Saturday 18th of May 2024

traditional ignorance...

petersonpeterson

The source for author Jordan Peterson’s recent claim that climate change cannot be modelled was a climate science denier who received money from a libertarian think tank funded by oil companies. 

The Canadian psychologist was widely criticised for spreading climate misinformation this week after telling the popular Joe Rogan podcast’s 11 million subscribers that climate models were full of errors that increase over time, and that climate is too complicated to model accurately. 

Peterson responded to the criticism on Thursday in tweets to his 2.2 million followers citing a book called “Hot Talk, Cold Science: Global Warming’s Unfinished Debate” by S Fred Singer.

Singer, an American atmospheric physicist who died in 2020, argued that climate change was natural and not increased by human-caused carbon dioxide emissions. He argued that warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions was “trivial”.

In 1990 he founded the Science and Environment Policy Project (SEPP) that expounded these views. In 2014 DeSmog revealed that Singer received $5,000 a month from US right-wing think tank the Heartland Institute, which has taken donations from oil interests including ExxonMobil and the Koch family. Singer was a speaker at a 2012 Heartland conference where sponsors received $67 million from Exxon, Koch and the Scaife Family Foundations.

Singer frequently criticised climate modelling by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the peer-reviewed authority on climate science made up of hundreds of climate scientists. 

In a 2016 article for American Thinker, Singer wrote: “The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has to provide proof for significant human-caused climate change; yet their climate models have never been validated and are rapidly diverging from actual observations.  

“The real threat to humanity comes not from any (trivial) greenhouse warming but from cooling periods creating food shortages and famines.” 

 

https://t.co/JPHgScWCW1

— Dr Jordan B Peterson (@jordanbpeterson) January 27, 2022 ‘The Scientists Were Right’

Dr Simon Evans, policy editor at Carbon Brief, told DeSmog: “Back in the early 1970s, scientists were building simple climate models and they hypothesised that rising greenhouse gas emissions would warm the planet. 

“Well, the results are in, and those scientists were right. Not only that, those models – and other more recent ones – have been pretty accurate in estimating how much warming we would get.”

Peterson is known for his self-help books and opposition to “identity politics”, but has increasingly been spreading climate science misinformation. In his Joe Rogan interview, Peterson advocated hydraulic fracturing to extract shale gas – known as fracking – and dismissed the idea that greenhouse gas emissions could be reduced to net zero by 2050. 

In an appearance on BBC Question Time in November, Peterson criticised the COP26 UN climate summit and said developing countries should not be encouraged to control their CO2 emissions. 

Last week Peterson shared a tweet from Net Zero Watch, a rebranding of the climate science-denying Global Warming Policy Forum, which questioned whether wind power is a “reliable, efficient and in-demand technology”. Peterson’s tweet added, regarding net zero targets: “Any “policy maker” who aims at zero anything has instantly demonstrated his or her incompetence.”

Jennie King, head of civic action and education at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue think tank, said: “This latest episode reveals a growing trend, whereby ‘non-climate influencers’ are becoming central nodes of mis- and disinformation for a mainstream public and exposing them to views which either deny the reality and impacts of climate change, or explicitly undermine trust in the science and institutions working to marshal a response. 

“There are absolutely things to be debated and agreed around climate action, governance, timelines and finance, but the fundamental bases that Peterson calls into question are entirely ill-informed and do not move the conversation forward,” she added. 

 

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Note: according the laws of knowledge, the weather is vaguely predictable for a few days at a time, then most prediction will go arse up, especially during a La Niña event. CLIMATE CHANGE in our anthropogenic era (aka global warming) is as predictable as a saucepan of beans on a cooktop that has been turned on. You don't know at what time the beans will burn (I do this a lot lately being distracted by other things) BUT THEY WILL BURN UNLESS YOU (me, the idiot) TURN THE GAS OFF

 

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gross misuse of consultants...

Climate catastrophe now inevitable without emergency action

 

By Ian Dunlop 

By relying on consultants for policymaking, the government avoids making any serious contribution to the global effort to minimise temperature rise. 

 

This is the second part of a two-part article. Read the first part here.

The Glasgow COP26 meeting demonstrated the fallacy of adopting the populist objective of net zero emissions by 2050 (NZE2050) as a sound basis for climate action globally. This has long been evident, yet even well-informed scientists resisted the pressure to aim for more rapid action, to avoid questioning the official party line, thereby playing to the fossil fuel industry’s “soft denial” agenda.

Some progress was made, but in reality the COP26 outcome was disastrous in the context of real climate action because if net zero emissions has to be reached by 2030 rather than 2050, as the science dictates, then the emission reduction strategies adopted globally have to be fundamentally different from those aimed at achieving NZE2050.

It is no longer possible to avoid catastrophic climate change with an orderly transition to NZE2050. By then global average temperatures will have moved beyond the Paris Agreement range of 1.5-2 degrees, possibly leading to an irreversible transition to “Hothouse Earth” conditions. Critical tipping points are already being triggered at today’s 1.2 degrees.

If the global community is serious about avoiding catastrophic climate outcomes, the only option is emergency action. This means that solutions have to be prioritised to achieve the fastest possible transition to zero carbon economies. The “Australian Way” plan, with its vague targets and lack of urgency, is totally at odds with this reality.

The immediate priority is to reduce carbon emissions as fast as possible; nothing is more important. This conflicts directly with the “soft denial” fossil fuel expansion mantra promoted by the industry here and overseas, and embodied in the Morrison government’s plan. Certainly fossil fuel will be needed for some time to come, but not expansion, as the International Energy Agency has confirmed.

Inevitably rapid emissions reduction will cause disruption and social friction, as already evident with the recent hike in energy prices in Europe. But it is the failure of the free market model, with the attendant inaction and delaying tactics long adopted by its proponents in conservative governments, media and the fossil fuel industry, which has brought us to this point, increasing climate risk to an existential level.

Reliance on voluntary action and market forces will no longer suffice. A war-footing approach with mandated action is essential. In this context, techno-utopian solutions built around silo-based venture capital models are insufficient. Technological innovation is critical, but it must be embedded in a systemic change framework so that innovations work in concert, becoming self-reinforcing to achieve emissions reduction in short order.

A re-ordering of societal priorities is essential. Climate change now represents an immediate existential threat to the global community, such that all required resources must be devoted to overcoming it. This means unprecedented global co-operation, within and between the developed and developing worlds. Escalating defence budgets in particular need to be redeployed around climate action; there is little point in developing increasingly sophisticated means of killing one another when the future of civilisation itself is at stake.

Statesmanship that prioritises the global common good, rather than libertarian individualism or authoritarian nationalism, becomes critical.

The role of the consultants

In these circumstances, it is astonishing that one of the world’s top consulting companies, McKinsey & Co, lent credibility to the “Australian Way” charade.

McKinsey’s role, “drawing upon its extensive database on low emission fuels, technologies and processes”, encompassed “a bottom-up analysis of the contribution the technologies prioritised through the government’s technology investment roadmap, combined with global technology trends, could make towards Australia achieving NZE2050”. The firm also “undertook supplementary analysis of the employment impacts and opportunities associated with Australia’s net zero target and the broader global shift toward low-emission technologies”.

All of this, in isolation, is relatively innocuous, apart from the fact that the detailed conclusions from this work are not available publicly, which they should be given the importance of this issue and McKinsey’s taxpayer-funded $6 million consulting fee.

However, the McKinsey name is liberally scattered throughout the documents, presumably to assist Emissions Reduction Minister Angus Taylor, himself a McKinsey alumnus, to gain support for the policy, which he attempted to do continually at the Glasgow COP26 meeting and has done since. In the process, Australia’s credibility as a serious contributor to global climate action was severely undermined.

In a broader context, McKinsey has long been advocating the need for urgent action to address climate risk. New initiatives focus on the need to stay within the 1.5 degree lower level temperature increase of the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, and McKinsey’s commitment to assist clients in so doing. Another paper emphasises the case for resilience in protecting people from climate risks as temperatures rise, and most recently the complexities of a net zero transition consistent with achieving 1.5 degrees.

The Morrison government’s NZE2050 plan, with its blatant expansion of fossil fuel use rather than making any serious contribution to the global effort to hold temperatures at 1.5 degrees, will exacerbate the problem. McKinsey, at the very least given its knowledge of climate risk, should have highlighted these dangers or otherwise decline the commission. Instead, it chose to indirectly aid and abet the government in presenting the plan as a credible Australian response to climate risk, which it patently is not.

McKinsey is already under internal criticism for the disconnect between its supposed values around climate change and its actual consulting advice to clients. Its support for the Morrison government’s plan is yet another dangerous example.

Apart from McKinsey, Taylor unsurprisingly appointed Dr Brian Fisher to chair a panel overseeing the modelling. Dr Fisher, for the last three decades, has been the “go-to” expert for climate denialist modelling, renowned for overestimating the costs of climate action and underestimating, or ignoring, the costs of climate inaction. With remarkable volte-face on this occasion, he apparently had no problem with the costs of climate action being underestimated and the cost of inaction again ignored. Dr Fisher’s track record does not engender confidence that the government’s plan is built upon a great deal of objectivity.

The role of consultant Reputex in the Labor Opposition’s modelling can be similarly criticised for failing to draw attention to the dangers of ignoring the impacts of climate change up to 2050. This is slightly more understandable given the ALP is trying to present as small a target as possible before the election. But the fact remains that by not articulating these impacts, it is made easier for the ALP to avoid addressing reality in its climate policy.

Responsibilities and liabilities

The Australian public service has been severely run down by conservative governments for years and its policymaking capability eroded. The climate policy debacle represented by the government’s emissions reduction plan demonstrates only too clearly the dangers of relying on consultants to replace the “frank and fearless advice” for which the public service was previously known.

The consultants here no doubt had terms of reference which excluded wider considerations of climate impact. However, given that they are all well aware of the existential threat that climate change now represents, it is morally and ethically unacceptable for them to undertake such commissions without articulating publicly the dangers of ignoring climate impacts, hence the resulting bias of the analysis.

By remaining silent, McKinsey in particular has substantially aided and abetted the Australian government’s climate denial leadership in international forums. This has not just undermined global efforts to address climate change, but also weakened Australia’s opportunity to seize the benefits of rapidly transitioning to a low-carbon economy.

Recalcitrant companies face increasing legal liability for failing to address climate change seriously. So far consultants have not been subject to the same legal sanction, but that might now change.

That said, there is clearly a valid role for consultants in providing an independent perspective on complex issues which any organisation, government or otherwise, may not be equipped to assess – particularly to break down the barriers of “groupthink”. But this must be done objectively against an ethical framework which does not allow both client and consultant to become part of the same “groupthink” problem, as in this case.

From a government perspective, cherry-picking consulting advice to justify pre-ordained policy is unethical at any time. Doing so with climate policy is lethal. There is an urgent need to rebuild public service capability to avoid such gross misuse of consultants.

 

Read more:

https://johnmenadue.com/climate-catastrophe-now-inevitable-without-emergency-action/

 

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See also:

https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/33287

 

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the super-consumers — us...

The super-consumer. Few geopolitical analysts out there have seen fit to blame the world’s woes on the real culprits. Sure, the George Soros evil billionaires play a major role, but compared to the “real” people doing using up and wearing out, the Bezos and Elon Musk types are just ringmasters in the world destruction circus.

Why don’t we ever focus on the real reasons behind things like the invasion of Iraq? How come the so-called “War on Terror” never really put a dent in terrorist activities? It’s time we took an honest look at where we are, how we got here, and where we want to go as a planet. And rehashing the same old delusions will not get us anywhere, COVID proved globalization was a lie. Let’s look with our eyes on the real problem with Earth.

I was studying “Peak Oil” again recently when I came across a sobering report by Julianne Geiger, editor of Oil Price. “The Real Reason Why Oil And Gas Is Here To Stay.” The report tells the tale of the world’s carbon footprint and how we are doomed to whatever global warming has in store for Earth. According to Geiger, “the wealthiest 1% account for 15% of the world’s emissions–more than twice the emissions generated by people in the bottom 50%.” And the richest countries are not about to give up fossil fuels.

She goes on to frame how the real reason why global climate targets are doomed to fail is cognitive dissonance and superconsumers. Or, in no uncertain terms, Americans and other oil entitled people simply lie to themselves to justify using up everything on the planet. As a patriotic American, and an honest one, I can attest to how we rationalize anything that makes us feel good. Not only do my countrymen deny climate change even exists, they complain like whining crybabies every time gas prices go up. It’s like watching and listening to crack addicts justify drug dealing.

Sadly, the UN report the Oil Price editor sources in her report reveals a damnable fact. According to the UN, the richer nations would have to cut their carbon footprint by 97% to stave off the devastating climate change experts project by the end of the decade. According to the experts, we’re headed toward a temperature rise in excess of 3°C this century. That is, unless Americans get their shit together, and quickly. And while the media is bashing actor Leonardo DiCaprio over the “Don’t Look Up” film, and his saying the media is part of the climate change problem, at the moment activist Greta Thunburg is vilified, humanity is at the crossroads. And not only because of global warming.

Oil. Money. Power. Because of these, what other calamities await before 2030? Well, all out war seems imminent over who supplies the world’s richest with gas. No really. Do you actually believe the recent Ukraine crisis has anything to do with the manifest destiny of Ukranians? Russians have ethnic, language, and cultural ties with many people in that poor country. But, Europeans and Americans? Nobody gives a damn about what happens in Kyiv or in the Donbass. The issue with this Russian borderland is historic on the one hand, and gas logic on the other. Russia’s wealth has been the big prize since the invention of fire, and the Russians becoming wealthier by selling gas to Europe is the cause of modern mayhem. As progressive as Vladimir Putin’s thinking is, the oligarchs and most of the people just want to finally become part of that 1%. The trend for Russia, China, and the rest of the BRICS is to finally be super consumers just like in the American movies. The idiocy would be bad enough if there were plenty of oil and power to go around. But there isn’t.

It’s no mystery why the United States and allies are hell bent on tromping down Iran, Venezuela, Iraq, and even Russia. These are the only places with substantial fossil fuel energy reserves remaining. I don’t want to get into a discussion about “Peak Oil” here, but the fact Saudi Arabia is lobbying for more world oil exploration says it all. A recent Bloomberg story about Saudi ministers warning of a collapse in oil supply, past evidence from WikiLeaks about Saudi production, and supports another revelation from a different Oil Price editor. They are running out. America’s shale desperation cannot keep up when the Middle East runs dry. The situation is desperate for all those Baby Boomers getting dividends from Shell or Exxon stocks. The Saudis are pretty much done unless they can fund external exploration, or get richer from an ARAMCO IPO. Think on this, and understand what’s really happening.

Western mainstream media says Vladimir Putin has an advantage in the current geostrategic quagmire. And in this case the corporate owned media is correct. Russia, Iran, and to a lesser extent Venezuela have the gas. Europe and North America do not. At least not where inexpensive recovery and refining are concerned. This is why Washington, London, and Brussels need NATO in Ukraine. This is why there are troop build ups on Russia’s frontiers. This is why Vladimir Putin is phoning the White House, calling for sanity. The reality is, even if Russia’s leader were to make Greta Thunberg minister of energy, the world’s last batch of gas for super-consumers would still be underneath Russian soil. And the 1% must grab it.

Now that we are clear, perhaps we can talk about averting the destruction of our world.

 

 

Phil Butler, is a policy investigator and analyst, a political scientist and expert on Eastern Europe, he’s an author of the recent bestseller “Putin’s Praetorians” and other books. He writes exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.

 

READ MORE:

https://journal-neo.org/2022/02/02/we-scoured-the-planet-and-found-the-enemy-the-superconsumer/

 

 

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