[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 109 (Thursday, July 19, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H5017]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GLOBAL WARMING IS REAL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, if anecdotal evidence were science, I would
be standing here proclaiming that global warming is real, just step
outside. It is severely hot, oppressive, simply unenjoyable. Often, I
feel as if I'm standing behind an 18-wheeler blowing heat and exhaust
in my face. But no, I'm just walking my dogs in Chicago no less.
Chicago, the city of snow. Yes, snow, the stuff that emboldened those
who said that global warming was a farce. ``Just think about that snow
piled up against your door,'' they said.
But global warming is part of a larger climate crisis--climate
change. It is something the Union of Concerned Scientists say includes
such events as more extreme storms, more severe droughts, deadly heat
waves, rising sea levels, and more acidic oceans, to name a few. You
might have noticed I'm citing the Union of Concerned Scientists, not
the group of folks who notice anecdotally that the weather was extreme.
It would do us good to heed the words of science and not the remarks of
a few casual observers.
I don't make my case that global warming is real because it's hot,
just as it doesn't follow that global warming isn't real when it's
cold. Extreme weather is climate change. Over 200 peer-reviewed
scientific studies have concluded that global warming is real and
potentially catastrophic. No scientific peer-reviewed studies have
found the opposite--none.
As of July 3, 56 percent of the continental United States was
experiencing drought conditions. This marks the largest area affected
by drought in the 12-year record kept by the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Scientists note that temperature records reveal a long-term trend for
warming that has been picking up speed. The first decade of this
century was the warmest on record, according to NOAA's State of Climate
in a 2010 report. It is real because science tells us so.
We have sustained 1,644 record heat days from January to June of
2012. We have endured 631 days of record rainfall. We have shoveled our
way out of 98 days of record snowfall. The prolonged heat wave this
past spring included the hottest March since recordkeeping began in
1894. There were 671 records that were broken, according to the
National Weather Service. April marked the end of the warmest 12-month
stretch ever in the United States.
What does all this snow, rain, heat, drought, ocean acidity, and
raging forest fires mean? Scientists say it's global warming.
Scientists say that our warming climate is causing more and more
extreme weather events, and they can and will get worse by our
inaction.
Several weeks of snowmageddon, which prompted taunts of Al Gore by
Congress, do not disprove scientific fact. At the same time, the
brutality of today's untenable heat does not solidify my stance any
more than the snow disproves Al Gore. Local temperatures taken as
individual data points have nothing to do with the long-term trend of
global warming.
To get a real hand on global reading, scientists rely on changes in
weather over a long period of time. Looking at high- and low-
temperature data from recent decades shows that new record highs occur
nearly twice as often as new record lows.
So, no, my belief in global warming isn't sprung from a conversation
with my neighbor nor a straw poll of people I'm sitting and sweating
with at a Cubs game. My belief in global warming is borne of a
respected acknowledgement of sound science that tells us that global
warming is real.
As Winston Churchill said, ``I never worry about action, but only
about inaction.'' My concern--my fear--is that we have gone too far to
save the planet we've neglected to protect because we've traded science
for reading the wind.
Global warming is real, and the extreme weather and sound science
demonstrate that this is so. Let us know the crippling fear of inaction
no longer.
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