Climate Mafia Strikes Again : This Time With Satellite Sea Level Data
via The Deplorable Climate Science Blog
http://ift.tt/2i1JH7O
via The Deplorable Climate Science Blog http://ift.tt/2i1JH7O
July 22, 2017 at 04:13PM
Climate Mafia Strikes Again : This Time With Satellite Sea Level Data
via The Deplorable Climate Science Blog
http://ift.tt/2i1JH7O
via The Deplorable Climate Science Blog http://ift.tt/2i1JH7O
July 22, 2017 at 04:13PM
Al Gore Explains Why He Keeps Comparing Global Warming Activism To Freeing The Slaves
via Watts Up With That?
http://ift.tt/1Viafi3
In addition to the story below, rather than have multiple posts on the Goremeister, here’s a link to Bill Nye: Older people need to ‘die’ out before climate science can advance~ctm | | Energy Michael Bastasch Former Vice President Al Gore explained why he routinely compares the fight against global warming to the civil rights,…
via Watts Up With That? http://ift.tt/1Viafi3
July 22, 2017 at 04:01PM
Is Our Sun Slowing Down in Its Middle Age?
via The Next Grand Minimum
http://ift.tt/1Ym5yjO
By: Monica Bobra writing in Sky and Telescope The Sun, now halfway through its life, might be slowing its magnetic activity, researchers say, which could lead to permanent changes in the sunspots and auroras we see. We all slow down … Continue reading →
via The Next Grand Minimum http://ift.tt/1Ym5yjO
July 22, 2017 at 03:36PM
Business Climate Advice
via Science Matters
http://ift.tt/2oqIky9
Climate Activists storm the bastion of Exxon Mobil, here seen without their shareholder disguises.
It’s not only big oil companies under siege from anti-fossil fuel activists. All businesses, small and large, private and publically traded are in the crosshairs.
Robert Bradley has a recent post directed at leaders of businesses, both large and small with respect to global warming/climate change. The article is Climate Alarmism and Corporate Responsibility at Master Resource. It is important advice since the large majority of business people are ethical and want to do the right thing, but their good intentions can be used against them in the current feverish media and political environment.
Everyone including business leaders needs to distinguish between two related but different threats from global warming/climate change. The first is the direct impacts upon one’s business and livelihood from natural conditions. The second is the indirect threat to prosperity from misguided public policies to “fight climate change.”
Climate Science: Where’s the Alarm?
On the outlook for the climate, of course there are both risks and opportunities to anticipate. Corporate plans typically involve assumptions and projections considered to be believable to a “reasonable person.” And as Bradley points out, no reasonable person can be expected to go beyond IPCC science, which is premised on concerns about global warming/climate change. Bradley:
Climate alarmism is not supported by the scientific reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on close inspection. There is no direct linkage between the IPCC finding that “the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on climate” and climate alarmism. In fact, there is ample evidence in the scientific literature that the enhanced greenhouse effect is benign. Top climate economists have gone further to conclude that a warmer and wetter world predicted by climate models would produce net benefits in future decades for the United States and other areas of the world with the free market means to adapt. (my bold)
Corporate policymakers can discount climate alarmism by understanding several key arguments and facts:
Business leaders have to balance the needs and interests of various stakeholders in the enterprise: principally the customers, the employees and the investors, as well as the larger society. Today’s social context presents the hazards of misguided public policies and regulations against fossil fuels, despite the unconvincing science case for them. The main risks are more expensive and unreliable power, more costly energy of all kinds, and a sluggish economy burdened with unnecessary expenses. To cope, Bradley makes some “no regrets” suggestions:
“No regret” policies—policies that are economical whether or not GHG emissions are worth addressing—should be pursued in their own right to help defuse the climate change issue. A prominent example is for businesses to profitably lower their energy usage wherever possible. Energy service companies in recent years have executed long-term contracts with guaranteed savings to completely manage the energy function of commercial and industrial users. Total energy outsourcing improves the allocation of core competencies and creates new incentives for optimal energy usage to benefit each party to the agreement. (my bold)
Other pro-market “no regret” public policies that would have the effect of profitably reducing greenhouse gas emissions over time include:
Summary
Agenda-driven climate alarmism should be rejected by corporate America on pragmatic and social responsibly grounds. Not only does the balance of evidence point toward net social benefits from a carbon dioxide enriched and moderately warmer and wetter world. Energy reality concludes that any short-term regulatory approach is futile and wasteful compared to perfecting business-as-usual strategies and using the wealth of energy abundance and free global markets to adapt to any weather and climate conditions in the future.
via Science Matters http://ift.tt/2oqIky9
July 22, 2017 at 01:49PM