Sunday, June 22, 2008
GLOBAL WARMING - THE CASE SEEMS NOT TO BE SETTLED AFTER ALL
Ipsos MORI polled 1,039 adults and found that six out of 10 agreed that 'many scientific experts still question if humans are contributing to climate change', and that four out of 10 'sometimes think climate change might not be as bad as people say'. In both cases, another 20 per cent were not convinced either way. Despite this, three quarters still professed to be concerned about climate change.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jun/22/climatechange.carbonemissions
So only 20% think the case is anything like settled. Sun must be getting to every body's brains.
The Observer (ie the Guardian on Sunday) are clearly sick at having to report this. John Redwood has a piece about it on his blog.
Expect to see a lot more MPs putting their heads above the parapets as Ann Widdicombe did when she voted against the climate bill on the grounds that warming scam wasn't true. She described this as far more important than her decision to vote for 42 days.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jun/22/climatechange.carbonemissions
So only 20% think the case is anything like settled. Sun must be getting to every body's brains.
The Observer (ie the Guardian on Sunday) are clearly sick at having to report this. John Redwood has a piece about it on his blog.
Expect to see a lot more MPs putting their heads above the parapets as Ann Widdicombe did when she voted against the climate bill on the grounds that warming scam wasn't true. She described this as far more important than her decision to vote for 42 days.