Russel Norman

Science is inconvenient

by Russel Norman

It seems that United Future want to exclude methane from any post Kyoto agreement on limiting greenhouse emissions. The reasoning is, sad to say, laughable really:

Ruminant animals (cattle, sheep, deer, goats) manufacture methane gas because they chew the cud and have a stomach of four compartments. In our view the emphasis should be on human induced climate change and exclude naturally occurring activity of this kind.

Now I may have missed something but it seems to me that dairy cows don’t just naturally occur on farms in NZ. They were put there by people as part of a human created economic system that requires constant attention by humans. I know that methane emissions from cows are rather inconvenient for us because of the problem of figuring out how to reduce them, but they still are greenhouse gases and will still produce climate change.

That’s the annoying thing about science, sometimes it’s downright inconvenient. But it’s best to base climate policy on science rather than convenience or a few decades down the track we might have some real inconvenience. One thing that is apparently a naturally occuring activity is wilful ignorance (though a bit of help from the climate denial industry does seem to help it survive).

Published in Environment & Resource Management by Russel Norman on Wed, April 18th, 2007   

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