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4 myths about global warming
San Francisco Chronicle ^ | 11/15/2001 | Debra Saunders

Posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:39 PM PST by Pokey78

Edited on 04/13/2004 2:39:03 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

NOW THAT YET another confab on the 1997 Kyoto global warming protocol has ended with participants patting each on the back for being such good enviros, you can expect even more pressure on President Bush to embrace the pact.

According to polls, Americans support the pact, which ostensibly will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 5.2 percent below 1990 levels by the year 2012. Alas, the public has bought into four myths that beg to be debunked.


(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:39 PM PST by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78
I'm astounded that this was in a San Fransisco paper!
2 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:40 PM PST by basil
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To: Pokey78
I am amazed to see this printed in a newspaper - even more amazed that is a SF newspaper. When do you suppose it will be told on CNN?
3 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:40 PM PST by CaliforniaDreamer
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To: CaliforniaDreamer
When do you suppose it will be told on
CNN?

Probably around the same time the temperature in hell dips below freezing.

4 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:41 PM PST by Fintan
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To: Fintan
Christopher C. Horner on global warming & media on National Review Online
  '); //-->  
 

Cmdr. Robert E. Stumpf: Making Sense of 587.

 
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Punxsutawney Protocol
“World Reaches Warming Pact” again, only not really.

By Christopher C. Horner, senior fellow, Competitive Enterprise Institute & counsel, Cooler Heads Coalition.
November 14, 2001 2:15 p.m.

 

stablishment-press reporting of Kyoto "global warming" treaty negotiations would embarrass even Bill Murray's character in the movie Groundhog Day. They laughably trumpet the same nonachievement, conference after conference. Consider last week's front-page, above-the-fold Washington Post story, the introductory paragraph to which read, "[M]ore than 160 countries, including Great Britain, Japan and Russia, reached agreement late last night on a groundbreaking climate control treaty setting mandatory targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions" ("160 Nations Agree to Warming Pact," November 10, 2001).

Such promotion is absurd given what actually transpired. And of course, it also followed some now also obligatory disparaging of the U.S. stance in the talks at issue, in this case the "Seventh Session of the Conference of the Parties," COP-7, in Marrakesh. Does all of this sound familiar?

Consider these headlines: "Historic Global Warming Pact Reached" (Associated Press, December 11, 1997, on the original Kyoto session) and "Nations Reach Landmark Global Warming Pact" (St. Louis Post-Dispatch, December 11, 1997); or this summer's "World Agrees on Climate Pact" (Chicago Tribune, July 24, 2001, on COP-6) and "Nations reach a climate accord" (New York Times, July 25, 2001).

Sounds like it might be time to stop agreeing and start ratifying. Yet only one covered country has chosen to submit ratification lo these four years. That is Romania, in a clear move to kiss up to the EU it desperately seeks to join. The trouble is that no nation can yet be sure of what it would be getting itself into; they're merely seeing a lot of troubling hints. These propagandistic headlines are therefore pure fiction. Any supposed "agreement" is in truth far from that: specifics remain undrafted, let alone agreed upon, even before individual countries must ratify them.

This one Post lead provides more factual errors, masquerading as editorial bias, than any news story should reasonably contain in its entirety. Consider the subhead's derogation, "U.S. Was on Sidelines in Morocco Talks." This, regrettably, is not true. Though claiming it will not be bound by the Kyoto Protocol, the U.S. nonetheless refuses to rescind its valid signature on the document — signaling, at best, continued engagement and a plea for less oppressive terms. At worst, it indicates that ratification may remain a possibility.

The U.S. sent a full delegation to Marrakesh, participated in key discussions, and, as anyone making even one inquiry would know, advocated longstanding negotiating positions through allied delegations. For example (and environmentalist groups fumed about this throughout the conference, even if it doesn't suit the reporting tastes of the Post), Canadian delegates promoted U.S. ideas for a "clean development mechanism" whereby covered countries receive some credit for energy projects developed overseas.

Further, even proponents of Kyoto assert that assuming their hypothesis of man's impact on the climate is true, this agreement — if fully and perfectly implemented — would affect temperatures so slightly as not to be measurable (estimated at a six-year delay of a three-one-hundredths of a degree increase). Would such a deal represent, to any reasonable mind, "climate control"? Or does it merely signify a desperately-sought affirmation of the belief — long advocated, through theories running the gamut from a "man-made ice age" to global warming — that too many people exist who are "killing the planet"?

Regardless, the Post and other establishment press seem to advocate — or fall for — the routine charade of "groundbreaking agreement." Anyone attending these conferences knows that whatever olio can be cobbled at the eleventh hour is hailed as a groundbreaking achievement closing the deal, etc., details to be hammered out later. Year in and year out, one negotiating session follows another. One "climate agreement" is reported after another, though all that's accomplished is a slight narrowing of terms. Given the actual treaty language's persistent vagaries, any implementable, enforceable "agreement" remains far off.

In truth, the Kyoto Protocol set forth broad language binding 38 countries to reduce particular "greenhouse gas" (GHG) emissions, by differing percentages each, by dates certain. It called for emission-credit-trading regimes to enable this even though, rhetoric notwithstanding, these remain undefined. It called for international economic sanctions, which are still unstated. So far, all they've agreed to for cases of noncompliance is a more restrictive emission level for the promised, and as-yet-unagreed-upon, "next compliance period." The key question — "Or what?" — now highlights the folly of this anti-growth measure.

Negotiations in The Hague in November 2000 made clear that either our negotiating partners in bad faith sought to change the terms of the agreement in mid-course — or there never was agreement.

There, our European allies insisted that when, for instance, Protocol Article 3 says GHG sinks "shall be used to meet the commitments under this article" ("sinks" are forestry and land-management practices sucking greenhouse gases from the atmosphere), they meant, "but not very much."

The U.S. clearly intended "to the extent we are able to reduce GHGs through that method." No EU flexibility, given that this would mitigate U.S. pain — therefore, no deal. We "dropped out." And most of such questions remain unanswered.

As still-scarce details take form, Kyoto is increasingly obviously designed to fail (the particular charade of such dysfunction requiring another essay entirely). Greens and their cheerleaders might find a more appropriate announcement in Chevy Chase's classic Saturday Night Live offering: "This just in, Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still valiantly holding on in his fight to remain dead."

 
 




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5 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:50 PM PST by MoralSense
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To: Pokey78
Mega-bump and, as the #2 comment said it: A SFO paper no less!!

KUDOS!

6 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:50 PM PST by FReethesheeples
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To: basil
I, too, was similarly astounded re: the SF Chronicle!

But Deb's a nationally syndicated columnist.

7 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:51 PM PST by FReethesheeples
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To: MoralSense
Mega-bump to your post @ # 5!

Kudos!

14 posted on 11/16/2001 1:16:51 PM PST by FReethesheeples
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To: Pokey78
3rd World, Africa and South America, Major Sources of Greenhouse Gases
15 posted on 11/16/2001 1:19:29 PM PST by SocialMeltdown
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To: MoralSense
The Kyoto Treaty will soon be renamed the Bozo Treaty.
16 posted on 11/16/2001 1:20:37 PM PST by Number_Cruncher
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To: FReethesheeples
Debra J. Saunders is great -- the lone conservative columnist at the SF Chronicle. There are many, many conservatives in the Bay Area -- their presence is overlooked by the insanity of elite wealthy liberals in SF and Berkeley.

There is a strong and growing core of conservatives in the Bay Area. KSFO is perhaps the best talk radio station in the country -- all conservative programming, and kicking ass.

Any liberal who owns a home in SF proper or Berkeley is a de facto hypocrite -- property values are ridiculous -- the ones who have hung on here since the 60s are all very wealthy and could feed hundreds of downtrodden every month by liquidating their real estate. They are American property-owning capitalists par excellence.

17 posted on 11/16/2001 1:20:39 PM PST by Monti Cello
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To: Pokey78
Let's call them what they really are...lies.
18 posted on 11/16/2001 1:21:45 PM PST by AlaskaErik
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To: Monti Cello
God bless Deb Saunders ---

& all the many SFO area conservatives whom you allude to ---

& (true) SFO area libertarians!

I had a friend who wrote pulitzer quality stuff for the Chronicle (or was it the Examiner?

(--- same thing, I guess)

and her bosses hated her & persecuted her essentially for distracting from the

"gay agenda",

which was their ONLY agenda;

so she left....

19 posted on 11/25/2001 5:03:14 PM PST by FReethesheeples
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