The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) recently proposed requirements for publicly traded companies to disclose information about purported climate-related risks – such as drought, wildfires, heat waves, etc. that could have an impact on their business, as well as “climate plans” that the company has developed in response to climate risks. [bold, links added]
Companies would also be required to report their greenhouse gas emissions. The rule also requires publicly traded companies to require the companies in their supply chains to report their emissions and climate responses to the publicly traded companies.
SEC’s stated goal for this rule is to provide “consistent, comparable, and reliable – and therefore decision-useful – information to investors.”
The SEC’s fact sheet about the rule is available here.
In April, shortly after SEC proposed the rule and opened it for public comment, H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D., director of the Arthur B. Robinson Center on Climate and Environmental Policy at The Heartland Institute, provided comments, arguing the proposal was unjustified and, based on the SEC charter, that it goes beyond Commission’s mission.
Princeton Professor, emeritus, William Happer, Ph.D., and MIT Professor, emeritus, Richard Lindzen, Ph.D., have also reviewed the proposed rule and filed a critical comment on it with the SEC.
In addition, they have filed an amicus curiae court brief with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that stated they do not believe there is a climate-related risk related to burning fossil fuels, and the resulting CO2 and other greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Below are excerpts of the comments they delivered to the SEC:
“It is utter nonsense,” said Happer.
Happer, who has studied possible CO2-related climate change for over 40 years, succinctly states his opinion:
“There isn’t a climate crisis. There will not be a climate crisis. It is utter nonsense.”
Lindzen, who has studied climate science even longer than Happer, stated:
“What historians will definitely wonder about in future centuries is how deeply flawed logic, obscured by shrewd unrelenting propaganda, actually enabled a coalition of powerful special interests to convince nearly everyone in the world that carbon dioxide from human industry was a dangerous, planet-destroying toxin.
“It will be remembered as the greatest mass delusion in the history of the world – that carbon dioxide, the life of plants, was considered for a time to be a deadly poison.”
One critical section of their filed comment examines the relationship between temperature trends and CO2 concentrations:
600 Million Years of CO2 and Temperature Data Contradict the Theory that High Levels of CO2 Will Cause Catastrophic Global Warming, Thus Confirming There is No Reliable Scientific Evidence Supporting the Proposed Rule
The chart below shows estimates for 600 million years of CO2 concentrations and temperatures. The blue line shows CO2 levels. The red line shows the temperature.
The chart (above) shows:
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- CO2 concentrations and temperature were uncorrelated over the past 600 million years.
- For hundreds of millions of years, temperatures were low when CO2 levels were high, and temperatures were high when CO2 levels were low.
- When CO2 was a record high of about 7,000 ppm, temperatures were at a record low
- Temperatures were the highest they have ever been about 60 million years ago, but CO2 levels were low.
- Temperatures have been higher than today over most of the past 600 million years, and life flourished
- CO2 levels have been relatively low for the last 300 million years, and have been sharply declining for the last 180 million years from 2,800 ppm to today’s low 415 pm.
Thus, Paleoclimate data going back 600 million years to the present show an inverse relation between CO2 and climate temperatures most of the time, and little correlation between them, implying that the effects of CO2 on global average temperatures are, in fact, marginal.
Although the data are based on various proxies, with the attendant uncertainties, they are good enough to demolish the argument that atmospheric CO2 concentrations control Earth’s climate.
Happer and Lindzen concluded:
Thus, in our opinion, science demonstrates that there is no climate emergency and no climate-related risk caused by fossil fuels and CO2.
Therefore, there is no reliable scientific evidence that supports the SEC proposed rule. Further, contrary to what is commonly reported, CO2 is essential to life on earth. Without CO2, there would be no photosynthesis, and thus no plant food and not enough oxygen to breathe.
Moreover, without fossil fuels, there will be no reliable, low-cost energy worldwide and less CO2 for photosynthesis making food. Eliminating fossil fuels and reducing CO2 emissions will be disastrous for the United States and the rest of the world, especially for lower-income people.
Read their full SEC comments here.
Read more at Climate Realism
Well, climate is just like immigration policy, abortion or seemingly any other complex modern issue. The LAST thing the progressive “activists” want is fully informed DEBATE. When you have to present & defend your ideas, you by necessity must have commend of the facts and have tangible evidence to support your position. You have to do a little WORK and get your fingernails dirty! As long as you can hide behind dutiful media propaganda, activist judges and in the bowels of government agencies, you can manipulate and more readily invoke your ideologically driven will. As I am not a climate scientist, I have no opinion as to the validity of Drs. Happer & Lindzen’s SEC comments. However, I have no doubt that there is NOT the overwhelming consensus in the scientific community that we are, in fact, in a climate “crisis.” You DO NOT make good decisions in a panic. This is especially true in policymaking. I say “pump the brakes” on the SEC gambit and let’s get some rational thought underway…