strad wrote: ↑21 Aug 2019, 00:42
I agree. It baffles me. Even more, what incentive would the IPCC have to be biased towards climate change?
Politicians have nothing to gain from climate change - in fact, they have a lot to lose. It's going to be an immensely expensive exercise, whether they opt for transitioning to a sustainable economy or for repairing the damage as it comes along, and being in favor of climate regulation is not exactly a vote magnet; on the contrary. If an inter-governmental panel would be biased towards anything, it would make more sense if it was biased to denial. The current IPCC argument to me makes as much sense as stating that research linking smoking and cancer would be biased towards that connection, if it were funded by tobacco companies.
That's totally disingenuous. You know perfectly well what's in it for them.
Also....This thread may have started as a UK oriented thread but it has been turned into a Global Warming thread, which affects us all.
No strad, I do not know what's in it for them, so why don't you tell me instead of trying to dodge the discussion with a personal accusation.
Do you mean "they benefit because they can increase taxes"? (because i've heard that argument from others). Politicians don't like raising taxes - it costs votes, and their salary hinges on vote levels, not tax levels.
Do you mean there are now parties that do gain votes from supporting climate change? Sure, but that's a relatively new development - and the counter movement is as large. In the Netherlands, the climate denying FvD won much more than the greens last election. For all the mainstream parties, the ones actually in power and not being on either extreme on the issue, the time of denialism is over - but they are all very much on downplaying the cost. So they also have no use for IPCC alarmism.
Do you mean direct payments to politicians? Lobbying budgets of companies that have no use for climate change are substantially higher than of those that do.
So please, let me know
why governments would be interested in biasing
towards climate change.
And do note that that in itself does not indicate the IPCC is actually biased. For that, you would actually have to show bias in the report itself. An incentive might be an explanation for observed bias, but is no evidence by itself. Now I've seen plenty of claims of bias (often without substantiated incentive), but never are they ever supported by any convincing evidence of it.
As for the 'change of topic', I think the first sentence of the opening post of this topic substantiates that this, to an extent, has been a GW topic all along. One of the prime objections to the UK regulation seems to be the validity of the underlying reason - which is now being discussed.