The secretary failed to mention that "three decades" was used as the
measurement period because we've had sea ice satellite data only since
1979 -- the Arctic is a famously difficult place to survey by any other
means, so there's simply no information from previous decades or
centuries to tell us to what extent such changes are normal and
cyclical.
Mr.
Kempthorne did say it would be "inappropriate" to use his listing
decision as an excuse to seek a reduction in man-made greenhouse gas
emissions, or to broadly address climate change.
But the secretary is either disingenuous or whistling past the
graveyard. Environmental extremists have sought the listing precisely
because the Endangered Species Act now allows them to sue any federal
agency, demanding that said agency no longer license or allow any
behaviors that might further "endanger" the "threatened" species.
"If the bears were listed," the Boston Herald warned in an editorial
Sunday, "the Endangered Species Act provides that each federal agency
would have to 'insure that any action authorized, funded or carried out
by such agency is not likely to jeopardize any endangered species or
threatened species or result in the destruction or adverse modification (our italics) of (critical) habitat of such species.'
"The environmentalists, if not the service, could claim that any
activity that emitted carbon dioxide, the chief gas causing the
supposed warming, could not be authorized, financed or done by a
federal agency," the Herald continued. "The agencies would have to
bring the modern world to a crash as no fossil fuels could be burned in
power plants, no highways built and so forth. ..."
Although Arctic ice is shrinking, the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration said in October this was caused not by
warming but a shift in wind patterns that pushed more ice out of the
Arctic.
"Polar bears have been around for 100,000 years, surviving much
warmer temperatures before the last ice age," the Herald noted.
"Canada, on whose territory about two-thirds of the bears live, has
refused to classify them as threatened or endangered. The United States
should follow suit."
Unfortunately, the deed is done, the precedent now set. The theory
embraced is that the animal is somehow "threatened" by consumers
burning fossil fuels in their SUVs in Georgia or Alabama, where the
lumbering predator has never been seen outside a zoo, all based on
cobbled-together computer models.
If polar bears are placed on the endangered species list, "the legal
hurdles to oil and gas drilling will increase," warns biologist Kenneth
P. Green of the American Enterprise Institute. "The U.S. Minerals
Management Service estimates that the area holds the potential for 7
billion barrels of recoverable oil and 32 trillion cubic feet of
recoverable natural gas."
Fuel to help hold down gasoline and energy prices -- fuel the green extremists hope we'll never see.
Never forget that the goal of the green extreme is to shut down our
modern industrial and technological civilization entirely, returning
mankind to the "more pristine" state of existence last seen seven
centuries ago, when wolves roamed the outskirts of Paris and the
average human being died before age 35, toothless, crippled and
shivering in the dark.
"Notwithstanding the secretary's disclaimers, this is the first time
the Endangered Species Act has been used to protect a species
threatened by the impacts of global warming," The Associated Press
noted Wednesday. "There has been concern within the business community
that such an action could have far-reaching impact and could be used to
regulate carbon dioxide."
Here it comes. Source