Professor
Les Woodcock, who has had a long and distinguished academic career, also said
there is "no reproducible evidence" that carbon dioxide levels have
increased over the past century, and blamed the green movement for inflicting
economic damage on ordinary people.
Professor
Woodcock is Emeritus Professor of Chemical Thermodynamics at the University of
Manchester and has authored over 70 academic papers for a wide range of
scientific journals. He received his PhD from the University of London, and is
a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, a
recipient of a Max Planck Society Visiting Fellowship, and a founding
editor the journal Molecular Simulation. (h/t Climate Depot)
Professor
Woodcock told the Yorkshire Evening Post:
"The
term 'climate change' is meaningless. The Earth's climate has been changing
since time immemorial, that is since the Earth was formed 1,000 million years
ago. The theory of 'man-made climate change' is an unsubstantiated hypothesis
[about] our climate [which says it] has been adversely affected by the burning
of fossil fuels in the last 100 years, causing the average temperature on the
earth’s surface to increase very slightly but with disastrous environmental
consequences.
"The
theory is that the CO2 emitted by burning fossil fuel is the 'greenhouse gas'
causes 'global warming' - in fact, water is a much more powerful greenhouse gas
and there is 20 time more of it in our atmosphere (around one per cent of the
atmosphere) whereas CO2 is only 0.04 per cent.
"There
is no reproducible scientific evidence CO2 has significantly increased in the
last 100 years."
He
also said:
"Even
the term 'global warming' does not mean anything unless you give it a time
scale. The temperature of the earth has been going up and down for millions of
years, if there are extremes, it's nothing to do with carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,
it's not permanent and it's not caused by us. Global warming is nonsense."
Professor
Woodcock dismissed evidence for global warming, such as the floods that deluged
large parts of Britain this winter, as "anecdotal" and therefore
meaningless in science.
"Events can happen with frequencies on
all time scales in the physics of a chaotic system such as the weather. Any
point on lowland can flood up to a certain level on all time scales from one
month to millions of years and it’s completely unpredictable beyond around five
days."
Also,
the only reason we regularly hear that we have had the most extreme weather
"since records began" is that records only began about 100 years ago.
"The reason records seem to be being
frequently broken is simply because we only started keeping them about 100
years ago. There will always be some record broken somewhere when we have
another natural fluctuation in weather.
"It's
absolutely stupid to blame floods on climate change, as I read the Prime
Minister did recently. I don't blame the politicians in this case, however, I
blame his so-called scientific advisors."
When
asked how can say this when most of the world's scientists, political leaders
and people in general are committed to the theory of global warming, Prof
Woodcock answered bluntly:
"This
is not the way science works. If you tell me that you have a theory there is a
teapot in orbit between the earth and the moon, it's not up to me to prove it
does not exist, it's up to you to provide the reproducible scientific evidence
for your theory.
"Such
evidence for the man-made climate change theory has not been forthcoming."
This
lack of evidence has not stopped a whole green industry building up, however.
At the behest of that industry, governments have been passing ever more
regulations that make life more difficult and expensive.
"...the
damage to our economy the climate change lobby is now costing us is infinitely
more destructive to the livelihoods of our grand-children. Indeed, we
grand-parents are finding it increasingly expensive just to keep warm as a
consequence of the idiotic decisions our politicians have taken in recent years
about the green production of electricity."
Professor
Woodcock is the latest scientist to come out against the theory of man-made global
warming. James Lovelock, once described as a "green guru", earlier
this month said that climate scientists "just guess", and that no one
really knows what's happening.
Judith
Curry, chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute
of Technology, also said that she was "duped into supporting the
IPCC" and added "If the IPCC is dogma, then count me in as a
heretic."
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