Bill
Nye the Scientism Guy
By Willie Soon and István Markó
Bill Nye, the scientism is a celebrity guy who likes to pretend he’s a real scientist.
Facts don’t support his
hypothesis, so he shouts louder, changes subjects and attacks his critics.
True science requires that data,
observations and other evidence support a hypothesis – and that it can
withstand withering analysis and criticism – or the hypothesis is wrong.
That’s why Albert Einstein once
joked, “If the facts don’t fit your theory, change the facts.” When informed
that scientists who rejected his theory of relativity had published a pamphlet,
100 authors against Einstein, he
replied: “Why 100? If I were wrong, one would be enough.”
In the realm of climate scientism, the
rule seems to be: If the facts don’t support your argument, talk louder, twist
the facts, and insult your opponents. That’s certainly what self-styled global
warming “experts” like Al Gore and Bill Nye are doing. Rather than debating
scientists who don’t accept false claims that humans are causing dangerous
climate change, they just proclaim more loudly:
Our theory explains everything that’s
happening. Hotter or colder temperatures, wetter or drier weather, less ice in
the Arctic, more ice in Antarctica – it’s all due to fossil fuel use.
Climate scientism aggressively
misrepresents facts, refuses to discuss energy and climate issues with anyone
who points out massive flaws in the manmade climate chaos hypothesis, bullies anyone
who won’t condemn carbon dioxide, and brands them as equivalent to Holocaust
Deniers.
In a recent Huffington Post article, Mr. Nye “challenges climate
change deniers” by claiming, “The science of global warming is long settled,
and one may wonder why the United States, nominally the most technologically
advanced country in the world, is not the world leader in addressing the
threats.”
Perhaps it’s not so settled. When
the Australian government recently shifted funds from studying climate change
to addressing threats that might result, 275 research jobs were imperiled. The
very scientists who’d been saying there was a 97% consensus howled that there
really wasn’t one. Climate change is very complex, they cried (which is true),
and much more work must be done if we are to provide more accurate temperature
predictions, instead of wild forecasts based on CO2 emissions (also true).
Perhaps Mr. Nye and these
Australian researchers should discuss what factors other than carbon dioxide
actually cause climate and weather fluctuations. They may also encounter other
revelations: that climate science is still young and anything but settled; that
we have little understanding of what caused major ice ages, little ice ages,
warm periods in between and numerous other events throughout the ages; that computer
model predictions thus far have been little better than tarot card divinations.
As for Nye’s assertions that “carbon
dioxide has an enormous effect on planetary temperatures” and “climate change
was discovered in recent times by comparing the Earth to the planet Venus” –
those are truly bizarre, misleading, vacuous claims.
The relatively rapid increase in atmospheric
CO2 over the last 30 years has produced only 0.2°C (0.4°F) of global warming –
compared to a 1°C (1.8°F) total temperature increase over the past 150 years.
That means the planetary temperature increase has slowed down, as carbon dioxide levels rose. In fact, average temperatures
have barely budged for nearly 19 years, an inconvenient reality that even the IPCC
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) now recognizes.
This is an “enormous effect”? By
now, it is increasingly clear, the proper scientific conclusion is that the “greenhouse
effect” of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide is very minor – as a recent article explains. Mr. Nye and his fans and
fellow activists could learn a lot from it.
Objective readers, and even Mr.
Nye, would also profit from reading a rather devastating critique of one of The Scientism Guy’s
“science-is-easy” demonstrations. It concludes that the greenhouse effect of
CO2 molecules is of course real, but Mr. Nye’s clever experiment for Al Gore’s “Climate
Reality Project” was the result of “video fakery” and “could never work” as
advertised. When will Messrs. Nye and Gore stop peddling their Hollywood
special effects?
For that matter, when will they
stop playing inter-planetary games? Mr. Nye and the popular media love to tell
us that carbon dioxide from oil, gas and coal could soon turn Planet Earth into
another Venus: over-heated, barren, rocky and lifeless. Princeton Institute of
Advanced Study Professors Freeman Dyson and Will Happer show that this is utter
nonsense.
For one thing, Venus is far closer
to the sun, so it is subjected to far more solar heat, gravitational pull and
surface pressure than Earth is. “If we put a sunshade shielding Venus from
sunlight,” Dr. Dyson notes, “it would only take 500 years for its surface to
cool down and its atmosphere to condense into a carbon dioxide ocean.” It’s not
the high temperature that makes Venus permanently unfriendly to life, he adds;
it’s the lack of water.
Second, the amounts of atmospheric
carbon dioxide are grossly disproportionate. Earth has barely 0.04% carbon
dioxide (by volume) in its atmosphere, whereas Venus has 97% and Mars has 95%
CO2. Mars much greater distance from the sun also means it has an average
surface temperature of -60°C (-80°F) –underscoring yet again how absurd it is
to use planetary comparisons to stoke climate change fears.
Third, Earth’s atmosphere used to
contain far more carbon dioxide. “For most of the past 550 million
years of the Phanerozoic, when multicellular life left a good fossil
record, the earth’s CO2 levels were four times, even ten times, higher than now,”
Dr. Happer points out. “Yet life flourished on land and in the oceans. Earth
never came close to the conditions of Venus.” And it never will.
Fourth,
Venus’s much closer proximity to the sun means it receives about twice as much
solar flux (radiant energy) as the Earth does: 2637 Watts per square meter versus
1367, Happer explains. The IPCC says doubling atmospheric CO2
concentrations would be equivalent to just 15 W/m2 of additional
solar flux. That’s nearly 100 times less than what Venus gets from
being closer to the Sun.
Fifth,
surface pressure on Venus is about 90 times that of the Earth, and strong convection
forces increase the heating of surface air, he continues, making Venus’s
surface even hotter. However, dense sulfuric acid clouds prevent most solar
heat from ever reaching the planet’s surface. Instead, they reflect most
sunlight back into space, which is “one of the reasons Venus is such a lovely
morning or evening ‘star.’”
Of
course, none of these nerdy details about Earth-Venus differences really matter.
We already know plant life on Planet Earth loved the higher CO2 levels that
prevailed during the Carboniferous Age and other times when plants enjoyed
extraordinary growth.
However,
even burning all the economically available fossil fuels would not likely even
double current atmospheric CO2 levels – to just 0.08% carbon
dioxide, compared to 21% oxygen, 78% nitrogen, 0.9% argon and 0.1% for all
other gases except water vapor. And doubling CO2 would get
us away from the near-famine levels for plants that have prevailed
for the past tens of millions of years.
Carbon
dioxide is absolutely essential for plant growth – and for all life on Earth. Volumes
of research clearly demonstrate that crop,
garden, forest, grassland and ocean plants
want more CO2, not less. The increased greening of our Earth
over the past 30 years testifies to the desperate need of plants for this most
fundamental fertilizer. The more CO2 they get, the better and faster they grow.
More than 70% of the oxygen present
in the atmosphere – and without which we could never live – originates from
phytoplankton absorbing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen. Keep this in mind
when Bill Nye The Junk Science Guy tells you carbon dioxide is bad for our
oceans and climate.
Dr. Willie Soon is an
independent scientist who has been studying the Sun and Earth’s climate for 26
years. Dr. István Markó is a professor of chemistry at the Université Catholique
de Louvain in Belgium and director of the Organic and Medicinal Chemistry
Laboratory.
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