Yes, impossibly stupid "weather panic" IS the new normal

Newsweek Weather Panic coverGuest post by Alec Rawls

Is Newsweek actually heeding the instruction of Linnaeus to “know thyself”? Their latest panic-mongering cover seems pretty self aware.

Panic is a loss of reason:

pan•ic (pænɪk), noun: a sudden, overpowering terror, often affecting many people at once.

Verb: to feel or cause to feel panic

Synonyms: go to pieces, overreact, become hysterical, have kittens

Yes, Newsweek “science editor” Sharon Begley is all het-up with teh kittehz, and offers readers a guide for how they too can work themselves into a state of unreasoning fear. A few details from her grab bag of hysteria provide an interesting look into this pathological mind.

Drier and wetter, IN THE SAME PLACE

This is just strange:

Picture California a few decades from now, a place so hot and arid the state’s trademark orange and lemon trees have been replaced with olive trees that can handle the new climate. Alternating floods and droughts have made it impossible for the reservoirs to capture enough drinking water.

Higher temperatures (unlikely to be coming, now that the sun has quieted down) would probably change some weather patterns, making some places wetter and some places drier. Overall increased evaporation would make for more rain, but this rain might miss California, as a scare story from 2009 alleged.

That was KTVU’s tropopause height extravaganza, put together by “science editor” John Fowler. There is speculation that the width of the tropical weather zone is a function of the height of the top of the troposphere, which has risen since 1958. If continued warming continues to raise the tropopause, we’re doomed:

Fowler: Since 1960, the sand colored desert regions have crept northward, according to this research, now up to about Los Angeles. They could cover the [San Francisco] Bay Area in a few decades.

All of the world’s increasing rainfall is apparently going to land on Seattle. But at least they weren’t claiming that the same part of California was going to become both drier and wetter. Where did Begley get the idea that global warming will cause flooding and droughts in the same place?

A little poking around on the Newsweek website (now a subsidiary of The Daily Beast) turns up Begley’s source, another “new normal” story posted on May 21st, linking the following “global weirding” drivel from Reuters:

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Heavy rains, deep snowfalls, monster floods and killing droughts are signs of a “new normal” of extreme U.S. weather events fueled by climate change, scientists and government planners said on Wednesday.”It’s a new normal and I really do think that global weirding is the best way to describe what we’re seeing,” climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe of Texas Tech University told reporters.

“We are used to certain conditions and there’s a lot going on these days that is not what we’re used to, that is outside our current frame of reference,” Hayhoe said on a conference call with other experts, organized by the non-profit Union of Concerned Scientists.

An upsurge in heavy rainstorms in the United States has coincided with prolonged drought, sometimes in the same location, she said, noting that west Texas has seen a record-length dry period over the last five years, even as there have been two 100-year rain events.

So west Texas had a record five year drought punctuated by two 100-year rain events. Is that even possible? Wouldn’t the rainfall from two 100-year events be enough to lift the rainfall total of that five year period far above the lowest totals on record? In any case, this is the epitome of local weather, and Sharon Begley is extrapolating it to the entire world. Unusual weather seen in one place one time will now be seen everywhere all the time. Some science editor! And I thought Fowler was bad.

But let’s give Katharine Hayhoe credit as well. What did she expect when she called a single cherry-picked five year span of weather in one location “the new normal”? Begley is just following Hayoe’s instructions for inciting irrational PANIC. Still, aren’t science editors supposed to, you know, edit? When they see something scientifically insane, aren’t they supposed to cut it out, not extrapolate it as world-covering truth?

Global weirding weirdos and CO2 “fingerprints”

In addition to citing global weirdist Katharine Hayhoe, Begley’s subtitle refers to “freak storms” and her article is accompanied by a photographic “freak weather gallery.” Yup, Newsweek is all aboard the weirdo bandwagon. So how do the weirdos justify blaming every weird weather event on people? Just ask Donald Wuebbles, professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Illinois. He dusted for fingerprints and the culprit was revealed:

Climate does of course vary naturally, but the large changes we have been seeing in recent decades have the fingerprints of human emissions as being the primary driving force.

The IPCC did try to claim that their predicted CO2 warming “fingerprint”—a “hotspot” in the upper troposphere—had been found, but that claim has long since been debunked, as recounted in David Evan’s recent piece in the Financial Post. (Evans also has a more formal presentation with citations).

If the CO2 explanation for late 20th century warming were correct, the hotspot would have to be there. The CO2 theory produces a testable hypothesis and the empirical falsification of this hypothesis proves that the theory is wrong. Ditto for the “global weirding” that stands upon it.

Trenberth is a weirdo too

Kevin Trenberth follows the Weirdo Wuebbles model for blaming every extreme weather event on human-caused global warming. We know that global warming is proceeding apace, says Trenberth (despite humanity’s failure to cause any 21st century warming), so pitch it in strong:

“Given that global warming is unequivocal,” climate scientist Kevin Trenberth cautioned the American Meteorological Society in January of this year, “the null hypothesis should be that all weather events are affected by global warming rather than the inane statements along the lines of ‘of course we cannot attribute any particular weather event to global warming.’”

Trenberth’s call to blame every bad thing on CO2 was used by the leftists at Think Progress to blame this year’s killer tornadoes on global warming, just like Begley and Newsweek. It’s one big global weirdo convention on the eco-left.

All that is actually getting weirder are the claims of our global warming scientists. Foot soldiers of panic like Sharon Begley are not proceeding just on their own ignorant intiative. They are following the marching orders of unscientific scientists like Wuebbles, Trenberth, and Heyhoe.

I come not to praise Stephen Schneider, but to bury him

It is appropriate that Trenbeth presented his sweeping justification for alarmism in a talk dedicated to the late Stephen Schneider, the spiritual grandfather of politicized eco-science.

It was Schneider who in the 1970’s tried to blame global cooling since the mid-forties on the human burning of fossil fuels. When the planet started to warm a few years later he smoothly switched to blaming global warming on fossil fuels. It never mattered to him if any of it was true. His objective was to curtail the human burning of fossil fuels and any excuse would do. Honesty was not a requirement, as he explained to Discover Magazine:

To capture the public imagination, we have to offer up some scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements and little mention of any doubts one might have. Each of us has to decide the right balance between being effective, and being honest.

If what one wants to be effective at is expounding truth, there is no such conflict. It is only ulterior motives, like the unplugging of industrial capitalism, that can only be effectively promoted though dishonesty. Bad behavior springs from bad motives. Unfortunately, we’ve let a lot of bad people gain a lot of power, and it’s going to be very difficult to dislodge them.

Addendum: Roy Spencer on the hotspot fingerprint

Roy denies that the absence of an upper troposphere hotspot invalidates the CO2 theory of late 20th century warming, but this conclusion seems to be a non sequitur:

The famous “hot spot” seen in [AR4 figure 9.1] has become a hot topic in recent years since at least two satellite temperature datasets (including our UAH dataset), and most radiosonde data analyses suggest the tropical hotspot does not exist. Some have claimed that this somehow invalidates the hypothesis that anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are responsible for global warming.

But the hotspot is not a unique signature of manmade greenhouse gases. It simply reflects anomalous heating of the troposphere — no matter what its source. Anomalous heating gets spread throughout the depth of the troposphere by convection, and greater temperature rise in the upper troposphere than in the lower troposphere is because of latent heat release (rainfall formation) there.

For instance, a natural decrease in cloud cover would have had the same effect. It would lead to increased solar warming of the ocean, followed by warming and humidifying of the global atmosphere and an acceleration of the hydrologic cycle.

Thus, while possibly significant from the standpoint of indicating problems with feedbacks in climate models, the lack of a hotspot no more disproves manmade global warming than the existence of the hotspot would have proved manmade global warming. At most, it would be evidence that the warming influence of increasing GHGs in the models has been exaggerated, probably due to exaggerated positive feedback from water vapor.

Roy’s “thus” at the beginning of the last paragraph refers to his assertion that warming caused by a decrease in clouds (as would result from an increase in solar activity under Henrik Svensmark’s GCR-cloud theory) would create an upper troposphere hotspot, so long as there is a positive water vapor  feedback effect. This does demonstrate that the existence of a hotspot would not uniquely implicate the CO2 warming theory, but it does not demonstrate that late 20th century warming could be due to CO2 in the absence of a hotspot. In fact the opposite is known to be true.

CO2 by itself does not trap enough heat to account for 20th century warming. The CO2 warming theory depends on a strong water vapor amplification mechanism, where the initial CO2 temperature forcing evaporates water into atmosphere whichg traps yet more heat, creating yet more water vapor, etcetera. As Roy notes, it is this “warming and humidifying of the global atmosphere” and the resulting “acceleration of the hydrologic cycle” that creates the upper troposphere hotspot. Ergo, no hotspot means no powerful water vapor amplification mechanism and no CO2-based account of late 20th century warming.

Svensmark’s theory, on the other hand, does not imply that there will be a hotspot. It is merely compatible with a hotspot. In the presence of a powerful water vapor feedback effect, the temperature forcing created by a GCR-cloud mechanism would create an upper troposphere hotspot. If  the water vapor feedback effect is weak or negative, temperature forcing from the GCR-cloud mechanism will not cause a hotspot, but it could still account for 20th century warming just by the magnitude of its unamplified forcing.

ThanksRoy, for all of your great work. Hope you don’t mind this bit of editing help.

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Theo Goodwin
June 4, 2011 6:58 am

Alec Rawls says:
June 3, 2011 at 10:28 pm
“Thanks to Joel for the Lindzen analysis. If Lindzen is right, it sounds like the upper troposphere hotspot is not a testable hypothesis of the CO2 theory of warming, but is something that we should expect to see regardless of whether there is a positive water vapor feedback effect or not. This differs from Spencer, who seems to be saying that a hotspot would imply a positive water vapor feedback effect. Am I reading Spencer correctly, and if so, can this difference between Lindzen and Spencer be settled?”
Talking about testability and falsifiability requires the actual words of the person whose hypothesis or hypotheses are being tested. There is no point in a debate among Rawls and Shore on the matter of Warmista hypotheses being falsified by lack of a hot spot unless they have the exact words of the scientist they are discussing. Rawls, Shore, Lindzen, Spencer, and many others have their views of the relevant Warmista hypothesis and substituting those views for the clearly stated views of some Warmista scientist is an exercise in futility. A hypothesis expresses a belief held by one or more indiviuduals and such a belief can be tested or falsified. However, to begin a discussion that uses the several beliefs of several people, none of them specified in detail, is just to introduce multiple ambiguity.

Joel Shore
June 4, 2011 6:58 am

Bill Illis says:

The tropical troposphere hotspot is not there. It is, in fact, warming at the lowest rate (barely above zero) of any area on the surface or in the troposphere. It is, therefore, the tropical cool spot.

And, you know this how? You seem to be cherry-picking which analysis of the data you want to believe to get the result that you want to believe. The fact is that the data are not good enough to make such bold conclusions.

It is illogical to now claim that the hotspot is not a signature of global warming because solar increases could have also caused it – this is misdirection, a red herring and a strawman.

No…It is perfectly logical. It is asking the question of whether or not the data can be used to distinguish what mechanism is responsible for the warming. And, the answer is that this aspect of the data cannot be used to do that.

If solar forcing had increased, the hotspot could have appeared. But solar forcing didn’t increase and the hotspot didn’t appear, therefore the hotspot is not a signature of global warming? That is the logic being used in this line of argument.

Some people do claim that the observed warming is due to the sun or natural variations or what-not (including the author of this post, I believe). The point is that the non-observation of a hot spot does not lend support to these claims because we would expect the hot spot for these mechanisms of warming too.

It is indeed a signature of global warming. The theory is obviously wrong on one of its most important aspects.

No…It is a signature of what we expect for warming due to any mechanism, and it is a signature that we in fact see for temperature fluctuations in the tropical atmosphere. That the models (and very basic theory) and data agree where the data is known to be reliable and only potentially disagree where the data is known to be subject to artifacts suggests the problem is most likely with the data.
This is especially true since, as I have noted, the time scales of the processes that are expected to yield the hot spot are much shorter than the time scales for the observation of either the temperature fluctuations or the multidecadal trends. This makes it difficult to come up with an explanation of what might be happening that has the “hot spot” appearing for the fluctuations but not for the multidecadal trends.
By the way, it is interesting that some skeptics seem to want to believe that the data conclusively show that the hot spot is not there while other skeptics (or maybe some of the same) want to believe that somehow the speed up of the water cycle with warming causes heat to be transported out into space without much surface warming. These two beliefs are contradictory. If the water cycle were doing this, the hot spot would have to be much more pronounced, not less pronounced, than the models predict.

June 4, 2011 7:11 am

OMG! Comments like these are whats wrong with climate change now, and why it has gotten as bad as it is. Its easy for you to sit back and say that the article is BS, your not the ones whose homes have been flooded or ripped from its foundation. Yes we have freak weather all the time, but it is increasingly getting worse and worse, and you sit there and type away at your computer doubtful and you’ll be the next one it gets. Just saying. You kinda deserve it. Your little brain cannot even begin to comprehend how frightful and terrifying this shit is. Let your family members die and perish in it, lets see how YOU feel. SMH!

ShrNfr
June 4, 2011 7:14 am

Fortunately, having a story appear on the cover of Newsweak (sic) or Bizzyweak (sic) or the front page of the NYT usually means a peak in the hysteria. After that it goes down.

John M
June 4, 2011 7:41 am

Sharon Begley?!
Good grief, is she still employed?
This is what she had to say in her famous “Truth About Denial” fantasy in Aug 2007.

1998 had the strongest El Nino in 100 years. That made global temps spike. 2005 (no El Nino) tied 1998, and now the temperature trend is again upward.”

No El Nino in 2005 eh? No, just about 3 years of nothing but.
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/enso/mei/
Now, as far as the “trend is again upward” bit.
Hmmm. When should we choose as the start point? 2007?
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2006.6/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2006.6/trend
How ’bout 2005?
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2005/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2005/trend
Maybe we should give her a break and look for that rising trend she saw in 2007.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2002.6/to:2007.6/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2002.6/to:2007.6/trend
Of course, since she didn’t specify a date range (Jean Dixon used to use a similar…er…trick), we can only guess what she meant by “trend is again upward”. Maybe she meant Jan 2006 to Jan 2007? Who knows.
Anyway, one cannot mention Newsweek without dragging out this masterpiece.
http://www.denisdutton.com/cooling_world.htm
What were they blaiming on global cooling then?

Last April, in the most devastating outbreak of tornadoes ever recorded, 148 twisters killed more than 300 people and caused half a billion dollars’ worth of damage in 13 U.S. states.

GregO
June 4, 2011 7:44 am

Canceled my subscription to both Newsweek and SciAm after their complete failure to adequately and objectively report on Climategate, the greatest science scandal in history. Their failure in reporting demonstrated a breathtaking lack of interest in the facts surrounding the issue and a clear-cut bias toward Man-Made Global-Warming alarmism.
Since then I will not pay any attention at all to anything they have to say on any topic – what else are they telling lies about – lies with far-reaching bad consequences for humanity?

Roger Knights
June 4, 2011 8:05 am

Someone famous said (approximately), <>
(I can’t find the source by googling–does anyone know it?)

Roger Knights
June 4, 2011 8:07 am

PS: My double angle-brackets blanked out the quote I included in them. It was, “It is in the nature of the ordinary that it includes the extraordinary.”

Bob Diaz
June 4, 2011 8:08 am

It would be interesting to have Newsweek “science editor” Sharon Begley explain what is the difference between the weird weather of the 1800s and the weird weather of today. One only needs to look back at the weather records of the 1800s to see that similar events happened then.
It’s really sad to see the “news media” using Fiction in their reports.

John M
June 4, 2011 8:19 am

Casey Byrd,
I and I presume all folks who post here have sympathy for those who incurred losses in the recent weather disasters.
That’s not to say we accept those who try to exploit such disasters and their victims to further their activist agenda about climate change.

Bill Illis
June 4, 2011 8:45 am

Joel Shore says:
June 4, 2011 at 6:58 am
————-
The tropical troposphere hotspot is not there because it is dominated by the ENSO and the ENSO has no trend over the long-term.
The tropics lower troposphere is predicted to warm at a rate that is 127% of the surface. But it is warming at only 55% of the surface.
http://imageshack.us/m/109/5572/tropicsnonhotspot.png

Quis custoddiet ipos custodes
June 4, 2011 8:49 am

“We are used to certain conditions and there’s a lot going on these days that is not what we’re used to, that is outside our current frame of reference,” Hayhoe said on a conference call with other experts, organized by the non-profit Union of Concerned Scientists.”
I guess it depends on the length of time one uses as “the current frame of reference” to understand if any particular event is outside a 3 to 5 sigma occurrence from the frame of reference.
The nuances around the law for non-profit classification aren’t something I am versed in, but it seems that the Union of Concerned Scientists sure collects a lot of revenue and spend it to enhance that revenue stream. Oh well, maybe it’s time for the “Union of Concerned Engineers” to develop a non profit……………………… I can think of lots of contributors here who would make excellent board members…………….

P Wilson
June 4, 2011 8:49 am

Joel Shore says:
June 4, 2011 at 6:58 am
“And, you know this how? You seem to be cherry-picking which analysis of the data you want to believe to get the result that you want to believe. The fact is that the data are not good enough to make such bold conclusions.”
for once, Joel Shore is to be commended for making a verifiable statement

P Wilson
June 4, 2011 8:51 am

addendum:
that is to say, generally in relation to climate data being represented across the range available, from temperature measurements to inferences from them, and not necessarily to this hypothetical hotspot

Curiousgeorge
June 4, 2011 8:52 am

casey byrd says:
June 4, 2011 at 7:11 am
OMG! Comments like these are whats wrong with climate change now, and why it has gotten as bad as it is. Its easy for you to sit back and say that the article is BS, your not the ones whose homes have been flooded or ripped from its foundation. Yes we have freak weather all the time, but it is increasingly getting worse and worse, and you sit there and type away at your computer doubtful and you’ll be the next one it gets. Just saying. You kinda deserve it. Your little brain cannot even begin to comprehend how frightful and terrifying this shit is. Let your family members die and perish in it, lets see how YOU feel. SMH!
I live in the center of Dixie alley. 40 miles from Tuscaloosa. The weather is not getting “worse and worse”. It’s just getting more publicity as a result of the internet, cell phones, etc., and because there is more inhabited land than there was 66 years ago when I was born. USA population in 1944 was approx 140million. Today it’s over 308 million.

P Wilson
June 4, 2011 8:53 am

Today’s discovery:
Do not make bold conclusions on the basis of inadequate data or biased data, as sceptics will doubt and pour objectivity onto the theory in question

Theo Goodwin
June 4, 2011 9:23 am

Joel Shore says:
June 4, 2011 at 6:58 am
“Some people do claim that the observed warming is due to the sun or natural variations or what-not (including the author of this post, I believe). The point is that the non-observation of a hot spot does not lend support to these claims because we would expect the hot spot for these mechanisms of warming too.”
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. A little knowledge of scientific method is a catastrophic thing. In the case of the quotation above, the knowledge displayed is so little that one is tempted to conclude that the author knows better and is actively propagating confusion.
The author reasons that several “hypotheses” imply (and that word is necessary here) the existence of a hot spot so the fact that no such hot spot has been detected means that the alternatives to his “hypothesis or hypotheses” cannot gain support from this fact. Yep, that is true. However, the author fails to note that, according to him, all the rival sets of “hypotheses” imply the existence of a hot spot that has not been detected. The search for this hot spot has been going on for decades. In that case, all the hypotheses are falsified. The author’s “hypothesis or hypotheses” are falsified. None of the sets of rival hypotheses can be used in their present form and must be rejected outright or seriously reformulated. How did the author manage to overlook this obvious implication of his reasoning?

P Wilson
June 4, 2011 9:23 am

Joel Shore says:
June 4, 2011 at 6:58 am
“By the way, it is interesting that some skeptics seem to want to believe that the data conclusively show that the hot spot is not there while other skeptics (or maybe some of the same) want to believe that somehow the speed up of the water cycle with warming causes heat to be transported out into space without much surface warming. These two beliefs are contradictory. If the water cycle were doing this, the hot spot would have to be much more pronounced, not less pronounced, than the models predict.”
Not necessarily contradictory, so its worth pointing out that heat leaving via the oceans indicate that the heat they are receiving from the sun is not as great as formerly, so heat as well as c02 exits the oceans at a greater rate than it is receiving. The distinction has to be drawn between sea temperatures and land temperatures, as both have different affinities of effect from the cause regarding the rate of heat escape, of which temperature is only a measurement.
It is nonsensical to regard atmospheric temperatures as anything more than the rate of heat escape of these two combined factors caused by outgoing long-wave radiation. Water just holds heat for much longer, so when the source of heat decreases, the energy remains for much longer. Water retains heat. Air does not.

Jim D
June 4, 2011 9:35 am

More distinct fingerprints of CO2 would be the Arctic melting and stratospheric cooling that are occurring. The tropical hot spot depends on tropical SST warming, and I suspect it may not be proceeding as fast as expected because of the more rapid than expected response of the Arctic sea ice albedo to the imbalance produced by CO2.

June 4, 2011 10:00 am

Jim D,
I see your mind is made up, and you insist on believing that CO2 must be the culprit. But cherry-picking the Arctic because it fits in with your beliefs is not science. And the widely touted tropo hot spot prediction completely failed – yet you still try to keep it on life support.
Don’t you see the problem? [If not, check out the title of this article].

bikermailman
June 4, 2011 10:24 am

I live ~30 miles from Texas Tech. We’re definitely dry right now, but last year was one of our wetter years on record, with it spread from January to October. The 100 year flood last year was from a hurricane that came inland. Not much of a connection to me, but who am I.

Dave Springer
June 4, 2011 10:27 am

“So west Texas had a record five year drought punctuated by two 100-year rain events. Is that even possible?”
It’s not only possible it’s normal.
http://texas.sierraclub.org/water/20100309b.asp
“Texas weather has sometimes been described as drought punctuated by floods.”
That’s one of the first things I heard about the climate when I moved here 18 years ago. The first thing I heard about the weather is “if you don’t like the weather right now just wait a bit because it will change”.

JKS
June 4, 2011 10:27 am

Winter-type storm beating down on central coast CA right now. Here we are in June and it’s acting like February.

June 4, 2011 10:46 am

Speaking of impossibly stupid weather panic, the guy who invented Obamacare says the world is getting warmer.
Well, I suppose it is, depending on the trend line used. But the long-term trend is intact, and it isn’t rising any faster than in pre-industrial times, so CO2 isn’t the cause. But I guess the politician is straddling the fence, as pols do.
But I would love to see a political debate where someone of national stature says: “Show me solid evidence of global harm from CO2! And make sure it’s global. If you don’t have any evidence that CO2 causes global damage, my opponents need to explain why the government should get $trillions more of our tax money to fight ‘carbon’.”
And he/she should be ready to ask the others if they know the percentage of atmospheric CO2 – a great ‘gotcha’ question, even if it’s answered correctly: 0.00039 of the atmosphere is insignificant, but 90% of the public still believes it’s 20% or more. And after a ≈40% increase in “carbon”, there should be at least some evidence of global damage, no? But there is no such evidence, none at all, indicating that the trace gas CO2 is harmless at current and projected concentrations.

John M
June 4, 2011 10:50 am

Jim D,
Please show us a graph of stratospheric temperature that’s consistent with increasing ghg in the troposphere.