yep, more lies deceptions and scare tactics in an attempt to
legitimize a radical enviornmental policy that  will do more damage
than good.  although al bore and his cronies have made their millions
out of the scam.

On Dec 18, 5:44 pm, Cold Water <[email protected]> wrote:
> (From Oz)
> Top 10 dud predictions
> Article from:
> Andrew Bolt
>
> December 19, 2008 12:00am
>
> GLOBAL warming preachers have had a shocking 2008. So many of their 
> predictions this year went splat.
>
> Here's their problem: they've been scaring us for so long that it's now 
> possible to check if things are turning out as hot as they warned.
>
> And good news! I bring you Christmas cheer - the top 10 warming predictions 
> to hit the wall this year.
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>   a.. Your say: Andrew Bolt's blog
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Read, so you can end 2008 with optimism, knowing this Christmas won't be the 
> last for you, the planet or even the polar bears.
>
> 1. OUR CITIES WILL DIE OF THIRST
>
> TIM Flannery, an expert in bones, has made a fortune from books and lectures 
> warning that we face global warming doom. He scared us so well that we last 
> year made him Australian of the Year.
>
> In March, Flannery said: "The water problem is so severe for Adelaide that it 
> may run out of water by early 2009."
>
> In fact, Adelaide's reservoirs are now 75 per cent full, just weeks from 2009.
>
> In June last year, Flannery warned Brisbane's "water supplies are so low they 
> need desalinated water urgently, possibly in as little as 18 months".
>
> In fact, 18 months later, its dams are 46 per cent full after Brisbane's 
> wettest spring in 27 years.
>
> In 2005, Flannery predicted Sydney's dams could be dry in just two years.
>
> In fact, three years later its dams are 63 per cent full, not least because 
> June last year was its wettest since 1951.
>
> In 2004, Flannery said global warming would cause such droughts that "there 
> is a fair chance Perth will be the 21st century's first ghost metropolis".
>
> In fact, Perth now has the lowest water restrictions of any state capital, 
> thanks to its desalination plant and dams that are 40 per cent full after the 
> city's wettest November in 17 years.
>
> Lesson: This truly is a land "of drought and flooding rains". Distrust a 
> professional panic merchant who predicts the first but ignores the second.
>
> 2. OUR REEF WILL DIE
>
> PROFESSOR Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, of Queensland University, is Australia's most 
> quoted reef expert.
>
> He's advised business, green and government groups, and won our rich Eureka 
> Prize for scares about our reef. He's chaired a $20 million global warming 
> study of the World Bank.
>
> In 1999, Hoegh-Guldberg warned that the Great Barrier Reef was under pressure 
> from global warming, and much of it had turned white.
>
> In fact, he later admitted the reef had made a "surprising" recovery.
>
> In 2006, he warned high temperatures meant "between 30 and 40 per cent of 
> coral on Queensland's great Barrier Reef could die within a month".
>
> In fact, he later admitted this bleaching had "a minimal impact".
>
> In 2007, he warned that temperature changes of the kind caused by global 
> warming were again bleaching the reef.
>
> In fact, the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network last week said there had 
> been no big damage to the reef caused by climate change in the four years 
> since its last report, and veteran diver Ben Cropp said this week that in 50 
> years he'd seen none at all.
>
> Lesson: Reefs adapt, like so much of nature. Learn again that scares make big 
> headlines and bigger careers.
>
> 3. GOODBYE, NORTH POLE
>
> IN April this year, the papers were full of warnings the Arctic ice could all 
> melt.
>
> "We're actually projecting this year that the North Pole may be free of ice 
> for the first time," claimed Dr David Barber, of Manitoba University, 
> ignoring the many earlier times the Pole has been ice free.
>
> "It's hard to see how the system may bounce back (this year)," fretted Dr 
> Ignatius Rigor, of Washington University's polar science centre.
>
> Tim Flannery also warned "this may be the Arctic's first ice-free year", and 
> the ABC and Age got reporter Marian Wilkinson to go stare at the ice and 
> wail: "Here you can see climate change happening before your eyes."
>
> In fact, the Arctic's ice cover this year was almost 10 per cent above last 
> year's great low, and has refrozen rapidly since. Meanwhile, sea ice in the 
> Southern Hemisphere has been increasing. Been told either cool fact?
>
> Yet Barber is again in the news this month, predicting an ice-free Arctic now 
> in six years. Did anyone ask him how he got his last prediction wrong?
>
> Lesson: The media prefers hot scares to cool truths. And it rarely holds its 
> pet scaremongers to account.
>
> 4. BEWARE HUGE WINDS
>
> AL Gore sold his scary global warming film, An Inconvenient Truth, shown in 
> almost every school in the country, with a poster of a terrible hurricane.
>
> Former US president Bill Clinton later gloated: "It is now generally 
> recognised that while Al Gore and I were ridiculed, we were right about 
> global warming. . . It's going to lead to more hurricanes."
>
> In fact, there is still no proof of a link between any warming and hurricanes.
>
> Australia is actually getting fewer cyclones, and last month researchers at 
> Florida State University concluded that the 2007 and 2008 hurricane seasons 
> had the least tropical activity in the Northern Hemisphere in 30 years.
>
> Lesson: Beware of politicians riding the warming bandwagon.
>
> 5. GIANT HAILSTONES WILL SMASH THROUGH YOUR ROOF
>
> ROSS Garnaut, a professor of economics, is the guru behind the Rudd 
> Government's global warming policies.
>
> He this year defended the ugly curved steel roof he'd planned at the rear of 
> his city property, telling angry locals he was protecting himself from 
> climate change: "Severe and more frequent hailstones will be a feature of 
> this change," he said.
>
> In fact, even the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change admits "decreases 
> in hail frequency are simulated for Melbourne. . ."
>
> Lesson: Beware also of government advisers on that warming wagon.
>
> 6. NO MORE SKIING
>
> A BAD ski season three years ago - right after a great one - had The Age and 
> other alarmists blaming global warming. The CSIRO, once our top science body, 
> fanned the fear by claiming resorts such as Mt Hotham and Mt Buller could 
> lose a quarter of their snow by 2020.
>
> In fact, this year was another boom one for skiing, with Mt Hotham and Mt 
> Buller covered in snow five weeks before the season started.
>
> What's more, a study this year in the Hydrological Sciences Journal checked 
> six climate models, including one used by the CSIRO.
>
> It found they couldn't even predict the regional climate we'd had already: 
> "Local model projections cannot be credible . . ."
>
> It also confirmed the finding of a study last year in the International 
> Journal of Climatology that the 22 most cited global warming models could not 
> "accurately explain the (global) climate from the recent past".
>
> As for predicting the future. . .
>
> Lesson: The CSIRO's scary predictions are near worthless.
>
> 7. PERTH WILL BAKE DRY
>
> THE CSIRO last year claimed Perth was "particularly vulnerable" and had a 90 
> per cent chance of getting less rain and higher temperatures.
>
> "There are not many other parts of the world where the IPCC has made a 
> prediction that a drop in rainfall is highly likely," it said.
>
> In fact, Perth has just had its coldest and wettest November since 1991.
>
> Lesson: As I said, don't trust the CSIRO's model or its warnings.
>
> 8. ISLANDS WILL DROWN
>
> THE seas will rise up to 100m by 2100, claims ABC Science Show host Robyn 
> Williams. Six metres, suggests Al Gore. So let's take in "climate refugees" 
> from low-lying Tuvalu, says federal Labor. And ban coastal development, says 
> the Brumby Government.
>
> In fact, while the seas have slowly risen since the last ice age, before man 
> got gassy, they've stopped rising for the last two, according to data from 
> the Jason-1 satellite.
>
> "There is no evidence for accelerated sea-level rises," the Royal Netherlands 
> Meteorological Institute declared last month.
>
> Lesson: Trust the data, not the politicians.
>
> 9. BRITAIN WILL SWELTER
>
> The British Met Office is home to the Hadley Centre, one of the top centres 
> of the man-made global warming faith.
>
> In April it predicted: "The coming summer is expected to be a 'typical 
> British summer'. . ."
>
> In fact, in August it admitted: "(This) summer . . . has been one of the 
> wettest on record across the UK." In September it predicted: "The coming 
> winter (is) likely to be milder than average."
>
> In fact, winter has been so cold that London had its first October snow in 74 
> years -- and on the day Parliament voted to fight "global warming".
>
> Lesson: If the Met can't predict the weather three months out, what can it 
> know of the climate 100 years hence?
>
> 10. WE'LL BE HOTTER
>
> SPEAKING of the Met, it has so far predicted 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005 and 2007 
> would be the world's hottest or second-hottest year on record, but nine of 
> the past 10 years it predicted temperatures too high.
>
> In fact, the Met this month conceded 2008 would be the coldest year this 
> century.
>
> That makes 1998 still the hottest year on record since the Medieval Warm 
> Period some 1000 years ago. Indeed, temperatures have slowly fallen since 
> around 2002.
>
> As Roger Pielke Sr, Professor Emeritus of Colorado State University's 
> Department of Atmospheric Science, declared this month: "Global warming has 
> stopped for the last few years."
>
> Lesson: Something is wrong with warming models that predict warming in a 
> cooling world, especially when we're each year pumping out even more 
> greenhouse gases. Be sceptical.
>
> Those, then, are the top 10 dud predictions of that hooting, screaming and 
> screeching tribe of warming alarmists. Look and laugh.
>
> And dare to believe the world is bright and reason may yet triumph.
>
> http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24820442-5000117,00.html
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