Note: I posted this originally early this morning, something happened with wordpress.com hosting (I’m not sure what) and it disappeared, here it is again. – Anthony
Christopher Monckton of Brenchley replies to readers

I am most grateful to the many kind readers of www.wattsupwiththat.com who have commented on my open letter to the Australian Prime Minister. If you want to see a real “hockey-stick” graph, just look at the record of this wonderful website’s monthly hit-rates over the past couple of years.
May I answer some of the scientific and economic points raised by your readers?
Several readers raised the question whether the function ΔT = (4.7 ± 1) ln(C/C0) (in Celsius degrees) that I have derived for the rate of warming predicted by the IPCC in response to any given proportionate increase in CO2 concentration takes account not only of the direct forcing from CO2 enrichment of the atmosphere but also of any net-positive temperature feedbacks.
In fact the Monckton function does take account of feedbacks as well as forcings. Broadly speaking, the IPCC assumes (though this is almost certainly a monstrous exaggeration) that temperature feedbacks approximately triple any externally-forced initial warming. For the sake of minimizing any dispute, and solum ad argumentum (only for the sake of argument), I have simply calculated the warming the IPCC’s way, exaggerations and all.
One can test the function by calculating that 4.7 ln 2 (for a doubling of CO2) equals 3.26, the precise equilibrium temperature change, in Celsius degrees, predicted by the IPCC as its central estimate. For US and UK readers, the Monckton function in Fahrenheit degrees is ΔT = (8.5 ± 1.8) ln(C/C0).
My purpose in deriving this function was to facilitate instant calculation of the equilibrium temperature change predicted by the IPCC for any given change in CO2 concentration, without having to take separate account of the magnitude of the CO2 radiative forcing, of the Planck no-feedbacks climate sensitivity parameter, or of the sum of climate-relevant positive and negative temperature feedbacks.
A related question, also raised by several readers, was whether I should have taken account of the fact that not all feedbacks are linear. Since the IPCC assumes that all feedbacks are either linear or close enough to linear to be linearizable, I have adopted the same assumption, again solum ad argumentum, even though it is clear that the water vapor feedback, for instance, cannot be strictly linear.
Another reader has asked why I have calculated the effect of implementing the Copenhagen Accord only as far as 2020. This is the time-horizon for the Accord. The effect of the Accord over ten years would be to forestall warming of just 0.2 C° (0.35 F°) forestalled even if everyone complies fully. This outcome is so minuscule that extending the analysis beyond that date would be pointless, not least because by ten years from now it will be blindingly obvious to everyone a) that the climate is simply not warming anything like as fast (if at all) as the IPCC had ambitiously predicted, and b) that compliance with Copenhagen was little better than compliance with Kyoto. By 2020, the climate scare will be all over bar the shouting, and no one will be cutting CO2 emissions any more.
Another query was about whether I should have done the calculation on the basis of 7.5% of total CO2 emissions, rather than 7.5% of the additional 20 ppmv that we will emit on the trend of the past decade unless we cut emissions. Here, the enquirer is confusing emissions with concentration. CO2 emissions are rising at a near-exponential rate, but over the past decade CO2 concentration has risen at a strictly linear rate of a fraction over 2 ppmv/year. The IPCC’s case is that without our emissions CO2 concentration would stabilize, and would only drop back to its pre-industrial 278 ppmv after hundreds of years: therefore it is appropriate – solum ad argumentum, as ever – to hoist the IPCC with its own petard and to attribute all of the 2 ppmv/year increase in CO2 concentration to our current emissions, from which the calculation in the letter to Mr. Rudd follows.
Dr. Patrick Michaels, one of the most distinguished commentators on the climate scam, has done some excellent work demonstrating that over the past 30 years the relationship between CO2 emissions and CO2 concentration has remained broadly constant at approximately 14-15 billion tons CO2 emitted per 1 ppmv increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration.
Therefore, if we ignored the IPCC’s belief – which certainly does not represent the consensus in the scientific literature – that CO2 lingers in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, then the correct calculation would be to assume that without our current emissions CO2 concentration would fall swiftly back to 278 ppmv from its present 388 ppmv – a drop of 110 ppmv. Then, if we saved 7.5% of total emissions, we should reduce CO2 concentration by 7.5% of 110 ppmv, or around 8 ppmv, in which event the warming forestalled over the next ten years would be 0.1 C°, still not worth all those trillions.
Next, a reader says he will not believe the UN’s computer models until they are capable of modeling all of the natural as well as anthropogenic causes of “global warming”. However, even then modeling is of limited value, because the climate is not merely complex and non-linear but mathematically chaotic. Therefore, as Lorenz (1963) proved in the landmark climate paper that founded chaos theory, unless we know the initial state of the climate at any chosen moment to a precision that is forever unattainable in practice, reliable, very-long-term weather prediction is not available “by any method” – and “very-long-term”, as the Met Office in the UK has learned to its cost in each of the past three summers and in the current winter, means just a few weeks. It is better to rely upon observation and measurement than upon models.
Which leads to my next answer. A reader says he wishes I had supplied references to support my statements in the closing paragraphs of the letter that the measured radiative forcing from changes in cloud cover between 1983 and 2001 was at least five times greater than that from CO2. The forcing from CO2 over that period – the only period warming that we could have influenced even in theory – was just 0.8 Watts per square meter. The forcing from decreased cloud cover, expressed as the sum of 19 annual means, was 4.5 Watts per square meter.
A recent blog posting by me at www.scienceandpublicpolicy.org explains the theory behind the radiative influence of changes in cloud cover. Briefly, where low-altitude, low-latitude cloud cover diminishes, more short-wave radiation hits the Earth rather than being reflected harmlessly back to outer space. When it hits the Earth, it is displaced to the long wave and then heads back towards outer space. Therefore, the ERBE and CERES satellites, whose data is publicly available, will show simultaneous decreases in outgoing short-wave and increases in outgoing long-wave radiation if decreases in cloud cover are the cause, and vice versa for increases in cloud cover.
There are several good papers on this measured phenomenon. See e.g. Palle, E, Goode, P.RT., Montañes-Rodriguez, P., and Koonin, S.E., 2004, Changes in the Earth’s reflectance over the past two decades, Science 304, 1299-1301, doi:10.1126/science.1094070; or Pinker, R.T., Zhang, B., and Dutton, E.G., 2005, Do satellites detect trends in surface solar radiation?, Science 308, 850-854. It is also worth looking at the data from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project, a “Mark-I-Eyeball” methodology which confirms the short-wave and long-wave measurements of the ERBE and CERES satellites.
My letter to Mr. Rudd also referred to measurements showing that outgoing radiation from the Earth’s surface increases as sea-surface temperatures increase, and does not diminish as all of the IPCC’s capable of being forced with changes in sea-surface temperatures predict. These measurements are reported and analyzed in Lindzen R.S., and Choi, Y.-S., 2009, On the determination of climate feedbacks from ERBE data, Geophysical Research Letters. I do not have the page reference, because I have the preprint that the authors kindly sent to me.
Another reader asked whether my letter had been “peer-reviewed”. Yes, I asked an eminent Professor in Australia to read it for me before it was sent to the Prime Minister and to other party leaders. Any errors, however, are mine alone.
A reader asks whether my letter to Mr. Rudd is available as a .pdf file. I have sent the file to Anthony Watts, who, I am sure, will kindly make it available to anyone who would like to see it. Thank you all very much for your kind interest: and, as always, thanks to Anthony for having given the letter a wider audience.
[Update: a pdf of Lord Monckton’s letter is available here. ]
A reader asks whether my letter to Mr. Rudd is available as a .pdf file. I have sent the file to Anthony Watts, who, I am sure, will kindly make it available to anyone who would like to see it. Thank you all very much for your kind interest: and, as always, thanks to Anthony for having given the letter a wider audience.
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Kevin S., no, not Memphis! That’s where I live. It’s cool enough right now, I don’t need snow, especially when you consider the city basically shuts down when there is more than a fraction of an inch. Try Knoxville, up in the mountains. They are more used to snow.
I don’t understand how the IPCC climate change computer models have any value at all. It’s like economic models that often get it wrong People still use them and some even make very important decisions based on such inaccurate models. I suppose it’s part of human nature – we all like to predict things. The trouble is the climate is far more complex than an economy, so any climate model is bound to be useless. Apart from the invalid assumptions, incomplete forcing equations and lack of a complete understanding of how the climate works, there’s the proof now that the models are totally wrong simply by comparing them to observational data. Of course, a few AGW believers go as far to say the observational data must be wrong. How’s that for stupidity? Give it a few more years, if not sooner and the current cooling cycle may go far enough to freeze all AGW believers (including politicians) into permanent silence. Nothing beats the truth, not even an Orwellian society, which is still a distinct possibility.
I have the feeling Sir, that it is like writing to a dog, whenever I see K.Rudd on TV he reminds me of my dog, I tell my dog something and you can see by his expression that he want to understand, but he does not, as he repeats his mistakes. (maybe I should write my dog a letter ? )
Thank you Lord Monckton I wish you all the very best in everything you do.
Just a nit-pick on accuracy. Eighth para above “The effect of the Accord over ten years would be to forestall warming of just 0.2 C° (0.35 F°) forestalled even if everyone complies fully. ”
Earlier article:= “Global warming” forestalled, 2010-2020: 0.02 C°
Are these values supposed to be the same or an order of magnitude different?
John Hooper said, Quote. “And frankly, a little less hyperbole, pretentious latin and general affectation might help Chris Monkton’s cause, who’s already tarnished by his Thatcher connection. “Unquote.
Frankly, I read a clear, reasoned and logical argument progressing from point to point. Whats pretentious about Latin ? our language is full of such words. I see an almost infinite amount of such reasoned argument from the skeptics side as against the AGWshouters pushing red herrings as “tarnished by his Thatcher connection”. When was Thatcher last PM of the UK ? and what has that got to do with scientific arguments about climate forcings ?
Anthony– This is OT, but I don’t know how else to send it. A Christmas Day, AP article featured in the Seattle Times describes a midwest “Massive Storm” (link below). Incredibly, however, through the entire article on a huge winter snowstorm, the word “cold” never appears! Wind speeds and snow depths are specified, but the temperature is not mentioned; even once.
I thought it was rather remarkable.
Yes indeed! We all hail Anthony Watts and Christopher Lord Monckton for a Job Well Done! on this day, the 4th day of the Age of Aquarius, heralded by the Mystery BLUE Spiral over Norway on December 9, 2009 and arriving at High Moon of the Rare BLUE Moon on January 1, 2010.
His position gives him access to forums that are denied to many more informed people, which is good. (But, speaking as a Scot, he’s still an English twit).
Bit OT, but interesting.
“For a fresh look at climate change”
Vladimir Radyuhin
‘Russia’s open mind on climate issues and emphasis on independent studies could pave the way for a truly objective international review of the causes and effects of climate change. “It is necessary to fund and organise climate research in such a way that scientists are protected from the state’s political interference and even from fellow scientists,” says Prof. Konstantin Sonin of the New Economic School in Moscow’
http://beta.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/article75631.ece?homepage=true
No link. maybe this time.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2010591460_holidaystorm25.html?prmid=obinsite
@ur momisugly John Hooper (12:15:05) “And frankly, a little less hyperbole, pretentious latin and general affectation might help Chris Monkton’s cause, who’s already tarnished by his Thatcher connection.”
Would you prefer text speak Dear Boy ? Lord Monckton writes in a perfectly understandable fashion and conveys the full import of his reasoning with style. We are lucky to have champions like him to help slay the AGW dragons. Baroness Thatcher was,in her day,one of the finest brains in politics. This letter will have to be answered by Mr.Rudd ,in full, if he is to show any form of statesmanship.
UAH for Dec: 0.28
UAH lower troposphere out – +0.28 deg c.
The use of Latin phrases may seem pretentious to some, who have not been exposed to its discipline. As a Brit who was taught Latin, but who has lived longer in Oz than in the UK, I also baulked initially at Lord Monckton’s style, thinking it would get the adverse reaction voiced by some here, typical of the all too prevalent “cultural cringe” of this nation. Then I realised LM, used words from other languages also. Collectively he was employing phrases with succinct meanings, entirely appropriate for the message. Compared with the convoluted twittering of our PM, LM wins hands down.
But this all a side issue. Now the question is how the PM will reply?
UAH lower tropospheric temp for 2009 was +0.26 deg c. Still no net warming for eleven years now.
My daughter has started a science degree in zoology at a prestigious university.
The very first thing she was taught in the key skills lecture in relation to references is ***wikipedia is NOT an acceptable reference***
There you go, scientific credibility 101, do NOT use wikipedia.
Re ” I do not have the page reference”, now you do:
On the determination of climate feedbacks from ERBE data Export
by: Richard S. Lindzen, Yong-Sang Choi
Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 36, No. 16. (26 August 2009), L16705.
See: http://www.citeulike.org/user/JoyKing/article/5683732
Monckton has never acknowledged that his former partner in crime, Margaret Thatcher was the prime instigator of global warming politics. Nor that she created the Hadley Centre as part of her war against coal (and the miner’s union) , wishing to make room for oil (her husband was a director of Britoil) and nuclear power.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/5955955/Weather-records-are-a-state-secret.html
Enron and BP persuaded Occidental Oil puppet, Al Gore to sign the Kyoto Protocol and insert carbon trading into article 17. The oil companies and banks(IETA) were the leading promoters of a Copenhagen treaty.
http://www.angrymermaid.org/ieta
Strangely, Rajendra Pachauri was on the Board of Directors of the Indian Oil Corporation when he became IPCC chairman on 20 April 2002.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rajendra_K._Pachauri
Doesn’t really fit his idea of a socialist takeover, does it ? Never mind, it’s certainly filled a lot of seats on his American lecture tour. I thought Monckton spoke very well on the science, but the right wing politics is a liability as well as being nonsensical.
This is how the oil companies changed sides and hijacked the environmental lobby with carbon trading.
Opposing Views on Global Warming: The Corporate Climate Coup
by Prof. David F. Noble – York University, Toronto, Canada
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=5568
Everything points to big oil.
With regards to Wiki, I responded to one of their appeals at the top of a Wiki page, found they were looking for people to contribute their expertise, and sent them an email telling them there was no way I’d consider contributing under the current open structure that encourages topic tromping. I suggested they reconfigure their editing pages to support multiple contributions from various editors and then they’d have something worth looking at eventually–let the public view different ideas and decide for themselves. I told them that having a system that supports different changes over and over and back and forth on a single page is completely nuts. I hope someday they come up with a system that can’t be compromised but until they do people should ignore Wiki for anything even remotely controversial, which applies to practically everything worth discussing.
Lord crocodile Ruddee Monckton, visiting Oz. I can’t wait to see how he’ll skin the warmist there.
Lord Monckton,
I am a relative latecomer to the “climate wars” – so late that I did not learn of your recent Canadian tour, until it was too late. So, I’m a Canadian who is very concerned that our government has pledged to harmonize “climate change” policies and practices with those of our neighbour to the south.
Would it be possible to slightly modify your most enlightening letter to Rudd, so that it could be sent to Obama who – lacking common sense and knowledge of the facts – seems bound and determined to embark on a disastrous “anti-C02 crusade” (via the EPA)?
Thank you.
I ask again – why wasn’t His Lordship a sceptic back in the day’s of Thatcher?
Still, better late than never! He’s doing good stuff now.
“Tom P (13:15:33) :
It’s certainly a common error to ignore emerging nonlinearity in future trends. Less common is to make such a mistake while also ignoring a nonlinear historical record.”
Here we go, next you say feedback and then tipping point. Listen: The climate models don’t even got the direction of the temperature change right over the last 10 years. They’re junk. Very expensive junk but junk. “We can’t explain where the energy went and it’s a travesty we can’t…” you know who said that. It was one of the “credible climatologists”.
Don’t get me started on nonlinear. Or i’ll say logarithmic.
John Hooper (12:15:05) :
“Let’s hope the “eminent Professor in Australia” isn’t Ian Plimer who’s done Climate Skepticism a massive disservice due to his sloppy fact checking.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Plimer
And frankly, a little less hyperbole, pretentious latin and general affectation might help Chris Monkton’s cause, who’s already tarnished by his Thatcher connection.”
You do yourself a disservice, John, by using the most unreliable source on the planet in endeavouring to besmirch Mr. Plimers’s good reputation.
Your execrable comment about Lord Monckton’s use of the Queen’s English also leads one to understand that you have little comprehension of our mother tongue.
TIme for you, I think, to rouse yourself from this CAGW induced torpor and breathe the coffea arabica.
I would like to see a similar analysis done for methane. CO2 laws are proposed in the future. The future in now in San Francisco. We are being threatened with fines and penalties is we don’t sort our garbage. The rationale is that sorting garbage, keeping food scraps out of the landfill, will help to “stabilize” the climate by 2050.