• Climate change cooling off?

    From Sean Dennis@618:618/1 to All on Sat Dec 6 17:57:27 2025
    From: https://shorturl.at/Kle30 (nypost.com)

    ===
    Opinion

    Climate change doom-and-gloomers are finally bowing out- and showing that common
    sense prevails

    By Matt Ridley
    Published Dec. 5, 2025, 8:51 p.m. ET

    Finally, thankfully, the global warming craze is dying out. To paraphrase
    Monty Python, the climate parrot may still be nailed to its perch at the
    recent COP summit in Belem, Brazil - or at Harvard and on CNN - but
    elsewhere it's dead. It's gone to meet its maker, kicked the bucket,
    shuffled off this mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the choir
    invisible. By failing to pledge a cut in fossil fuels, COP achieved less
    than nothing, the venue caught fire, the air-conditioning malfunctioned -
    and delegates were told on arrival not to flush toilet paper. Bill Gates's
    recent apologia, in which he conceded that global warming "will not lead
    to humanity's demise," after he closed the policy and advocacy office of
    his climate philanthropy group is just the latest nail in the coffin.

    In October, the Net Zero Banking Alliance shut down after JPMorgan Chase,
    Citigroup, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs
    led a stampede of other banks out the door. Shell and BP have returned to
    being oil companies, to the delight of their shareholders. Ford is about
    to cease production of electric pickups that nobody wants. Hundreds of
    other companies are dropping their climate targets. Australia has backed
    out of hosting next year's climate conference.

    According to analysis by the Washington Post, it is not just Republicans
    who have given up on climate change: the Democratic party has stopped
    talking about it, hardly mentioning it during Kamala Harris's campaign for
    president last year. The topic has dropped to the bottom half of a table
    of 23 concerns among Swedish youths. Even the European Parliament has
    voted to exempt many companies from reporting rules that require them to
    state how they are helping fight climate change.

    It has been a long, lucrative ride. Predicting the eco-apocalypse has
    always been a profitable business, spawning subsidies, salaries,
    consulting fees, air miles, best-sellers and research grants. Different
    themes took turns as the scare du jour: overpopulation, oil spills,
    pollution, desertification, mass extinction, acid rain, the ozone layer,
    nuclear winter, falling sperm counts. Each faded as the evidence became
    more equivocal, the public grew bored or, in some cases, the problem was
    resolved by a change in the law or practice.

    But no scare grew as big or lasted as long as global warming. I first
    wrote a doom-laden article for the Economist about carbon dioxide
    emissions trapping heat in the air in 1987, nearly 40 years ago. I soon
    realized the effect was real but the alarm was overdone, that feedback
    effects were exaggerated in the models. The greenhouse effect was likely
    to be a moderate inconvenience rather than an existential threat. For this
    blasphemy I was abused, canceled, blacklisted, called a "denier" and
    generally deemed evil. In 2010, in the pages of the Wall Street Journal I
    debated Gates, who poured scorn on my argument that global warming was not
    likely to be a catastrophe - so it is welcome to see him come round to my
    view.

    Greta has moved on

    The activists who took over the climate debate, often with minimal
    understanding of climate science, competed for attention by painting ever
    more catastrophic pictures of future global warming. They changed the name
    to "climate change" so they could blame it for blizzards as well as heat
    waves. Then they inflated the language to "climate emergency" and "climate
    crisis," even as projections of future warming came down.

    "I'm talking about the slaughter, death and starvation of six billion
    people this century. That's what the science predicts," said Roger Hallam,
    founder of Extinction Rebellion in 2019, though the science says no such
    thing. "A top climate scientist is warning that climate change will wipe
    out humanity unless we stop using fossil fuels over the next five years,"
    tweeted Greta Thunberg in 2018. Five years later she deleted her tweet and
    shortly after that decided that Palestine was a more promising way of
    staying in the limelight.

    Scientists knew pronouncements like this were nonsense but they turned a
    blind eye because the alarm kept the grant money coming. Journalists
    always love exaggeration. Capitalists were happy to cash in. Politicians
    welcomed the chance to blame others: if a wildfire or a flood devastates
    your town, point the finger at the changing climate rather than your own
    failure to prepare. Almost nobody had an incentive to downplay the alarm.

    Unlike previous scares, climate fear has the valuable feature that it can
    always be presented in the future tense. No matter how mild the change in
    the weather proves to be today, you can always promise Armageddon
    tomorrow. So it was that for four long decades, climate-change alarm went
    on a long march through the institutions, capturing newsrooms, schoolrooms
    and boardrooms. By 2020 no meeting, even of a town council or a sports
    team, was complete without a hand-wringing discussion of carbon
    footprints. The other factor that kept the climate scare alive was that
    reducing emissions proved impossibly difficult. This was a feature, not a
    bug: if it had been easy, the green gravy train would have ground to a
    halt. Reducing sulfur emissions to stop acid rain proved fairly easy, as
    did banning chlorofluorocarbons to protect the ozone layer. But decade
    after decade, carbon dioxide emissions just kept on rising, no matter how
    much money and research was thrown at the problem. Cheers!

    Switching to renewable energy made no difference, literally. Here's the
    data: the world added 9,000 terawatt-hours per year of energy consumption
    from wind and solar in the past decade, but 13,000 from fossil fuels. Not
    that wind and solar save much carbon dioxide anyway, their machinery being
    made with coal and their intermittency being backed up by fossil fuels.

    Dwindling donations

    Despite trillions of dollars in subsidies, these two "unreliables" still
    provide just 6 percent of the world's energy. Their low-density,
    high-cost, intermittent power output is of no use to data centers or
    electric grids, let alone transport and heating, and it effectively
    poisons the economics of building and running new nuclear and gas
    generation sites by preventing continuous operation. Quite why it became
    mandatory among those concerned about climate change to support these
    unreliables so obsessively is hard to fathom. Subsidy addiction has a lot
    to do with it, combined with a general ignorance of thermodynamics.

    Now the climate scare is fading, a scramble for the exits is beginning
    among the big environmental groups. Donations are drying up. Some will
    switch seamlessly to trying to panic us about artificial intelligence;
    others will follow Gates and insist that they never said it was the end of
    the world, just a problem to be solved; a few will even try declaring
    victory, claiming unconvincingly that promises made at the Paris
    climate-change conference a decade ago have slowed emissions enough to
    save the planet.

    Of course, Al Gore, the former vice president who did more than anybody
    else to alarm the world about climate change and made a $300 million
    fortune from it, has been at the recent conference in the Brazilian jungle
    - the one where they felled a forest to build the access road. As he
    railed against Gates last week for abandoning the cause and accused him of
    being bullied by President Trump, he sounded like one of those Japanese
    soldiers emerging from the jungle who did not know World War Two was over.

    Perhaps Gore might now regret his exaggerated preachings of hellfire and
    damnation. In his 2006 film An Inconvenient Truth, for which he jointly
    won a Nobel Prize, he predicted a sea-level rise of up to 20 feet "in the
    near future" - out by around 19 feet and nine inches. In 2009, he said
    there was a 75 percent chance all the ice in the Arctic Ocean would
    disappear by 2014. In that year there was 5 million square kilometers of
    the stuff at its lowest point - about the same as in 2009; this year there
    was 4.7 million square kilometers. At the film's showing at the Sundance
    Festival, Gore said that unless drastic measures to reduce greenhouse
    gases were taken within 10 years, the world would reach a point of no
    return. Yet here we are, 19 years later.

    Wears down voters

    Gore is correct that fear of retribution from the Trump administration
    drives some of the corporate retreats. President Trump has already
    canceled $300 billion of green infrastructure funding and purged
    government websites of climate rhetoric. But even if the Republicans lose
    the White House in 2028, it will be hard to reinflate the climate balloon.
    The proportion of Americans greatly worried about climate change is
    dropping. If Trump takes America out of the 1992 treaty that set up the
    United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change it would require an
    unlikely two-thirds vote of the Senate to rejoin.

    Bjorn Lomborg, the Danish economist who is president of the Copenhagen
    Consensus and has fought a lonely battle against climate exaggeration for
    decades, recently explained the shift in public opinion: "The shrillness
    of climate doom also wears down voters. While climate is a real and
    man-made problem, constant end-of-the-world proclamations from media and
    campaigners massively overstate the situation."

    A key figure in the collapse of the climatocracy is Chris Wright, the
    pioneer of extracting shale gas by hydraulic fracturing who was appointed
    by Trump as Energy Secretary this year. Wright commissioned a review of
    climate science by five distinguished academics who set out just how
    non-frightening the facts of climate change are: slowly rising
    temperatures, mainly at night in winter and in the north, correspondingly
    less in daytime in summer and in the tropics where most people live,
    accompanied by a very slow rise in sea level showing no definite
    acceleration, minimal if any measurable change in the average frequency
    and ferocity of storms, droughts and floods - and record low levels of
    deaths from such causes. Plus a general increase in green vegetation,
    caused by the extra carbon dioxide.

    Melissa, the category-5 hurricane that devastated Jamaica last month,
    killed around 50 people. In the past - before global warming - hurricanes
    like that killed tens if not hundreds of thousands. In total, weather
    events killed just 2,200 people globally in the first half of this year, a
    record low, whereas indoor air pollution caused by poor people cooking
    over wood fires because they lack access to gas and electricity kills
    three million a year. So yes, Gates, influenced by Lomborg and Wright, is
    correct to say that getting cheap, reliable, clean energy to the poor is
    by far the more urgent priority.

    Sources tell me that Wright is treated like a rock star at international
    conferences: his fellow ministers, especially those from Africa and Asia,
    are thrilled to talk about the need to get energy to people instead of
    being hectored about emissions. Only a few western European ministers
    sneer, but even some of them (the British being an exception) quietly
    admit that they need to find a way to climb down off their green high
    horses.

    Gas glut

    Fortunately, they now have convenient cover for doing so: artificial
    intelligence. We would love to go on subsidizing wind and solar, say the
    Germans privately, but if we are to have data centers, we need lots more
    reliable and affordable power so we will now build gas - and maybe even
    some nuclear - turbines.

    Likewise, throughout the tech world of the American west coast, emoting
    about climate suddenly seems like a luxury belief compared with the need
    to sign contracts with firm power suppliers, mostly burning natural gas -
    or get left behind in the AI race. The world's gas glut is impossible to
    overstate: thanks to fracking, we have centuries' worth of cheap gas. The
    tech bros are piling into nuclear, too, but that won't address the needs
    for extra power until well into the next decade - and the need is now.

    The climatastrophe has been a terrible mistake. It diverted attention from
    real environmental problems, cost a fortune, impoverished consumers,
    perpetuated poverty, frightened young people into infertility, wasted
    years of our time, undermined democracy and corrupted science. Time to
    bury the parrot.
    ===

    -- Sean

    --- MultiMail/Win
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (618:618/1)