Re: Climate Change, Should Government Just Chill Out?

Stanford University physicist and Nobel Prize Winner Robert Laughlin suggests that the best thing governments can do about climate change is to simply chill out.  In an article titled "What The Earth Knows" appearing in the Summer 2010 issue of The American Scholar, Prof. Laughlin says “Common sense tells us that damaging a thing as old as [Earth] is somewhat easier to imagine than it is to accomplish – like invading Russia.” He notes  “The geologic record suggests that climate ought not to concern us too much when we gaze into the future, not because it’s unimportant but because it’s beyond our power to control.”   He recommends instead directing our focus and our money toward more traditional and much less glamorous conservation efforts - habitat preservation, for example.

The policy implications of Laughlin's argument are substantial and obvious.  If Laughlin is right about the science - and his reasoning is grounded in very basic and well-accepted geology -then the entire basis for EPA's claim of right to regulate CO2 emissions falls away.  At a minimum, Laughlin's argument suggests that those in Congress and EPA who rely on anthropogenic climate change as the justification for “remaking” our economy and imposing strict government regulation over consumption, production and transportation via cap and trade allowances, CO2 permits, and so forth, really ought to take a step back and slow down.    

Cross-Examining Climate Science.

A “cross-examination” of global warming science conducted by Jason Scott Johnston, Professor and Director of the Program on Law, Environment and Economy at the University of Pennsylvania Law School concludes that virtually every claim advanced by global warming proponents fail to stand up to scrutiny.  He summarizes his findings as follows:

Insofar as establishment climate science has glossed over and minimized such fundamental questions and uncertainties in climate science, it has created widespread misimpressions that have serious consequences for optimal policy design. Such misimpressions uniformly tend to support the case for rapid and costly decarbonization of the American economy, yet they characterize the work of even the most rigorous legal scholars. A more balanced and nuanced view of the existing state of climate science supports much more gradual and easily reversible policies regarding greenhouse gas emission reduction, and also urges a redirection in public funding of climate science away from the continued subsidization of refinements of computer models and toward increased spending on the development of standardized observational datasets against which existing climate models can be tested.

The full report is here. Expect Johnston’s analysis to resurface in the litigation against the EPA’s endangerment determination and to be used to counter the narrative behind the Kerry-Lieberman/Waxman-Markey legislative initiatives.