An Appeal to Reason: a Cool Look at Global Warming Pdf, Epub, Ebook

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

An Appeal to Reason: a Cool Look at Global Warming Pdf, Epub, Ebook AN APPEAL TO REASON: A COOL LOOK AT GLOBAL WARMING PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Nigel Lawson | 166 pages | 02 May 2011 | Penguin Putnam Inc | 9781590202524 | English | United States An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming PDF Book In fact, while looking at the science component of the issues, most of the book treats the consensus position seriously and critically analyses the proposed responses to it. He discusses the science, the models, the possible impacts and their costs, and the policies proposed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in clear, concise, measured prose. Last year, the CBI brought together a group of business leaders who were none of the above. Volunteer crews rescue the Taylor family from the roof of their suburban, which became trapped due to flooding during Hurricane Katrina, , in Bay St. It is starting with the second chapter that Lawson takes on his most unique approach. The former Chancellor is right, too, to mock some of the solutions that have been all too readily peddled. Highly recommend. Most people don't expect their house to burn down. The book closes with a discussion about the discount rates used by the IPCC and the Stern Review in their economic analysis, with a more detailed discussion on the latter. Climate change Politics books reviews. The longer we delay, the more costly the necessary actions. The book begins by arguing that "the science of global warming is far from settled. Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date. Argos AO. Aug 14, Michael Fortner rated it it was amazing Shelves: philosphy , physics , science. We were told in Britain to expect mild, wet winters. In Fashion Tribes, award-winning photographer Daniele Tamagni has tracked down and recorded some of the most surprising and colorful international fashion subcultures. By , we will be losing almost everywhere. Secondly, the trading schemes and Kyoto agreement have been utter failures, negating the possibility of a real carbon reduction solution. Of course Stern's conclusions are open to challenge. Lawson takes an interesting approach to the global warming debate. The issue of health is argued as potentially positive as a result of warming, whereas economically, it is argued that instead of being 9. Abracadabra, It's Spring! Never one to suffer from an excess of humility, he is happy to attack the scientific might of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a "global quasi-monopoly" whose judgment and integrity he finds open to question. Literary Review. The final chapter summarizes the book, ending with a warning about the dangers of the environmental movement, calling it "the new religion of eco-fundamentalism" and claiming that "we appear to have entered a new age of unreason. It's like saying that the Spanish flu pandemic of may have killed 40million and the Second World War 60 million, but since the global population was two billion, we can live with those death tolls because world economic growth per capita was only slightly interrupted. An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming Writer Here his arguments are badly flawed. He selectively quotes Prof. It's not Lawson's climate denial that got to me - although that was grating, I appreciate that science shouldn't be a religion and that the whole scientific method is based on testing, retesting, retesting, etc. Everybody associated with it, not least the publisher, should be deeply ashamed of themselves. Mike Wise. In that case, we can't Most people don't expect their house to burn down. The longer we delay, the more costly the necessary actions. It seems to me to be a basically undeniably sensible thing to be developing clean energy for these reasons, perhaps more pressingly even than climate change. The explanation is also illustrative of how global warming theorists use weather events to fit their theory: anything which appears to corroborate the global warming hypothesis, such as a hot summer or a tropical storm, is presented as evidence for the theory. Events have been kind to Lawson since this book was published in two very cold winters in Britain; the email 'Climategate' controversy; and the wild exaggeration about the rapidity with which the Himalayan glaciers might melt. Argued with logic, common sense, and even wit, and thoroughly sourced and referenced, Lawson has written a long overdue corrective to the barrage of spin and hype to which the politicians and media have been subjecting the public on this important issue. While global warming may make such events more likely, other factors may well play a significant role. Return to Book Page. And he is right to scoff at those who claim that unusual weather conditions in recent years represent clear evidence that disaster is on the way. He believes that "We appear to have entered a new age of unreason, which threatens to be as economically harmful as it is profoundly disquieting. For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now. When talking about how to maximize tax revenue he says: "I and my predecessors and successors as Chancellor of the Exchequer in this country and many of our counterparts elsewhere in Europe have used high sounding health arguments to justify raising substantial revenues from tobacco taxation, always taking care not to pitch the duty so high that too many people gave up smoking, causing the tax yield actually to diminish. I heard about this book on Red Eye. Some of the predictions Lawson shouts as bogus have actually come true, so I'd love to see his excuses for it now. Showing I enjoyed it a lot and did learn more about the religion of global warming. Even so I was genuinely shocked at how offensive this book is, on every level, across every one of its rancid pages. Thus the basic theory holds. Related Searches. Jul 27, Brandur rated it it was amazing. Last year, the CBI brought together a group of business leaders who were none of the above. But they take out fire insurance, provided it is available at a sensible price, to protect themselves against the possibility. First there's no such thing as global warming because it actually cooled; then okay, maybe there is global warming, but only mild so NBD; but okay, even if it IS warming, mitigation isn't the answer, it's adaptation, and it won't be so bad, not really After the introduction, the remainder of the book proceeds under the assumption that the IPCC majority view is correct. But perhaps the most outrageously hypocritical moment comes when he highlights the abundance of coal in the UK as a cheap energy source, despite having been a leading member of a government that jackboot-stamped the last nail into the coffin of the UK coal industry. But averaging GDP out across the planet gives a very false impression. Hardcover , pages. Other Editions The idea that we can predict the climate years hence with any degree of certainty has always seemed to me somewhat absurd, particularly when we struggle to forecast accurately the weather 2 days ahead. Selena Roberts. The environmental response to a warming planet is looked at first, and each of the five areas of concern by the ipcc are argued to be relatively small iin scope when Another book casting doubt on the validity of anthropogenic climate change We also need an understanding of exactly what measures are politically realistic on a global scale. The Science and the History. All have graced the pages of The New York Times, entertaining readers with their probing coverage of the N. David Mcintosh rated it it was ok Dec 27, In summary, Lawson notes that the prospect of a warming Armageddon is not substantiated by a close scrutiny of the ipcc documents. First, he argues that greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere do not automatically translate into rising average global temperatures, since there was a pause in the latter between and , and again between and , so the basic theory fails. An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming Reviews It is possible that we have already passed the peak of hysteria about global warming, at least in this country. Robharries rated it liked it Apr 09, Nigel Lawson. Trivia About An Appeal to Reas It is very ballanced book and actually has references to review. The defining theme of this book is hypocrisy, in evidence on pretty much every page. It also raises the question as to whether the UK government is not seriously seeking alternatives to fossil fuel as long as there are healthy tax revenues from motorists? Here Mr Lawson argues that climate science is flawed, along with the reports from the IPCC, and that the green evangelism is the new loony left. Thus the basic theory holds. He opposes the scientific consensus as summarized by the IPCC. Two key arguments stand out. They concluded that climate change represented a significant risk to society and the economy, and that actions to mitigate the risk were therefore necessary. Lawson carefully and succinctly examines all aspects of the global warming issue: the science, the economics, the politics, and the ethics. Explore Now. More benefits than costs, so it's FINE if islanders' water supplies are contaminated by rising seawater or there's erratic, intense droughts in east Africa. The idea that we can predict the climate years hence with any degree of certainty has always seemed to me somewhat absurd, particularly when we struggle to forecast accurately the weather 2 days ahead. But what was that about adapting? Some data 10 years ago shows an uncertainty? Even so I was genuinely shocked at how offensive this book is, on every level, across every one of its rancid pages.
Recommended publications
  • Climate Change Scepticism: a Transnational Ecocritical Analysis
    Garrard, Greg. "Climate Scepticism in the UK." Climate Change Scepticism: A Transnational Ecocritical Analysis. By Greg GarrardAxel GoodbodyGeorge HandleyStephanie Posthumus. London,: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019. 41–90. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 26 Sep. 2021. <http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350057050.ch-002>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 26 September 2021, 23:43 UTC. Copyright © Greg Garrard, George Handley, Axel Goodbody and Stephanie Posthumus 2019. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 2 Climate Scepticism in the UK Greg Garrard Before embarking on a detailed analysis of sceptical British texts, I will provide some historical and scholarly context. There have been many studies of anti- environmentalism in the United States (Helvarg; Brick; Ehrlich and Ehrlich; Switzer) and one on the global ‘backlash’ (Rowell), but none focuses exclusively on the UK. The sole treatment of anti-environmentalism within ecocriticism comes from the United States (Buell), just like the various exposés of climate scepticism discussed in the Introduction. As this chapter will show, British climate scepticism is possessed of a prehistory and some distinctive local features that reward closer inspection. Nevertheless, the Anglo-American axis of organized anti-environmentalism is obvious: British climate sceptics such as Christopher Monckton, James Delingpole and Nigel Lawson are darlings of the American conservative think tanks (CTTs) that promulgate sceptical perspectives, while Martin Durkin’s The Great Global Warming Swindle (2007), a British documentary shown on Channel 4, includes interviews with Richard Lindzen, Patrick Michaels and Fred Singer, all prominent American sceptics.
    [Show full text]
  • The Economics and Politics of Climate Change An
    CENTRE FOR POLICY STUDIES THE ECONOMICS AND POLITICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE AN APPEAL TO REASON Nigel Lawson A Lecture to the Centre for Policy Studies 1 November 2006 CENTRE FOR POLICY STUDIES NIGEL LAWSON: THE ECONOMICS AND POLITICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE THIS IS A HIGHLY COMPLEX SUBJECT, involving as it does science, economics and politics in almost equal measure. The Centre for Policy Studies has kindly agreed to publish a greatly extended version of this lecture as a pamphlet, in which I will be able to do greater justice to that complexity and to quote the sources of a number of the statements I propose to make this evening. It will also enable me to deal at slightly greater length with the scaremongering Stern Report, published earlier this week. But the essence of it is what I have to say tonight. * * * But first, a very brief comment on Stern. If scaremongering seems a trifle harsh, I should point out that, as a good civil servant, he was simply doing his masters’ bidding. As Mr Blair’s guru, Lord Giddens (the inventor of the so-called third way), laid down in this context in a speech last year, “In order to manage risk, you must scare people”. In fact, the voluminous Stern Report adds disappointingly little to what was already the conventional wisdom – apart from a battery of essentially spurious statistics based on theoretical models and conjectural worst cases. This is clearly no basis for policy decisions which could have the most profound adverse effect on people’s lives, and at a cost which Stern almost certainly underestimates.
    [Show full text]
  • An Appeal to Reason: a Cool Look at Global Warming Free
    FREE AN APPEAL TO REASON: A COOL LOOK AT GLOBAL WARMING PDF Nigel Lawson | 166 pages | 02 May 2011 | Penguin Putnam Inc | 9781590202524 | English | United States Review: An Appeal to Reason by Nigel Lawson | Books | The Guardian Climate change is a highly complex global problem, and one plagued by major uncertainties. Despite much progress in recent years, our knowledge about the physical processes underlying global warming is still far from complete. And its possible economic impact depends on a huge number of unpredictable variables, An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming as how well society might adapt to change, and at what cost. So it is important to keep testing the consensus view that has emerged in the past few years, which is, to quote from an IMF report this month, that "climate change is a potentially catastrophic global externality and one of the world's greatest collective action problems. To this extent, Nigel Lawson's short book is to be welcomed. Along with the polemics, he makes some sensible points. For example, he is right to raise the alarm about the impact of biofuels on food prices, and about the huge costs and inefficiencies of imposing arbitrary targets for the production of renewable energy. He is right to warn about the dangers of trade protectionism that could result from imposing trade barriers against countries that do not cut their greenhouse gas emissions. And he is right to scoff at those who claim that unusual weather conditions in recent years represent clear evidence that disaster is on the way.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate B&A Run On.Indd
    BOOKS & ARTS Clean, green fl ying machines DOES FLYING COST THE EARTH? Science Museum, London. Until 15 November 2008. Aircraft emissions show little sign of abating as the development of climate-friendly technologies struggles to keep pace with booming passenger numbers. Behemoths of the fossil fuel era greet only and omit other greenhouse gases. of aircraft emissions, which leads to visitors to London’s Science Museum. But partly because of those other gases a walk-through display of the green Just inside the entrance, in Energy and their intensified effects at high technology that could power future Hall, stands Thomas Newcomen’s altitude, the IPCC estimated in 1999 planes. Both have a high gee-whiz factor: hulking steam engine, which started that air travel accounted for roughly I was delighted to learn that scientists the industrial revolution and ran on 3.5 per cent of the human-caused at Lancaster University have recruited a coal. Two galleries in, hanging between greenhouse effect in 1992, a figure network of condensation-trail spotters nineteenth-century locomotives and a predicted to climb to 5 per cent by 2050, who gather data by staring at the sky vertical stack of six classic cars, one of though with large uncertainty. More daily, and to inspect models of nifty the world’s first commercial airliners recently, the UK’s Royal Commission futuristic jets. glowers from the ceiling. on Environmental Pollution suggested In exploring such technologies, the It is a powerful symbol of the 5 per cent should be revised to exhibition makes inspired use of facts and modernity — its iconic status surely one 6–10 per cent.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Warming Fraud?
    1 Open letter to policy makers, colleagues, students, and citizens Disproofs of the hypothesis of AGW (Anthropogenic Global Warming): And proofs that AGW is a fraud. Dr. Eric T. Karlstrom, Professor of Geography (webmaster of www.naturalclimatechange.us) California State University, Stanislaus, November, 2010 In this paper, I document some of the many disproofs of the hypothesis of unprecedented, catastrophic, anthropogenic global warming (AGW). In the process, I demonstrate that AGW is and has always been a fraud. I also: 2) Demonstrate that there is no consensus amongst scientists in support of the AGW hypothesis. 3) Show that natural climate fluctuations have had a far greater influence than humans on the climate system and that the claimed rate of modern warming (0.6° C in the 20th century) is well within the normal range for natural temperature fluctuations. 4) Show that atmospheric CO2 does not drive temperatures and plays a minor role in the climate system. 5) Discuss the historical benefits of relatively warm climates vs. more damaging colder climates. 6) Demonstrate that human contributions of CO2 to the atmosphere are minor (about 3.5%) as compared with nature’s contributions. And water vapor is by far the most important greenhouse gas. 7) Detail the many ways in which science fraud has been systematically and is still being used to create the common misperceptions associated with AGW. 8) Discuss problems and limitations of the GCMs (global climate models) that provide the basis of the alarmist claims of human-induced global warming. 9) EXpose the fallacies of the many propaganda ploys, including melting glaciers, rising sea levels, die-off of polar bears, increase in eXtreme weather, etc., that are now commonly attributed to AGW.
    [Show full text]
  • The Global Warming Standstill
    THE GLOBAL WARMING STANDSTILL Dr David Whitehouse Foreword by Lord Turnbull The Global Warming Policy Foundation GWPF Report 10 GWPF REPORTS Views expressed in the publications of the Global Warming Policy Foundation are those of the authors, not those of the GWPF, its Trustees, its Academic Advisory Council members or its Directors. THE GLOBAL WARMING POLICY FOUNDATION Director Dr Benny Peiser Assistant Director Philipp Mueller BOARD OF TRUSTEES Lord Lawson (Chairman) Baroness Nicholson Lord Donoughue Lord Turnbull Lord Fellowes Sir James Spooner Rt Rev Peter Forster Bishop of Chester Sir Martin Jacomb ACADEMIC ADVISORY COUNCIL Professor David Henderson (Chairman) Professor Richard Lindzen Adrian Berry (Viscount Camrose) Professor Ross McKitrick Sir Samuel Brittan Professor Robert Mendelsohn Sir Ian Byatt Professor Sir Alan Peacock Professor Robert Carter Professor Ian Plimer Professor Vincent Courtillot Professor Paul Reiter Professor Freeman Dyson Dr Matt Ridley (Viscount Ridley) Christian Gerondeau Sir Alan Rudge Dr Indur Goklany Professor Philip Stott Professor William Happer Professor Richard Tol Professor Terence Kealey Dr David Whitehouse Professor Anthony Kelly Professor Deepak Lal 2 The Global Warming Standstill The Global Warming Standstill Dr David Whitehouse Foreword by Lord Turnbull ‘First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.’ --Mahatma Gandhi ISBN: 978-0-9566875-7-9 ©Copyright 2013 The Global Warming Policy Foundation Table of Contents Table of Contents 2 About the Author 2 Foreword by Lord Turnbull 3 Executive Summary 5 Introduction 7 2006: Eight Years Flat 7 2007: ‘Wrong, Completely Wrong’ 8 2008: Flavour Of The Month 14 2009: The Bottom Line 19 2010: The Significant Stratosphere 26 2011: ‘We have not seen that in the land data’ 31 2012: HadCRUT4 40 2013: An Apparent Acknowledgement 54 Conclusion 59 Annex 62 Dr David Whitehouse David Whitehouse is the Science Editor of the Global Warming Policy Foundation.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Change and the Gospel – David Atkinson
    1 Climate Change and the Gospel Why we in the churches need to treat climate change more urgently David Atkinson, Epiphany 2015 Why are we in the Christian Church so slow in responding to the most important moral issue of our generation: climate change? If the climate scientists are right, and there is a huge majority agreement in the latest report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,1 much of the earth could be uninhabitable for humans in 100 years’ time, and the world my grandchildren inherit could be very different from today’s world, and a much more painful place to live in. And yet the large majority of Christian people are carrying on as though business is as usual. Of course, I’m not being quite fair. There have been huge numbers of Christian initiatives, many of which I outlined in my 2008 booK Renewing the Face of the Earth2 – and since then a great deal more has happened. The Church in South Africa produced a fine report.3 In the UK the ecumenical study Hope in God’s Future4 was published; Christian Aid, CAFOD, Tearfund, Green Christian (formerly Christian Ecology Link), A Rocha, John Ray Initiative and others have all made substantial contributions. Operation Noah launched a paper, ‘Climate change and the purposes of God’ (that has become known as the ‘Ash Wednesday Declaration’) in 2012, signed by Archbishops Desmond Tutu, Rowan Williams and Barry Morgan as well as a number of other UK Church leaders from Baptist, Roman Catholic, Methodist, URC, evangelical and Orthodox Churches.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Change and the Stern Review: the Implications for Treasury Policy
    House of Commons Treasury Committee Climate change and the Stern Review: the implications for Treasury policy Fourth Report of Session 2007–08 Report, together with formal minutes, oral and written evidence Ordered by The House of Commons to be printed 15 January 2008 HC 231 [Incorporating HC 248 i-iv, Session 2006-07] Published on 5 February 2008 by authority of the House of Commons London: The Stationery Office Limited £0.00 The Treasury Committee The Treasury Committee is appointed by the House of Commons to examine the expenditure, administration, and policy of HM Treasury, HM Revenue & Customs and associated public bodies. Current membership Rt Hon John McFall MP (Labour, West Dunbartonshire) (Chairman) Nick Ainger MP (Labour, Carmarthen West & South Pembrokeshire) Mr Graham Brady MP (Conservative, Altrincham and Sale West) Mr Colin Breed MP (Liberal Democrat, South East Cornwall) Jim Cousins MP (Labour, Newcastle upon Tyne Central) Mr Philip Dunne MP (Conservative, Ludlow) Mr Michael Fallon MP (Conservative, Sevenoaks) (Chairman, Sub-Committee) Ms Sally Keeble MP (Labour, Northampton North) Mr Andrew Love MP (Labour, Edmonton) Mr George Mudie MP (Labour, Leeds East) Mr Siôn Simon MP, (Labour, Birmingham, Erdington) John Thurso MP (Liberal Democrat, Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross) Mr Mark Todd MP (Labour, South Derbyshire) Peter Viggers MP (Conservative, Gosport). Powers The Committee is one of the departmental select committees, the powers of which are set out in House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in SO No. 152. These are available on the Internet via www.parliament.uk. Publications The Reports and evidence of the Committee are published by The Stationery Office by Order of the House.
    [Show full text]
  • TIME for CHANGE ? Climate Science Reconsidered
    UCL POLICY COMMISSION ON COMMUNICATING CLIMATE SCIENCE TIME FOR CHANGE ? Climate Science Reconsidered TIME FOR CHANGE ? Climate Science Reconsidered The Report of the UCL Policy Commission on Communicating Climate Science Cover and above: Sir Antony Gormley’s Sound II, installed in the crypt of Winchester Cathedral. Photography by Joe Low Urgent and unprecedented environmental and social changes challenge scientists to define a new social contract. This contract represents a commitment on the part of all scientists to devote their energies and talents to the most pressing problems of the day in proportion to their importance, in exchange for public funding. The new and unmet needs of society include more comprehensive information, understanding, and technologies for society to move towards a more sustainable biosphere – one which is ecologically sound, economically feasible, and socially just. New research, faster and more effective transmission of new and existing knowledge to policy- and decision-makers, and better communication of this knowledge to the public will all be required to meet this challenge. Extract from Jane Lubchenco’s Inaugural Speech as incoming President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, ‘Entering the Century of the Environment: A New Social Contract for Science’, delivered in 1997 Contents Report Summary 6 Foreword 8 Conclusions 10 Recommendations 12 Chapter Summaries Report 19 Introduction A New Era for Climate Science 25 Chapter 1 Clarifying the Science–Policy Interface 41 Chapter 2 What is Inside Our Minds? 67 Chapter 3 Strengthening the Public Standing of Climate Science 95 Chapter 4 Capturing an Engaged Audience 107 Chapter 5 How Climate Change Features in the Public Consciousness 115 Chapter 6 Rising to the Challenge 130 Glossary 132 Appendix 134 References 149 Associated Documents 6 FOREWORD I have found this Foreword quite difficult to write.
    [Show full text]
  • Green Conservatism Sample Chapter from Kieron O'hara
    Chapter Nine: Green Conservatism Sample Chapter from Kieron O’Hara, Conservatism (Reaktion Books, 2011) Small-c conservatism, understood as a philosophy of change and risk, clearly has a lot in common with its etymological relation ‘conservationism’. Many conservative politicians such as Newt Gingrich and David Cameron, and philosophers, including Burke, Disraeli and Roger Scruton (as well as the protean outlier John Gray),1 have powerfully described the environment as an important source of value whose degradation is a source of general loss and harm. Temperamentally, environmentalists and conservatives are miles apart; while the Tory sups champagne at White’s, the green enjoys nothing so much as creating a new type of compost. They move in different circles and have different enemies (often each other). Yet I shall argue in this chapter that, both philosophically and pragmatically, conservatism is the best-placed ideology for defending our environment. This is a deep topic worthy of many more words than I have space for here, but I hope it will serve as a taster for the possibilities of future conservative thinking. In this chapter I will focus mainly on the issue of climate change, but I hope that a germ of an approach to unrelated environmental problems is visible in the discussion. We certainly should not forget that climate change is only one environmental issue. Some others can be addressed alongside it, as they have related causes (for example the acidification of the sea). Often issues are complementary, for example reducing the amount of waste produced by households and industry. There are many arguments about whether agriculture should be efficient or organic (for example there is at least some evidence that importing food from the developing world actually helps rather than hinders the efforts against climate change, despite greater transport costs, because poor farmers create far fewer emissions than industrialised Europeans).
    [Show full text]
  • DR-385-Spindletop-Law.Pdf [2.9
    Submission to Productivity Commission on its draft report “Low-Emissions Economy” April 2018 Sean Rush Spindletop Law Contents ABOUT THE AUTHOR .......................................................................................... 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY........................................................................................ 4 Key points ..................................................................................................................................4 PROLOGUE ........................................................................................................... 6 INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................... 7 Opening Remarks ......................................................................................................................7 PART 1: SETTING THE SCENE ........................................................................... 8 The Need for Stable and Credible Climate Policy Settings ..........................................................8 IPCC Assessment Reports .........................................................................................................9 First Assessment Report....................................................................................................................... 9 Second Assessment Report.................................................................................................................. 9 Third Assessment Report ..................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Lecture
    Economics, Politics & Climate Change: Are the Sceptics Right? Julian Hodge Institute of Applied Macroeconomics Annual Lecture Julian Hodge Bank Lecture, Cardiff, April 2008 Colin Robinson, Emeritus Professor of Economics, University of Surrey Colin Robinson worked for eleven years as a business economist, mainly in the oil industry, before being appointed in 1968 to the Chair of Economics at the University of Surrey, where he founded the Department of Economics and is now Emeritus Professor. He is the sole or joint author of 25 books and monographs and over 160 journal papers and book chapters, including studies of the international oil, coal and gas markets, North Sea oil and gas, nuclear energy in Britain, British energy policy and various aspects of utility regulation. He has also edited numerous books, mainly in the utility regulation field. He is a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society, of the Society of Business Economists and of the Institute of Energy. He was named British Institute of Energy Economics ‘Economist of the Year’ in 1992 and in 1998 received from the International Association for Energy Economics its ‘Outstanding Contribution to the Profession and its Literature’ award. From 1992 to 2002 he was Editorial Director of the Institute of Economic Affairs, in addition to his university post. He is a member of the IEA’s Academic Advisory Council and a Trustee of the Wincott Foundation. Julian Hodge Institute of Applied Macroeconomics In May 1999, Cardiff Business School and Julian Hodge Bank announced a major new initiative, the establishment of the Julian Hodge Institute of Applied Macroeconomics. The aim of the institute is to carry out research into the behaviour of the UK economy, and to study in particular its relationship with the other economies of Europe.
    [Show full text]