Global Warming Is No Hoax

Former CAAV Chair Les Grady
Former CAAV Chair Les Grady

Global Warming Is No Hoax, Les Grady
February 19, 2015, Daily News-Record

Although the editor would have us believe that global warming is a hoax, that is far from the truth (“How Hot Is It?” Feb. 13 *see this below).

For an analysis of the news stories and blogs upon which the editorial was based, read “Nothing False about Temperature Data” at FactCheck.org.

Calculating the global mean temperature record is complicated. For an explanation of why and how adjustments must be made to the raw data from weather stations see “The Thinking Person’s Guide to Climate Change” by Robert Henson or read “Instrumental Temperature Record” on Wikipedia.

As much as we fixate on global air temperatures, more than 90 percent of the heat gained by Earth has gone into the oceans. That record shows a steady and inexorable climb, demonstrating clearly that Earth is warming in a manner consistent with the increase in greenhouse gases.

Leslie Grady Jr.
Harrisonburg

*How Hot Is It?
Daily News-Record, February 13, 2015

Shortly after 2014 melded into 2015, we were told – ad infinitum and nauseam – that the former was the “hottest year on record.” The implication: Man is so intent on baking the planet, so get ready for more of the same. Year after sweltering year.

But what if this isn’t so? What if the only things getting cooked are the data on which these lamentations are based? That seems to be the case. Francis Menton, who writes the Manhattan Contrarian blog, points his readers to Christopher Booker of London’s Telegraph, who calls into question 2014’s distinction as the “hottest year on record,” employing words such as “fraud” and “scandal.”

The basic charge cited in both articles was this: To quote Mr. Menton, “The past has been cooled to make the present look warmer by comparison.” At first blush, this sounds so diabolical as to totally strain credulity. So how, really, can such an allegation be credibly explained?

Simply stated, intrepid researchers such as Paul Homewood and Tony Heller have culled historical data from myriad weather stations across the globe – from Paraguay to Siberia to upstate New York – and found a similar pattern of tampering: “one-way adjustments” downward. That is, the willful rejiggering of data to establish evidence of irrefutable, and perhaps irreversible, global warming.

Consider Mr. Booker’s summary of Mr. Homewood’s findings:

“Homewood has now turned his attention to the weather stations across much of the Arctic, between Canada (51 degrees W) and the heart of Siberia (87 degrees E). Again, in nearly every case, the same one-way adjustments have been made, to show warming up to 1 degree C or more higher than was indicated by the data that was actually recorded. This has surprised no one more than Traust Jonsson, who was long in charge of climate research for the Iceland met office (and with whom Homewood has been in touch). Jonsson was amazed to see how the new version completely `disappears’ Iceland’s “`sea ice years’ around 1970, when a period of extreme cooling almost devastated his country’s economy.”

Mr. Menton concludes that “hottest year on record” declarations have been tendered without proper – or any – examination of satellite data. And none of the reports trumpeting the distinction (whether in Scientific American and The New York Times or by the BBC), he says, refer to these data.

“[A]nybody who follows this issue even a little,” Mr. Menton writes, “knows that beginning in 1979 the U.S. government at great taxpayer expense has put up satellites with sophisticated instruments to get much more accurate measurements of world temperatures than previously available. … Luckily it’s not too hard to figure out what the satellites say.”

And that is? Precisely this, notes Mr. Menton: “2014 was not the hottest year, nor close, but rather tied for 6th/7th place in the 36-year record … 0.3 degrees Celsius cooler than the warmest year, which was 1998 – 16 years ago. Now 0.3 degrees C may not be a lot, but it’s also not a little in a record that only varies by about 1.2 degrees C from coolest to warmest year.”

No wonder Mr. Menton calls climate change, formerly known as global warming, “the greatest scientific fraud of all time.”

Are Local Reps Dragging Feet On Environment?

Joy Loving © Matt Schmachtenberg
Joy Loving © Matt Schmachtenberg

Are Local Reps Dragging Feet On Environment?, Joy Loving
Daily News-Record, February 13, 2015

A recent editorial in the Virginian Pilot reported on the defeat of the Virginia Coastal Protection Act put forward by Republican Del. Ron Villaneuva, R-Virginia Beach, and Democratic Sen. Donald McEachin, D-Henrico. Virginia would have joined the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.

This “East Coast cap and trade program lets states sell carbon allowances to utilities, with a goal of reducing emissions,” the Pilot reported. Money raised through the program would have prepared for sea-level rise and sinking land along our coast, bolstered our renewable energy industry, and assisted coal miners whose jobs are shrinking rapidly.

Too bad my local legislators did not support this market-driven way to create jobs and retrain workers whose jobs are going away. Are Sen. Emmett Hanger, R-Mount Solon, and Del. Steven Landes, R-Weyers Cave, among state lawmakers who for years, the Pilot claimed, “have dragged their feet rather than addressing the threat, sacrificing the long-term security of critical assets and communities to partisan crusades and gamesmanship”?

Joy Loving
Grottoes

Virginia A Dark Hole Of Ignorant Policy?

Laura cropped.pic
CAAV Chair Laura Dansby

Virginia A Dark Hole Of Ignorant Policy?, Laura Dansby
Daily News-Record, February 12, 2015

The Atlantic Ocean has risen 18 inches at Sewells Point in Norfolk. Del. Ron Villanueva, R-Virginia Beach, introduced The Virginia Coastal Protection Act.

The goal of the bill is to reduce heat-trapping emissions and raise money for coastal adaptation. This is accomplished by allowing states to sell carbon allowances to utilities.

Virginia would join 10 other Eastern states in a program that would raise $200 million per year for Virginia toward coastal adaptation. Also, a portion of the funds would strengthen renewable energy programs and help to economically diversify Virginia’s dying coal region. Unsurprisingly, Dominion opposed the bill and it failed. Ron Villanueva, a Republican, but he gets it.

The people on the coast, the U.S. military, and the politicians know something must be done. Virginia should be the jewel in the crown of the Eastern Seaboard, not a dark hole of ignorant policy.

Laura Dansby
Keezletown

Don’t Even Think about It

DontEvenThinkAboutItI recently finished reading Don’t Even Think about It – Why Our Brains Are Wired to Ignore Climate Change by George Marshall, Bloomsbury, New York, ©2014, ISBN: 978-1-62040-133-0.  As one who tries to engage the public on the issue, I found the book to be very helpful in understanding the full dimension of our reluctance to talk about climate change and in gaining insight into how I might approach the subject. As Marshall notes, “If climate change becomes intentionally harmful only when people know they are causing it, is it any surprise that most people do everything they can to avoid learning about it or accepting that it exists?”

As important as the moral dimension of climate change is, Marshall cautions that we must be very careful in raising that dimension. As Jonathan Haidt points out in his book The Righteous Mind, various groups in our culture place different degrees of emphasis on each of the six moral foundations.  Consequently, moral demands must be carefully tailored to speak to the values of the group being addressed or they will fail to have the desired effect, and may backfire.  In fact, when discussing framing (i.e., how we present the issue), Marshall says “Never assume that what works for you will work for others.  Indeed, the fact that you strongly like something may well be an indication that people with other values will hate it.” Insights such as this were very helpful to me.

It is always gratifying when an author presents a concept that you, too, had been pondering. Thus, I was pleased to read that Marshall also thinks that we need to mourn the end of the fossil fuel age, which was “exceptionally affluent, mobile, and exciting. The low-carbon world will have new pleasures, but no longer the sweet roar of the Ford Mustang V8.”  As a former owner of a 1965 Mustang (in 1965) and as a person who drove sports cars for years, I really identify with that idea.  Fossil fuels brought us many benefits, but now it is time to let them go.  As we do so, many of us will long for the “old days” and hate to give them up.  We should acknowledge that loss and create a way for people to grief, thereby helping us move on to a new future.  Such acknowledgement may also serve as a bridge to communities we aren’t currently reaching.

While the book is full of little seeds for further thought, I’ll bring up just one more. Marshall thinks that the climate change community and governments have placed too much emphasis on carbon dioxide (the tailpipe) and not enough on the fossil fuels themselves (the wellhead) and everything in between. This causes a disconnect, allowing our government to subsidize fossil fuel exploration and production at the same time it is beginning to regulate carbon dioxide emissions. Perhaps the divestment movement will help us focus on the fuels themselves and the need to stop making new investments in fossil fuel infrastructure.

The book is relatively short, 242 pages, and is divided into 43 chapters. Thus, one can pick it up for a few minutes and read a chapter or two, making it easy for someone like me, who never seems to have enough time to read, to get through it.  In addition, Marshall’s writing style is very easy to read and understand. I think you will find it to be very informative and well worth your time.

Les Grady
CAAV Steering Committee
February 2015

Weatherize Harrisonburg for Energy Efficiency

The next meeting of Weatherize Harrisonburg/Rockingham will be on:

Monday, April 20, 2015 5:00-6:30PM, Gilkerson Community Activities Center Craft Room 2
Westover Park
305 S.Dogwood Dr., Harrisonburg.

All welcome!
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fullchp.200We are helping to plan a Public Meeting with representatives of Community Housing Partners sponsored by the Northeast Neighborhood Association on Thursday, March 26 at 7:00 PM, Simms Center, 620 Simms Ave., Harrisonburg.

If you qualify as a low-to-moderate income household, Community Housing Partners can help reduce your energy bills, make your home more comfortable, energy efficient and affordable year round. Clients approved for the Weatherization Assistance Program will receive a free energy audit which will determine the work that can be done in your home.

Join the Northeast Neighborhood Association at this meeting with representatives of Community Housing Partners and Weatherize Harrisonburg/Rockingham to learn more and obtain an application.

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February 26, 2015, Meeting at the downtown library:

First Meeting!
First Meeting on February 26!

Our agenda for the meeting is to learn who you all are and where your interests and expertise lie.  Are you interested in helping to ferret out all existing weatherization programs and funding sources, whether “official” or volunteer?  Do you work with an agency or business or volunteer group already involved in a program ?   Do you know groups of people who might be in need of having their houses worked on?  Do you have useful contacts with any of the above​ or would you like to develop some?

We want to flesh out the list we’ve begun from online sources and add to it with personal contacts, and we​ need your help to gather as much information as we can. Only then can we decide the best ways of making the information available to the people who need it, whether it’s an online website, public meetings, or going door to door–or all of the above.

We can also decide how often we need to meet, when, and where.​

Hope to see you tomorrow.
Joni Grady, Joy Loving, Les Grady

infrared houseFind our working document of resources here: WHAT WE KNOW and DON’T KNOW about Local Weatherization/Energy efficiency options. Please offer any comments and contributions you may have!

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We ended the advocacy workshop last month talking about ways to improve the energy efficiency of low and middle income homes in our area. Energy efficiency is the cleanest, cheapest fuel there is.  It is one of the cornerstones of the President’s Climate Action Plan.  It can save low and middle income families real dollars and let them benefit even more should a revenue neutral carbon fee be put in place. And the feds have been working on it since 1976, almost 40 years!  Here in Virginia, Governor Terry McAuliffe signed a proclamation designating October 30, 2014, as Weatherization Day. The WAP (Weatherization Assistance Program) network was also recognized at the Governor’s Housing Conference in Norfolk, Virginia last November.

There are other programs that Valley residents could tap into if they only knew about them and had some assistance in making use of them.  Members of the Climate Action Alliance of the Valley have decided to create an ad hoc committee to:

1)  create a database of programs already in place or potentially available, the people involved, what they offer and to whom

2)  get the information out to the people who need it and help them connect to the help that’s offered

3)  hopefully hold a one-day volunteer weatherization event, put actual (work) boots on the ground

We need your help.  The first step is the research and data gathering, an activity a lot of you who came to the workshop were very interested in!  We have begun making lists of program/contacts, just as we did at the workshop, but we also need to figure out exactly what information we need to put into the database.  And when that’s done, we need people who will gather that information from the online links and then call the contacts to fill in missing information.

I know you’re interested in making a real difference in the Valley so join us for an hour to plan and organize. Also, please let us know if you’re interested in the project but just can’t make the meeting.

Joni Grady, ad hoc committee on Energy Efficiency
contactcaav[at]gmail.com

Update, February 16, 2015.

Joy Loving and I have been busily gathering some background information to find out what we know and what we don’t know about the weatherization options available to low and middle income residents of Virginia and Harrisonburg in particular.

Please look it over–it’s the Weatherization document on Google Drive –and make any comments (using Review) you might have about people you know, groups that you know, etc.  When we do meet, we’ll at least have this as a basis for making a plan for further action and know what blanks we need to fill in.  We’ll update it as we continue to find more clues to what we can do and we’ll incorporate your comments appropriately.  One overall impression that I have gotten is that Virginia and Harrisonburg are strong supporters of energy efficiency action–as long as the feds are paying for it.  Which means that there will be ample opportunity for advocacy as well as local action.

We have been asked to attend the NorthEast Neighborhood Association meeting Thursday, February 19 at 7pm at Simms School to introduce what we’re thinking of doing and the information we need from homeowners.

I’m excited about the opportunities we have for making even a small difference where we are.

Joni Grady
540-209-9198

Clean Energy Lobby Day 2015

CAAV steering committee member Alleyn Harned and CAAV member Bishop Dansby participated in Clean Energy Lobby Day in Richmond on Tuesday, February 3, 2015.

Read about Clean Energy Lobby Day from Ivy Main here.

Bishop took some photos and offered comments:

CleanEnergyDay1
Francis Hodsoll, President, Virginia Advanced Energy Industries, kicks off the press conference at Clean Energy Lobby Day, February 3, 2015. Speakers included senators and delegates from both parties.
Secretary of Commerce and Trade, Maurice A. Jones, meets with and takes questions from the renewable energy industry people. In addition to attendees from Virginia, there were some from other states, including Maryland and California. Maryland solar business owners pointed out that they can draw from a trained workforce, as Maryland community colleges award certificates in solar installation.
Secretary of Commerce and Trade, Maurice A. Jones, meets with and takes questions from the renewable energy industry people. In addition to attendees from Virginia, there were some from other states, including Maryland and California. Maryland solar business owners pointed out that they can draw from a trained workforce, as Maryland community colleges award certificates in solar installation.
Alleyn Harned, Virginia Clean Cities, networks with Francis Hodsoll.
Alleyn Harned, Virginia Clean Cities, networks with Francis Hodsoll.

Clean energy day industry attendees were matched up to talk with legislators in their offices. Harrisonburg’s Alleyn Harned and Bishop Dansby visited with Arlington County Delegate Randy Minchew (R). They found Minchew to be very progressive on clean energy matters.