I thought I’d seen the end of this after we first saw it back on May 26th of this year. I wrote then:
How not to make a climate photo op
You have to wonder- what were these guys thinking? The only media visual they could have chosen that would send a worse message of forecast certainty was a dart board…or maybe something else?

MIT’s “wheel of climate” – image courtesy Donna Coveney/MIT
But no, they apparently didn’t get enough press the first time around. I mean, come on, it’s a table top roulette wheel in a science press release. Today we were treated to yet another new press release on the press mailing list I get. It is recycled science news right down to the same photo series above which you can see again in the press link below. The guy on the left looks slightly less irritated in the new photo at the link. Next, to get more mileage, I think we’ll see the online game version.
So what I think we need now is a caption contest for the photo above. Readers, start your word skills. I’ll post the best three captions from comments in a new post later.
Oh and if you want to read about the press release, here it is below:
From MIT Public Release: 2-Oct-2009
There’s still time to cut the risk of climate catastrophe, MIT study shows
A new analysis of climate risk, published by researchers at MIT and elsewhere, shows that even moderate carbon-reduction policies now can substantially lower the risk of future climate change. It also shows that quick, global emissions reductions would be required in order to provide a good chance of avoiding a temperature increase of more than 2 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial level — a widely discussed target.
How to limit risk of climate catastrophe

Photo – Image courtesy: MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change
David L. Chandler, MIT News Office
A new analysis of climate risk, published by researchers at MIT and elsewhere, shows that even moderate carbon-reduction policies now can substantially lower the risk of future climate change. It also shows that quick, global emissions reductions would be required in order to provide a good chance of avoiding a temperature increase of more than 2 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial level — a widely discussed target. But without prompt action, they found, extreme changes could soon become much more difficult, if not impossible, to control.
Ron Prinn, co-director of MIT’s Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change and a co-author of the new study, says that “our results show we still have around a 50-50 chance of stabilizing the climate” at a level of no more than a few tenths above the 2 degree target. However, that will require global emissions, which are now growing, to start downward almost immediately. That result could be achieved if the aggressive emissions targets in current U.S. climate bills were met, and matched by other wealthy countries, and if China and other large developing countries followed suit with only a decade or two delay. That 2 degree C increase is a level that is considered likely to prevent some of the most catastrophic potential effects of climate change, such as major increases in global sea level and disruption of agriculture and natural ecosystems.
“The nature of the problem is one of minimizing risk,” explains Mort Webster, assistant professor of engineering systems, who was the lead author of the new report. That’s why looking at the probabilities of various outcomes, rather than focusing on the average outcome in a given climate model, “is both more scientifically correct, and a more useful way to think about it.”
Too often, he says, the public discussion over climate change policies gets framed as a debate between the most extreme views on each side, as “the world is ending tomorrow, versus it’s all a myth,” he says. “Neither of those is scientifically correct or socially useful.”
“It’s a tradeoff between risks,” he says. “There’s the risk of extreme climate change but there’s also a risk of higher costs. As scientists, we don’t choose what’s the right level of risk for society, but we show what the risks are either way.”
The new study, published online by the Joint Program in September, builds on one released earlier this year that looked at the probabilities of various climate outcomes in the event that no emissions-control policies at all were implemented — and found high odds of extreme temperature increases that could devastate human societies. This one examined the difference that would be made to those odds, under four different versions of possible emissions-reduction policies.
Both studies used the MIT Integrated Global Systems Model, a detailed computer simulation of global economic activity and climate processes that has been developed and refined by the Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change since the early 1990s. The new research involved hundreds of runs of the model with each run using slight variations in input parameters, selected so that each run has about an equal probability of being correct based on present observations and knowledge. Other research groups have estimated the probabilities of various outcomes, based on variations in the physical response of the climate system itself. But the MIT model is the only one that interactively includes detailed treatment of possible changes in human activities as well — such as the degree of economic growth, with its associated energy use, in different countries.
Quantifying the odds
By taking a probabilistic approach, using many different runs of the climate model, this approach gives a more realistic assessment of the range of possible outcomes, Webster says. “One of the common mistakes in the [scientific] literature,” he says, “is to take several different climate models, each of which gives a ‘best guess’ of temperature outcomes, and take that as the uncertainty range. But that’s not right. The range of uncertainty is actually much wider.”
Because this study produced a direct estimate of probabilities by running 400 different probability-weighted simulations for each policy case, looking at the actual range of uncertainty for each of the many factors that go into the model, and how they interact. By doing so, it produced more realistic estimates of the likelihood of various outcomes than other procedures — and the resulting odds are often significantly worse. For example, an earlier study by Tom Wigley of the National Center for Atmospheric Research estimated that the Level 1 emissions control policy — the least-restrictive of the standards studied -would reduce by 50 percent the odds of a temperature increase of more than 2 degrees C, but the more detailed analysis in the new study finds only a 20 percent chance of avoiding such an increase.
One interesting finding the team made is that even relatively modest emissions-control policies can have a big impact on the odds of the most damaging climate outcomes. For any given climate model scenario, there is always a probability distribution of possible outcomes, and it turns out that in all the scenarios, the policy options have a much greater impact in reducing the most extreme outcomes than they do on the most likely outcomes.
For example, under the strongest of the four policy options, the average projected outcome was a 1.7 degrees C reduction of the expected temperature increase in 2100, but for the most extreme projected increase (with 5 percent probability of occurring) there was a 3.2 degree C reduction. And that’s especially significant, the authors say, because the most damaging effects of climate change increase drastically with higher temperature, in a very non-linear way.
“These results illustrate that even relatively loose constraints on emissions reduce greatly the chance of an extreme temperature increase, which is associated with the greatest damage,” the report concludes.
Webster emphasizes that “this is a problem of risk management,” and says that while the technical aspects of the models are complex, the results provide information that’s not much different from decisions that people face every day. People understand that by using their seat belts and having a car with airbags they are reducing the risks of driving, but that doesn’t mean they can’t still be injured or killed. “No, but the risk goes down. That’s the return on your decision. It’s not something that’s so unfamiliar to people. We may make sure to buy a car with airbags, but we don’t refuse to leave the house. That’s the nature of the kind of tradeoffs we have to make as a society.”
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UPDATE: WUWT commenter Deborah via Jim Watson implies in comments that she has too much time on her hands 😉

Yep! That’s me. Happy to make you laugh. My work is done….for today 😉
I’ve been reading this blog and the posts that follow for awhile now so I want to get this straight. I can’t rely/trust on NASA, MIT, National Science Foundation or any other academic body for any scientific information?
I don’t know who to believe? These are the scientist’s that have given me GPS technology, the Internet, digital TV, cell phones, nuclear energy, and numerous other innovations but now they are all scheming to take my money through taxation of CO2. Not only are the scientists in the US in on the scheme but it’s a global conspiracy.
This is getting climathetic.
You people are in danger of becoming climatrophic or even climatose.
Go see a climatrician and get rewired.
Couldn’t resist a second shot…….
Scientists power MIT !
Principal Research Scientist Adam Schlosser takes a turn at spinning the turbine disguised as a Roulette Wheel after models predicted the wheel could Power MIT if turned at 3000rpm/24hrs per day. The wheel is cleverly colored to turn white once the correct speed is reached.
The politics is settled now spin the wheel for this weeks 100 year forecast.
“You spin me right round, baby right round like a record, baby right round, round, round…”
“Science that any gangsta can understand”
“You do the Hokey-Pokey,
And you spin the disk around.
That’s what it’s all about!”
With apologies to Roland Lawrence LaPrise / Chuck Macak / Tafft Baker
“200 years of climate science”
The scientists can’t win. You criticise them relentlessly because the models have a large margin of error, they point this out, and you pillory them. They are telling you, these are the odds, and they are all losing odds at that, no one wins on this wheel.
The scientists are not supposed to “win”. They are supposed to conduct science.
The result of the spin, so far, is not even in the thin blue sliver. The observed results are not even on that wheel.
A reasonable scientist would be expected to conclude that perhaps the wheel itself was in need of closer scrutiny.
They are passing on what they have found in a simple to understand way. The long term trend is up, models cannnot and do not predict year to year variations.
Ted (08:54:09) :
Caption: “MIT’s environmental spin doctors present their new climate predication algorithm, which they have been revising since the early 1990’s. ‘This is much more robust than the “dart-board” method,’ said one member of the team. ‘We’re just not very good a throwing darts.’”
“Spin Doctors” is enough. Brevity is the soul of wit.
Yes Jody. Sort of like a VR version of “Invasion of the Body Snatchers.” Look out your window for people running down the street crying, “They’re coming, they’re coming!”
And cue spooky music.
Caption:
“Dark clouds over the new computer models”
Caption:\”Pat, I’d like to buy a vowel.”
Yes, it is hard to understand. I think the reason is that the scientists and engineers who gave us so much technological innovation over the past decades are not the same people as the self-promoters who have given us this farrago of bad science, half-truths, and outright lies under the rubric of ‘climate science’. They have created a political movement that has captured not only the respected institutions you name, but entire governments, and not coincidentally has resulted in a rich gravy train of taxpayer money for those who hew to the party line, which consists of alarmist fabrications that have no basic in objectively-viewed fact or science.
Writers on this blog have shown time and time again that the data stinks, but the ideologues and politicians run with it nonetheless. That’s not science, it’s insanity.
/Mr Lynn
I had one once but the wheel came off.
Caption should read “Look at the tree ring we found in Al Gore’s garden.”
“Behind the Scenes Preparation of the AR5”
Year to year, since 2000, the wheel has been off, and by no small amount. If these are the odds, I wouldn’t buy stock in it. Who, in their right mind, would believe in a stock that for nearly 10 years has shown no growth and at times, negative values? Yet there are folks who continue to side with these scientists, coming to their defense on what is nothing more than buying a pig in a poke. Are these people so repulsed by the idea that someone who should be trusted has been in reality, pulling the wool over their eyes? What is missed here is that a good scientist, one that cares not one wit for where the grant money is coming from, and instead relies on the observation, hypothesis, test, observation, hypothesis, test cycle, must must must think that way. This has been so in the past, else gravity would not have succumbed to relativity. The general public needs to think this same way, else street smarts will succumb to snake oil purchases once again.
Pamela,
You use the wrong metric in assessing growth in this affair. The growth and stock arrives in the reaffirmation of good science. That an enormous machine with (essentially) unlimited funds attempted to mold human imagination to accept its misanthropic view – has been defeated.
For each year of zero or negative temperature rise – a far greater mark has been achieved. Slavish obedience to political ideology, cultism and shaming – is extinguished. Fear-based manipulation for whatever purported end does not stand muster. The exposure of this drama as the creation of misguided saviors, is in fact a cornerstone of human enlightenment.
Not bad for a decade of no growth.
Thanks to Simon (06:53:31) whose entry: “Look at the tree ring we found in Al Gore’s garden.” inspired me not so much with a caption entry but rather with a balloon where the guy in the suit says
“Look you idiots, tree rings are supposed to be circular not pie shaped.”
Caption: “MIT discovers why Briffa suppressed his tree-ring data.”
Caption should read “Next year we’ll build a wheel with 400 degrees to the full circle. Then we’ll be able to fit in +8 and +9 degrees Celcius as well!”