| on Jul 7, 2008, 05:16 PM E.S.T.
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Since the election of the Rudd Labor government last year
Australians seem to be under some sort of delusion that what we do here
in Australia will actually have an impact on global climate. These
delusions seem to have increased with the release of the Garnaut Climate Change Review Draft Report last Friday.
The front page of the weekend edition of the Sydney Morning Herald suggests
that unless we immediately start work on a carbon trading scheme to
operate from 2010 – and accept that the price of petrol, gas, power and
food will rise – then it will be the end of agriculture in the
Murray-Darling Basin by 2100, 5.5 million people will be exposed to
dengue virus, it will be the end of the Great Barrier Reef and the
beginning of political instability in neighbouring countries.
This is simply not true.
Indeed even Ross Garnaut acknowledges in his report that for there
to be any impact on global carbon dioxide levels, the world’s major
economies must do something about their emissions. The Professor lists
China, the US, the European Union, Indonesia, Brazil, Russia then
India, as the world’s largest greenhouse emitters and in that order.
Emissions from Australia make up only about 1 percent of the world
total. In reality, we are a nation of just 21 million people at the
bottom of the world. There are 1.3 billion people in China
(India 1.1 billion, US 304 million and Indonesia 231 million) and given
China and most other developing countries have no intension of limiting
their greenhouse gas emissions in the short to medium term atmospheric
levels of greenhouse gases are likely to continue to increase.
And I am not conceding that the apparently elevated levels of carbon dioxide are driving global temperatures.
Indeed atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide have increased
significantly over the last few decades and global temperatures did
increase over the period 1975 to 1998, but since then they appear to
have plateaued.
The prediction was that 2007 would be really hot, but it wasn’t.
There has been a breakdown in the correlation between increasingly levels of carbon dioxide and global temperatures.
Instead of acknowledging this in his report Professor Garnaut has
deferred to two fellows at the Australian National University who he
describes as "eminent econometricians" and quotes them apparently
concluding that “viewed from the perspective of 30 or 50 years ago, the
temperature recorded in most of the last decade lie above the
confidence band produced by any model that does not allow for a warming
trend” (pg. 113).
Why doesn’t the Professor just acknowledge that over the last 10
years, viewed from now, there has been no global warming and that now
is not the time to introduce a radical new emission trading scheme that
is sure to force up the price of everything, particularly given that
our big neighbours, including Indonesia with a population of 231
million, have no plans to do the same.
The bottom line is that the introduction of an emissions trading
scheme into Australia is likely to deliver real economic hardship while
delivering no environmental benefit. Indeed it is absurd to suggest
that the introduction of an emissions trading scheme in Australia will
have any impact on the environment of the Murray Darling Basin or the
Great Barrier Reef.
Australians are indeed deluding themselves if they think that by
simply paying more for their petrol, they can influence global
temperature trends, never mind that there has been no warming for 10
years now. Source
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