Spencer: AGW has most of the characteristics of an "urban legend"

An Expensive Urban Legend

by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

http://www.vaguebuttrue.com/images/1251394834-alligator%20and%20sewerWEBSITE.jpg
Urban legend? Gators don't really live in the sewer.

About.com describes an “urban legend” as an apocryphal (of questionable authenticity), secondhand story, told as true and just plausible enough to be believed, about some horrific…series of events….it’s likely to be framed as a cautionary tale. Whether factual or not, an urban legend is meant to be believed. In lieu of evidence, however, the teller of an urban legend is apt to rely on skillful storytelling and reference to putatively trustworthy sources.

I contend that the belief in human-caused global warming as a dangerous event, either now or in the future, has most of the characteristics of an urban legend. Like other urban legends, it is based upon an element of truth. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas whose concentration in the atmosphere is increasing, and since greenhouse gases warm the lower atmosphere, more CO2 can be expected, at least theoretically, to result in some level of warming.

But skillful storytelling has elevated the danger from a theoretical one to one of near-certainty. The actual scientific basis for the plausible hypothesis that humans could be responsible for most recent warming is contained in the cautious scientific language of many scientific papers. Unfortunately, most of the uncertainties and caveats are then minimized with artfully designed prose contained in the Summary for Policymakers (SP) portion of the report of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). This Summary was clearly meant to instill maximum alarm from a minimum amount of direct evidence.

Next, politicians seized upon the SP, further simplifying and extrapolating its claims to the level of a “climate crisis”. Other politicians embellished the tale even more by claiming they “saw” global warming in Greenland as if it was a sighting of Sasquatch, or that they felt it when they fly in airplanes.

Just as the tales of marauding colonies of alligators living in New York City sewers are based upon some kernel of truth, so too is the science behind anthropogenic global warming. But there is a big difference between reports of people finding pet alligators that have escaped their owners, versus city workers having their limbs torn off by roving colonies of subterranean monsters.

In the case of global warming, the “putatively trustworthy sources” would be the consensus of the world’s scientists. The scientific consensus, after all, says that global warming is…is what? Is happening? Is severe? Is manmade? Is going to burn the Earth up if we do not act? It turns out that those who claim consensus either do not explicitly state what that consensus is about, or they make up something that supports their preconceived notions.

If the consensus is that the presence of humans on Earth has some influence on the climate system, then I would have to even include myself in that consensus. After all, the same thing can be said of the presence of trees on Earth, and hopefully we have at least the same rights as trees do. But too often the consensus is some vague, fill-in-the-blank, implied assumption where the definition of “climate change” includes the phrase “humans are evil”.

It is a peculiar development that scientific truth is now decided through voting. A relatively recent survey of climate scientists who do climate research found that 97.4% agreed that humans have a “significant” effect on climate. But the way the survey question was phrased borders on meaninglessness. To a scientist, “significant” often means non-zero. The survey results would have been quite different if the question was, “Do you believe that natural cycles in the climate system have been sufficiently researched to exclude them as a potential cause of most of our recent warming?”

And it is also a good bet that 100% of those scientists surveyed were funded by the government only after they submitted research proposals which implicitly or explicitly stated they believed in anthropogenic global warming to begin with. If you submit a research proposal to look for alternative explanations for global warming (say, natural climate cycles), it is virtually guaranteed you will not get funded. Is it any wonder that scientists who are required to accept the current scientific orthodoxy in order to receive continued funding, then later agree with that orthodoxy when surveyed? Well, duh.

In my experience, the public has the mistaken impression that a lot of climate research has gone into the search for alternative explanations for warming. They are astounded when I tell them that virtually no research has been performed into the possibility that warming is just part of a natural cycle generated within the climate system itself.

Too often the consensus is implied to be that global warming is so serious that we must do something now in the form of public policy to avert global catastrophe. What? You don’t believe that there are alligators in New York City sewer system? How can you be so unconcerned about the welfare of city workers that have to risk their lives by going down there every day? What are you, some kind of Holocaust-denying, Neanderthal flat-Earther?

It makes complete sense that in this modern era of scientific advances and inventions that we would so readily embrace a compelling tale of global catastrophe resulting from our own excesses. It’s not a new genre of storytelling, of course, as there were many B-movies in the 1950s whose horror themes were influenced by scientists’ development of the atomic bomb.

Our modern equivalent is the 2004 movie, “Day After Tomorrow”, in which all kinds of physically impossible climatic events occur in a matter of days. In one scene, super-cold stratospheric air descends to the Earth’s surface, instantly freezing everything in its path. The meteorological truth, however, is just the opposite. If you were to bring stratospheric air down to the surface, heating by compression would make it warmer than the surrounding air, not colder.

I’m sure it is just coincidence that “Day After Tomorrow” was directed by Roland Emmerich, who also directed the 2006 movie “Independence Day,” in which an alien invasion nearly exterminates humanity. After all, what’s the difference? Aliens purposely killing off humans, or humans accidentally killing off humans? Either way, we all die.

But a global warming catastrophe is so much more believable. After all, climate change does happen, right? So why not claim that ALL climate change is now the result of human activity? And while we are at it, let’s re-write climate history so that we get rid of the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice age, with a new ingenious hockey stick-shaped reconstruction of past temperatures that makes it look like climate never changed until the 20th Century? How cool would that be?

The IPCC thought it was way cool…until it was debunked, after which it was quietly downgraded in the IPCC reports from the poster child for anthropogenic global warming, to one possible interpretation of past climate.

And let’s even go further and suppose that the climate system is so precariously balanced that our injection of a little bit of that evil plant food, carbon dioxide, pushes our world over the edge, past all kinds of imaginary tipping points, with the Greenland ice sheet melting away, and swarms of earthquakes being the price of our indiscretions.

In December, hundreds of bureaucrats from around the world will once again assemble, this time in Copenhagen, in their attempts to forge a new international agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as a successor to the Kyoto Protocol. And as has been the case with every other UN meeting of its type, the participants simply assume that the urban legend is true. Indeed, these politicians and governmental representatives need it to be true. Their careers and political power now depend upon it.

And the fact that they hold their meetings in all of the best tourist destinations in the world, enjoying the finest exotic foods, suggests that they do not expect to ever have to be personally inconvenienced by whatever restrictions they try to impose on the rest of humanity.

If you present these people with evidence that the global warming crisis might well be a false alarm, you are rewarded with hostility and insults, rather than expressions of relief. The same can be said for most lay believers of the urban legend. I say “most” because I once encountered a true believer who said he hoped my research into the possibility that climate change is mostly natural will eventually be proved correct.

Unfortunately, just as we are irresistibly drawn to disasters – either real ones on the evening news, or ones we pay to watch in movie theaters – the urban legend of a climate crisis will persist, being believed by those whose politics and worldviews depend upon it. Only when they finally realize what a new treaty will cost them in loss of freedoms and standard of living will those who oppose our continuing use of carbon-based energy begin to lose their religion.

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Roger Knights
October 24, 2009 9:32 pm

I’d change “all the characteristics” to “some of the characteristics.” This isn’t a second-hand-source tale.
REPLY: I just changed that to be accurate, I conflated what Spencer said. -A

p.g.sharrow "PG"
October 24, 2009 9:42 pm

” You can fool some of the people all of the time.” they really want to believe in B.S. the stranger the better. As Woopy Goldburg said ” I don’t believe with my head, I believe with my gut.”
” You can fool all of the people some of the time.” With loud, official sounding scary pronouncements you can stampede most people for a short time.
“You can’t fool all of the people all of the time.” After a while the sceptics stop and say,
“this is all B.S.”

jorgekafkazar
October 24, 2009 9:42 pm

savethesharks (20:31:12) : “Mobs act differently than individuals.”
Dawn age hominids hunted in packs. They spread out in a long line, then formed a circle, slowly moving in, trapping game within the circle. To do this, they had to function in concert, automatically moving as a unit, adjusting their individual speeds to that of the slowest member of the pack. This is why the mental ability of a mob instinctively adjusts itself to match the IQ of the stupidest member. That is hard-wired into us. It’s great for catching coneys. It is useless for science, as can be plainly seen.

October 24, 2009 9:50 pm


An Expensive Urban Legend
by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

Urban legend? Gators don’t really live in the sewer.

Whom am I to believe? Are not my lying eyes witnessing a ‘gator crawling from a storm drain in the picture at the top of this thread?
Just sayin … (is there a back story to the ‘staged’ photo?)
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jorgekafkazar
October 24, 2009 9:55 pm

Ken Gregory (21:30:51) : “The data is telling us the CO2 is displacing water vapour as a greenhouse gas, and that the laws of physics place a limit on the total effective amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.”
Which laws of physics would that be?

Terry Jackson
October 24, 2009 10:07 pm

[snip – please lets not take this towards a religious discussion, your point below is excellent though – A ]
Surely there are alligators in the Chico sewers.
Observed things today are apparently less appreciated then modeled things. I can build a model to take you anywhere, but reality its its constraints. Explaining the obvious to the oblivious is a time eater.

David Schnare
October 24, 2009 10:12 pm

Having lived through 39 years of environmental management at the federal level, and being a bureaucrat, a scientist and an attorney, I wish I could find Roy’s essay persuasive. I can’t.
In language the common man can understand, we need to explain in words and pictures the exact basis for the IPCC statement on AGW and why it is wrong. Why we actually cannot predict the future very well (complex and chaotic system) and why we should not assume the worst scenario.
I’ve been attentive to this subject for quite some time now and I have yet to see an honest, complete, scientifically sound, persuasive and understandable explanation that goes to the core of the central issue – the evidence of what, exactly, is mankind’s influence on climate, to include the reasonably expected impact in the near and long term. Roger Pielke Sr. has provided some of the best commentary, but I still have not seen the 50 page arrow through the heart of the AGW scare campaign, much less the crisp, clear summary of that work.
Until that is available, Roy’s contribution has to be viewed as cheer leading, but no more. I support him and his voice, but it is too close to “relying on authority” rather than positing the scientific explanation.
Don’t wish to be negative, but I’m getting too old to wait much longer for the winning presentation of the data, so some of you younger folks – hop to it.

October 24, 2009 10:21 pm

“Which laws of physics would that be?”
The laws of physics that govern the atmosphere, or specifically, the laws that control the greenhouse effect. But obviously, not the laws of physics that are programmed into climate models. When the data contradicts your theory, you need to change your theory.

Gene Nemetz
October 24, 2009 10:22 pm

however, the teller of an urban legend is apt to rely on skillful storytelling and reference to putatively trustworthy sources.
Of course it resonates that this is Al Gore.
p.s. more snow in the US this weekend– a white Halloween (h/t rbateman), heading toward a white Thanksgiving, and a deep white Christmas, but it’s all just weather 😉 )

Gene Nemetz
October 24, 2009 10:24 pm

So why not claim that ALL climate change is now the result of human activity?
As some claimed in the past that eclipses of the sun were caused by man.

Gene Nemetz
October 24, 2009 10:33 pm

In December, hundreds of bureaucrats from around the world will once again assemble, this time in Copenhagen
It looks like President Obama will not attend :
President Obama will almost certainly not travel to the Copenhagen climate change summit in December and may instead use his Nobel Peace Prize…
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/environment/article6888165.ece

D. King
October 24, 2009 10:38 pm

The mass bureaucrat migration to Copenhagen may be a “once in
a life time” event. I once saw a circular Sea Hare mating chain, of
over 10 individuals. That was something, I’m here to tell you.
http://www.seaslugforum.net/factsheet.cfm?base=seahmat
I expect the mass bureaucrat migration to be just as exciting.

Jerry Lee Davis
October 24, 2009 10:50 pm

David Schnare (22:12:24) :
“…but I still have not seen the 50 page arrow through the heart of the AGW scare campaign, much less the crisp, clear summary of that work.”
David, for the fun of it, I am willing to assume that you are not an AGW believer simply performing your duties as a troll (sowing seeds of doubt).
With that background, I must comment that since you have been an attorney, you must realize that (in America at least), one is innocent until proven guilty and not the other way round. The specific “one” in this case is mankind, which stands accused.
What is missing is a 50 page, crisp, clear summary (or any other summary) that proves mankind’s production of CO2 does anything other than help feed the world’s growing population. Therefore in fact, the summary you regret not having yet seen would be redundant in a court of law.

Jeff B.
October 24, 2009 11:28 pm

I disagree with Jerry and agree somehwat with Schnare.
A great use of the next ICCC meeting in NYC would be to get all of the bright skeptic minds (Watts, Lindzen, Spencer, Ball, Monckton, Horner, Joe D’Aleo, etc.) and a top Madison Ave firm together to draft a truly concise and powerful statement. It should be aimed at the common man and it should encourage local weathermen to deliver it to their viewers.
It’s time to put an end to the nonsense before it does real damage to our economies.

D. King
October 25, 2009 12:03 am

Jeff B. (23:28:43) :
Don’t forget about Stephen McIntyre, Ross McKitrick and the
death of the “Hockey Stick”. After all, the Wegman report to
congress, is still ignored by the hysterical doom mongering
bureaucrats.

AlanG
October 25, 2009 12:37 am

OT, but given it’s Roy Spencer, I thought I would talk about climate sensitivity… As Dr. Spencer says, precipitation exactly matches evaporation and the atmosphere is not saturated with water vapor. Everything follows from that.
I’m strongly attracted to Roy’s ‘strong forces’ model where the ‘forces’ of warming and cooling push strongly against each other to keep temperature in a tight band (see the chart on page 53 in his [highly recommended] book Climate Confusion). The simplest case is that the hydrological cycle has strong negative feedback at the equator but weakly positive feedback at the poles and in cold, dry places like Siberia in winter at night. Surely, positive feedback can only true at the limit case where the atmosphere is saturated with water vapor. Which it isn’t. There is a strong hysteresis built into cloud formation, precipitation and dissipation which sends temperatures and humidity running back below where it started.

Brendan H
October 25, 2009 12:37 am

Hotrod: “If you disagree you must be stupid…If you are not stupid, you are an evil genius…or in the sway of some evil cult…
“In fairness some skeptics are inclined to do the same and we need to guard against adopting the same blind faith and automatic assignment of malicious intent to anyone who supports AGW.”
Good point. So how does this thread line up: “begin to lose their religion…not innocent storytellers…GroupThink and Peer Pressure…bureaucrats can gain more power…like children..serious socialist apparatchiks…collective madness…mass-delusion and group-think…herd/school/flock behavior…the Germans…“moronity”.
So that’s stupid, evil and cult covered. Do you think you’re perhaps shutting the barn door after the nag has well and truly bolted and sired a whole bunch of offspring?

James F. Evans
October 25, 2009 1:09 am

hotrod wrote (19:59:23):
“You need to find some way to make them face a fundamental contradiction in their belief system that causes their old belief system to collapse. It is not about facts or science to them it is about belief pure and simple.”
hotrod, you are spot on.
Even a whole series of facts and evidence can fail to persuade them. There is too much invested, and depending on the issue and circumstances, their whole identity is wrapped up in it. Self-justification is strong in Human Nature and the attitude, “I couldn’t have been wrong”, easily befalls many, one might say, it befalls those will specialized training, in even higher numbers because they only listen to their peer group, and will even be hostile to outsiders.
That is why in science, it is imperative to follow protocol: The highest is the scientific method, employing reasonable scepticism and an open-mind to engage in empirical collection of observations & measurement.
When people claim there is no need for observation & measurement, that is when you know their belief system is based on faith not on empirical science.

Tor Hansson
October 25, 2009 1:26 am

Little or nothing will happen.
There will be flowery speeches and inspiring words.
When it comes down to practical outcomes, see the opening sentence.
These guys now what side their bread is buttered on after all.

Iren
October 25, 2009 1:31 am

How about the Skeptics Handbook by Joanne Nova, which is definitely meant for lay people:
http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/the_skeptics_handbook_2-3_lq.pdf
I heard Professor Lindzen on the radio a while ago and he not only mentioned it but repeated the url. He said that while he didn’t entirely agree with its contents it was a good starting point.
Joanne Nova also did a paper (which I think might have been mentioned here) about the amount of money being tossed into this bottomless pit. Big government spending their money is something most people have no difficulty grasping.
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/originals/climate_money.pdf

Iren
October 25, 2009 1:36 am

I’m not sure if the second link above works so I’m repeating it.
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/originals/climate_money.pdf

Turboblocke
October 25, 2009 3:06 am

Above Spencer says, “If you submit a research proposal to look for alternative explanations for global warming (say, natural climate cycles), it is virtually guaranteed you will not get funded.”
Then later he also says,”… I once encountered a true believer who said he hoped my research into the possibility that climate change is mostly natural will eventually be proved correct.”
Does that mean that Spencer’s research is not funded?

Turboblocke
October 25, 2009 3:07 am

“Mankind’s burning of fossil fuels creates more atmospheric carbon dioxide. As we add more CO2, more infrared energy is trapped, strengthing the Earth’s greenhouse effect. This causes a warming tendency in the lower atmosphere and at the surface. As of 2008, it is believed that we have enhanced the Earth’s natural greenhouse effect by about 1%.”…
“Now, you might be surprised to learn that the amount of warming directly caused by the extra CO2 is, by itself, relatively weak. It has been calculated theoretically that, if there are no other changes in the climate system, a doubling of the atmospheric CO2 concentration would cause less than 1 deg C of surface warming (about 1 deg. F). This is NOT a controversial statement…it is well understood by climate scientists. (As of 2008, we were about 40% to 45% of the way toward a doubling of atmospheric CO2.)” http://www.drroyspencer.com/global-warming-101/

UK Sceptic
October 25, 2009 3:10 am

Here’s how to twist this particular urban legend back on itself.

H/T to Richard over at EU Referendum.

Geoff Sherrington
October 25, 2009 3:11 am

NikFromNYC (19:13:59) :
What motivates the strident criers for action NOW?
I’ve spent 35 years trying to work out the motivations of protesters and I am still no closer to an answer. Statistically, we cannot expect 100% agreement on any social issue, but when you get a 50% that screams at public rallies that they want to decrease their living standards NOW, there has to be another explanation.
The closest I can get is to incriminate teachers (who can suffer from generational incestuous thought, the lame leading the blind); and the mainstream media.
I like teachers. The younger ones can be excused for passing on what they were taught as gospel, but the older ones should inquire more.
MSM is a far more serious problem because it verges on crime. Without mentioning names, there is one major global newspaper owner (or effective controller) whose known Scientology beliefs link him at least by association with others known to contribute large sums to sustain certain views. Media magnates do not get so wealthy without a bit of cunning and a bit of showing the lemmings the way. If you have megabucks and want more, what better way than to use your MSM to convince the people to redistribute wealth while you cut a slice off it? All I can say is, remember where Conrad Black is now.
The senior managers in the MSM really have to go along with the bosses for co-prosperity and the trickle effect sees the headlines spreading alarm. Money is more easily made in a moving market than a steady one – especially when you cause the market to move in a predicted direction. It’s like rigging horse races.
As for the scientists with the 1,000 yard stare and the fervent, repetitive dogma, I have only personal disdain. Historians of science will affirm that the giants of the past did not just dash off an interim half-finished note to “Nature”. Many worked over and over the same manuscript until they felt they could do no better, sometimes taking years. Perhaps the imperative of “being ready for Copenhagen” is a recent syndrome that better scientists should quell through stronger action. There was a lot of messy business getting ready for AR4, with timeline and publication rules being broken and conventions thrown aside, as Steve has often noted.
Anyone into psychology enough to coment professionally on motivation? Is it more than the girl school mass panic attack effect that is documented?