The last point in the article, like everything else, has to have evidence to back it up.
The
5 stages of climate denial are on display ahead of the IPCC report
Climate
contrarians appear to be running damage control in the media before
the next IPCC report is published
Rupert
Murdoch's Wall Street Journal and The Australian are providing the
media coverage for climate contrarian damage control. Photograph:
Stefan Rousseau/PA
16
September, 2013
The
fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report is due
out on September 27th, and is expected to reaffirm with growing
confidence that humans are driving global warming and climate change.
In anticipation of the widespread news coverage of this esteemed
report, climate contrarians appear to be in damage control mode,
trying to build up skeptical spin in media climate stories. Just in
the past week we've seen:
- The David Rose Mail on Sunday piece that treated scientific evidence in much the way bakers treat pretzel dough.
Interestingly,
these pieces spanned nearly the full spectrum of the 5 stages of
global warming denial.
Stage 1: Deny the Problem Exists
Often
when people are first faced with an inconvenient problem, the
immediate reaction involves denying its existence. For a long time
climate contrarians denied that the planet was warming. Usually this
involves disputing the accuracy of the surface temperature record,
given that the data clearly indicate rapid
warming
.
.
In
the 1990s, Christy and Spencer created a data set of lower atmosphere
temperatures using measurements from satellite instruments. These
initially seemed to indicate that the atmosphere was not warming,
leading Christy, Spencer, and their fellow contrarians to declare
that the problem didn't exist. Unfortunately, it turned out that
their data set contained several
biases that added an artificial cooling trend,
and once those were corrected, it was revealed that the lower
atmosphere was warming at a rate consistent with surface temperature
measurements.
Most
climate contrarians have come to accept that the planet has warmed
significantly. Unfortunately many have regressed back into Stage 1
denial through the new myth
that global warming magically stopped 15 years ago (most
recently exemplified
by David Rose in the Mail on Sunday). The
error in that argument involves
ignoring about 98 percent of the warming of the planet, most of which
goes into heating the oceans. When we account for all of the data,
global warming actually appears to be accelerating.
Global
heat accumulation data, from Nuccitelli et al. (2012)
David
Rose also doubled-down
on his Arctic sea ice decline denial this
weekend, suggesting melts in the 1920s were just as large as today's.
Sorry David, the
data debunk your denial again.
Average
July through September Arctic sea ice extent 1870–2008 from the
University of Illinois (Walsh & Chapman 2001 updated to 2008) and
observational data from NSIDC for 2009–2012.
Stage 2: Deny We're the Cause
Once
people move beyond denying that the problem exists, they often move
to the next stage, denying that we're responsible. John Christy and
Roy Spencer took this approach by disputing the accuracy of global
climate models in The Daily Mail and The Christian Post,
respectively. Spencer was quite explicit about this:
...we deny "that most [current climate change] is human-caused, and that it is a threat to future generations that must be addressed by the global community."
Christy
and Spencer made their case by comparing the outputs of 73 climate
models to satellite temperature measurements, and showing that the
models seemed to predict more warming than has been observed. But the
comparison was not of surface temperatures, or of the lowermost layer
of the atmosphere, or even any measurement global average
temperatures. They specifically looked at measurements of the
temperature of the middle troposphere (TMT) in the tropics.
There's
certainly nothing wrong with examining this particular subset of
temperature data, but it's a bit of an odd choice on the face of it.
The real problem lies in the fact that satellite measurements of TMT
are highly uncertain. In fact, estimates of the TMT trend by
different scientific groups vary
wildly,
despite using the same raw satellite data.
Another
problem is that the stratosphere (the layer of the atmosphere above
the troposphere) is cooling – an
expected consequence of the increased greenhouse effect.
But some of the cooling stratosphere bleeds into the TMT data,
leading to another cool bias. While there is a discrepancy between
model simulations and measurements of tropical troposphere
temperatures, it's not clear how much (if any) is due to the models
being wrong, and how much is due to errors in the measurements. As a
U.S. Climate Change Science Program report co-authored
by John Christy concluded,
"This difference between models and observations may arise from errors that are common to all models, from errors in the observational data sets, or from a combination of these factors. The second explanation is favored, but the issue is still open."
However, in mainstream media interviews and editorials, Christy and Spencer always fail to mention the possibility that the problem could lie more in the measurements than the models, which frankly is intellectually dishonest. Additionally, climate models have done very wellin projecting long-term global surface temperature changes.
Stage2b: Consensus Denial
In
Murdoch's The Australian, Andrew Montford took a different approach
to deny that we're the cause of the problem, attacking the expert
consensus on human-caused global warming. Specifically he attacked
the Cook
et al. (2013) study
finding 97
percent consensus on this question in the peer-reviewed scientific
literature.
In
order to deny the consensus, Montford employed the
Climategate strategy,
using material stolen during a hacking
of the private Skeptical Science discussion forum.
He then pulled quotes out of context to claim the study was "a
public relations exercise," because we discussed how to
effectively communicate our consensus results. In reality, the
comments Montford used to support this argument were made after we
had preliminary
results reviewing nearly 14,000 peer-reviewed abstractsthat
found only 24 rejecting the human-caused global warming consensus.
Montford's
article demonstrates the inherent dangers in quoting illegally
obtained private correspondence. First, there is the obvious ethical
issue of republishing private correspondence obtained through an
illegal act. Second, using isolated quotes extracted from private
conversations runs the risk of taking comments out of context and
misrepresenting the facts.
In
any case, we have set up a public ratings system so that anybody can
read and rate the scientific abstracts. If you don't believe the
vast body of evidence of
an expert consensus on human-caused global warming,test
it for yourself.
Moreover, the
scientist ratings of
their own papers – independent of our abstract ratings – also
resulted in a 97 percent consensus.
Stage 3: Deny It's a Problem
Once
they've progressed through the first two stages and admitted global
warming is happening and human-caused, contrarians generally move on
to Stage 3, denying it's a problem. Lomborg and Ridley did their
best Tony
the Tiger impressions
in The Washington Post and Murdoch's Wall Street Journal,
respectively, arguing that global warming is 'Grrrrreat!' (or at
least nothing to worry about).
I've
previously discussed why this argument is a
complete risk management failure.
When faced with a potentially catastrophic outcome for something as
important as the global climate, it's a no-brainer to take action to
make sure we avoid that possible outcome. Moreover,Lomborg's
and Ridley's arguments are based on cherry picking data.
For example, Lomborg talks about how droughts have not worsened in
the United States, according to the IPCC, but fails to mention that
theIPCC
predicts that US droughts will intensify over
the next century.
In
his editorial, Ridley takes a rosy view about the impact of climate
change on crop yields that is not
supported by the scientific research.
He argues that climate impacts won't be bad in a middle-of-the-road
emissions scenario, but as
Climate Progress reports,
the scientist on whose work Ridley based this argument previously
explained,
"In his article, Mr. Ridley is just plain wrong about future global warming."
Moreover,
by painting an unjustifiably rosy picture and thus misleading the
public, he's helping to ensure that we'll blow past that middling
greenhouse gas emissions scenario (which requires significant
emissions reductions efforts) and commit ourselves to much worse
climate change consequences.
Stage 4: Deny We can Solve It
In
his editorial, Roy Spencer bounced between the second and fourth
stages of global warming denial, also claiming that solving the
problem is too expensive and will hurt the poor. In
reality the opposite is true
.
Spencer
specifically attacked renewable energy like wind power as being too
expensive. In reality, wind
power is already cheaper than coal,
even without considering the added climate damage costs from coal
carbon emissions. When including those very real costs, solar
power is also already cheaper than coal.
Additionally, the
poorest countries are generally the most vulnerable to climate
change.
Listening to Spencer and continuing to cause rapid climate change is
what will really hurt the poor.
Stage 5: It's too Late
Stage
5 global warming denial involves arguing that it's too late to solve
the problem, so we shouldn't bother trying (though few climate
contrarians have reached this level). Unfortunately this stage can be
self-fulfilling. If we wait too long to address the problem, we may
end up committing ourselves to catastrophic climate change.
The
good news is that we still have time to avoid a catastrophic outcome.
The more emissions reductions we can achieve, the less the impacts of
climate change will be. The challenge lies in achieving those
greenhouse gas emissions reductions when Rupert Murdoch's media
empire and other news outlets are spreading climate misinformation
and denial.
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