Feb 062011

Last Monday evening, BBC2 broadcast a Horizon programme with the title Science Under Attack. Both the title and the content of the programme were deeply misleading but, no doubt unintentionally, it may reveal far more about the scientific establishments confused and panic-stricken reaction to the onslaught of criticism that it has witnessed since the Climategate scandal broke just over a year ago than either its illustrious presenter or the programme makers realise or intended.

The white knight who galloped to the rescue of our beleaguered ‘community of climate scientists’ (the presenter’s words) was Sir Paul Nurse, a Nobel Prize winning geneticist and the newly appointed president of the Royal Society. His rather blokeish, seemingly modest, but relentlessly confident and avuncular style in front of the camera, together with a gift for appearing to explain complex issues in a fair-minded and easily digestible way, were more than enough to lull any audience into a complacent acceptance of anything he might have to say. So what went wrong?

Sir Paul’s primary mission was to persuade viewers that the questions posed by global warming sceptics are of no consequence, and that climate science has emerged from a traumatic year of unsavoury revelations without a stain on its good name. But there was another theme that underpinned his thesis: everyone should listen to what scientists say and then meekly accept it as incontrovertible truth. Whether his efforts were appropriate for a scientist of his distinction is very doubtful. It is not unreasonable for the public to expect the president of our national academy of science to take a well-balanced view of such an important subject as climate change, but there was absolutely no evidence of this.

The Royal Society recently attempted to dump its indefensible claims that the science of anthropogenic global warming is settled and the debate is over by drafting a new, and far more cautious, report on the present level of scientific understanding of this vexed topic. It would appear that their new president has no such doubts or concerns about the vast uncertainties that dog climate research. One wonders just how much Sir Paul knows about the present state of play in climate science, which is well outside his field of expertise. It would also be interesting to know how he has informed himself about this subject.

This Horizon programme would seem to have been part of a concerted PR campaign that was launched soon after compromising emails from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia were released on the Internet. The narrative that the scientific community, and it’s cheerleaders in the eNGOs, the government, and parts of the media seek to implant in the public consciousness is that the scientists whose behaviour was laid bare in their correspondence were in fact innocent victims of politically motivated and unscrupulous climate sceptics, rather than the perpetrators of apparently disgraceful behaviour. This is to turn logic on its head, but if Nurse has noticed, eminent scientist that he no doubt is, then he sees no reason to comment.

For all his ‘man of the people’ delivery, one could hardly accuse Sir Paul of false modesty. Only seconds into his presentation, we were informed that “science created our modern world”, a fatuous and arrogant claim that seems to be emerging as a new mantra from the beleaguered science community.  Professor Brian Cox used almost the same phrase in his Wheldon lecture last December “science … delivered the modern world” while attempting to justify the BBC’s lack of impartiality when reporting climate related matters.

If this is the way that scientists are now inclined to see themselves, and an endorsement of that notion from such an eminent personage as the president of the Royal Society would certainly seem to send a message that it is quite OK to do so, then that is truly terrifying. Are scientists really so hubristic now that they ignore the contributions of philosophers, engineers, businessmen, explorers, academics from a host of non-scientific disciplines, social reformers, entrepreneurs, politicians, and countless others in order to assign all accolades and glory to themselves?

A few moments later, we were treated to a clip of Sir Paul barking, ‘Are you saying that the whole community, or a majority of the community of climate scientists are skewing their data? Is that what you are saying?’ at a rather startled looking James Delingpole. The camera immediately cut away giving the impression that the redoubtable ‘Dellers’ had no response to this salvo, which seems unlikely. Not many sceptics think anything of the kind, although they are well used to hearing the worst kind of climate alarmist, who is clutching at straws, making this accusation. Why the president of the Royal Society should choose to use such a notoriously threadbare ‘straw man’ argument without allowing a reply from his victim is something that each of us must decide for ourselves. And this sets the scene for most of the rest of the programme in which Sir Paul’s views are paramount, and the arguments of climate sceptics the attackers of the programme title are not given any serious consideration.

The message that Sir Paul evidently wishes to get across and there can be no doubt that this edition of Horizon was about getting a very specific message across and doing so ruthlessly was not particularly complex. If a Nobel Prize winner chooses to lay down the law on a matter as important as global warming, there is no room for dissent from anyone outside the cosy academic world of the scientific establishment that he inhabits. The views of an acclaimed researcher, albeit in a totally unrelated field, who is the new head of the world’s oldest and arguably most respected scientific institution, and by his own estimation a creator of the modern world, are beyond criticism or challenge because they represent SCIENCE. Particularly, no one should pay any attention to the questions that global warming sceptics pose because they are not part of the SCIENTIFIC ESTABLISHMENT and must therefor be politically motivated troublemakers. In this scenario there are legions of impartial and scrupulously fair-minded mainstream climate scientists queuing up to explain everything, while the sceptics just cause trouble.

As examples of such worthy personages, it is remarkable that Sir Paul chose to interview a very complacent glaciologist from James Hansen’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) at NASA who seemed to have a less than adequate understanding of the carbon cycle and, believe it or not, Phil Jones, the researcher at the centre of the University of East Anglia Climategate scandal.

The man from NASA had some very pretty video presentations to show how satellites collect vast quantities of data about Earth’s climate, and how weather models can mimic observed data. No mention was made of the relatively short period that satellite data covers, or that GSMs that can predict weather patterns over a period of days with reasonable accuracy are not necessarily capable of telling us much about what the climate is likely to do during the rest of this century. A brief excursion into the carbon cycle lead to this amazing exchange:

Bob Bindschadler [NASA scientist]: We know how much fossil fuel we take out of the ground. We know how much we sell. We know how much we burn. And that is a huge amount of carbon dioxide. It’s about seven gigatons per year right now.

Paul Nurse: And is that enough to explain…?

Bob Bindschadler: Natural causes only can produce – yes, there are volcanoes popping off and things like that, and coming out of the ocean, only about one gigaton per year. So there’s just no question that human activity is producing a massively large proportion of the carbon dioxide.

Paul Nurse: So seven times more.

Bob Bindschadler: That’s right.

So it would appear that neither the NASA expert, nor the president of the Royal Society who has chosen to enlighten the public about the climate debate in an hour long TV programme, know that anthropogenic emissions of Co2 are generally estimated as about 5% of natural emissions into the atmosphere, not 700%.

However Sir Paul did confide, rather breathlessly, that GISS burns $2bn (no it’s not a typo) in funding for climate research each year, rather implying that any data that cost that much must be pretty darned good. The possibility that funding on this scale might be a distinct disincentive to following up on any evidence that casts doubt on anthropogenic global warming (AGW) seems not to have crossed the presenter’s mind. This is strange as, at other points in the programme, Sir Paul stresses the importance of scientists considering all the evidence relating to the research they are conducting and to testing their theories to destruction. As his programme appears to be an exercise in assessing the credibility of climate scepticism in face of the wisdom handed down by the creators of the modern world, one might expect him to follow his own excellent advice so far as methodology is concerned. It would seem that he reserves such good practices for the day job in the genetics lab.

Concerning the availability of research funding to those concerned about the climate, there is a deep irony in the fact that the Horizon programme was broadcast about the same  time that Jeff Id, who has made a valuable, and sceptical, contribution to the climate debate, announced that he was closing his Air Vent blog because of business and family pressures, and Antony Watts of Watts Up With That took a decision to scale back his activities for similar reasons.

The sceptics that Professor Nurse chooses to interview, supposedly to find out what evidence climate scepticism is founded on, are James Delingpole and Fred Singer.

The former is a journalist who happily admits that he is an arts graduate who only became interested in the climate debate about a year ago, and that he can hardly be expected to be a match for a scientist of Nurse’s standing. Fred Singer, now in his mid-eighties, was introduced as ‘one of the world’s most prominent and prolific climate sceptics’ and interviewed in a crowded and very noisy Washington diner where a few mumbled remarks about solar influence on climate were hardly audible, but gave the impression as the film makers presumably intended that he was talking nonsense.  Of the multitude of climate sceptics who could have presented arguments that Sir Paul would have had trouble sweeping aside, there was no sign, but then we were not watching that kind of programme and he was not considering all the evidence or testing his theories to destruction on this occasion.

The interview with Phil Jones, on the other hand, was conducted in the tranquil setting of the CRU library and the University or East Anglia campus, where not a syllable of the Climategate emailers responses to sympathetically posed leading questions could be missed.  This was an obvious attempt to rehabilitate this still beleaguered scientist, but why should Sir Paul want to do such a thing when doubts about both Jones behaviour and his research findings still so obviously exist?  The day after the programme was broadcast, the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology published their review of the supposedly independent inquiries into the Climategate affair. They found that the inquiries were not independent, and that they failed to examine issues that could have proved damaging to Jones and his colleagues.

What is perhaps rather strange is that, while giving Jones and the University of East Anglia such an easy time, and claiming that the Climategate emailers have been exonerated by ‘independent’ enquiries even though these just happen to have been set up by their employers, the very institutions that would suffer most if any malfeasance had been reported, Sir Paul omits to mention that he was born (and bred :correction, see below) in the city of Norwich, where UEA is based, and that he received his PhD from UEA in 1973. Nor does he mention that Jones was a part of the Society’s climate advisory network that produced the now discredited and replaced statement on climate change referred to above. Given the degree of mistrust that exists between warmists and sceptics, those would seem to be matters that he should have been quite open about.

There is much more that one could say about this programme which, while purporting to be a dispassionate analysis of the climate debate by an eminent scientist, is just another shocking attempt to influence public opinion by being very selective in the evidence it considers. Instead of reviewing the criticisms, or in the words of the programme title ‘attacks’, that climate research has been subject to, Nurse prefers to home in on a very mild criticism that comes from those within the establishment fold who seek to defend the scientists.

Scientists may not be willing enough to publicly discuss the uncertainties in their science, or to fully engage with those that disagree with them, and this has helped to polarise the debate.

The hostile and arrogant attitude of climate scientists to anyone who may be so impertinent as to want to ask questions about their findings were displayed for all to see in the  Climategate emails. Engaging with those who disagree with them and acknowledging uncertainties will not prevent a polarised debate, it will simply bring an increased deluge of embarrassing questions from sceptics, and climate scientists must know this. But the suggestion that climate scientists may merely have been a little bit reticent sounds benign and reassuring to the uninitiated when delivered with a steady gaze looking straight into the lens of the camera. The problem is that if the uncertainties that attend every step on the way to an anthropogenic climate change hypothesis were frankly discussed, then the credibility of climate science would vanish like snowdrifts in a heatwave. Too many unjustified claims of certainty or near certainty have been made in the past for researchers to publicise the true state of affairs now.

But if all else fails, one can always blame the media for any woes. This seems to be a very strange line for Sir Paul to take. In an age when ‘churnalism’ (journalists regurgitating undigested press releases, stories from wire services, and PR packages without checking them) assures any sensational story about imminent environmental catastrophe a place in the headlines it is hard to know what climate scientists have to complain about. But Sir Paul says:

It’s not surprising that the public are confused reading all of this different stuff. There’s these lurid headlines and there’s political opinions, I think, filtering through, which probably reflects editorial policy within the newspapers, and we get an unholy mix of the media and the politics, and it’s distorting the proper reporting of science. And that’s a real danger for us, if science is to have its proper impact on society.

He seems to  be referring to the Daily Express, Daily Mail and Sunday Telegraph where climate scepticism is freely reported, but not of course to the Guardian, the Independent, and very often the Times and Sunday Times, which seem to be prepared to print any scare story about ‘new scientific research’, however ill founded and preposterous it might be. And Sir Paul certainly doesn’t address what Steve McIntyre has called ‘the silence of the lambs’: the failure of the climate science community to criticise or correct inaccurate and exaggerated reporting when it stirs up alarm about human impact on the climate.

Indeed there are moments of pure unreality in Sir Paul’s diatribe against those who attack science.

There’s an overwhelming body of evidence that says we are warming our planet. But complexity allows for confusion, and for alternative theories to develop. The only solution is to look at all the evidence as a whole. I think some extreme sceptics decide what to think first and then cherry-pick the data to support their case.

Of course the possibility that climate scientists might be victims of precisely the same affliction is not addressed. As for the so-called consensus view of climate science, he has this to say:

“Consensus” can be used like a dirty word. Consensus is actually the position of the experts at the time, and if it’s working well – it doesn’t always work well – but if it’s working well, they evaluate the evidence. You make your reputation in science by actually overturning that, so there’s a lot of pressure to do it. But if over the years the consensus doesn’t move, you have to wonder: is the argument, is the evidence against the consensus good enough?

It is this utterance, perhaps more than anything else in the programme, which suggests that Sir Paul is way out of his depth where climate science is concerned. The idealised scenario that he proposes may be possible in mathematics, chemistry, physics or genetics, but in climate research it would be professional suicide, as the Climategate emails show. In this field, if no other, dissent is viewed as heresy pure and simple, regardless of how well founded it might be.

And while we are on the subject of the scientific consensus on climate change, it is very strange that Sir Paul has omitted any mention of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change from this programme about the inviolable authority of climate science. I wonder why?

Controversy surrounding AIDs and GM crops are touched on briefly, but the programme’s focus is relentlessly on climate change. A sequence dealing with aids includes a long, and very sympathetic, discussion with a man called Tony who does not believe that HIV causes AIDs because, although he was diagnosed HIV positive years ago, and has not taken any of the medication he was prescribed, he is still alive and apparently healthy. This would seem to have been included for no other purpose than to suggest that climate sceptics are no different from HIV sceptics, and therefor totally irrational.

Controversy about GM food crops is also given a brief airing, but Sir Paul seems to be oblivious to the irony that the green activists who trash fields of GM maize, and therefore science must be scientific ignoramuses because they do not listen when researchers say there is no danger, are likely to be the very same people who will turn out for anti fossil fuel demonstrations and presumably fully accept all that the climate science community has to say on that subject.

This episode of Horizon begins and ends in the archives of the Royal Society with Sir Paul admiring – almost worshiping – the early minutes of the Royal Society’s meetings and works by Newton and Darwin. No one can doubt the outstanding record of scientific achievement of the Society in the past, and Sir Paul is obviously thrilled to be at its head, but the inclusion of these sequences seem to say to the audience, don’t you dare question what I, the successor of these great men, am telling you.

In the eyes of many scientists, it seems to be becoming as unacceptable to challenge scientific dogma today as it was to question the theology of the medieval church, although it is not yet quite so dangerous. Yet anyone who has read the Climategate emails must know that in climate science a reformation is long overdue: this branch of science definitely needs a spring-clean. In the emails we see a world of people whose sole preoccupation seems not to be curiosity and discovery, but keeping one jump ahead of their critics. And how do they view those critics? As politically motivated ignoramuses of course, while Sir Paul describes, the CRU in the following terms:

‘The unit’s headquarters are [sic] tiny, yet Dr Jones and his colleagues have had a truly global impact’.

Why should such titans of the scientific world be concerned about sceptics who want to check their research? What could they possibly have to fear? And why, in the wake of the Climategate scandal, did the University of East Anglia promise a review of the research that has come out of the CRU, and then quietly drop the idea? And why is asking questions about such matters considered to be an attack on science?  Indeed why, if there isn’t any problem really, has such controversy triggered an hour-long programme from the BBC starring the president of our national academy of science?

No one could possibly expect the scientific world’s new chief representative (and shop steward?) to say anything that might stand in the way of concern about global warming providing billions of pounds of research funding, but the subject did deserve something rather better than a tedious and often confused defence of the establishment view; just leave it all to the scientists Sir Paul seems to be repeating endlessly, like Phil Jones, who understand all these things and cannot possibly be wrong.

But how can any fair-minded person, inside or outside the scientific establishment, be indifferent to demands that climate scientist, who have so much influence on public policy at present, should be subject to intense scrutiny, and particularly by those who are most hostile to their views. Only then can their research findings be fully tested and finally trusted. Although Sir Paul says he is keen on scientists testing their ideas to destruction, he seems terrified if that process is instigated from outside the scientific establishment and applied to climate science. And therein lies the real thrust of his programme.

Sir Paul is now at the pinnacle of the scientific establishment. His views on climate science matter, regardless of whether he really knows anything about the controversies that have engulfed this subject or not. Although he purports to be considering whether the attacks that have been made on climate science during the last year can in any way be justified, it seems evident that his mind was closed to any such possibility from the outset. Had this not been the case he would have chosen very different climate sceptics to talk to and would have attempted to establish just what their concerns are.

The title of the programme, Science Under Attack, points to a fascinating sidelight on the way that the scientific establishment now view the climate debate. As I have said, what controversy exists over GM crops and the cause of AIDs is of a very different type and order from that concerning anthropogenic global warming, and their inclusion in this programme is ancillary to the main theme. So far as I am aware, mathematicians, physicists, chemists and astronomers are not conspicuously under attack. Only climate science and climate scientists are in the cross hairs of public condemnation at the moment. So why was this programme called Science Under Attack? Is this meant to imply that anyone who fails to embrace the consensus view on climate change is challenging science, and the scientific method, in its entirety? If so that would seem to be a very dangerous position for Sir Paul and the scientific establishment to adopt.

If the Royal Society is prepared hold up climate science as the poster child of science as a whole, then the credibility of science is being linked to just one discipline that has a distinctly short and chequered record. This leads to two serious pitfalls. In the first, the old established disciplines maths, physics, chemistry, astronomy etc are likely to resent the hype and razzmatazz surrounding their junior colleagues, and become hostile and inquisitive. It would seem unlikely that climate science would come out of such scrutiny by other disciplines smelling of roses.

The second is that the public may come to judge science as a whole by the performance and behaviour of one high profile discipline; climate science. This would seem to be a most ill advised and offering a hostage to fortune. At the moment the frenetic revelations of last year have quietened down, but it would be quite unjustified to assume that all the skeletons have tumbled out of the climate science cupboard and that more will not follow.

Added to these considerations, it seems that criticism is something that the scientific establishment now finds impossible to cope with in an open and constructive way. Hence the rather hysterical title of Sir Paul’s programme and its utter failure to acknowledge and address the origin of the problems that climate scepticism are causing to those who seek to promote and defend science. As I have said, it would be unreasonable to expect the president of the Royal Society to express any outright scepticism about global warming in a popular television series, but one might expect him to acknowledge that doubts exist when it is so manifestly obvious that uncertainties in the science have not been acknowledged in the past. In fact, he does no more than acknowledge that some uncertainties exist, but in a dismissive way that suggests that this need worry no one.

There are various possible explanations for this obtuse behaviour.

It is of course possible that Sir Paul is simply being disingenuous, but this would seem unlikely. Then there is the possibility that, when assessing a controversy in a discipline that he is not familiar with, he has been credulous and willing to retail uncritically the views of his cronies in the scientific establishment. But perhaps the most likely explanation, based on Sir Paul’ own words, is that an overweening arrogance has seized the world of science. Here is part of Sir Paul’s peroration:

I’m here in the Royal Society,[which represents]  350 years of an endeavour which is built on respect for observation, respect for data, respect for experiment. Trust no-one, trust only what the experiments and the data tell you. We have to continue to use that approach, if we are to solve problems such as climate change.

It’s become clear to me that if we hold to these ideals of trust in evidence, then we have a responsibility to publicly argue our case. Because in this conflicted and volatile debate, scientists are not the only voices that are listened to. When a scientific issue has important outcomes for society, then the politics becomes increasingly more important. So if we look at this issue of climate change, that is particularly significant. Because that has effects on how we manage our economy and manage our politics. And so this is become a crucially political matter, and we can see that by the way that the forces are being lined up on both sides. What really is required here is a focus on the science, keeping the politics and keeping the ideologies out of the way.(Emphasis added)

This would appear to be a plea for acceptance of scientific hegemony on a scale that brooks no dissent, but at the same time it is contradictory. The climate sceptics who precipitated the Climategate scandal were, in fact, attempting to establish that trust in the experiments and data is justified. Why hinder them?  Concern that only the voices of science should be listened to from someone with Sir Paul Nurse’s influence sit very uneasily with the plea that the evidence for AGW is overwhelming. If this is the case, what does scientific establishment have to fear? And anyway, why should the voice of climate science be unchallengeable? As for the importance of not trusting anyone other than climate scientists when assessing the evidence of AGW, it is necessary for most of us to do so, and not least the audience that has spent an hour soaking up Sir Paul’s anything but objective views on the climate controversy, even though he is a geneticist. Is the title ‘scientist’ really enough to convey the ability to pontificate on any branch of science with authority?

Finally lets look at what a couple of commentators who can definitely not be described as climate sceptics had to say about Science Under Attack. Here is Fiona Fox of the Science Media Centre, one of the most influential climate alarm advocates, writing on the BBC College of Journalism website :

Many, including colleagues in the science communication world, felt that it [Nurse’s programme] was a classic example of ‘scientism’, a growing tendency to demand that science should trump everything else as the only sound basis for good public debate and decision-making.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/journalism/blog/2011/02/when-does-the-vigorous-defence.shtml

And Mike Hulme, former director the Tyndall Centre at the University of East Anglia

In this programme from BBC’s Horizon team, the incoming President of the Royal Society, Sir Paul Nurse, offers a vigorous defence of the trustworthiness of science. He also reveals an exalted view of the normative authority of science: both in the world of political decision-making (e.g. the cases of climate change and GM crops which the programme selects) and in the private lives of citizens. I suggest that he betrays an underlying adherence both to the linear view that science should drive policy-making and, to a lesser extent, to the deficit model of science communication.

http://mikehulme.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/Science-under-attack.pdf

If concerns such as these are being expressed from the heart of the warmist community, then Sir Paul’s tenure at the Royal Society is likely to be an interesting one. As he acknowledges in Science Under Attack, public belief in anthropogenic global warming is steadily declining in spite of all the efforts by scientists, politicians, the eNGOs and a large part of the media. Evidently it is not enough for scientists to shout ever more kindly that they are right and everyone else is not only wrong, but is not even capable of having a valid opinion.

And so we finally return to the programme title: Science Under Attack. Is Sir Paul really saying that because climate scientists are being criticised, all science is being attacked and threatened? It would appear that he is, but choosing climatology as the champion and exemplar of science would seem to be illogical and very risky, so why do it? Does he really think that the reputation of scientists everywhere depends on the public image of climate scientists? He may be right, but if so, then the world of science risks being hopelessly compromised by any shortcomings that become evident in a field that is now mired in controversy and, as he admits in the programme, failing to convince the public that human activity is warming the planet.

Science has not been well served by Sir Paul’s programme. If he is right, and the image of science as a whole has suffered from the ructions in climatology over the last year, then the scientific establishment would be wise to cut climate science adrift before it inflicts any more damage on the rest of the profession. Instead, the science establishment seem to think that it can to shore up the reputation and authority of their profession with a blatantly partisan TV film fronted by a man who seems very proud to be following in the footsteps of Newton, Wren and Darwin.

H/t to Alex Cull for an excellent transcript of the programme, which can be found here.

(UPDATE 11/02/2011: I have corrected this post which originally said that Sir Paul was ‘born and bred’ in Norwich.  Although he was born in Norwich, he was brought up in London)

197 Responses to “Nurse puts science on life support”

  1. PeterG,

    You’re creating a strawman argument here. It simply isn’t true that “ climate science is the only area of science where you have a small cadre of scientists extolling us to spend trillions of dollars to save the planet.”

    You could argue that some climate scientists have overstepped the line. Some certainly don’t, they just say nothing publicly and publish only in scientific journals. Judith Curry herself has criticised this approach and has suggested that all scientists should come down from their ivory tower.

    So they’ll be criticised if they do speak publicly and they’ll be criticised if they don’t!

    I’m not sure about “trillions of dollars” but the amount of money required, and the wider policy implications are not, in any case calculated or determined by climate scientists. I’m not sure what makes you think that.

    It sounds like you may not have heard of the the Stern report, written by climate scientists – not!:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stern_Review

    Similarly in Australia we have had the Garnaut report. A climate scientist – no he isn’t!:

    http://www.garnautreview.org.au/chp6.htm

  2. PeterM You are not seriously suggesting the Stern report is anything other than a piece of Political fiction are you? It has been well and truely discredited.

  3. Wow Peter M, you do know this report was commissioned by the UK govt and that the economics behind it have been thoroughly discredited and Yes I HAVE bothered to read it myself. Suggest you try to get hold of David Hollands critique of the report.

    No one has the faintest idea of costs and try to disguise the minimal effect that cutting emissions would have on temperature (hundredths of a degree as Max, myself and Prof David Mackay have pointed out)

    Don’t believe me? Well read this transcript of an interview by a UK govt official trying to sell the idea of carbon trading to you Aussies.

    http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt/index.php/heraldsun/comments/dont_know_the_cost_dont_know_if_it_works/

    tonyb

  4. PeterG,

    I think what I was seriously suggesting was that the Stern report wasn’t written by climate scientists as you were claiming originally.

    That’s where the politics does and should start I would agree. You obviously disagree with it, and calling it ‘fiction’ and ‘discredited’ could even be a viable political tactic on your part, but I would hope for a higher standard of debate all around, I must say.

  5. TonyB,

    Andrew Bolt is probably the Australian equivalent of James Delingpole.

    He’s asking questions like how much will it cost and will it work? Which on the surface seem fair enough but, incidentally, these aren’t questions I remember him asking when he was in favour of sending Australian troops into Afghanistan. The cost there is more than just the $$, as I’m sure you’ll know, and there was even more reason to ask the question then than there is now.

    Presumably, he’s trying to scare the public with the cost of carbon abatement. If he really means that there is just no way that the problem can be tackled, we’ve left it all too late, and we’d better just hope that these bloody scientists are all wrong because that’s our only chance, then why doesn’t he just come out and say so?

  6. PeterM

    Judith Curry herself has criticised this approach and has suggested that all scientists should come down from their ivory tower.

    Yeah.

    But not to act as “salesmen” (or “-women”) for the disastrous AGW premise and the need for immediate action, but to mix it up with the “unwashed” masses, find out what they are thinking and maybe learn something in the process.

    And she is doing it very well.

    Visit her blog and you’ll see.

    That’s the kind of scientist the world needs in the ongoing climate debate.

    What is not needed is a brilliant scientist in a totally different field who is relatively uninformed but nevertheless strongly opinionated regarding the climate debate and is using his position as the political leader of a venerable scientific organization to try to give one side of the story an “argument from authority” (and makes silly blunders along the way).

    Max

  7. Peter said

    “Andrew Bolt is probably the Australian equivalent of James Delingpole.

    He’s asking questions like how much will it cost and will it work? Which on the surface seem fair enough but, incidentally, these aren’t questions I remember him asking when he was in favour of sending Australian troops into Afghanistan. The cost there is more than just the $$, as I’m sure you’ll know, and there was even more reason to ask the question then than there is now. Presumably, he’s trying to scare the public with the cost of carbon abatement.

    If he really means that there is just no way that the problem can be tackled, we’ve left it all too late, and we’d better just hope that these bloody scientists are all wrong because that’s our only chance, then why doesn’t he just come out and say so?”

    Peter, read the interview don’t throw ad homs at the interviewer or throw up more of your famous red herrings by referring to cost of something unrelated.

    As I mentiioned to you some weeks ago I am writing an article on costs and mitigation. I have been in contact with the chief scientist at the UK’s Department of Climate change and Energy.

    Unfortunately, what the British spokesperson was saying to Andrew is the official position
    1) They have not the faintest idea of costs-I do, having bothered to read the parliamentary debates. In the Uk’s terms it is £50 Billion a year for the next forty years.

    2) The estimate of temperature reduction is something less than 100 hundredths of a DEGREE if we reach our target of cutting emissions by 80% of our 1998 values.

    £50 billion to make no difference whatsover against a problem that seemns highly elusive-the UK-like many countries have been seeing our temperatures tumble after a brief warming-see your chart and my reply on the other thread

    Don’t you think we have FAR better things to do with our money? You guys might like to invest in better earthquake prediction and tsunanai prediction for example.

    Do you think the precautionary principle should encompass this insane waste of money that won’t even begin to fix a problem that doesnt even appear to exist?

    tonyb

  8. PeterM

    You wrote Peter Geany:

    You’re creating a strawman argument here. It simply isn’t true that “ climate science is the only area of science where you have a small cadre of scientists extolling us to spend trillions of dollars to save the planet.”

    Aw c’mon, Peter.

    You sound soooo pre-Climategate. This is also exactly Paul Nurse’s (and BBC’s) problem.

    Face it.

    IPCC has lost all credibility. The “save the planet” story did not sell.

    The glory days of Nobel Peace Prizes and Oscars are over.

    The inside clique of “majority consensus” climatologists have been exposed as a bunch of narrow-thinking ideologues who arrogantly thought they could bamboozle the world and get away with it. It didn’t work.

    Like you, Paul Nurse (and BBC), many politicians have not yet gotten the word (it took a long time before the Nixon insiders realized that Watergate had basically changed the game, and the same is happening here).

    The UK government is still pussyfooting around the issue, and many bureaucrats are still hoping to keep the AGW hysteria alive among the population, but I believe it is clear to the leadership that there has been a tidal shift, which is resonating in the ever more skeptical opinion of the general public.

    The astute climate scientists will see this as an opportunity to be more honest and transparent, to encourage independent outside audits of their work, in short, to look for the “truth” in what forces our planet’s climate to do what it does (including natural factors), rather than the “proof” that it is driven by human emissions, that it is potentially serious and thus requires immediate action to “save the planet”.

    Like the IPCC, the old “team” along with the doomsayer activists, like Hansen, have now become irrelevant and redundant as a result of Climategate, etc. These guys should now step aside gracefully and let a new bunch take over (without the IPCC millstone around their necks).

    The prime objective of the new group should be to put the “science” back into climate science and to get the “politics “out, by eliminating the politically based, agenda driven science, which has dominated and corrupted the IPCC process and climate science in general.

    The new group should include all the open-mined scientists, like Judith Curry. They should also reach out to those scientists, who have been skeptical of the claims of the failed “insider” group (Spencer, Lindzen, etc.), in order to get them all on board as well. They should encourage outsiders, like Steve McIntyre, to help them audit their work.

    The politicians of this world should now also show leadership. The old approach of trying to drive the science to a foredrawn conclusion to support a political agenda has failed. They should stay out of the scientific debate and let the scientists do their work without this pressure. There will be time enough to consider various political and policy options once there are untainted data, which draw to conclusions on whether or not human activities are really a major climate forcing factor.

    Maybe I am an optimist, but I think this can be an exciting time for a new transparent and fully un-biased climate science, which regains the full credibility of the general public.

    When it happens, people like Paul Nurse will welcome it, as well.

    Copenhagen is dead! Cancun is dead! IPCC is mortally wounded and dying a slow death!

    Long live climate science!

    Max

  9. TonyB

    I just did a quickie check on the “global temperature reduction” one could expect from the UK plan to curtail CO2 emissions to 80% of 1998 value (your 132).

    I come up with 0.008C (less than 1/100th of a degree), so it looks like that’s a good check of your estimate.

    FYI, I assumed the following

    Cutback to occur over next 10 years with 80% of 1998 level reached by 2020, and remaining constant at that level through 2100.

    The latest compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of UK CO2 emissions was 0.16% per year (excl. latest recession dip) so I rounded this up to 0.2% CAGR, and figured this would continue through 2100 for the “no CO2 cutback” case.

    Over the next 90 years the UK cutback plan would reduce global CO2 emissions by 15.85 GtCO2.

    Assuming half of this “stays” in the atmosphere, this represents a reduction of atmospheric CO2 by year 2100 of 1.0 ppmv.

    Using the IPCC 2xCO2 estimate of 3.2C, this means we will have averted warming of 0.08C by 2100, as a result of the UK measure.

    I’m sure even Peter would agree that this is an imperceptible reduction in AGW.

    But the real question here is:

    Are the UK politicians so daft (or arrogant) that they really think they can influence global climate one iota no matter what they do?

    If so, Tony, I think it’s time for you to vote in some new politicians and get rid of the ones in office now. These guys are not astute enough to be making policy decisions (or even recommendations).

    Max

  10. Max

    Thanks for confirming the calculations.

    We have lots of people who think they know whats good for us and enjoy imposing their view-they’re called politicians. :)

    There are also a substantial number of scientists who believe in ‘noble cause.’ There are many from both groups who cite’common purpose’ and ‘tragedy of the commons’ in order to justify the insane policies they want us all to follow in order to fight non existent AGW,

    However read what Peter writes-no matter what calculations we produce (agreed by Britains Chief Scientist) he -and they-still say we have to do ‘something’. The fact it will make no difference whatsoever to temperatures is immaterial to such people.

    Only 22% of the world is willing to cut emissions. Those making enormous sacrifices at huge cost to cut by 80% can’t possibly make any perceptible difference. Even if the whole of humanity joined in and cut by 80% the tiny effect on temperature would be completely lost within natural variability.

    tonyb

  11. Tonyb,

    I think w’ve been through all this before. Essentially it the “my emissions are so small in comparison to everyone else’s – so why do I need to bother doing anything?” argument.

    Max,

    Its odd that you guys seem to think, and you do seem to have convinced yourself, that hacking a bunch of private emails has made any difference at all to the way the atmosphere and climate will behave. There’s been an inquiry and you labelled it whitewash -inevitably.

    Yes, as time passes, and the existing generation retire you will get your wish and “a new bunch” will ineed take over. But what if they end up saying pretty much the same thing? Which they will – with or without the IPCC.

    You’ll finally accept what they say then will you?

    Will websites like this change their line?

    http://american-conservativevalues.com/blog/obama-plans-to-push-climate-change-policy.html

    I don’t think so. Not any time soon at least. Its just not politically acceptable for Conservative Americans to go along with any science that is associated with dangerous lefties like Al Gore.

  12. PeterM

    Lots of “ifs” in your question.

    I firmly believe (as do a great number of people, including several climate scientists) that IPCC has outlived its usefulness and that it is more of a liability to climate science today than an asset.

    As I pointed out above, the IPCC process has been exposed as corrupt and it’s “gold standard” reputation has become tarnished by the scandals, bogus data, etc. It’s time to turn climate science over to a new breed of scientists, who are much more transparent and less dogmatic than the old “insider team” that got climate science into so much disrepute. The new group should include many of those scientists, who have essentially been excluded under the old IPCC process (Spencer, Lindzen etc.). These should have an equal seat at the table in arriving at the best estimates of what makes our climate work. This should include much more effort to identify and quantify natural forcing factors, which have essentially been ignored under the myopic IPCC fixation on CO2.

    Will this new constellation come up with different conclusions than the old bunch did?

    You bet. Because they will be looking for the “truth” about our planet’s climate, not simply for the “proof” that AGW is the primary driver.

    And, yes, I’ll continue to look at what is published out there critically and skeptically, but I will accept ant studies, based on transparent empirical data.

    Max

  13. Peter said in 136

    “I think w’ve been through all this before. Essentially it the “my emissions are so small in comparison to everyone else’s – so why do I need to bother doing anything?” argument.”

    Do read what I said and I am in good company with the Chief Scientist of DECC.

    We can make NO difference whatsoever to world temperatures by screwing our economy and impoverishing its population by reducing emissions by 80% )(HOW!)

    If the entire world followed suit it would make a difference of one quarter of a degree.

    I appreciate you see Cuba as a role model but do you seriously think this is a good way to spend our money? Don’t you think we have much better things to do with it including implementing some genuinely useful environmental policies?

    Turn the world upside down for a quarter of a degree? Bankrupt Britain and that small number of countries who are signed up? You are speaking as a true zealot Peter. Hope your hair shirt doesn’t itch too much.

    tonyb

  14. TonyB,

    Saying we can make “no difference” is quite defeatist. Ok if there is no difference to make, or no difference that needs to be made but what if these dreaded scientists are correct? What is a difference does need to be made?

    It won’t affect you too much anyway. You aren’t going to be around to see the worst of climate change, so your attitude isn’t without a certain logic.

  15. Max,

    You say ” These should have an equal seat at the table in arriving at the best estimates of what makes our climate work.”

    Don’t you mean “lowest estimates”? You could put these positions out to tender. But, instead of them being decided on the lowest monetary bid, you’d award them to the climate scientists who were saying essentially what you were wanting to hear. :-)

  16. Peter 139

    Do be consistent here-It is the scientists saying we can make no difference-I thought you belived everything they say.

    If we effectively shut down the world economy and ruin the life chances of developing nations by reducing carbon emissions to 80% of current, it will make no noticeable difference.

    That isnt going to happen is it? It will be the idiots in the West – cheered on by such as yourself who hold up Cuba as an energy example we need to aspire to-who will wreck their economies trying to achive something that isn’t worth achieving. Those are the bald unvarnished facts whether you believe in CAGW or not.

    Are you seriously saying that if your fellow Aussies knew the facts they would be happy to turn their lives and their economy upside down in order to achieve- in your case- a temperature reduction of a quarter of a hundredth of one degree?

    We have far more urgent uses for our time and money surely? I will repeat the words of one of my colleagues which I suspect echo those of Lomborg;

    “It remains absolutely clear that our planet is vastly damaged by many human activities such as:
    · environmental pollution.
    · over fishing.
    · forest clearance.
    · industrial farming.
    · farming for bio-fuels [1].
    · and other habitat destruction.

    We should indeed be strenuously finding ways to improve these situations. But the unwarranted concentration on reducing CO2 emissions is deflecting even well-meaning green activists from these more immediate and worthwhile objectives. There are many more investments that should be prioritised for the benefit of mankind. This is especially so in the third world including:
    · controlling malaria.
    · clean water.
    · stopping deforestation
    · AIDS prevention, etc.

    At the same time, this is absolutely not to say that the world should not be seeking more efficient ways of generating its energy, conserving its energy use and stop directly damaging its environment.

    There is a real need to wean the world off the continued expenditure of fossil fuels on the grounds of:
    · security of supply.
    · their increasing scarcity.
    · their rising costs.
    · using them as the future feedstock for industry rather than simply burning them.”

    So lets spend money on things that can be fixed rather than concentrating on things we can’t fix or probably don’t need fixing in the first place.

    tonyb

  17. PeterM

    Don’t act like an idiot (or lurkers here will think you are one).

    Spencer has a valid hypothesis on the forcing function of clouds, yet IPCC ignores this, because it doesn’t fit its notion of the “highest bid” (as you put it).

    Spencer has also shown with physical CERES satellite observations that the net feedback from clouds with warming is strongly negative over the tropics, yet IPCC sticks with its model-based estimates of strongly positive feedback.

    Lindzen has proposed a natural regulating mechanism, whereby high altitude cirrus clouds diminish with warming over the tropics, thereby reducing their GH effect (which was later confirmed by the above physical observations on clouds by Spencer) but this hypothesis is simply brushed away by IPCC.

    Lindzen has shown based on ERBE satellite observations that the overall 2xCO2 climate sensitivity is well below 1C, yet this is ignored (except by some ineffective blog attempts to shoot it down by Trenberth + co.). [BTW, Spencer has critiqued the calculation method used by Lindzen, coming up with a slightly higher CS, but it is still well below 1C.]

    All this knowledge is simply ignored, because it does not match the desired message of disastrous human-caused global warming, which IPCC has wanted to sell since it was formed.

    Unlike IPCC (and apparently YOU, Peter) I want ALL voices heard and included not just (as you put it):

    the climate scientists who were saying essentially what [IPCC and] you were wanting to hear

    Get the difference, Peter?

    It is very basic, and it is a key reason for the loss of confidence worldwide in IPCC and the AGW scare.

    It has become apparent that IPCC has “cherry-picked” the data they report (in some cases even fabricating or “bending” it, as was recently revealed), in order to sell the preconceived message that AGW is a danger requiring action.

    But as Abraham Lincoln said about fooling people, it has backfired.

    Unfortunately, IPCC plus the small clique of “insider scientists” that supported IPCC, have brought discredit to all of climate science (much to the dismay of honest scientists, like Judith Curry), and, more regrettably, to some extent to all of science.

    It really doesn’t help the credibility of “science” when a Nobel Prize geneticist starts bloviating about alleged “consensus” in climate science (a field he knows nothing about).

    Does Nurse know about the observations of Spencer or Lindzen? Has he included those in his “consensus”? Of course not. And that is why he should have kept his mouth shut. And he also helped give “science” in general another black eye with his silly remarks.

    As a result of all this, polls worldwide show that a large majority of people no longer believe that AGW is a problem (down from over half prior to climategate and all the other scandals).

    If you are not seeing all this, then you must really be sticking your head in the sand.

    Pull your head out and look around you.

    Max

  18. PeterM

    Read TonyB’s 141 slowly and carefully (take notes, if necessary, to make sure it has sunk in).

    Then read it once more.

    Then write a summary of what Tony wrote.

    It will help you understand the futility of your wild goose chase to change our planet’s climate.

    In your 139 you make one true remark to TonyB:

    It won’t affect you too much anyway. You aren’t going to be around to see the worst of climate change

    No one alive today (including their as-yet unborn great-grandchildren) will “be around to see the worst of climate change”, because it “ain’t gonna happen” the way you (and IPCC) imagine it.

    Climate will change (it always has). It may get cooler, it may get warmer, we may have harsh winters, we may have hot summers, we may have floods, we may have droughts, we may even have another streak of general warming, as we did from around 1910 to 1944 or around 1975 to 2001, or maybe we’ll have a period of slight cooling as we did between 1944 and 1975.

    But, through it all we will survive and thrive, if we don’t get sidetracked destroying our world economy by getting into silly wild goose chases.

    Max

  19. Max,

    So it’s just a coincidence that the climate scientists you like and quote are ones who, on the scale of the problem, always give the lowest estimates?

    No-one wants there to be this CO2 problem. But if they did they would be equally wrong to always choose the highest estimates.

    You like to blame the IPCC for their message but there is really no reason to think that whatever organisation was set up to replace it, or even if it were abolished altogther the message from the scientific community would be any different in the slightest.

    The IPCC has no equivalent in any other scientific field. I’m personally not sure if its a good idea or not. But say a similar body had ever to set up to investigate and report on

  20. Sorry my PC seems to be doing odd things at the moment! Those last paragraphs went off before I was ready! Anyway to continue:

    Say a similar body had ever to set up to investigate and report on Darwinian Evolution -the Internation Panel on Human Origins. They wouldn’t have said anything in their reports which we don’t already know from other sources. But the Creationists would have hated the IPHO with all the same passion that you hate the IPCC.

    They’d have been equally convinced it was all a stitch up job and would have claimed, as soon as the IPHO was abolished, scientists would have been free to “tell the truth” and of course they couldn’t afford to get on the wrong side of the IPHO.

    So I’m not advocating the abolition of the IPCC but really it doesn’t make that much difference. You’ll still get the same outcome whether it exists or not.

  21. PeterM Just for my information, can I have the names of your atmospheric experts who disagree with Lindzen & Spencer. Not some faceless IPCC link, but the actual scientists that have done the work and made it all available for critique.

    You see I get the feeling that Lindzen & Spencer are the only ones who have gone out and used real data rather than computer models, and therefore their opinions carry great weight. An because it is real world data a lot of hard work is involved, something the vast majority are not prepared to do. I await your answer with great interest.

  22. PeterG,

    I’m not sure I want to get into a discussion into who has the longest list of names who support/reject the notion that AGW is serious problem.

    Max once challenged me along the lines of “I provided you a list of 280 qualified individuals, who have gone on record that they do not support the ‘dangerous AGW’ premise of IPCC. You are unable to provide me etc etc …..”

    This “my list is longer that your list”, is a typical contarian argument and not just about AGW.

    The creationsts have been at it a bit longer than you guys and they really know how to put togther a list!

    http://www.discovery.org/scripts/viewDB/filesDB-download.php?command=download&id=660

    Incidentally Lindzen and Spencer are famous because they are in such a minority. Judith Curry wasn’t anywhere near as well known before she, sort of, switched sides.

  23. Peter Geany

    Watch out for PeterM’s red herring of switching topics to “creationists” when you challenge his “majority consensus of scientists support dangerous AGW” myth.

    He’s correct that we discussed it.

    He maintains (without presenting any supporting evidence) that an overwhelming majority of scientists support this hypothesis.

    Yet when presented with a list of 280 scientists who have specifically gone on record as not supporting the hypotheses, and challenged to provide a list of at least 3x this many who have gone on record that they do (75% = “overwhelming majority”), he folds (usually by switching topics).

    The old walnut shell and pea game at work.

    Max

  24. Max

    Yes I noticed Peter M’s old trick too. However he has been successful to some extent as we are now discussing the ‘list’ rather than his evasive tactics in not providing names of those atmospheric scientists who disagree with Lindzen et al.

    Come on Peter M, we don’t want a list, just the names of a few other atmospheric scientists so we can examine their work

    tonyb

  25. PeterM

    You commented (147):

    Incidentally Lindzen and Spencer are famous because they are in such a minority. Judith Curry wasn’t anywhere near as well known before she, sort of, switched sides.

    Hmmm…

    Why is Michael Mann so “famous”?

    Because he and a team of cohorts put together a bogus “hockey stick” graph in an attempt to eliminate the historically well-documented Medieval Warm Period, in order to support IPCC claims of “unusual 20th century warming”?

    Or maybe for “hiding the decline” (which showed that his tree-ring numbers did not match up to reality in the 20th century)?

    Why is Steve McIntyre so “famous”?

    Because he exposed Mann’s bogus “hockey stick”?

    Why is Phil Jones so “famous”?

    Because he and his merry men at UEA have been “massaging” the global temperature record to make recent warming appear more exaggerated and have then destroyed the data, rather than releasing it to FoI requests?

    Why is Kevin Trenberth so famous?

    For his statement that the “unexplained” 21st century “lack of warming” of our planet (despite increased CO2 to record levels) was a “travesty”?

    Or maybe for his most recent attempt to re-write the rules of the scientific method by declaring the “null hypothesis” on extreme weather events is that they are caused by AGW?

    Why is James E. Hansen so famous?

    Because he has made several climate disaster predictions in the past, none of which have really happened, but still continues to make new disaster predictions for the future?

    There is always a reason someone becomes “famous” – good or bad.

    The real reason Lindzen and Spencer are “famous” (if that’s what you want to call them) is that they have brought compelling scientific evidence refuting the notion of dangerous AGW, when the politically (and economically) motivated scientific “mainstream” was following a corrupted IPCC process and moving in exactly the opposite direction.

    And Judith Curry is “famous” for having the courage to risk attack and slander from her “mainstream” colleagues by simply being honest and conceding that there is great uncertainty in climate science today.

    Max

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