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| “Consensus”? What “Consensus”? Among Climate Scientists, The Debate Is Not Over |
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| Written by Viscount Monckton of Brenchley |
| Thursday, 19 July 2007 03:50 |
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The origin of the claim of
“consensus”
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David
Miliband, the Environment Minister of the United Kingdom, was greeted by
cries of “Rubbish!” when he told a conference on climate change at the Holy See
in the spring of 2007 that the science of climate and carbon dioxide was simple
and settled. Yet Miliband was merely reciting a mantra that has been widely
peddled by politicians such as Al Gore and political news media such as the
BBC, which has long since abandoned its constitutional obligation of
objectivity on this as on most political subjects, and has adopted a policy of
not allowing equal air-time to opponents of the imagined “consensus”.
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The claim
of “consensus” rests almost entirely on an inaccurate and now-outdated
single-page comment in the journal Science
entitled The Scientific Consensus on
Climate Change (Oreskes, 2004). In this less than impressive “head-count”
essay, Naomi Oreskes, a historian of science with no qualifications in
climatology, defined the “consensus” in a very limited sense, quoting as
follows from IPCC (2001) –
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“Human
activities … are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents … that
absorb or scatter radiant energy. … most of the observed warming over the last
50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas
concentrations.”
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The limited definition of
“consensus”
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Oreskes’
definition of “consensus” falls into two parts. First, she states that
humankind is altering the composition of the atmosphere. This statement is
uncontroversial: for measurement has established that the concentration of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen over the past 250 years to such an
extent that CO2 now constitutes almost 0.01 per cent more of the atmosphere
than in the pre-industrial era. However, on the question whether that
alteration has any detrimental climatic significance, there is no consensus,
and Oreskes does not state that there is.
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The
second part of Oreskes’ definition of the “consensus” is likewise limited in
its scope. Since global temperatures have risen by about 0.4C in the past 50
years, humankind – according to Oreskes’ definition of “consensus” – may have
accounted for more than 0.2C.
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Applying
that rate of increase over the present century, and raising it by half to allow
for the impact of fast-polluting developing countries such as China,
temperature may rise by 0.6C in the present century, much as it did in the past
century, always provided that the unprecedented (and now-declining) solar
activity of the past 70 years ceases to decline and instead continues at its
recent record level.
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There is
indeed a consensus that humankind is putting large quantities of greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere; that some warming has resulted; and that some
further warming can be expected. However, there is less of a consensus about
whether most of the past half-century’s warming is anthropogenic, which is why,
rightly, Oreskes is cautious enough to circumscribe her definition of the
“consensus” about the anthropogenic contribution to warming over the past
half-century with the qualifying adjective “likely”.
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There is
no scientific consensus on how much the world has warmed or will warm; how much
of the warming is natural; how much impact greenhouse gases have had or will
have on temperature; how sea level, storms, droughts, floods, flora, and fauna
will respond to warmer temperature; what mitigative steps – if any – we should
take; whether (if at all) such steps would have sufficient (or any) climatic
effect; or even whether we should take any steps at all.
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Campaigners
for climate alarm state or imply that there is a scientific consensus on all of
these things, when in fact there is none. They imply that Oreskes’ essay proves
the consensus on all of these things. Al Gore, for instance, devoted a long
segment of his film An Inconvenient Truth
to predicting the imminent meltdown of the Greenland and West Antarctic
ice-sheets, with a consequent global increase of 20 feet (6 m) in sea level
that would flood Manhattan, Shanghai, Bangladesh,
and other coastal settlements. He quoted Oreskes’ essay as proving that all
credible climate scientists were agreed on the supposed threat from climate
change. He did not point out, however, that Oreskes’ definition of the
“consensus” on climate change did not encompass, still less justify, his alarmist
notions.
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Let us
take just one example. The UN’s latest report on climate change, which is
claimed as representing and summarizing the state of the scientific “consensus”
insofar as there is one, says that the total contribution of ice-melt from
Greenland and Antarctica to the rise in sea level over the whole of the coming
century will not be the 20 feet luridly illustrated by Al Gore in his movie, but
just 2 inches.
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Gore’s
film does not represent the “consensus” at all. Indeed, he exaggerates the
supposed effects of ice-melt by some 12,000 per cent. The UN, on the other
hand, estimates the probability that humankind has had any influence on sea level at little better than 50:50. The BBC, of
course, has not headlined, or even reported, the UN’s “counter-consensual”
findings. Every time the BBC mentions “climate change”, it shows the same tired
footage of a glacier calving into the sea – which is what glaciers do every
summer.
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What Oreskes said
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Oreskes
(2004) said she had analyzed –
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“928
abstracts, published in refereed scientific journals between 1993 and 2003, and
listed in the ISI database with the keywords ‘climate change’.”
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She
concluded that 75% of the papers either explicitly or implicitly accepted the
“consensus” view; 25% took no position, being concerned with palaeoclimate
rather than today’s climate; and –
“Remarkably,
none of the papers disagreed with the consensus position. … This analysis shows
that scientists publishing in the peer-reviewed literature agree with IPCC, the
National Academy of Sciences, and the public statements of their professional societies.
Politicians, economists, journalists, and others may have the impression of
confusion, disagreement, or discord among climate scientists, but that
impression is incorrect. … Our grandchildren will surely blame us if they find
that we understood the reality of anthropogenic climate change and failed to do
anything about it. … There is a consensus on the reality of anthropogenic
climate change.”
It
is not clear whether Oreskes’ analysis was peer-reviewed, since it was
presented as an essay and not as a scientific paper. However, there were
numerous serious errors, effectively negating her conclusion, which suggest
that the essay was either not reviewed at all or reviewed with undue indulgence
by scientists who agreed with Oreskes’ declared prejudice – shared by the
editors of Science - in favour of the
alarmist position.
{mospagebreak}
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What Oreskes got wrong
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Dr. Benny
Peiser, of Liverpool John Moores University in the UK, conducted a search of the
peer-reviewed literature on the ISI Web of Science database between 1993 and
2003. He found not 928 but more than 12,000 papers mentioning the phrase
“climate change”. When he pointed this out, the editors of Science were compelled to publish an erratum to the effect that the
search term which Oreskes had used was not, as stated in her essay, “climate
change” but rather “global climate change”. Accordingly, Oreskes’ essay had
covered not the entire corpus of scientific papers on climate change over the
stated decade but fewer than one-thirteenth of them.
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Dr.
Peiser used “global climate change” as a search term and found 1,117 documents
using this term, of which 929 were articles and only 905 also had abstracts.
Therefore it is not clear which were the 928 “abstracts” mentioned by Oreskes,
and Science did not, as it would have
done with a peer-reviewed scientific paper, list the references to each of the
“abstracts”.
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Significantly, Oreskes’ essay does
not state how many of the 928 papers explicitly endorsed her very limited
definition of “consensus”. Dr. Peiser found that only 13 of the 1,117 documents
– a mere 1% – explicitly endorse the consensus, even in her limited definition.
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Dr. Peiser’s research demonstrated
that several of the abstracts confounded Oreskes’ assertion of unanimity by
explicitly rejecting or casting doubt upon the notion that human activities are
the main drivers of the observed warming over the last 50 years. Thus, in
Oreskes’ sample, more than twice as many appeared to have explicitly rejected
or doubted the “consensus” as had explicitly endorsed it.
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According to Dr. Peiser, fewer than
one-third of the papers analyzed by Oreskes either explicitly or implicitly
endorsed the “consensus”, contrary to Oreskes’ assertion that the figure was
75%. In addition, 44 abstracts focused on the natural as opposed to
anthropogenic causes of climate change, and did not include any direct or
indirect link or reference to human actitivies, carbon dioxide or other
greenhouse gas emissions, let alone anthropogenic forcing of recent climate
change. More than half of the abstracts did not mention anthropogenic climate
change at all and could not,
therefore, reasonably be held to have commented either way upon the “consensus”
as defined by Oreskes.
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Dr. Peiser wrote to Science to point out these and other
anomalies in Oreskes’ essay. The editors of Science
at first asked him to shorten his letter: then, after he had sent in his
shortened version, they changed their minds and refused to publish it –
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“After realizing that the basic points of your letter have already been
widely dispersed over the internet, we have reluctantly decided that we cannot
publish your letter. We appreciate your taking the time to revise it.”
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In fact, Dr. Peiser had been careful
to ensure that none of his material had appeared in any public forum, whether
on the Internet or otherwise. In any event, it is reprehensible that a learned
journal should publish defective material and should then, in effect, expect
its readers to surf the Internet to find the truth.
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The editors of Science also refused to publish any of the numerous other letters
that they had received pointing out the deficiencies in Oreskes’ analysis.
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At the time, the editors of Science had received (and rejected) a
research paper giving the results of a survey of some 500 international climate
researchers conducted by Professors Dennis Bray and Hans von Storch of the
German Institute for Coastal Research. The survey had found that –
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“a quarter of
respondents still question whether human activity is responsible for the most
recent climate changes.”
Dr. Peiser has commented: > “The decision to publish Oreskes' claim of general agreement (just days before an important UN conference on global warming, the Tenth Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Climate Change), was apparently made while the editors of Science were sitting on a paper that showed quite clearly the opposite. > > “It would appear that the editors of Science knowingly misled the public and the world's media. > > “In my view, such unethical behaviour constitutes a grave contravention, if not a corruption of scientific procedure. This form of unacceptable misconduct is much worse than the editors' refusal to publish the numerous letters and rebuttals regarding Oreskes' flawed study.” > Furthermore, what of the countless research papers that show global temperatures were similar or even higher than today’s during the Holocene Climate Optimum and the Medieval Warm Period, when atmospheric CO2 levels were much lower than at present? > What of the papers showing that solar variability is a key driver of recent climate change, and that in the past 70 years the Sun has been more active, for longer, than at almost any comparable period in the past 11,400 years? > What of the papers echoing Lorenz (1963), who, in the paper that founded chaos theory, stated and demonstrated his famous theorem that the climate is a mathematically-chaotic object that is by its nature unpredictable unless one fully understands not only all the relevant evolutionary processes but also the initial state of the global climate to a precision that is in practice altogether unattainable? > There are hundreds of learned papers, many of them written by the world's leading experts in climatology and related fields, that have raised serious reservations about the notion of a “consensus” as to the alarmist presentation of climate change. Many of these papers explicitly reject the “consensus”, even in the limited sense used by Oreskes. > There is no such thing as a “scientific consensus”, except in a very limited sense. This may be readily demonstrated by quotation from dozens of papers casting doubt on the “consensus”. > Some examples of papers which fell within Oreskes’ search criteron and within her chosen timeframe but which she regarded as supportive of her imagined “unanimous” consensus: > Ø AMMANN et al. (2003) detected evidence for close ties between solar variations and surface climate. > Ø REID (1997) found that “the importance of solar variability as a factor in climate change over the last few decades may have been underestimated in recent studies”. > Ø KONDRATYEV and Varotsos (1996) criticize “the undoubtedly overemphasized contribution of the greenhouse effect to the global climate change”. > Two abstracts reviewed by Oreskes directly and bluntly rejected the “consensus” as she had defined it, but she counted them as “consensual” nevertheless: > GERHARD and Hanson (2000): > “The American Association of Petroleum Geologists’ Ad Hoc Committee on Global Climate Issues has studied the supposition of human-induced climate change since the committee’s inception in January 1998. This paper details the progress and findings of the committee through June 1999, At that time there had been essentially no geologic input into the global climate change debate. The following statements reflect the current state of climate knowledge from the geologic perspective as interpreted by the majority of the committee membership. The committee recognizes that new data could change its conclusions. The earth’s climate is constantly changing owing to natural variability in earth processes. Natural climate variability over recent geological time is greater than reasonable estimates of potential human-induced greenhouse gas changes. Because no tool is available to test the supposition of human-induced climate change and the range of natural variability is so great, there is no discernible human influence on global climate at this time.”
FERNAU et al. (1993): “This article examines the status of the scientific uncertainties in predicting and verifying global climate change that hinder aggressive policy making. More and better measurements and statistical techniques are needed to detect and confirm the existence of greenhouse-gas-induced climate change, which currently cannot be distinguished from natural climate variability in the historical record. Uncertainties about the amount and rate of change of greenhouse gas emissions also make prediction of the magnitude and timing of climate change difficult. Because of inadequacies in the knowledge and depiction of physical processes and limited computer technology, predictions from existing computer models vary widely, particularly on a regional basis, and are not accurate enough yet for use in policy decisions. The extent of all these uncertainties is such that moving beyond no-regrets measures such as conservation will take political courage and may be delayed until scientific uncertainties are reduced.” > Though Oreskes has challenged Dr. Peiser’s analysis by pointing out that the paper by Gerhard and Hansen was not peer-reviewed, her essay appears not to have been peer-reviewed either. It may even be the case that the authors of most or even all of the cited abstracts personally believe that humankind is responsible for more than half of the 0.4C observed warming of the past half century. Dr. Peiser accepts, as does the author of the present paper, that most climate scientists published in the journals probably believe that humankind has contributed more than 0.2C of the 0.4C observed warming over the past half century. But the published papers we have quoted, nevertheless, raise sufficient doubts about important aspects of the imagined “consensus” to demonstrate the falsity of Oreskes’ claim that not one of the abstracts was counter-consensual. > Nor is the explicit and implicit rejection of the "consensus" confined to individual research papers such as those mentioned above. Distinguished scientific organizations such as the Russian Academy of Science and the U.S. Association of State Climatologists have also stated that they are skeptical of the imagined “consensus”. > Dr. Peiser concludes: > “The stifling of dissent and the curtailing of scientific skepticism is bringing climate research into disrepute. Science is supposed to work by critical evaluation, open-mindedness and self-correction. There is a fear among climate alarmists that the very existence of scientific skepticism and doubts about their gloomy predictions will be used by politicians to delay action. But if political considerations dictate what gets published, it's all over for science.” > After examining the erroneous essay by Oreskes, the unsatisfactory circumstances in which it was published, and the failure of Science to correct more than one of its numerous deficiencies, we may conclude as follows: > · That Oreskes’ essay provides no sound basis for the assertion that a unanimous scientific “consensus” exists on climate change, for, though most climate scientists probably believe that humankind has caused 0.2C of the past half-century’s 0.4C warming, there is no unanimity; > · That even in the limited sense defined by Oreskes, there were more scientific papers explicitly doubting or even rejecting the “consensus” than explicitly supporting it; > · That less than half of the papers which Oreskes said had implicitly endorsed the “consensus” had in fact done so; > · That more than half of the papers which Oreskes considered had not mentioned anthropogenic climate change at all; > · That the definition of “consensus” in Oreskes’ essay is so limited, and her findings as published so greatly at variance with the content of the papers she reviewed, that the essay provides no justification for her frankly-political contention that – > “our grandchildren will surely blame us they find that we understood the reality of anthropogenic climate change and failed to do anything about it”; and > · That Science, having been given evidence of Oreskes’ errors before publication, in the form of a direct survey of more than 500 climate scientists, and after it, in the form of several letters pointing out the material errors some of which we have reported here, refused to allow the survey, the letters, or any other correction to appear in print, save only the correction of the database search term which Oreskes had used. > Bringing the analysis of “consensus” up to date > Oreskes’ essay is now outdated. Since it was published, more than 8,000 further papers on climate change have been published in the learned journals. In these papers, there is a discernible and accelerating trend away from unanimity even on her limited definition of “consensus”. > Schulte (2007: submitted) has brought Oreskes’ essay up to date by examining the 539 abstracts found using her search phrase “global climate change” between 2004 (her search had ended in 2003) and mid-February 2007. Even if Oreskes’ commentary in Science were true, the “consensus” has moved very considerably away from the unanimity she says she found. > Dr. Schulte’s results show that about 1.5% of the papers (just 9 out of 539) explicitly endorse the “consensus”, even in the limited sense defined by Oreskes. Though Oreskes found that 75% of the papers she reviewed explicitly or implicitly endorsed the “consensus”, Dr. Schulte’s review of subsequent papers shows that fewer than half now give some degree of endorsement to the “consensus”. The abstract of his paper is worth quoting in full:
“Fear of anthropogenic ‘global warming’ can adversely
affect patients’ well-being. Accordingly, the state of the scientific consensus
about climate change was studied by a review of the 539 papers on “global
climate change” found on the Web of Science database from January 2004 to
mid-February 2007, updating research by Oreskes (2004), who had reported that
between 1993 and 2003 none of 928 scientific papers on “global climate change”
had rejected the consensus that more than half of the warming of the past 50
years was likely to have been anthropogenic. In the present review, 32 papers
(6% of the sample) explicitly or implicitly reject the consensus. Though
Oreskes said that 75% of the papers in her sample endorsed the consensus, fewer
than half now endorse it. Only 7% do so explicitly. Only one paper refers to
“catastrophic” climate change, but without offering evidence. There appears to
be little evidence in the learned journals to justify the climate-change alarm
that now harms patients.”
{mospagebreak}
Schulte’s table of results is also worthy of
reproduction -
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Unlike
Oreskes, who does not quote even one of the 928 papers upon which her analysis
was based, Schulte cites some of the counter-consensual papers from his sample
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Cao et al. (2005)
point out that, without the ability to quantify variations in the terrestrial
carbon sink both regionally and over time, climate projections are unreliable –
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“To predict global climate change
and to implement the Kyoto Protocol for stabilizing atmospheric greenhouse
gases concentrations require quantifying spatio-temporal variations in the
terrestrial carbon sink accurately. During the past decade multi-scale
ecological experiment and observation networks have been established using
various new technologies (e.g. controlled environmental facilities, eddy
covariance techniques and quantitative remote sensing), and have obtained a
large amount of data about terrestrial ecosystem carbon cycle. However,
uncertainties in the magnitude and spatio-temporal variations of the
terrestrial carbon sink and in understanding the underlying mechanisms have not
been reduced significantly.”
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Gerhard (2004), discussing the conflict between
observation, theory, and politics, says –
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“Debate over whether human activity causes
Earth climate change obscures the immensity of the dynamic systems that create
and maintain climate on the planet. Anthropocentric debate leads people to
believe that they can alter these planetary dynamic systems to prevent what
they perceive as negative climate impacts on human civilization. Although
politicians offer simplistic remedies, such as the Kyoto Protocol, global
climate continues to change naturally.”
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Leiserowitz (2005) reports –
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“results from a national study
(2003) that examined the risk perceptions and connotative meanings of global
warming in the American mind and found that Americans perceived climate change
as a moderate risk that will predominantly impact geographically and temporally
distant people and places. This research also identified several distinct
interpretive communities, including naysayers and alarmists, with widely
divergent perceptions of climate change risks. Thus, ‘dangerous’ climate change
is a concept contested not only among scientists and policymakers, but among
the American public as well.”
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Lai et al. (2005) offer an entirely new hypothesis to
explain recent warming of the climate –
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“The impacts of global warming on
the environment, economy and society are presently receiving much attention by
the international community. However, the extent to which anthropogenic factors
are the main cause of global warming, is still being debated. … This research
invokes some new concepts: (i) certain biochemical processes which strongly
interact with geophysical processes in climate system: (ii) a hypothesis that
internal processes in the oceans rather than in the atmosphere are at the
center of global warming; (iii) chemical energy stored in biochemical processes
call significantly affect ocean dynamics and therefore the climate system.
Based on those concepts, we propose a new hypothesis for global warming.”
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Moser (2005) explores the assessment of rising
sea levels and in state-level managerial and policy responses to climate change
impacts such as sea-level rise in three US states –
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“Uncertainties in the human
dimensions of global change deeply affect the assessment and responses to
climate change impacts such as sea-level rise.”
> Shaviv (2006) considers the cosmic-ray forcing posited by Svensmark et al. (2006), and concludes that, if the effect is real, natural climate variability rather than anthropogenic enhancement of the greenhouse effect has contributed more than half of the warming over the past century – > “The cosmic-ray forcing / climate link … implies that the increased solar luminosity and reduced cosmic-ray forcing over the previous century should have contributed a warming of ~0.47K, while the rest should be mainly attributed to anthropogenic causes.” > Zhen-Shan and Xian (2007) say that CO2 forcing contributes less to temperature change than natural climate variability, that the anthropogenic enhancement of the greenhouse effect – > “Could have been excessively exaggerated” … Therefore, if CO2 concentration remains constant at present, the CO2 greenhouse effect will be deficient in counterchecking the natural cooling of global climate in the following 20 years. Even though the CO2 greenhouse effect on global climate change is unsuspicious, it could have been excessively exaggerated. It is high time to re-consider the trend of global climate changes.” > Whatever “unanimity” may have been thought or claimed to exist before 2004 in the peer-reviewed literature, there is certainly none in the peer-reviewed journals that have been published since. > Is there a scientific “consensus” wider than that defined by Oreskes? > We have established that Oreskes’ essay does not really lend any scientific credibility to the panicky predictions of a small minority of scientists many of whom have Left-leaning political opinions or connections. > The outright scaremongers are led by James Hansen, a donor of thousands of dollars to the re-election campaigns of Al Gore and John Kerry. He showed Congress a graph in 1988 that set the trend for wildly-exaggerated projections of future global temperature. The graph presented three scenarios, the most extreme of which had no basis in the scientific literature or in previously-observed trends. > Politicians at that time treated the graph with respect because it had been generated by a computer. Yet the model which generated the graph, still in use by Hansen and the UN today, continues to contain “flux adjustments” – i.e. fudge-factors – many times greater than the very small perturbations which the model is supposed to predicting.
Hansen’s
model is discredited by the observed temperatures since 1988 –
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Hansen’s
graph, updated to depict observed temperature to end 2006 overlaid in red,
shows that the temperature trend projected by the GISS model used by Hansen is
near-identical to that which the model had projected on the assumption that
atmospheric CO2 concentrations had been substantially reduced from 1989 onward
and stabilized by 2000. On this evidence (and this is the evidence that
launched the “global warming” scare), it would be legitimate to conclude that
the additional CO2 that has entered the atmosphere since Hansen’s graph was
published has had no climatic influence whatsoever.
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Yet Hansen’s
computer model, and others very like it, are the chief reason offered by the
alarmists for claiming a “consensus” for an extreme version of climate change
that even goes so far as to predict the eventual eradication of more than half
the world’s species (State of the Wild: http://www.giss.nasa.gov/~jhansen/preprints/Wild.070410.pdf).
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This broader
and more frankly alarmist definition of “consensus” that is presented by Hansen,
Al Gore, and the BBC has even less warrant in the peer-reviewed literature than
the “consensus” to the effect that humankind has caused most of the slight
warming of the past half-century. On this definition of “consensus”, we are led
to believe that all serious scientists are agreed on the imminence of
catastrophe and on the urgent need for, and the likely effectiveness of, costly
and extreme mitigative or remedial measures.
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It is
crucial to appreciate that Oreskes’ paper does not lend any scientific
credibility to the alarmists’ extreme views on climate change. The more honest
among them recognize how careful she was to constrain the scope of her
definition so that at least it bore some relation, however threadbare, to the
peer-reviewed literature that she had analyzed. The alarmists, therefore, now
find themselves compelled to fall back upon some additional mantras which, if
recited often enough, come to seem true.
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“2,500 scientists can’t be wrong”
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First
among these is that the UN’s latest report on climate change (IPCC, 2007) was
written by 2,500 scientists – and “2,500 scientists can’t be wrong”. In fact,
however, the scientific chapters were contributed by a far smaller number than
this. Furthermore, we are now able to offer proof that the UN cannot have
obtained the approval of as many as 2,500 scientists to the text before it was
published.
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{mospagebreak}
>
The first
table of figures that occurs in the UN’s Summary
for Policymakers as first published, Table SPM-0, sets out and quantifies four
sources of sea-level change:
align="center">
The IPCC’s incorrectly-summed
sea-level table
Officials inserted this table after the scientists had finalized the draft of the 2007 report align="center">
This curious
table was not in the final draft of the IPCC’s 2007 report as approved by the hundreds
of scientists who had had a hand in the drafting. UN officials had inserted it
after the event, but before publication.
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>
The reason
for this furtive last-minute insertion behind the backs of the “2,500
scientists” may have been the revelation by the Science Correspondent of the Sunday Telegraph, some weeks before
publication of the report, that the
UN had drastically reduced its high-end projection of the rise in sea level to
2100, from 3 feet to less than 2 feet.
The fifth row of the table, entitled Sum of individual climate contributions to
sea-level rise, is the result of an extravagantly incorrect addition:
How did so
incompetent an error arise? Inferentially, the error occurred because the UN,
in the version of the 2007 report of its scientific working group which was
presented to journalists at its extravagantly-publicized launch, had exaggerated
the projected contributions from the Greenland
and Antarctic ice-sheets tenfold, by the ingenious expedient of putting the decimal
points in the wrong place, four times.
The UN’s corrected
sea-level table
align="left">
Observed
rate of sea-level rise and estimated contributions from different sources
align="left">
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After
protests from the author of the present paper, the UN quietly corrected Table
SPM-0, and diverted attention from what they had done by relabeling it Table
SPM-1.
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By then, of
course, the intended damage had been deftly done. Thousands of journalists
worldwide had written excitable articles about the impending (though in reality
non-existent) acceleration in the rate at which the Greenland
and Antarctic ice-caps would melt.
>
In the final
version of the table, units have been changed from metres per century in the previous
version to millimetres per year.
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Why did the
IPCC’s 2,500 scientists fail to spot so serious an error? Because the table did
not appear at all in the final draft of the Summary
for Policymakers that the scientists had worked on. This episode
demonstrates with great clarity that it is incorrect to assume that all of the
2,500 scientists said to have participated in the IPCC’s working groups have
even seen, let alone accepted, the final text that has been published in their
names.
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The UN fails
to state that its reduced best estimate of a 30cm sea-level rise (just 1 ft per
century) is less than a third of the average centennial rise in sea level since
the end of the last Ice Age.
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The
last-minute list of contributions to sea-level rise does not include an item
quantifying the effects on sea level of the extraction of groundwater in all
parts of the world.
>
Morner (2004), the world’s foremost expert on
sea-level change, has written –
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“There is a total absence of any
recent ‘acceleration in sea level rise’ as often claimed by IPCC and related
groups.”
>
Finally,
it is worth noting that the UN’s brief but, in public-relations terms,
ingeniously effective 900% exaggeration of the projected contributions of the
Antarctic and Greenland ice-caps to future increases in global sea level is an
echo of Al Gore’s 12,000% exaggeration of precisely the same topic.
>
Why?
Because, as the BBC knows, pictures of glacial ice collapsing into the sea are
a telegenic method of misleading the viewers into believing that the greatest
of the imagined threats from “global warming”, namely the supposedly imminent
20ft rise in global sea level and the consequent displacement of tens of
millions of people, is true when, insofar as there is a “consensus” among
climate scientists, that “consensus” is to the effect that there is little
danger of a 20ft rise in sea level until several millennia have passed, and
that most of the rise in sea level is likely to be natural.
>
From this
episode we know that the “2,500 scientists” who, we are told, approved every
word of the politically-charged 2007 UN report on climate change could not have
done so.
>
{mospagebreak}
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“All leading scientific bodies are
in agreement”
>
A second mantra
that is often recited by the alarmists is to the effect that all leading
scientific bodies worldwide are in agreement that urgent action is necessary to
prevent catastrophe.
>
Certainly,
political pressure-groups like the US National Academy of Sciences and the
Royal Society (one of Britain’s
oldest taxpayer-funded lobby-groups) have screamed almost as loudly as the
alarmist politicians and media. A joint statement by 11 national scientific
bodies, including these two, says we need to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions
immediately, and spend a great deal more money on scientists, or catastrophe
will follow.
>
However,
in such statements as this, there is a curious scarcity of references to specific
articles in the peer-reviewed scientific journals. These scientific pressure-groups
are unable to point to a scientific consensus on their extremist proposition in
the learned journals; for the number of peer-reviewed articles predicting doom
is vanishingly small, and nearly all of them are written by the members of a
tiny, politically-connected clique.
>
Of these
national scientific pressure-groups, the U.S. National Research Council (an
advisory and public policy arm of the National Academy of Sciences) is perhaps
the most militantly ridiculous. It is recorded (Newsweek, April 28, 1975) as having produced a report 30 years ago
alerting the nation to the imagined consequences of global cooling. That entertaining report said –
>
“A
major climatic change would force economic and social adjustments on a
worldwide scale, because the global patterns of food production and population
that have evolved are implicitly dependent on the climate of the present
century.”
>
The
National Academy of Sciences has changed its opinion with the weather. Between
1940 and 1975, global temperature had fallen, notwithstanding a continuous and
monotonic increase in atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases, and notwithstanding an increase in solar activity, suggesting
a larger role for the oceans than the UN at present admits.
>
In
response to the supposed threat of “global cooling”, the National Academy of
Sciences trotted out its report, which, though cautiously expressed as was then
the custom, was certainly exciting enough to attract the widespread media
attention that such politicized bodies now crave. And we were told, then as
now, by media outlets such as the BBC, that global cooling represented the
scientific “consensus”.
>
Since
1975, global temperature has risen. The NAS has joined other politicized
science bodies round the world to produce another report, this time expressed
in alarmist terms and going exotically beyond the “consensus” as defined by
Oreskes (2004).
>
Politicized
individuals, as well as groups, have made the transition from cryo-alarmism to
thermo-alarmism with seamless disregard for intellectual self-consistency.
>
One such
is the amiable, eccentric British eco-diplomatist, Sir Crispin Charles Cervantes
Tickell, who energetically argued for State expansion, intervention, and
taxation to address the “problem” of “global cooling” 35 years ago, and today
unblushingly argues, no less enthusiastically, for State expansion,
intervention, and taxation to address the “problem” of “global warming”.
>
These
easy transitions of allegiance to pseudo-scientific hypotheses mask a
consistency of allegiance to an explicitly dirigiste,
anti-free-market, anti-business ideology. Often, when the word “consensus”
is prayed in aid by bureaucrats, politicians and scientists talking about
“global warming”, they do not mean a consensus about the science, but a undeclared
“consensus” on the international Left about the political measures which they
wish to frighten the world into adopting, regardless of the direction in which
the science actually points, and regardless of whether there is a scientific
consensus at all.
>
{mospagebreak}
Conclusion > One has only to cut away the alarmist rhetoric and the media distractions, one has only to focus on the central question in the climate-change debate, and at once the fact that there is no scientific consensus about climate change is laid bare. The central question is this: By how much will global temperature increase in response to any foreseeable increase in the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide? On that question, which the bureaucrats call the “climate sensitivity question”, there is no consensus whatsoever among the scientific community. We have seen how Hansen’s initial attempt at prediction, albeit using one of the largest computer models of the climate on the planet, turned out to contain an unfortunate element of exaggeration. It is inevitably the extreme scenarios that attract the attention of politicians and the media. > The UN’s own attempts to reach “consensus” on the climate sensitivity question demonstrate all too clearly not only that it cannot perform simple additions credibly but also that it does not even agree with itself. The internal inconsistencies in the UN’s documents are numerous and growing. We have already seen how it has changed its mind on sea level, as well as performing incorrect addition sums for what appears to have been a political purpose. On the climate sensitivity question, too, the IPCC does not agree with itself. In 2001, it said that the sum of the major climate “forcings” that contribute to temperature change was approximately 2.4 watts per square meter. Now it has decided that the “forcing” from carbon dioxide is largely canceled out by the negative “forcing” from the pollution that accompanies fossil-fuel burning, particularly in China and India, preventing sunlight from reaching the Earth. > Likewise, if one aggrgates up the UN’s central estimates of the contributions of all climate “forcings” and temperature “feedbacks” to the projected warming from increased greenhouse gases, the total comes to just half the UN’s published central estimate of a 3.2C temperature increase in response to a doubling of the atmospheric CO2 concentration. Once again, a large exaggeration is evident, right at the heart of the alarmist case. If the UN’s documents do not even agree with themselves, how can any kind of “consensus” be claimed? > The Russian Academy of Sciences and the US Association of State Climatologists are just two of the scientific organizations that have trenchantly expressed serious doubts about the imagined “consensus” on climate change. They have recently been joined by the Administrator of NASA, who has said that it is arrogant to make the Panglossian assumption that today’s climate is the best of all possible climates, and still more arrogant to assume that any of the more or less futile remedial measures which have been advocated will make any significant climatic difference. The Administrator ought to know: for it is his organization that gathers much of the weather data via satellite upon which the rickety edifice of the climate-change “consensus” is constructed. A growing number of scientists who had previously subscribed to the alarmist presentation of the “consensus” are no longer sure. They are joining the numerous climatologists – many of them with outstanding credentials – who have never believed in the more extreme versions of the alarmist case. Indeed, many scientists now say that there has been no discernible human effect on temperature at all. For instance, Buentgen et al. (2006) say: “The 20th-century contribution of anthropogenic greenhouse gases and aerosol remains insecure.”Let the last word go to Mike Hulme, Director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in the UK, who has himself undergone something of a conversio morum on climate change, and has written: > > “The IPCC is not going to talk about tipping points; it's not going to talk about five-meter rises in sea level; it's not going to talk about the next ice age because the Gulf Stream collapses; and it's going to have none of the economics of the Stern Review. It's almost as if a credibility gap has emerged between what the British public thinks and what the international science community think. … > > “Over the last few years a new environmental phenomenon has been constructed … - the phenomenon of ‘catastrophic’ climate change. It seems that mere ‘climate change’ was not going to be bad enough, and so now it must be ‘catastrophic’ to be worthy of attention. The increasing use of this pejorative term - and its bedfellow qualifiers ‘chaotic’, ‘irreversible’, ‘rapid’ - has altered the public discourse around climate change. > “This discourse is now characterised by phrases such as ‘climate change is worse than we thought’, that we are approaching ‘irreversible tipping in the Earth's climate’, and that we are ‘at the point of no return’. I have found myself increasingly chastised by climate change campaigners when my public statements and lectures on climate change have not satisfied their thirst for environmental drama and exaggerated rhetoric. It seems that it is we, the professional climate scientists, who are now the (catastrophe) sceptics. How the wheel turns!” >
Christopher Walter, Third
Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, is a former policy advisor to Margaret Thatcher
during her years as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. He may reached through SPPI, or directly at (
>
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*The views and opinions expressed in this paper are those of the author, and not necessarily those of SPPI. > |
| Last Updated on Sunday, 19 April 2009 16:56 |























