The week before last, the Eastern Daily Press was kind enough to print my reply to a piece by local Green MP Rupert Read. I think it was in the print edition only, so I’m pasting it in below.
Note that this is written for a general audience, not the old hands of Cliscep. It was rather mistitled: my own work, I admit – rather assuming that one of the editors would use their own, I put no thought into it. Rather than “The Importance of Putting Climate Change into Context” I ought to have said, “The Importance of Putting Adverse Weather into Context.” That’s because the argument is really about whether climate change is causing the adverse weather.
Here you can find Rupert Read’s original, “Rupert Read looks at the new climate challenge,” which you should probably read before mine. I will paste in a small section below, which was what prompted me to ask the editor for 600 words to reply:
Remember: Two devastating hurricanes hit Florida in the space of two weeks killing at least 232, costing at least $42 billion in damages, and leaving millions without power.
The horrific and still ongoing floods in Spain have already killed over 200 people with many still missing.
A story that you may have missed is that the UK has seen the second worst harvest on record.
We all saw and felt the severe flooding earlier this autumn, even though East Anglia actually got off lighter than many parts of Britain.
It has never been more evident that we are now all on the climate frontlines. Transformative Adaptation is about how we deal with this fact.
Among the list of disasters attributed to climate change, although Rupert Read calls it “climate breakdown,” was the second worst harvest on record. You do not have to know much about farming to know that this is not true. How could an MP think it?
I place this here with an encouragement to Clisceppers: if something particularly egregious appears in your local paper, ask the editor for a right to reply. The chances are, you know more about the topic than the person you would be replying to. My advice is to zero out the snark – the below, as you will see, was written with my very polite hat on. They may play rhetorical games, but we should not, having the facts on our side, join in.
The wise man referred to is well known in sceptical circles, but not to the general public. He is famed for having deduced the identity of the alleged forger of the Heartland memo.
Message begins:
Something I try to do when writing about climate change is to put things into their proper context. A favourite tactic of the alarmist is to claim natural disasters as proof of how terrible everything is, without admitting (or perhaps even knowing) that such events have gone on since time immemorial.
Thus Rupert Read in these pages (22nd November) noted that two hurricanes this year cost 232 lives in the United States, with the obvious implication that this was a symptom of climate change. Those in search of context might like to know that hurricanes occurred before humanity made any significant contribution to carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere. An important example is the Great Hurricane of 1780, which killed over 22,000 and, in sinking several ships of the British Navy, may have altered the course of the U.S. War of Independence. The Great Hurricane was one of 4 major hurricanes that year, each killing more than 1,000.
Rupert’s claim that this year’s harvest was the “second worst on record” is plain wrong. Records of UK wheat yields go back formally to 1885, and informally far before that. Wheat yield at the end of the 19th century was 2 to 2.5 tonnes per hectare; this year, it will probably be 7 tonnes per hectare. This is low for the past 20 years (average about 8 tonnes per hectare), true, but not at all low in historical terms. If you want to go back still further, you will find that wheat yields in Medieval times were under 1 tonne per hectare. This year’s poor harvest is only the “second worst on record” if we forget almost all the past.
Farming was transformed over the course of the twentieth century, with seed filtration methods, mechanisation, artificial fertiliser and artificial pesticides leading to levels of productivity that a Medieval peasant would probably think of as witchcraft. One thing that cannot be controlled is weather, and that will remain the case if we somehow manage to return to the pre-industrial carbon dioxide level that some desire.
In Rupert’s view, “climate breakdown is here.” The language used by alarmists these days is revealing. Those of us of a certain age will remember when the threat was “global warming.” Because this was received by most with indifference, it became “climate change.” Then, when we ignored the peril of “climate change,” it became variously “climate emergency,” “climate heating,” or “climate breakdown.” The climate is not breaking down. I do not think the phrase has meaning.
Rupert advocates adaptation to prepare for the coming trouble. I tend to agree. A wise man once said, and I may be paraphrasing slightly, “Of course we don’t plan for tomorrow. We don’t plan for today.” By which he meant our civilisation is not resilient to today’s weather, let alone the worse weather prophesied to occur in response to climate change. Building in resilience (for example, in flood defences) will benefit the places where money is spent. This compares favourably to unilaterally cutting carbon dioxide emissions, where any benefits are spread across the globe – the savings of the frugal shared out among the profligate.
However, Rupert’s version of resilience to “climate breakdown” is not a wall against rising water, or an underground bunker against roasting temperature; it’s a community orchard. And while a community orchard is a fine idea, it is surely not for someone who believes that “climate breakdown” is here now, and getting worse.
To plant a tree shows no fear of next week, or next year, but faith in the future. It is the definition of optimism. And three cheers for that.
Keep up the good work!
It’s interesting that Rupert Read, although a climate catastrophist, seems to be of the view that climate change is here to stay, that the COPs are a hopeless failure, and consequently what we need to do is to ensure we adapt. That’s quite close to the sceptic view that (although we generally don’t recognise a climate crisis) there’s nothing we – certainly not unilaterally in the UK – can do about climate change, and it’s far wiser to spend (rather less) money on adaptation than we are currently spaffing on inevitably failing attempts to mitigate. Interesting times.
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Would that be the same Rupert Read who Shinobi Yaka takes issue with in this video:
https://youtu.be/2NSkQyQLvW4?si=AQ89CfruHyInjima
If so, it seems he has something of a history in misrepresenting agricultural output.
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Thx, JIT.
The long climate record is our friend.
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Hi JIT
“Responding to astoundingly dumb assertions from a local Green MP”
It seems you’ve promoted Mr Read to a position above his level of (in)competence.
According to WikiP, he’s merely ” …an academic and a Green Party campaigner, a former spokesperson for Extinction Rebellion, and the current director of the Climate Majority Project”
Perhaps his greatest claim to fame is (according to Wiki)
“In June 2018, Read triggered a BBC policy shift by publicly refusing to debate with a climate change denier.[9] This led to new policy that meant the BBC would no longer present climate change deniers’ views as a counterbalance to scientific standpoints.”
Translation – he was incapable of supporting his opinions in public.
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Rupert Read has had several mild online disagreements with his Green House Think Tank buddy John Foster* in the last year or so. Read wants to keep using the UK’s existing electoral system to form a Climate Majority. Foster** reckons that most UK voters are ‘deeply incapable’. His plan is to form a Climate Minority of intelligent, imaginative, reflective, honest and brave ‘people with their hands on or near the levers of power, influence and authority within the fossil fuel state’; these people would ‘sabotage that state while building shadow administrative and economic structures to replace it’; eventually ‘enough of those trying to run the country [would] accept the need for an emergency government’.
(That’s pretty close to how Stephan Lewandowsky, the world-renowned debunker of conspiracy theories, reckoned that Brexit happened. Cabals of neo-fascists, Lew reckoned, rather than cabals of… neo-… ?)
===
*Last year I saved John Foster from involuntary involvement in a VAT scam. Did he thank me? No. But he is getting on a bit.
**web.archive.org/web/20241106130105/https://www.greenhousethinktank.org/changing-the-world-with-four-mps-2/
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“Farmers face £600m loss after second-worst harvest on record”
Gosh. Now the Telegraph is making the same mistake.
As Defra notes (for England)
Yes, yield is low relative to recent years (the highest yields ever have been made in the past 10 years, in the midst of “teh climate breakdown”). No, it is not the second-worst on record: but perhaps the second-worst in the 21st century. Also note: the harvest is reduced not just by a lower yield, but by a smaller area sown. Wheat area in England was down by 11%.
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Rupert Read’s book is now out. The EDP article announcing it almost begins as a news item, but then collapses into a spongy manifesto of side notes and irrelevancies.
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Presumably we can expect him to have an interview on BBC Radio 4 soon to give him the opportunity to plug his book.
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“It is written by Rupert Read and others involved in the Climate Majority Project which calls on the hidden majority who are waking up to our climate reality to take action.”
That was enough for me, another puff piece in the Greta vein, but she at least had a point with the “Bla Bla Bla” comment. Easy to think you can change how the world works, energy wise, but when reality hits, reality always wins (or should).
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The launch party for Transformative Adaptation: another world is still just possible was a bit late. The book was published in November.
Rupert Read has been plugging it for ages. For example, 360 days ago he said that it would be available as a free download. No sign of that yet – and there probably never will be. The blogpost in which he promised that has been deleted. (Wayback has it.)
Perhaps he’s a bit short of money after taking early retirement.
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“Coat of Hopes visits East Anglia in climate change fight”
Rupert Read is Radagast for a minute.
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Jit,
Did Rupert visit Barking? Probably not. It used to be in Essex, now I imagine it’s just part of Greater London. Pity. Because if he had, he would have realised that the magic transformative powers of the Coat of Hopes were entirely illusory and he would have come away barking . . . . . just the same as he went in.
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