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

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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RR Kampen,
Of course a true believer is uninterested in discussing the fact that AGW theory is failed, and that the promotion of it is fundamentally corrupt.
Rather than wonder about a system of thought that embraces anything said in its favor, and rejects everything said that is critical, true believers see that as the proper order of things. So your boredom is understandable: to be engaged at all means questioning your faith. And AGW cannot withstand that for even a moment.
You should be more interested, if you had any critical thinking skills, to consider that that the climate does not care what the AGW community says, either.
hunter, you are still talking about beliefs of people instead of climate and climate change.
“AGW cannot withstand that for even a moment.” – it apparently can, which is why specifically within the scientific community there has been consensus about the hypothesis since the year Arrhenius. In fact I remember ‘we’ (scientists) were by the end of the nineteeneighties just waiting until global warming would rise to significant levels. It duly did.
@Chris-savethesharks
An excellent expansion on what I remember reading in my youth, ex a work by C.G. Yung: (if I remember correctly) “The morality of a crowd is in inverse proportion to its size” I have seen this at work umpteen times! So much for the claimed scientific consensus. The larger the “in” group, the more the individual accountability and standards are compromised in favour of the group-think.
By danappaloupe’s logic, you could pick everyone’s scientific opinions on the basis of their religious background. This is a stupid trick the warmist scientists have tried to use on me: find religious scientists who are climate skeptics and then suggest that they are unreliable on the basis of their religious belief. What they are forgetting is that they have a belief in climate change that is becoming almost as dogmatic and biased. Take it from a heathen 🙂 People have something called opinions. I guess I have the true lack of faith… lack of faith in either religion or climate change. Both seem equally unprovable in my opinion… no offense to anyone who believes in either… I’m just saying that danappaloupe is using twisted logic. I may be a skeptic, but I know some really incredible scientists who are religious. Depending on the field you work in, they can be separate issues.
Re: GabrielVanDenBergh (05:48:44) :
An excellent expansion on what I remember reading in my youth, ex a work by C.G. Yung: (if I remember correctly) “The morality of a crowd is in inverse proportion to its size” I have seen this at work umpteen times! So much for the claimed scientific consensus. The larger the “in” group, the more the individual accountability and standards are compromised in favour of the group-think.
This is especially true in mathematics, where advocates of free speech who purport that Pi is a rational number actually get kicked out of their job!
In fact I remember ‘we’ (scientists) were by the end of the nineteeneighties just waiting until global warming would rise to significant levels. It duly did.
In the late 1980s the PDO hadn’t even been discovered yet.
Re: evanmjones (06:10:15) :
In the late 1980s the PDO hadn’t even been discovered yet.
No, its effect is small by comparison. It belongs to the ‘noise’ on which a marked upward trend is superposed.
RR Kampen,
Sir, with all due respect, you do not even understand the issue.
AGW – the theory that we are experiencing extreme, unusual and dangerous human caused climate change is not true.
The consensus you rely on is a false consensus.
I do notice that instead of dealing the reality of what the IPCC is – a political organization, not scientific one, and with the falsifications of AGW predictions, you take the only route open to you: dissemble, deflect and dismiss.
Do this as much as you wish.
It will not make AGW any less untrue.
RR Kampen,
And I seriously doubt if you are telling anything close to what you were actually waiting on in the 1980’s.
hunter (17:54:32) :
The red herring by the AGW true believer, Joel Shore, that skeptics should keep to their place and only discuss the failures of AGW in forums he approves is rather transparent and condescending.
All reasonable people should never forget the ad homs, the threats against professional standing, and the calls for criminalization of cilmate dissent, by the AGW community.
This is the foundation of alarmist undoing. Good intentions need not threaten, censor, attack or criminalize an opposing point of view. Rational men on witnessing such behavior know immediately the false prophets.
hunter, we are into the fastest climate change in thousands of years.
I wouldn’t break into a panick for that, but I wouldn’t close my eyes to this reality either.
As for the eighties, the literature is still there. Do a count and discover the huge AGW-consensus that was there already then.
I know it because I believed until 2004 it had to be the sun. And I felt just like you then 😉
For RR Kampen and all fans of fastest climate change™, this is the temperature record from Central England from the depths of Maunder minimum to pleasant times of Modern Solar maximum:
http://www.junkscience.com/MSU_Temps/JonesMann2004.html
I especially recommend to check temperature trends between 1660-1695 and 1695-1740, then compare it with present times (decade of somehow flat temperatures) and then… start arguing that CET is not representing the whole world and the fastest climate change is happening.
Juraj V., Junkscience? Please!!
Anyway, even this graph shows something typical for many parts of the world: a slightly decreasing variance (due to the weakening winter season!) and a distinct, consistent upturn in the last decennia (known as the ‘hockey stick’).
What suprises me is the that years 2006 and 2007 don’t stick up more in this graph. They were the warmest.
“What suprises me is the that years 2006 and 2007 don’t stick up more in this graph. They were the warmest.” – I correct myself, the graph doesn’t go past 2002 or so.
Talking about AGW related urban myths, unfortunately, average person after decades of media massage got all that myths deep into brain. Ask anyone and he says, yes we (will) see more droughts, more floods, more extremes, more hurricanes.
But then you look at the hard data and you see that there is no visible trend in hurricane frequency nor intensity. You learn that the deadliest hurricane hit Galveston in 1900, the strongest hurricane hit US in 1935. Katrina did sucked, but the biggest havoc was caused by failing sea protection walls.
You learn that highest recorded temperatures ever were all seen in 19th century or first half of 20th century (except Antarctica where observations started after WWII).
Strongest wind ever recorded blew in 1934.
The most extreme drought hit US in 30ties, Central Europe in 1947.
You learn that droughts killed millions in India in 18th and 19th centuries.
Then you look at CET temperature record and see, that inter annual temperature variations during the LIA were often wild and warming or cooling trends were by far more intense than in 1950-2000.
As LIA started, increased temperature contrast between tropics and polar regions caused powerfull storms, sea floodings in Northern Europe and strong coastal erosion, something unheard today.
I recommend in such discussion to ask the opponents few basic questions: when were highest temperature records observed, strongest and deadliest hurricanes, deadly floods, droughts; they will have no clue, since they can only babbling about fastest climate change™ without any hard facts. Beat them with facts, and sane people will recognize it.
I had meant this item to be posted to this thread yesterday morning, but I missed and sent it to a thread that must have had people reading it scratching their heads. My apologies–I will learn what I am doing eventually.
Beyond being an urban legend, we see evidence of something worse. In 1995 I gave a talk to our local Phi Theta Kappa chapter, and compared global warming to Irving Langmuir’s description of pathological science. There was a remarkable fit at that time, which has become only more remarkable as the creation of various “hockey sticks” shows. Moreover, people are all the more convinced about the certainty of the global warming tale even as one points out the impressive list of very current instances of pathological science (see for example a number of examples I put together at this place) that should give them reason for caution.
Years ago I couldn’t find the text of Langmuir’s colloquium on the subject, but thanks to the miracle of the unfettered internet, someone at Princeton has put it online! See http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~ken/Langmuir/langmuir.htm.
This storm killed 1852 people in Holland and a couple hundred in Britain and Belgium:
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/archive/ra/1953/Rrea00119530201.gif
This system drowned 343 people in and around Hamburg: http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/archive/ra/1962/Rrea00119620217.gif
This system (‘Vivian’, Stockholm 938 hPa) produced comparable tides on Dutch coasts that did nothing, because de dykes have been improved considerably: http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/archive/ra/1990/Rrea00119900228.gif
Systems from the LIA have not been known to be more severe than low pressure areas like those mentioned above. The impact of such was much more severe, of course, like the impact of even a moderate cyclone in Bangadesh will remain devastating until there’s something of a sea defense in place there. For now already many lives have been saved there because they put mounds and hills everywhere so people can run up them during a storm surge.
RR Kampen, here is the CET record till 2009, but without Maunder minimum
http://hadobs.metoffice.com/hadcet/
Every temperature record starting from the depth of LIA will look a bit as hockey stick. Who knows how HadCET is handling the UHI issue, near Armagh observatory record is much more conservative.
http://blog.sme.sk/blog/560/195013/armaghcetssn.jpg
Oops, we just reached 1730/1780 temperatures.
O, Juray, the post about storm surges was a reply to yours. And, as an aside, climate and climate change is about averages, not incidents. But a barchart of daily min, max, average temperature records per decennium for de Bilt, Holland, looks like this:
http://benlanka.tweakdsl.nl/climate/datumrecords.png
“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 there any data to support this assertion?
To me as a scientist, the word “significant” implies that we could see the signal above the noise level (natural variation, in this case). But, we still don’t even know what the noise level is and probably never will.
Svein (09:36:28) :
It was recently reported here that scientists and organizations skeptical of AGW have received about $19 million in funding, while scientists and organizations studying AGW have received more than $50 billion in funding.
So for every $2,631.58 received for anthropogenic global warming studies, skeptical scientists have received $1.00.
The adage: “You get what you pay for” comes to mind.
Getting published is the key to getting grants. That is why the clique that controls the climate peer review process fights tooth and nail to get their papers published and keep skeptical papers out. For a true example of the flaming hoops skeptics must jump through to even get a comment published, see here.
Re RR Kampen (09:30:22)
Bilt.. isnt it the station which was found to be biased upwards?
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/09/24/ooops-dutch-meteorological-institute-caught-in-weather-station-siting-failure-moved-station-and-told-nobody/
Try harder next time.
James Chamberlain has hit the nail on the head.
AGW theory has yet to produce anything that is beyond the range of normal variation or error.
RRK,
So if I am reading you correctly, until the 2004 period, you were believing that sol was driving our climate variations.
All that has happened since then is things have continued to diverge from the AGW scenarios of Hansen.
Why would you change your mind just in time to see AGW falsified?
Sandy says:
Not true at all. In fact, skeptical paper have been published in peer-reviewed journals, even quite bad papers. For example, there is the Douglass et al. paper (see discussion here ) that was published despite a fairly elementary error that should have been caught in the refereeing process. And, the paper by Stephen Schwartz in Journal of Geophysical Research arguing for a low climate sensitivity was published; the problems with it were admittedly a little more subtle but it prompted several comments and in his reply to the comments, Schwartz admitted there were problems and upped his estimate of the climate sensitivity from 1.1 +/- 0.5 C to 1.9 +/- 1.0 C ( http://www.ecd.bnl.gov/pubs/BNL-80226-2008-JA.pdf ) although my guess is that some of the commenters would argue that his revised estimate is still too low given the identified problems.
Finally, there is the paper by Gerlich and Tscheuschner (see http://www.realclimate.org/wiki/index.php?title=G._Gerlich_and_R._D._Tscheuschner ), which admittedly falls into the category of a paper that was published in a journal pretty far outside the climate science field (in a statistical physics journal). Still, I think the fact that it was published at all is quite embarrassing considering that it is extremely polemical and has various wrong statements not only about climate science but even many about physics.
Vincent says:
There are a few sites that discuss the most common arguments. This is one of the best: http://www.skepticalscience.com/ This is another: http://scienceblogs.com/illconsidered/2008/07/how_to_talk_to_a_sceptic.php