1979 is a very
important year in global warming science.
On the weather front,
the World
Meteorological Association
issued a declaration from their meeting in Geneva, Switzerland that included
the appeal “to foresee and to prevent potential man-made changes in climate
that might be adverse to the well-being of humanity.” Later, the WMO joined
with the United Nations Environment Programme to form the International Panel
on Climate Change, the U.N. panel whose global warming predictions have been
discredited by the earth’s failure to warm.
Another major event
was the launch of a satellite system designed to track global temperatures and
other environmental phenomena like the health of the polar ice caps.
Today, we have the
benefit of reviewing thirty-six years of satellite data detailing the shrinking
or increase of the polar ice caps, and the results are amazing.
After all the worry
about polar bears dying from lack of sea ice habitat (Note: Polar bears may
well be more abundant today than in 1979.) and carbon-dollar-capturing Al Gore, Jr.’s dire prediction of the total
disappearance of the Arctic ice cap by 2013 and the resulting rising tides, it
turns out that there has been little, if any, change.
What’s more, the
satellite system, which – unlike ground monitoring stations – is not impacted
by localized variants caused by development, has found that the global warming
pause now stands at seventeen
years. In fairness, the
average temperatures are higher than all but a couple of years between 1979 and
1988, but the predicted escalation of temperatures that undergirds the entire
push for massive changes to the world’s electricity generation system are
paltry.
With polar ice caps
remaining stable since the beginning of the global warming crisis, and the
earth’s temperatures stubbornly refusing to rise for almost two decades,
despite increasing carbon emissions, every assumption used by the Environmental
Protection Agency to justify their regulatory assault on America’s legitimate
energy sector needs to be rethought.
Little did those who
launched the climate satellite in 1979 know that they were putting into place
the scientific data collection technology that changed everything in the global
warming debate. One wonders what it feels like to be hoisted on one’s own
petard.
Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2015/08/polar-ice-caps-stable-since-1979/
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