Global warming skepticism
Believers in Global warming assert some or all of the following, especially the first three:
- global temperatures are rising,
- the current warmth is unusual in the past 1000 years,
- this warming is caused by human activity,
- this warming will have serious consequences for mankind,
- computer models correctly predict even greater warming,
- action must be taken now to prevent warming.
Note that within the global warming debate, the term "skeptic" has a particular meaning different from the usual one of Skepticism: it is the obverse of a "believer" in global warming, as indicated above, rather than "a scientific, or practical, position in which one does not accept the veracity of claims until solid evidence is produced" - all sides claim to adhere to that position.
Prominent skeptics
The most visible critics of the global warming theory from within the scientific community have been
Information Council on the Environment (ICE)
Michaels, Balling and Idso all lent their names in 1991 to the scientific advisory panel of the Information Council on the Environment (ICE), an energy industry public relations group.
Petitions and attacks on them
Global warming skeptics also dispute the claim (or relevance to reality) that a "growing consensus" of scientists support the global warming hypothesis, and that even the IPCC report authors do not all support the reports [1]. In fact, they say, the consensus of those who expend the effort to comment is moving in the opposite direction.
To support this claim, the website of S. Fred Singer's Science and Environmental Policy Project (SEPP) lists four separate petitions:
- The 1992 "Statement by Atmospheric Scientists on Greenhouse Warming"
- The "Heidelberg Appeal" (also from 1992)
- Singer's own "Leipzig Declaration on Global Climate Change" (1995 and 1997)
- The "Oregon Petition," which was circulated in 1998 by physicist Frederick Seitz.
- The 1992 "Statement by Atmospheric Scientists" is more than a decade old and only has 46 signers.
- The Heidelberg Appeal actually does not say anything about global warming.
- Most of the signers of the Leipzig Declarations are non-scientists or lack credentials in the specific field of climate research.
- Many of the signers of the Oregon Petition are also non-scientists or lack relevant scientific backgrounds.
One argument against global warming questions the contention that rising levels of carbon dioxide correlate with -- and thus have caused -- global warming.
Global warming and carbon dioxide
Global warming and solar activity
Another argument against man-made global warming (or anthropogenic global warming) is the discovery that changes in worldwide average temperature correlate closely with the intensity of solar radiation.
The correlation between global temperature ups and downs, noted by "skeptics", is much closer than the claimed correlation between global temperature rise and carbon dioxide claimed by "warmers".
Global warming and the Kyoto Protocol
Skeptics, believing that carbon dioxide levels have no significant impact on global temperatures, feel that support for the Kyoto Protocol is entirely misguided.
Global Warming and Future Technology
Some skeptics believe that even if global warming is real and man-made, no action need be taken now because future scientific advances or engineering projects will remedy the problem before it becomes serious.
See also
References
Links