'Cap and Trade Is Dead'
The recently disclosed emails and documents from University
of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit compromise the integrity of the United
Nations' global warming reports.
by Kimberley Strassel
WSJ.com
So declares Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe, taking a few minutes away from a
Thanksgiving retreat with his family. "Ninety-five percent of the nails were in
the coffin prior to this week. Now they are all in."
If any politician might be qualified to offer last rites, it would be Mr.
Inhofe. The top Republican on the Environment and Public Works Committee has
spent the past decade in the thick of Washington's climate fight. He's seen the
back of three cap-and-trade bills, rode herd on an overweening Environmental
Protection Agency, and steadfastly insisted that global researchers were
"cooking" the science behind man-made global warming.
This week he's looking prescient. The more than 3,000 emails and documents
from the University of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit (CRU) that have found
their way to the Internet have blown the lid off the "science" of manmade global
warming. CRU is a nerve center for many of those researchers who have authored
the United Nations' global warming reports and fueled the political movement to
regulate carbon.
Their correspondence show a claque of scientists massaging data to make it
fit their theories, squelching scientists who disagreed, punishing academic
journals that didn't toe the apocalyptic line, and hiding their work from public
view. "It's no use pretending that this isn't a major blow," glumly wrote George
Monbiot, a U.K. writer who has been among the fiercest warming alarmists. The
documents "could scarcely be more damaging." And that's from a believer.
Associated Press
Sen. Jim Inhofe
This scandal has real implications. Mr. Inhofe notes that international and
U.S. efforts to regulate carbon were already on the ropes. The growing fear of
Democrats and environmentalists is that the CRU uproar will prove a tipping
point, and mark a permanent end to those ambitions.
Internationally, world leaders finally acknowledged that the recession has
sapped them of their political power to impose devastating new
carbon-restrictions. China and India are clear they won't join the West in an
economic suicide pact. Next month's summit in Copenhagen is a bust. Instead of
producing legally binding agreements, it will be dogged by queries about the
legitimacy of the scientists who wrote the reports that form its basis.
The next opportunity to get international agreement is in Mexico City, 2010—a
U.S. election year. Democrats were already publicly acknowledging there will be
no domestic climate legislation in 2009 and privately acknowledging their great
unease at passing a huge energy tax on Americans headed for a midterm vote.
Add to that the CRU scandal, which pivots the focus to potential fraud.
Republicans are launching investigations, and the pressure is building on
Democrats to hold hearings, since climate scientists were funded with U.S.
taxpayer dollars. Mr. Inhofe's office this week sent letters to federal agencies
and outside scientists warning them not to delete their own CRU-related emails
and documents, which may also be subject to Freedom of Information requests.
Polls show a public already losing belief in the theory of man-made global
warming, and skeptics are now on the offense. The Competitive Enterprise
Institute's Myron Ebell argues this scandal gives added cover to Blue Dogs and
other Democrats who were already reluctant to buck the public's will and vote
for climate legislation. And with Republicans set to pick up seats, Mr. Ebell
adds, "By 2011 there will hopefully be even fewer members who support this. We
may be close to having it permanently stymied." Continued U.S. failure to act
makes an international agreement to replace Kyoto (which expires in 2012) a
harder sell.
There's still the EPA, which is preparing an "endangerment finding" that
would allow it to regulate carbon on the grounds it is a danger to public
health. It is here the emails might have the most direct effect. The agency has
said repeatedly that it based its finding on the U.N. science—which is now at
issue. The scandal puts new pressure on the EPA to accede to growing demands to
make public the scientific basis of its actions.
Mr. Inhofe goes so far as to suggest that the agency might not now issue the
finding. "The president knows how punitive this will be; he's never wanted to do
it through [the EPA] because that's all on him." The EPA was already out on a
legal limb with its finding, and Mr. Inhofe argues that if it does go ahead, the
CRU disclosure guarantees court limbo. "The way the far left used to stop us is
to file lawsuits and stall and stall. We'll do the same thing."
Still, if this Democratic Washington has demonstrated anything, it's that
ideology often trumps common sense. Egged on by the left, dug in to their
position, Democrats might plow ahead. They'd be better off acknowledging that
the only "consensus" right now is that the world needs to start over on climate
"science."
Write to kim@wsj.com
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