K
kimmielittle
Guest
On “ocean acidification”
tinyurl.com/33prwbd
epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm FuseAction=Files.View&FileStore_id=db302137-13f6-40cc-8968-3c9aac133b16
Statement of
DR. JOHN T. EVERETT
Joint Hearing on
“EPA’s Role in Protecting Ocean Health”
before the
Subcommittees on Oversight and on Water and Wildlife of the
Committee on Environment and Public Works
United States Senate
May 11, 2010
Dr .Everett goes on to expose the "science’ that promoted this fear by using "exaggeration’.…Importantly, oceans arealkaline - not acidic, so use of the term “acidification” unnecessarily promotes fear. If all the CO2 in the air were put into the ocean, the oceans would still be alkaline. With all this talk of acidification, we need to reassure bathers that their feet will not dissolve when they step into the ocean. Ocean water at the surface generally has a pH over 8 and neutral is 7.0 (pure water) while a puddle of rain water (pH 5.6) is 100 times more acidic after having picked up CO2 in its fall through the air. Many of our recreation lakes and drinking water reservoirs (such as most of those in some states; (e. g., 70% in Maine) have pH values so low that they are truly acidic (pH<7). There is nothing wrong with the fish and the water in these lakes. It is often just that the lakes have less limestone and more granite on their bottoms. Technically, we should say the oceans could become less alkaline, rather than more acidic. In any case, unlike rainwater, the oceans will never become acidic.
I have reviewed the major papers and the critiques of the papers.
Below are a few that I think merit bringing before the Committees. It is only a few that show no
obvious bias. For example, it is quite common among researchers vying for scarce funding
dollars to hype their findings or the importance of the problem. Whether it is the use of
hydrochloric (HCl) acid to mimic CO2 but which introduces other issues such as shell decay, or presenting the findings of grave consequences at high acidity while not mentioning the lack of
change at lower levels, or not investigating whether low pH was due to degraded water quality
from runoff and sewage, the real cause of reduced growth or mortality. In some cases a lower
base year is chosen that exaggerates the percentage change, such as “pH levels will drop 30%
from pre-industrial levels – when current levels are far less disputed, but the % change is less.
A MUST read:Each study must be scoured for hints of inappropriate procedures and unfounded statements.
None can be accepted at face value. The peer review process has warts. A good example is the dispute over whether acidification is good or bad for “shell”-forming plant plankton, a vital part of the ocean’s biology with the ability to sequester vast amounts of CO2. The first paper says more CO2 is good, the second that it is bad, and then the first successfully refutes the criticism and gets the last word, sustaining the positive assessment in great detail - all published in Science. This is important because much of the alarmist literature is based on work that is refuted in this series. The verdict: shell forming algae do much better in a higher CO2 environment.
tinyurl.com/33prwbd
epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm FuseAction=Files.View&FileStore_id=db302137-13f6-40cc-8968-3c9aac133b16