Friday, June 14, 2019

Great Lakes Reveal a Fatal Flaw in Climate Change ‘Science’

Great Lakes Reveal a Fatal Flaw in Climate Change ‘Science’ 



Great Lakes Reveal a Fatal Flaw in Climate Change ‘Science’

I & I Editorial





Lake Erie and Lake Superior — two of the five
that make up the Great Lakes — broke records for water levels this May.
Lakes Michigan and Huron could follow suit.
Naturally, climate change is getting the blame. “We are undoubtedly
observing the effects of a warming climate in the Great Lakes,” says
Richard Rood, a University of Michigan climate scientist.





But just a few years ago, climate scientists were insisting that a warming climate would cause water levels to decline.





In 2008, Science Daily
reported on a study that attributed the decline in Great Lakes water
levels to global warming. The researchers who conducted the study said
that the drop “raised concern because the declines are consistent with
many climate change predictions.”





In 2009, Columbia University’s Earth Institute
informed us that “most climate models suggest that we may see declines
in lake levels over the next 100 years; one suggests that we may see
declines of up to 8.2 feet.”





In 2011, the Union of Concern Scientists said
that “scientists expect water levels in the Great Lakes to drop in both
summer and winter, with the greatest declines occurring in Lakes Huron
and Michigan.”





In 2013, the Natural Resources Defense Council said that “it’s no secret that, partially due to climate change, the water levels in the Great Lakes are getting very low.”





That same year, Think Progress reported
that “Several different climate models for the Great Lakes region all
predict that lake levels will decline over the next century.”





Since the Great Lakes account for 21% of the world’s surface fresh
water, these stories were all wrapped in doom-and-gloom scenarios about
the impact on drinking water, shipping, recreation, and so on.





The very next year, however, water levels started rising.





So what are scientists saying now? Simple. They’re now claiming that the fall and rise of Great Lakes’ water levels are due to climate change.





“Climate change is driving rapid shifts between high and low water levels on the Great Lakes,” is the new “consensus.” 





The truth, of course, is that water levels in the Great Lakes vary
over time. And, as a matter of fact, they varied far more in the past
than they do now. A U.S. Geological Survey notes that “prehistoric levels exceed modern-day fluctuations.”





It says that “Prehistoric variations in lake levels have exceeded by
as much as a factor of 2 (that is, more than 3 meters) the 1.6-meter
fluctuation that spanned the 1964 low level and the 1985-87 high
level.”





And, as anyone who’s ever lived near the Great Lakes knows, the lakes themselves were formed
in the wake a massive change in the earth’s climate — when the glaciers
receded at the end of the Ice Age roughly 14,000 years ago.





So if the lakes’ huge fluctuations in the past weren’t caused by
mankind’s burning fossil fuels, why are scientists so convinced that the
far more minor changes happening today are?





The reason is simple. Climate scientists can blame anything they want
on global warming. The climate models are imprecise enough that no
matter what is happening they can point to it as proof that man-made
climate change is happening. Too much rain, too little rain, bitterly
cold winters, mild winters, more snow, less snow, rising water levels,
falling water levels — they can attribute “climate change” as a cause of
it all.





But if nothing can disprove a theory, and every event, no matter how
contradictory, is proof that the theory is valid, is that really
science? Sounds more like a religion to us.