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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Queensland Water for Southern Irrigators: The Bizarre Beattie-Bradfield Plan

February 22, 2007 By jennifer

Just 2 years ago the Queensland government passed the Wild Rivers Act 2005. It’s purportedly about preserving the natural values of wild rivers through regulating future development while maintaining grazing, fishing and eco-tourism. The bottom-line is that the legislation was championed by activists to stop the further development of irrigation in north Queensland.

The legislation is resented by many, who perceive double standards from the one government: a government which supports new dams and infrastructure development in south east Queensland, but introduces the first Act of its type in Australia to limit development in the north of the state.

But now to add insult to injury, the Queensland Premier, Peter Beattie, resurrects the 1920’s Bradfield plan and suggests water be diverted from north Queensland Rivers to the Murray Darling system and for irrigation.

So the Murray Darling Basin is short of water. Well it’s in drought and furthermore inflows to major rivers have been reducing because of bushfires, plantations and more efficient use of water on farm including recycling.

There has been lots of rain in northern Australia and it’s in northern Australia that most of our water falls.

But for a Queensland Premier to suggest that large sums of money be spent building the infrastructure and piping water south, while at the same time restricting development in the north of this own state. Well that’s un-Australian!

rainfall06_bom_summary.JPG

Rainfall for the Murray Darling Basin from 1900 to 2006

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Water

Government to Ban Incandescent Light Bulbs

February 20, 2007 By jennifer

Australia’s Minister for the Environment and Water Resources, Malcolm Turnbull MP, today announced the phasing out of incandescent light bulbs.

He said, “A normal light bulb is too hot to hold – that heat is wasted and globally represents millions of tonnes of CO2 that needn’t have been emitted into the atmosphere if we had used more efficient forms of lighting.”

“These more efficient lights, such as the compact fluorescent light bulb, use around 20 per cent of the electricity to produce the same amount of light.”

“A compact fluorescent light bulb can last between 4 and 10 times longer than the average incandescent light bulb, which can lead to major savings in household energy costs.”

So why not just run some advertisements? Why ban the old technology?

According to the media release the banning will save on average 800,000 tonnes of carbon emissions per year during the 2008-2012 period. Given annual emissions are predicted to be about 603 million tonnes each year for this period then we are looking at a saving of 0.13 percent of total annual emissons.

Other abatement measures are predicted to save a total of 35.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide.

energy abatement measures.JPG
from http://www.greenhouse.gov.au/projections/pubs/stationaryenergy2006.pdf

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Energy & Nuclear

Tribunal Rules against Global Warming Hysteria

February 18, 2007 By jennifer

The Queensland Conservation Council and Mackay Conservation Group objected to the expansion of a coal mine in central Queensland, in particular they claimed that there would be an adverse environmental impact unless conditions were imposed such that it was to, “… avoid, reduce or offset the emissions of greenhouse gases that are likely to result from the mining, transport and use of the coal from the mine.”

The objection was brought in the Queensland Land and Resources Tribunal with The Decision handed down last Thursday.

Emeritus Professor Ian Lowe AO was an expert witness and indicated the over the life of the mine it would contribute to the cumulative impacts of global warming to the extent that it would add the equivalent of 0.24 percent to current annual global emissions.

The President of the Tribunal, Mr Koppenol, suggested it more appropriate to compare annual global emissions with annual output of the mine and that the figure was thus 0.001098 percent and that Professor Lowe’s figure was 218 times too high.

The other expert witness for the environment groups Mr Jon Norling relied heavily on the finding of the British Government’s 2006 ‘Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change’ and also the assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

The President of the Tribunal again found evidence of exaggeration noting in the judgment that Mr Norling converted Sir Nicholas Stern’s ‘if’ to ‘when’ with reference to sea level rise.

Interestingly, the President, took it upon himself to read up not only on the Stern Review but also the latest IPCC summary, and also avail himself of the recent published critique of ‘The Stern Review: A Dual Critique’ * by Professor Robert Carter et al and Proessor Sir Ian Byatt et al.

President Koppenol noted in his decision that the Carter-Byatt critique of the Stern Review concluded that it was scientifically flawed and a vehicle of speculative alarmism and not a basis for informed or responsible policies.

In defending his decision to make reference to these documents, President Koppenol noted that the Tribunal is empowered by statute to inform itself of anything in the way it considers appropriate and that having become aware of these papers and regarding them as relevant, “it would have been in appropriate for me to have just ignored them”.

The final recommendation in The Decision by President Koppenol was for the expansion of the Xstrata coal mine to go ahead without any of the conditions sought by the environmental groups.

How refreshing it is to read a document from someone in a position of authority and to see that all the evidence has been considered.

—————-
* Update: It has been suggested to me by email that this link does not work and that a better link to the critique is here
http://www.katewerk.com/temp/sda_WE.pdf .

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Validation and Climate Models – A Note from Vincent Gray

February 17, 2007 By jennifer

Hi Jennifer,

My greatest success as an “expert reviewer” to the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group I (WGI) Science Reports was with the first draft of the 1995 Report.

There was a Chapter entitled “Validation of Climate Models”

I commented that this was incorrect. No Climate Model has ever been “validated” in the sense understood by computer engineers, and the Chapter included no discussion on how it should be done, let alone any of the necessary procedure, on any model.

They ageed with me. They changed the words “Validation”, or “Validate” to “Evaluation” or “evaluate” no less than fifty times, throughout the Chapter. They have done so ever since. The word “validate” or “validation” does not appear anywhere in their Reports, and, notably, in the recently issued “Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis: Summary for Policymakers”

One of the major objects of science is to simulate observable phenomena with a mathematical representation which can not only provide an explanation for the phenomena, buit also make it possible to predict future behaviour.

This task has a long history. “Stonehenge Decoded” by Gerald S Hawkins shows how before 1600 BC it was possible to build a system which would enable prediction of the movements of the sun and moon.

Ptolemy in the second century AD published the “Almagest” which predicted the movements of the planets with a system of “epicycles”. Newton and Galileo replaced this with a better, simplified theory, and Eistein with a refined version. Nobody would even have heard of these people if there was not abundant positive evidence that their predictions actually work. Without them, we could never have sent rockets to the moon.

Let me spell out what is needed for “validation”, the procedure without which no mathematical representation, or computer model, could possibly be capable of future prediction.

First, the model must be capable of simulation of past behaviour to a satisfactory level of accuracy. Computer models of the climate have usually failed to do this. Indeed, their only attempt has been on the so-called “global surface temperature anomaly record”:which I showed, in my last Newsletter, to be subject to huge, unknown biases and inaccuracy because it is based on unrepresenrative and statistically flawed data. The claimed successful simulation of this flawed record could only be made by leaving out both consideration of these inaccuracies, and also one of the main “natural” contributors to the temperature record, the recently more frequent sudden warming peaks caused by the El Niño ocean oscillation behaviour.

The models are unable to simulate almost everything else.

They cannot explain why there has been no “warming” for the past eight years, even when measured by the unsatisfactory “surface record”.

They cannot explain why there has been no warming at all on the Arctic continent.

They cannot explain why methane concentrations in the atmosphere are falling instead of rising. They even devote learned papers trying to find out why this behaviour is “anomalous”.

A recent study by Douglass et al 2006 Geophysical Reserarch Letters 33 L19711 on the climatic effects of the eruption of Mount Pinatubo showed that it could only be expalined by a model iwith very low figures for “climate sensitivity” the basic parameter of the models.

The models therefore fail at the first requirement for “validation”. They cannot reliably simulate past climate behaviour.

Suppose for one moment that Newton and Einstein had never lived and they were launching a rocket to the moon from Cape Kennedy. They ask the people who prepared the computer programme to guide the rocket “How reliable is it” Imagine if the reply was ‘ Our boys think it it is very likey to hit the moon, but we have no idea where”

We are taking all sort of drastic measures to damage our future energy policies based entirely on just such an “opinion” of partisan “experts”.

The second important necessity for validation is successful predictioin of future behaviour under a variety of conditions to a satisfactory and measurable level of accuracy.

There has not been even a single attempt to meet this requirement for any computer model of the climate. They do not even discuss how it might be done.

The models are therefore worthless and should be discarded until validation has actually happened.

But why is it that so many people, not only Prime Ministers, US Presidential Candidates, Senior Economists, but also senior scientists and even winners of Nobel Prizes, seem to be convinced that those providing models have even MADE predictions, let alone provide a measures of their reliability.

It is even claimed that a large majority of scientists involved in climate research accept these false assumptions, and this claim might even be true.

Since the IPCC have accepted that no model has ever been validated, they have also accepted that they are unable to make predictions and they have never done so after the First Report (1990) The word “prediction” never appears anywhere in the recent IPCC Reports. The only thing the models can do is to provide “projections”. This word implies that the figure obtained is purely a result of assuming that the data, parameters and equations in the model represent reality: but there is no evidence that they actually do.

How have they succeeded in fooling the world?

The answer is, that they have devised a whole series of tricky procedures designed to cover up the truth, and give the impression to casual readers and all but the intensive critic (which I claim to be) that they really have overcome the absence of validation, and provided definite figures which some people can pretend to be “predictions”, and even provide what seems at first sight to be some measure of accuracy.

Their main tool is to pretend that they can replace scientific evidence with the opinions of “experts”. The “experts” in this case are people who are mainly financed by Governments who promote the certainty of the greenhouse idea. I would not wish for a moment to suggest that these scientists could possibly be other than impartial, or that they could be influenced by pressure from their employers, even when they represent them at international conferences. But, all the same, most of them know that there might be undesi\rable consequences if any of them failed to endorse the value of models.

At this point let me say that the idea that scientific opinions can be influenced by employers is not just a myth. In my long scientifc career such pressure was applied to myself on several occasions, and on one of them, I was dismissed.when I resisted,

Because of the opinions I express in this newsletter I am sometimes accused of being influenced by mythical employers, For example Professor Neil Curtis, formerly from Victoria University of Wellington, and currently Patron of the New Zealand Association of Scientists, has accused me of being in the pay of oil companies. Vanessa Atkins, Greenpeace representative in New Zealand, says I am paid by Exxon, and the same accusation has been made recently on the “Real Climate” website.

I have never been employed by any oil company, or received finance from one. Campaigning for truth in climate science is not exactly financially rewarding. I might tell you about two of my recent contributions.

Last Year, I was invited to the Beijing Climate Center as a Visiting Scholar. I was welcomed by the Director General and I gave three well attended lectures. They paid my fare and accommodation Yet the Senior scientist there is Co-Chair if Working Group I resposible for the 2007 IPCC Report about to be issued.

The people in Beijing appear to be willing to listen to different points of view on climate change, but in New Zealand I could never be invited to address a meeting sponsored by NIWA, and Victoria University of Wellington now seems out of bounds. The Wellington Branch of the Royal Society .replies with an excuse. But I must admit I have recently address the Ohariu Branch of the Univesity of the Third Age, two Wellington Rotary Clubs, and a “Freedom Summit” Conference

Another recent source of income has been two book reviews in the Christchurch “Press” In the first I came down heavily on “The Weathermakers” by Tim Flannery, currently “Australian of the Year”. He is a biologist with no knowledge of physics, since he thinks the greenhous efffect is caused by the heating of trace gases by the sun, instead of the more orthodox theory that they are heated from radiation by the earth. His only credit is that he demolishes the “hydrogen economy” because it ends up emitting more greenhouse gases than before. But that seems also to be true of “biofuels” so perhaps it does not matter

But. I digress. The “opinions” of the IPCC “experts” are graded in levels of “likeliness”, and they are given spurious “probability” levels which bear no relationship to probability that most scientists recognise.

Besides the completely uncertain nature of the “projections” of climate models it is imposasible to provide a measure of their possible acuracy or reliabity. If there were such measures it would be possible to grade the models in order of success. Since this cannot be done all the models are given equal credence. They even hold occasional meetings to try and avoid too much difference between models, since too wide a “projection” might destroy the impression of plausibility.

It means also that the IPCC never has the embarassing task of telling any model maker that his model has a “failure” mark, since they have no way of marking them.The result is that the models are a free for all and the more extreme the “projections” are, the better some polticians or activists like them, and the better the chances for future funds. Many of the models can give low or even negative figures if you fit the right parameters, but the fate of those who have tried this is best not revealed.

Having managed to provided a half-way plausible “estimate” for a a model output, they then had to find a procedure to provide accuracy estimates of this figure, beyond that of the levels of “likelihood”

They do this by combining a restrictive choice of models with a restrictive choice of “emissions scenarios”. Both of these are chosen so as to give a “range” of outcomes acceptable to the Governments who pay them. They carefully avoid outcomes that are too high ar too low. The “range” is then presented as if it were a scientific nmeasure of the accuracy of the combined model/scenario package.

The “scenarios” themselves are supposed to provide a range of plausible assumptions of what could happen to climate in the next hundred years.They do not have the confidence, however to carry out any checks to find out whether the assumptions are confirmed by what actually happens. This means they have no way of grading their plausibility. The scenarios are thus regarded as equally plausible, but like the animals in Orwells’s “Aniumal Farm” some scenarios are more equally plausible than others.

My paper Gray, V R 1998 “The IPCC future projections: are they plausible”Climate Research 10 155-162 showed that the earlier scenarios were not plausible, and Chapter 7 of my book “The Greenhouse Delusion: A Critique of ‘Clmate Change 2001” showed that the 2001 scenarios are also not plausible. They could not even get right the figures for the year 2000. So they cannot even predict the past.

Several senior economists have criticised the economic forecasting methods used by the IPCC, but with little response. One of these David Henderson, former Head of the Economics and Statistics Department of the OECD is addressing two meetings in Wellington next week, which I will be attending.

The First Draft of the 2001 IPCC Report had a “projection” graph for temperatures by the year 2100 which gave a maximum temperature rise of 4ºC. This figure must evidently have been considered to be not high enough, because the second draft, and the final one, had a figure of 5.8ºC which had been achieved by inventing an extra extreme “scenario”. A1F1.

The latest “Climate Change 2007: Summary for Policymakers” gives the “projected” “Best Estimates” and spurious “ranges” for six different “scenarios”. The most extreme one, which is still A1F1. gives a “Best Estimate” figure for a “projected” temperature rise by 2100 of 4.0ºC, with a “range” of 2.4ºC to 6.4ºC. You can bet your bottom dollar that the only figures anyone will quote is the 6.4ºC. All the rest, which go down to 1.1ºC, will be ignored.

The world is in the grip of “climate change” hysteria. Today”s BBC News gave an interview with the Mayor of San Francisco who is walking to work instead of taking the car. Next, perhaps, he will give up walking as well so that he exhales less carbon dioxide.

Down here in New Zealand they are so keen to get us to use public transport that they are scouring the museums to find 30s style railway carriages to put back into service to cope with the demand, and bus drivers currently have to ask passengers where the bus is supposed to go.

Cheers,
Vincent Gray
Wellington, New Zealand

“The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it” H. L. Mencken

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Sailor Kazutaka Makita Dies at Antarctic

February 17, 2007 By jennifer

“Today, the crew of the Nisshin Maru [the mother ship for the Japanese whaling fleet in Antarctica] were able to search the area of the vessel that caught fire. It is with great sadness they have reported finding the body of sailor Kazutaka Makita, who succumbed to the effects of the fire.

“He was located at 08:20 am (local time) on the second deck close to where the fire began and quickly spread throughout that area.

“Mr Makita, 27, was from Kagoshima Prefecture, south of Kyushu Island. He has played an important role aboard Nisshin Maru.

“This is deeply saddening. The Institute of Cetacean Research and Kyodo Senpaku express their heartfelt sympathy to Mr Makita’s family,” Dr Hatanaka and Mr. Yamamura said.

My condolences to the crew of the Nisshin Maru and the family of Kazutaka Makita.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Europeans Don’t Regulate ‘Filth’ in Food, Just GM – A Note and Paper by Andrew Apel

February 17, 2007 By jennifer

The European Union does not regulate food ingredients which, in the US, would be considered “filth.” This seems at first to be an impossible conclusion, as it claims proof of a negative. Yet, that is the conclusion, and it’s not because these regulations have not yet been found. Rather, it’s because the European Union has specifically exempted such ingredients from regulation.

Even after reading the European legislation which exempts “extraneous matter, such as, for example, insect fragments, animal hair, etc.” from regulation, it remains difficult to believe. It becomes more understandable, though hardly more palatable, when placed in the context of the trade issues involved. In short, Europe has lowered its food standards in order to lower trade barriers between member nations. Scarcely anything could make this more explicit than the Commission’s declaration that trade disturbances based on the Precautionary Principle are problems which Europe must enact laws to prevent. Even so, there is something more explicit: the food regulation designed to address the ‘problem of precaution’ declares these contaminants are “not food,” and therefore, not subject to restrictions on food.

Much of the rhetoric which surrounds the use of engineered crops for food production makes use of the notion of ‘contamination,’ a theme avidly promoted by activists. It is interesting to consider what would happen if the European Union passed legislation which declared ingredients from engineered crops to be ‘contaminants’ on a par with insect fragments and animal hair. The result: they would either not be contaminants, and present a mere “quality” issue, or they would be ‘not food,’ and not subject to food law.

An obvious paradox arises when trade in safe food would flourish in Europe if it were legally defined as ‘contaminated.’ Likewise, another paradox when trade in food actually ‘contaminated’ is expressly exempted by food safety legislation. There is yet a third paradox–when the first two paradoxes coexist within the same legal system.

All this can easily be explained in a European system which gives priority to free trade among its member states over food safety and the precautionary principle, and inverts these interests to defend trade interests against outsiders…

Read ‘The Tolerance of Food Contamination in Europe’ by Andrew Apel here: http://www.cropgen.org/european_food.pdf

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Biotechnology

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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To get in touch with Jennifer call 0418873222 or international call +61418873222.

Email: jennifermarohasy at gmail.com

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