Why is Washington Completely out of Touch on Climate?

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse points out the obvious. Everyone on the planet with functioning brain cells gets climate change, and yet Washington has become paralyzed on the issue. Excerpts from the video transcript:

They are propagating two big lies. One is that environmental regulations are a burden to the economy and we need to lift those burdens to spur our economic recovery. The second is the jury is still out on climate changes caused by carbon pollution, so we don’t need to worry about it or even take precautions.

For instance, before the 1990 acid rain rules went into effect, Peabody Coal estimated that compliance would cost $3.9 billion. The Edison Electric Institute chimed in and estimated that compliance would cost $4 to $5 billion. Well, in fact, the Energy Information Administration calculated the program actually cost $836 million, about one-sixth of the Edison Electric Institute estimate.

When polluters were required to phase out the chemicals they were emitting that were literally burning a hole through our Earth’s atmosphere, they warned that it would create “severe economic and social disruption” due to “shutdowns of refrigeration equipment in supermarkets, office buildings, hotels, and hospitals.” Well, in fact, the phaseout happened 4 years to 6 years faster than predicted; it cost 30 percent less than predicted; and the American refrigeration industry innovated and created new export markets for its environmentally friendly products.

Their other big lie the jury is still out on is whether human-made carbon pollution causes dangerous climate change and oceanic change. Virtually all of our most prestigious scientific and academic institutions have stated that climate change is happening and that human activities are the driving cause of this change. Many of us in Congress received a letter from those institutions in October 2009. Let me quote from that letter.

“Observations throughout the world make it clear that climate change is occurring, and rigorous scientific research demonstrates that the greenhouse gases emitted by human activities are the primary driver. These conclusions are based on multiple independent lines of evidence, and contrary assertions are inconsistent with an objective assessment of the vast body of peer-reviewed science.”

Let me repeat that last quote.

“Contrary assertions are inconsistent with an objective assessment of the vast body of peer-reviewed science.”

This letter was signed by the heads of the following organizations: the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Chemical Society, the American Geophysical Union, the American Institute of Biological Sciences, the American Meteorological Society, the American Society of Agronomy, the American Society of Plant Biologists, the American Statistical Association, the Association of Ecosystem Research Centers, the Botanical Society of America, the Crop Science Society of America, the Ecological Society of America, the Natural Science Collections Alliance, the Organization of Biological Field Stations, the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, the Society of Systematic Biologists, the Soil Science Society of America, and the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.

These are highly esteemed scientific organizations. They are the real deal. They don’t think the jury is still out. They recognize that, in fact, the verdict is in, and it is time to act.

Let me look for a moment at the book I talked about, “Our Astonishing Atmosphere,” published in 1955–the year I was born, more than half a century ago–for the “Science for Every Man Series.” Let me read:

Although the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere remains at a concentration of 0.03 percent all over the world, the amount in the air has not always been the same. There have been periods in the world’s history when the air became charged with more carbon dioxide than it now carries. There have also been periods when the concentration has fallen unusually low. The effects of these changes have been profound. They are believed to have influenced the climate of the earth by controlling the amount of energy that is lost by the earth into space. Nearly a century ago, the British scientist John Tyndall suggested that a fall in the atmospheric carbon dioxide could allow the earth to cool whereas a rise in the carbon dioxide would make it warmer. With the help of its carbon dioxide, the atmosphere acts like a greenhouse that traps the heat of the sun. Radiations reaching the atmosphere as sunshine can penetrate to the surface of the earth. Here, they are absorbed, providing the world with warmth. But the earth itself radiating energy outwards in the form of long-wave heat rays. If these could penetrate the air as the sunshine does, they could carry off much of the heat provided by the sun. Carbon dioxide in the air helps to stop the escape of heat radiations. It acts like a blanket to keep the world warm. And the more carbon dioxide the air contains, the more efficiently does it smother the escape of the earth’s heat. Fluctuation in the carbon dioxide of the air has helped to bring about major climate changes experienced by the world in the past.

This is 1955. This is “Our Astonishing Atmosphere,” out of the “Science for Every Man Series.” This is not something that was just invented.

10 thoughts on “Why is Washington Completely out of Touch on Climate?”


  1. The Greenhouse Effect is an imperfect analogy (because a greenhouse works by trapping the air inside it not be preventing outgoing long-wave radiation). The analogy of a blanket is actually much better but, whatever analogy you prefer, the reality of the effect of even 0.04% CO2 in the atmosphere has not now been in doubt for 150 years.

    The planet Mars is half the diameter and and eighth of the volume of Earth. It could not retain its internal heat, ceased to be volcanically active, and lost its atmosphere a very long time ago. The planet Venus is very similar size to Earth but is – and has long been – 100s of times more volcanically active than Earth. It’s atmosphere is so dense and so stuffed-full of volcanic gases that the surface temperature and pressure are 90 times that here on Earth.

    Does this mean that what humans do is of no consequence? Absolutely not.
    Given that the USGS now estimate that human activity is pumping well over 100 times more CO2 into the atmosphere than all the Earths’ volcanoes put together, it is time humanity stopped lying to itself and accepted that it may just be that we are endangering the biodiversity of our so-called “Goldilocks” planet. But I am preaching to the converted…


    1. Unlike Venus, Earth also has geological and biological carbon cycles which reabsorb atmospheric CO2. We’re overwhelming that gift in a big way. Not to worry, the Earth will terminate our CO2 experiment long before it resembles Venus.


      1. Very true. Sadly this does not stop reality-inverters like James Delingpole from claiming that because they referred to Earth as having a human cancer, the Club of Rome must therefore be bunch of misanthropic Communists; and that because she caused highly eco-toxic organic pesticides to be banned, Rachel Carson was a Communist seeking to wreak misery on humans while saving a few birds (and of course his kind seem to have an ideologially induced blind spot when it comes to things like Union Carbide’s generous gift to the people of Bhopal)…


      2. I would suggest you not take that on faith. It’s not a leap to imagine humans burning every last bit of fossil fuels we can find in a desperate attempt to live in an increasingly hot planet.

        That could be enough to tip us into an ocean-evaporating feedback loop that would send us into the “Venus scenario”.


        1. Not faith in human nature. Faith in science’s conclusions that a fossil fuel based energy economy will collapse long before a Venus like runaway GHG effect that boils the oceans. For comparison, 4% of all species survived the PETM. Here we are, 52,000,000 years later, recreating the same conditions at a much faster pace.


  2. Mahalo Peter and the posters of all these important comments. I will summarize and promote this webpage and the Senator’s eloquent remarks on newser.com. I would like to see Senator Whitehouse in the White House.

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