As the New Year dawned, much of the UK enjoyed comparatively
mild conditions, as it had through the Christmas period. This was not only good
for those with one eye on the cost of heating, but it also ensured the silence
of the climate change denial fringe, at least on one subject. Booker and
Delingpole would have to find other subjects on which to unload their scorn and
bile.
Then temperatures fell, and late last week we all saw the
snow. With remarkable coincidence, Christopher Booker was on to it like a shot:
“I
looked out of the window on Friday morning to see that 6in of global warming
had turned my Somerset garden into a winter wonderland”. Spent Thursday
sleeping, then, Chris. Then readers get the usual guff about him knowing everything
and scientists nothing.
A similar line has been taken by James “saviour of Western civilisation” Delingpole, as his headline reads “Deddy.
What is this strange white stuff falling from the sky?” which must be
achingly funny for those of Del Boy’s fans who want to talk as posh as him (Sid
and Doris Bonkers). And both these august pillars of climate change denial are after
the same target.
As with any time there is a snowfall, David Viner gets it in
the neck. Back in March 2000, he ventured the prospect that “within a few years winter snowfall will
become ‘a very rare and exciting event’”. Note that he did not define “a few”, and thus his hostage to fortune:
Del and Booker, who know more than all those rotten scientists put together,
have defined it for him. But only when it snows.
But even as this dysfunctional duo is baying in celebration,
the true level of their much-vaunted knowledge is let slip. Booker asserts “no one in the world actually knows what
global temperatures will be even next month”. Bullshit. We can say with
some precision and certainly what global temperatures will be. What we cannot
say with any certainty is the temperature for individual towns or cities.
Delingpole fares little better: he
cites Anthony Watts in claiming that December 2012 was some kind of record
month for snowfall, but manages to miss (a) we didn’t have very much in most of
the UK, (b) snow cover and volume are not the same thing, and (c) the graph that
Watts cites shows a significant negative anomaly for 1978-9, which was the last
really severe winter to hit the UK (and it snowed a lot).
And both Booker and Delingpole manage to miss what Viner
also said: “Heavy snow will return
occasionally ... but when it does we will be unprepared ... snow will probably
cause chaos in 20 years’ time”. How did they miss that? After all, Booker
has recently read “scores of books,
hundreds of scientific papers and thousands of blog posts”. He can’t be just
cherry-picking, can he? It rather looks like he can.
So keen to crow that they score two own goals. No change there, then.
1 comment:
I wonder how much of the globe he thinks Somerset actually covers. Global Warming is not the same as Somerset cooling!
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