This
illustrates that the silencing of scientists didn’t start
yesterday. Prof. Peter Barrett was forced to change his message back
in 2004
Global
warming won't cause extinction, just civilisation's end
The
winner of one of New Zealand's top science medals, Professor Peter
Barrett, has backed off a controversial claim that humanity faces
extinction within 100 years because of global warming.
18
November, 2004
By
SIMON COLLINS
Dr
Barrett, who was presented with the Royal Society's Marsden Medal in
Christchurch last night, gave the Christchurch Press notes for his
acceptance speech in which he planned to say: "If we continue
our present growth path we are facing extinction - not in millions of
years, or even millennia, but by the end of this century."
After
a storm of criticism, he changed the word "extinction" in
his speech last night to "the end of civilisation as we know
it".
Dr
Barrett, 64, the director of Victoria University's Antarctic Research
Centre, has used ancient air particles trapped in Antarctic ice to
show changes in carbon dioxide are linked with changes in the polar
ice sheets and the Earth's climate. His work has been widely cited in
the world's scientific journals.
But
his own colleagues were embarrassed yesterday after his initial
speech notes were reported.
"I
certainly wouldn't be using that language," said Dr Jim
Salinger, the lead author for the Australia and New Zealand chapter
of the next global assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change.
Dr
Tim Naish of the Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences, who
has worked with Dr Barrett in Antarctica for many years, said he
talked to him at length after his speech notes were reported and
said, "I don't think he meant to say that in 100 years we'll all
be gone.
"I
personally, and I think the majority of scientists, would find his
comments, as they were reported, hard to defend from a scientific
basis," Dr Naish said.
Auckland
engineer Bryan Leyland, a climate change sceptic, said small ice
sheets had melted but there was no evidence the rest of Antarctica
was warming.
Dr
Salinger said Antarctic ice showed that carbon dioxide ranged between
180 and 280 parts per million during natural cycles caused by changes
in the Earth's orbit over the past 400,000 years, but had now reached
374 ppm.
Dr
Barrett said smaller climatic changes had destroyed past
civilisations and humanity could not run the risk of rising carbon
dioxide levels.
"The
last time carbon dioxide levels were this high was before humans
evolved," he said.
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