“Trumpet of Patriots exposes the truth about climate change,” proclaims the wholly-owned political party of mining magnate Clive Palmer in one of its advertisements. Except that it doesn’t.
The ad uses a video showing a glaciologist talking about Greenland ice cores, apparently saying that global temperatures are cooling. But as science writer Peter Hadfield says on his YouTube channel Potholer 54, if you think you’ve stumbled on a video that completely overturns current scientific wisdom, scientists may know something you don’t.
As Hadfield points out, Palmer’s ad uses footage from the late 1990s about events in Greenland only. Since then, the glaciologist in question, Jorge Peder Steffensen, has said many times that man-made global warming is real and happening. But that doesn’t stop Palmer or the man he so admires, President Donald Trump, from spinning their yarns.
It’s easy to spread this sort of misinformation because climate change involves many processes interacting over vast areas and time scales, a complexity that stretches the capabilities of the best scientists and the most powerful computers. Politicians and the wider public have an incomplete grasp of it, and their “not knowing” is at the heart of climate policy failure here and everywhere.
This lack of public awareness has long troubled David Hamilton, a former physicist with experience in the oil and gas industry and a member of the voluntary advisory group Climate Tasmania. So much so that he has a new YouTube post, Words Matter, outlining his thoughts. You can find it by entering “words matter tas” in the Youtube search engine.
Hamilton’s eight-part discussion explores how apparently small things in our use of language have allowed rampant carbon pollution to continue unabated, imperilling the future of humanity. He introduces it with these words:
“We have a climate crisis on our hands which is continuing to worsen. While the crisis has several causes, the primary cause is our past and continuing extraction and burning of fossil fuels: coal, oil and gas. To stop making the crisis worse… we need to address the primary cause by shifting from coal, oil and gas to clean energy.”
Many have said this before, but not much has changed. Most Australians say they’re “concerned” or “very concerned” about climate change, but we see no evidence of that in the amounts of petrol, diesel and bottled natural gas being burned.
This has frustrated David Hamilton as much as anyone, but he hasn’t allowed that to defeat him. Instead he’s explored in forensic detail the ways politicians and others (including myself) have talked and written about why we’re in trouble and what needs to be done to turn this around.
Hamilton produces good evidence from recent polls of small business and people more broadly that political and business leaders are using terms like “fossil fuels”, “emissions”, “net zero” and “decarbonisation”, or reading about these concepts, without fully grasping their meaning or how they relate directly to things the respondents do every day.
Why don’t people know this stuff? muses Hamilton. As he says, we all have other things to think about, the language is vague and technical, and people haven’t been told about the situation in a way that’s meaningful to them. He cites the example of one apparently informed business person who didn’t know that moving off fossil fuels meant stopping using diesel.
This confusion is not helped by politicians telling us we need to cut emissions while simultaneously approving new coal and natural gas projects. Most people miss the contradiction, says Hamilton. They are mildly reassured by buzzwords, taking comfort in the idea that offsetting by planting trees will neutralise burning of petrol or diesel or jet fuel to get them from A to B.
The offsetting elixir has been embraced by politicians and business leaders promoting “net emissions” – the basis of net-zero targets used by most countries including Australia. But it doesn’t stack up. Hamilton rightly points out that while emissions to the atmosphere endure for thousands of years, carbon taken up by trees remains sequestered only for the life of the trees.
The desired end result – phasing out fossil fuel use – means we must all use less petrol, diesel and bottled gas. Politicians may find this home truth a challenge, but it’s not insurmountable. Hamilton says they can meet the challenge by expressing the facts openly and plainly while explaining that they’re simply clarifying the steps involved in reducing emissions.
Like so much else around climate change, Words Matter is a work in progress. Hamilton and others at Climate Tasmania are currently working on a new, more viewer-friendly video. Watch this space.