Guest post by Bernie Lewin

As it is the time of year for reflection, let us consider for a moment the Climate Change scare in the bigger picture.
One thing that became more evident as the year progressed was that Copenhagen 2009 might have been the peak of this scare. It is difficult now to see how we could have a resurgence of the campaign that would push beyond the hype of 2009. This is not to say it is all over just yet. And even because it is not over, and because of its resilience even in retreat, it is useful to gain an understanding of what is still happening in this scare before we consider the questions of whether it will happen again, and how much it has damaged the cause of environmentalism and the reputation of science.
Social panic and millenarian movements are well known, not only from medieval times, but also as continuing in different forms during modern times — as panics and as bubbles, the madness of crowds and so forth. What surprised many of us at the first realisation of the phoney nature of the science was that this could happen so comprehensively and convincingly within modern science. Where such panics are usually associated with ignorance and irrationality, this one has the authority of modern science at its very core. Yet we can find precedents to this science-base scare in many health scares of recent decades, and also in environmental scares since the DDT cancer scare triggered by Silent Spring, politicised by the EDF and legalized by the newly formed EPA. (See Scared to Death which finds a repeating pattern to these science-based scares.)
The AGW scare is similar to these in that it was instigated by scientists, but with one undoubted difference being its monumental scale. What is new in AGW is how it became so much more powerful and pervasive across so many disciplines and domains of science. While some previous scares were moderated and dampened by state-instituted scientific organisations, AGW was almost universal promoted. The involvement of state-sanctioned scientific institutions is of special historically interest when we consider the history of the Royal Society, the first successful state-sanctioned scientific institution upon which so many others were cloned. The Royal Society first promoted itself 350 years ago as a sober and reasonable remedy for such apocalyptic enthusiasm rife in the English Restoration. It is only in very recent times, and mostly with AGW, that the Royal Society and its clones have taken on apocalyptic scenarios as a principle tool of science promotion, and as a way to asserting their power, i.e., by drumming up panic, and so directing public policy (more here).

Apocalyptic public policy to appease social panic is not at all new. Sometimes (and often with the help of scientific reasoning) it was to quieten the panic. But often, and powerfully, it was to inflame it. Fear campaigns have long been used to drum up support for war. That the AGW campaign did often reach the pitch of war propaganda is evident in much of the political rhetoric of 2008-9, not the least example of which was the newly elected Australian prime minister’s declaration that AGW is the greatest moral issue of our time. And the public policy push was not just about windmills and carbon taxes. Nor was policy success always driven by an unconscious coalition of Baptists and Bootleggers. In my state (Victoria, Australia), during the 2008-10 peak, we were throwing public funding at a water pipeline and a desalination plant while introducing planning rules against new constructions on formerly expensive low-lying coastal properties.
These two major projects, the desal plant and the pipeline, were instigated upon scientific advice eschewing the historical evidence of climate cycles and promoting the idea of a climate shift to a warmer-dryer future for South-Eastern Australia. Beyond the construction contractors it is hard to find the ‘bootleggers’ here. The new planning rule was instituted upon the advice of state-funded science of an imminent 0.8 metre sea level rise. It does indeed seem that to some extent the decision makers really believed this advice and acted upon it to their perceived benefit in the face of embarrassing and widespread public protest. That they were victims of the bad advice of AGW proponents seemed to became evident when the government was defeated on a stormy weekend following the wettest spring in this corner of the continent since the drought began — during which the press was depicting farmers standing on their flood farms shouting ‘climate cycles’ and ‘told you so.’
While the political extremes of AGW are astounding, what is for me most interesting about the AGW scare is not so much the public panic – we have seen that all before – but the pervasive infiltration of this scare into the scientific establishment, into its associations, its journals and its funding bodies. Why so successful, so rapid, so pervasive this corruption?
When we turn for answers to academic historians of climate science, we find them mostly on-side and on message, and seemingly unaware of the profound significance of this turn in the history of science. (While Fleming is better than Weart, Oreskes & Conway mainline the propaganda and spits it out, whereas Kellow is the notable exception among the academics – see below). Looking elsewhere, we do find others starting to develop useful ways of presenting an historical understand of what is going on here. Some of these that I find the most interesting, I present briefly below for WUWT readers’ consideration and comment:
1. Now that modern science has usurped religion as the new principle validation of public knowledge, such corruptions should be expected.
In pre-modern times there were two prevailing validations of contentious public knowledge, one was the dogma of the state or religious authority and the other was direct communications from God. The authority of the prophet is upon such direct communication, while the religious dogma often defers to the authority of prophetic testimonials. But since the end of World War II, and especially through the compulsory secular education programs of affluent nations, the principle authority for public knowledge has been modern science. Except in the context of a Church, if you want to persuade folks to act according to the knowledge you profess, the best way is to make your claims upon the authority of science. Only recently has science commanded such enormous power. And power corrupts. And so when we look back on the corruption of the Church and the abuse of its dogmas to serve the interests of the unscrupulous, where we see scary scenarios causing panic in religious knowledge systems, now that modern science has usurped religion, should we be surprised that similar phenomena emerge within science also?
2. The public fear –> public funding cycle generated explosive growth of the pseudo-science of Climate Change.
In 1988 James Hansen won extraordinary attention from the press when he proclaimed his ‘99% certainty’ that the forecasted self-imposed global warming catastrophe was now in train. Schneider was not so certain, but he did recognise that scary scenarios were required in order to gain attention and to prompt folks to act (Haughton later admitted much the same). The IPCC was founded, and it reported twice without certainty and without alarm…and without much attention. At the end of 1995 it nearly did the same again…until late changes were made…and so headlines in the papers again…and the rest is history. Climate science, an under-paid stagehand was propelled into the glory of the footlights. (more here)
Scary scenarios generate public fear, public fear generates funding for more research, and if the new research generates more public fear then the science will continue to expand. The environmental sciences had hit upon a funding mechanism rarely exploited outside the arms industry (i.e., the fabled ‘military-industrial complex’), and this caused almost irresistible and explosive expansion.
3. The social and environmental sciences legitimated activist-science.
The Marxist social sciences of the post-war period (neo-Marxism) promoted activist science under the slogan ‘Philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the world…the point is to change it’ and this legitimated the validation of academic research and teaching, not according to some ground in truth, but by the extent to which it promoted social change for the good. This politicised approach to scholarship pervaded left thinking to such an extent that old-fashion liberal scientists were vilified on campus as ‘bourgeois.’ Such an approach to research is evident in social science discourses with no apparent Marxism affinities, including Feminism and more recently Post-Normal Science. (more here)
Science-as-activism came into the natural sciences through geography and the other environmental sciences. At the time universities were using funding incentives to promote such things as ‘community partnering’, ‘knowledge transfer’ and science-for-policy – and all this against an idea of the old paradigm of the academy as an ivory tower full of irrelevant boffins wasting public money pursuing science for science’s sake. The distinction between science and policy, and between science and political interest became blurred. In this atmosphere, the involvement of advocacy groups (WWF, Greenpeace etc) in the scientific process was condoned and encouraged. The work of Mike Hulme, the founding director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, exemplifies the corruption of conventional natural science practices by this new activist approach to science (more here).
4. Noble Cause or ‘Virtuous’ Corruption
The legitimation of activist-science helps to promote what is called ‘noble cause corruption’. This is the term used in the context of criminal investigations, where, for example, evidence might be planted in order to convict a criminal of a crime that the investigator has no doubt he committed. (Such corruption is portrayed famously by Orson Welles in A Touch of Evil.) As this sort of corruption manifests in the sciences, Aynsley Kellow has labelled it ‘virtuous corruption.’ This is where we would have scientists genuinely believing in the truth of AGW quite prepared to manipulate, distort and misrepresent their research in order to promote this truth in the face of formidable opposition from powerful vested interests (read: ‘Big Oil’ etc) attempting to obscure the truth with their own distortions, misrepresentations and lies.
-BL
******
Sal Minella,
Very good! [And I think I know what “mo”-TSA means.]
On the corruption of science, Climate Audit has an interesting comment on James Hansen’s self-serving, endless “adjustments” to the temperature record.
Response to George Lawson: Scientists abide by a protocol for a reason, namely: to ensure that their work complies with accepted methodology and is focussed on achieving reasonable results. Their tools are observation and measurement and they extrapolate from observed data to larger cases. The peer review process is simply a way to optimize the chance that these methods and standards have provided by the researchers. Typically, the reviewers are not chosen by the researchers, but rather by the publishers, to avoid the possibility of a biased review.
The IPCC publications are a review of ALL peer reviewed publications. The reviewers monitor thousands of papers published worldwide. There are hundreds of reviewers and , once completed the initial publication is presented to the Academies of Science throughout the world for further review. But before publication, the final report is edited by the major countries of the world. Clearly, this is a profoundly conservative process.
The body of your post, George, is simply wrong. “Non-scientists” have not proven that polar bears “are surviving.” In fact their is ample evidence showing that Arctic habitat is fast diminishing creating conditions which dramatically threaten bear populations. Do a Google search, or check the work of Henry Pollack, Sylvia Earle, and many others. Glaciers are melting all over the world, ( I look out my front window and see this happening.) Check the work of Wallace Broecker, one of the world’s most celebrated Earth Scientists, for an elaboration of this crucial issue. Climate change and diminishing groundwater availability, together with atmospheric warming are NOW impacting agricultural production all over the world catastrophically affecting millions (It has been estimated that 50,000 die of starvation every day.)
The claim is not that climate change alone is causing these conditions, but it is evident that we are in the midst of a perfect storm, losing ecological function and biodiversity as a result of over consumptive patterns and over population. Weather patterns are changing rapidly in places like Europe as a direct result of warming which results in increased melting of the on land glaciers in Greenland and the consequent desalinization of the northern oceans. The outcome of this phenomenon, which is well documented in the literature, (see Earle and Pollack, amongst many others) is that the currents which bring warmth from the south to the north are diminishing rapidly. WE should expect that there will be increased storm events in Europe and along the US eastern coast.
It is simply incorrect to be talking about “false statements” coming from “peer reviewed” publications. I’m sure that mistakes are made by scientists, and the rest of us, but the peer review is designed to catch these errors before publication. In the main, however, I think we can be confident in the integrity of the process and the accuracy of the findings. When the conversation stops in the scientific community concerning the main tenets of the global warming issue, you can be sure that the scientists are reasonably certain of their conclusions.
Hugh Pepper says:
“Climate change and diminishing groundwater availability, together with atmospheric warming are NOW impacting agricultural production all over the world catastrophically affecting millions (It has been estimated that 50,000 die of starvation every day.)”
That is just one example out of many that you posted, which are provably wrong. You have been repeatedly asked to give verifiable facts. Instead, you continue to repeat debunked talking points from your realclimate echo chamber, and stray incoherent and scatterbrained from one thought to another.
Let’s take your nutty statement from above, and give you some much-needed education:
First off, the central question is whether the rise in human emitted CO2 is the cause of any harm. Whether ground water is being depleted has nothing to do with that central question, which is based in turn on the central CO2=CAGW conjecture — the basis for reducing everyone’s standard of living and giveing supra-national entities control over every aspect of your life. So quit wandering off into unrelated subjects.
Increased CO2 has been conclusively shown to be beneficial, and there is no verifiable evidence that it is harmful.
Next, atmospheric warming must be defined. How do we do that? By taking the instrumental record over the past three decades? Where is the scary warming?
Or do we take the CET record, going back to the 17th century?
Or do we look at the Holocene, where temperatures were several degrees warmer and colder many times?
Cherry-picking your time frame will give you the results you want, and that is exactly what you are doing.
Likewise, every claim you made above can be just as easily debunked. If it were not for your impotent fixation on Lord Monckton, you could learn some very good climate science from him — as the students and faculty at Oxford did when they voted him the clear winner of the recent climate debate.
Finally, the IPCC may look at peer reviewed papers, but they also waste an inordinate amount of time on WWF and other self-serving NGO propaganda. If you believe AR-4, you will believe anything. Even realclimate.
Thanks Smokey, the final line is a bit clumsy but I’m satisfied with it overall.
BTW some folks are beyond education, especially those who see their politics as religion.
Bernie makes stuff up
——————–
These two major projects, the desal plant and the pipeline, were instigated upon scientific advice eschewing the historical evidence of climate cycles and promoting the idea of a climate shift to a warmer-dryer future for South-Eastern Australia.
————–
Err, it was actually instigated because the dams were running out of water with no end in sight. And well past the times of normal drought/flood cycles. And no holes in the ground to turn into new dams.
Bernie thinks he is full of wisdom. There are a lot of people like Bernie in Australia. Australians can recognize them and even have a term for them: Story tellers aka “BS artists.”
LazyTeenager
Here are the official reasons given to the public for the desalination plant and pipeline:
quote:
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Our oceans hold 97 per cent of the water on this planet. Because of changing climate, our growing population (n.b., rapidly imported against the wishes of the people) and drought, we need to use some of it to make sure we have water for the future.
http://www.ourwater.vic.gov.au/programs/desalination
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This is what “changing climate” looks like here in Melbourne:
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Hose ban soon in Melbourne to help storages
Argus, February 1939
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Here are the current levels for Melbourne water storage: 53.7 percent — up from an all time low of around 32 percent last year.
Here is the accumulated Melbourne rainfall for 2010.
Here is the cost of the Brisbane desalination plant:
========
October 2010:
RESIDENTS are losing at least $1 million a week operating desalination and water recycling plants in Queensland’s flooded southeast.
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Brisbane water levels, currently at around 100 percent:
http://www.seqwater.com.au/public/dam-levels
LazyTeenager: “And well past the times of normal drought/flood cycles.”
Do you have any data on the length of a “normal” cycle in Australia?
“I love a sunburnt country, a land of sweeping plains, of droughts and flooding ranges….” Dorothea MacKellar – circa 1901
There are a lot of people like “Lazy Teenager” in Australia.
Australians can recognize them and even have a term for them: “Figjam”
F*** I’m Good, Just Ask Me.
😀
The responses here are spot on. I especially like the ones that query Australian spelling, as if they know how to write the Queen’s English let alone American English.
And facts are certainly needed. If it’s hot it’s climate change. If it rains buckets it’s climate change. What do they think – heat causes more evaporation and when it cools it dumps more water? What a joke. Just look at Queensland floods. Do they honestly think that just because it’s getting more rain dumped up there across a broader area than ever before and because they are getting 100 year floods every couple of years now it’s all because of more water in the air because of global warming? Or climate change? Of course not. It floods in Queensland. Just because there have been more and bigger floods up northern Australia doesn’t mean it’s because of global warming. And the longest and hottest drought in Victoria followed by the worst downpours ever doesn’t mean climate change, it’s just weather. But the scientists keep telling us to expect more rain up north of Australia and more hot and dry down south. And they tell us the rain will be heavier when it comes. Just because they were right this time around doesn’t mean they are right all the time. Right?
Next they’ll be telling us that the melting ice in the Arctic and the lack of ice in Hudson Bay and the unseasonal warmth in Canada and Greenland is due to global warming. Yeah, right! You can’t fool us, silly scientists. We all know that any day now it’s going to turn into an ice age. Just wait till the solar activity starts up again. That’ll cool things down.
Some comment replies for later passing readers:
Pat Moffitt says:
In response to the post’s query “Why so successful, so rapid, so pervasive this corruption?”– My experience going back to the 70s is that it was not rapid.
– Pat, you are right it was not so rapid, and I regret saying so.
Russell C:
Church-going AGW believers are prompted to equate basic Christian values with saving the planet.
– But not the Australian Cardinal Pell:
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/heat-on-pell-for-cool-air-on-climate-change/story-e6frg6nx-1111114719258
Vince Causey:
Public fear has NOT generated more government funding for the simple reason that public fear does not exist, not now nor in the past. You have simply assumed that fear exists because that is what scary scenarios are meant to engender…What has happened, is that pundits have deduced that the logical effect of alarmist’s propaganda is – alarm[…]Yet the myth persists that an alarmed public are forcing governments to act. Governments believe these myths, so they play to an audience that went home at the start of the second act.
– This point of discussion well deserves the attention it got above. While I do indeed see something like public fear, perhaps it is not fear but the expression of a moral crisis; or a symptom finding a convenient expression (in the Freudian sense). I know people who seem to be searching for an apocalyptic scenario…like, with the problem of oil reserve depletion is not all the usual boring problems of scarcity but it has to be ‘peak oil’ and ‘the end of suburbia,’ and so forth. And I do agree with Causey that there is some evidence that the politicians have over estimated the level of public fear/concern.
Woodentop follows on this discussion:
There is, however, a curious disconnect between what the MSM want to talk about and what are pressing concerns for “ordinary people”, if I can put it like that. Politicians seem to speak to the press, who speak back to the politicians, whilst the rest of us look on with increasing disbelief (and increasing detachment) from the unedifying spectacle.
This has been going on for some time, it’s not restricted to climate change and is one reason, I would postulate, for the growth of the Tea Party movement in the USA. When no-one seems to represent you, what happens next?
– Nice postulation!
Brian Macker:
Tulip mania, the Mississippi bubble, and other manias were not precipitated by a general “madness of crowds”. In fact they were caused by a central bank exacerbating the natural tendency of fractional reserve banking to inflate the money supply.
– The Economic analysis of history is always very sobering. When it is right, it is yet another way we put the lie to history shaped by willful intent. H. Trevor Roper first taught me this sobering lesson.
Pat Moffitt says:
A philosophy that espoused -Capitalism and its resultant “excess economic activity” fueled by access to cheap energy sources were incapable of being bounded by the natural limits to growth. Environmental harm and social injustice were the consequences. Only by changing the system could environmental improvement and social (environmental) justice be attained.
– Right! And CO2 became the convenient vehicle.
Anne v:
[A 5th way of understanding what is going on here is] The demise of hierarchy within universities and research institutes by the centralized funding.
– Interesting. I wonder how we distinguish the effect of the astronomical increase in gov research funding from the way it is distributed.
Peter Plail
I am afraid I see more megalomania than religious fervour in the attitude of many scientists and politicians in their position on AGW…
– This suggests the question: Were the likes of Savonarola megalomaniacs?
Tall bloke:
…I pointed out to the prof that this subject was clearly the clearest opportunity to witness in real-time the interaction of interests which determine the direction of science, and that it was *the* hot potato issue of our time.
– When I started a year ago my blog on hist & philos implications of Climate Change, I mused about how “in Hearts of Darkness I recall Francis Ford Coppola explaining how he first thought of making a movie about the Vietnam War in Vietnam during the war. Running this blog during the AGW controversy feels as crazy and exciting as that — but without the danger to life and limb.”
Lucy Skywalker:
Maggie Thatcher was on the warpath against the miners…So Maggie established the Hadley Centre and CRU. At first, under Hubert Lamb, CRU was a good place.
– You seem right about Hadley, Thatcher, AGW climate modelling etc, but I am not so sure about CRU. Under Hubert Lamb (’71-’78) it CRU did not have an AGW agenda. It was under Wigley (’78-’93) that this changed. But I would love to know more of this history!
Jason Calley:
The best comparison of past science manias to the current CAGW mania is the example of Lysenkoism in the old USSR.
– I would like to here your case elaborated – could you write it up somewhere?
johanna:
Another factor worth considering is pre-emptive mission creep by the conservation movement…Indeed, many conservationists of the old stripe are very uncomfortable with their current bedfellows and their focus on climate issues and social control.
– Yep, that’s me!
Aynsley Kellow:
the process is corrupted – in the same sense that a computer disc could be corrupted.
– Yes, perhaps I erred by not emphasising this enough. The corruption is not so much about individuals deliberate wrong-doing, but also (mostly?) a corruption that is made up of lots of folks dutifully doing their bit for the good of science and society. As Jesus said, we ‘know not what we do.’
Ceri Reid,
I think we should consider the role of ‘moral hazard’ in all of this. It’s pretty clear to me that none of the players – scientists, politicians, NGOs, etc. – believe that they will be answerable for the ill effects of unwarranted alarm about AGW. They’ll be retired…
– Yes, its much as has always been for politicians
Ceri Reid,
Research proposals are also more likely to be funded if the results are known before the research starts. (And if you think that makes no sense, you’re right). It is no surprise to me at all, that once the notion of the importance of AGW had become established, a bandwagon effect amplified it – that’s just the grim reality of how science funding works.
– Yes, I have even heard how big grant-getters have learnt to stay ahead financially by apply for grants for research already completed.