国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

OP Rana

Trivialize climate data at our own peril

By Op Rana (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-04-09 07:37
Large Medium Small

The jury is still out on Rajendra K. Pachauri. The embattled head of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has been cleared of charges that the agency received funds from private companies. But Pachauri has to wait until autumn sheds the toxic leaves that are threatening to poison his IPCC tree.

Pachauri has faced attacks, many of them blatantly racist, from every possible corner of the globe. But let's be clear, if Pachauri deserved the bouquets for IPCC's good work, he has to accept the brickbats for its failures and lapses, too. There can be no excuse for the IPCC's flawed report saying the Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035. Nor can the manipulation of climate change data, as suggested by leaked e-mails of University of East Anglia scientists, be defended.

But the question is: Why didn't climate skeptics have the insight and counterdata to question the IPCC's findings on Himalayan glaciers and trivial other facts? The fact is that almost all IPCC data is indisputable.

So at stake here is more than climate change data. Pachauri was chosen to lead the IPCC not because he was an Indian but because former US president George W. Bush rooted for him, thinking he would help the developed world's cause.

The world, however, knows Pachauri didn't do that. Instead, he went on to present a report that made the world sit up to the reality of climate change. He became a household name overnight and shared the Nobel Peace Price with former US vice-president Al Gore for his role in trying to save the planet.

This is something that developed countries couldn't accept. Climate skeptics, who mostly come from developed countries, were waiting for an excuse to throttle the IPCC and Pachauri. And Pachauri offered them that on a platter in the shape of the Himalayan glacier report and the leaked e-mails.

That is what happens when an all-important organization like the IPCC doesn't have a permanent head. The IPCC may not be a supervisory or administrative body. But in more ways than one it has the power to shape the future of our planet - the least it could do is point out the problems and suggest the solutions. Such an important body can't do without a permanent head, which Pachauri is not.

Pachauri heads the New Delhi-based TERI (The Energy and Resources Institute), too, which landed him in a soup. He has been accused of taking favors from private companies. But KPMG, a professional services company that examined the personal finances of Pachauri, has cleared him of any wrongdoing.

Leaders of countries, whose interests were being compromised because of the measures they had to take to counter climate change, as well as big private companies and climate skeptics were waiting for a chance to pounce on Pachauri. Such has been the impact of the IPCC controversy that even green activists are divided over Pachauri. The Friends of the Earth and World Wide Fund for Nature defend Pachauri, but Greenpeace says he should resign to restore the reputation of the IPCC and the UN.

So what do we do now - pretend that climate change is a myth, as some climate skeptics say, or do something to counter the threat?

Perhaps Pachauri gives the best answer to this. Accusing politicians and prominent climate skeptics of "a new form of persecution" against scientists who work on global warming, he has said that scientific knowledge of climate change is "something we distort and trivialize at our peril".

We have been doing exactly that, as James Lovelock, the man behind the Gaia theory, said recently. The scientist who said the planet behaves like a single organism, claimed humans were "not clever enough" to handle climate change problems. "I don't think we're yet evolved to the point where we're clever enough to handle as complex a situation as climate change," he said. "The inertia of humans is so huge that you can't really do anything meaningful."

The controversial scientist warned that only a catastrophic event would persuade humans that the threat of climate change was serious.

The problem is that by the time such a catastrophe strikes it will be too late to act.

E-mail: oprana@hotmail.com

滕州市| 保山市| 白朗县| 富民县| 龙门县| 新昌县| 乐亭县| 宣汉县| 柘荣县| 太保市| 浦北县| 包头市| 阆中市| 讷河市| 黑水县| 双辽市| 三亚市| 安平县| 铜梁县| 闻喜县| 博爱县| 洛浦县| 讷河市| 平南县| 唐山市| 上栗县| 阿坝县| 桃园市| 黄骅市| 诏安县| 来宾市| 曲水县| 宣武区| 大安市| 灵宝市| 双桥区| 敦煌市| 关岭| 望奎县| 汤阴县| 遵义县|