Inconvenient
Truths Indeed
http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=052406F

by Robert
Balling
Al Gore's "An
Inconvenient Truth" opens around the country this week. In the film Gore
pulls together evidence from every corner of the globe to convince us that
climate change is happening fast, we are to blame, and if we don't act
immediately, our Earth will be all but ruined. However, as you sit through the
film, consider the following inconvenient truths:
(1) Near the beginning of
the film, Gore pays respects to his Harvard mentor and inspiration, Dr. Roger
Revelle. Gore praises Revelle for his discovery that atmospheric CO2 levels
were rising and could potentially contribute to higher temperatures at a global
scale. There is no mention
of Revelle's article published in the early 1990s concluding that the science
is "too uncertain to justify drastic action." (S.F. Singer, C.
Starr, and R. Revelle, "What to do about Greenhouse Warming: Look Before
You Leap. Cosmos 1 (1993) 28-33.)
(2) Gore discusses
glacial and snowpack retreats atop Mt. Kilimanjaro, implying that human induced
global warming is to blame. But Gore fails to mention that the snows of
Kilimanjaro have been retreating for more than 100 years, largely due to
declining atmospheric moisture, not global warming. Gore does not acknowledge
the two major articles on the subject published in 2004 in the International
Journal of Climatology and the Journal of Geophysical Research showing that modern glacier
retreat on Kilimanjaro was initiated by a reduction in precipitation at the end
of the nineteenth century and not by local or global warming.
(3) Many of Gore's
conclusions are based on the "Hockey Stick" that shows near constant
global temperatures for 1,000 years with a sharp increase in temperature from
1900 onward. The record Gore chooses in the film completely wipes out the
Medieval Warm Period of 1,000 years ago and Little Ice Age that started 500
years ago and ended just over 100 years ago. There is evidence from throughout
the world that these climate episodes existed, but on Gore's Hockey Stick, they
become nothing more than insignificant fluctuations (Gore even jokes at one
point about the Medieval Warm period).
(4) You will certainly
not be surprised to see Katrina, other hurricanes, tornadoes, flash floods, and
many types of severe weather events linked by Gore to global warming. However,
if one took the time to read the downloadable "Summary for
Policymakers" in the latest report from the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), one would learn that "No
systematic changes in the frequency of tornadoes, thunder days, or hail events
are evident in the limited areas analysed" and that "Changes globally
in tropical and extra-tropical storm intensity and frequency are dominated by
inter-decadal and multi-decadal variations, with no significant trends evident
over the 20th century."
(5) Gore claims that sea
level rise could drown the Pacific islands, Florida, major cities the world
over, and the 9/11 Memorial in New York City. No mention is made of the fact
that sea level has been rising at a rate of 1.8 mm per year for the past 8,000
years; the IPCC notes
that "No significant acceleration in the rate of sea level rise during the
20th century has been detected."
(6) Near the end of the
film, we learn of ways the United States could reduce emissions of greenhouse
gases back to the levels of 1970. OK. Assume the United States accomplishes
this lofty goal, would we see any impact on climate? The well-known answer is
no. China, India and many other countries are significantly increasing their
emission levels, and global concentrations of CO2 may double this century no
matter what we decide to do in the United States. Even if the Kyoto Protocol
could be fully implemented to honor the opening of this movie, the globe would
be spared no more than a few hundredths of a degree of warming.
Throughout the film Gore
displays his passion for the global warming issue, and it is obvious that he
has dedicated a substantial amount of time to learning about climate change and
the greenhouse effect. This leads to an obvious question. The Kyoto Protocol
was negotiated in December of 1997 giving the Clinton-Gore administration more
than three years to present the Protocol to the United States Senate for
ratification. Given Gore's position in the senate and his knowledge and passion
for global warming, one must wonder why then Vice President Gore did not seize
on what appears to have been an opportunity of a lifetime?
"An Inconvenient
Truth" is billed as the scariest movie you'll ever see. It may well be,
but that's in part because it is not the most accurate depiction of the state
of global warming science. The enormous uncertainties surrounding the global
warming issue are conveniently missing in "An Inconvenient Truth."
Dr. Robert C. Balling
Jr. is a professor in the climatology program at Arizona State University,
specializing in climate change and the greenhouse effect.