Guest post by Indur M. Goklany

In an earlier post, The IPCC: Hiding the Decline…, I argued that even more egregious than the IPCC’s mistaken claim that Himalayan glaciers would be mainly gone by 2035, was the willful omission in the IPCC Working Group II’s 2007 Summary for Policy Makers (SPM) of the fact that global warming could reduce the net global population at risk of water shortage. That this was a willful decision on the part of the authors of the of the IPCC SPM is suggested by the fact that one of the Expert comments on the Second Order Draft (SOD) of the SPM had explicitly warned that: “It is disingenuous to report the population ‘new water stressed’ without also noting that as many, if not more, may no longer be water stressed (if Arnell’s analyses are to be trusted).”
In this post I will show that this was not an isolated incident, but part of a pattern. I will show that there are other sins of omission which are also very unlikely to have occurred due to ignorance of the impacts literature or careless reporting, and that it was probably due to a conscious effort to tell the truth, but not the whole truth.
Before identifying other sins of omission, I should note that over the years, our political leaders, e.g., President Clinton, Prime Minister Blair, President Chirac, President Sarkozy, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon — have told us frequently that global warming is one of the – if not the – most important policy issues facing the world today. While there is no scientific or economic basis for such rhetoric (see, e.g., here, here, and here), it does show that policy makers ought to be very interested in how the impacts of global warming compare against other problems afflicting society. [Without such a comparison how could one know that it was ( or was not) the most important problem or issue facing humanity?] Therefore, one would think that any Summary for Policy Makers would be eager to shed light on this matter.
Contribution of Global Warming to Population at Risk of Hunger
Among the Expert comments on the Second Order Draft (SOD) of the SPM, (see page 28, Item A) was the following:
We note that global impact assessments undertaken by Parry et al. (1999, 2004) indeed indicate that large numbers will be thrown at risk for hunger because of CC; however, they also indicate that many more millions would be at risk whether or not climate changes. (see [sic] Goklany (2003, 2005a). Policy makers are owed this context. Withholding this nugget of information is a sin of omission. Without such information, policy makers would lack necessary information for evaluating response strategies and the trade-offs involved in selecting one approach and not another. One consequence of using Parry et al.’s results to compare population at risk for hunger with and without climate change is that it indicates that measures to reduce vulnerability to current climate sensitive problems that would be exacerbated by CC could have very high benefit-cost ratios. In fact, analyses by Goklany (2005a) using results from Parry et al. (1999) and Arnell et al. (2002) suggests that over the next few decades, vulnerability reduction measures would provide greater benefits, more rapidly, and more surely than would reactive adaptation measures or, for that matter, any mitigation scheme. [Emphasis added.]
To which, the IPCC writing team responded thus:
This whole text, from lines 11 to 26, has been deleted. Tables SPM-1 and SPM-2 give greater insights into risks of hunger etc, with full confidence range from negative to positive changes.
But if we go through the current SPM, there is nothing that indicates that even in the foreseeable future, the contribution of global warming to hunger would be substantially smaller than that of non-global warming related factors. Any such statement would, of course, imply that, with respect to hunger, climate change is a smaller problem than proponents of drastic GHG controls would have us believe. That is, regarding hunger, at least, other problems should take precedence over global warming.
Contribution of Global Warming to Population at Risk of Malaria
On page 63 of Expert comments on the Second Order Draft (SOD) of the SPM, it is noted:
First, most of the information on these lines is based on Table 20.4. However, there are several problems with that table that need to be fixed; after that is done, these lines in the SPM should be fixed. The problems we have with Table 20.4 are the following:
A. Table 20.4 omits critical information that would provide a context in which CC impacts should be viewed. This information, which is also available in Arnell et al. (2002) — the same source used to construct this table — is the millions of people that are exposed to the stresses highlighted in this table (i.e., the population at risk) in the absence of climate change. This information should be included in an additional column. This compilation has already been done by Goklany (2005a) for the 2080s. It shows that for hunger, water stress and malaria — which inexplicably is not included in this table, although the data are available in Arnell et al (2002) — the population at risk in the absence of climate change exceeds the population at risk under the “unmitigated” or the S750 and S550 cases. This suggests that for these stresses through the 2080s (at least), non-climate change related factors are more important than climate change, and that existing hurdles to sustainable development would outweigh additional hurdles due to climate change (through 2085, at least). Reference: Goklany, I.M.: 2005a. “A Climate Policy for the Short and Medium Term: Stabilization or Adaptation?” Energy & Environment 16: 667- 680.
B. The implications of the relative magnitude of the populations at risk for the hazards noted above with and without climate change should be noted in the SPM (see Goklany 2005a).
C. This table only provides information on the millions of people for whom water stress is increased without providing a parallel estimate of the millions for whom water stress would be reduced.
The IPCC SPM writing team’s response was:
Text has been deleted and replaced by headline on page 18 line 16 and the following text. In particular, lines 25-29 in the old SPM, which were based on Table 20.4, have been deleted.
Table SPM-1 now presents broadly the same information in a more rigorous format. Full range of stabilisation and SRES profiles for 3 time slices are shown, together with examples of impacts related to various temperature changes.
And if one looks at the current SPM or Table 20.4 in the IPCC WG II report, it is silent on the fact that impacts analyses show that through the foreseeable future:
- The contribution of global warming to future population at risk for malaria verges on the trivial,
- The contribution of global warming to the population at risk for hunger is small,
- Global warming could reduce the net population at risk of water shortage.
Noting these results from global impacts analyses would have undermined the case for drastic greenhouse gas emission reductions.
What’s truly remarkable about the above-noted comments on the SOD is that they are based on work done by Parry, Arnell, and their colleagues. But Parry was the Chairman of the IPCC Working Group II, and both were on the writing team for the SPM! It wasn’t as if the comment was saying anything that they didn’t already know, since it was all based on their papers (and, in fact, had been brought to their attention a few times previously – but that is another story ). What seems to have been lacking was candor. Perhaps they didn’t want to get crossways with their political masters. But if that was the case, what function does the SPM serve other than rubber stamp political leanings?
Regardless, they committed sins of omissions and, it seems, with due deliberation.
The IPCC: More Sins of Omission – Telling the Truth but Not the Whole Truth
Indur M. Goklany
In an earlier post, The IPCC: Hiding the Decline…, I argued that even more egregious than the IPCC’s mistaken claim that Himalayan glaciers would be mainly gone by 2035, was the willful omission in the IPCC Working Group II’s 2007 Summary for Policy Makers (SPM) of the fact that global warming could reduce the net global population at risk of water shortage. That this was a willful decision on the part of the authors of the of the IPCC SPM is suggested by the fact that one of the Expert comments on the Second Order Draft (SOD) of the SPM had explicitly warned that: “It is disingenuous to report the population ‘new water stressed’ without also noting that as many, if not more, may no longer be water stressed (if Arnell’s analyses are to be trusted).”
In this post I will show that this was not an isolated incident, but part of a pattern. I will show that there are other sins of omission which are also very unlikely to have occurred due to ignorance of the impacts literature or careless reporting, and that it was probably due to a conscious effort to tell the truth, but not the whole truth.
Before identifying other sins of omission, I should note that over the years, our political leaders, e.g., President Clinton, Prime Minister Blair, President Chirac, President Sarkozy, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon — have told us frequently that global warming is one of the – if not the – most important policy issues facing the world today. While there is no scientific or economic basis for such rhetoric (see, e.g., here, here, and here), it does show that policy makers ought to be very interested in how the impacts of global warming compare against other problems afflicting society. [Without such a comparison how could one know that it was ( or was not) the most important problem or issue facing humanity?] Therefore, one would think that any Summary for Policy Makers would be eager to shed light on this matter.
Contribution of Global Warming to Population at Risk of Hunger
Among the Expert comments on the Second Order Draft (SOD) of the SPM, (see page 28, Item A) was the following:
We note that global impact assessments undertaken by Parry et al. (1999, 2004) indeed indicate that large numbers will be thrown at risk for hunger because of CC; however, they also indicate that many more millions would be at risk whether or not climate changes. (see [sic] Goklany (2003, 2005a). Policy makers are owed this context. Withholding this nugget of information is a sin of omission. Without such information, policy makers would lack necessary information for evaluating response strategies and the trade-offs involved in selecting one approach and not another. One consequence of using Parry et al.’s results to compare population at risk for hunger with and without climate change is that it indicates that measures to reduce vulnerability to current climate sensitive problems that would be exacerbated by CC could have very high benefit-cost ratios. In fact, analyses by Goklany (2005a) using results from Parry et al. (1999) and Arnell et al. (2002) suggests that over the next few decades, vulnerability reduction measures would provide greater benefits, more rapidly, and more surely than would reactive adaptation measures or, for that matter, any mitigation scheme. [Emphasis added.]
To which, the IPCC writing team responded thus:
This whole text, from lines 11 to 26, has been deleted. Tables SPM-1 and SPM-2 give greater insights into risks of hunger etc, with full confidence range from negative to positive changes.
But if we go through the current SPM, there is nothing that indicates that even in the foreseeable future, the contribution of global warming to hunger would be substantially smaller than that of non-global warming related factors. Any such statement would, of course, imply that, with respect to hunger, climate change is a smaller problem than proponents of drastic GHG controls would have us believe. That is, regarding hunger, at least, other problems should take precedence over global warming.
Contribution of Global Warming to Population at Risk of Malaria
On page 63 of Expert comments on the Second Order Draft (SOD) of the SPM, it is noted:
First, most of the information on these lines is based on Table 20.4. However, there are several problems with that table that need to be fixed; after that is done, these lines in the SPM should be fixed. The problems we have with Table 20.4 are the following:
A. Table 20.4 omits critical information that would provide a context in which CC impacts should be viewed. This information, which is also available in Arnell et al. (2002) — the same source used to construct this table — is the millions of people that are exposed to the stresses highlighted in this table (i.e., the population at risk) in the absence of climate change. This information should be included in an additional column. This compilation has already been done by Goklany (2005a) for the 2080s. It shows that for hunger, water stress and malaria — which inexplicably is not included in this table, although the data are available in Arnell et al (2002) — the population at risk in the absence of climate change exceeds the population at risk under the “unmitigated” or the S750 and S550 cases. This suggests that for these stresses through the 2080s (at least), non-climate change related factors are more important than climate change, and that existing hurdles to sustainable development would outweigh additional hurdles due to climate change (through 2085, at least). Reference: Goklany, I.M.: 2005a. “A Climate Policy for the Short and Medium Term: Stabilization or Adaptation?” Energy & Environment 16: 667- 680.
B. The implications of the relative magnitude of the populations at risk for the hazards noted above with and without climate change should be noted in the SPM (see Goklany 2005a).
C. This table only provides information on the millions of people for whom water stress is increased without providing a parallel estimate of the millions for whom water stress would be reduced.
The IPCC SPM writing team’s response was:
Text has been deleted and replaced by headline on page 18 line 16 and the following text. In particular, lines 25-29 in the old SPM, which were based on Table 20.4, have been deleted.
Table SPM-1 now presents broadly the same information in a more rigorous format. Full range of stabilisation and SRES profiles for 3 time slices are shown, together with examples of impacts related to various temperature changes.
And if one looks at the current SPM or Table 20.4 in the IPCC WG II report, it is silent on the fact that impacts analyses show that through the foreseeable future:
· The contribution of global warming to future population at risk for malaria verges on the trivial,
· The contribution of global warming to the population at risk for hunger is small,
· Global warming could reduce the net population at risk of water shortage.
Noting these results from global impacts analyses would have undermined the case for drastic greenhouse gas emission reductions.
What’s truly remarkable about the above-noted comments on the SOD is that they are based on work done by Parry, Arnell, and their colleagues. But Parry was the Chairman of the IPCC Working Group II, and both were on the writing team for the SPM! It wasn’t as if the comment was saying anything that they didn’t already know, since it was all based on their papers (and, in fact, had been brought to their attention a few times previously – but that is another story ). What seems to have been lacking was candor. Perhaps they didn’t want to get crossways with their political masters. But if that was the case, what function does the SPM serve other than rubber stamp political leanings?
Regardless, they committed sins of omissions and, it seems, with due deliberation.
corrigendum:… the GW and A aspects of the argument…
Thanks once again for your efforts.
Anthony:
I hope you can “bounce” Mr. Deniers Suck. It should be noted that “words do have power”. Interestingly I’ve run into these types at my 5 “Atmospheric Physics” lectures I’ve given in the last 3 months.
My standard response is to politely ask them to defer their questions until the end of my presentation. Result: Stunning silence on their part. Oh, I did have one fellow who kept asking me “You don’t believe in Global Warming??” I kept reciting the Apostle’s creed. (Much to the delight of several other people in the room.)
I finally started asking in response to his persistent question, “What was the TITLE of my Presentation?” When he finally mumbled, “Atmospheric Physics”…I said, “Did I use the term ‘Global Warming’ anywhere in my presentation?” He answered, “I think so…” I pointed out my presentation NEVER uses the term. Then I pointed out, “Since I never use the term, I find your question a “non-sequitor” and it merits no answer.
At this point the individual stalked out of the room saying, “I guess you just won’t answer that question…” To which one of the other bystanders said, “He’s got to be pretty dense. I figured that out when you recited the Apostle’s Creed!”
Max
A thought to ponder… We know that the CRU where actively trying to get funds out of Big Oil in 2000. Yet, we are the people they accuse of being from Big Oil to fund research.
“…The Esso (Exxon-Mobil) situation is still promising, but they’re having to
get clearance from HQ in the USA (my best contact retired (with cancer)
just a few weeks ago, so we’ve had to work around the new CE, to whom all
this is news…). They know the deadline and will do their best for us…”
http://www.eastangliaemails.com/emails.php?eid=159&filename=951431850.txt
“…I can make a London lunch on either 19 or 20, but with a strong preference for 20th. Trevor could also make both days if necessary. By then we will have got further with the Tyndall contract so it would useful to talk with Esso (do you have a copy of the Exxonmobil booklet referred to?)…”
“…Esso have selectively quoted to (over)-emphasise the uncertainties re.
>climate change, but at least they have moved beyond denial and recognise
>that potential unknown long-term risks may require tangible short-term
>actions. Seems to be some room for negotiation over what research needs
>doing. I would think Tyndall should have an open mind about this and try
>to find the slants that would appeal to Esso. Uncertainty and risk
>analysis and C sequestration may be the sort of things that appeal…”
http://www.eastangliaemails.com/emails.php?eid=167&filename=957536665.txt
Why haven’t we had any articles about this series of obvious conflicts yet? They habitually accuse skeptics, of what they are in fact doing themselves.
Its time to call them on being funded or seeking funding from Big Oil, the next time they bring up the topic. It seems they are guilty of being the loudest denier in the room.
Jack Barnes who has never received money from Big Oil In Oregon
I still don’t see how this report changes the fact that glacier are retreating in most parts of the world .
Carry non blogging to yourselves folks but the fact is this is a non article ( just like the so called climategate) .
A version of the story has appeared on Fox news. http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/01/25/climate-panel-knowingly-inaccurate-statements-says-insider/
foxnews.com isn’t exactly the nightly news on TV, but its building. Or as an earlier story stated, “growing legs”.
BTW, I wouldn’t worry so much about Deniers Suck or Herman or whatever she wants to call herself. She(he?) hasn’t made a valid point yet. It’s kind of fun to watch a “CAGWer” invalidate themselves. It saves us a lot of time if we just let them hang themselves.
PeteM (13:13:27):
“I still don’t see how this report changes the fact that glacier are retreating in most parts of the world .”
Out of approximately 162,000 glaciers on the planet, how many are advancing and how many are retreating?
Or are you just giving your opinion and calling it a “fact”?
Ahhh! Sorry all, that should have been – “NANO-bacteria” that eats CO2 out of the air and yes trees (and corn, and wheat, and…..) do work better and do NOT get carried away like some lab created “thing” could… now where is that article about some “scientist” doing… I had it here somewhere….
got to get this mess organized – – before it eats ME….
http://news.google.com/news/search?um=1&cf=all&ned=es_us&hl=es&q=cold+poland
Jack in Oregon (13:02:02) :
“A thought to ponder… We know that the CRU where actively trying to get funds out of Big Oil in 2000.”
Jack;
Trying to?
They were started with money form Big Oil in 1974 and they have been funded by Big Oil to this very day. We don’t need to look at any emails, it is right on their own web site, in public, always has been. The believers simply choose not to look.
At the bottom of this page
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/about/history/
From the Climate Research Units own web site you will find a partial list of companies that fund the CRU.
It includes:
British Petroleum, ‘Oil, LNG’
Broom’s Barn Sugar Beet Research Centre, ‘Food to Ethanol’
The United States Department of Energy, ‘Nuclear’
Irish Electricity Supply Board. ‘LNG, Nuclear’
UK Nirex Ltd. ‘Nuclear’
Sultanate of Oman, ‘LNG’
Shell Oil, ‘Oil, LNG’
Tate and Lyle. ‘Food to Ethanol’
Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, ‘Nuclear’
KFA Germany, ‘Nuclear’
You might what to check out what these and the other funding companies actually do.
This is all about making Nuclear Power, Liquefied Natural Gas and Food to Ethanol more cost competitive.
They have been paying for the research and getting the results that they have paid for, the results that you accept, and drive you to demand low CO2 products. They have the products you now want so desperately, and they are ready to deliver.
The raw data, the computer models and the methods used by the CRU have not been released, only the results. The CRU does not do science; they are in the anti-CO2 business.
I do not see a difference between this and Merck, their ‘researchers’ and Vioxx, the government and ‘thousands and thousands’ of doctors believed them, as did a lot of people.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/01/26/2801138.htm?section=world
Simple – Fact
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5168198,00.html
W. Earl Allen (08:19:41) :
Which is worse?
1. Emitting plant-feeding carbon dioxide
or
2. Omitting any reference to the beneficent effects of warmer temperatures and higher carbon dioxide concentrations”
And that is the point, the benefits of (1.) are known and strong. Right now we have 10% to 20% more food worldwide then if CO2 was 100 PPM less. (read that again)
Stated another way it would take 10% to 20% more land and water to grow the same amount of food at 280 PPM verses the 380PPM we now have. These benefits are known!!!
The drought disasters are projections via disputed climate models.
PeteM (13:38:23) :
Simple – liar
I pity you troll.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/current/month/aus/summary.shtml
PeteM (13:13:27) This story and climategate, shows how myself and yourself have been intentionally misled. Did you read the e-mails? It showed many things that have been covered in many places including this site. Data manipulation, collusion, hi-jacking the peer review process, obfuscation and destroying data and documents, ignoring data that contradicts their hypothesis…ect. Did you read this story? Where the IPCC intentionally attempted to mislead the world? These are non-stories?
Petey, at what point does it have to go before you’d say it is a story? Maybe if historical data had been manipulated to show warm…..no wait, that’s already been shown to have happened. What else is left? Petey, let go and come over to the light side. Put down the hate, put down the lies, and put down the guilt. Just let it go, man. It’s ok now.
IPCC = International Pack of Climate Crooks
PeteM (13:46:43),
How do you explain the claim that droughts will increase with global warming? Keep in mind that local climates naturally fluctuate, the same as always. But a warmer planet means more evaporation, which means more rainfall. Globally [which is the issue] a slightly warmer planet will have more precipitation, not less.
And you still haven’t explained where you got this: “I still don’t see how this report changes the fact that glacier are retreating in most parts of the world .”
Glaciers have nothing to do with CO2. The primary factor in glacier growth/retreat is precipitation [snow] at higher altitudes.
PeteM.
Perhaps you should read this: 12 Glacier facts
Once you have, come back to us with a critique, hmmmmm? I just love the taste of believer tears.
Link courtesy of James Dellingpole.
J S — nice spin but I reckon your claim is simply making ‘a mountain out of a mole hill ‘
What will it take for me to change my view — well perhaps polar icecaps not melting , glacier ranges expanding , spring happening later and winter earlier , tree and plant species retreating , ocean acidification, perma frost not melting , average global temperatures not increasing , .. irrelevant things like that …
A few emails and a selective ‘cherry picked ‘ blogging won’t …
PeteM, interesting link. Now here’s one for you.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/01/22/american-thinker-on-cru-giss-and-climategate/#more-15521
Now, tell me about the veracity of the temp data Down Under again?
Oh, and PeteM, why on Earth did you link to the Australian Bureau of Meterology site?
I couldn’t find any commentary on Australia’s glaciers receding, even though it’s summer down here.
QED – Australia’s glaciers are NOT receding.
Or, maybe, Australia doesn’t have any glaciers.
Why then the link?
PeteM
Thats weather not climate.
PeteM (13:13:27):
“I still don’t see how this report changes the fact that glacier are retreating in most parts of the world .”
===
Well, try this for starters Petey:
http://www.ihatethemedia.com/12-more-glaciers-that-havent-heard-the-news-about-global-warming
Smokey – yep more snow because it’s warmer which mean glaciers can grow (until it warms a bit more …
But you’re not always so lucky .. ( perhaps a new name is called for this Park)
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/03/090302-glaciers-melting.html