The following text is an article by Arnd
Bernaerts published 1993 in ‘L.O.S. Lieder’ of
the Law of the Sea Institute, William S. Richardson School
of Law; University of Hawaii.[1]
Lieder
Professional
correspondence from the
Law of the Sea Institute
William S. Richardson
School of Law,
University of Hawaii;
U.S.A., 96822
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WARMING UP - SCIENCE OR
CLIMATE
The climatic change issue has recently
become one of the most serious challenges facing humankind.
As L.O.S. Lieder insists on brevity, even though
this issue deserves to be discussed at length, I beg your
forgiveness for formulating my thesis directly and perhaps
somewhat dramatically: climatic specialists and those people
who have contributed to recent debates are possibly as much
of a threat to the climate as the pollution caused by
industrialization. For almost one hundred years, science has
failed to realize that climate and the oceans are one and
the same thing. As a result, the 1982 U.N. Convention on the
Law of the Sea, the only true treaty dealing with climatic
change issues, was thwarted the moment it came into effect
over ten years ago.
Although climate should long ago have
been defined as "the continuation of the ocean by other
means," the Framework Convention on Climate Change of
June 1992 came up with an alternate definition: "The
totality of the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere and
geosphere and their interactions." What this all boils
down to is that climate is nature working in all its forms
– a nonsensical definition and useless as a basis for
legal regulations.
As recently as 1990, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) came to the
conclusion that CO 2 was altering the climate and that
"understanding and detecting the earth's climate system
must surely be the greatest scientific challenge yet to be
faced by humankind. It is a worthy banner under which the
nations of the world can unite" (IPCC, Working Group I,
p. 328). Certainly not a bad thing for science. The 1992
Earth Summit resulted in an unprecedented success for the
scientists working in the climatic area, forcing politicians
to listen to them and paving the way for greater financial
backing in an effort to understand and come to terms with
the climate system.
Yet, what is good for scientists is not
necessarily good for the climate. The simple fact of the
matter is that meteorology has never been particularly inter
ested in climate except for statistical purposes, defin ing
it as the average weather over a given period of time. On
the other hand, there are the mathematic ians, physicists
and chemists, who do little more than apply their laboratory
findings, theoretical conclusions and abstract calculations
performed on greenhouse gases to a real natural system with
little regard for the true essence of climate.
But while the seas continue to influence
the climate, science is staring into the air (or, to be more
precise, the atmosphere) in an attempt to find out what
makes the climate tick. What is more, scientists have misled
the international community of nations by claiming that
greenhouse gases are the actual cause of climate change.
This may yet prove to be the real tragedy of the climate
change issue. After all, the oceans are still the part of
the world about which the least is known. There is neither
an "inventory" of the oceans nor an observation
system. What is even sadder is that climate is still far
from being acknowledged as the blue print of the oceans.
So beware of IPCC's call for unification
in its attempt to come to terms with the climate. The
climatic change issue is far too serious a matter to leave
to those who should have known better for many decades and
who were not interested in or aware of matters relating to
the oceans. It is high time to enforce what is by far the
best convention for under standing and protecting the
climate — the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea
— before it is too late. After all, it is the first global
constitution and would therefore compel humankind to ensure
that the planet remains a place worth living in. There is no
need to "detect the earth's climate" and even less
is there a need for a banner to serve IPCC's "greatest
scientific challenge".
Footnotes
[1]
Arnd Bernaerts, “Warming up --- Science or climate” ,
L.O.S. Lieder it 28, Vol. 5, January 1993,
Professional correspondence from the Law of the Sea
Institute, William S. Richardson School of Law, University
of Hawaii.
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