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Climate of Public Policy Making

Climate of Public Policy Making. Barun Mitra Liberty Institute. Global temp in the tropics. Global warming deferred. Global mean surface temp (C), media reports in May 2008. Sun Spot Cycle (1850-1913). Sun spot data and surface temperature. Sun Spot Cycle (1913 – 2006).

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Climate of Public Policy Making

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  1. Climate of Public Policy Making Barun Mitra Liberty Institute

  2. Global temp in the tropics

  3. Global warming deferred Global mean surface temp (C), media reports in May 2008

  4. Sun Spot Cycle (1850-1913) Sun spot data and surface temperature

  5. Sun Spot Cycle (1913 – 2006) Sun spot data and surface temperature

  6. The past decade

  7. Climatic change • Kerry Emanuel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, unveiled a novel technique for predicting future hurricane activity. It suggests that, even in a dramatically warming world, hurricane frequency and intensity may not substantially rise during the next two centuries. • Prof Emanuel had published a paper in Nature weeks before hurricane Katrina in 2005, arguing that intensity of storms had increased since 1970s.

  8. Changing Climate (1) • Earth was warmer than now at -500 MY, -390 MY, -250 MY, and -100 MY and colder than now at -445 MY, -310 MY, -170 MY and -35 MY (VIEZER et al., 2000; KUMP, 2000; REID, 1987). • -490 to -443 MY (Ordovician glaciation-. Colder than present (SHAVIV and VIEZER, 2003). • -145 MY (Cretaceous-. Very warm. Speculation that there was no ice on the planet, even at the poles (ENVIRONMENT CANADA, 2003). • -43 MY (Eocene-. Very warm. CO2 levels then were less than during the glaciation at –114,000 years (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). • -17 MY (Miocene- very warm. CO2 levels then were less than present levels (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). • -2 MY very warm. Forests almost extended towards the North Pole (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). • -1.6 MY to now. Thirty-three ice ages and retreats; earth was much colder than at -2 MY (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). Periodic and rapid fluctuations from cooler to warmer periods are referred to as interglaciations. Reasons cited are: continental drift, changes in ocean configurations, changes in atmospheric and ocean circulations, natural wobbles in earth’s orbit (called Milankovich cycles) and variations in solar energy.

  9. Changing climate (2) • -125,000 years. Very warm in Europe. Hippopotami and other animals, now confined mainly to Africa in natural habitat, existed in Northern Europe (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). • -114,000 years. Beginning of the most recent glacial period. Very cold. High CO2 levels (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). • -50,000 years. Very cold. Most of North America was covered by ice, some places up to 1.5 km thick (ENVIRONMENT CANADA, 2003). • -15,000 years. Earth was emerging from the last ice age. Temperatures in Greenland rose by 9 _C in 50 years (WEART, 2003). • -12,000 years. In Europe, temperatures varied from warmer than present to the coldest during the ice age in a few decades and then bounced back. In Greenland, temperatures rose by 8 _C in a single decade (WEART, 2003). • -11,000 years. Last ice age ended. Since then temperatures have been fluctuating (ENVIRONMENT CANADA, 2003). • -7,000 to -4,000 years. 1 to 3_F warmer than now ( ENVIRONMENT CANADA, 2003; BRIFFA, 2000).

  10. Changing Climate (3) • -5,000 years. Cooling of 2 _C globally. 6 _C cooling in the Arctic and only 0.5 _C in lower latitudes (ENVIROTRUTH, 2003). • -2,000 years. Tree-ring records from Siberia suggest no temperature change except three episodes (i) Medieval Warm Period (MWP), (ii) Little Ice Age (LIA) and (iii) high temperatures of 20th Century with peak in 1940 (CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF CARBON DIOXIDE AND GLOBAL CHANGE, 2003). • 800 to 1300 A.D. MWP (Medieval Warm Period): 1 to 2 _C warmer than present. • Warmest period was during 900 to 1100 A.D (SOON and BALIUNAS, 2003; VILLALBA, 1990, 1994). • 1000 A.D. Very warm in the Arctic. Sailing activity reported where there is a permanent ice pack now (THOMPSON et al., 2000; BRIFFA, 2000 and also LAMB, 1972a, b; VILLALBA, 1990, 1994). • 1350 – 1800 A.D. LIA (Little Ice Age): Average temperature dropped by 1.5 _C in 100 years. Coldest period of the LIA was during 1550 to 1700 (JONES et al., 1998; VILLALBA, 1990, 1994). • 1860 – to present time: This period of instrument data has provided the most detailed description of the earth’s climate with a steep temperature increase between 1910–1940, a moderate decrease from 1945 to 1970 and the present warming from about 1975 (LAMB, 1972a, b; DEGAETANO, 2003; GRAY, 2002; GORDON, 1998).

  11. Climate Science • Climate is ever changing, • Science can never be settled • Limits of using science for public policy • Science is about hypothesis, facts and theories • Public policy is about values, preferences and prices

  12. World at Night This map shows the geographic distribution of cities. It clearly shows that cities are concentrated in Europe, the eastern United States, Japan, China and India. It is a better map for showing the geography of night time electricity consumption for outdoor lighting than it is for showing the geography of population. For example: the eastern United States is very bright but the more densely populated areas of China and India are not nearly as bright in this image. NASA Image.

  13. Africa & Europe Western Europe is aglow with night lights. This image clearly shows that the cities of Europe are along the coasts. The Mediterranean coasts of Italy, France and Spain are a solid line of light as is the southern shorelines of the Black and Caspian Seas. The Sahara of northern Africa and the jungles of south-central Africa are largely void of illuminated cities. One of the most striking features on this image is the high concentration of cities on the Nile River, downstream from the Aswan Dam. NASA Image.

  14. ASIA Japan stands out on this satellite view of Asia at night, along with the west coast of Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong and Bangkok. The route of the Trans-Siberian Railroad can be seen as a light line across the otherwise dark area of northern Russia. High city densities in eastern China, Indonesia, India and the eastern coast of Australia can clearly be seen.

  15. Korean Peninsula Light of Development Blackout: While South Korea is a blaze of light, there's barely a glimmer in North Korea (2006)

  16. Adaptation vs Mitigation • Mitigation – lower economic growth and consumption • Adaptation – encourage economic growth and consumption

  17. Penalising Energy • Taxes on fuel and transport • Carbon tariffs being proposed • Bio-fuels, subsidies diverting food crops

  18. Price of being powerless • High cost of transportation, congestion and pollution • Loss to agriculture due to lack of electricity to run the water pumps • Less than 5% of agriculture produce is processed, lack of refrigeration and storage leading to about 30% of fruits and vegetables being wasted • 50,000 Indians die each year due to snake bites, because of lack of medical facilities, including lack of refrigeration to store the anti-venom serums • 20,000 of the 2-3 million people bitten by dogs die because failure to provide rabies vaccine

  19. Drought and Development • A typical drought and consequent famine killed over a million people • In 1876-77, 3 to 6 million died across India • In 1942-43, 1.5 to 2 million died just in Bengal • 1965-66, 1.5 million died mostly in North India

  20. Rainfall in India

  21. Basket case to bread basket

  22. Food production in price

  23. Conclusion • Enable the poor to come of poverty • Asking the poor today to pay for the challenges of tomorrow, will only make the poor more vulnerable, and endanger the future as well • Richer people will be better placed to deal with the challenges of tomorrow

  24. Thank You Liberty Institute Julian L. Simon Centre C-4/8 Sahyadri Plot 5, Sector 12, Dwarka New Delhi 110075. India Telefax: +91-11-28031309 Email:libertyInstitute@gmail.com , info@libertyindia.org Web sites:www.InDefenceofLiberty.org www.IndianDemocracy.net , www.EmpoweringIndia.org

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