We do not believe the evidence unequivocally supports the hypothesis of  anthropogenic global warming (AGW) | 
        
                      
                        | 1.1  | 
                        We dissent from some of the statements made in  the report Between a Rock and a Hard  Place by the Standing Committee on Science and Innovation on its  investigation into the Geosequestration of Carbon Dioxide.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.2 | 
                        We disagree with the report’s unequivocal  support for the hypothesis that global warming is caused by man—so-called anthropogenic  global warming (AGW).  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.3 | 
                        We are concerned that the Committee’s report  strays well outside its terms of reference. In fact, the committee did not take  any evidence relating to anthropogenic global warming.  | 
        
                                            
                      
                        | 1.4  | 
                        We do agree with the report’s examination of the  various factors relating to the geosequestration of carbon dioxide. Its  coverage of the five aspects required in the terms of reference is sound.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.5  | 
                        We believe that the document is valuable in  providing a resource that is detailed and up-to-date on the science, technology  and other issues related to carbon dioxide geosequestration in the Australian  context.  It is as good as any in the  public domain.  | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        The case for AGW based theoretical models and unproven economic assumptions | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.6  | 
                        The science related to anthropogenic global  warming is not, despite the assurances of some, settled in the scientific  community.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.7 | 
                        There is a great deal of debate and uncertainty  related to this science, yet the Committee’s report, in dealing with those  issues, uses one-sided language that does not in any way correspond with the  level of uncertainty or the low level of scientific understanding of many of  the disciplines involved in global warming research.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.8  | 
                        Furthermore, the critical area of the  fallibility and shortcomings of computer modelling is not mentioned anywhere.  These shortcomings are exacerbated by the need to base the theoretical models  on assumptions which are in turn generated by complex and also theoretical  economic projections.  | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Many eminent scientists say that AGW is far from proven | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.9  | 
                        The very first discussion paragraph of Chapter 2  in the report sets the scene in a very unfortunate manner. The evidence that  human beings are changing the global climate is certainly not compelling. Many,  even within the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) itself,  disagree with the claimed consensus view. Remember that it is the IPCC that is  the international body to whom the policy makers and AGW fanatics have looked  to for direction on this subject.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.10 | 
                        The following passages report the well founded  views of some eminent scientists in fields related to climate change, some of  whom have made significant contributions to the IPCC’s investigations. They,  with good reason, disagree with the IPCC’s findings in relation to AGW.
                         - Yuri Israel, Vice Chairman of the IPCC has stated ‘There is no proven link between human activity and global warming’.1
 
                              - Dr Chris Landsea, a hurricane researcher,  quit the IPCC in disgust due to what he viewed as the politicisation of his  work. In his resignation, among other things, he stated ‘I personally cannot in  good faith continue to contribute to a process that I view as both being  motivated by pre-conceived agendas and being scientifically unsound’.2
 
                              - IPCC reviewer and meteorologist Dr. Vincent  Gray, after analysing the latest available temperature measurements from  satellites and weather balloons, and determining that there was no significant  warming in the lower troposphere, concluded that:
                          The NOAA (2006) study does not remove discrepancies between  surface and lower troposphere mean global temperature anomaly records, but,  instead, confirms them. It shows that for temperature sequences comparatively  free from the interference of natural influences there is no detectable warming in the lower troposphere (our  emphasis), the place where the enhanced greenhouse effect is claimed to be  evident. For six out of the seven lower troposphere temperature records there  is no influence of greenhouse forcing for a period of nineteen years, and even  the seventh one shows no warming for ten of those years.3 Gray adds that the observed surface warming that is  highlighted by the IPCC must therefore have a different cause, which is  probably the biasing of the records by urban heat effects.4 
                          
                          - Climate scientist Dr. John Christy,  specialising in satellite temperature measurements and formerly lead author  of the IPCC has stated:
                            I've often heard it said that there's a consensus of  thousands of scientists on the global warming issue and that humans are causing  a catastrophic change to the climate system. Well I am one scientist, and there  are many that simply think that is not true.5  
  - Prof Richard Lindzen of MIT, a lead  author of Chapter 7 of the scientific report of the IPCC TAR (2001) has also stated that the IPCC use the  Summary for Policymakers to misrepresent what scientists say.6 He has stated that:
  …the full IPCC report is an admirable description of research  activities in climate science, but it is not specifically directed at policy.  The “Summary for Policymakers” is, but it is also a very different document. It  represents a consensus of government representatives (many of whom are also  their nations’ Kyoto  representatives), rather than of scientists. The resulting document has a  strong tendency to disguise uncertainty, and conjures up some scary scenarios  for which there is no evidence.7  
 - Dr. Martin Manning, IPCC Vice Chair of IPCC  Working Group II on Impacts until 2002, and currently Vice Chair of IPCC  Working Group 1 on the Science of Climate Change stated:
                            The process used to produce the Summary for Policymakers  (SPM) is far from ideal and may be distorting the real messages from the  available science. Some government delegates influencing the SPM do not  understand the methodologies being used and misinterpret or contradict the lead authors. This may need to be addressed in future through tighter rules of  procedure.8  
  - Prof. Paul Reiter of the Louis Pasteur  Institute, a specialist in malarial diseases, has major issues with the  IPCC’s view of disease, and is very damning of the IPCC process itself. He  stated that:
                            
These confident pronouncements, untrammelled by details of  the complexity of the subject and the limitations of these models, were widely  quoted as "the consensus of 1,500  of the world's top scientists" (occasionally the number quoted was  2,500). This clearly did not apply to the chapter on human health, yet at the  time, eight out of nine major web sites that I checked placed these diseases at  the top of the list of adverse impacts of climate change, quoting the IPCC. The  issue of consensus is key to understanding the limitations of IPCC  pronouncements. Consensus is the stuff  of politics, not of science. Science proceeds by observation, hypothesis  and experiment. Professional scientists rarely draw firm conclusions from a  single article, but consider its contribution in the context of other  publications and their own experience, knowledge, and speculations. The  complexity of this process, and the uncertainties involved, are a major  obstacle to meaningful understanding of scientific issues by non-scientists.9   
                          Many  others have also voiced their scepticism of the science.10 11 In fact, according the IPCC itself, the level of understanding in six of the nine  related disciplines is medium or low.12 There are also other scientific factors that contribute to climate that are not  even considered by the IPCC, such as the role of cosmic ray activity in cloud  formation.13                         | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Global warming observed on other planets | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.11 | 
                        Another problem with the view that it is  anthropogenic greenhouse gases that have caused warming is that warming has  also been observed on Mars,14 Jupiter,15 Triton,16 Pluto,17 Neptune18 and others. It is the natural property of planets with fluid envelopes to have  variability in climate. Thus, at any given time, we may expect about half the  planets to be warming. This has nothing to do with human activities.                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Science relies on testing hypotheses, not consensus | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.12 | 
                        The issue of consensus in science is very much  misunderstood; unfortunately, in dealing with the issue of anthropogenic global  warming, the Committee’s report adds to that misunderstanding.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.13  | 
                        Science is a discipline which relies on testing  hypotheses and exposing flaws, (scientifically known as falsification), not on consensus, in order to further scientific  understanding. Scientific fact is not a democracy.  Scientific facts are not concerned with what  the majority of people or scientists think or do not think. The laws of physics  are not subject to the democratic vote of a group of scientists; they cannot be  repealed by a popular vote. Albert   Einstein, for example, when asked  to comment on the book One Hundred  Authors Against Einstein which denounced his Theory of Relativity, stated  that ‘to  defeat relativity one did not need the word of 100 scientists, just one fact’.19 
                           | 
        
                      
                        | 1.14 | 
                        Many examples exist of erroneous scientific  consensus in the history of science: 
                       - The earth was found, via falsification, not to be  the centre of the universe;
 
                          - Sir   Isaac Newton's  equations of motion were found, after having been accepted as a complete description  of mechanics for two centuries, to represent only the special case where  velocity was low relative to that of light. The special theory of relativity  generalised the field of mechanics; and
 
                          - Indeed, even in the field of climatology, the  consensus position in the mid 1970’s was that the earth was cooling as a result  of mankind’s activities, and we were headed to another ice age.20
                             | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Committee does not apply scientific method | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.15 | 
                        We view it as very disappointing that the  Committee on Science and Innovation has put out a report that misunderstands the  nature of scientific method.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.16 | 
                        For example, section 2.2 of the Committee’s  report mentions the IPCC Summary for Policymakers that there is a >90%  certainty that human beings have affected the climate. The problem with this  statement is that this ignores the fundamental fact that this figure is not the  result of some detailed statistical or any other analysis.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.17  | 
                        It is based on, yet again, simply a consensus  opinion arrived at by IPCC bureaucrats. This pseudo-quantitative figure is in  the bureaucratic summary for policymakers, not in the actual technical reports,  and has no material basis or justification in measured fact.  | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Evidence does not support AGW | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.18 | 
                        This report on geosequestration also gives a  false impression of the importance of carbon dioxide on the greenhouse effect.  All of the gases mentioned in section 2.5 are minor contributors to greenhouse.  Between 75%-95% of the greenhouse effect is the result of water vapour and  cloud. The understanding of the influence of the latter is low, by the IPCC’s  own admission.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.19 | 
                        Doubling CO2 will only increase the  natural greenhouse effect less than 2%. This would produce warming of the order  of 1 degree Celsius in the absence of negative feedbacks which are the norm in  sustainable physical systems. To be sure, current model projections do depend  on positive feedbacks from the ill-understood clouds and water vapour  (primarily above 6km).21 
                           | 
        
                      
                        | 1.20 | 
                        Section 2.27 of the Committee’s report relies  heavily on the IPCC’s third assessment report (TAR).  The statements made in the Committee’s report, summarised from the IPCC TAR Summary for Policymakers do not in any way  address any of the complexities relating to the science underpinning these  statements—they are simply bald statements made in an attempt to support the  position taken on AGW in this report.
                        - IPCC states that average global surface  temperatures have increased by 0.6 degrees Celsius, which is broadly correct.  However, it does not explain how it is that most of this increase occurred in  the first half of the 20th  century, a time when increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide was not  particularly rapid. The concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide began  increasing fairly rapidly following the Second World War, but the period  between 1940 and 1975 was associated with a reduction in global surface temperatures.22 Significantly, global surface temperatures peaked in 1998, and only NASA’s  Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) shows any year other than 1998 as  the hottest year on record. The Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCN),  Hadley Centre and MSU satellite data sets show 1998 as the hottest on record.23 In the nine years since 1998, global temperatures have been relatively stable  despite rising carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere.24
 
- IPCC states that snow cover and ice extent have  decreased. The fact is there is some argument about the ice balance on Greenland,25 and it is generally accepted that the main Antarctic ice cap is, in fact, both  cooling and increasing its ice mass.26 Indeed, a couple of the striking examples of the decrease in snow cover/ice  extent given as examples of the effect of greenhouse gas induced global warming  by the proponents of anthropogenic global warming, such as Al Gore, are  demonstrably wrong. For example, the glaciers of Kilimanjaro have been  shrinking for over a century, but this is likely due to decreasing  precipitation as a result of changed land use (deforestation).27 The change of mass balance with glaciers is problematic: there are only 42  glaciers (out of 160 000 glaciers around the world) that have a fully detailed  mass balance history extending more than 10 years.28
 
- Sea levels all over the globe have been rising  for centuries; this is not due to anthropogenic global warming, but merely a  recovery from the last ice age.29 A recent analysis has found that no statistically significant ocean warming has  occurred over the late 20th  century.30
 
- Rainfall patterns have always changed around the  world; this is nothing new. One needs merely examine the changes in  precipitation in Australia  over the last century to realise this;31 there has been variation in Australian rainfall, but little change in long-term  trends (see table below). The variations in this period are not proof that it  is caused by human influence, as many populists claim. In fact, viewing  history, the Mayan society collapsed due to a decrease in rainfall in the 9th century.32
  
                         | 
        
                      
                         
                              Table  Graph showing the variability of aggregate  rainfall in Australia 
                             
                           
  | 
        
                      
                        |   | 
                        - It is a pity that the report uses the Stern  Review as a basis for the scientific understanding of anthropogenic global  warming. Not only has this report been thoroughly debunked in a scientific and  economic sense,33 but Stern acknowledges that he had zero  understanding of the issue less than one year before the Stern Review. He  stated that ‘in August or July of last year (2005)… [he] had an idea what the  greenhouse effect was but wasn’t really sure’.34
 
 
                          It is  staggering that someone with essentially no scientific knowledge on greenhouse  effect, within less than one year, had acquired the scientific knowledge to  state that the ‘scientific evidence is now overwhelming’. Furthermore, the  Stern Review was commissioned because UK Prime Minister Blair  and Chancellor of the Exchequer Brown did not like the findings of the House of  Lords Report into climate change.35       | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Audit Process | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.21  | 
                        The admissions and uncertainties quoted in this  dissenting report demonstrate the clear need for better methods of auditing the  science used for climate change policy advice.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.22  | 
                        In a recent discussion over the Stern report,  Carter et al.36 and Holland et al.37 pointed out that the peer review process, on which the IPCC so heavily relies,  is flawed. Ensuring the quality of advice on climate change also requires a  comprehensive audit of the information on climate risk that is currently being  used by governments to set public policy.                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.23 | 
                        It is a matter of public record that some  scientists have withdrawn from the IPCC process because of dissatisfaction with  its probity and methods. Valuable though it might be for IPCC to continue to  provide summaries of the science of climate change, it is simply not credible  to see the IPCC as an adequate audit body.  | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Uncertainty in IPCC Summary for Policymaker’s predictions based on computer  models, and the use of unqualified “celebrities”  | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.24 | 
                        The references to anthropogenic climate change  in this report do not in any way reflect the uncertainty in the science associated  with climate change science, nor do they reflect the significant debate on the  issue in the scientific community, including significant debate in the  peer-reviewed scientific literature.   Indeed, if one paragraph clearly illustrates the one sided nature of  this report, it is paragraph 5.59. Here, we have a captain of industry (Rupert Murdoch),  who, by his own admission is not a scientist, quoted regarding his view on  anthropogenic global warming and the need to take action: 
                          
                       I  am no scientist but … I do know how to assess a risk. Climate change poses  clear catastrophic threats. We may not agree on the extent, but we certainly  can’t afford the risk of inaction  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.25 | 
                        This exemplifies the more general problem that  most of the public statements that promote the dangerous human warming scare  are made from a position of ignorance—by political leaders, press commentators  and celebrities who share the characteristics of lack of scientific training  and lack of an ability to differentiate between sound science and computer-based  scaremongering.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.26 | 
                        On the issue of computer models used to predict  (or project, the IPCC uses the terms interchangeably) future climate, Kevin  Trenberth, coordinating lead author of IPCC 4th Assessment Report, WG1 Chapter 3, has made staggering admissions  about the weaknesses inherent in the modelling process in the Nature Climate  Change blogsite (a longer quote is to be found in Appendix 1):38 
                               …in fact, since the  last report it is also often stated that the science is settled or done and now  is the time for action. 
                              In fact there are no  predictions by IPCC at all…But they do not consider many things like the  recovery of the ozone layer, for instance, or observed trends in forcing  agents… 
                               
                              …none of the climate  states in the models correspond even remotely to the current observed climate.  In particular, the state of the oceans, sea ice, and soil moisture has no  relationship to the observed state at any recent time in any of the IPCC  models. 
                               
                              I postulate that  regional climate change is impossible to deal with properly unless the models  are initialized. 
                               
                              Therefore the problem  of overcoming this shortcoming, and facing up to initializing climate models  means not only obtaining sufficient reliable observations of all aspects of the  climate system, but also overcoming model biases.  So this is a major challenge.                            | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Conclusion | 
                      
                      
                        | 1.27 | 
                        Climate change is a natural phenomenon that has  always been with us, and always will be. Whether human activities are  disturbing the climate in dangerous ways has yet to be proven. It is for this  reason that we strongly disagree with the absolute statements and position  taken in this review regarding AGW. We have taken no evidence regarding the  science of AGW, yet a strong position has been taken regarding this. On the  other hand, statements made about the cost competitiveness of renewable energy  sources have been taken out of the report, despite the fact that evidence was  taken on this.  | 
        
                      
                        | 1.28 | 
                        We therefore conclude this dissenting opinion by  appending a long quote from Carter et al (Appendix 2).39 
                           | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
        
                      
                        Acknowledgements | 
        
                      
                        We wish to thank the following people for reviewing the  scientific accuracy of this report: 
                          
                            - Professor R.S.        Lindzen (Alfred P. Sloan       Professor of Meteorology, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary       Sciences, MIT)
 
                            - Professor J.R.        Christy (University of Alabama,       Huntsville)
 
                            - Professor G.W.        Paltridge (Director of the       Antarctic CRC and IASOS, University of Tasmania)
 
                            - Professor R.M.        Carter (James Cook        University)
 
                            - Associate Professor C.R.        de Freitas (University of Auckland) 
 
                            - W. Kininmonth       (Retired Head of the National Climate Centre, Australia) 
 
                                                     Dr Dennis Jensen MP, Hon Jackie   Kelly MP, Hon Danna Vale MP,  
                            Mr David Tollner  MP 
                             
  13 August 2007 
                           
                            | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
        
                      
                        Appendix 1 | 
        
                      
                        ‘I have often seen references to predictions of future  climate by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), presumably  through the IPCC assessments. In fact, since the last report it is also often  stated that the science is settled or done and now is the time for action. 
                           
                          In fact there are no predictions by IPCC at all. And there  never have been. The IPCC instead proffers “what if” projections of future  climate that correspond to certain emissions scenarios. There are a number of  assumptions that go into these emissions scenarios. They are intended to cover  a range of possible self consistent “story lines” that then provide decision  makers with information about which paths might be more desirable. But they do  not consider many things like the recovery of the ozone layer, for instance, or  observed trends in forcing agents. There is no estimate, even  probabilistically, as to the likelihood of any emissions scenario and no best  guess. 
                           
                          Even if there were, the projections are based on model  results that provide differences of the future climate relative to that today.  None of the models used by IPCC are initialized to the observed state and none  of the climate states in the models correspond even remotely to the current  observed climate. In particular, the state of the oceans, sea ice, and soil  moisture has no relationship to the observed state at any recent time in any of  the IPCC models. There is neither an El Niño sequence nor any Pacific Decadal  Oscillation that replicates the recent past; yet these are critical modes of  variability that affect Pacific Rim countries  and beyond. The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, that may depend on the  thermohaline circulation and thus ocean currents in the Atlantic, is not set up  to match today’s state, but it is a critical component of the Atlantic  hurricanes and it undoubtedly affects forecasts for the next decade from Brazil  to Europe. Moreover, the starting climate state in several of the models may  depart significantly from the real climate owing to model errors. I postulate  that regional climate change is impossible to deal with properly unless the  models are initialized. 
                           
                        The current projection method works to the extent it does  because it utilizes differences from one time to another and the main model  bias and systematic errors are thereby subtracted out. This assumes linearity.  It works for global forced variations, but it can not work for many aspects of  climate, especially those related to the water cycle. For instance, if the  current state is one of drought then it is unlikely to get drier, but  unrealistic model states and model biases can easily violate such constraints  and project drier conditions. Of course one can initialize a climate model, but  a biased model will immediately drift back to the model climate and the  predicted trends will then be wrong. Therefore the problem of overcoming this  shortcoming, and facing up to initializing climate models means not only  obtaining sufficient reliable observations of all aspects of the climate  system, but also overcoming model biases. So this is a major challenge.’40                            | 
        
                      
                         | 
                          | 
        
                      
                        Appendix 2 | 
        
                      
                        ‘Climate changes naturally all the time. Human activities  have an effect on the local climate, for example in the vicinity of cities  (warming) or near large areas of changed land usage (warming or cooling,  depending upon the changed albedo). Logically, therefore, humans must have an  effect on global climate also. This notwithstanding, a distinct human signal  has not yet been identified within the variations of the natural climate  system, to the degree that we cannot even be certain whether the global human  signal is one of warming or cooling. Though it is true that many scientists  anticipate that human warming is the more likely, no strong evidence exists  that any such warming would be dangerous. 
                           
                          The gentle global warming that probably occurred in the late  20th century falls  within previous natural rates and magnitudes of warming and cooling, and is  prima facie quite unalarming, especially when consideration is given to the  likelihood that the historic ground temperature records used to delineate the  warming are warm-biased by the urban heat island and other effects. Once  corrected for non-greenhouse climate agents such as El Niños and volcanic  eruptions, the radiosonde (since 1958) and satellite (since 1979) records show  little if any recent warming and certainly none of untoward magnitude. 
                           
                          Atmospheric carbon dioxide is indeed a greenhouse gas, but  the empirical evidence shows that the warming effect of its increase at the  rates of modern industrial emission and accumulation is minor, given an assumed  pre-industrial level of about 280 ppm and noting the established logarithmic  relationship between gas concentration increases and warming. As one such  empirical test, it can be noted too that no global increase in temperature has  now occurred since 1998 despite an increase in carbon dioxide concentration  over the same 8 years of about 15 ppm (4%). 
                           
                          Putative human influence aside, it is certain that natural  climate change will continue, sometimes driven by unforced internal variations  in the climate system and at other times forced by factors that we do not yet  understand. The appropriate public policy response is, first, to monitor  climate accurately in an ongoing way; and, second, to respond and adapt to any  changes - both warmings and the likely more damaging coolings—in the same way that  we cope with other natural events such as droughts, cyclones, earthquakes and  volcanic eruptions. 
                           
                          Neither the Stern Review itself, nor the additional papers  that our critique has stimulated, address the above cautious and widely held  assessment of the situation. Instead, straw-man arguments are erected and  attacked, detail is endlessly obfuscated and IPCC orthodoxy is relentlessly  repeated. 
                           
                        In dealing with the certainties and uncertainties of climate  change, the key issue is prudence. The main certainty is that natural climate  change will continue, and that some of its likely manifestations—sea-level rise  and coastal change in particular locations, for example—will be expensive to  adapt to. But adapt we must and will. Moreover reducing vulnerability to today’s  climate-sensitive problems will also help the world cope with future challenges  from climate change whether that is due to natural variability, anthropogenic  greenhouse gas emissions or other human causes.41 The most prudent way of ensuring that happens is to build wealth into the world  economy and to be receptive to new technologies. This will not be achieved by  irrational restructuring of the world’s energy economy in pursuit of the  chimera of “stopping” an alleged dangerous human-caused climate change that, in  reality, can neither be demonstrated nor measured at this time.’42  | 
                      
       
      
              
         
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