from: http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2835581.htm

The money trail

Joanne Nova

 
Somehow the tables have turned. For all the smears of big money funding the 
"deniers", the numbers reveal that the sceptics are actually the true 
grassroots campaigners, while Greenpeace defends Wall St. How times have 
changed. 

Sceptics are fighting a billion dollar industry aligned with a trillion dollar 
trading scheme. Big Oil's supposed evil influence has been vastly outdone by 
Big Government, and even those taxpayer billions are trumped by Big-Banking. 

The big-money side of this debate has fostered a myth that sceptics write what 
they write because they are funded by oil profits. They say, follow the money? 
So I did and it's chilling. Greens and environmentalists need to be aware each 
time they smear with an ad hominem attack they are unwittingly helping giant 
finance houses. 

FOLLOW THE MONEY
Money for Sceptics: Greenpeace has searched for funding for sceptics and found 
$23 million paid by Exxon over 10 years (which has stopped). Perhaps Greenpeace 
missed funding from other fossil fuel companies, but you can be sure that they 
searched. I wrote the Climate Money paper in July last year, and since then no 
one has claimed a larger figure. Big-Oil may well prefer it if emissions are 
not traded, but it's not make-or-break for them. If all fossil fuels are in 
effect "taxed", consumers will pay the tax anyhow, and past price rises in 
crude oil suggest consumers will not consume much less fuel, so profits won't 
actually fall that much. 

But in the end, everyone spends more on carbon friendly initiatives than on 
sceptics-- even Exxon: (how about $100 million for Stanford's Global Climate 
and Energy Project, and $600 million for Biofuels research). Some will complain 
that Exxon is massive and their green commitment was a tiny part of their 
profits, but the point is, what they spent on sceptics was even less. 

Money for the Climate Industry: The US government spent $79 billion on climate 
research and technology since 1989 - to be sure, this funding paid for things 
like satellites and studies, but it's 3,500 times as much as anything offered 
to sceptics. It buys a bandwagon of support, a repetitive rain of press 
releases, and includes PR departments of institutions like NOAA, NASA, the 
Climate Change Science Program and the Climate Change Technology Program. The 
$79 billion figure does not include money from other western governments, 
private industry, and is not adjusted for inflation. In other words, it could 
be…a lot bigger.

For direct PR comparisons though, just look at "Think Climate Think Change": 
the Australian Government put $13.9 million into just one quick advertising 
campaign. There is no question that there are vastly more financial rewards for 
people who promote a carbon-made catastrophe than for those who point out the 
flaws in the theory.

Ultimately the big problem is that there are no grants for scientists to 
demonstrate that carbon has little effect. There are no Institutes of Natural 
Climate Change, but plenty that are devoted to UnNatural Forces.

It's a monopsony, and the main point is not that the scientists are necessarily 
corrupted by money or status (though that appears to have happened to a few), 
but that there is no group or government seriously funding scientists to expose 
flaws. The lack of systematic auditing of the IPCC, NOAA, NASA or East Anglia 
CRU, leaves a gaping vacuum. It's possible that honest scientists have 
dutifully followed their grant applications, always looking for one thing in 
one direction, and when they have made flawed assumptions or errors, or just 
exaggerations, no one has pointed it out simply because everyone who could 
have, had a job doing something else. In the end the auditors who volunteered — 
like Steve McIntyre and AnthonyWatts — are retired scientists, because they are 
the only ones who have the time and the expertise to do the hard work. (Anyone 
fancy analysing statistical techniques in dendroclimatology or thermometer 
siting instead of playing a round of golf?)

Money for the Finance Houses: What the US Government has paid to one side of 
the scientific process pales in comparison with carbon trading. According to 
the World Bank, turnover of carbon trading reached $126 billion in 2008. 
PointCarbon estimates trading in 2009 was about $130 billion. This is turnover, 
not specifically profits, but each year the money market turnover eclipses the 
science funding over 20 years. Money Talks. Every major finance house stands to 
profit as brokers of a paper trade. It doesn't matter whether you buy or sell, 
the bankers take a slice both ways. The bigger the market, the more money they 
make shifting paper. 

BANKS WANT US TO TRADE MONEY...
Not surprisingly banks are doing what banks should do (for their shareholders): 
they're following the promise of profits, and urging governments to adopt 
carbon trading. Banks are keen to be seen as good corporate citizens (look, 
there's an environmental banker!), but somehow they don't find the idea of a 
non-tradable carbon tax as appealing as a trading scheme where financial 
middlemen can take a cut. (For banks that believe in the carbon crisis, taxes 
may well "help the planet," but they don't pay dividends.)

The stealthy mass entry of the bankers and traders poses a major force. Surely 
if money has any effect on carbon emissions, it must also have an effect on 
careers, shareholders, advertising, and lobbying? There were over 2,000 
lobbyists in Washington in 2008.

Unpaid sceptics are not just taking on scientists who conveniently secure 
grants and junkets for pursuing one theory, they also conflict with potential 
profits of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, 
Barclays, Morgan Stanley, and every other financial institution or corporation 
that stands to profit like the Chicago Climate Exchange, European Climate 
Exchange, PointCarbon, IdeaCarbon (and the list goes on… ) as well as against 
government bureaucracies like the IPCC and multiple departments of Climate 
Change. There's no conspiracy between these groups, just similar profit plans 
or power grabs.

Tony Abbot's new policy removes the benefits for bankers. Labor and the Greens 
don't appear to notice that they fight tooth and nail for a market in a 
"commodity" which isn't a commodity and that guarantees profits for big 
bankers. The public though are figuring it out.

THE LARGEST TRADEABLE "COMMODITY" IN THE WORLD?
Commissioner Bart Chilton, head of the energy and environmental markets 
advisory committee of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), has 
predicted that within five years a carbon market would dwarf any of the markets 
his agency currently regulates: "I can see carbon trading being a $2 trillion 
market." "The largest commodity market in the world." He ought to know. 

It promises to be larger than the markets for coal, oil, gold, wheat, copper or 
uranium. Just soak in that thought for a moment. Larger than oil.

Richard L. Sandor, chairman and chief executive officer of Climate Exchange 
Plc, agrees and predicts trades eventually will total $10 trillion a year." 
That's 10 thousand billion dollars.

ONLY THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE MATTERS
Ultimately the atmosphere is what it is regardless of fiat currency movements. 
Some people will accuse me of smearing climate scientists and making the same 
ad hominem attacks I detest and protest about. So note carefully: I haven't 
said that the massive amount of funding received by promoters of the Carbon 
Catastrophe proves that they are wrong, just as the grassroots unpaid 
dedication of sceptics doesn't prove them right either. But the starkly 
lop-sided nature of the funding means we'd be fools not to pay very close 
attention to the evidence. It also shows how vapid the claims are from those 
who try to smear sceptics and who mistakenly think ad hominem arguments are 
worth making.

And as far as evidence goes, surprisingly, I agree with the IPCC that carbon 
dioxide warms the planet. But few realise that the IPCC relies on feedback 
factors like humidity and clouds causing a major amplification of the minor CO2 
effect and that this amplification simply isn't there.

Hundreds of thousands of radiosonde measurements failed to find the pattern of 
upper trophospheric heating the models predicted, (and neither Santer 2008 with 
his expanding "uncertainties" nor Sherwood 2008 with his wind gauges change 
that). Two other independent empirical observations indicate that the warming 
due to CO2 is halved by changes in the atmosphere, not amplified.[Spencer 2007, 
Lindzen 2009, see also Spencer 2008]

Without this amplification from water vapor or clouds the infamous "3.5 degrees 
of warming" collapses to just a half a degree — most of which has happened. 

Those resorting to this vacuous, easily refutable point should be shamed into 
lifting their game. The ad hominem argument is Stone Age reasoning, and the 
"money" insult they throw, bounces right back at them — a thousand-fold.


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