Not even close, I’m afraid. Perhaps you should re-read my post.
How is a prediction that Sydney has 50 years (from 2004-2054) to avoid catastrophic climate change falsified by a dam capacity of 66% in 2008 and 62% in 2010?
And how does it answer a challenge to find evidence of any benefits of global warming?
2010: Perth’s water storages are nearly
50%.
You know, I’m really struggling to decide if this is a perfect example of the
self-deception required to maintain a belief system that is directly contradicted by the facts in front of you, or if this is a perfect example of the
deception required to support a claim that you know is untrue.
As your own links clearly states, Perth’s dams are at 32.2%, and that’s
with the support of the first desalination plant running at full capacity
and unsustainable extraction of water from Gnangara Mound. They were at 51.5% capacity
last year, and that was
the highest level in 12 years. (Also with the desalination plant and unsustainable extraction from Gnangara Mound.)
Perth has also instigated the toughest water restrictions ever, despite making the “normal” restrictions of “watering only two days per week” permanent years ago.
And Perth’s climate change since the 1970s has been well documented. We’re not talking about a bad year or two, we’re talking about a “drought” that has lasted 30 years. Do you dare to suggest that Perth’s
second desalination plant, currently under construction, is a mistake? It seems like those actually
responsible for ensuring Perth does not become a “ghost metropolis” aren’t as cavalier about the future as you.
2008: Flannery predicted Adelaide would run out of water by early 2008.
2010: Adelaide’s water storages are
84% and rising.
Another one? Has it occurred to you that if your argument had merit, you
wouldn’t need to misrepresent? Doesn’t that
tell you something?
You claim Flannery “predicted Adelaide would run out of water by early 2008.”
Flannery
actually wrote: “Desalination plants can provide insurance against drought. In Adelaide, Sydney and Brisbane, water supplies are so low they need desalinated water urgently, possibly in as little as 18 months.” (At that time, Brisbane dam levels
were down to 18% following a nearly monotonic decline since 2001 at a rate of about 15%/year. The
Tarong coal-fired power station, responsible for 30% of Queensland’s power, had to cut output by 70%, costing 160 jobs, because there wasn’t enough water in the dam to keep it running.
NSW had a similar problem last year. So, I would call that “urgent”, yes. Perhaps you enjoy the thrill of living close to the edge hoping for a flood to “fix” everything.)
Now, I’m assuming that that is the Flannery comment you’re using to fabricate your claim because that’s the quote Andrew Bolt used in his interview with Flannery when
he fabricated a very similar claim, but his was about Brisbane. It’s hard to tell because you chose not to cite a reference for your claim. Perhaps it was
this one instead? “The water problem is so severe for Adelaide that it may run out of water by early 2009.”
How does “may” turn into “will” in your mind?
Of course, this has absolutely
nothing to do with the correctness of the science of climate change. After all,
Gavin Schmidt criticised Flannery’s “too-frequent absolutist statements based on preliminary science” as “a classic example of why ‘consensus’ reports are both more careful and more correct than an individual opinion” so perhaps proving Flannery wrong (which you haven’t actually managed to do
anyway) is a poor substitute for proving the actual
science is wrong, and does
nothing to support your claims about how great higher CO2 levels are going to be.