What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
Professor Tim Palmer, president of the Royal Meteorological Society, said that belief in climate change is not the issue. It was about assessing risk. The chances of a damaging two-degree rise in average temperatures by 2100 stood at 90 per cent while the chances of a more severe five-degree rise stood at 10 per cent. ‘The risk of serious environmental damage is so great that we should act.’
Dr Benny Peiser, a visiting fellow at the University of Buckingham, confirmed that public concern about climate change has peaked. The scale and the extent of the problem were impossible to predict and alarmist prophecies should be treated with caution. ‘We aren’t doomed.’ Current views on global warming are irrelevant, he said. ‘The people who have to pay for the policies will make the decisions.’
Sir David King, a chief scientific adviser to the Blair government, told us that every 10 per cent rise in the oil price causes a 0.2 per cent decrease in the world’s GDP. ‘Defossilising the economy would be a win-win and would deliver economic growth.’ He showed us temperature graphs indicating that the exceptionally hot summer of 2003 — which caused the deaths of 30,000 elderly Europeans — would be an average summer by 2050. Lord Lawson, who lives in France, replied that thousands of older citizens had perished there in 2003 because their families had gone on holiday and left them to fend for themselves.
The motion was carried, but with a much larger swing from the undecideds to the losing side during the debate. —Lloyd Evans
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