The
Problem With The Global
Warming Skeptics
By Joshua Frank
01 June, 2007
Countercurrents.org
Alexander
Cockburn has been making waves with his recent series on global warming,
which has been published in The Nation and online at CounterPunch.org
where he serves as co-editor (and I contribute a weekly column). In
them, Cockburn attacks the logic of those fear-mongering scientists
and all of us uneducated “Greenhousers” who believe humans,
and our industrialized economy, are negatively impacting the planet’s
climate.
While I’m quite happy
to be dubbed a dumb Greenhouser — make no mistake, I’m not
an intelligent scientist. In fact I’m one of the few radical environmentalists
I know who doesn’t believe global warming is the most immediate
threat to life on Earth. Call me crazy, but that trophy, I’m afraid,
is still firmly in the clutches of the world’s nuclear powers.
In his articles Cockburn
bases much of his argument on the opinion of one retired chemist, Dr.
Martin Hertzberg, who worked for the U.S. Navy and later as an explosions
expert for the Bureau of Mines, which functions under the rubric of
the Department of the Interior. Hertzberg’s reasoning goes something
like this: global warming is caused by water vapor and not by CO2 emissions.
In fact, according to Hertzberg, it’s never caused by CO2 emissions,
no matter the amount. His belief relies on the largely contested thesis
that oceans are “carbon sinks” which store excessive CO2
and other sediments.
By contrast, most climate
scientists insist that CO2 concentrations are cumulative. So, after
they are released, the gas remains in the atmosphere for thousands of
years unlike oceanic water vapor, which precipitates rather quickly
out of the atmosphere as snow and rain.
Scientific research also
challenges the “carbon sink” theory. The most recent and
extensive study to do so was written by eighteen scientists and published
in Science in late April 2007. The research was conducted by two international
scientific expeditions, which studied waters in the South Pacific near
the equator. The work suggests that rather than sinking, CO2 is instead
gobbled up by animals and bacteria and recycled in the “twilight
zone,” a shadowy area 100 to 1,000 meters below the ocean’s
surface.
“The twilight zone is a critical link between the surface and
the deep ocean,” says Ken Buesseler, a biogeochemist at Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution who was lead author of the study. “We’re
interested in what happens in the twilight zone, what sinks into it
and what actually sinks out of it. Unless the carbon goes all the way
down into the deep ocean and is stored there, the oceans will have little
impact on climate change.”
If true, Dr. Hertzberg’s
position is in deep water. But there are far greater problems with this
lone scientist than his sketchy position on global warming or his past
history as an explosives expert for the Bureau of Mines. Indeed Hertzberg
may have other reasons for not challenging the industry-line on climate
change. Fact is, Hertzberg serves as an expert witness for Big Coal,
and was even hired by Jim Walter Resources in a case where the large
coal company paid a meager $3,000 in fines after an explosion in one
of their Alabama mines led to the deaths of 13 miners. Jim Walter Resources,
which pocketed over $100 million in profits that same year, surely cut
Dr. Hertzberg a hefty check for his professional services. His testimony,
which was cited by the presiding judge, likely decreased the fine levied
at the company.
Hertzberg cannot be considered
an unbiased scientist on the issue of climate change, as he is a paid
consultant for an industry whose coal-burning power plants produce the
single largest source of CO2 pollution in the U.S. This, to me, is proof
positive that we ought to disregard Hertzberg’s climate science
all together.
There are other blatant problems
with some of the warming skeptics’ assumptions as well as their
possible motivations. In his second piece on the matter Cockburn quotes
the notorious doubter Pat Michaels of the University of Virginia, who
spends a great deal of time critiquing global warming models. But Michaels,
an Environmental Science professor, was long ago exposed as a pawn of
industry. Writing for Harper’s in 1995, Ross Gelbspan explained,
“Michaels has received more than $115,000 over the last four years
from coal and energy interests. World Climate Review, a quarterly he
founded that routinely debunks climate concerns, was funded by Western
Fuels.”
Other holes exist in the
skeptic’s logic as well. Cockburn correctly references a 1995
report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that
hastily slipped in the following language, which contradicted much of
the original report: “The balance of evidence suggests a discernible
human influence on global climate.”
However, it should be noted
that since the IPCC’s second review of climate change research
in 1995, there has been two additional IPCC papers, one in 2001 and
another this year, both of which argue that the literature overwhelmingly
show that humans are “likely” contributing to planetary
warming.
Sadly, the aforementioned
global warming skeptics are in one way or another on the fossil fuel
dole. Aside from Dr. Hertzberg, the explosives expert who does consulting
work for Big Coal, and Prof. Michaels who is funded by power companies
that operate and own coal fired plants, the last, and worst, ‘scientist’
the skeptics, including Cockburn, so frequently cite is Fredrick Seitz.
For those of you who haven’t
followed the climate debate over the years, sourcing the 96 year-old
Seitz on global warming, as a friend of mine put it, is like quoting
Judith Miller on Iraq’s WMDs. He’s a complete and utter
fraud who has been exposed as such time and again. Seitz has argued
that smoking doesn’t cause cancer while simultaneously pocketing
mega-bucks from Big Tobacco. He even disputes the fact that CFCs damage
the ozone layer. Seitz would probably tell you it’s okay to sprinkle
DDT on your kid’s birthday cake if DuPont paid him enough.
Seitz, who along with Edward
“father of the atomic bomb” Teller, also founded the egregious
“Atoms for Peace” program, which called for exploding nukes
to excavate harbors, bring natural gas to the surface and run space
ships to Mars. Seitz is certainly not an impartial source on global
warming. He’s a hack.
Arguing the in and outs of
global warming research is diversionary. I agree that we ought to be
skeptical of Al Gore’s past, the carbon offset market, carbon
credits and the eco-economy that’s spawned from our papal induced
guilt. We should be aware that the Prius isn’t really all that
‘green’, with its copper loaded engines that are raping
the hillsides of British Columbia. We should know that our eco-friendly
Patagonia attire is made locally, in China. Yet climate change, as I
noted earlier, is a symptom of industrialization. It cannot, and will
not, be tamed until we acknowledge as much.
There is little risk in playing
it safe — go ahead and consider the possibility that human industry
is contributing to the warming of the Earth’s atmosphere. The
only harm in calling for a dramatic curb in CO2 emissions, I see, is
that large oil and gas companies will have to radically alter their
destructive ways. But if global warming serves as a gateway for people
to openly criticize our global economy, and God forbid, industrial capitalism
— all the better.
Joshua Frank holds a graduate degree in Environmental
Conservation from New York University. He’s the author of Left
Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush and co-edits DissidentVoice.org.
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