- Look Ahead: Market Taking Its Cues From Fed Statement
- Bailed-Out Banks Preparing Pay Bonanza: Study
- Oracle-Sun Micro Deal May Be Rejected by EU: Report
- Berkshire's 15 Biggest Stock Holdings
- Cramer: The 8 Stocks That Control the Market
- Buffett: Berkshire Business Doing 'Just a Tick Better'
- Berkshire for $65.30 a Share? 50-1 Stock Split Planned
- Baidu's Challenge: Expand Beyond Its Success in China
- GM Monthly Sales Increase; Ford Sales Edge Lower
- Final World Series Games Big Money Makers
- Best Buy To Embed Digital Download Platform on Devices
- Options Trader Targets Precious Metal Surge
- October Shows Auto Rebound Will Be Slow
- The Silencing of Paul Volcker?
- CNBC Transcript: Warren Buffett Explains His Railroad 'All-In Bet' on America
- CIT's Retail Impact?
- M&A: Signs of Strength?
- Crescenzi: Fed Exit Best As Process, Not Event
- PRico delays nearly half of planned 15,000 layoffs
- Tw telecom swings to 3Q profit from loss
- W.R. Berkley promotes W. Robert Berkley to COO job
- MasTec aims to buy Precision Pipeline for $150M
- Pacer in deal with UP Railroad; makes 3Q profit
- Discovery 3Q earnings fall 29 pct on higher costs
- Crown Castle posts larger-than-expected 3Q loss
- Pitney Bowes reduces 2009 revenue, EPS guidance
- El Paso posts big 3Q profit plunge, cuts dividend
SALT LAKE CITY - Utah lawmakers heard competing views on climate change Wednesday: one emphasizing the vast scientific consensus about warming trends and humanity's influence and another raising doubts about the root causes.
University of Utah scientist James Steenburgh told the state's Public Utilities and Technology Interim Committee that temperatures are rising and people are very likely to blame.
But University of Alabama researcher Roy Spencer offered doubts about that conclusion and said natural climate cycles should be more thoroughly investigated.
Lawmakers held the 90 minute, standing-room-only hearing as they follow Congress' consideration of carbon cap and trade legislation.
Spencer, a former senior scientist for climate studies at NASA, said the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change exists to build the scientific case for humans' role in global warming. Research funding favors those with similar views and shuns those seeking alternate explanations, he said.
"There is no such thing as unbiased research in this field," he said.
But Steenburgh, who led a state science panel on the expected effects of global warming in Utah, spent about 20 minutes reiterating "the preponderance of evidence" leading most scientists to conclude humanity's role in the Earth's warming.
Over the last 100 years, the planet's average surface temperatures have increased by about 1.3 degrees, with some of the warmest years on record occurring in the last decade, he said.
Utah is warming more than the global average, meaning residents could see fewer frost days, longer growing seasons for some crops, earlier spring snow melt and more heat waves. It's unclear what will happen with the state's rain and snow, Steenburgh said.
The science over global warming is still unresolved, said state Rep. Mike Noel, who ran the hearing. The Republican said he's reluctant to support any policies that might lead to job losses in Utah and higher costs for energy consumers.
Spencer said not enough has been done to thoroughly examine the possibility of natural causes for warming temperatures, including long-running fluctuations in climate and weather cycles, Spencer said.
There are significant uncertainties about the cascading effects that more greenhouses gases in the atmosphere might trigger, Spencer said.
Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, a Republican, convened a blue ribbon panel on climate change in 2006 and signed onto an initiative with other Western governors to cut the region's carbon emissions to below 2005 levels by 2020, a roughly 15 percent reduction.
But Gov. Gary Herbert, who succeed Huntsman and is also a Republican, has taken a more skeptical view of humanity's role in climate change.
Earlier Wednesday, 18 scientific organizations including the nation's largest — the American Association for the Advancement of Science — sent a letter to all U.S. senators, saying that climate change is occurring and "rigorous scientific research demonstrates that the greenhouse gases emitted by human activities are the primary driver."
- These four sectors will be the next to lead the market.
- These executives got the largest pay packages of the last 10 years.
- People who are scared of flying can now press a button on their iPhone to help them deal with their panic.
- A Harvard professor’s unusual confectionary is blowing away chocolatiers in Paris.
- CNBC’s Darren Rovell corrects his assertion on NYC Marathon men's winner Meb Keflezighi’s nationality.
- How much would you pay for a motorized La-Z-Boy? An eBay auction for a police-confiscated 'DWI' chair is fetching high dollars.








