There is some
concern, well actually there is a lot of concern, that global warming will
produce rising sea levels and that it is possible that the increase in sea
level will permanently flood coastal areas.
North Carolina
has a long coast, a really long coast and the threat of rising sea levels is a
factor in the economic development of that area.
So the Republican legislators
in North Carolina have
found a unique was to defeat global warming and the threat of rising water
to inundate low lying coastal North
Carolina .
lawmakers passed a
bill that restricts local planning agencies’ abilities to use climate change
science to predict sea-level rise in 20 coastal counties. The bill’s supporters
said that relying on climate change forecasts would stifle economic development
and depress property values in eastern North
Carolina .
So what does this mean. Well it means that by law sea levels can only rise 8 inches between now and the year 2100. Any rise over that amount would be illegal and thus could not occur.
The
practical result of the legislation would be that for the purposes of coastal
development, local governments could only assume that the sea level will rise 8
inches by 2100, as opposed to the 39 inches predicted by a science panel.
Hm a panel of scientists. How could they know anything about climate science, it's not like they are a panel of political hacks who are experts in all areas, including global warming.
The
measure next goes back to the state House, where it recently passed, to
consider a technical change adopted by the Senate. Once approved there, it
would override the 2010 conclusions of the state-appointed science panel. The
panel said melting glaciers would result in pervasive flooding nearly 2 miles
inland in parts of the state by the end of this century.
The
Senate voted 35 - 12 to squelch those findings as unreliable and harmful to
economic development.
“It’s
becoming tough on any kind of economic development if we don’t start using
common sense in some of this rule-making,” said Sen. Harry Brown, a Republican
who represents coastal Jones and Onslow counties.
But the actual impetus from the bill did not come from legislators, it came from someone who probably knows even less about climate science then they do assuming that is possible, an economic development director.
The
push to rollback climate change science came from N.C.-20, a nonprofit that
promotes economic development in the 20 coastal counties. The group’s chairman,
Tom Thompson, is a Beaufort
County economic
development director.
It’s been a bad couple of weeks, so thanks
We live in frightening times when there can be a "push to rollback" science.
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