The United Nation admits to the Global Warming Hoax
THE UN’s climate change chief, Rajendra Pachauri, has
acknowledged a 17-year pause in global temperature rises, confirmed
recently by Britain’s Met Office, but said it would need to last “30 to
40 years at least” to break the long-term global warming trend.
Dr Pachauri, the chairman of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, said that open discussion about controversial science
and politically incorrect views was an essential part of tackling
climate change.
In a wide-ranging interview on topics that included this year’s
record northern summer Arctic ice growth, the US shale-gas revolution,
the collapse of renewable energy subsidies across Europe and the
faltering European carbon market, Dr Pachauri said no issues should be
off-limits for public discussion.
In Melbourne for a 24-hour visit to deliver a lecture for Deakin
University, Dr Pachauri said that people had the right to question the
science, whatever their motivations.
“People have to question these things and science only thrives on the basis of questioning,” Dr Pachauri said.
He said there was “no doubt about it” that it was good for controversial issues to be “thrashed out in the public arena”.
Dr Pachauri’s views contrast with arguments in Australia that views
outside the orthodox position of approved climate scientists should be
left unreported.
Unlike in Britain, there has been little publicity in Australia given
to recent acknowledgment by peak climate-science bodies in Britain and
the US of what has been a 17-year pause in global warming. Britain’s Met
Office has revised down its forecast for a global temperature rise,
predicting no further increase to 2017, which would extend the pause to
21 years.
Thank You: Weasel Zippers