This is global warming, says environmental chief

I’m behind the theory that we’re doing something we shouldn’t be doing. Two storms like this back to back is a sign. The human suffering is beside the point when you look at this in a ‘future generations’ perspective. Regardless of how many people die or lose everything from these specific ones, by ignoring the science we’re really screwing over our kids the most. Outright denial is the message I get from the right talkers when it comes to global warming. They simply assume that human beings couldn’t have an impact on the overall health of the planet. Those who agree with them need to seriously consider this one issue as something that transcends politics. Math and science are our discoveries, and turning our backs on all that has been built off of it is a special kind of insolence. The kind of stuff old-time humans would build a religion over…after the people were killed into submission. That process is taking place right now in front of our eyes. We surely cannot rebuild a handfull of coastal cities each year. Perhaps we can though, and that capacity alone is what drives our malcontent legacy. The political ground that has been staked out by the right that tells people to believe that we’re tougher than any nation, tougher than nature and perhaps even tougher than God. Because NOBODY tells US what to do…we’re America damnit!

As Hurricane Rita threatens devastation, scientist blames climate change

By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor
Published: 23 September 2005

Super-powerful hurricanes now hitting the United States are the “smoking gun” of global warming, one of Britain’s leading scientists believes.

The growing violence of storms such as Katrina, which wrecked New Orleans, and Rita, now threatening Texas, is very probably caused by climate change, said Sir John Lawton, chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution. Hurricanes were getting more intense, just as computer models predicted they would, because of the rising temperature of the sea, he said. “The increased intensity of these kinds of extreme storms is very likely to be due to global warming.”

In a series of outspoken comments – a thinly veiled attack on the Bush administration, Sir John hit out at neoconservatives in the US who still deny the reality of climate change.

Referring to the arrival of Hurricane Rita he said: “If this makes the climate loonies in the States realise we’ve got a problem, some good will come out of a truly awful situation.” As he spoke, more than a million people were fleeing north away from the coast of Texas as Rita, one of the most intense storms on record, roared through the Gulf of Mexico. It will probably make landfall tonight or early tomorrow near Houston, America’s fourth largest city and the centre of its oil industry. Highways leading inland from Houston were clogged with traffic for up to 100 miles north.

There are real fears that Houston could suffer as badly from Rita just as New Orleans suffered from Hurricane Katrina less than a month ago.

Asked what conclusion the Bush administration should draw from two hurricanes of such high intensity hitting the US in quick succession, Sir John said: “If what looks like is going to be a horrible mess causes the extreme sceptics about climate change in the US to reconsider their opinion, that would be an extremely valuable outcome.”

Asked about characterising them as “loonies”, he said: “There are a group of people in various parts of the world … who simply don’t want to accept human activities can change climate and are changing the climate.”

“I’d liken them to the people who denied that smoking causes lung cancer.”

With his comments, Sir John becomes the third of the leaders of Britain’s scientific establishment to attack the US over the Bush government’s determination to cast doubt on global warming as a real phenomenon.

Sir John’s comments follow and support recent research, much of it from America itself, showing that hurricanes are getting more violent and suggesting climate change is the cause.

A paper by US researchers, last week in the US journal Science, showed that storms of the intensity of Hurricane Katrina have become almost twice as common in the past 35 years.

Although the overall frequency of tropical storms worldwide has remained broadly level since 1970, the number of extreme category 4 and 5 events has sharply risen. In the 1970s, there was an average of about 10 category 4 and 5 hurricanes per year but, since 1990, they have nearly doubled to an average of about 18 a year. During the same period, sea surface temperatures, among the key drivers of hurricane intensity, have increased by an average of 0.5C (0.9F).

Sir John said: “Increasingly it looks like a smoking gun. It’s a fair conclusion to draw that global warming, caused to a substantial extent by people, is driving increased sea surface temperatures and increasing the violence of hurricanes.”

Super-powerful hurricanes now hitting the United States are the “smoking gun” of global warming, one of Britain’s leading scientists believes.

The growing violence of storms such as Katrina, which wrecked New Orleans, and Rita, now threatening Texas, is very probably caused by climate change, said Sir John Lawton, chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution. Hurricanes were getting more intense, just as computer models predicted they would, because of the rising temperature of the sea, he said. “The increased intensity of these kinds of extreme storms is very likely to be due to global warming.”

In a series of outspoken comments – a thinly veiled attack on the Bush administration, Sir John hit out at neoconservatives in the US who still deny the reality of climate change.

Referring to the arrival of Hurricane Rita he said: “If this makes the climate loonies in the States realise we’ve got a problem, some good will come out of a truly awful situation.” As he spoke, more than a million people were fleeing north away from the coast of Texas as Rita, one of the most intense storms on record, roared through the Gulf of Mexico. It will probably make landfall tonight or early tomorrow near Houston, America’s fourth largest city and the centre of its oil industry. Highways leading inland from Houston were clogged with traffic for up to 100 miles north.

There are real fears that Houston could suffer as badly from Rita just as New Orleans suffered from Hurricane Katrina less than a month ago.

Asked what conclusion the Bush administration should draw from two hurricanes of such high intensity hitting the US in quick succession, Sir John said: “If what looks like is going to be a horrible mess causes the extreme sceptics about climate change in the US to reconsider their opinion, that would be an extremely valuable outcome.”
Asked about characterising them as “loonies”, he said: “There are a group of people in various parts of the world … who simply don’t want to accept human activities can change climate and are changing the climate.”

“I’d liken them to the people who denied that smoking causes lung cancer.”

With his comments, Sir John becomes the third of the leaders of Britain’s scientific establishment to attack the US over the Bush government’s determination to cast doubt on global warming as a real phenomenon.

Sir John’s comments follow and support recent research, much of it from America itself, showing that hurricanes are getting more violent and suggesting climate change is the cause.

A paper by US researchers, last week in the US journal Science, showed that storms of the intensity of Hurricane Katrina have become almost twice as common in the past 35 years.

Although the overall frequency of tropical storms worldwide has remained broadly level since 1970, the number of extreme category 4 and 5 events has sharply risen. In the 1970s, there was an average of about 10 category 4 and 5 hurricanes per year but, since 1990, they have nearly doubled to an average of about 18 a year. During the same period, sea surface temperatures, among the key drivers of hurricane intensity, have increased by an average of 0.5C (0.9F).

Sir John said: “Increasingly it looks like a smoking gun. It’s a fair conclusion to draw that global warming, caused to a substantial extent by people, is driving increased sea surface temperatures and increasing the violence of hurricanes.”

Source

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5 Responses to This is global warming, says environmental chief

  1. captain_menace says:

    the message I get from the right talkers when it comes to global warming

    Couldn’t agree more. I live in Alaska where the effects of global warming are much more evident. I pointed this out at right-thinking.com and you would have thought that I cut a nasty fart in church. I hadn’t even speculated as to the cause (which I’m still unsure of).

    It’s one thing to argue about the source of warming, but to deny that things are heating up is simply moronic. But hey, what can you really expect from a party that voted King George in to office?

  2. Chris Austin says:

    For the right-wing, it’s a battle of wills at this point. Jesus himself could descend and tell Congress personally that we are bringing on this climate change, and they wouldn’t believe it.

  3. captain_menace says:

    Well, you know according to Revelations… if Jesus does come down there will be some serious warming going on.

  4. Chris Austin says:

    And religious fanatics have been predicting that day for thousands of years already. I say Revelations is a load of crap…written as an insurance policy, in case the preceding enormity of all the chapters that came before didn’t get the job done.

    Jesus has come back many times, and we manage to kill him over and over and over again.

  5. captain_menace says:

    Jesus has come back many times, and we manage to kill him over and over and over again.

    It’s an unfortunate position that many of us find ourselves in… respecting the teachings of Jesus based simply on his compassion for man, and having no respect whatsoever for the religions that “spread” his word.

    Whenever I think I may want to embrace Christianity all I need to do is re-read Revelations. Any religion that damns all of mankind that doesn’t believe is simply a fantasy. If I’m going to believe in fantasy I can come up with something much more imaginative that the stories in the Bible.

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