Are the world's ice caps melting because of climate change, or are
the reports just a lot of scare mongering by the advocates of the
global warming theory?
Scare mongering appears to be the case, according to reports
from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
that reveal that almost all the allegedly “lost” ice has come back. A
NOAA report shows that ice levels which had shrunk from 5 million
square miles in January 2007 to just 1.5 million square miles in
October, are almost back to their original levels.
Moreover, a Feb. 18 report in the London Daily Express showed
that there is nearly a third more ice in Antarctica than usual,
challenging the global warming crusaders and buttressing arguments of
skeptics who deny that the world is undergoing global warming.
The Daily express recalls the photograph of polar bears clinging
on to a melting iceberg which has been widely hailed as proof of the
need to fight climate change and has been used by former Vice President
Al Gore during his "Inconvenient Truth" lectures about mankind’s
alleged impact on the global climate.
Gore fails to mention that the photograph was taken in the month
of August when melting is normal. Or that the polar bear population has
soared in recent years.
As winter roars in across the Northern Hemisphere, Mother Nature seems to have joined the ranks of the skeptics.
As the Express notes, scientists are saying the northern
Hemisphere has endured its coldest winter in decades, adding that snow
cover across the area is at its greatest since 1966. The newspaper
cites the one exception — Western Europe, which had, until the weekend
when temperatures plunged to as low as -10 C in some places, been basking in unseasonably warm weather.
Around the world, vast areas have been buried under some of the
heaviest snowfalls in decades. Central and southern China, the United
States, and Canada were hit hard by snowstorms. In China, snowfall was
so heavy that over 100,000 houses collapsed under the weight of snow.
Jerusalem, Damascus, Amman, and northern Saudi Arabia report the
heaviest falls in years and below-zero temperatures. In Afghanistan,
snow and freezing weather killed 120 people. Even Baghdad had a
snowstorm, the first in the memory of most residents.
AFP news reports icy temperatures have just swept through south
China, stranding 180,000 people and leading to widespread power cuts
just as the area was recovering from the worst weather in 50 years, the
government said Monday. The latest cold snap has taken a severe toll in
usually temperate Yunnan province, which has been struck by heavy
snowfalls since Thursday, a government official from the provincial
disaster relief office told AFP.
Twelve people have died there, state Xinhua news agency reported, and four remained missing as of Saturday.
An ongoing record-long spell of cold weather in Vietnam's
northern region, which started on Jan. 14, has killed nearly 60,000
cattle, mainly bull and buffalo calves, local press reported Monday. By
Feb. 17, the spell had killed a total of 59,962 cattle in the region,
including 7,349 in the Ha Giang province, 6,400 in Lao Cai, and 5,571
in Bac Can province, said Hoang Kim Giao, director of the Animal
Husbandry Department under the Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development, according to the Pioneer newspaper.
In Britain the temperatures plunged to -10 C in central England,
according to the Express, which reports that experts say that February
could end up as one of the coldest in Britain in the past 10 years with
the freezing night-time conditions expected to stay around a frigid -8
C until at least the middle of the week. And the BBC reports that a bus
company's efforts to cut global warming emissions have led to services
being disrupted by cold weather.
Meanwhile Athens News reports that a raging snow storm that
blanketed most of Greece over the weekend and continued into the early
morning hours on Monday, plunging the country into sub-zero
temperatures. The agency reported that public transport buses were at a
standstill on Monday in the wider Athens area, while ships remained in
ports, public services remained closed, and schools and courthouses in
the more severely-stricken prefectures were also closed.
Scores of villages, mainly on the island of Crete, and in the
prefectures of Evia, Argolida, Arcadia, Lakonia, Viotia, and the
Cyclades islands were snowed in.
More than 100 villages were snowed-in on the island of Crete and
temperatures in Athens dropped to -6 C before dawn, while the coldest
temperatures were recorded in Kozani, Grevena, Kastoria and Florina,
where they plunged to -12 C.
Temperatures in Athens dropped to -6 C before dawn, while the
coldest temperatures were recorded in Kozani, Grevena, Kastoria and
Florina, where they plunged to -12 C.
If global warming gets any worse we'll all freeze to death.