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In a paper entitled ''Nine Facts about Climate Change'', published by the Lavoisier Group, Paltridge stated that he was threatened with funding cuts in the 1990s by his employer, the ], if he publicly expressed his doubts about the extent of the effect of greenhouse emissions.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lavoisier.com.au/articles/greenhouse-science/climate-change/evans2007-4.php |title=Nine Facts about Climate Change |publisher=www.lavoisier.com.au |accessdate=2009-10-12 }}</ref><ref name="threat"> In a paper entitled ''Nine Facts about Climate Change'', published by the Lavoisier Group, Paltridge stated that he was threatened with funding cuts in the 1990s by his employer, the ], if he publicly expressed his doubts about the extent of the effect of greenhouse emissions.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lavoisier.com.au/articles/greenhouse-science/climate-change/evans2007-4.php |title=Nine Facts about Climate Change |publisher=www.lavoisier.com.au |accessdate=2009-10-12 }}</ref><ref name="threat">

Revision as of 18:37, 14 October 2009

Garth William Paltridge
Born (1940-04-24) 24 April 1940 (age 84)
Brisbane, Queensland
NationalityAustralian
Alma materUniversity of Queensland
University of Melbourne
Known forMaximum entropy production (MEP) hypothesis,
Climate change skepticism
Scientific career
FieldsAtmospheric sciences
InstitutionsUniversity of Tasmania

Garth William Paltridge, (born April 4, 1940, Brisbane, Queensland), is a retired Australian atmospheric physicist. He is presently a Visiting Fellow at the Australian National University and Emeritus Professor and Honourary Research Fellow at the Institute of Antarctic and Southern Oceans Studies (IASOS), University of Tasmania. In August 2009 he published a book on the global warming debate, The Climate Caper. Paltridge believes that athropogenic global warming is real, but that the warming will probably be too small to be a threat, and that given time the dire prognoses given in many scientific quarters will be proved wrong.

Career

Paltridge obtained a BSc in 1961 from the University of Queensland, a PhD in 1965 from University of Melbourne and a DSc in 1976 from the University of Queensland. He worked as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in 1966, then as Senior Research Scientist for the Radio and Space Research Station at Ditton Park, Buckinghamshire, England from 1967-1968. In 1968 he took up a role as Research Scientist at the CSIRO, Australia where he remainded until 1981. During that time he worked briefly as a Consultant to the World Meteorological Organization in 1975 in Geneva, Switzerland, where he was involved in the early development of the World Climate Program, and in 1979 he was posted as Senior Visiting Scientist at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). He was elected as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 1980. In 1981 he was seconded as Director of the Environmental Executive of the Institute of Petroleum, and in 1982 he returned to the CSIRO as Chief Research Scientist, where he remained until 1989. He briefly served as Senior Visiting Scientist at the National Climate Program Office from 1989-1990. From 1990 to 2002 he was Professor and Director of the Institute of Antarctic and Southern Oceans Studies at the University of Tasmania and at the same time, from 1991-2002, he was the Chief Executive Officer of the Antarctic Co-operative Research Centre at the University of Tasmania.

Paltridge was involved in studies on stratospheric electricity, the effect of the atmosphere on plant growth and the radiation properties of clouds. Paltridge researched topics such as the optimum design of plants and the economics of climate forecasting, and worked on atmospheric radiation and the theoretical basis of climate. In terms of scientific impact, his most significant contribution has been to show that the earth/atmosphere climate system may have adopted a format that maximises its rate of thermodynamic dissipation, i.e. entropy production. This suggests a governing constraint by a principle of maximum rate of entropy production (MEP). According to this principle, prediction of the broad-scale steady-state distribution of cloud, temperature and energy flows in the ocean and atmosphere may be possible when one has sufficient data about the system for that purpose, but does not have fully detailed data about every variable of the system.

Paltridge has published more than 100 books and scientific papers.

Group affiliations

Paltridge is a speaker at conferences organised by the Lavoisier Group, which organised the launch of Paltridge's book on August 11, 2009 in Melbourne. Lavoisier Group president Hugh Morgan launched the book, and Paltridge responded.

View on climate change

Paltridge has argued that although the addition of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere should cause the surface temperature to rise, he does not believe that the rise would necessarily be large, or even noticeable. He has expressed his view as follows:

In one limited sense the members of the "do something about global warming" lobby are correct. If humans insist on giving the atmosphere an extra dose of carbon dioxide, then indeed one can expect Earth's surface temperature to rise. To be strictly accurate, we should say that its temperature will be higher than it would have been otherwise. Either way, it doesn't take a lot of physical knowledge and insight to accept the statement. It is rather the equivalent of saying that if one hits something with a bat then that something will respond. So it is true, as the lobby delights in telling us at every opportunity, that there is no longer much argument among scientists about the existence of the greenhouse global warming phenomenon. There never was.

The consensus goes no further down the chain of political correctness than this. It is rather naughty of the greenhouse lobby either to say outright, or to imply by judicious omission, that it does.

It has not been solidly established, and it is certainly not accepted by the majority of scientists as proven fact, that global warming from increased atmospheric carbon dioxide will be large enough to be seriously noticeable - let alone large enough to be disastrous. Imagine the response of a well-bedded concrete post when belted by a relatively small bat. In a situation where the post has been around a long time and has in the past survived the beatings of lots of much bigger bats, the chances are that it won’t move much.

He has also questioned the predictions of dangerous rise of sea levels if the Earth warmed by two or three degrees celsius, although he has said that if the flow rate of grounded ice into the sea increased, the sea levels may rise by one or two metres over the next one to two thousand years.

Paltridge has argued against the Australian government's proposed emissions trading legislation. He has said, "Given all the uncertainties about climate change itself and whether in any event its impact on the environment would be positive or negative, it's not exactly an open-and-shut case that one should spend a lot of money on reducing carbon dioxide emissions now." He has suggested instead that it would be better to invest in adaptation strategies. He has said, "We should be looking at this question of adaptation, which we'll have to do anyway, and setting up society so it can adapt is possibly more important than trying to restrict the amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere at the moment and, by implication, restricting our industrial expansion."


In a paper entitled Nine Facts about Climate Change, published by the Lavoisier Group, Paltridge stated that he was threatened with funding cuts in the 1990s by his employer, the CSIRO, if he publicly expressed his doubts about the extent of the effect of greenhouse emissions.

Book: The Climate Caper

In the short (111-page) book, Paltridge criticises the IPCC for having become a permanent feature with its own bureaucracy spawning a continuing series of reports which have not changed our basic knowledge of the problem. Yet, he maintains, the science of global warming is far less settled than climate scientists admit. He points to a lack of experimental data with which to compare the modelled predictions of temperature rise. He argues further that with the politicisation of the greenhouse effect issue, it has become almost impossible for dissenters to enter the field. In his view, it has been neither solidly established nor accepted as such by a majority of scientists that global warming from increased atmospheric carbon dioxide will be large enough to be even noticeable, much less disastrous.

In the final chapter, Paltridge discusses what he sees as the "hidden agendas" of those advocating for mitigation on climate change, whom he calls "warmists". He suggests that the French President, Jacques Chirac, is pushing for carbon cap-and-trade as a first step towards global government; he believes that others have an agenda to redistribute wealth globally; the powerbrokers of the European Union "look upon such action as a basis for legitimacy"; bureaucrats the world over simply crave for the sort of power which, "until now, has been wielded only by the major religions". More generally, he writes, "there are those who, like the politically correct everywhere, are driven by a need for public expression of their own virtue."

The book was recommended by fellow global warming skeptic, Christopher Monckton, in the book's foreword:

Nevertheless, when the history of the bizarre intellectual aberration that is “global warming” comes to be written, once it is even clearer than it already is that the disasters, catastrophes, cataclysms and apocalypses that have been so luridly and so widely predicted have not and will not come to pass, Dr. Paltridge’s little book will be regarded as one of the few, rare, precious beacons of enlightenment that prevented humanity from wandering through carelessness, ignorance and absent-mindedness into a new Dark Age.

Ray Evans, co-founder and President of the New Right think tank, the H R Nicholls Society, said this of the book:

Having read the manuscript I can endorse this book without reservation. It is written by a scientist who was at the top of the scientific establishment in Australia, and who saw at first hand the intellectual corruption which went hand in hand with government funding of science "research". The book is written in a whimsical style, reminiscent of P G Wodehouse, and is difficult to put down.

Selected Publications

References

  1. Australian National University. "Prof. Garth Paltridge". Retrieved 2009-10-09.
  2. ^ "The over-blown science of global warming - On Line Opinion - 17/8/2009". www.onlineopinion.com.au. Retrieved 2009-08-18. ...there is no longer much argument among scientists about the existence of the greenhouse global warming phenomenon.
  3. ^ University of Melbourne. "Paltridge, Garth William (1940 - )". Retrieved 2009-07-29.
  4. "About the author". Connor Court. 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-29. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. Paltridge, G. W. "The steady-state format of global climate" (PDF). Q. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc. 104 (442)): 927-945.
  6. "Publications of Garth W. Paltridge" (PDF). Retrieved 2009-09-10.
  7. Clive Hamilton (2007). Scorcher: The Dirty Politics of Climate Change. Black Inc. pp. p. 140. ISBN 0977594904. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  8. "The Lavoisier Group: About The Lavoisier Group". www.lavoisier.com.au. Retrieved 2009-10-12.
  9. "Quadrant Online - Accomplices in deceit". www.quadrant.org.au. Retrieved 2009-10-12.
  10. BBC (11th February, 2000). "Limited sea rises expected". Retrieved 2009-10-10. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ Duffy, Michael (9th April, 2005). "A cold, hard look at a hot topic". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2009-07-29. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ABC News Online (4th April, 2005). "Adaptation the key to surviving climate change, scientists say". ABC News Online. Retrieved 2009-10-10. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  13. "Nine Facts about Climate Change". www.lavoisier.com.au. Retrieved 2009-10-12.
  14. Devine, Miranda (2nd March, 2006). "A debate begging for more light". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2009-07-29. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  15. ^ Akerman, Piers (30th July, 2009). "The folly of emissions trading". Geelong Advertiser. Retrieved 2009-07-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  16. Pearson, Christopher (12th September, 2009). "Global warming hotheads freeze out science's sceptics". The Australian. Retrieved 2009-09-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. Forbes, Viv (2009). "The Climate Caper and the RAT Scheme". quotegator.com. Retrieved 2009-07-30.

See also

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