s good green Earth while the poor can do nothing more than lay damp towels over their dying children and hope for the fucking best. Who needs God’s forgiveness there? All my tears outside the walls of Babylon have long ago been wept; there’s nothing left in me now but an abiding anger at you.

You are a part of the problem when you should by any decent notion of religious conviction be a major part of fixing it.

I am nothing and nobody, a small man with a small voice who long ago despaired of any faith in some sort of god. And yet I beseech you in the name of whatever god you follow to do something, or at least speak out. Like the Nazarene, you will not be rewarded for telling the simple truth.

Don’t tell me why god allows such things because there can be no reason, don’t bother debating god’s existence with me or his mysterious ways, just tell me why as a human being and a supposed man of god with some influence, you aren’t standing in your pulpit at every opportunity, raging and thundering to your congregation against such an obscene and preventable waste of human life and worse still, allowing that inhumanity to grind on day after pitiless day without doing a single thing about it.

Tell me why.

Today marks 18 years, with NO Global Warming! (But plenty of CO2)

Happy Anniversary: 1 October Marks 18 Years Without Global Warming Trend

Via The GWPF Global Warming Pause Comes Of Age

The Earth’s temperature has “plateaued” and there has been no global warming for at least the last 18 years, says Dr. John Christy, professor of atmospheric science and director of the Earth System Science Center (ESSC) at the University of Alabama/Huntsville. “That’s basically a fact. There’s not much to comment on,” Christy said when CNSNews.com asked him to remark on the lack of global warming for nearly two decades as of October 1st. –Barbara Hollingsworth, CBS News, 30 September 2014

clip_image002

Figure 1. RSS monthly global mean lower-troposphere temperature anomalies (dark blue) and trend (thick bright blue line), October 1996 to August 2014, showing no trend for 17 years 11 months.

More on the “The pause” here: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/09/04/global-temperature-update-no-global-warming-for-17-years-11-months

What will the Warming Pause do next? Get a job? Go on a gap year? Maybe go to college and rack up some proper student debt. Who knows, but it’s worth celebrating the good news that the planet’s temperatures are not accelerating to thermageddon. –Josh, Bishop Hill 1 October 2014

The scientific community would come down on me in no uncertain terms if I said the world had cooled from 1998. OK it has but it is only 7 years of data and it isn’t statistically significant. –Phil Jones, University of East Anglia 5 July 2005

Bottom line: the ‘no upward trend’ has to continue for a total of 15 years before we get worried. -Phil Jones, University of East Anglia 7 May 2009

2014 will probably be in the top five warmest, but at the moment it will probably not turn out to be warmer than 2010. It is impossible for it to beat 2010 by a statistically significant margin, even if we define that as only one standard deviation above the decadal mean. Even if 2014 does beat 2010 it will only be by a statistically insignificant margin and well within the inter-annual error bars. In all probability 2014 will continue the global surface temperature standstill in a statistically perfect manner. When will the global surface annual temperature start to rise out of the error bars of the past 18 years? –David Whitehouse, The Global Warming Policy Forum, 28 September 2014

It’s fair to say that this pause is something of an embarrassment to many in the climate research community, since their computer models failed to indicate that any such thing could happen. Just how long the temperature pause must last before it would falsify the more catastrophic versions of man-made climate change obviously remains an open question for many researchers. For the time being, most are betting that it will get real hot real fast when the hiatus ends. –Ronald Bailey, Reason Online, 9 September 2014

Former United Kingdom environment secretary Owen Paterson launched an attack against the “wicked green blob,” saying policies to stop global warming might do more harm than good. “There has not been a temperature increase now for probably 18 years, some people say 26 years,” Paterson told an audience at the Conservative party conference over weekend. “So the pause is old enough to vote, the pause is old enough to join the army, the pause is old enough to pay its taxes.” –Michael Bastasch, Daily Caller, 29 September 2014

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