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Moreover, as the latest IPCC report makes clear, careful studies have shown that, while extreme weather events such as floods, droughts and tropical storms, have always occurred, overall there has been no increase in either their frequency or their severity. That may, of course, be because there has so far been very little global warming indeed: the fear is the possible consequences of what is projected to lie ahead of us. And even in climate science, cause has to precede effect: it is impossible for future warming to affect events in the present.

Of course, it doesn't seem like that. Partly because of sensitivity to the climate change doctrine, and partly simply as a result of the explosion of global communications, we are far more aware of extreme weather events around the world than we used to be. And it is perfectly true that many more people are affected by extreme weather events than ever before. But that is simply because of the great growth in world population: there are many more people around. It is also true, as the insurance companies like to point out, that there has been a great increase in the damage caused by extreme weather events. But that is simply because, just as there are more people around, so there is more property around to be damaged.

The fact remains that the most careful empirical studies show that, so far at least, there has been no perceptible increase, globally, in either the number or the severity of extreme weather events. And, as a happy coda, these studies also show that, thanks to scientific and material progress, there has been a massive reduction, worldwide, in deaths from extreme weather events.

It is relevant to note at this point that there is an important distinction between science and scientists. I have the greatest respect for science, whose development has transformed the world for the better. But scientists are no better and no worse than anyone else. There are good scientists and there are bad scientists. Many scientists are outstanding people working long hours to produce important results. They must be frustrated that political activists then turn those results into propaganda. Yet they dare not speak out for fear of losing their funding.

Indeed, a case can be made for the proposition that today's climate science establishment is betraying science itself. During the period justly known as the Enlightenment, science achieved the breakthroughs which have so benefited us all by rejecting the claims of authority — which at that time largely meant the authority of the church — and adopting an overarching scepticism, insisting that our understanding of the external world must be based exclusively on observation and empirical investigation. Yet today all too many climate scientists, in particular in the UK, come close to claiming that they need to be respected as the voice of authority on the subject — the very claim that was once the province of the church.

If I have been critical of the latest IPCC report, let me add that it is many respects a significant improvement on its predecessors. It explicitly concedes, for example, that "climate change may be beneficial for moderate climate change" — and moderate climate change is all that it expects to see for the rest of this century — and that "Estimates for the aggregate economic impact of climate change are relatively small . . . For most economic sectors, the impact of climate change will be small relative to the impacts of other drivers." So much for the unique existential planetary threat.

What it conspicuously fails to do, however, is to make any assessment of the unequivocally adverse economic impact of the decarbonisation policy it continues to advocate, which (if implemented) would be far worse than any adverse impact from global warming.

Even here, however, the new report concedes for the first time that the most important response to the threat of climate change must be how mankind has always responded, throughout the ages: namely, intelligent adaptation. Indeed, the "impacts" section of the latest report is explicitly entitled "Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability". In previous IPCC reports adaptation was scarcely referred to at all, and then only dismissively.

This leads directly to the last of my four questions. To the extent that there is a problem, what should we, calmly and rationally, do about it?

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Oliver K. Manuel
May 6th, 2014
4:05 PM
Thank you, Nigel Lawson, for speaking out! George Orwell correctly forecast our future when he moved from London to the Scottish Isle of Jura to start writing "Nineteen Eighty-Four" in 1946!

Oliver K. Manuel
May 6th, 2014
4:05 PM
Climategate has now exposed sixty-nine years (2014 - 1945 = 69 yrs) of global abuse of the scientific method by members of the UN's IPCC, the National Academies of Sciences of the US, UK, USSR, Sweden, Norway, Germany, etc. These leaders of science now refuse to publicly address nine pages of precise experimental data (pages 19-27) that falsify their post-1945 models of the cosmos, the Sun, Earth's climate and the atomic nucleus. Their present actions suggest that their past acts of deception were intentional! “A Journey to the Core of the Sun – Chapter 2: Acceptance of Reality" https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10640850/Chapter_2.pdf

richard2
May 5th, 2014
10:05 PM
Renewable energy- Germany plans to build 60,000 new wind turbines — in forests, in the foothills ………. 60,000 turbines x 45 cement mixer lorries per turbine x 20 tons of cement per lorry. = 54,000,000 tons of cement in pristine countryside. every wind farm is a city of concrete.

Anonymorichardus
May 5th, 2014
9:05 PM
Right about the deserts greening, http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/07/130708103521.htm Deserts 'greening' from rising carbon dioxide: Green foliage boosted across the world's arid regions Date: July 8, 2013 Source: CSIRO Australia Summary: Increased levels of carbon dioxide have helped boost green foliage across the world's arid regions over the past 30 years through a process called carbon dioxide fertilization, according to new research.

Laughsatconspiracytheroists
May 5th, 2014
5:05 PM
Lord Lawson expends many words to describe a vast conspiracy. The scientists aren't wrong, he is. Who does fund the GWPF?

Mervyn
May 5th, 2014
9:05 AM
The IPCC can be conveniently ignored because although it is disguised as the world's "peak scientific body" (which it is certainly not), in reality it is blatantly evident it is a political body engaged in activism to achieve international agreement over the control of fossil fuel energy use.

Anonymous
May 5th, 2014
9:05 AM
An excellent article, which will, of course, persuade no one. Lord Lawson is correct in observing that Climate Guilt has replaced Original Sin as the justification for the self-flagellation of the developed world; but I wouldn't say that it has replaced Communism - the hijacking of ecological responsibility by the diletante left is the New Communism. The waste implicit in extravagant policies feeds the time honoured fallacy that levelling down leads to greater equality and is "therefore" fairer. In "1984" the extravagance of War was an instrument of the Party whose sole aim was to maximise their own power. Now the unelected bureaucrats and technocrats have their own supernational Ministry of Impoverishment.

David Walker
May 4th, 2014
2:05 PM
Excellent. Thank you,your Lordship.

grimm
May 4th, 2014
11:05 AM
The discussion of the global warming issue in the broadcast media is almost totally one-sided. Where are the in depth news features and documentaries dealing with the issues Mr Lawson writes about in this article? The C4 documentary "The Great Global Warming Swindle" back in 2007 stands as a sole example of the sceptics being given substantial air time. Broadcasters should have a duty to inform the public about all aspects of this issue. Instead we get bland uniformity of opinion. It is as though the TV companies were staffed with environmentalists and their sympathisers. Environmentalists I have known personally have always been the artistically inclined and drawn to the creative professions. They tend to have an irrational distaste for industrial development seeing it as self-evidentally evil, ugly and driven only by "mankind's foolishness and greed". For them industry means "black satanic mills", chemicals mean pollution, third world poverty and backwardness mean sustainability and "unspoiled" cultures. Environmentalism also has a strong class bias. Whatever their stated goals the underlying drive is toward a more comfortable and aesthetically pleasing world for the better off.

Catmando
May 4th, 2014
9:05 AM
Shame on Lord Lawson for presenting a rather whining and self-pitying piece. He would know, if he bothered to read more widely, that the term denier has been used of people who have contradicted the science without any basis in credible evidence for 150 years. For instance, Herbert Spencer was a vaccine denier way back when. To claim that the term is designed to make one think of Holocaust deniers is ignorant.

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