Dr. Willie Soon - keynote
speaker at the upcoming Good Neighbor Forum - is quoted
in "Polar bears caught in a heated eco-debate" by Oren
Dorell - U.S.A. Today, March 10, 2008.
You can meet Dr. Soon
and hear him address: "Global Warming 101- Al Gore CO2 Theory"
- on March 15th in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Dr. Soon
and his colleagues at the Smithsonian-Havard Institute (Boston) have invited Mr.
Al Gore to debate on many occasions. Mr. Gore has
declined. Dr. Willie Soon
Polar bears caught in a heated
eco-debate
By Oren Dorell, USA TODAY
Eskimos in Alaska and Canada have
joined to stop polar bears from being designated as an endangered species,
saying the move threatens their culture and livelihoods by relying on sketchy
science for animals that are thriving.
Eskimos in Alaska and Canada have
joined to stop polar bears from being designated as an endangered species,
saying the move threatens their culture and livelihoods by relying on sketchy
science for animals that are thriving.
Although they say sea ice has
melted, some Natives question the accuracy of the most dire predictions of a
warming climate in the Northern Hemisphere, and members of the Inuit Circumpolar
Council seek evidence that a change would seriously harm the bears.
PHOTO
GALLERY: Polar bears
Their stance has put them at loggerheads with a
usual ally: environmentalists who say the bears need protection now to survive a
warmer climate in the future.
"It would have a really big effect on us
Inuit, because we go by dog team to traditionally hunt polar bears," said Jamie
Kablutsiak, who guides U.S. trophy hunters for big money onto the ice on
Canada's Hudson Bay. As for the
bears, "I don't think they're decreasing
because there's usually lots, even in summer time," he said.
A decision
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will come soon, spokesman Bruce Woods
said.
The petition marks the first time a healthy species would be
considered at risk under the Endangered Species Act and the first time global
warming would be officially labeled a species' main threat.
Polar bears
have increased from a population of 5,000 in 1972 to between 20,000 and 25,000
today.
The Center for Biological Diversity submitted a petition in 2005
for endangered species protection based on projected habitat loss due to global
warming.
The petition resulted in a 2007 report by the U.S. Geological
Survey, which predicted a loss of two-thirds of the world's polar bear
population by 2050, based on a projected 42% summertime loss of "optimal polar
bear habitat"
such as shallow-water sea ice.
Some scientists, however,
question predictions that sea ice will disappear, and even that polar bears
would disappear if it did.
Richard Glenn, an Alaskan Inuit hunter and ice
researcher, told U.S. senators in January that "marginal ice," which freezes in
winter and melts in summer, will grow as multiyear ice disappears.
"Even
the Fish and Wildlife Service study acknowledges that . may be beneficial to ice
seals and polar bears," he said.
The aim of the environmentalists is to
use the Endangered Species Act to force the U.S. government to take action on
global warming, said Kassie Siegel, a lawyer for the Center for Biological
Diversity. It would require federal agencies "to look at the cumulative effect
of greenhouse gases on polar bears" and limit emissions by cars and power
plants, Siegel said.
Alaskan Gov. Sarah Palin disagrees with that
approach.
"If you want to address climate change, address it directly,"
said Doug Vincent-Lang, Palin's coordinator for endangered species.
To
the Inuit, the polar bear has been a source of food, clothing and income for
millennia, said Duane Smith, president of the Inuit Circumpolar Council in
Canada, which represents Inuit across Canada.
The Inuit Circumpolar
Council, which represents Native communities in Greenland, Canada, Alaska and
Russia, wants Fish & Wildlife not to make a decision until Natives have a
greater role, Chairwoman Patricia Cochran
said. Any decision should be based
on "sound science," which includes traditional knowledge, Cochran
said.
Big money is at stake. Sport hunters pay between $25,000 and
$30,000 each to bag a polar bear.
The Alaska Nanuuq Commission, which
represents Eskimos on polar bear issues, supports the listing as long as it
allows subsistence hunting by Alaskan Inuit to continue. Executive Director
Charlie Johnson said the group chose
to avoid clashing with U.S.
environmentalists.
The conservation scheme works because "it's in the
best interest of the (Inuit) people out there to maintain the (bear)
populations," Smith said. But it may end if the bear is listed because U.S.
hunters will be banned from importing any part of the bear, such as a pelt,
Smith said.
"The numbers of polar bear are good," said Smith, a former
conservation officer for the Canadian government.
Steven Amstrup, chief
polar bear researcher for the U.S. Geological Survey, said climate models
predict that it will be warmer by midcentury than "ever in the course of polar
bear evolution." Other scientists question that view.
Willie
Soon, an astrophysicist at the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, said
far too few data were used to make predictions about both climate change and
polar bear behavior and populations."We looked at
historical studies. The first thing you notice is the whole climatic system
undergoes huge fluctuation," Soon said.Over the
possibly 200,000 years the polar bear has existed as a species, it has survived
"very harsh conditions" of extreme cold, such as ice ages, and warmth, such as
the last interglacial period, 100,000 to 110,000 years ago, Soon
said. Find this article at:
https://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/globalwarming/2008-03-09-polar-bears_N.htm
In
a note to Good Neighbor (3/10/08) Dr. Soon had this to say
about the article."Please share with Lyle Laverty and all the
good neighbors ..."
Willie
"ps: I gave Oren Dorell extensive interview and
share with him many data and evidence ---glad to see that the article is at
least fair and open-minded on the issues and concerns."
Topic: FOOD in the 21st Century
Learn how policies regarding
endangered species, conservation easements, European Union, roadless, water and
trade will impact your food supply and safety.Learn about your private property
rights and become part of a network of "first responders" who address
misinformation and provide facts regarding proposed and existing
policy.
Joining Dr. Soon, will be moderator Kent Rutledge,
Esq. and Featured speakers:
Mr. Lyle Laverty, DC - US Department of the Interior's Assistant
Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks
Mr. Lawrence
Kogan, Esq. -NJ Precautionary Principle, European Union, International Trade and
more. Dr. Corey Ciochhetti, CO -
Suggestions on the Ethics and Essence of being a Good
Neighbor.
Mr. Jim Beers, VA - Everything you want to know about the
Endangered Species
Act.
Harriet Hageman, CO - Connecting the dots from Spotted Owl to
pine beetle, fire, roadless, and water.
Speaker briefs:
Sharon Croghan, CO - NAFTA
Superhighway, Colorado Super Slab.
Kimmi Clark Lewis, CO - Pinon Canyon vs US Army.
Cindy Schonholtz, CO - PRCA Animal Welfare - Horse Slaughter Ban and
animal rights activists.
Ed Prosser, WY - How Conservation Easements work in
Wyoming
Jim Keen, CO - Internationally known photographer and agriculture
advocate.
Speakers will gather for panel discussion beginning at 4:00
pm.