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The answer is — or should be — a no-brainer: adapt. I mentioned earlier that a resumption of global warming, should it occur (and of course it might) would bring both benefits and costs. The sensible course is clearly to pocket the benefits while seeking to minimise the costs. And that is all the more so since the costs, should they arise, will not be anything new: they will merely be the slight exacerbation of problems that have always afflicted mankind.

Like the weather, for example — whether we are talking about rainfall and flooding (or droughts for that matter) in the UK, or hurricanes and typhoons in the tropics. The weather has always varied, and it always will. There have always been extremes, and there always will be. That being so, it clearly makes sense to make ourselves more resilient and robust in the face of extreme weather events, whether or not there is a slight increase in the frequency or severity of such events.

This means measures such as flood defences and sea defences, together with water storage to minimise the adverse effects of drought, in the UK; and better storm warnings, the building of levees, and more robust construction in the tropics.

The same is equally true in the field of health. Tropical diseases — and malaria is frequently (if inaccurately) mentioned in this context — are a mortal menace in much of the developing world. It clearly makes sense to seek to eradicate these diseases — and in the case of malaria (which used to be endemic in Europe) we know perfectly well how to do it — whether or not warming might lead to an increase in the incidence of such diseases.

And the same applies to all the other possible adverse consequences of global warming. Moreover, this makes sense whatever the cause of any future warming, whether it is man-made or natural. Happily, too, as economies grow and technology develops, our ability to adapt successfully to any problems which warming may bring steadily increases.

Yet, astonishingly, this is not the course on which our leaders in the Western world generally, and the UK in particular, have embarked. They have decided that what we must do, at inordinate cost, is prevent the possibility (as they see it) of any further warming by abandoning the use of fossil fuels.

Even if this were attainable — a big "if", which I will discuss later — there is no way in which this could be remotely cost-effective. The cost to the world economy of moving from relatively cheap and reliable energy to much more expensive and much less reliable forms of energy-the so-called renewables, on which we had to rely before we were liberated by the fossil-fuel-driven Industrial Revolution — far exceeds any conceivable benefit.

It is true that the notorious Stern Review, widely promoted by a British prime minister with something of a messiah complex and an undoubted talent for PR, sought to demonstrate the reverse, and has become a bible for the economically illiterate.

But Stern's dodgy economics have been comprehensively demolished by the most distinguished economists on both sides of the Atlantic. So much so, in fact, that Lord Stern himself has been driven to complain that it is all the fault of the integrated assessment models, which — and I quote him — "come close to assuming directly that the impacts and costs will be modest, and close to excluding the possibility of catastrophic outcomes".

I suggested earlier that these elaborate models are scarcely worth the computer code they are written in, and certainly the divergence between their predictions and empirical observations has become ever wider. Nevertheless, it is a bit rich for Stern now to complain about them, when they remain the gospel of the climate science establishment in general and of the IPCC in particular.

But Stern is right in this sense: unless you assume that we may be heading for a CO2-induced planetary catastrophe, for which there is no scientific basis, a policy of decarbonisation cannot possibly make sense.

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Oliver K. Manuel
May 6th, 2014
3:05 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
3:05 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
9:05 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
8:05 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
4:05 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
8:05 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
8:05 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
1:05 PM
Excellent. Thank you,your Lordship.

grimm
May 4th, 2014
10:05 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
8:05 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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