By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
Mr. John Cook, who runs a website puzzlingly entitled Skeptical Science” (for he is not in the least sceptical of the “official” position) seems annoyed that I won the 2011 televised debate with Dr. Denniss of the Australia Institute, and has published a commentary on what I said. It has been suggested that I should reply to the commentary. So, seriatim, I shall consider the points made. Mr. Cook’s comments are in Roman face: my replies are in bold face. Since Mr. Cook accuses me of lying, I have asked him to be good enough to make sure that this reply to his commentary is posted on his website in the interest of balance.
Chaotic climate
Cook: “Monckton launched his Gish Gallop by arguing that climate cannot be predicted in the long-term because it’s too chaotic because, [Monckton says],
‘the climate is chaotic…it is not predictable in the long-term…they [the IPCC] say that the climate is a coupled, non-linear, chaotic object, and that therefore the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible.’
… It’s really quite self-evident that Monckton’s statement here is incorrect.”
Reply: Paragraph 5 section 14.2.2.2 of the IPCC’s 2007 AR4 TAR report says:
“In sum, a strategy must recognise what is possible. In climate research and modelling, we should recognise that we are dealing with a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore that the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible.”
My quotation from the IPCC, given from memory, was in substance accurate. Here and throughout, I shall ignore Mr. Cook’s numerous, disfiguring, ad-hominem comments.
Consensus
Cook: “Monckton proceeds to demonstrate his confusion about the causal relationship between science and consensus: [he says: ‘the idea that you decide any scientific question by mere consensus [is incorrect].’ … He suggests that somehow climate science is done by first creating a consensus when in reality the consensus exists because the scientific evidence supporting the anthropogenic global warming theory is so strong.”
Reply: This seems a quibble. Dr. Denniss had said he was satisfied with the science because there was a consensus. He had appealed repeatedly to consensus. Yet in the Aristotelian canon the argumentum ad populum, or headcount fallacy, is rightly regarded as unacceptable because the consensus view – and whatever “science” the consensus opinion is founded upon – may or may not be correct, and the mere fact that there is a consensus tells us nothing about the correctness of the consensus opinion or of the rationale behind that opinion.
Adding carbon dioxide to an atmosphere will cause warming, but we need not (and should not) plead “consensus” in aid of that notion: for it is a result long proven by experiment, and has no need of “consensus” to sanctify it. However, the real scientific debate is about how much warming extra CO2 in the air will cause. There is no “consensus” on that; and, even if there were, science is not done by consensus.
Mediaeval warm period
Cook: “Every single peer-reviewed millennial temperature reconstruction agrees that current temperatures are hotter than during the peak of the [Mediaeval Warm Period]. …
Reply: At www.co2science.org, Dr. Craig Idso maintains a database of papers by more than 1000 scientists from more than 400 institutions in more than 40 countries providing evidence that the medieval warm period was real, was global, and was generally warmer than the present, sometimes by as much as 3-4 C°. Many of these papers provide millennial reconstructions.
Cook: “The climate scientists involved in creating those first millennial proxy temperature reconstructions are not under criminal investigation.”
Reply: The Attorney-General of the Commonwealth of Virginia, Mr. Cuccinelli, issued a press statement on May 28, 2010, repeating an earlier statement that –
“The revelations of Climategate indicate that some climate data may have been deliberately manipulated to arrive at pre-set conclusions. The use of manipulated data to apply for taxpayer-funded research grants in Virginia is potentially fraud. … This is a fraud investigation.”
Fraud, in the Commonwealth of Virginia as in most jurisdictions, is a criminal offence. The Attorney-General’s investigation is being conducted in terms of the Fraud Against Taxpayers Act 2000.
Is there a human fingerprint?
Cook: “The scientific literature at the time [of the 1995 Second Assessment Report of the IPCC] clearly demonstrated a number of ‘fingerprints’ of human-caused global warming.”
Reply: The scientists’ final draft of the 1995 Report said plainly, on five separate occasions, that no evidence of an anthropogenic influence on global climate was detectable, and that it was not known when such an influence would become evident.
However, a single scientist, Dr. Ben Santer of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, rewrote the draft at the IPCC’s request, deleting all five statements, replacing them with a single statement to the effect that a human influence on global climate was now discernible, and making some 200 consequential amendments.
These changes were considered by a political contact group, but they were not referred back to the vast majority of the authors whose texts Dr. Santer had tampered with, and whose five-times-stated principal conclusion he had single-handedly and unjustifiably negated.
We now have the evidence of Prof. “Phil” Jones of the University of East Anglia, in one of the recently-released Climategate emails, that the warming of the past century falls well within the natural variability of the climate – consistent with the conclusion that Dr. Santer had negated.
The IPCC’s fraudulent statistical technique
Cook: “Monckton proceeds to make another bizarre claim about the IPCC reports which we’ve never heard before: that they use a ‘fraudulent statistical technique’ to inflate global warming’ … As long as the claim sounds like it could be true, the audience likely cannot determine the difference between a fact and a lie.”
Reply: Mr. Cook is here accusing me of lying. Yet my email address is well enough known and Mr. Cook could have asked me for my evidence for the fraudulent statistical technique before he decided to call me a liar. He did not do so. Like the hapless Professor Abraham, he did not bother to check the facts with me before making his malevolent and, as I shall now show, baseless accusation.
The IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report, 2007, carries in three places a graph in which the Hadley Center’s global mean surface temperature anomaly dataset from 1850-2005 is displayed with four arbitrarily-chosen trend-lines overlaid upon it. At each place where the altered graph is displayed, the incorrect conclusion is drawn that because trend-lines starting closer to the present have a steeper slope than those starting farther back, the rate of warming is accelerating and that we are to blame.
I wrote both to Railroad Engineer Pachauri (in 2009) and to a lead author of the 2007 report (in 2011), and visited both of them in person, to report this defective graph. They both refused to have it corrected, though neither was able to argue that the technique was appropriate. I have now had the data anonymized and reviewed by a statistician, who has confirmed that the technique is unacceptable. In the circumstances, the refusal of the two senior IPCC figures to correct the error constitutes fraud and, when the statistician has been shown the context of the data that he saw in an anonymized form, the police authorities in the relevant nations will be notified and prosecution sought.
Climate sensitivity
Cook: “Where Monckton gets this claim that the Australian government’s central climate sensitivity estimate to doubled CO2 is 5.1 C° is a complete mystery.
Reply: The “mystery” could and should have been cleared up by Mr. Cook simply asking me. The estimate is that of Professor Ross Garnaut, the Australian Government’s economic adviser on climate questions. It is on that figure that his economic analysis – accepted by the Australian Government – centres.
Cook: “Monckton also repeats a myth … that most climate sensitivity estimates are based on models, and those few which are based on observations arrive at lower estimates. The only study which matches Monckton’s description is the immensely-flawed Lindzen and Choi (2009).”
Reply: I am not sure what qualifications Mr. Cook has to find Professor Lindzen’s work “immensely flawed”. However, among the numerous papers that find climate sensitivity low are Douglass et al. (2004, 2007) and Coleman & Thorne (2005), who reported the absence of the projected fingerprint of anthropogenic greenhouse-gas warming in the tropical mid-troposphere; Douglass & Christy (2009), who found the overall feedback gain in the climate system to be somewhat net-negative; Wentz et al. (2007), who found that the rate of evaporation from the Earth’s surface with warming rose thrice as fast as the models predicted, implying climate-sensitivity is overstated threefold in the models; Shaviv (2005, 2011), who found that if the cosmic-ray influence on climate were factored into palaeoclimate reconstructions the climate sensitivities cohered at 1-1.7 C° per CO2 doubling, one-half to one-third of the IPCC’s central estimate; Paltridge et al. (2009), who found that additional water vapor at altitude (caused by warming) tends to subside to lower altitudes, allowing radiation to escape to space much as before and greatly reducing the water vapor feedback implicit in a naïve application of the Clausius-Clapeyron relation; Spencer and Braswell (2010, 2011), who found the cloud feedback as strongly negative as the IPCC finds it positive, explicitly confirming Lindzen & Choi’s estimated climate sensitivity; Loehle & Scafetta (2011), who followed Tsonis et al. (2006) in finding that much of the warming of the period 1976-2001 was caused not by us but by the natural cycles in the climate system, notably the great ocean oscillations; etc., etc.
Cook: “Monckton at various times has claimed that climate sensitivity to doubled CO2 is anywhere between 0.2 and 1.6 C°.”
Reply: I have indeed done climate sensitivity estimates by a variety of methods, and those methods tend to cohere at a low sensitivity. The IPCC at various times has claimed that a central estimate of climate sensitivity is 3.8 C° (1995); 3.5 C° (2001); and 3.26 C° (2007); and its range of estimates of 21st-century warming in the 2007 report is 1.1-6.4 C°. Ranges of estimates are usual where it is not possible to derive an exact value.
Carbon pricing economics
Cook: “Monckton employs the common ‘skeptic’ trick of focusing on the costs of carbon pricing while completely ignoring the benefits.”
Reply: On the contrary: my analysis, presented in detail at the Los Alamos Santa Fe climate conference in 2011, explicitly calculates the costs of taxing, trading, regulating, reducing, or replacing CO2 and sets against the costs the cost of not preventing the quantum of “global warming” that will be reduced this century as a result of the “investment”. Yet again, if Mr. Cook had bothered to check I could have sent him my slides and the underlying paper.
Cook: “Economic studies consistently predict that the benefits [of carbon dioxide control] will outweigh the costs several times over.”
Reply: No, they don’t. True, the Stern and Garnaut reports – neither of them peer-reviewed – came to this conclusion by questionable methods, including the use of an absurdly low inter-temporal discount rate. However, if one were permitted to use the word “consensus”, one would have to point out that the overwhelming majority of economic studies on the subject (which are summarized in my paper) find the cost of climate action greatly exceeds the cost of inaction. Indeed, two review papers – Lomborg (2007) and Tol (2009) – found near-unanimity on this point in the peer-reviewed literature. Cook is here forced back on to the argument from consensus, citing only an opinion survey of “economists with climate expertise”. However, he does not say how many were interviewed, how they were selected, what weightings and other methods were used: and, in any event, the study was not peer-reviewed. Science is not, repeat not, repeat not done by opinion surveys or any form of head-count.
Abrupt warming
Cook: “Monckton proceeds to claim that abrupt climate change simply does not happen:
‘Ask the question how in science there could be any chance that the rate of just roughly 1 C° per century of warming that has been occurring could suddenly become roughly 5 C° per century as it were overnight. There is no physical basis in science for any such sudden lurch in what has proven to be an immensely stable climate.’
The paleoclimate record begs to differ. A stable climate is the exception, not the norm, at least over long timescales.”
Reply: Mr. Cook displays a graph of temperature changes over the past 450,000 years. At the resolution of the graph, and at the resolution of the proxy reconstructions on which it was based, it would be quite impossible to detect or display a 5 C° warming over a period of as little as a century.
Global temperatures have indeed remained stable over the past 100 million years, varying by just 3% either side of the long-term mean. That 3% is around 8 C° up or down compared with today, and it is enough to give us a hothouse Earth at the high end and an ice age at the low end.
However, very extreme temperature change can only happen in a very short time when conditions are very different from what they are today. For instance, at the end of the Younger Dryas cooling event, 11,400 years ago, temperature in Antarctica rose by 5 C° in just three years, according to the ice cores (which, over that recent period, still have sufficient resolution to allow determination of annual temperatures). No such lurch in temperatures has happened since, and none is reasonably foreseeable.
We now have confirmation from the UK Met Office that there has been no “global warming” to speak of for 15 years. That is hardly the profile of an imminent 5 C° increase in global temperature. Bottom line: a stable climate is the rule, not the exception: and nothing that we can do to alter the climate can cause a major change such as that which terminates ice ages. Remember Canute: our power is limited.
Human influence on the climate
Cook: “There has never before been a large human influence on the climate, so why should we expect it to behave exactly as it has in the past when only natural effects were at work?”
Reply: I did not say that the climate will behave “exactly” as it has in the past. We are capable of exerting some influence over it, but not very much. The notion that we can exercise a large influence is based on the mistaken idea that the initial warming from a doubling of CO2 concentration (which might be about 1 K) will be tripled by net-positive temperature feedbacks. This unfortunate assumption is what truly separates the IPCC from scientific reality. The IPCC makes the mistake of assuming that the feedback mathematics that apply to an electronic circuit (Bode, 1945) are also applicable to the climate. In two very important respects that the models are tuned to overlook, this is not so. First, precisely because the climate has proven temperature-stable, we may legitimately infer that major amplifications or attenuations caused by feedbacks have simply not been occurring.
Secondly, the Bode equation for mutual amplification of feedbacks in an electronic circuit has a singularity (just above the maximum temperature predicted by the Stern report, for instance, or by Murphy et al., 2009) at which the very strongly net-positive feedbacks that reinforce warming suddenly become just as strongly net-negative, dampening it. I have not yet heard of a convincing physical explanation for any such proposed behaviour as applied to the climate. But if we must use the Bode equation then it necessarily follows from the climate’s formidable temperature-stability that the feedback loop gain in the climate system is either zero or somewhat net-negative. A climate subject to the very strongly net-positive feedbacks imagined by the IPCC simply would not have remained as stable as it has.
Has Earth warmed as expected?
Cook: “Monckton … repeats … that Earth hasn’t warmed as much as expected … [He says} ‘If we go back to 1750 … using the Central England Temperature Record as a proxy for global temperatures … we’ve had 0.9 C° of warming …’. It should go without saying that the temperature record for a single geographic location cannot be an accurate proxy for average global temperature.”
Reply: Central England is at a latitude suitable to take the long-run temperature record as a fair proxy for global temperatures. However, if Mr. Cook were unhappy with that, he could and should have contacted me to ask for an independent verification of the 0.9 C° warming since 1750. Hansen (1984) found 0.5 C° of warming had occurred until that year, and there has been 0.4 C° of warming since, making 0.9 C°. Indeed, in another article on Mr. Cook’s website he himself uses a value of 0.8 C° in the context of a discussion of warming since 1970.
The significance, of course, is that the radiative forcings we have caused since 1750 are equivalent to those from a doubling of CO2 concentration, suggesting that the transient sensitivity to CO2 doubling is around 1 C°.
Cook: “… Human aerosol emissions, which have a cooling effect, have also increased over this period. And while 3 C° is the IPCC’s best estimate for equilibrium climate sensitivity, the climate system is not yet in equilibrium. Neglecting these two factors (aerosols and thermal inertia of the global climate), as Monckton and Lindzen have done, will certainly give you an underestimate of equilibrium sensitivity, by a large margin. This is how Monckton supports his lowball climate sensitivity claim – by neglecting two important climate factors.”
Reply: Once again, Mr. Cook has failed to check his facts with me. Of course my calculations include the effect of aerosols (which, however, is by no means as certain in its magnitude as Mr. Cook seems to think). And of course I have not ignored temperature feedbacks (which Mr. Cook mistakenly confuses with “the thermal inertia of the global climate”: actually, it is I who have been arguing that there is considerable homoeostasis in global temperatures, and he who had earlier been arguing that global climate was not stable). If I am right about temperature feedbacks (see above), then the equilibrium sensitivity will be about the same as the transient sensitivity – around 1 C°. And that, on most analyses, would actually be beneficial.
Cook: “The warming over the past 60 years is consistent with the IPCC climate sensitivity range and inconsistent with Lindzen and Monckton’s lowball climate sensitivity claims. Monckton claims the observational data supports his low sensitivity claims – reality is that observational data contradicts them.”
Reply: Warming from 1950 to date was 0.7 C°. Net forcings since 1950 were 1.8 Watts per square meter, using the functions given in Myhre (1998) for the major greenhouse gases and making due allowance for aerosols and other negative anthropogenic forcings. The transient climate-sensitivity parameter over the period was thus 0.4 Celsius degrees per Watt per square meter, consistent with the 0.5 derivable from Table 10.26 on page 803 of IPCC (2007) on each of the IPCC’s six emissions scenarios. In that event, the transient warming in response to a doubling of CO2 concentration over the present century would be 0.4(5.35 ln 2) = 1 C°, again using a function from Myhre (1998). Interestingly, the IPCC’s implicit central estimate of warming from CO2 this century is only 50% above this estimate, at 1.5 C°.
In short, even if the IPCC is right about the warming this century from CO2, that warming is simply not going to be enough to cause damage.
Lying
Cook: “Monckton spent almost the entire debate misrepresenting the scientific (and economic) literature at best, lying at worst.”
Reply: Now that readers have had a chance to hear both sides, they will be able to form a view on who was lying and who was not.

Criminals in all walks of life always hate the truth.
Good job again, Mr Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
This debate needs many more point-by-point interchanges with exact quotes and exact literature citations.
In my opinion, it takes a lot of work to write that kind of thing: the temptation is always to paraphrase, and to refer to “the studies” without full citations of any reference. We bloggers do it all the time. You have done this well.
joel
I see you are unfamiliar with photonic osmosis, whereby you put a unidirectional screen between a cold and a hot place so that infrared photons can go from cold to hot, only.
It makes for very cold fridges !
very good rebuff btw of that pedantic preaching site that is skepticalscience.com
Ian says:
February 3, 2012 at 10:52 am
“…While there are bounds to the climate based on our understanding of the geological record, within those outside temperature boundaries, it appears shifts between climate states can occur with amazing speed…”
Or not. Check this out:
First plants cooled the Ordovician
Timothy M. Lenton, Michael Crouch, Martin Johnson, Nuno Pires and Liam Dolan
http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/v5/n2/pdf/ngeo1390.pdf
“…Between 488 and 444 million years ago, during the Ordovician period, the climate cooled gradually , culminating in the abrupt onset of periods of temporary glaciation. These Late Ordovician glaciations are puzzling, because they occurred when atmospheric CO2 concentrations, as estimated by geochemical models2–4 and proxy data5–7, were roughly 14–22 times present-day atmospheric levels (PAL). Yet complex climate models8,9 suggest atmospheric CO2 levels had to drop to about 8 PAL to trigger glaciations at this time….”
Abrupt seems to measure about 10 million years. Note too, that dropping CO2 to something like 3200 ppm is cited as the key element here leading to glaciation. Looks like we’re doomed.
Joel Shore says:
February 3, 2012 at 2:15 pm
Why is it bizzare? If a molecule of CO2 absorbs a photon and it has a new energy state, what happens to the molecule after that? Does it spend eternity in the same energy state or does it emit a photon of its own and return to its previous energy state?
Dan says:
February 3, 2012 at 8:48 am
Joe Ryan says:
February 3, 2012 at 5:38 am
If it weren’t for argumentum ad hominem, argumentum ad populum and argumentum ad verecundiam.they’d have no argumentum at all.
———————————————–
Brilliant! hahahaha I love it.
You missed out argumentum ad ignorantium
JimF says:
February 3, 2012 at 3:08 pm
“…Between 488 and 444 million years ago, during the Ordovician period, the climate cooled gradually , culminating in the abrupt onset of periods of temporary glaciation. These Late Ordovician glaciations are puzzling, because they occurred when atmospheric CO2 concentrations, as estimated by geochemical models2–4 and proxy data5–7, were roughly 14–22 times present-day atmospheric levels (PAL). Yet complex climate models8,9 suggest atmospheric CO2 levels had to drop to about 8 PAL to trigger glaciations at this time….”
This belief that only CO2 can change climate is nothing short of moronic.
It is unbelievably depressing to see this idiotic dogma remain entrenched in the climate science establishment as the unquestioned starting point of any climate “research”.
“”Cook: “Monckton spent almost the entire debate misrepresenting the scientific (and economic) literature at best, lying at worst.””
I’ve got your back Downunder, Christopher Monckton of Brenchley, I’m on his case.
Regards,
Joel Shore: ” 0.4(5.35 ln 2) = 1.48°C, not 1°C”
Using excel I get log(5.35,2)=2.42, which comes to 0.97 when multiplied by 0.4
Correct me if for some reason I’ve misunderstood.
[“ln” is natural log (base e); while “log” is usually understood to be log base 10. Robt]
Mr Cook is a foot solider for academic fundamentalism.
He uses his website primarily to source contrary views, purely so as to negate them, regardless of whether we know they are true or not, and whether there is any uncertainty in the literature. It is pure academic fundamentalism; anything and everything that is against the central agenda is pre-emptively dismissed; that is, I suspect, what the website is set up for, to dismiss anything and everything that doesn’t suit The Cause. The long list of views against the central agenda is a giveaway, it is blatantly one sided and does not represent the state of the literature, it is simply designed to appeal to the prejudices of the readers.
Lord Monckton is my hero! keep up the good work
Thinking of my thoughts upon reading this, I must say that I, personally, grow dispirirted by these endless arguments with the warmistas, who are only interested in coin. The fact that they lose .. again, again and again, is not important to them as long as the money flows..
The money machine rolls on. I think we should still hammer away at the warmistas argments, but we should also attack their motives … and them personally, as they do us.
And I think Canada leads the way here .. I hope various nasty organizations habe their “charitable” status removed, and the government stops giving them money!!!
TimM says:
Tim,
What you are doing there is taking log_base2 of 5.35. What you are supposed to do is take log_base_e of 2 and multiply by 5.35. It looks like you just desperately tried to do something to get Monckton’s result. However, he was clear that he was using 5.35*ln(2)…and that makes sense as it gives the accepted value of ~3.7 W/m^2 for a doubling of CO2 levels.
Joel Shore (and Robt) – thanks for the clarification, I am now wiser. It makes me wonder (given the similarity of the result) if that’s what Monckton did as well.
I did try a search for log and ln on the PDF of Myhre (1998) to try and find a reference to the function but the PDF I found is just an image so the search was futile.
How come when the great orator enters the room, R. Gates and A Physicists beat it out the back door?
We see the real John Cook here, fumbling because he can’t just delete comments that he can’t answer, as they do on SkS and also SoD. You’ll find screen captures of just some of many of my posts which were deleted without reason on SkS on this Skeptical Science Errors page which has had about 7,750 views http://climate-change-theory.com/SkS_errors.html
Over the last 12 months or so I have had to set up nine different email addresses (and an extra ISP) to register that many times under different names on SkS, each time being banned when they worked out who I was. They even prevented opening of their whole website a couple of times, hence the need for another ISP.
by using “the SS” in place of Skeptical Science???? :-).
Gary Hladik says:
February 3, 2012 at 8:06 am
John Marshall says (February 3, 2012 at 6:16 am): “The re-radiated heat that increases surface heat is a problem insofar as the mid/upper troposphere is far colder than the surface and heat cannot flow up gradient, or from cold to hot,otherwise you could make a Perpetual Motion Machine. The 2nd law of thermodynamics is quite explicit in this…”
The 2nd Law says only that the net flow is from warm to cool, which doesn’t preclude a bi-directional flow. A photon of infrared light doesn’t know if it came from a body warmer or colder than its destination; it will transfer its energy to the target regardless of the target’s temperature.
For a good overview of the so-called “greenhouse effect” from a self-described climate heretic, I recommend two articles by Willis Eschenbach:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/11/17/the-steel-greenhouse/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/11/27/people-living-in-glass-planets/
=============
And what’s the mechanism that makes it a net hotter to colder?
Doug Cotton: Don’t fool your yourself. Your comments about back-radiation and such are not deleted because they can’t be answered. They are deleted because they are nonsense that has repeatedly been answered and such a level of cluelessness just adds noise to the discussion. No real respected scientists believe the nonsense that you peddle, and by nobody, I mean that AGW skeptics like Roy Spencer, Richard Lindzen, Willis Eschenbach, Robert Brown, … Heck, even Monckton doesn’t believe that sort of nonsense.
nc says:
February 3, 2012 at 5:08 pm
Good question, nc. Indeed, they (R. and A.) are never to be found when Lord Monckton takes critics to the woodshed–What could they say, except “Gosh, have we ever been taken in–big time!”
Losers.
Joel Shore says:
February 3, 2012 at 2:15 pm
And you want us to take you seriously here, Mr. Shore?
Consider (as refutation of your statement above):
http://e-collection.library.ethz.ch/eserv/eth:1828/eth-1828-02.pdf
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781439805336
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jctb.686/abstract
And there are plenty more.
But look on the bright side, Mr. Shore–if nobody had done the experimental verification as you claim, here’s your chance to shine! Go for it, I say!
RockyRoad: Is my sarcasm really that hard to detect?!?
Thanks for the references though. I’m sure our friend Babsy will enjoy them.
Purely in the interest of ad hominem fun, here is John Cook. Does anyone else detect the crazed look of a Soros supported maniac?
OK, I shouldn’t have said that. I have nothing against maniacs.☺
That’s the 2001 TAR
http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/tar/wg1/505.htm
http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/tar/wg1/
etc.