Wrong! Read this from the Sherpa who visits the top regularly:
KATMANDU, Nepal � ��" A Sherpa from Nepal who holds the world's record for scaling Mount Everest said Monday the planet's highest peak was littered with trash and warned that its glaciers were melting because of global warming.
Appa, who like most Sherpas goes by only one name, scaled the peak last week not to draw attention to his own amazing feat _ he has now climbed Everest a record 19 times _ but to the impact that global warming is having on the majestic site.
Glaciers are melting at an alarming rate, creating lakes whose walls could burst and flood villages below. Melting ice and snow also make the routes for mountaineers less stable and more difficult to follow.
"We have only one Everest, we need to clean it, protect it," said Appa, who flew back to Katmandu on Monday after reached the 29,035-foot (8,850-meter) summit last Thursday for the 19th time. "The warming temperature is increasing the volume of glacial lakes." (source)
*******
Maybe the Aztecs were right that you have to feed the gods, so we had better start sacrificing thousands of throbbing hearts to HUITZILOPOCHTLI, the Aztec god of war and to TONATIUH, the sun god, to stave off our pending destruction.
Although the sun really may be one of the drivers of global warming, the great majority of climate scientists really have come to the conclusion that CO2 emissions are another driver, if not the key driver, and that at least we can try to control that, although it may really be too late. But you know what they say: necessity still is the mother of invention. When humanity really does reach that overall "Oh sh*t!" moment, then maybe there will be a concerted effort to salvage civilization.
For your convenience, here is the transcript of the above video:
Transcript from the Real News Network
PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The
Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay, in Washington, DC. And joining us now
from our Toronto studio is George Monbiot. George is an author� ��"the
best-selling book Heat: How to Stop the Planet from Burning. He writes
a weekly column for The Guardian newspaper, and he's been involved in
the climate-change issues and environmental issues for decades. Thanks
for joining us, George.
GEORGE MONBIOT, AUTHOR: Thanks, Paul.
JAY: The Earth is not the only thing that's burning right now: the
Internet is burning with emails flying back and forth and blogs and
articles about some stolen emails, emails that were stolen from the
East Anglia climate change unit. So can you give us a bit of background
on what these emails are and then give us your take on it?
MONBIOT: Yes. It seems that someone hacked into the server of the
Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia and extracted a
lot of emails, of which 1,000 or so have been put online. Most of them
are pretty innocuous, but some of them are quite damaging to the
climate scientists who posted those emails. They show a culture which
is a little bit secretive, which isn't as open as it ought to be, which
appeared to be attempting to frustrate the release of information. And
that's antithetical to science. That's not how science should be
conducted. Science is all about openness and transparency. Now, of
course, these people have been subject to tremendous pressure from the
climate change denial industry, which was desperately trying to stymie
their efforts to demonstrate what was going on in the world and the
impacts and extent of man-made climate change. And that, I think,
partly accounts for the rather closed and secretive approach that they
had. But it's still not really good enough, and we need to demand very
high standards from our climate scientists. But what's happened is that
these emails have now been blown out of all proportion by this denial
industry, much of which is funded by the fossil fuel industries, and
they're saying this is the final nail in the coffin of climate science
and all the rest of it. Well, that's complete nonsense.
JAY: Well, let's get into a little bit about what the emails said.
There seems to be two different things or even three different
categories you can say that the emails cover, but perhaps the most
important part is the thing that is the parts of the email that seemed
to question the basic science of climate change. So in 1999, in
November, Phil Jones writes an email which goes, "I've just completed
Mike's Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the
last 20 years (ie, from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith's"� ��"in
other words, substituting this for what Keith did. And then the key
line is: "to hide the decline." Now, to put this into context for
people, I assume this means that people thought, after 1998, where
there was a high point in the global temperature, that temperatures
would continue to rise through the late '90s and through the last
decade or so, and they haven't. They seem to have more or less
plateaued. There was an article written in October 2009 by Paul Hudson,
BBC news correspondent, and he writes in the headline, "Whatever
happened to global warming?" And he writes, "This headline may come as
a bit of a surprise, so too might the fact that the warmest year
recorded globally was not 2008 or 2007 but in 1998. . . . For the last
11 years we have not observed any increase in global temperatures. And
our climate models did not forecast it, even though man-made carbon
dioxide, the gas thought to be responsible for warming our planet, has
continued to rise." So one of the emails people are really jumping on
now is another email, written by Kevin Trenberth, another climate
scientist. And this was written to Michael Mann, the scientist that
developed the "hockey stick" theory of global warming, where the global
warming took off after the Industrial Revolution. And the key line
there, he talks about how in Boulder, Colorado, where he is, it's
actually getting cooler in October, not warmer� ��"record cool
temperatures. And then the key line is: "The fact is that we can't
account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that
we can't. The CERES data published in the August BAMS 09 supplement on
2008 shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely
wrong. Our observing system is inadequate." So that raises two very
critical questions. Is the data being manipulated to prove a theory,
that man has caused climate change? And to what extent is data that
contradicts the thesis being suppressed? So, again, your reaction. And
what do you make of it all?
MONBIOT: Well, there's a number of different issues being conflated
here. What they were talking about with that "Nature trick" and the
idea of hiding the decline was not the recorded temperature series
showing what the world's average temperature is; it was to do with some
very complicated business of reconciling a proxy record, as I
understand it, from things like tree rings with the actual recorded
temperature record. These people having that correspondence had no
engagement with the actual recorded-temperature record, and they
weren't responsible for measuring it and monitoring it.
JAY: And just to explain this, if I understand this correctly, if
you're going to try to understand what the temperature was for the last
thousand years, there were no television weatherman 1,000 years ago, so
you have use tree rings and whatever kind of physical evidence to kind
of deduce what the temperatures were.
MONBIOT: That's right. And there are some difficulties, I think, in
reconciling the more recent proxy data, which sort of tests the value
of the ancient proxy data with the actual temperature record. Now, what
the scientists say is that the word "trick" actually doesn't mean a
trick to try to disguise something; it means a clever use of statistics
to try to reconcile a whole load of different and competing data sets.
That's an unfortunate word, but I don't think that that word is in
itself damning. "Hide the decline," again they say there's a perfectly
innocent explanation for that, and it's all to do with incredibly
complex statistical analyses. Now, those aren't actually the emails
that concern me. They're not the ones that worry me, because I think
there are good explanations for those emails. Incidentally, you talk
about what Paul Hudson's saying, that there hasn't been a rise in
global temperatures. You know, that is complete nonsense. Eight of the
ten warmest years in the whole temperature record� ��"and this is the
actual measured temperature with thermometers around the world� ��"occurred
since 2001. Eight of the ten warmest years since 1850 occurred since
2001. And what Paul Hudson is talking about� ��"and it's a grotesquely
intellectually dishonest approach� ��"is he's saying no year has been as
warm as 1998; therefore there's been a temperature decline since 1998.
But actually it simply doesn't work like that. Nineteen ninety-eight
was a wild outlier, and even at the time it was recognized as such, and
it was greatly boosted, the temperature in that year, by the El Nià �o
event. And, in fact, the very climate change deniers who are now
saying, "Oh, temperatures have gone down since 1998," in '98 were
saying, "This has nothing to do with climate change. This is El Nià �o."
They can't have it both ways. So there was a very strong El Nià �o event
coupled with the background climate change, which has been taking place
for a long time as a result of industrial emissions in '98. Since then,
the actual trend of emissions has continued to go upwards. In other
words, the average of the last ten years has been much higher than the
average of any preceding ten years, and all the record years, bar two,
have been since 2001. So what's the issue? If you were to say since
1997 let's look at the temperature series, you would see that
temperatures have been consistently higher since 1997. If you look at
1999, temperatures have been consistently higher since 1999. But these
people like Paul Hudson are cherry picking 1998 quite deliberately, in
order to pretend that there's been a decline in temperatures, and it is
simply not true.
JAY: Well, how do you deal with this issue, then, where Trenberth says this is a "travesty" that we can't prove this?
MONBIOT: Well, I mean, I don't know exactly what Trenberth is talking
about, but what we see around the world is monitoring stations which
have been tested to destruction, showing a global rise in average
temperature. And, you know, these are thermometers. We're not talking
about incredibly detailed computer models or proxy indicators or
anything like this. We're just talking about thermometer readings. And
those are going up and up and up.
JAY: Now, you said there are other parts of these emails that concern you more.
MONBIOT: Yes. I'm much more concerned about the emails which appear to
be denying freedom of information requests and trying to prevent
scientific data from being released. I think that's where the real
danger lies, that, you know, science has got to be open, it's got to be
transparent, it's got to be unimpeachable, and withholding data and
trying to frustrate inquiries to get a hold of data, regardless of who
they're from� ��"and, you know, there's no question that some of the people
making those inquiries appear a bit like serial pests, where they're
constantly making life very difficult for these scientists. Regardless
of that, I think you just have to release your data so that other
people can analyze it. Otherwise it's not science. And that's where my
concerns really lie.
JAY: Now, you've called for the resignation of Phil Jones as the head
of [the University of] East Anglia Climate Research Unit. Why?
MONBIOT: Because he wrote an email where he appeared to be encouraging
other scientists to delete material which was subject to a freedom of
information request. That's contrary to the spirit of science, it's
contrary to the spirit of the open Society, and it's also potentially a
criminal matter, because you're not allowed to do that under UK law.
And it seems to me that we have to clear this matter up and we have to
draw it to a close and say, yes, fault has taken place, what these
people have done is not wholly justifiable, and they must be held
accountable for that. I don't think they're bad people. I think they
tried to do a good job. But in that respect they messed up, and we
should be honest enough and broad-shouldered enough to recognize that
and to be able to state that. Now, by comparison to what the climate
change deniers have been doing, what these scientists have done is
nothing. It makes them look pure as the driven snow when you look at
what the denial industry has been doing, where for a very long time
now, two decades, the fossil fuel companies have pooled literally
billions of dollars into trying to persuade the world that climate
change is not taking place. And in misrepresenting the science, in some
cases fabricating the science, direct and straightforward scientific
fraud� ��". I mean, in one instance they published a paper which� ��"they
published it in the font and format of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, which is a very major scientific journal, and they
published it with a forward of a previous chairman of the National
Academy of Sciences to make it look as if it was in fact from that
journal. It was nothing of the kind; it was just a fabricated paper.
Now, that's the sort of thing which is far, far worse than anything
revealed by these emails, embarrassing and deeply disappointing as some
of those emails are. And, you know, what the emails show is that these
scientists can be flawed. They haven't done everything the way they
should have done it. I completely agree with that. But we're talking
about three or four scientists� ��"three or four is an absolute maximum who
have been involved in this� ��"and we're talking about one or two lines of
evidence out of several hundred lines of evidence which show that
man-made climate change is taking place. So to suggest, as some people
have been doing, that this is the end of climate science is just
hyperbolic nonsense. And, you know, you look at the enormous weight of
evidence and you see that the science of climate change is as solid as
the science of evolution, or as the link between smoking and lung
cancer or between HIV and AIDS.
JAY: Mojib Latif, who's a member of the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change), he said that it's not impossible to have several
years of cooling, even as much as a decade or more of cooling, but it
would still not refute the idea that the overall trend is towards
warming. To what extent is that possible, from what your research has
shown you, that we might get a few years of cooling?
MONBIOT: Well, that is possible. We might do. Carbon emissions and
greenhouse gas emissions are not the only driver. The sun is a driver.
We know that. The El Nià �o and La Nià �a events, they're drivers. There
are all sorts of factors involved. But overall, on a long time frame,
the real push for global warming over the past few decades has been
man-made carbon dioxide emissions and other greenhouse gas emissions.
That's very clearly established now. But you wouldn't expect that trend
to be a totally smooth and linear one, because it's what they call a
multivariate trend. In other words, there are lots of variables
involved, and so the trend is going to go like that. That's what's been
happening. But it's been going like that upwards. And so sometimes when
it's going like that, if you take only that tiny little fraction of the
graph, it looks like the temperature's going down, and then it goes
like that and you think, "Oh, is going up again." But what you're
looking at is not the noise but the signal, and the signal is doing
that.
JAY: Well, in the next segment of our interview let's talk about
Copenhagen. Most of the world has accepted the science of the IPCC.
Most of the world scientific community and political community, at
least in words, accepts that we are facing an urgent climate-change
crisis. People, the governments, and state leaders are meeting in
Copenhagen. But is anything real going to get done there? So in the
next segment of our interview, we will discuss Copenhagen. Please join
us for that on The Real News Network.