WorldNetDaily.com -
19 Mai
08
HEAT OF THE MOMENT
31,000 scientists reject 'global warming' agenda
'Mr. Gore's movie has claims no informed expert
endorses'
By Bob Unruh
More than 31,000 scientists across the U.S. –
including more than 9,000 Ph.D.s in fields such as
atmospheric science, climatology, Earth science,
environment and dozens of other specialties – have
signed a petition rejecting "global warming," the
assumption that the human production of greenhouse
gases is damaging Earth's climate.
"There is no convincing scientific evidence that
human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other
greenhouse gases is causing or will, in the
foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of
the Earth's atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's
climate," the petition states. "Moreover, there is
substantial scientific evidence that increases in
atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial
effects upon the natural plant and animal
environments of the Earth."
The Petition Project actually was launched nearly 10
years ago, when the first few thousand signatures
were assembled. Then, between 1999 and 2007, the
list of signatures grew gradually without any
special effort or campaign.
But now, a new effort has been conducted because of
an "escalation of the claims of 'consensus,' release
of the movie 'An Inconvenient Truth' by Mr. Al Gore,
and related events," according to officials with the
project.
"Mr. Gore's movie, asserting a 'consensus' and 'settled
science' in agreement about human-caused global
warming, conveyed the claims about human-caused
global warming to ordinary movie goers and to public
school children, to whom the film was widely
distributed. Unfortunately, Mr. Gore's movie
contains many very serious incorrect claims which no
informed, honest scientist could endorse," said
project spokesman and founder Art Robinson.
WND submitted a request to Gore's office for comment
but did not get a response.
Robinson said the dire warnings about "global
warming" have gone far beyond semantics or
scientific discussion now to the point they are
actually endangering people.
"The campaign to severely ration hydrocarbon energy
technology has now been markedly expanded," he said.
"In the course of this campaign, many scientifically
invalid claims about impending climate emergencies
are being made. Simultaneously, proposed political
actions to severely reduce hydrocarbon use now
threaten the prosperity of Americans and the very
existence of hundreds of millions of people in
poorer countries," he said.
In just the past few weeks, there have been various
allegations that both shark attacks and typhoons
have been sparked by "global warming."
The late Professor Frederick Seitz, the past
president of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences
and winner of the National Medal of Science, wrote
in a letter promoting the petition, "The United
States is very close to adopting an international
agreement that would ration the use of energy and of
technologies that depend upon coal, oil, and natural
gas and some other organic compounds."
"This treaty is, in our opinion, based upon flawed
ideas. Research data on climate change do not show
that human use of hydrocarbons is harmful. To the
contrary, there is good evidence that increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide is environmentally
helpful," he wrote.
Accompanying the letter sent to scientists was a
12-page summary and review of research on "global
warming," officials said.
"The proposed agreement would have very negative
effects upon the technology of nations throughout
the world, especially those that are currently
attempting to lift from poverty and provide
opportunities to the over 4 billion people in
technologically underdeveloped countries," Seitz
wrote.
Robinson said the project targets scientists because,
"It is especially important for America to hear from
its citizens who have the training necessary to
evaluate the relevant data and offer sound advice."
He said the "global warming agreement," written in
Kyoto, Japan, in 1997, and other plans "would harm
the environment, hinder the advance of science and
technology, and damage the health and welfare of
mankind."
"Yet," he said, "the United Nations and other vocal
political interests say the U.S. must enact new laws
that will sharply reduce domestic energy production
and raise energy prices even higher.
"The inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness include the right of access to
life-giving and life-enhancing technology. This is
especially true of access to the most basic of all
technologies: energy. These human rights have been
extensively and wrongly abridged," he continued. "During
the past two generations in the U.S., a system of
high taxation, extensive regulation, and ubiquitous
litigation has arisen that prevents the accumulation
of sufficient capital and the exercise of sufficient
freedom to build and preserve needed modern
technology.
"These unfavorable political trends have severely
damaged our energy production, where lack of
industrial progress has left our country dependent
upon foreign sources for 30 percent of the energy
required to maintain our current level of prosperity,"
he said. "Moreover, the transfer of other U.S.
industries abroad as a result of these same trends
has left U.S. citizens with too few goods and
services to trade for the energy that they do not
produce. A huge and unsustainable trade deficit and
rapidly rising energy prices have been the result.
"The necessary hydrocarbon and nuclear energy
production technologies have been available to U.S.
engineers for many decades. We can develop these
resources without harm to people or the environment.
There is absolutely no technical, resource, or
environmental reason for the U.S. to be a net
importer of energy. The U.S. should, in fact, be a
net exporter of energy," he said.
He told WND he believes the issue has nothing to do
with energy itself, but everything to do with power,
control and money, which the United Nations is
seeking. He accused the U.N. of violating human
rights in its campaign to ban much energy research,
exploration and development.
"In order to alleviate the current energy emergency
and prevent future emergencies, we need to remove
the governmental restrictions that have caused this
problem. Fundamental human rights require that U.S.
citizens and their industries be free to produce and
use the low cost, abundant energy that they need. As
the 31,000 signatories of this petition emphasize,
environmental science supports this freedom," he
said.
The Petition Project website today said there are
31,072 scientists who have signed up, and Robinson
said more names continue to come in.
In terms of Ph.D. scientists alone, it already has
15 times more scientists than are seriously involved
in the U.N.'s campaign to "vilify hydrocarbons,"
officials told WND.
"The very large number of petition signers
demonstrates that, if there is a consensus among
American scientists, it is in opposition to the
human-caused global warming hypothesis rather than
in favor of it," the organization noted.
The project was set up by a team of physicists and
physical chemists who do research at several
American institutions and collects signatures when
donations provide the resources to mail out more
letters.
"In a group of more than 30,000 people, there are
many individuals with names similar or identical to
other signatories, or to non-signatories – real or
fictional. Opponents of the petition project
sometimes use this statistical fact in efforts to
discredit the project. For examples, Perry Mason and
Michael Fox are scientists who have signed the
petition – who happen also to have names identical
to fictional or real non-scientists," the website
said.
The petition is needed, supporters said, simply
because Gore and others "have claimed that the 'science
is settled' – that an overwhelming 'consensus' of
scientists agrees with the hypothesis of
human-caused global warming, with only a handful of
skeptical scientists in disagreement."
The list of scientists includes 9,021 Ph.D.s, 6,961
at the master's level, 2,240 medical doctors and
12,850 carrying a bachelor of science or equivalent
academic degree.
The Petition Project's website includes both a list
of scientists by name as well as a list of
scientists by state.