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Climate change: who do we believe?

By John Schluter | View Archive September 30th, 2008, 4:03 pm
Have you noticed lately there's been a rather big shift in attitudes towards climate change?

Two years ago, there was a huge groundswell of support for the theory that global Warming equals climate change. It's been a time when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change almost unanimously agreed climate change is happening and humans are making a significant contribution.

But there have been a lot of opposing views from equally credible sources, so for a lot of us it's become very confusing. Who and what do we believe?

One thing is for sure, climate change is nothing new. It's been going on since time began and this is yet another spanner in the works.

A good example happened in our own backyard not that long ago. In 1991, Mt Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted and created a sulphuric acid haze that reached into the stratosphere.

Immediately, it spread further through the atmosphere and within two months, the ash was affecting most of the world.

It actually impacted Australia, with more vivid and dramatic sunsets and sunrises. That happens when light from the sun passes through the atmosphere and scatters off the added particles, creating brighter colours.

But the real impact was felt over a much larger area. It's thought for two years after the Mt Pinatubo eruption, the world's climate actually cooled, because the large ash clouds refected heat back into space.

So in theory, the climate changed, but unlike the current thinking, it was without any human intervention.

History has many similar tales to tell. In 1783, Benjamin Franklin noticed after a vocanic eruption in Iceland, sunlight directed through a magnifying glass no longer set fire to a piece of paper.

In 1815, after a huge eruption near Borneo, they went through a period known as "the year without summer", again because of the cooling affect of the volcanic ash.

So the debate goes on, but in many ways a lot of this is certainly nothing new.

Comments

  1. dallasjohnson2006 View Profile

    I myself have reservations about this climate change notion.Whilst I acknowledge that because of our inherent greed causing a great deal of the problems that we are facing there is too much production of largely unnecessary and leisure goods and products .Also manufacturing is of a planned obsolescence nature such as throw-away printers for which replacement cartridges cost as much ,if not more than the purchase price of the article itself, I think cycles are years ,centuries in the making

    Mar 12 04:38 pm
  2. glen411au View Profile

    We are so hell bent on blaming humans for global warming, yet, we forget that it is us humans that still allow third world countries to be third world countries, if "those"people are so hell bent on fixing the world, they can start there, third world countries produce heaps.

    Mar 12 07:55 pm
  3. captthermopyle View Profile

    John, you should be the pin-up for reading less news and watching less TV. You're a ratings whore.

    Mar 19 10:59 am
  4. ourgathering View Profile

    Totally agree with you John.

    Mar 19 11:08 pm
  5. experus7382 View Profile

    Climate change worry indicates we are worried about the state of the planet in general. A better question is: why the worry and fesr? Are we worried the world is coming to an end as in Matchbox Twenty lyrics: 'Let's see how far weve come' -- or should that be 'let's see how much damage we've done'? I find it amazing science can create little wondeful gadets like GPS pens but cannot solve pollution problems -- could it be they just don't care?

    Mar 21 09:18 am

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