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In previous related articles (Environmental Extremism and Historical and philosophical context of the climate change debate. and How the world was misled about global warming and now climate change)
we examined how environmentalism and particularly climate was hijacked
to achieve the political goals of Maurice Strong (pictured), primarily to cause
the demise of industrialized nations. We saw how he established the
political vehicle the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and the
scientific vehicle, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) for his purpose.
He brought them together at the Earth Summit in
Rio in 1992. The fruits of his efforts and the policies they engendered
are now emerging and are hurting the poor and middle-income people of
all countries, with rising food and energy costs. They’re hurting the
people they were ostensibly designed to help, but more on that later.
Sir John Houghton, first co-chair of the IPCC and lead editor of the
first three Reports, signaled the objectives were political and not
scientific. He said, “Unless we announce disasters no one will listen.”
The IPCC has done this with ruthless efficiency while pretending what
they are doing is science not politics. Houghton gave an example of a
disastrous statement when he announced “...the impacts of global
warming are like a weapon of mass destruction”, which is followed by
the claim that it kills more people than terrorism. Trouble is more
people die of cold each year than heat. Also, notice the word “impact”
because that, not science, dominates the work of the IPCC. Two thirds
of the people involved in the IPCC (1900 of 2500) are not climate
experts and study what might happen, not will happen. So the entire
process was established to achieve the goal of announcing (potential)
disasters.
Bert Bolin, who Al Gore credits with creating the IPCC, was
Houghton’s co-chair. Bolin had a history of involvement in the politics
of the environment. Both he and Houghton signed the 1992 warning to
humanity essentially blaming the developed nations. It was more of the
Club of Rome approach with no clear measures or evidence, simply a list
of possible disasters if we didn’t do things their way.
Science creates theories based on assumptions that are then tested by
other scientists performing as skeptics. The structure and mandate of
the IPCC was in direct contradiction to this scientific method. They
set out to prove the theory rather than disprove it. Maurice Strong and
his UN committees’ objectives, especially the IPCC made sure the focus
was on human caused change and CO2 as the particular culprit. They’d
already biased the research by using a very narrow definition of
climate change in article 1 of the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC), a treaty produced at that infamous “Earth
Summit” in Rio in 1992. Climate Change was defined as “a change of
climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity
that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which is in
addition to natural climate variability observed over considerable time
periods. This makes the human impact the primary purpose of the
research. The problem is you cannot determine that unless you know the
amount and cause of natural climate change.
Properly, a scientific definition would put natural climate variability
first, but at no point does the UN mandate require an advance of
climate science. The definition used by UNFCCC predetermined how the
research and results would be political and pre-determined the result.
It made discovering a clear ‘human signal’ mandatory, but meaningless.
As noted it thwarted the scientific method.
Other parts of their mandate illustrate the political nature of the
entire exercise. Its own principles require the IPCC “shall concentrate
its activities on the tasks allotted to it by the relevant WMO
Executive Council and UNEP Governing Council resolutions and decisions
as well as on actions in support of the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change.” (From Principles Governing IPCC work, approved at the
14th Session, Vienna 1-3 October 1998 and amended at the 21st Session,
Vienna 6-7 November, 2003.) The role is also to “...assess on a
comprehensive, objective, open and transparent basis the scientific,
technical and socio-economic information relevant to understanding the
scientific basis of risk of human-induced climate change, its potential
impacts and options for adaptation and mitigation. IPCC reports should
be neutral with respect to policy...” The process has been anything but
“comprehensive, objective, open and transparent” as we will see later.
However, the cynicism of the last sentence was exposed when they made
the Summary for Policymakers (SPM) the most important part of IPCC
reports and these have been anything but ‘neutral’ as we will see.
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