| The
Putin Administration on Kyoto
by Andrei Illarionov 
Remarks
by Russian Presidential Economic Adviser Andrei Illarionov at a
press conference on results of the "Climate Change and Kyoto
Protocol" seminar in Moscow
We have a few minutes left and I would like to tell you about the
impressions on the two-day seminar that has just ended.
Yuri Antonovich and I have mentioned the fact that this is the first
seminar of its kind that we have managed to arrange and it was accidental.
Over almost a year we have repeatedly asked our foreign partners
who advocate the Kyoto Protocol and who insist that Russia should
ratify the Kyoto Protocol, and we have invited them to meet and
discuss these issues, present arguments and counter-arguments and
discuss them jointly. But we have not received any reply for a year.
These people persistently refused to take part in any discussion.
Nine months ago, at an international climate change conference in
Moscow, ten questions concerning the essence of the Kyoto Protocol
and its underlying theory were submitted to the IPCC. We were told
that the reply would be given within several days. Nine months have
passed since then but there has been no reply, even though we have
repeated our inquiries on these and the growing number of other
related questions.
Instead of getting replies to our questions, we kept on hearing
that replies did not matter. What was important is that whether
or not Russia trusts Britain, the European Union and the countries
that have ratified the Kyoto Protocol and that have been exerting
unprecedented pressure on Russia to ratify it. This is why it was
so important for us to arrange a real meeting and a real discussion
of real problems with the participation of foreign scientists who
have different views in order not to stew in one's own juice, as
Yuri Antonovich put it, but to hear the arguments not only of our
Russian scientists but also the arguments and counter-arguments
from scientists in other countries.
We did get such an opportunity and over the past two days we heard
more than 20 reports, we held detailed discussions, and now we can
say that a considerable number of the questions we formulated and
raised have been somewhat clarified, just as some other questions
have.
I would sum up my conclusions in six points. The first one concerns
the nature and the contents of the Kyoto Protocol. This is one of
the biggest, if not the biggest, international adventure of all
times and nations. Frankly speaking, it's hard to recall something
like this of the same scale and of the same consequences, just as
the lack of any grounds for action in field.
Basically, none of the assertions made in the Kyoto Protocol and
the "scientific" theory on which the Kyoto Protocol is
based been borne out by actual data. We are not seeing any high
frequency of emergency situations or events. There has been no increase
in the number of floods. Just as there has been no increase in the
number of droughts. We can see that the speed of the wind in the
hails in some areas is decreasing contrary to the statements made
by the people who support the Kyoto Protocol. We are not witnessing
a higher incidence of contagious diseases, and if there is a rise,
it has nothing to do with climate change.
If there is an insignificant increase in the temperature it is not
due to anthropogenic factors but to the natural factors related
to the planet itself and solar activity. There is no evidence confirming
a positive linkage between the level of carbon dioxide and temperature
changes. If there is such a linkage, it is a reverse nature. In
other words, it is not carbon dioxide that influences the temperature
on Earth, but it just the reverse: temperature fluctuations are
caused by solar activity influence the concentration of carbon dioxide.
The statistical data underpinning these documents and issued in
millions of copies are often considerably distorted if not falsified.
The most vivid example of that is the so-called "ice hockey
stick", or the curve of temperature changes on the planet over
the past 1000 years. It is alleged that there were insignificant
temperature fluctuations for 900 years but there was a sharp rise
in temperature in the 20th century.
A number of scientific works published lately show that in order
to produce this "ice hockey stick", nine intentional or
unintentional, I don't really know, mistakes were made that led
to distortions in initial data and final results. Using the words
of famous poet Vladimir Vysotsky, everything is not the way it should
be.
Second, in respect to the presentation made by representatives of
the so-called official team of the British government and the official
British climate science, or at least how they introduced themselves
at the seminar. I personally was surprised by the exceptionally
poor content of the papers presented. During the past two years
I took part in many international meetings, seminars, conferences
and congresses on these issues both in Russia and in many of the
countries, including the seminar that we had today and yesterday.
Honestly, these papers and presentations differed dramatically from
what is usually offered at international congresses and conferences.
Simultaneously, they revealed an absolute - and I stress, absolute
inability to answer questions concerning the alleged professional
activities of the authors of these papers. Not only the ten questions
that were published nine months ago, but not a single question asked
during this two-day seminar by participants in the seminar, both
Russian and foreign, were answered.
When it became clear that they could not provide a substantive answer
to a question, three devices were used. And I have to say it now
although has not direct bearing on the Kyoto Protocol and the content
of the extremely interesting presentations made during the past
two days. The British participants insisted on introducing censorship
during the holding of this seminar. The chief science adviser to
the British government, Mr. King, demanded in the form of an ultimatum
at the beginning of yesterday that the program of the seminar be
changed and he presented an ultimatum demanding that about two-third
of the participants not be given the floor.
The participants in the seminar who had been invited by the Russian
Academy of Sciences, they have been invited by the president of
the Academy of Sciences Yuri Sergeyevich Osipov. Mr. King spoke
about "undesirable" scientists and undesirable participants
in the seminar. He declared that if the old program is preserved,
he would not take part in the seminar and walk out taking along
with him all the other British participants.
He has prepared his own program which he proposed, it is available
here and my colleagues can simply distribute Mr. King's hand-written
program to change the program prepared by the Russian Academy of
Sciences and sent out in advance to all the participants in the
seminar.
A comparison of the real program prepared by the Academy of Science
and the program proposed as an ultimatum by Mr. King will give us
an idea of what scientists, from the viewpoint of the chief scientific
adviser to the British government, are undesirable. In the course
of negotiations on this issue Mr. King said that he had contacted
the British Foreign Secretary Mr. Straw who was in Moscow at the
time and with the office of the British Prime Minister, Blair, so
that the corresponding executives in Britain should contact the
corresponding officials in Russia to bring pressure on the Russian
Academy of Sciences and the President of the Russian Academy of
Sciences to change the seminar's program.
When the attempt to introduce censorship at the Russian Academy
of Sciences failed, other attempts were made to disrupt the seminar.
At least four times during the course of the seminar ugly scenes
were staged that prevented the seminar from proceeding normally.
As a result we lost at least four hours of working time in order
to try to solve these problems.
During these events Mr. King cited his conversations with the office
of the British Prime Minister and had got clearance for such actions.
And thirdly, when the more or less normal work of the seminar was
restored and when the opportunity for discussion presented itself,
when questions on professional topics were asked, and being unable
to answer these questions, Mr. King and other members of the delegation,
turned to flight, as happened this morning when Mr. King, in an
unprecedented incident, cut short his answer to a question in mid
sentence realizing that he was unable to answer it and left the
seminar room. It is not for us to give an assessment to what happened,
but in our opinion the reputation of British science, the reputation
of the British government and the reputation of the title "Sir"
has sustained heavy damage.
The next point brings us directly to the Kyoto Protocol, or more
specifically, to the ideological and philosophical basis on which
it is built. That ideological base can be juxtaposed and compared,
as Professor Reiter has done just now, with man-hating totalitarian
ideology with which we had the bad fortune to deal during the 20th
century, such as National Socialism, Marxism, Eugenics, Lysenkovism
and so on. All methods of distorting information existing in the
world have been committed to prove the alleged validity of these
theories. Misinformation, falsification, fabrication, mythology,
propaganda. Because what is offered cannot be qualified in any other
way than myth, nonsense and absurdity.
Finally, my last point is why it happens and how the whole thing
can be described. When we see one of the biggest, if not the biggest
international adventures based on man-hating totalitarian ideology
which, incidentally, manifests itself in totalitarian actions and
concrete events, particularly academic discussions, and which tries
to defend itself using disinformation and falsified facts. It's
hard to think of any other word but "war" to describe
this.
To our great regret, this is a war, and this is a war against the
whole world. But in this particular case the first to happen to
be on this path is our country. It's unpleasant to say but I am
afraid it's undeclared war against Russia, against the entire country,
against the left and the right, against the liberals and the conservatives,
against business and the Federal Security Service, against the young
and the old who live in Moscow or in provinces. This is a total
war against our country, a war that uses all kinds of means.
The main prize in this war for those who have started it and who
are waging is the ratification by Russian authorities of the Kyoto
Protocol. There is only one conclusion to be made from what we have
seen, heard and researched: Russia has no material reasons to ratify
this document. Moreover, such a ratification would mean only one
thing: complete capitulation to the dangerous and harmful ideology
and practice that are being imposed upon us with the help of international
diplomacy.
This is not a simple war. Like any war it cannot be easy and simple.
Regrettably like any war it has its losses and victims, and we must
understand that. The main thing is that we have now obvious evidence
that we have got over the past two days, although we had some hints
before that time, and it was the approach to Russia practiced by
some people attending the seminar, an approach to Russia as a kind
of banana republic, an approach to a country that is not a colony
yet but about to become it as soon as it ratifies the document.
At least we now know how people in colony feel towards other people
who are trying to make them a colony.
I
will permit myself to remind you of the words said by President
Putin. President Putin has never said that he supported the Kyoto
Protocol. President Putin said on May 24, 2004 that he supported
the Kyoto process. So, I am sorry, but you can't say that I do not
support President Putin on this issue.
Copyright
2004 The Federal News Service, Inc.,Official Kremlin Int'l News
Broadcast
Friday, July 9, 2004
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