Interesting discussion on the radio the other day about "conservation".
There was much debate about what it is we are trying to conserve, forests being one of the topics and the country in question being the UK. Oh dear, it depends on which time you want to take as your datum. From the last Ice age we have been through tundra, birch pine and oak. We've been forested and then not forested.
The most recent time we as people made the most difference to forestation was during the Napoleonic wars when oak was felled for ships.
Most of the UK woodland is cultivated.
By the way, don't expect trees in all the forests because forest was originally a term for a hunting preserve (of the king). Much is and was moorland.
Pretty much every aspect of the UK's countryside has been managed in some way or other for some time and well before the modern industrial era.
At one time, during the Roman occupation, the climate favoured cultivation of vines for wine. There appears to be a resurgence at the moment but the weather may count against it again as we have had the coldest spell for 44 years.
To oppose or question the claims for Anthropogenic Global Warming does not mean we live in denial. It means that what is proposed to combat AGW is a huge undertaking and that we really need to get it right. But irreversible? not a term I'd apply to the climate, changeable, yes. Can we ever revert to some other time? I doubt it. Do we risk irreversible damage to society and the economy? yes. We get it wrong and we may not be able to recover.
Should we suspect the AGW claims? on the basis of the data, absolutely. It grows ever more suspect day by day.
JMW