Gore forecasts ice cap meltdown within years
Arrives at meeting in motorcade, suggests attendees ride bicycles
Posted: July 24, 2008
12:00 am Eastern
By Christina Miller
© 2008 WorldNetDaily
A complete meltdown of the North Pole ice cap resulting in
environmental catastrophes for Greenland and other northern nations,
generating a flood of "climate refugees." The latest horror flick
storyline? No. Al Gore's latest forecast.
Gore has declared that because of the potentially horrifying
consequences, he wants the U.S. to move to entirely renewable sources
of electricity within 10 years.
"[It's] fantastic that he set the goal he did," said Alan Cohen of
the Baltimore Climate Action Network, an offshoot of Chesapeake Climate
Action Network. "I also wish Gore were running for president, but
that's another issue."
The former vice-president told a recent meeting of the Daughters of
the American Revolution that the climate crisis is worsening so quickly
that the meltdown scenario is possible "within a few years."
He also said tornadoes, floods, wildfires and other catastrophes can be blamed on environmental damage due to global warming.
Gore, however, did not mention that the winter of 2007-2008 was the coldest on record worldwide. Nor did he discuss confirmation from the editor of Physics & Society, a newsletter of the American Physical Society, that many of the group's members don't believe humans are the primary cause of climate change.
Nor was included in his speech reports of the Petition Project,
which has collected the signatures of more than 31,000 scientists,
including 9,000 Ph.D.s, who deny that global warming can be attributed
to man's activities.
Nevertheless, Gore said the solution to the climate crisis is to
reduce dependence on carbon-based fuel. He told the audience America's
best achievements have resulted from setting short-term goals because
people do not pay attention in the long term.
Gore laid out a plan that in 10 years would see all of the nation's electric energy come from solar and wind power. He cited a finding that the amount of solar energy that falls on the earth in 40 minutes could supply all of the country's electricity needs for one year.
Gore pledged his faith to efficiency and conservation
improvements that could be obtained through international treaties,
starting with the United Nations Climate Change conference in
Copenhagen next year.
He said the biggest obstacle to reducing energy dependency is
politics and self-government. He called the current political system
too sold out to special interests to make any serious improvements in
climate change.
Attendee David Stone said Gore's speech was a "bold call to action"
in combating climate and global warming issues. He also said that even
though it is an unpopular position, he believes taxes and the cost of
living should rise in the U.S. to promote fuel efficiency and energy
independence.
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Gore's challenge would
simply restructure the entire electricity supply system across the
nation. That industry depends on coal for about half of its power,
natural gas for about a quarter, and nuclear and hydropower sources
providing lesser amounts, according to the U.S. Energy Information
Administration.
Jime Owen of Edison Electric Institute said the idea to use more
renewable energy is fine, but there's no way the nation's energy needs
will be met by such sources over the next 10 years.
"We cannot do the job with renewables and energy efficiency alone,"
he told the Chronicle. "We have to have a balanced energy portfolio
that includes all those things in even higher percentages, but also has
to include nuclear. And we frankly think that nuclear should be
increased."
Gore, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and 2000 Democratic presidential
candidate, said his solution solves three problems at one time.
"We're borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf
to burn it in ways that destroy the planet," he told the Chronicle.
"Every bit of that's got to change.
Such statements, however, came in for ridicule in a commentary at Human Events.
"Al Gore did not claim he invented electricity. … But the words he
uttered in his challenge on energy carried just as much fantasy," wrote
Cassandra Kane. "The Alliance for Climate Protection, a supposedly
bipartisan group Gore leads, estimates the costs of transforming the
U.S. to clean electricity sources at $1.5 trillion to $3 trillion over
30 years in public and private money. That's an investment of about 30
percent of a year of America's Gross Domestic Product.
"Gore said in the speech that we must 'move beyond empty rhetoric.'
Yes, agreed. But why don’t Gore and his Democrat counterparts heed
their own advice?" she asked.
She cited a 2007 report from the Tennessee Center for Policy
Research that the Gore family burned through more than twice the
electricity in one month than an average American family uses in an
entire year. Gore contended that his 10,000-square-foot Nashville
mansion is not an "average" home and that he and his wife Tipper work
from home. He assured America he was using energy-saving technology to
reduce the family footprint down to zero, she said.
"However, a TCPR report released last month shows that Gore actually
increased his energy use by 10 percent, despite all of the supposed
steps to make his home more energy-efficient."
WND columnist Doug Powers raised a similar issue.
"Gore showed up to the speech with a carbon nightmare of a
motorcade, complete with two Lincoln Town Cars and a Suburban SUV.
Would it be too much to ask that Gore at least pretend to
believe what he preaches?" he suggested. "Prior to the speech, Gore had
encouraged all attendees to walk, ride a bicycle or take public
transportation. Now it's apparent why: He needed the carbon offsets."
Physics & Society Editor Jeffrey Marque
says there's a "considerable presence within the scientific community"
of experts who don't agree with contentions human-produced CO2
emissions likely are the primary cause of global warming that has
occurred since the Industrial Revolution.
The publication's July issue features a paper by Lord Christopher Monckton, the science
adviser to Britain's Margaret Thatcher administration. Monckton
concludes scientific modeling has grossly overstated the rate of
temperature change caused by greenhouse gas.
WND
also has reported on the work of Art Robinson, a research professor of
chemistry who co-founded the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine,
and whose Petition Project has collected the names of thousands of scientists.
Robinson's petition states:
"There is no convincing scientific evidence that human
release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gases is
causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating
of the Earth's atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific
evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many
beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of
the Earth."