Kyoto, Carbon Tax Will Not Noticeably Change CO2
New Zealand Climate Science Coalition
12 May 2006
Kyoto and A Carbon Tax Will Make No Noticeable Difference in CO2 Levels
The International Energy Agency seem to be convinced that man-made global warming is real, that adopting Kyoto would make a difference and that we should get into carbon trading or a carbon tax.
European Economic
and Social Committee (EESC), (20 April 2006) seems to take a
more realistic view when it says:
"..the global climate
is also affected by cycles of solar activity and geophysical
factors, and establishing exactly how great man's influence
is compared with natural changes is not yet possible, nor is
it likely to be for a long time. There are also
uncertainties concerning the representativeness of available
data and the results of the climate models, which still do
not describe all the interactions with complete accuracy and
therefore cannot simulate all the elements of the climate
system with absolute precision."
The fact is that all the predictions about future rises in the global temperature are based on computer models of the climate. None of these models predicted that, for instance, 1998 would be the warmest year and that the world would cool slightly since them. Studies based on the sunspot cycle did predict this and also predict a steady cooling until about 2030. Therefore they appear to have more credibility.
The EESC seems to agree: "Further research is required to improve the ability to detect, attribute and fully understand climate change, to reduce uncertainties and to project future climate changes. In particular, there is a need for additional systematic and sustained observations, modelling and process studies."
Even if man-made global warming is happening, the IPCC climate models predict that adherence Kyoto will not make a noticeable difference.
In advocating carbon trading, the International Energy Agency is obviously not in touch with latest events. In 2005, carbon dioxide was valued at ¤25 per ton but in the last few weeks it has dropped to ¤10 per ton. According to The Economist, European generators have made a lot of money out of carbon trading and it has had little affect on the production of carbon dioxide. Carbon trading was strongly promoted by Enron because they believed - obviously correctly - that they could make a lot of money out of it. New Zealand would lose a lot of money. (In the United Kingdom alone, $1.5 billion.)
Bryan Leyland Chairman, Economic Panel,
New
Zealand Client Science
Coalition.
ENDS