字幕列表 影片播放
-
The only constant... is change.
-
That's true about life. And it's true about the climate. The climate has been constantly
-
changing since the earth was formed 4.6 billion years ago.
-
For example, in just the past 2000 years, we have seen the Roman Warm Period,
-
when it was warmer than today...Then came the cooler Dark Ages... Followed by the Medieval Warm period,
-
when it was at least as warm as today... Then we had the Little Ice Age -- that drove
-
the Vikings out of Greenland. And, most recently, a gradual 300-year warming to the present day.
-
That's a lot of changes. And, of course, not one of them was caused by humans.
-
During the past 400,000 years, there have been four major periods of glaciation
-
-- meaning that vast sheets of ice covered a good part of the globe -- interrupted by brief interglacial periods.
-
We are in one of those periods right now. This is all part of the Pleistocene Ice Age
-
which began in earnest two and a half million years ago. It's still going on,
-
which means that we are still living in an ice age. That's the reason there's so much ice at the poles.
-
Thirty million years ago the earth had no ice on it at all.
-
So, then, what about carbon dioxide, the great villain of the Global Warming alarmists?
-
Where does that fit in to this picture? Not as neatly as you might think.
-
Temperatures and carbon dioxide levels do not show a strong correlation. In fact,
-
over very long time spans -- periods of hundreds of millions of years --
-
they are often completely out of sync with each other.
-
Over and over again, within virtually any time frame, we find the climate changing
-
-- for reasons we do not fully understand. But we do know there are many more factors in play
-
than simply the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere -- factors such as the shape and
-
size of the earth's elliptical orbit around the sun, activity from the sun, and the amount
-
of wobble or tilt in the earth's axis, among many others. Even the relatively short 300-year
-
period from the peak of the Little Ice Age to the present has not been steady.
-
The latest trend has been a warming one, but it began nearly a century before there were significant
-
carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels. And, there has been no significant
-
warming trend in the 21st century. Contrary to media headlines,
-
the trend over the past couple of decades has been essentially flat.
-
Meanwhile human-caused CO2 emissions are higher than ever. About 25 percent of all the CO2
-
emissions from human sources have occurred during this period of no net warming.
-
So, what are we in for next? Will the temperature resume an upward trend?
-
Will it remain flat for a lengthy period? Or, will it begin to drop? No one knows.
-
Not even the biggest, fastest computers.
-
All the information I've presented -- the increases, decreases and plateaus in temperature
-
over the ages and into the last centuries -- is available to anyone who wants to seek it out.
-
Yet to state these simple facts is to risk being called a "climate change denier."
-
Not only is that absurd, it's mean-spirited. It's absurd because no one, not even the most
-
fervent skeptic, denies that the climate is changing. And it's mean-spirited because to
-
call someone a climate change denier is to intentionally link them to people who deny the Holocaust.
-
So, maybe it's time to stop the name-calling.
-
Predicting the climate, one of the most complex systems on earth with thousands of inputs,
-
many of which we don't understand, isn't an exact science, or anything close to it.
-
Maybe it's just a tad arrogant to suggest that we can predict the weather or the climate
-
or just about anything 60 years from now.
-
The science is not "settled." The debate is not over. The climate is always changing.
-
It always has. And it always will.
-
I'm Patrick Moore, Co-Founder of Greenpeace, for Prager University.