| Statement by Atmospheric
Scientists on Greenhouse Warming
February 27, 1992 WASHINGTON, D.C. - As independent scientists, researching atmospheric and climate problems, we are concerned by the agenda for UNCED, the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, being developed by environmental activist groups and certain political leaders. This so-called Earth Summit is scheduled to convene in Brazil in June 1992 and aims to impose a system of global environmental regulations, including onerous taxes on energy fuels, on the population of the United States and other industrialized nations. Such policy initiatives derive from highly uncertain scientific theories. They are based on the unsupported assumption that catastrophic global warming follows from the burning of fossil fuels and requires immediate action. We do not agree. A survey of U.S. atmospheric scientists, conducted in the summer of 1991, confirms that there is no consensus about the cause of the slight warming observed during the past century. A recently published research paper even suggests that sunspot variability, rather than a rise in greenhouse gases, is responsible for the global temperature increases and decreases recorded since about 1880. Furthermore, the majority of scientific participants in the survey agreed that the theoretical climate models used to predict a future warming cannot be relied upon and are not validated by the existing climate record. Yet all predictions are based on such theoretical models. Finally, agriculturalists generally agree that any increase in carbon dioxide levels from fossil fuel burning has beneficial effects on most crops and on world food supply. We are disturbed that activists, anxious to stop energy and economic growth, are pushing ahead with drastic policies without taking notice of recent changes in the underlying science. We fear that the rush to impose global regulations will have catastrophic impacts on the world economy, on jobs, standards of living, and health care, with the most severe consequences falling upon developing countries and the poor. David G. Aubrey, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute Nathaniel B. Guttman, Ph.D., Research Physical Scientist, National Climatic Data Center Hugh W. Ellsaesser, Ph.D., Meteorologist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Richard Lindzen, Ph.D., Center for Meteorology and Physical Meteorology, M.l.T. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Robert C. Balling, Ph.D., Director, Laboratory of Climatology, Arizona State University Patrick Michaels, Ph.D., Assoc. Professor of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia Roger Pielke, Ph.D., Professor of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University Michael Garstang, Ph.D., Professor of Meteorology, University of Virginia Sherwood B. Idso, Ph.D., Research Physicist, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory Lev S. Gandin, Ph.D., UCAR Scientist, National Meteorological Center John A. McGinley, Chief, Forecast Research Group, Forecast Systems Laboratory, NOAA H. Jean Thiebaux, Ph.D., Research Scientist, National Meteorological Center, National Weather Service, NOM Kenneth V. Beard, Ph.D., Professor of Atmospheric Physics, University of Illinois Paul W. Mielke, Jr., Ph.D., Professor, Dept. of Statistics, Colorado State University Thomas Lockhart, Meteorologist, Meteorological Standards Institute Peter F. Giddings, Meteorologist, Weather Service Director Hazen A. Bedke, Meteorologist, Former Regional Director, National Weather Service Gabriel T. Csanady, Ph.D., Eminent Professor, Old Dominion University Roy Leep, Executive Weather Director, Gillett Weather Data Services Terrance J. Clark, Meteorologist, U.S. Air Force Neil L Frank, Ph.D., Meteorologist Michael S. Uhart, Ph.D., Meteorologist, National Weather Service Bruce A. Boe, Ph.D., Director, North Dakota Atmospheric Resource Board Andrew Detwiler, Ph.D., Assoc. Prof., Institute of Atmospheric Sciences, S. Dakota School of Mines & Technology Robert M. Cunningham, Consulting Meteorologist, Fellow, American Meteorological Society Steven R. Hanna, Ph.D., Sigma Research Corporation Elliot Abrams, Meteorologist, Senior Vice President, AccuWeather, Inc. William E. Reifenyder, Ph.D., Consulting Meteorologist, Professor Emeritus, Forest Meteorology, Yale University David W. Reynolds, Research Meteorologist Jerry A. Williams, Meteorologist, President, Oceanroutes, Inc. Lee W. Eddington, Meteorologist, Geophysics Division, Pacific Missile Test Center Werner A. Baum, Ph.D., former Dean, College of Arts & Sciences, Florida State University David P. Rogers, Ph.D., Assoc. Professor of Research Oceanography, Scripps Institution of Oceanography Brian Fiedler, Ph.D., Asst. Professor of Meteorology, School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma Edward A. Brandes, Meteorologist Melvyn Shapiro, Chief of Meteorological Research, Wave Propagation Laboratory, NOM Joseph Zabransky, Jr., Associate Professor of Meteorology, Plymouth State College James A. Moore, Project Manager, Research Applications Program, National Center for Atmospheric Research Daniel J. McNaughton, ENSR Consulting and Engineering Brian Sussman, Meteorologist Robert D. Elliott, Meteorologist, Fellow, American Meteorological Society H. Read McGrath, Ph.D., Meteorologist Earl G. Droessler, Ph.D., North Carolina State University Robert E. Zabrecky, Meteorologist William M. Porch, Ph.D., Atmospheric Physicist, Los Alamos National Laboratory Earle R. Williams, Ph.D, Assoc. Prof. of Meteorology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology S. Fred Singer, Ph.D., Atmospheric Physicist, Univ. of Virginia, President, Science & Environmental Policy Project Please note: Affiliations listed are for identification purposes only. http://www.sepp.org/statment.html Additional recommended reading: http://www.IceAgeNow.org
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