Even though written from a biased perspective, with comments such as “raving from a fringe minority”, this article speaks clearly to things like the absurdity of the Catlin Artic Ice Survey. It used tremendous amounts of fuel (and left fuel depots on the ice yet to be retrieved) compared the the simple flyover in a DC-3 by German researchers at the Wegener Institute to measure ice thickness.
Then there’s the new “Deep Black” supercomputer being installed by the UK Met Office that will use 1.2 megawatts of power to run climate models.
That’s enough to power a small city
Yet there’s “no shame” in any of this as long as its being done to “save the earth”. Even though Mr. Brook is on the other side of the argument from me, I’m glad to see I’m not the only one that wonders about these “do as I say, not as I do” things. – Anthony
Ignoring the Elephant in the Room:
The Carbon Footprint of Climate Change Research
by Ryan K. Brook from ARCTIC VOL. 62, NO. 1 (JUNE 2009) P. 253–255
http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic62-2-253.pdf
Despite some ongoing raving from a fringe minority of attention seekers and professional refuters funded by the oil companies, most scientists now accept that climate change is a reality and that human activity is the root cause (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2007; Jacques et al., 2008). Many scientists have worked tirelessly to ensure the science is solid, and each new study contributes to understanding the big picture. In all of this, scientists should be immensely proud. Global efforts to convince the general public that climate change is a reality and that our collective actions need to change have been much less successful. Perhaps this failure stems from the misguided notion that climate change is really only an environmental issue, not a social problem.

It seems that while the general public is now much more aware of climate change and its potential impacts than ever before, perhaps the majority believe that global warming is still in debate and that scientists are far from reaching a consensus. For example, a recent poll in the United States found that only 41% of respondents blame global warming on human activity. Even worse, despite some important success stories, there has been a global failure to respond with real reductions in carbon dioxide output. In 2008, a poll of 12 000 citizens in 11 countries, including Canada, found that only 47% were prepared to make personal lifestyle changes to reduce carbon emissions, which is actually a decrease from the 58% willing to do so in 2007. Canada signed and ratified the Kyoto Accord with strong public support, yet it has failed miserably in reaching even these modest goals (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, 2009). The United States, on the other hand, signed and then promptly ignored Kyoto. Some European countries have led inspirational initiatives, and there are definitely some bright lights throughout the world, but globally we are losing the battle to control carbon output. Badly.
If the science of climate change is so compelling and the risks of maintaining the status quo are so overwhelming (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2007), why is the message not translating into meaningful action? One reason, I believe, is that the scientists sounding the alarm are, in fact, part of the problem because we are saying “Do as I say, not as I do.” Scientists who study climate change, especially in the polar regions, have large carbon footprints themselves. By not openly discussing this issue and actively addressing it, we seriously undermine our credibility andour message. Of course, there is no question that the science is absolutely essential and that the data generated will have significant positive impacts on our understanding of climate change and development of policy and mitigation strategies.
But it is increasingly difficult to make a convincing case for how serious the problem is when we, ironically, are doing little to reduce our own research-related carbon footprint. Perhaps most troubling is the almost total absence of dialogue among researchers on this issue.
I think we are generally aware of the vast amount of carbon our research produces, but most of us have not done much to reduce our CO2 production or even calculated its amount. Like most scientists working in polar regions, I travel a great deal throughout the Arctic to do research and teaching, as well as to conferences and meetings in the south.
Recently a student of mine calculated the carbon footprint for a course I teach in the Arctic, and the numbers were sobering. For a research team of 20 people, calculating only the propane and gasoline used in our remote camp on the Hudson Bay coast for one week and the helicopter fuel needed for the short 40 km flights in and out, we produced 3500 kg of CO2.
For the purposes of this essay, I estimated my carbon footprint for helicopter and fixed-wing aircraft use, including commercial travel to get north and travel to four North American conferences annually over the last decade. On average, I have produced 8300 kg of CO2 per year through research alone. I suspect that my total is about average, if not on the low side, compared to other researchers.

For comparison, the average citizen living in Toronto produces about the same amount of CO2 per year in daily life (8600 kg) as I do in my research alone. In the global picture, the total amount of CO2 produced by all scientists is relatively small, but it is the perceptions created by scientists who travel extensively in helicopters, planes, and large ships to do research that has an influential impact on the general public and their willingness to make personal changes. An important first step is calculating our individual research footprint; a far more challenging step is to do something about it.
How can we argue to the world that reducing CO2 output is so important if we are not willing to undertake change on our own? Yet how can we reduce our use of fossil fuels while still conducting research and monitoring in the North? Clearly these are not easy questions to answer, but it is time to start thinking and talking about them. The International Polar Year (IPY) has led to a vast number of training opportunities for graduate students who will form the next cohort of northern scientists. I fear that the science community as a whole is not doing enough to recognize the impacts that we are having through our research activities, and there is an immediate need to identify ways to reduce our negative impacts and take ownership of the issue. Will our inaction result in future scientists who also ignore the issue and do nothing?
Lately, I have been raising the issue of carbon footprints and what should be done about them with colleagues, but surprisingly, carbon production from research and the possibility of offsets doesn’t seem to be on the radar of many. When I inquired about buying offsets, most were quick to dismiss them as a sham. Indeed, there do seem to be some issues with offsets, and it is clearly more effective to deal with emissions at the source rather than absorb them later or stop them somewhere else (Wright, 2007; Galik and Jackson, 2009). But offsets are one tangible way to start at least discussing the issue and working toward viable solutions. I also inquired several times to the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research to seek some leadership on this issue, but of these only NSERC responded and had no advice, ideas, or support to offer. Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, there is virtually no general dialogue or leadership on the issue of researchers’ carbon footprints. It would seem that the leadership will have to come from within.
When I talked with a colleague in the ecotourism industry, who also has a large carbon footprint, it quickly became clear that many in the tourism industry are way out front on this issue. He had built offsets into programs and said that cap-and-trade requirements will soon become a part of how business is usually done. The David Suzuki Foundation has already produced a comprehensive, practical guide to help businesses reduce and offset greenhouse gas emissions (David Suzuki Foundation, 2008), and many similar resources are available worldwide. The World Business Summit on Climate Change, held in Copenhagen at the end of May 2009, also planned to emphasize discussions on low-carbon options for business and facilitate conversation regarding business action on climate impacts (Copenhagen Climate Council, 2009). So if the business sector can become organized around quantifying and mitigating carbon footprints, what can the science community do to catch up? Better yet, what might we do to become leaders in this? Scientists could begin to provide leadership on this issue by sharing data about their carbon footprints and perspectives on how to reduce them. We can also share our collective experience in ways to minimize reliance on fossil fuels during travel and fieldwork, as there have been some important success stories (Figs. 1 and 2a, b). We can also minimize the number and extent of our trips and work collaboratively with northern communities to collect the data we need (Fig. 3).

The International Polar Year has facilitated much greater collaboration with northern people and has built capacity for community-based research and monitoring. Meetings held using video-conferencing and other technologies can both lower carbon output and save money. The year 2009 may be an important milestone in climate change action, with the United Nations Climate Change Conference fast approaching. This conference, to be held in Copenhagen in December, represents an exciting opportunity for scientists to emerge as leaders, not only in the science of climate change, but also in the process of recognizing and reducing carbon footprints.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I thank Susan Kutz, Leanne Niblock, and Murray Gillespie
for insightful comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript and
Celes Davar of Earth Rhythms for his thoughtful perspective.
My research is currently funded by the Nasivvik Centre for Inuit
Health and Changing Environments, the Department of Ecosystem
and Public Health in the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at
the University of Calgary, the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council of Canada PromoScience Program, and
an International Polar Year grant to the CircumArctic Rangifer
Monitoring and Assessment Network.
REFERENCES
Copenhagen Climate Council. 2009. World Business Summit
on Climate Change, 24 – 26 May, Copenhagen. http://www.
copenhagenclimatecouncil.com.
David Suzuki Foundation. 2008. Doing business in a new climate:
A guide to measuring, reducing and offsetting greenhouse
gas emissions. www.davidsuzuki.org/Publications/Doing_
Business_in_a_New_Climate.aspx.
Galik, C.S., and Jackson, R.B. 2009. Risks to forest carbon offset
projects in a changing climate. Forest Ecology and Management
257:2209 – 2216.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 2007. Climate
change 2007: Synthesis report. www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/
index.htm.
Jacques, P.J., Dunlap, R.E., and Freeman, R. 2008. The organisation
of denial: Conservative think tanks and environmental
scepticism. Environmental Politics 17:349 – 385.
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
2009. Kyoto protocol status of ratification. http://unfccc.int/
files/kyoto_protocol/status_of_ratification/application/pdf/
kp_ratification.pdf.
Wright, M. 2007. Carbon offsets deliver where it matters. BBC
News: Viewpoint, 23 July. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/
tech/6912336.stm.
Ryan Brook is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Ecosystem
and Public Health, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, at the
University of Calgary (rkbrook@ucalgary.ca). He has worked in
northern Canada for the last 16 years and is currently focusing
on community-based caribou research.
“The United States, on the other hand, signed and then promptly ignored Kyoto. ”
The US never ratified Kyoto. Another lie in the ointment.
The ‘impartiality’ of the BBC here in the UK continues. We have to pay an annual fee to have a TV in our homes and thereby support this lot.
Latest climate scare web page link is here not to mention all the other propaganda links it contains. This is really winding me up. The scale of the scam is frightening – thank goodness for WUWT and friends. Do we need some sort of realist worldwide political party to ensure that common sense prevails?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8107014.stm
Mike Bryant (19:02:38) :
Smokey,
If you can back ol’ Al up to that machine, I would consider it a rare privilege and honor to pedal…
Mike, look again. It’s a hand crank for Lilliputians.
“Why cannot AGW be dealt with simply by Governments of each country purchasing carbon offsets on behalf of all their citizens?”
Because the so-called “carbon offsets” are just con games by which politically unpopular companies and people are forced to transfer cash to politically popular groups and nations. These favored parties do not do anything to actually reduce carbon dioxide emissions, but instead are paid to NOT do something that they claim they would have done.
Of course, since they never actually intended to do the thing they are being paid not to do, this scheme is quite literally Money for Nothing.
redneck (18:06:48) :
More news and photos at Eruptions. http://scienceblogs.com/eruptions/2009/06/sarychev_peak_eruption_update_2.php
Nick Darlington UK (05:29:02) :
You are so right about the biases at the BBC. They have no news about the Sarychev eruption, yet its SO2 plume will have a cooling effect in the northern hemisphere this coming winter. It is the third such release of SO2 this year and who knows what is to come.
There is however, what seems to be a coordinated and concerted effort by the EU and the USA, to release scare stories such as how COMPUTER MODELS models forecast soaring temperatures, like the BBC news at 8-00 this morning claiming London summer temperatures as high as 41 degrees C. by 2080.
There must be a financial reckoning with these liars one day.
IT’S THE SAME OLD STORY, GARBAGE IN, GARBAGE OUT.
Something similar was published last year:
Climate researchers ‘should cut their carbon footprint’
Jet-setting scientists responsible for substantial greenhouse gas emissions.
By Anna Petherick
Published online 21 November 2008 | Nature | doi:10.1038/news.2008.1250
http://www.nature.com/news/2008/081121/full/news.2008.1250.html
and
The travel-related carbon dioxide emissions of atmospheric researchers
Atmos. Chem. Phys., 8, 6499-6504, 2008
By A. Stohl
http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/8/6499/2008/acp-8-6499-2008.html
Thanks for a fantastic read, everyone. I’m spreading the word about this site – and a few others – to those I know who are openminded.
Unfortunate story in the link to notevil just wrong – I live in Switzerland (American married to Swiss), we had a translation office for 20 years – and have counted among the not-scientifically-trained skeptics since finding out there was even such an inane idea as “consensus science.” Well, if I could still stand to translate, I’d offer to do it (assuming they haven’t found anyone). There are a number of us heretics over here.
By the way, you probably aren’t aware that the ranks of the skeptics is swelling by leaps and bounds from the now-leperized ranks of those who began questioning second-hand smoke scaremongering. As they discover the pseudoscience behind that, they begin to question other “scientific” claims (especially when used to impose or threaten draconian policies/laws).
“”” Tom in Florida (04:47:20) :
“The United States, on the other hand, signed and then promptly ignored Kyoto. ”
The US never ratified Kyoto. Another lie in the ointment. “””
To be precise, Al Gore alone signed the Kyotp Treaty; nobody else representing the USA did. Then the United States Senate; who alone is empowered to sign treaties (as Veep, algore was president protem of the senate), voted 95 to zero to NOT ratify the Kyoto Accord.
If you were the soon thereafter incoming President George W. Bush, would you push for approval of a treaty that your Senate had voted 95 to zilch to 86 ?
Bush was castigated for ignoring Kyoto, when the entire pertinet part of the Congress voted against it. I don’t remember whether the other five were absent or abstained.
George
But it is increasingly difficult to make a convincing case for how serious the problem is when we, ironically, are doing little to reduce our own research-related carbon footprint.
Of course, the important thing is that you *feel* bad about what the wrongs you have committed.
How about funding based inversely on the size of your “footprint”. I suspect that would spur a new industry to develop computer models that would produce tinier and tinier outputs. Kind of an inverse hockey stick. 😉
I’m surprised that no one has mentioned the carbon footprint of President Obama with all his flying around the country and the world to promote himself. IN the meantime we are asked to drive around in small vehicles. He could sign some of those bills in the Whitehouse rather than flying off to another State. He acts like he is still running for President.
From the original post:
When larger desktop machines are equipped with 600 W power supplies, you can’t really be surprised at 1.2 MW supercomputers.
That’s enough to power a small city
A bit of an exaggeration — it’s only like 400 average U.S. households!
PaulH (09:50:30) :
I thought the prevailing wisdom here was all about more observation and less reliance on blind modeling. 😉
chillybean (16:05:28) :
Typo’s are never a good first post so feel free to snip.
Nor should “Typo’s” (sic) have an apostrophe. The correct pluralization is “Typos.” An apostrophe is used for possession, e.g., “Anthony’s typos should be corrected,” or a contraction (it is), e.g., “Anthony’s the one that should correct the typos, not me!”
Sorry to be a punctuation Nazi, but I cannot help it!
Mark
“Despite some ongoing raving from a fringe minority of attention seekers and professional refuters funded by the oil companies, most scientists now accept that climate change is a reality and that human activity is the root cause (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2007; Jacques et al., 2008).”
I suppose that “climate change” is now code for AGW caused climate change. Is there anyone who reads this blog that ever doubted that climate is always in a state change? Of course not!
This use of strawmen puts put everyone who disputes AGW into the category of raving fringe minority of attention seekers and professional refuters funded by the oil companies. The AGWers do this rather well. If only they could come up with some research to support their dogma.
The policy advocacy-science conflict of which this example and its corruption of science is analyzed in an excellent speech/essay, “Aliens cause global warming,” by Michael Crichton, 2003 speech at Cal Tech:
http://michaelcrichton.net/speeches.html
Crichton’s website is a wellspring of wonderfully crafted prose. Enjoy.
Anthony, where do I sign up for a check from the oil companies to post my comments refuting AGW? I certainly could use the income in these trying times.
OMS:
“That’s enough to power a small city
A bit of an exaggeration — it’s only like 400 average U.S. households!”
which comes to about 1500 people. Average desktop PC consumes 400 watts, divided into 1.2MW means 3000 desktops. Does this supercomputer equal the processing power of 3000 CPUs?
“When it is finally completed, around 2011 the Met Office machine will be the second most powerful machine in Britain with a total peak performance approaching 1 PetaFlop — equivalent to over 100,000 PCs and over 30 times more powerful than what is in place today.”
What is a petaflop in re PC capacity?
http://www.pcmag.com/encyclopedia_term/0,2542,t=Roadrunner&i=59167,00.asp
“The first supercomputer to reach one petaFLOPS (one quadrillion floating point operations per second). Running under Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Roadrunner comprises 12,960 Cell chips, 6,948 dual-core AMD chips and 80 terabytes of memory. Developed by IBM for Los Alamos National Labs and achieving its record performance in 2008, Roadrunner weighs in at 250 tons, much larger than the behemoth computers of the 1950s. It takes up an area approximately 100 by 120 feet. Although Roadrunner soaks up nearly four megawatts of power, its performance is that of 100,000 fast laptop computers and is actually more energy efficient than many of its peers.”
A PC is not a “fast laptop computer”. PC computers are generally significantly more powerful than laptops.
George
Actually, that’s not quite right. The Senate voted 95-0 or something similar to tell then VP Gore NOT to sign anything at Kyoto that might hurt the US economy. Gore, thinking he new better, ignored the will of the Senate and signed Kyoto. Then President Clinton never presented the accord to the Senate for ratification – not that the President is required to, it’s just protocol – electing instead to let his successor deal with it.
Well pedantically I am sure you are right; it was a “Sense of the Senate” resolution they voted on; not exactly a call for ratification.
In any case Bush was faced with something the senate had rejected hands down; would have been political suicide to push Kyoto on the American people; and the subsequent history has borne that out.
I just file this stuff away in my head so sometimes I recall it incorrectly.
George
I know that sarcasm and joking around is kind of the norm in these comments, but I’ve felt some regret after writing this here:
“I think Brook needs therapy. There’s a bigger issue going on here. Does he feel guilty for his existence? Does he have OCD?”
I kind of felt some concern for Brook after reading his article (though at the same time I couldn’t help but chuckle), but at the same time I was kind of joking around, too. No one’s prompted me to do this, but I apologize for saying the above, in all seriousness. People’s foibles are their own and I shouldn’t joke about them. I think I was expressing my frustration at the realization that people like Brook who have an obsessiveness and shame about what we emit have as much influence as they do over our lives.
Changing the subject some, I’ve had this sneaking suspicion that one reason why we’ve seen what we’ve seen with AGW proponents is the dominant role that mathematics has played in the institutional study of climate influences, over science. I’ve been doing a little reading about mathematics, and the profile seems to fit. It seems the whole idea is to make an assumption and then make a deduction from it. This is seen as absolute truth. In the realm of mathematics this is perfectly fine, because it’s okay to deal with abstractions that have no basis in reality. I heard a prominent man in my field of study, Alan Kay, say once, “Mathematics without science is dangerous.” I don’t remember him elaborating on this, but I think he was referring to this quality of mathematics, and that people can become convinced they are discovering truth in the real world through mathematics alone. After all Galileo said that the universe is written in the language of mathematics, right? If people in the field try to draw wisdom and justification from this they are misinterpreting what he said. It’s been written in the language of mathematics by us, but the universe is not mathematical in the purest sense. Mathematics just happens to have been the best tool we’ve found to explain what we see (though in some quarters this idea is being challenged by my field of study, computing). This is what science informs us about.
A while back I read “The Art of Mathematics” by Jerry King (a good book), and in there he talks about how mathematicians tend to have an air of intellectual superiority about them, that only they and their colleagues can understand what they are doing. Everyone else is not mentally equipped for it (that’s the assumption). We’ve heard this from the AGW proponents, haven’t we?
I can’t say this arrogance is universal. I had the thought that another area where mathematics has intruded on science is string theory in physics, and I have not heard the same complaints in that field as I’ve heard (and I’ve had) about AGW alarmists in climatology. Perhaps the only reason for this is the funding differential…
My understanding is that string theory came about when a student happened to compare a mathematical theorem for the motion of a spring to a physics formula for the motion of a particle, and they seemed kind of similar. This student and others opened up a whole new realm of theoretical physics by doing some combining and recombining of the math and physics formulas to come to some conclusions. The physics field was initially very skeptical of this approach (rightly so), but there’s been some acceptance of this theory as time has passed, with as yet no empirical evidence. Its proponents say it just seems to help explain some phenomena that were unexplainable before. It doesn’t seem that physics has lost its head with this stuff though.
I understand the political aspect of AGW, and that there are those who want to control and restrict freedom, destroy capitalism, and destroy manufacturing, but I’m sure there are many in this area of work who don’t have those sorts of desires, but are mistakenly convinced that by their use of mathematics they can arrive at scientific truths.
wws (05:56:33) :
“Because the so-called “carbon offsets” are just con games by which politically unpopular companies and people are forced to transfer cash to politically popular groups and nations. These favored parties do not do anything to actually reduce carbon dioxide emissions, but instead are paid to NOT do something that they claim they would have done.
Of course, since they never actually intended to do the thing they are being paid not to do, this scheme is quite literally Money for Nothin”
I am glad you agree “money for nothing” is a scam
Sham = fake = scam
rbateman (17:25:00) :
“MadCap & Tirade”
Is that covered in the Taxman/Malarkey bill?
I don’t know if this post will be seen by the Moderators but I think that some of the pictures on this page deserve to be seen. They show just how Nature tends to paint with a very, very broad brush. I wonder how anyone can legislate against these sorts of GHG emissions?
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/view.php?id=38985
Further discussion and pointers to accessing other pictures here:-
http://volcanism.wordpress.com/
Mark T:
“Sorry to be a punctuation Nazi, but I cannot help it!”
I’m afraid I’m a bit of a pedant too. The mistake I spotted earlier was the use of the word factoid to describe a small fact. The dictionary definition of factoid is: -n. an assumption or speculation that is reported and repeated so often that it becomes accepted as fact; a simulated or imagined fact.
A better word might be factette. (-ette. suffix meaning small, ie kitchenette, cigarette.)
I, too, am sorry; but I, also, cannot help it!!!
Stephen Brown (13:05:27) :
Thanks for posting that information.
With the plumb reaching 10 to 15 and possibly 20km it will be interesting to see how much total SO2 is released.