Professor Richard Lindzen on Australian radio

Prof. Richard Lindzen is likely the world’s most repsected climate scientist.  He was recently interviewed by Chris Smith on Australian radio.

I highly recommend you spend 14 mintes to listen to the interview.

Go on.  Click the link.  You won’t be disappointed.

 http://www.2gb.com/index2.php?option=com_newsmanager&task=view&id=8613

Posted in Climate Science, Economics, Energy, Environment, Politics | 2 Comments

You think the planet is in danger from our CO2 emissions. Think again.

From an article in the Financial Post.  http://opinion.financialpost.com/2011/04/07/climate-models-go-cold/

The article is by Dr David Evans.  David is a mathematician and engineer, with six university degrees, including a PhD from Stanford University in electrical engineering.

Here are a few extracts.

The debate about global warming has reached ridiculous proportions and is full of micro-thin half-truths and misunderstandings. I am a scientist who was on the carbon gravy train, understands the evidence, was once an alarmist, but am now a skeptic.

The whole idea that carbon dioxide is the main cause of the recent global warming is based on a guess that was proved false by empirical evidence during the 1990s. But the gravy train was too big, with too many jobs, industries, trading profits, political careers, and the possibility of world government and total control riding on the outcome. So rather than admit they were wrong, the governments, and their tame climate scientists, now outrageously maintain the fiction that carbon dioxide is a dangerous pollutant.

Finally, to those who still believe the planet is in danger from our carbon dioxide emissions: Sorry, but you’ve been had.

There’s much more in the article.  It’s only a click away.  http://opinion.financialpost.com/2011/04/07/climate-models-go-cold/

Or – if you’d rather see the video … http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Di5FyndJbz0

Posted in Climate Science, Economics, Environment, Politics | 2 Comments

A legal battle looming

From an item at Climate Realists by John O’Sullivan.  http://climaterealists.com/?id=7512

Dr. Tim Ball is a talented climate scientist who has been working hard to expose the alarm over global warming.  He now unfortunately faces two costly courtroom battles.

Dr. Tim Ball is widely recognized as one of Canada’s first qualified climate scientists and has long taken a brave stand in speaking out on corruption and unethical practices. Two global warming doomsayers Ball has targeted are professors Michael Mann and Andrew Weaver.  They are now suing Tim for libel with the backing of Big Green donors.

Click to read an interview with Dr. Ball by John O’Sullivan.  http://johnosullivan.livejournal.com/34877.html

Tim’s website is: http://drtimball.com.  It contains much useful information.  And anyone wanting to donate to Tim can do so at his site:

Posted in Climate Science, Politics | 3 Comments

Energy crisis over – for 250 years?

From an article in the Register by Andrew Orlowski.  http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/04/07/lots_more_gas_everywhere/

Here are some extracts.

The “Energy Crisis” is over, according to some analyses, with new gas discoveries securing supplies for as much as 250 years.

The big winners include Argentina with 774 trillion cubic feet, South Africa, with 485, Poland, with 187, France with 180, and the North Americas. Canada (385) the USA (862) and Mexico (681) have vast reserves. China (1,275) has the largest. Australia’s domestic energy production will benefit from 396 trillion cubic feet of technically recoverable reserves.

So with all this newly found energy, maybe we can backtrack on the biofuels agenda, and revert to growing food for people to eat, rather than diverting it to our vehicles.

Article at: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/04/07/lots_more_gas_everywhere/

Posted in Energy, Environment | 2 Comments

DDT, malaria, sled dogs, people and death

Last week I was at a training course over in Australia.  One of the presenters was a top policeman who shared some of his leadership experiences.  One of them was about a time he spent in Africa.  The sickness and death that occurs there due to malaria is atrocious.  Hundreds of thousands die from malaria.

But the worst part to me is: This death is completely unnecessary.  Correct application of DDT would control this problem.  In fact this problem was almost under control until the environmental movement had DDT banned. 

The article is by Cyril Boynes, Jr.

I have repeated his article in full because the link I had would not work.  I hope Cyril doesn’t mind.

Cyril is co-chair of the Congress of Racial Equality Uganda and a tireless advocate for health and prosperity in Africa and all other developing regions.

If only the world cared as much about African children and families, as they do about dogs.

A couple months ago, when its dog-sledding business lost customers, a Canadian company had a hundred of its dogs killed. The incident “shocked” and “angered” people. The employee who shot the dogs said he suffered “post traumatic stress” from killing them and wants compensation.

Animal activists used the incident in campaigns against dog sled rides. “I don’t think society is willing to accept that animals should be killed just because they are surplus or don’t suit the purpose they were born for,” said one. “The magnitude of this atrocity is so shocking – our heads are reeling,” another said.

Huskies are beautiful, gentle animals, and I’m really sad that this happened. But the world needs to put this in perspective. Humans eat animals. Our cars kill them along highways. Wind turbines kill eagles and other birds. More important, what about people?

My wife Fiona Kobusingye lost her son, two sisters and four cousins to malaria. Her nephew is permanently brain-damaged because of it. Almost everyone I know has lost at least one child or sibling to this killer disease. Despite millions of bednets, malaria still kills more African children than any other disease.

I cannot help thinking it would really be nice if, just once in awhile, animal lovers, environmentalists, journalists and other people would care half as much about African babies, children and families, as about dogs.

A hundred dogs are killed, and activists and newspapers make it a huge story.

Last year, almost one hundred thousand Ugandan children and adults were killed by malaria. And yet, nobody seemed to care – certainly not enough to write a story about it, or get outraged that callous anti-pesticide activists lie about DDT risks and prevent the use of DDT and other insecticides that could prevent malaria, yellow fever and other diseases that cause so much suffering, poverty and death on our continent.

It’s as if anti-pesticide greens believe we Africans are “surplus” people on an “over-populated” planet and don’t “suit the purposes” they think people should be born for. It’s as if our misery and deaths don’t mean anything. This is the real atrocity, and our African heads are reeling.

Yes, government agencies, private foundations, school children and other kind people from rich, malaria-free countries do send bednets, so at least some babies and pregnant women can sleep under one. But nets get torn, people don’t always use them or hang them properly, and they only reduce malaria by 20 or 30 percent. That’s why we need additional weapons – like DDT and other insecticides.

DDT keeps most mosquitoes from even going into homes. It irritates any that do come in, so they are less likely to bite. It kills any that land on walls after a blood meal, so they can’t transmit malaria to other victims. DDT is cheap and long lasting: one spray is good for six months or more. No other chemical in existence does all this, at any price.

To break the transmission cycle and stop malaria, we need to reduce mosquito populations, keep them away from people, and treat infected people quickly. Nets are essential. So are better houses and hospitals (with screens on doors and windows), greater efforts to remove mosquito resting areas near homes, and access to the best possible drugs.

But we also need chemicals to kill mosquito larvae, insecticides to kill adults, and DDT as a long-lasting spatial repellant to keep mosquitoes out of our homes. We need every one of these weapons, not just the ones chemical-hating ideologues approve of, or we will forever be burying our children. 

We are constantly told the DDT we spray on walls to keep mosquitoes out of our houses, and the insecticides we use to kill these insects, are dangerous, have undesirable side effects and shouldn’t be used. But as Dr. Rutledge Taylor explains in his new film, “3 Billion and Counting,”” years of research actually prove that DDT is safe for people and the environment. See http://www.3billionandcounting.com/ and read The Excellent Powder, by Donald Roberts and Richard Tren.)

As Dr. Taylor points out, no one has ever died or been seriously hurt from DDT. Its worst effects are skin rashes and speculative (but unproven) connections to early lactation failure in nursing mothers and various other minor problems. Both Dr. Gordon Edwards and Dr. Taylor have actually eaten large amounts of DDT – and not been harmed.

We all know what malaria does. Besides lactation failure and low birth weights in babies, malaria makes people horribly sick and unable to work, leaves millions permanently brain-damaged, and kills millions more in the most awful, painful ways imaginable. Why anyone – especially Africans – would oppose using weapons that can stop this terrible carnage is impossible to imagine.

But a lot of people listen to the constant lies, told by baby-killing, pesticide-hating activists – and believe them. It’s bad enough that Greenpeace, Environmental Defense, Pesticide Action Network and the Stockholm Convention Secretariat tell these lies and want to ban DDT from malaria programs by 2020. It’s much worse that the Global Environment Facility, United Nations Environment Programme and even some bureaucrats in the World Health Organization support the ban.

But it’s unconscionable that Ugandan companies and politicians are doing it, too.

Organic food companies claim even a trace of DDT on their produce or flowers will keep them out of Europe. That is false. Their crops just cannot have DDT above certain levels – and that will not happen from DDT sprayed on walls. But what’s really absurd is that tobacco companies refuse to allow the barest detectable trace of DDT on cancer-causing tobacco that they are happy to sell to Europeans, and Europeans are happy to smoke.

It’s not just hypocrisy. For these companies, government agencies and activist groups to put their salaries, profits and ideologies ahead of the health and lives of African babies is immoral. It’s manslaughter.

Decisions about using DDT, larvacides and insecticides (along with nets and drugs) need to be made by African health ministers – not by activists, animal lovers, or environmental and agricultural interests. These groups are spending more money trying to get rid of DDT than the world is spending to control and eradicate malaria – when almost three billion people are at risk of getting this disease, and a million die from it, year after year.

We need to use DDT and other insecticides carefully – and we are doing so. However, in the end, if we don’t use them, our wonderful, brilliant, athletic, musical, hard-working children and parents will be struck down, brain-damaged and killed by malaria.

Or more accurately, they will be murdered by self-centered ideologues, businessmen, politicians, and even WHO and other medical doctors who are violating their oath to save lives.

This has to end. We need to get our priorities straight – and understand what the real risks are. We need to pray that this insane opposition to disease-preventing, life-saving chemicals will be replaced soon with a concern for babies and parents that is equal to their concern for sled dogs.

Posted in DDT, Environment, Human cost, Politics | 1 Comment

4 out of 5 Australians say ‘No Carbon Tax’

From an article at Joanne Nova’s site.

A Channel 9 poll of about 159,000 people shows 83% of Aussies do not support a carbon tax, while 17% do.  Here’s the link to Joanne’s post.

http://joannenova.com.au/2011/03/mainstream-australia-is-speaking-greens-flop-flannery-labor/

The result is similar to the “NZ should scrap the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS)” question in Family First’s survey. 67% of those who answered wanted to scrap the ETS, 14% would keep it, and 19% have not made up their mind.

http://www.kiwithinker.com/2011/03/carbon-tax-survey-result-new-zealand/

Posted in Economics, Environment, Politics | 3 Comments

An ‘engineered’ food crisis?

Last week an article titled “How we engineered the food crisis” was in the UK Guardian.  Interestingly, the article does not focus on ‘climate change’ as the cause.  Instead, Henry Miller’s article lists large scale disasters causing localised crop failures, deadly strains of wheat pathogen and rising incomes in major emerging markets, as causing a back drop of lessened supply and increased demand.  He then explains, against that supply/demand backdrop, how our reluctance to embrace new technology and our diversion of food to biofuels, is hindering or making things worse.

He states, ‘Thanks to dysfunctional regulation of genetic engineering and misguided biofuels policy, the world’s poorest are going hungry’.

Here’s the link to the article and a couple of quotes from it:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/mar/20/food-farming

… the United States and Europe are diverting vast and increasing amounts of land and agricultural production into making ethanol. The United States is approaching the diversion of 40% of the corn harvest for fuel…

… higher food prices are a bad thing for the poor because they cannot afford a healthy diet in the first place and are forced to make further cuts on education and health spending if their food bill goes up. We already have close to one billion people go[ing] hungry today, not because there is not enough food in the world but because they cannot afford to buy it…

So, if there are present food crop supply problems and increasing demand:-

Why do we make it harder for food producers to use latest technology to increase their harvest?

Why have we diverted so much land use and crop yield from food production to fuel production?

Is a food crisis being ‘engineered’?

Why would anybody want to do that?

Feel free to offer your comments …

Posted in Economics, Environment | 1 Comment

Earth hour poetry

A friend wrote a poem about earth hour which I thought was worth sharing.  Very succinct.  So with thanks to Mike Smith for allowing me to share ‘By Cripes’ with you:

By cripes, these days it’s really quite confusing

Trying to decide which bulb we should be using

The compact fluorescent lamp will save us long term money

But they’re made with mercury, which makes the fish smell funny

 

The fridge takes really good care of my alcohol

Working efficiently thanks to thermostatic control

If I switch it off to put the power bill on hold

It’ll cost twice as much again to get it bloody cold

 

So much fuss these days on saving energy

By reducing our use and production of electricity

But before we congratulate ourselves with backslap, smile and shout

Remember the profit’s better if we spread more of the stuff about

 

I’ll still participate in Saturday’s global earth hour

I’ll switch off, go outside, look up and see how small we really are

Our stay on this world is only temporary, in life, civilisation and history

When we’re gone, the earth now dark and cold

Somewhere else, out there, a seed takes hold

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Solar and lunar effects – and earthquakes

I continued looking around for some more information on the link between solar effects and earthqaukes and I found a youtube video.

It is an interview with Piers Corbyn.  The interviewer covers some other aspects of the Japan earthquake for a few minutes before interviewing Piers.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZVOnML1jtE&feature=player_embedded

Piers Corbyn is an astrophysisist with an incredible record of weather predictions based on solar and lunar effects.  When it comes to the sun, the moon, and our weather – he is one of the world’s best.  The video is definitely worth a listen.

And over at Climate Realists there is an article describing what might have caused thee other volcanoes to erupt about the same time as the Japan earthquake.

http://climaterealists.com/index.php?id=7374

Posted in Environment, Geology, Solar | 3 Comments

Solar Effects and Earthquakes

There is huge devastation in Japan due to the earthquake there.  In New Zealand the focus had been the earthquake in Christchurch.  Two earthquakes in close succession.  Wow.

Now I’d like to share a ‘train of thought’ with you.  Tonight, (a couple of hours after the Japan earthquake) I was talking with an old friend.  We considered a possible link between solar activity and earthquakes.  My friend is a PhD civil engineer/hydrologist.  He’s right up there when it comes to computer models and hydrology.

I read Anthony Watts blog every day, http://wattsupwiththat.com and remembered two recent posts about major solar events.  One on 18th February and the other on 9th March.

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/02/18/largest-space-weather-storm-in-at-least-four-years/

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/03/10/sol-is-finally-waking-up/

Then something clicked; both these events occurred two or three days before the Christchurch and Japan earthquakes respectively.  So I kept looking around Anthony Watts site for some more clues and came across this gem.

Take a look at this link.  It was included in a comment by Vukcevic.  http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/gms.htm

This is an ongoing ‘live’ project to establish a possible link between the geomagnetic activity (magnetic storms) and acceleration of the earthquake’s occurrence. It is not claimed that geomagnetic storm is a primary cause of any earthquake. However if conditions for an earthquake are ‘ripe’, then solar storm may be a trigger for it, and bring it forward for few hours or days.” 

Interesting eh!

Posted in Environment, Solar | Leave a comment