Just to emulate my hero, that would be Minimus Dickus, here's an
interesting article :

http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id=15720419&source=most_commented

"""

CLIMATE-change legislation, dormant for six months, is showing signs of
life again in Washington, DC. This week senators and industrial groups
have been discussing a compromise bill to introduce mandatory controls
on carbon (see article
<http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15721597>). Yet
although green activists around the world have been waiting for 20 years
for American action, nobody is cheering. Even if discussion ever turns
into legislation, it will be a pale shadow of what was once hoped for.

The mess at Copenhagen is one reason. So much effort went into the
event, with so little result. The recession is another. However much
bosses may care about the planet, they usually mind more about their
bottom line, and when times are hard they are unwilling to incur new
costs. The bilious argument over American health care has not helped:
this is not a good time for any bill that needs bipartisan support. Even
the northern hemisphere’s cold winter has hurt. When two feet of snow
lies on the ground, the threat from warming seems far off. But climate
science is also responsible. A series of controversies over the past
year have provided heavy ammunition to those who doubt the seriousness
of the problem.

Three questions arise from this. How bad is the science? Should policy
be changed? And what can be done to ensure such confusion does not
happen again? Behind all three lies a common story. The problem lies not
with the science itself, but with the way the science has been used by
politicians to imply certainty when, as often with science, no certainty
exists.


    What went wrong and what did not

When governments started thinking seriously about climate change they
took the sensible step of establishing, in 1989, the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change. It was designed to get scientists to work out
what was happening to the climate, and to get governments to sign off on
the scientists’ conclusions. It has done the job of basic science pretty
well. There have been occasional complaints both that it has overstated
the extent of the problem, and that it has understated it. Its reports
trawl through all recent climate science. The wide range of the outcomes
it predicts—from a mildly warming global temperature increase of 1.1°C
by the end of the century to a hellish 6.4°C—illustrate the
uncertainties it is dealing with.

But the ambiguities of science sit uncomfortably with the demands of
politics. Politicians, and the voters who elect them, are more
comfortable with certainty. So “six months to save the planet” is more
likely to garner support than “there is a high probability—though not by
any means a certainty—that serious climate change could damage the
biosphere, depending on levels of economic growth, population growth and
innovation.” Politics, like journalism, tends to simplify and
exaggerate. Hence the advertisements that the British government has
been running, using nursery rhymes: “Jack and Jill went up the hill to
fetch a pail of water. There was none as extreme weather due to climate
change had caused a drought.”

Such an approach may, in the short term, have encouraged some voters to
support measures to combat climate change. But implying that Britain’s
children face some sort of Saharan future is wrong, and dangerous. This
week Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority slapped the government
for its infantile advertisements. And there has been worse.

In November, shortly before the Copenhagen climate summit, a stash of
e-mails from and to various researchers at the Climatic Research Unit of
the University of East Anglia somehow found its way onto the web. They
revealed an unwillingness to share data which broke the spirit, if not
the letter, of Britain’s Freedom of Information act, an aggressive
attitude to the peer review of papers by opponents and an apparent
willingness to hedge science in the face of politics. Around the same
time it emerged that the most recent IPCC report had claimed that the
Himalayan glaciers were going to disappear by 2035, instead of 2350. The
panel’s initial unwillingness to address this mistake, and the discovery
of further problems with its work, raised troubling questions about its
procedures.

How bad is this? Sceptics point out that each mistake has tended to
exaggerate the extent of climate change. The notion that the scientific
establishment has suppressed evidence to the contrary has provided
plenty of non-expert politicians with an excuse not to spend money
reducing carbon. So the scientists’ shameful mistakes have certainly
changed perceptions. They have not, however, changed the science itself.

As our briefing
<http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15719298> explains
in detail, most research supports the idea that warming is man-made.
Sources of doubt that have seemed plausible in the past, such as a
mismatch between temperatures measured by satellites and temperatures
measured at the surface, and doubts about the additional warming that
can be put down to water vapour, have been in large part resolved,
though more work is needed. If records of temperature across the past
1,000 years are not reliable, it matters little to the overall story. If
there are problems with the warming as measured by weather stations on
land, there are also more reliable data from ships and satellites.


    Insuring against catastrophe

Plenty of uncertainty remains; but that argues for, not against, action.
If it were known that global warming would be limited to 2°C, the world
might decide to live with that. But the range of possible outcomes is
huge, with catastrophe one possibility, and the costs of averting
climate change are comparatively small. Just as a householder pays a
small premium to protect himself against disaster, the world should do
the same.

This newspaper sees no reason to alter its views on that. Where there is
plainly an urgent need for change is the way in which governments use
science to make their case. The IPCC has suffered from the perception
that it is a tool of politicians. The greater the distance that can be
created between it and them, the better. And rather than feeding voters
infantile advertisements peddling childish certainties, politicians
should treat voters like grown-ups. With climate change you do not need
to invent things; the truth, even with all those uncertainties and
caveats, is scary enough.
"""




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