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Third, even if the earth were to warm, so far from this necessarily being a cause for alarm, does it matter? It would, after all, be surprising if the planet were on a happy but precarious temperature knife-edge, from which any change in either direction would be a major disaster. In fact, we know that, if there were to be any future warming (and for the reasons already given, "if" is correct) there would be both benefits and what the economists call disbenefits. I shall discuss later where the balance might lie.

And fourth, to the extent that there is a problem, what should we, calmly and rationally, do about it?

It is probably best to take the first two questions together.

According to the temperature records kept by the UK Met Office (and other series are much the same), over the past 150 years (that is, from the very beginnings of the Industrial Revolution), mean global temperature has increased by a little under a degree centigrade — according to the Met Office, 0.8ºC. This has happened in fits and starts, which are not fully understood. To begin with, to the extent that anyone noticed it, it was seen as a welcome and natural recovery from the rigours of the Little Ice Age. But the great bulk of it — 0.5ºC out of the 0.8ºC — occurred during the last quarter of the 20th century. It was then that global warming alarmism was born.

But since then, and wholly contrary to the expectations of the overwhelming majority of climate scientists, who confidently predicted that global warming would not merely continue but would accelerate, given the unprecedented growth of global carbon emissions, as China's coal-based economy has grown by leaps and bounds, there has been no further warming at all. To be precise, the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a deeply flawed body whose non-scientist chairman is a committed climate alarmist, reckons that global warming has latterly been occurring at the rate of — wait for it — 0.05ºC per decade, plus or minus 0.1ºC. Their figures, not mine. In other words, the observed rate of warming is less than the margin of error.

And that margin of error, it must be said, is implausibly small. After all, calculating mean global temperature from the records of weather stations and maritime observations around the world, of varying quality, is a pretty heroic task in the first place. Not to mention the fact that there is a considerable difference between daytime and night-time temperatures. In any event, to produce a figure accurate to hundredths of a degree is palpably absurd.

The lessons of the unpredicted 15-year global temperature standstill (or hiatus as the IPCC calls it) are clear. In the first place, the so-called Integrated Assessment Models which the climate science community uses to predict the global temperature increase which is likely to occur over the next 100 years are almost certainly mistaken, in that climate sensitivity is almost certainly significantly less than they once thought, and thus the models exaggerate the likely temperature rise over the next hundred years.

But the need for a rethink does not stop there. As the noted climate scientist Professor Judith Curry, chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology, recently observed in written testimony to the US Senate:

Anthropogenic global warming is a proposed theory whose basic mechnism is well understood, but whose magnitude is highly uncertain. The growing evidence that climate models are too sensitive to CO2 has implications for the attribution of late-20th-century warming and projections of 21st-century climate. If the recent warming hiatus is caused by natural variability, then this raises the question as to what extent the warming between 1975 and 2000 can also be explained by natural climate variability.

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Chuck Nolan
May 3rd, 2014
8:05 PM
Thank you Nigel. I fully concur. Your article is the best explanation of my thoughts and beliefs concerning our global warming crisis. Without cheap, abundant energy life is very brutal and short. cn

Nicanuk
May 3rd, 2014
6:05 AM
The aim of the Malthusian envirofascists is to centrally plan energy production, extraction and distribution with handsome fees, taxes and levies skimmed off all transactions. The subsidies/taxes -carrot/stick -thus control the development of the energy "free market". Brilliant. Except, as with all socialist schemes, it will collapse under its own weight of incompetance and malinvestment. The consumer and the energy sector gets screwed on the way up and doubly screwed during the collapse, but that is the whole point of the exercise. Screw the world to save it. Paraphrasing that Malthusian charlatan (and now FRS) Ehrlich - there is simply only enough resources for the righteous. Hayek saw this coming in the 40s, when he wrote "The Road to Serfdom" ironically while he was at the LSE. You couldn't make this crap up.

Braqueish
May 3rd, 2014
12:05 AM
Geologist are clear that ice ages are normative. Interglacials -- which we're currently enjoying -- are temporary respites. In the end, the scary pseudo-scenarios which climate alarmists employ in order to try and reduce "consumption" (i.e. comfort and civilised society) are phantasies. The truth is that within the next 1,000 years those RSPB "sanctuaries" and the wilfully flooded parts of Somerset will either be tundra or under a significant mass of glacier ice. It is a monstrous over-estimation of human prowess which assumes that the magisterial power of nature is subject to fickle homo sapiens enterprise. What's more, I'd bet on the future survival of our species (despite the financial centres of New York City, Frankfurt, and London being wiped out) will continue to progress in Atlanta, Brisbane and Madeira, or wherever.

Vernon E
May 2nd, 2014
3:05 PM
Lord Lawson says it all, and with great elegance, but still the bandwagon surges on. I, myself, am in contention with my own scientific body, the (UK) Institution of Chemical Engineers, of which I am a Fellow and have been a member for over fifty years. Its organ, TCE, has been hi-jacked of late by an editorial team that espouses just the sort of anti-industrial nonsense that Lord Lawson is addressing. What hope is there?

Steve Davison
May 2nd, 2014
10:05 AM
I am not a natural supporter of Nigel Lawson but this has to be one of the best summaries of the the state of affairs with respect to man-made global warming alarmism and the very real costs to tax-payers and the poorest in society. He is to be applauded.

Anonymous
May 1st, 2014
7:05 PM
An excellent and important article, but one problem with this statement in the second last paragraph: "as they belatedly put in place the sort of economic policy framework that brought prosperity to the Western world." Surely it was the absence of policy - writ from on high or petty interference and corruption - which brought prosperity to the Western world, and and South Korea, and Hong Kong, and Singapore and which is now bringing the same to China and India. A little less "policy," whether for climate management or for selling bananas only by the kilo, and a little more liberty is needed.

NikFromNYC
May 1st, 2014
5:05 PM
All this high minded talk in the face of now the most brazen scam in science is just silly. Here is clear proof that peer review in climate "science" is corrupt and that thus the entire field needs a clean slate after the hockey stick team and its enabling editors on journals are *sacked*: http://s6.postimg.org/jb6qe15rl/Marcott_2013_Eye_Candy.jpg In what other field of science would such pure artifact alarmism be accepted rather than severely punished?

Dr John G Gahan
May 1st, 2014
5:05 PM
Apart from the science, says it all. Well done Nigel.

stephenwv
May 1st, 2014
1:05 PM
The alarmists tell us we must stop the next 2 degrees of warmup. Yet according to the studies of the Dome Fuji Ice Core Samples, the Earth's current average temperature is still 2 to 3 degrees COOLER than all of the past interglacial warmups of the past 450,000 years, as the black temperature line found on the U.S. Government NOAA web site illustrates. One must ask, how can man hope to stop mother nature? http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/abrupt/data2.html In the U.S. the environmentalists are constantly harping about the possible extinction of the yellow spotted species de jour. Yet when the Earth enters into the glacial cooling cycle (which we soon will if it has not already begun) the results of a mile deep glacier over Washington D.C. (besides freezing government spending) will include a 15 degree average earth temperature change (causing extinction of 80% of the Earth's species not tolerant of that change), shortening of the world wide growing season (the potential for wide spread starvation), and elimination of much of the Earth's farm land. Perhaps, if the greenhouse effect is significant, these catastrophes can be avoided and the Earth's species and the majority of mankind will not be exterminated.

Roger W. Cohen
May 1st, 2014
1:05 PM
A reasoned, comprehensive view of our current state of affairs. As a physicist, the most painful impact of the dogma has been the dismantling of the scientific process so painfully put together over the past 400 years. As an ordinary human, I find the willful disregard of the health and well being of those in the developing world a criminal act. Looking through my political goggles, the alarmists' attack on freedom of speech is the real alarming feature of this whole business.

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