Guest post by Indur M. Goklany
Sir David King, erstwhile Chief Scientific Adviser to Her Majesty’s Government, famous for his claim that “climate change is the most severe problem that we are facing today—more serious even than the threat of terrorism,” had an op-ed in the Telegraph over the weekend, in which he notes that the IPCC runs against the spirit of science. [Full disclosure: I have previously tangled with Sir David on the pages of Science magazine, here.] He states, absolutely correctly in my opinion:
“Faced with the social need to tell the world what the science says, the IPCC was set up as a means of seeking consensus. My concern has always been that it runs against the normal spirit of science.” [Quotes are italicized; emphasis added.]
He explains, “In science, people are supposed to rock the boat,” and ideas have to survive “ordeal by fire.” So thank you, Sir David, for endorsing skepticism and the scientific method. In our world, that cannot be repeated often enough.
- He then notes that:
“emails from scientists at the University of East Anglia suggest that certain members of the IPCC felt that the consensus was so precious that some external challenges had to be kept outside the discussion. That is clearly not acceptable.
“Moreover, this leads to the danger that people will go beyond the science that is truly reliable, and pick up almost anything that seems to support the argument [such as] saying that all ice would vanish from the Himalayas within the next 30 years … When I heard Dr Pachauri, the head of the IPCC, declare this at Copenhagen last December I could hardly believe my ears. This issue is far too important for scientists to risk crossing the line into advocacy.” [Emphasis added.]
So far, so good. Sir David recognizes that one can be a scientist or an advocate, but not both at the same time. The two are mutually exclusive. That is because skepticism is integral to the scientific method which, in turn, is the essence of science. On the other hand, advocacy eschews skepticism of one’s position.
Sir David’s revisionist Apologia for IPCC’s transgressions
But then he offers an apologia for these “scientists”:
“However, it’s not all the IPCC’s fault. Climate scientists have been forced into this corner by a disastrous combination of cynical lobbying and a misguided desire for certainty. The American lobby system, driven by political and economic vested interests in fossil fuels, seeks to use any challenge to undermine the entire body of science. The drive for consensus has come to some extent because the scientific community (me included) has become frustrated with this willful misuse of the scientific process.” [Emphasis added.]
This is revisionism. First, “climate scientists” were not forced into any corner. They chose to move into that corner freely. The IPCC could have summarized salient points without exaggerating the consequences of climate change had they been upfront with caveats, and heeded comments to avoid sins of omissions.
Second, it was not lobbyists for “vested interests in fossil fuels” that badgered IPCC scientists into exaggerating the rate of Himalayan glacier melt, omitting estimates of the decrease in the population at risk of water shortage, or eschewing comparisons of the relative contribution of climate change to malaria or hunger. Nor was it these interests that lobbied for expressions of greater certainty from the IPCC about the science, impacts and policies related to climate change. In fact, that pressure came from environmental NGOs, multilateral organizations, European governments, and the governments of small island nations, and proclamations of powerful people and leaders of various institutions. These pronouncements included, in addition to Sir David King’s claim that “climate change is the most severe problem that we are facing today–more serious even than the threat of terrorism,” repeated claims that “the science is settled” (e.g., Al Gore), or that climate change is the most important environmental problem facing the globe this century (Presidents Clinton and Chirac, and PM Blair).
This onslaught was accompanied by efforts to marginalize and ridicule those who looked askance at either the science or, if they accepted the science, their favored policy prescription, namely, massive and immediate reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. For the longest time — until the Delhi Ministerial Declaration at COP-8 in November 2002 — it was almost taboo to even suggest adaptation. Dissenters and non-conformists were labeled “skeptics” and “flat earthers”, as if skepticism were anathema, forgetting that it took skepticism to reject the age-old consensus that the earth was flat. This offensive silenced many dissenters and would-be dissenters. But despite this onslaught, there remained a hard core that would not hew to the orthodoxy. Accordingly, some raised the rhetorical stakes by attaching the term “deniers” with its ugly connotations, to the skeptics.
Thus, if anyone forced or badgered the IPCC into dropping caveats, insisting that the science was more certain than warranted, and embellishing climate change impacts and their severity, it was the greens, their groupies and their political allies. It was their pressure that led some IPCC scientists to become complicit in the war against the scientific method, as is revealed in their failure to defend skepticism; in their occasional use of “skeptic” as a pejorative (see here); and in their efforts to keep skeptical papers out of the peer reviewed literature, and viewpoints out of IPCC reports.
The “Schneider Trap”: A Scientist cannot be an Advocate at the same time
Another reason for scientists crossing the line into advocacy that Sir David sweeps under the rug is the possibility that many of the scientists were themselves not disinterested participants. One of the minor revelations in the CRU e-mails — in case one doubted it — is that scientists and science institutions are not disinterested in obtaining funding. In the US alone, annual funding for the Climate and Global Change Research Program exceeds $2 billion. Over the past few years there has been an explosion of institutes worldwide to study climate change funded not only by governments but philanthropies and foundations. [Sir David, for instance, is the Director of Oxford University’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment which is funded by both public and private sources.] Obviously, such sums would not be forthcoming were it shown that climate change, even if it’s happening, is no big deal. So scientists—and non-scientists—in the business of “climate science” have a vested interest in suggesting not only that global warming may be happening but that its impacts could be large, if not severe or catastrophic.
The “Schneider Trap”. Then, of course, as Stephen Schneider has noted:
“On the other hand, we are not just scientists but human beings as well. And like most people we’d like to see the world a better place, which in this context translates into our working to reduce the risk of potentially disastrous climatic change. To do that we need to get some broadbased support, to capture the public’s imagination. That, of course, entails getting loads of media coverage. So we have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified, dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might have. This ‘double ethical bind’ we frequently find ourselves in cannot be solved by any formula. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest. I hope that means being both.”
The problem with this is that it assumes that one can be a scientist and advocate simultaneously. For lack of a better term, I’ll call this the “Schneider Trap.” But, as recognized by Sir David and argued above, these two roles are mutually exclusive. Unfortunately, some IPCC “scientists” have fallen into the Schneider Trap. But they chose to be advocates willingly, thereby ceasing to be scientists, in my opinion. This might explain why, at critical junctures, the IPCC Summary for Policy Makers sometimes presents information that makes the impacts of global warming seem far worse than it actually might be, as noted on these pages and elsewhere (see here and here).
Logical fallacies regarding the cause of climate change
The most revealing part of Sir David’s op-ed, however, is the following passage which illustrates a pitfall that those with insufficient skepticism can fall victim to:
“We know from thermometers and satellites that temperatures have risen at least 0.8C. There is now massive monitoring of the loss of land ice around the planet, including the ground-breaking double satellite gravitational measurements. We have robust data on rising sea levels, the acidification of our oceans, and the spectacular multidimensional details of how climate has changed in the past.”
“Given all this evidence, it’s ridiculous to say this that human-induced climate change isn’t happening, absurd to say we don’t understand why, and any suggestion that we have nothing to worry about is like making a very bad bet.” [Emphasis added.]
This is poor logic. Just because one detects warming, it does not follow that it is necessarily human-induced. These paragraphs point to one of the major disagreements between climate change skeptics and “conformists.” Most skeptics do not dispute that it has warmed, although most, in my opinion, are skeptical that we know the amount of warming with sufficient accuracy to make quantitative pronouncements about how much or how fast it has warmed during the past century. And they certainly would not conclude that because it is warming, human beings must necessarily be responsible.
And how does it follow logically that given the evidence of climate change, it’s “absurd to say we don’t understand why”?
Sir David then compounds these errors in logic by insisting, “We know that we need to decarbonise our economy, so let’s do it.” But what is the basis for this claim? This assumes not only that human beings are necessarily responsible for whatever warming we might have seen, but also that the human contribution is (largely) through the CO2 route. But what about other factors, such as soot, changes in land use and land cover, etc.? And, of course, it also assumes that the impacts will be, on the whole, negative, and that adaptation will be MORE costly than mitigation. But none of these have been shown to be the case. At best, they remain plausible hypotheses. It was precisely such hypotheses that the IPCC was originally formed to assess impartially and critically — something it seems to be failing at.
If a scientist as distinguished as Sir David King, once HMG’s Chief Scientific Adviser, could make such fundamental errors in logic, it’s hardly surprising that a good share of humanity, even those who are well educated and, presumably, less-than-gullible, could make similar errors. Much of the public support for doing “something” about global warming comes, perhaps, from this segment of society.
Despite faulty reasoning, Sir David, however, has it right that we should get on with the business of innovation and wealth creation. This is the right solution but for reasons beyond those articulated by him. Not only will this help us cope with any challenges posed by global warming but, more generally, with climate change, regardless of which direction the change is in. More importantly, it will help us address other far more important challenges to environmental and human well-being (see here).
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Excellent, level-headed article. Excellent. I will share this with some of my warmist friends. Maybe they will see the light.
Many thanks. Did I mention how excellent I thought it was?
Sir David King is a spokesperson for the UK government. Why are they so keen on decarbonizing our economy? Years ago, the UK made 10% of their GDP with North Sea Oil. This is dropping fast now. At the same time somebody told them that they have a lot of wind there.
Don’t trust the UK government. They’d do everything to get that kind of revenue again. They’re more desperate than any lobbyist for Big Oil could ever be. When Pachauri is not playing cricket in India or hanging out on some UN junket he’s in London. Ever wondered why?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_King_(scientist)#Academic_career
“He was born in South Africa in 1939, and after an early career at the University of Witwatersrand, Imperial College and the University of East Anglia, King became the Brunner Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Liverpool in 1974. In 1988 he was appointed 1920 Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Cambridge and subsequently became Master of Downing College (1995 – 2000) and Head of the University Chemistry Department (1993 – 2000). During this time, King, together with Gabor Somorjai and Gerhard Ertl, shaped the discipline of surface science and helped to explain the underlying principles of heterogeneous catalysis. Controversially, the 2007 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Ertl alone [3].
King has published over 500 papers on his research in chemical physics and on science and policy, and has received numerous prizes, Fellowships and Honorary Degrees. King was knighted in 2003 and in 2009 made a Chevalier of the Légion d’Honneur. He continues as Director of Research in the Department of Chemistry at Cambridge University.”
I know, I know – I broke my own rules never to cite Wikiliar…..but it was quick and dirty.
Sir David King lost a lot of credibility when he made a cameo appearance on the BBC botched CO2 experiment (link below) and proclaimed that Climategate was the work of foreign spies, because they were also tapping phones. No one had mentioned that before, nor since, from what I have read.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/24/bbc-botches-grade-school-co2-science-experiment-on-live-tv-with-indepedent-lab-results-to-prove-it/
“You and yours” on BBC radio 4 at mid day GMT is asking for submissions on climate change.
Didn’t Sir David King participate in the botched BBC greenhouse-in-a-bottle experiment where he casually remarked that an elite government agency was behind the CRU email “hack”? Did he not allege that this same government agency was also responsible for hacking into the mobile phone conversations of prominent climate scientists?
This man is a proven idiot and should not be taken seriously under any circumstances.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/24/bbc-botches-grade-school-co2-science-experiment-on-live-tv-with-indepedent-lab-results-to-prove-it/
Ha! Leigh beat me to it 🙂
Speaking as someone educated in Maths at the windy and cold cloisters of Cambridge University, some 30 years ago, I was long ago educated in the concept of the word “axiomatic”
This in English means “self-evident” or “obvious”, but in Mathematical terms means an assertion that is assumed to be true upon which we can base all our other assumptions or theorems.
It seems to me that we need to determine what are the axioms of climate science From my relatively short time delving into this topic with all its emotional and political baggage, we desperately need to return to first principles and determine “what are the axioms of climate science?” (Specifically with respect to climate change or global warming)
I would like to know, specifically with respect to Sir David King’s assertion that we need to decarbonize our economy, what axioms and inferences he is using to make this assertion.
Is it axiomatic that the earth is currently warming?
Is it axiomatic that CO2 is a greenhouse gas?
Is it axiomatic that mankind is emitting CO2?
These are some of my questions and I have learnt to completely throw out all my pre-conceived ideas and start from scratch.
Any ideas?
Another flaw in SDK’s argument.
“However, it’s not all the IPCC’s fault. Climate scientists have been forced into this corner by a disastrous combination of cynical lobbying and a misguided desire for certainty. The American lobby system, driven by political and economic vested interests in fossil fuels, seeks to use any challenge to undermine the entire body of science.”
If he cares to look at TV adverts or propaganda published as editorial in once newspapers of record such as the Telegraph or the behaviour of GE and fossil fuel companies, he will see that they have welcomed warmist alarmism since it gives them a tax payer funded stream of highly profitable revenue.
Where is his evidence for the Exxon funding of WUWT or CA? At best the sceptics have received funding in millions of dollars, probably less than $10 mn. Set this against the covert funding by the UK government of carbon folly and the billions spent of GCMs.
It might be worth one of the dedicated readers of this site trying to put a number on the total fossil fuel funding of the sceptics. A job for Mr Goklany?
Cheers
Paul
Sir David’s silly public assertion that Climategate had to be the work of sophisticated foreign spies showed that outside of his specialist field his opinions are both gratuitous and worthless.
LIttle wonder his logic is so lacking here too.
He was so appalled at the claims about the Himalayan glaciers melting in twenty years time, that he kept his mouth shut?
It’s called post rationalisation. Although to be fair to him he is consistent,, he was a joke when he was the UK governments chief scientific adviser and he is still a joke now, albeit as a D list minor celebrity.
To end on a positive note, a very thoughtful and intelligent post.
Watching climate criminals come to grips with dissolution of their charade(and the corresponding culpability of their actions creating it)…… is like watching the murder suspect on “48 hrs”.
In the beginning of the interrogation, he swears he was nowhere near the scene, and doesn’t know anyone involved. After a few hours, he knows the victim, but hasn’t seen him all week. Another hour, and he was there, but just driving the car. By 2 am, he’s describing the dope deal gone bad, and admits he was angry with the victim…. and he needs a cigarette. 4 am, and he’s sobbing and saying he doesn’t remember firing the gun…. Confessions come hard, in increments.
Speaking of the botched BBC experiment, there is something about it that has bothered me ever since I first watched it. Okay there are many things about that experiment that bothered me but one thing in particular is worth analyzing because no one has ever mentioned it (as far as I know).
Watch the video again and you will notice that the lamp shining on the enhanced CO2 bottle is marked with a small piece of black tape (on the lower part of the lamp stem). This is important because the lamps should be identical in every way for such an experiment to be credible and a marker on one lamp might be interpreted to mean that something is different about that lamp. For example, maybe the lamp bulb has a slightly higher wattage than the other lamp bulb, thus influencing the outcome.
Surely that small piece of tape was an innocent oversight and I’m simply over-analyzing the situation. Maybe, maybe not. It’s interesting to note that Dr. Maggie Aderin-Pocock had previously performed the exact same experiment in a different BBC video:
Notice that the location of the enhanced CO2 bottle is different: it’s on the right-hand side instead of being on the left-hand side. Please also note the location of the lamp with the black tape. So, in light of the above, how should we interpret these observations?
I like your article, Goklany, an excellent, fair differentiation.
King seems to be a brilliant specialist scientist who understands Scientific Method – but he should have recognized his inadequately evidenced assertions. I suspect that the current main science bodies are stuffed with people like him near the top, who have been taken in by IPCC pronouncements as “science” and who have little or no concept of scientific fraud in high places, or of climbing down, admitting to having been duped when they should have checked better, or saying sorry.
I hope there are a few high-up scientists still in the establishment, who have been duped but are now shaking in their boots and looking again; or who had been intimidated into silence but actually care about truth enough to now be willing to speak out if they can have the final say on what goes out.
Andy Scrase (23:41:36) :
“I would like to know, specifically with respect to Sir David King’s assertion that we need to decarbonize our economy, what axioms and inferences he is using to make this assertion.”
He’d have started with
The laws of Thermodynamics
Chaos theory
Physical Hydrology
Maxwell’s equations
Newtonian mechanics (but as climate is chaotic he’d need relativity to avoid building in micro differences to his initial conditions)
Fluid mechanics
Atmospheric Chemistry
Quantum theory
Statistical mechanics
Probability Theory
and the physics of plastic bottles
He’d then use post normal inductive and deductive logic to synthesize the AGW hypothesis and then test its validity in series of focus groups and audiences in a friend’s kitchen.
Oh and excellent article Indur Goklany
Let’s see pharma. manufacturers use the same logic. This pill is good for you because it will improve your cholesterol levels so everyone should take it, but many people just won’t bother to take it, even though it is good for them, so let’s say there’s a life threatening virus that is going to kill billions and this pill is the only way to prevent you getting this virus.
Well the poor pharma. manufacturers and scientists were forced to lie because people are too stupid to do what’s good for them. You know what that is? Supreme arrogance. How would these scientists feel if some medical authority decided they were mentally I’ll and they should be institutionalised for their own good? It is the same loss of personal autonomy. Let’s just manipulate the people with lies.
A while ago a greenie said to me, “what’s wrong with lying to people if it is for their own good?”
See, what Sir David King has said is not news. Greens decided we all needed to be lied to for our own good. Of course peope who believe themselves to be in the right don’t stop to question themselves. They lack, what’s the word… “skepticism” about themselves.
The most precious thing we have is reason and self inquiry. Losing that would be worse than any killer climate change.
Andy Scrase (23:41:36) : Speaking as someone educated in Maths at the windy and cold cloisters of Cambridge University, some 30 years ago, I was long ago educated in the concept of the word “axiomatic”. This in English means “self-evident” or “obvious”, but in Mathematical terms means an assertion that is assumed to be true upon which we can base all our other assumptions or theorems… I would like to know… what axioms and inferences he is using to make this assertion.
Is it axiomatic that the earth is currently warming?
Is it axiomatic that CO2 is a greenhouse gas?
Is it axiomatic that mankind is emitting CO2?
Andy, have a look at my “Primer” by clicking my name. Then go here to see IMHO a better statement of your “axiomatic” questions… currently flying under the radar, needs good input…
Instead of doing the interview with Roger Harribin of the BBC, send this article to him, and dare him to print it on the BBC website, with a link to the index page.
Then you’ll know if he can be trusted to tell both sides without edited spin.
Keep warm over there, stay in, have a single malt by the fireside, and don’t drive!
I raised the problematic of what actual empirical evidence existed for the UK Government’s position on climate change a few years ago and the rely I received from Dave King (as he signed the letter) was basically none whatsoever. The UK climate policies is based on faith in the models at Hadley. Scary stuff.
According to The Times the Met office forecasted this next cold spell here in the UK months ago. Errr I think they must of forgotten to tell us then….
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/weather/article7018518.ece
Sir David King moaned that “The American lobby system, driven by political and economic vested interests in fossil fuels…”
Would those be the same fossil fuel interests that have merrily bought into AGW because of the carbon capture and storage bonanza they will reap if the politicians keep their end of the bargain, AND the money to be made trading emissions credits, AND the money to be made by artificially increasing the prices of fossil fuels?
David thinks they are funding a pernicious campaign against the IPCC. That is illogical. Why would they, when there is far more money to be made backing AGW to the hilt?
Thank you for recognising that someone who holds a degree in a particular field, and is “working” in that field, is not ipso facto “a scientist”.
A scientist is someone who follows the disciplines of science. One of these is the effort to make your work reproducible, as much as is possible.
Therefore, people who falsify data, hide data, delete data, refuse to share data, refuse to share their methods, refuse to expose their workings to any skeptical examination whatsoever, but simply announce their results and say “There, the science is settled. I’m a scientist and I say so” – these people are NOT scientists.
No matter what their credentials, no matter what their reputations, no matter what their conclusions, no matter what their funding, no matter what their personal opinions.
Apologies for the second post in quick succession,
The line many warmists take is that there is a well funded fossil fuel interest keen and trying to undermine the green agenda. We know that isn’t the case but if you start from that wrong assumption you can perhaps explain why Governments are spending vast sums of taxpayer money that Jo Nova put at $79billion over the last 20 years in the US alone.
A lot of modern politics is about misdirection and fighting phantoms. Eco-lobbyists have the ear of politicians because they sell a story of vast armies of well funded contrarians in the pay of fossil fuel interests hellbent on destroying the world, and they make the politicians believe that only they have the authority to prevent it. The well funded contrarian army doesn’t actually exist but to maintain the massive taxpayer spending and momentum the spectre must be wheeled out now and again.
The Brits’ best quality is their appetite and aptitude for making fun of one another. But they’ve got it easy, with such fantastic fatheads as this guy. He should be in the next “Carry On” film.
He appears to have revised the assertion by Sir david king that by 2100 “Antarctica will be the only habitable continent” out of existence.
Sinking ship; rat.