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| "An Examination of the Impacts of Global Warming on the Chesapeake Bay" |
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| Written by Sen. Inhofe | |
| Tuesday, 25 September 2007 | |
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Today’s hearing is on the
impact global warming is having on the
Most interesting,
Many of my colleagues today
will undoubtedly say the science advocating man-made global warming is
settled. In fact, just last month, a comprehensive survey of
peer-reviewed scientific literature from 2004-2007 revealed “Less than half of
all published scientists endorse global warming theory.” The survey used
the same search term as that used in a survey cited by Al Gore in his movie as
proof of the consensus.
The study revealed that of
528 total papers on climate change, only 7% gave an explicit endorsement of the
consensus. The figure rose to 45 percent if one includes implicit endorsement,
or the acceptance of the consensus without an explicit statement. While
only 6% reject the consensus outright, the largest category (48%) is neutral
papers, refusing to either accept or reject the hypothesis. This lead the
science publication Daily Tech to conclude in August 2007 “This is no
'consensus.’” Let me repeat, just last month, a comprehensive survey of
peer-reviewed scientific literature from 2004-2007 revealed “Less than half of
all published scientists endorse global warming theory.”
With regard to the Bay, its
sea levels have been rising for thousands of years. The Bay itself is the
product of rising sea level. The Bay is at best 10,000 years old and
recognizable to us in its current form only in the last 5,000 years.
Further, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, the Bay has risen about 6
inches per century over the last 6,000 years. According to the Maryland
Department of Natural Resources, the sea level rise is due to naturally
occurring regional land subsidence. The land is subsiding at a rate of
1.33 millimeters per year. In its report on global warming, the
Chesapeake Bay Foundation noted that “much of the area is actually sinking due
to geological processes that began during the last ice age.” The Bay
and its sea life have adjusted to its constant rise in sea level and it will
continue to adjust and if the pollution issues can be brought under control, it
will continue to flourish.
This hearing should not
have been about the impact of global warming on the Bay but rather I would
propose that this hearing should have been on the Bay’s health, the pollution
sources, the local economy and the water quality. In 2000,
In 1985, 358 million pounds
of nitrogen were delivered to the Bay’s tidal waters. By 2005, nitrogen loadings
into the tidal waters were down to 286 million pounds. However, as noted
in last year’s Inspector General Report, the average rate of decrease in
nitrogen loadings is about 3.4 million pounds annually. In order to meet
the 2000 Agreement’s goal of removing the Bay from EPA’s impaired waters list,
nutrient loadings must be reduced by 16 million pounds annually.
According to the 2006 Chesapeake Bay 2006 Health and Restoration Assessment,
the signatories have met fewer than 50% of their restoration goals. We
should examine why those goals have not been met, whether the goals were
realistic, whether the resources exist to meet them and where best to devote
limited federal dollars in the effort. According to the Congressional
Research Service, the federal government spent $58 million in 2006 directly on
I think today is a lost
opportunity. While much of the testimony is focused on global warming, I
remain hopeful we will be able to learn about local solutions to the problem of
nutrient and sediment loadings. |
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