It was always one of the lamest global warming/rising sea level scare stories ever, that is, the disappearance of the island of Lohachara in the Sundarbans where the Ganges and the Brahmaputra rivers empty into the Bay of Bengal. Breathtaking in its studied refusal to look at the already long available evidence that the islands in this group come and go and move all the time in response to tidal flows and other factors. It also confirmed the fact that Geoffrey Lean is possibly the most incompetent environment writer for any newspaper in the world, though his Amazon rain forest doomed by drought story, which actually got the results of a study completely arse about also stands out amongst his ignorant scaremongering! Tim BlairSunday, June 07, 2009 at 12:22amRecall the tragic island of Lohachara, eaten by global warming some years ago:
The story, by the Independent on Sunday‘s environment editor Geoffrey Lean, was a complete crock, omitting even a vague date of the island’s removal. And now, as Achintyarup Ray reports, Lohachara is back:
Geoffrey Lean – a tilter by nature as well as by name – has been wanting for inspiration of late. Perhaps he could examine Lohachara’s revival, which marks the moment when one of the most apocalyptic predictions of environmentalists and climate scientists didn’t come true. UPDATE. For no apparent reason, the Independent only a few hours ago republished Lean’s absurd 2006 piece. UPDATE II. From the Times of India piece referenced by Ray:
And the website for the holy Lohachara sculpture has vanished. |
Saturday, June 6, 2009
The island of Lohachara reappears!
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So let’s see… The island is in the delta of a river system than drains 1/3 of the monsoon-soaked Indian subcontinent and is subject to routine flooding, storm surges and tsunamis from the Bay of Bengal, so obviously it was global warming. Of course! I could write the news release myself:
....Survivors describe the horror of being forced to stand on tippy-toe as a wall of water 2.8 centimeters high swept across this bucolic island paradise. Rescuers with squeegees and paper towels documented a catastrophic dampness that ultimately doomed efforts to stabilize the area...
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