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Griffin said he
doubted global warming is "a problem we must wrestle with," and that
it is arrogant to believe that today's climate is the best we could have and
that "we need to take steps to make sure that it doesn't change."
While NASA scientist, James Hansen, was sharply critical of his boss, other
scientists from around the world came to Griffin's
support.
Said Dr. Walter Starck, an Australian marine scientist, "Griffin makes an important distinction
between the scientific findings of climate change and dramatic predictions of
catastrophic consequences accompanied by policy demands. The former can be
evaluated by its evidence, but; the latter rest only on assertions and claims
to authority. Alternate predictions of benefits from projected changes have
been proposed with comparable authority and plausibility. For example, unless
one chooses to define the Little Ice Age as "normal" and
"optimal" the net effect of any warming has only been beneficial and
any anthropogenic contribution very small indeed. Dramatic predictions of
imminent disaster have a near perfect record of failure. Griffin's note of caution in the escalating
concern over climate change deserves sober consideration.
Another Australian, who testified before a Senate panel last year, Professor
Robert Carter, observed, "My main reaction to Michael Griffin is to
congratulate him on his clear-sightedness, not to mention his courage in
speaking out on such a controversial topic."
Dr. Tim Ball, a Canadian climatologist, responded: "Griffin's
statement is sensible because it allows time for the testing of the man-made
global warming hypothesis to continue as it should."
"I certainly support Griffin's
comments," said William Kininmonth, a former head of the Australian
National Climate Centre. "Not only is it speculative to claim that humans
can in any way influence the course of climate but it is arrogant to suggest
that today's climate is getting worse than it has been in the past. For
example, who would prefer to return to pre-industrial conditions as they were
during the Little Ice Age? Frost Fairs were common on many rivers of Europe and
the London diarist John Evelyn records that in
1683-84 the Thames
River froze from late
December to early February. Conditions were terrible with men and cattle
perishing and the seas locked with ice such that no vessels could stir out or
come in. The fowls, fish and exotic plants and greens were universally
perishing. Food and fuel were exceptionally dear and coal smoke hung so thickly
that one could scarcely see across the street and one could scarcely
breathe."
Kansas geologist, Lee Gerhard added, "Griffin's statement
focuses on the hubris that affects much of public policy. It is great to know
that someone out there besides geologists understands that humans do not
dominate earth's dynamic systems.
Said Ross McKitrick, an economist at the University of Guelph,
"Claims of major, impending catastrophe are speculative and go far beyond
what has been credibly established by researchers to date. Hence Griffin's view is not at
all controversial or out of step with available evidence, and he should be
commended for having the courage to say it. The fact that it took courage,
however, points to the deeper problem that questioning the catastrophic propaganda
we hear so much is now considered politically incorrect."
Dr. Pat Michaels at the University
of Virginia agrees:
"NASA Administrator Michael Griffin's statement about whether or not it is
in fact a "problem" is supported by a scientific literature that his
employee, James Hansen, appears to ignore. It is well-known that much of the
Eurasian arctic was between 4 and 12 degrees (F) warmer than modern
temperatures for much of the 6,000 years between 3,000 and 9,000 years ago, and
that such warming was caused by a massive intrusion of warm Atlantic water into
the arctic. Given that the only way it can get there is to flow east of
Greenland, Mr. Hansen's well-publicized fears that a massive amount of Greenland's ice will fall into the ocean in the next 100
years is mere science fiction. It is ironic that today President Bush appears
to have given in to Hansen's hysteria rather than to the calm reason of NASA
Administrator Griffin.
Finally, Harvard University
physicist Lubos Motl praised Griffin's
climate comments, calling them "sensible." On his public blog, Motl
said he applauds Michael Griffin and encourages him to act as "a
self-confident boss of a highly prestigious institution." "I have
always believed that the people who actually work with hard sciences and
technology simply shouldn't buy a cheap and soft pseudoscientific propaganda
such as the 'fight against climate change,'" Motl added.
SOURCE:
Science and Public Policy Institute
06-01-2007 /CONTACT:
Robert Ferguson:         202-288-5699
Harriette
Johnson:         312-377-4000
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