Lord Monckton Debate, National Press Club, Canberra.
Supporters needed to attend please.
By Viv Forbes, Chairman,
Dr Richard Denniss is Executive Director of the Australia Institute.
He is an economist with a particular interest in the role of regulation. Prior to taking up his current position he was an Associate Professor at the Crawford School of Economics and Government at the Australian National University where he continues to hold an adjunct appointment. Richard has also worked as Strategy Adviser to the Leader of the Australian Greens, Senator Bob Brown, Chief of Staff to the Leader of the Australian Democrats, Senator Natasha Stott Despoja, and lectured in economics at the University of Newcastle.
Lord Christopher Monckton is Chief Policy Advisor to the Science and Public Policy Institute.
He was Special Advisor to British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher from 1982 to 1986.
Monckton is a widely recognized commentator on climate sensitivity. His climate change lecture to Cambridge University undergraduates was later turned into a full-length feature film (funded by SPPI) titled "Apocalypse? NO!". Recently, Monckton has devoted his work toward challenging the so-called “consensus” of scientists on climate change. Along with giving lectures and writing scholarly analyses, Monckton has testified before a subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives.Vaclav Klaus Appearances in Australia
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Global Warming Hysteria Fades in Europe
"The climate policy of the European Union is now stuck in a dead end.
Europe wanted to be the leader – showing the world the way.
It wanted to export the "market-economic" instrument of emissions trading as a new standard of regulation.
Today it is clear that there is going to be no successor agreement to Kyoto. There is no way out of the dilemma. Europe is completely standing alone.
The world is not a carbon market. It will never be one."- Holger Krahmer, Public Service Europe, 29 June 2011
Gore Effect Strikes Gillard
The most celebrated Gore event occurred in Britain, which was struck by massive snowstorms while the British Parliament (with only one dissenting voice) was passing probably the most expensive, destructive and wrong-headed bit of legislation ever to receive such solid support – the Climate Change Act. As that bitter winter progressed, the snows kept falling, the winds dropped, the wind turbines stopped turning and some froze. Zero green power was produced. Every nuclear, coal and gas plant was running at full capacity, but still power supplies failed in some areas and electric trains were marooned. One old steam loco burning coal helped stranded passengers on one line.
Such is the strength of the Gore Effect.
PM Gillard unveiled her plans to use carbon taxes to induce global cooling on Carbon Sunday, 10 July 2011. The Gore Effect struck us soon after.
Here on our farm at Rosevale in Queensland, Australia, sheep work starts as soon as it is light enough to see new-born lambs on the ground. Ever since Carbon Sunday, heavy white frosts have blanketed the ground well up the hills. Sheep start their breakfast with chlorophyll icicles. Then the sun comes up, and the welcome warm nuclear-powered radiation floods the land. The icicles start to disappear, temperature increases at the rate of one degree per hour and rises about fifteen degrees by lunch time.
Julia and her puppets think we are scared of the possibility that, unless we lie in her bed of nails, the temperature may rise a fraction of a degree in 50 years!!!! It rises that much in a few minutes every morning where I live.
What do they put into the water in Canberra?
It's the Sun, Stupid.
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