Climate change is expected to cause mass human migration, including immigration across international borders. This study quantitatively examines the linkages among variations in climate, agricultural yields, and people's migration responses by using an instrumental variables approach. Our method allows us to identify the relationship between crop yields and migration without explicitly controlling for all other confounding factors. Using state-level data from Mexico, we find a significant effect of climate-driven changes in crop yields on the rate of emigration to the United States. The estimated semielasticity of emigration with respect to crop yields is approximately −0.2, i.e., a 10% reduction in crop yields would lead an additional 2% of the population to emigrate. We then use the estimated semielasticity to explore the potential magnitude of future emigration. Depending on the warming scenarios used and adaptation levels assumed, with other factors held constant, by approximately the year 2080, climate change is estimated to induce 1.4 to 6.7 million adult Mexicans (or 2% to 10% of the current population aged 15–65 y) to emigrate as a result of declines in agricultural productivity alone. Although the results cannot be mechanically extrapolated to other areas and time periods, our findings are significant from a global perspective given that many regions, especially developing countries, are expected to experience significant declines in agricultural yields as a result of projected warming.From Climate Depot comes word of an amazing full court press against Michael Oppenheimer from the usual suspects.
Propagandist Michael Oppenheimer shredded: 'There are only 6.3m agricultural workers in Mexico. For Oppenheimer to predict that they will all move north seems preposterous' omichael@princeton.eduMark wants you to write to Mike (what is it with these clowns and their Mike mania, Michael Mann, Michael Tobis and now Michael Oppenheimer), and tell him how wrong he is. Mark has some problems with number too. Current estimates are that there are already about 6 million Mexicans in the US without permission, and, Oppenheim's estimate of climate driven migration would be 1.4 to 6.3 million. There are probably about 30 million dual nationals, visa holders and first or second generation descendants of Mexican citizens in the US. But on to the food fight . . .
UN IPCC Lead Author Richard Tol: Oppenheimer's 'silly PNAS paper makes 3 mistakes. 1st: It confuses decadal weather variability with climate change...'including this goodie from Ethon's lunch time friend Lubos
'2nd, it fails to control for other determinants of migration that may well be correlated with weather during the sample. 3rd they extrapolate beyond belief'
Prof. Pielke Jr. Mocks Oppenheimer's 'Silly Science': Immigration paper 'is guesswork piled on top of 'what ifs' built on a foundation of tenuous assumptions'
Physicist mocks Oppenheimer: 'The descendants of Oppenheimer should sue Oppenheimer and prevent him from using and contaminating the name of their ancestor - and the good name of physics' visit siteSo the big bird flew over there to see why Motl was defending a dead, left wing physicist, and read
He and his friends essentially claim that global warming is going to be the main reason of the Mexican illegal immigration. Between 1.4 and 6.7 million Mexicans will arrive to the U.S. by 2080 because their agriculture will get worse, and so on. Of course, this statement is completely preposterous but the media make it even worse when they exclusively quote the upper "6.7 million" figure in the title.Why is this not going to be a problem, some, not Ethon, might ask? and, of course, the friendly poly-arithmetic (he knows how to add, but not multiply) Motl replies
The number of Mexicans who actually move because of the temperatures may be counted in thousands, not millions. If you check an encyclopedia, the daily temperatures in Mexico City go from 6 to 21 °C in January to 12 to 26 °C in May (the figures are average lows and average highs in the months). In average, there's no excessive heat over there. And the agriculture is not getting worse because of the climate change.Which makes sense if you don't have a clue about the geography of Mexico. Mexico City sits way high on a plateau. High enough that low landers need a LOT of time to acclimate, and, as even Lubos knows, temperature decreases with altitude. Eli, being a RTFR kinda bunny, went and found a climatic map of Mexico
You may check that e.g. Sao Paolo in Brazil, the agricultural powerhouse of Latin America, has temperatures by about 6 °C higher than Mexico City. They're even higher in Rio de Janeiro. Warmth is surely not a problem.
Guess where Mexico City is. Oh yeah, that large green area down in the south. The yellow part is mostly highlands. The rest of the country is a lot hotter. Lubos, of course, picked the coolest part of Mexico. Why is Eli not surprised?
Oh yes, read the article. Tol and Pielke Jr. have not.
Again the denialists do want want any attempt at understanding the scale of the problems that await. Their only valid approach is to stick our collective heads in the sand and chant "not real, not real"
ReplyDeleteLittle Mouse applauds Feng, Kreuger and Oppenheimer for the insight.
I visit often but rarely comment, but have to say you always crack me up.
ReplyDeleteIts obviously proposterous that people would migrate because of climate change. Because climate change is not real. And because scientists make such proposterous claims, it is obvious that climate change cannot be real.
ReplyDeleteThe first rule of 'skepticism': do not talk about the goals of skepticism
ReplyDeleteThe second rule of 'skepticism': play up all uncertainties
The third rule of 'skepticism': attack all CO2 warming attribution
- Fight Mouse
Citation: Stahle, D. W., E. R. Cook, J. Villanueva Díaz, F. K. Fye, D. J. Burnette, R. D. Griffin, R. A. Soto, R. Seager, and R. R. Heim Jr. (2009), Early 21st-Century Drought in Mexico, Eos Trans. AGU, 90(11), doi:10.1029/2009EO110001.
ReplyDeleteSEAGER, R et al. Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change. Atmósfera [online]. 2009, vol.22, n.1 [citado 2010-07-29], pp. 1-31 . Disponível em: . ISSN 0187-6236.
See even the denier use tricks! Claiming that temps in Mexico City are representative of the whole country! Personally I prefer tricks that are fully explained in journals like Nature, Which can be conventionality called Nature tricks, so that everyone knows where to find the details.
ReplyDeleteI guess the only difference is that Motl didn't use the word trick...
Eli can retire part XXXIII: http://epa.gov/climatechange/endangerment/downloads/response-volume1.pdf
ReplyDeleteThis Richard Tol is (claims to be) an economist?
ReplyDelete"Physicist mocks Oppenheimer: 'The descendants of Oppenheimer should sue Oppenheimer and prevent him from using and contaminating the name of their ancestor - and the good name of physics' "
ReplyDeleteIsn't Michael Oppenheimer J. Robert's nephew?
-luminous
Probably worth pointing out that agriculture isn't very extensive in the megalopolis of Mexico City, so that's hardly a good place for Motl to point to as his example of Mexican agriculture.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the optimal temperature of the planet?
ReplyDeleteAh, I see that AGW Skeptic (whose website is quite honest about what he offers--that is lies) is spreading the standard canard asking the optimal global temperature. The answer is whatever temperature allows us to feed, house and clothe 10 billion people by 2050. That is probably less than the temperature will be at that time.
ReplyDeleteAlso note that AGW Skeptic is brave enough to post an anonymous comment here but not brave enough to allow posts on his/her lie-filled web page.
ReplyDelete