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			 by Tom Blumer
 
			
			November 29, 2010  
			from
			
			NewsBusters Website 
			  
			This would be really funny if it weren't for the fact that so many 
			supposedly informed people, including our president and those who 
			surround him, may actually buy into ideas being proposed at the 
			United Nations-sponsored Cancun climate conference, and will relish 
			the means by which they could be put into place.
 At the 
			
			UK Telegraph today, environment correspondent
			Louise Gray 
			feeds us the following headline and sub-headline:
 
			  
				
				Cancun climate change summit 
				Scientists call for rationing in 
			developed worldGlobal warming is now such a serious threat to mankind that climate 
			change experts are calling for Second World War-style rationing in 
			rich countries to bring down carbon emissions.
 
			From all appearances, such rationing would last at least two 
			decades, during which there would be, by design, no economic growth. 
			Zero, zip, nada.
 Here are selected paragraphs from Gray's grouse (bolds and number 
			tags are mine):
 
				
				In a series of papers published by the Royal Society, physicists and 
			chemists from some of world’s most respected scientific 
			institutions, including Oxford University and the Met Office, agreed 
			that current plans to tackle global warming are not enough.
 Unless emissions are reduced dramatically in the next ten years the 
			world is set to see temperatures rise by more than 4°C (7.2°F) by as 
			early as the 2060s, causing floods, droughts and mass migration.
				[1]
 
					
					...In one paper Professor Kevin Anderson, Director of the Tyndall 
			Centre for Climate Change Research, said the only way to reduce 
			global emissions enough, while allowing the poor nations to continue 
			to grow, is to halt economic growth in the rich world over the next 
			twenty years. [2] 
				This would mean a drastic change in lifestyles 
				[2] for many people 
			in countries like Britain as everyone will have to buy less ‘carbon 
			intensive’ goods and services such as long haul flights and fuel 
			hungry cars. 
					
					...He said politicians should consider a rationing system similar 
			to the one introduced during the last “time of crisis” in the 1930s 
			and 40s. [3]
 ...Prof Anderson insisted that halting growth in the rich world 
			does not necessarily mean a recession or a worse lifestyle, [2]
					it 
			just means making adjustments in everyday life such as using public 
			transport and wearing a sweater rather than turning on the heating.
 
 ...At the moment efforts are focused on trying to get countries to 
			cut emissions by 50 per cent by 2050 relative to 1990 levels. [4]
 
				But Dr Myles Allen, of Oxford University’s Department of Physics, 
			said this might not be enough. He said that if emissions do not come 
			down quick enough even a slight change in temperature will be too 
			rapid for ecosystems to keep up. 
			A suggestion for Prof. Anderson and Dr. Allen:  
				
				You first, guys. If 
			you commit for the next 20 years not to use a computer or any kind 
			of wireless communication device, and only to travel via public 
			transportation, we might listen.    
				Too harsh for self-appointed 
			elitists like you? Too bad. 
			
 
			References 
				
				[1] - Climategate, "The Dog Ate My 
				Global Warming Data," other clear breaches of scientific 
				protocol and objectivity, and the inherent limitations of 
				relying on computer models to predict what will happen in a 
				complex world make this claim speculative at best, and needless 
				scaremongering at worst.
 
				[2] - Within just a few paragraphs, 20 years of no economic 
				growth means "drastic lifestyle changes" but somehow not "a 
				worse lifestyle." Really?
 
				[3] - By describing them as having occurred "in the 1930s and 
				1940s," Ms. Gray makes the World War II-related rationing 
				regimes appear worse than they were. They lasted six years at 
				most, less than one-third of the two decades desired by the 
				self-appointed experts. Patriotism reined in the black market to 
				an extent during World War II. It will require a police state to 
				restrain the black market that will result from a 
				government-enforced, popularly-opposed scam during peacetime. 
				Perhaps statists consider that a feature, not a bug.
 
				[4] - "Cutting emissions by 50% relative to 1990" is cynically 
				manipulative math at its worst. Since worldwide emissions have 
				grown by about 35% since 1990 (below chart), cutting back to 1990 levels would 
				really require a reduction of 63% (0.85 divided by 1.35).  
				  
					
						
							| 
								
									
									
									World Energy 
									Consumption and Carbon Dioxide Emissions
									1990–2025
									 
										
											
												
													| 
													
													
													Region | 
													
													
													Energy consumption(quadrillion btu)
 | 
													
													
													Carbon dioxide emissions(million metric tons)
 |  
													| 
													
													
													1990 | 
													
													
													2001 | 
													
													
													2010 | 
													
													
													2025 | 
													
													
													1990 | 
													
													
													2001 | 
													
													
													2010 | 
													
													
													2025 |  
													| 
													
													Industrialized nations | 
													
													182.8 | 
													
													211.5 | 
													
													236.3 | 
													
													281.4 | 
													
													10,462 | 
													
													11,634 | 
													
													12,938 | 
													
													15,643 |  
													| 
													
													Eastern Europe/Former Soviet 
													Union | 
													
													76.3 | 
													
													53.3 | 
													
													59.0 | 
													
													75.6 | 
													
													4,902 | 
													
													3,148 | 
													
													3,397 | 
													
													4,313 |  
													| 
													
													Developing nations |  
													| 
													
													 Asia | 
													
													52.5 | 
													
													85.0 | 
													
													110.6 | 
													
													173.4 | 
													
													3,994 | 
													
													6,012 | 
													
													7,647 | 
													
													11,801 |  
													| 
													
													 Middle East | 
													
													13.1 | 
													
													20.8 | 
													
													25.0 | 
													
													34.1 | 
													
													846 | 
													
													1,299 | 
													
													1,566 | 
													
													2,110 |  
													| 
													
													 Africa | 
													
													9.3 | 
													
													12.4 | 
													
													14.6 | 
													
													21.5 | 
													
													656 | 
													
													843 | 
													
													971 | 
													
													1,413 |  
													| 
													
													 Central and South America | 
													
													14.4 | 
													
													20.9 | 
													
													25.4 | 
													
													36.9 | 
													
													703 | 
													
													964 | 
													
													1,194 | 
													
													1,845 |  
													| 
													
													Total developing | 
													
													89.3 | 
													
													139.2 | 
													
													175.5 | 
													
													265.9 | 
													
													6,200 | 
													
													9,118 | 
													
													11,379 | 
													
													17,168 |  
													| 
													
													Total world | 
													
													348.4 | 
													
													403.9 | 
													
													470.8 | 
													
													622.9 | 
													
													21,563 | 
													
													23,899 | 
													
													27,715 | 
													
													37,124 |  |  
				  
				Gullible environment correspondents are apparently a bit more 
				likely to swallow the idea of a falsely-advertised 50% reduction 
				than one that in reality, after considering population growth, 
				involves per-capita reductions approaching 70%. 
			As noted earlier, the fact that there 
			are people in positions of power and responsibility who either buy 
			into globaloney (my term for human-caused global warming) or, 
			
			in 
			certain cases, unapologetically see it as a convenient opportunity 
			for engaging in wealth redistribution, means that nonsense such as 
			what is emanating from Cancun can't be ignored.
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