Ross McKitrick

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Ross McKitrick, AGW denier, inaction advocate
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Ross McKitrick is an Associate Professor in the Economics Department at the University of Guelph, Ontario, and is affiliated with various climate inaction groups. His name also appears frequently as "Ross McKittrick".

McKitrick made a name for himself as a climate change sceptic since he co-authored the book Taken By Storm, which was published in late 2002, although his support for anti-regulation challenges to environmental policies does stretch back some years prior.

His background is as an economist; it shows no apparent expertise in climate science.

Academic background

According to a biographical note McKitrick holds "a BA in economics from Queen's University, and an MA and Ph.D. in economics from the University of British Columbia. He was appointed Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Guelph in 1996 and Associate Professor in 2000."

"His area of specialization is environmental economics and policy analysis. His current research areas include empirical modeling of the relationship between economic growth and pollution emissions; the impact of economic activity on the measurement of surface temperatures; and the climate change policy debate," it states. [3]

A January 2000 profile of McKitrick in his hometown newspaper, the Guelph Mercury, described his PhD thesis as doctoral thesis as being on the possibility of taxing carbon emissions as a way to reduce payroll taxes which he considered to be too high.

The profile also noted that a current McKitrick study was on alternatives to government's and citizens suing corporations for pollution induced damage. It noted that McKitrick didn't support the proposal by the federal government that the federal government sue pulp and paper manufacturers for damage to fisheries. "What I'm interested in is looking at whether, in the end, this kind of system would be more costly to society on the whole than the good it would do," he told the Guelph Mercury.

According to his bio note McKitrick has briefed the Canadian Parliamentary Finance Committee, and to government staff at the US Congress and Senate but it does not state on what issues.

"He has published scholarly articles in The Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Economic Modeling, The Canadian Journal of Economics, Environmental and Resource Economics and other journals, as well as commentaries in newspapers and other public forums," it states,

Affiliations

Since October 2002, McKitrick has been a Senior Fellow at the Fraser Institute, an anti-regulation organization based in Vancouver, British Columbia[4] funded in part by the Atlas Economic Research Foundation. He is also on the academic advisory council of the Global Warming Policy Foundation.

He is also a signatory of the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation's "An Evangelical Declaration on Global Warming".[1]

He was University of Buckingham visiting professor circa 2009.[2]

1999, McKitrick on endangered species

In November 1999 the Fraser Institute disputed an estimate by the Committee on the Status of Wildlife in Canada that there were 339 endangered species. Instead it preferred its own estimate of 91. In a Canadian Press article on the report a spokesman for the Alberta Wilderness Association, Stephen Legault, described the report as "another effort at fearmongering and misinformation by a right-wing think tank."

In response McKitrick penned a letter to the editor of the Guelph Mercury, an Ontario newspaper, defending the think tank and accusing Legault of being "blinded by ideology." McKitrick claimed the U.S. Endangered Species Act "imposes draconian restrictions on use of private land on which rare species are present. Since these rules destroy property value, landowners across the U.S. now work to make their lands inhospitable to endangered species."

McKitrick on climate

While most of McKitrick's work in the late 1990's concentrated on modelling pollution abatement costs and environmental taxes, from 2000 onwards he engaged in efforts to delay action on climate change.

McKitrick has said, "I have been probing the arguments for global warming for well over a decade. In collaboration with a lot of excellent coauthors I have consistently found that when the layers get peeled back, what lies at the core is either flawed, misleading or simply non-existent."[3]

His background is as an economist shows no apparent expertise in climate science that would equip him to hold an informed view on global warming.

Ross McKitrick is a speaker at the America First Energy Conference to be held on November 9th, 2017. [5]

2000 Cooler Heads Coalition briefing statement

At a October 2000 briefing organised by the Cooler Heads Coalition, then a project of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, McKitrick joined other sceptics in criticising the Third Assessment Report (TAR) of the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). "Climate alarmists put the policy cart in front of the horse. Even if global warming is happening, or about to happen, and we decide its net effects are mostly bad, there are many feasible policy options to deal with it. In sharp contrast, the scale of policy intervention required to stabilize carbon concentrations would have far worse effects on human welfare than any known impact of climate change," the October 2000 edition of Power magazine reported McKitrick stating.

2002+, Canadian newspaper op-eds

In 2002 McKitrick became a regular contributor to Canadian newspaper op-ed pages, particularly the National Post, criticizing the Kyoto Protocol.

2002 Book - Taken by Storm

Despite McKitrick's outspoken criticisms of the IPCC's work there was relatively little questioning of his arguments. However, following the release of Taken by Storm in October 2002, his specific criticisms of climate change modelling and policies came to be assessed more critically.

  • Christopher Essex and Ross McKitrick, Taken By Storm: The Troubled Science, Policy and Politics of Global Warming, Key Porter Books, Toronto, 2002. ISBN 1552632121. This book - which won the 2002 Donner Book Prize, a $10K award - was paid for in part by the Donner Canadian Foundation, which contributed $20k toward writing the book in 2002.[4]

Contact details

The University of Guelph
Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1 Canada
Tel: (519) 824-4120 ext. 52532
Fax: (519) 763-8497
Email: rmckitri AT uoguelph.ca
Web: http://www.uoguelph.ca/~rmckitri/ross.html

Articles and resources

References

Related SourceWatch articles

External resources

McKitrick and affiliates

Criticisms

External articles

Wikipedia also has an article on Ross McKitrick. This article may use content from the Wikipedia article under the terms of the GFDL.