Guest post by David M. Hoffer
IPCC reports AR1 through 4 were published in relative obscurity. ClimateGate and the emergence of the blogosphere as the primary forum for debate of the science and public policy intersection changed all that. AR4 in particular has been put under the microscope, and thoroughly discredited. It was laced with references to gray literature, claims that were known to be false, and written in a misleading fashion with important information that didn’t fit the narrative downplayed or omitted.
Knowing the level of scrutiny AR5 would receive, my expectation for some time has been that the IPCC would put considerable effort into maintaining their alarmist narrative while not completely bankrupting their credibility on the science. Near-term projections (2016-2035) being Chapter 11, where they have the most to lose the soonest, seemed to me to be the best place to see how they would handle things.
Indeed, Chapter 11 is literally laced with caveats. To be fair, some of them are legitimate. Volcanic eruptions for example, cannot be factored in because we don’t know if, when, where, or how big they might be. On the other hand, they go out of their way to say that their projections are predicated on a major reduction in aerosol emissions over the next few years. Perhaps they have legitimate reasons to expect this, but with countries like China, India and Brazil ramping up fossil fuel consumption at a rate that dwarfs western world consumption, I find that a bit less than likely. More amusing however is their repeated (and repeated, and repeated) admonition that their projections may not be detectable due to natural variability. Given that skeptics were mocked for pointing out that the temperature record to date is well within natural variability, I find it a bit disingenuous that they now want to use that same natural variability to shield their inability to clearly demonstrate the very effects that they have for so long insisted were dominant, urgent, and catastrophic.
But the IPCC’s efforts to shroud every projection in a cloak of bankruptcy protection caveats may well be part of their undoing. Their extensive efforts on this range from the amusing, to what may well turn out to be bombshell material. Here’s one example of the amusing side of their efforts:
There is high confidence that baseline surface ozone (O3) will change over the 21st century, although projections across the RCP, SRES, and alternative scenarios for different regions range from –4 to +5 ppb by 2030 and –14 to +15 ppb by 2100.
Can you imagine a financial expert getting on a news program and, with a straight face, saying that after exhaustive analysis he is highly confident that in a year’s time the NASDAQ will be either higher or lower? To be fair, I think they’ve poorly worded what they meant, but that’s hardly the only example. AR5 was leaked in the first place because of the way the issue of solar variance is handled. While this next excerpt from Chapter 11 is on the one hand amusing, the issue it exposes is more serious:
As discussed in Section 8.2.1.4.1, a recent satellite measurement (Harder et al., 2009) found much greater than expected reduction at UV wavelengths in the recent declining solar cycle phase. Changes in solar uv drive stratospheric O3 chemistry and can change RF. Haigh et al. (2010) show that if these observations are correct, they imply the opposite relationship between solar RF and solar activity over that period than has hitherto been assumed. These new measurements therefore increase uncertainty in estimates of the sign of solar RF, but they are unlikely to alter estimates of the maximum absolute magnitude of the solar contribution to RF, which remains small (Chapter 8). However, they do suggest the possibility of a much larger impact of solar variations on the stratosphere than previously thought, and some studies have suggested that this may lead to significant regional impacts on climate (as discussed in 10.3.1.1.3), that are not necessarily reflected by the RF metric (see 8.2.16).
Let’s try and summarize that:
1. Observational data suggests they got the physics completely backwards
2. Despite which they’re sure the amount of change is small….but
3. It may result in larger regional impacts than projected
Say what? They think they got the physics completely reversed, but we should still trust them that the order of magnitude is small, but allow that the impacts might be larger anyway? Just like the ozone projection, they’ve cloaked their wording in so many bankruptcy protection caveats that they won’t actually be outright wrong no matter what happens. As to what the actual effects are…. the only conclusion I can draw is that they don’t really know.
But this last example is, in my opinion anyway, the most egregious of them all. It relates to the climate models themselves. Using start dates such as 1960, they go into great detail explaining how well the models mirror actual observed climate indices up to the present. They then talk about a variety of techniques to make them more accurate, one of which is “initialization”. Without going into a lot of detail as to exactly what initialization is, here is one rather startling quote:
While there is high agreement that the initialization consistently improves several aspects of climate (like North Atlantic SSTs with more than 75% of the models agreeing on the improvement signal), there is also high agreement that it can consistently degrade others (like the equatorial Pacific temperatures).
I don’t know that any amount of bankruptcy protection caveats can get them off the hook on this one. But I have to hand it to them, they do try:
As discussed in 11.3.1, most of the projections presented in 11.3.2–11.3.4 are based on the RCP4.5 scenario and rely on the spread amongst the CMIP5 ensemble of opportunity as an ad-hoc measure of uncertainty. It is possible that the real world might follow a path outside (above or below) the range projected by the CMIP5 models. Such an eventuality could arise if there are processes operating in the real world that are missing from, or inadequately represented in, the models. Two main possibilities must be considered: 1) Future radiative and other forcings may diverge from the RCP4.5 scenario and, more generally, could fall outside the range of all the RCP scenarios; 2) The response of the real climate system to radiative and other forcing may differ from that projected by the CMIP5 models. A third possibility is that internal fluctuations in the real climate system are inadequately simulated in the models.
The fact of the matter is that when you adjust a model and as a consequence one part becomes more accurate and another part becomes less accurate (as did happen with their initialization techniques) that is compelling evidence that the model is suffering from exactly such problems. This is evidence that there are factors in the real world that are improperly modeled or missing entirely from the models. Given that in the same chapter the IPCC is admitting that they probably got the physics of solar variation wrong first by ignoring it entirely when they should not have, and then by including it but getting the sign of the effect completely backwards, that seems like a pretty obvious conclusion. In fact, Chapter 11 also suggests that the models are having a tough time with aerosols, Atlantic Multidecadal Variability, Pacific Decadal Variability, Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation and Walker Circulation.
In brief, the evidence that the models are getting the right answers for the wrong reasons is staring them in the face. The models can sort of kind of get the climatology right, but only for the years we already have data for. In brief, they can use 1960 data to get 2012 right, but only because we already know what the answer for 2012 should be, and the adjustments deliver it. When those same models try and make projections into the future, and then we wait a few years for the future to arrive (AR4 projections from 2007 for example are already looking way off for 2012) the matter becomes readily apparent. AR4 suggested that if no warming showed up for 15 years, the models were probably wrong. AR5 seems to provide even better evidence that they are, in fact, wrong, surrounding their projections with so many caveats that anything short of an ice age or spontaneous combustion could be said to fit within their error range.
Of course this isn’t the final draft. Only time will tell how they choose to handle these issues now that they are exposed. But the contrived nature and density of the caveats makes what they are trying to protect themselves from seem obvious.
Chapter 11 can be downloaded here (PDF)
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An Engineer of would laugh these guys of the floor. Can you imagine an engineer saying:There is high confidence that wheels will stay on, although projections and alternative scenarios for different gears and cogs might prove differently. However we should trust this uncertainty and spend $2 billion building it anyway!
IPPC = LOL.
The view from here would be great, but the mountains are in the way.
One of my skills is that of teaching Academic English. If the IPCC cares to wave a lot – or even a bit – of money my way, I can make myself astonishingly available to teach them how to write clearly.
But perhaps that isn’t what they want.
Reblogged this on The GOLDEN RULE and commented:
As pointed out, a draft at this stage. BUT, these self-incriminating comments have been made. Even if retracted or altered, their current meaning is clear and spells out a failure to justify their claims and certainly, the political and industrial processes that they set in motion are shown to have no supporting basis. The Emperor has no clothes! Great article David!
any chance the draft was leaked in order to attract some free editing? to see what could be gotten away with?
they go out of their way to say that their projections are predicated on a major reduction in aerosol emissions over the next few years. Perhaps they have legitimate reasons to expect this, but with countries like China, India and Brazil ramping up fossil fuel consumption at a rate that dwarfs western world consumption, I find that a bit less than likely.
The only way to get a major reduction in aerosol emissions is by building a lot of coal (or gas or nuclear) fired power stations in the developing world, as this will replace domestic consumption of fossil and non-fossil fuels.
I anticipate they will be at least partially correct in this prediction. And as a result, places like India which have shown cooling over the 20th century from aerosol increases, will experience a period of warming.
If I was a scientist alarmed by the warming alarmism, but wanting to keep both my job and interest in environmental sciences high, my strategy would be to ensure that the IPCC put caveats on everything.
By building up a series of such caveats, each one defensible to the vast majority of scientists, you end up with the likes of what David is talking about – a document so laced with restrictions that it is obvious that the conclusions are meaningless.
That is the only way the reasonable majority can defeat the hard-core who dominate the inner circle, by the sort of obstructionism against alarmism that yet defends science. Perhaps we see the majority taking back, slowly, by this means.
I doubt very much this is being driven by the acolytes of Mann, Romm, Schnellnhuber etc, trying to decrease their chances of being proven wrong. Their style is to reduce the concept of scientific uncertainty because they are so certain in their own minds.
It is all very simple:
IPCC et alia climate model inputs:
Well understood factors: x
Poorly understood factors: 2x – 10x
Not yet recognised factors: 10x – 50x
So it’s just guesswork with big complex computers. However, the model makers become infatuated with their creations, similar to people converted to a new religion. In other words, they become fanatical about their new findings and beliefs. Climate fundamentalists and religious fundamentalists are not really all that different – they just can’t understand why everyone doesn’t think like they do..
But of course.
Coal fired power plants, car ownership expansion………………….That’s right, a “major reduction in aerosol emissions over the next few years”.
I forgot to mention to ask what happens as the world comes out of recession?
Peter Miller says:
December 23, 2012 at 3:41 pm
“So it’s just guesswork with big complex computers. However, the model makers become infatuated with their creations, similar to people converted to a new religion. ”
While I’m always having fun documenting the things that they can’t simulate yet, make no mistake: Even if they could simulate all processes AND would initialize their models with the correct initial state they would STILL fail, as it is by the definition of chaos not possible to keep the deviation between a chaotic system and its simulation on a model with finite resolution under any predefined bound (the deviation measured e.g. as the vector distance between the two states in the state space used by the system and the simulation, or any other useful distance metric).
Assuming that running a simulation to the year 2100 is short enough to avoid this exponential-quality increase in deviation beyond tolerable bounds would be an extraordinary assumption in need of evidence. That evidence could only be accumulated by running a model alongside reality and measure the deviation.
If it turns out that the sun controls the climate on short timescales, the situation changes dramatically, as in that case Earth’s climate would not be an entirely freely oscillating system, and long term predictions might become feasible. But that would invalidate the models instantly as well as they have no such dependency built in.
ICPP
We have an old saying in Germany that seems to be very appropriate here:
“Wenn der Hahn kräht auf dem Mist,
dann ändert sich das Wetter,
oder es bleibt wie es ist.”
(“When the rooster crows on top of the manure pile, the weather will change, unless it stays the same.”)
As long as the answers are more government power and the transfer of wealth to the third world, aren’t the questions really irrelevant?
This is where we are at in the climate wars. AR5 will push back the 15 years because it has to. It will pick up on a ‘new’ paper (based on new and improved models) giving them N years into the future. AGW / CAGW / CC can never and will never be falsified because it is not science.
More papers to follow I’m sure.
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2011/2011JD016263.shtml
http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/cmb/bams-sotc/climate-assessment-2008-lo-rez.pdf
@Jimbo
“I forgot to mention to ask what happens as the world comes out of recession?”
Not much chance looking at all the ‘lend and spend’ governments currently ‘in charge’.
Europe and the US won’t see a real recovery for years to come.
The Keynesians and socialists have bankrupted the system some time ago.
Jimbo,
“Coal fired power plants, car ownership expansion………………….
If you put SO2,NOx and soot scrubbers on coal fired power plants you get a major reduction in aerosol emissions. The Chinese are putting SO2,NOx and soot scrubbers on their power plants for reasons that have nothing to due with climate change…I.E…They like to breathe.
The major reduction in aerosols is predicated on an official Chinese policy.
D Böehm says:
December 23, 2012 at 2:35 pm
This shows that the long term global warming trend has remained within well defined parameters. Global warming has not accelerated, despite the rise in CO2. Therefore, CO2 has had no measurable effect.
The Global Warming depicted has also not followed the evolution of solar and geomagnetic activity which have not shown any trend over that period.
Of course this isn’t the final draft. Only time will tell how they choose to handle these issues now that they are exposed. But the contrived nature and density of the caveats makes what they are trying to protect themselves from seem obvious.
———-
Well I would say the IPCC got suckered by the trap you guys set for them in your criticisms of the previous drafts.
Remember how there was a framework set way back then for describing uncertainty. And despite that how you guys banged on incessantly about how wicked the IPCC was for not making a big enough deal about the uncertainty.
I knew what you were up to and ignored your banging on about uncertainty. Looks like the IPCC are not as quick off the mark.
I anticipated that as soon as the IPCC started getting too wishy washy about their conclusions you guys would start exploiting that. Well here it is. Well done.
The basic problem is making decent assessments of the evidence and the risks involved takes some insight, clear thinking and courage. Risk assessment is not something people do well. And we can’t afford to stay at home like some neurotic.
David Hoffer you write “But the contrived nature and density of the caveats makes what they are trying to protect themselves from seem obvious.”
But this creates THE major problem, which is in the Summary for Policy Makers (SPM). In the past the various SPMs has been extremely definitive on how positive the IPCC is that CAGW is occurring. Things like “very likely”, meaning “90% probability”. As we have seen in this leaked SOD, the SPM is still carrying on in the same way. It was for this reason that Alec Rawls leaked the document in the first place. What he noted that although the authors of Chapter 7 had made changes of the sort he suggested, the SPM had not changed. He was afraid thst unless this was pointed out at an early stage, the whole mess could be covered up.
The problem the IPCC has with the AR5 is not in writing things like Chapter 11, as you are discussing. It is how do you explain to an ever increasingly skeptical bunch of scientists that weasel worded chapters support the extremely strong statement which must be in the SPM. Becasue if the SPM does not contain such positive statements, then it is obvious that previous IPCC reports did not have any basis for their strong statements.
I cananot ever recall myself writing the conclusions of a report, before all the science was completed. The last things we ever wrote were the conclusions. But here in the SOD, and presumably the FOD, are all the conclusions firmly stated, and the closing date for new science is, I understand, March 2013. The SPM of AR5 MUST say the same as all the previous SPMs. The problem is how can the IPCC support the strong statements in the AR 5 SPM with weasel worded chapters.
lsvalgaard says:
“The Global Warming depicted has also not followed the evolution of solar and geomagnetic activity which have not shown any trend over that period.”
So we can rule out both CO2 and geomagnetic activity. We’re getting it narrowed down, a little. Good.
•••
Lazy T,
It’s called “transparency”. There isn’t nearly enough of that in mainstream climate science.
LazyTeenager says:
December 23, 2012 at 4:43 pm
“The basic problem is making decent assessments of the evidence and the risks involved takes some insight, clear thinking and courage. Risk assessment is not something people do well. And we can’t afford to stay at home like some neurotic.”
Where has the IPCC and its member scientist demonstrated insight, clear thinking, or courage? Please bring an example. It doesn’t demonstrate clear thinking to run unvalidated models over a 100 years and assign any significance to the endstate. If anything, it demonstrates muddled thinking.
As for the risk assessment: you are right, they are not doing it well (they pull numbers out of thin air).
Do you have evidence that neurotics stay at home a lot? Maybe a peer-reviewed paper?
I note it is our Ms Haight doing this driveling. Ms Haight, all three of the possibilities you cite that may cause reality to lie outside the model forecasts (note the arrogant subordination of reality) are, with 100% certainty in operation. Also, it is totally disengenuous to base forecasts on a decline in aerosols that are not going to happen(China, India, Brazil….) This is a blatant preparation for another failure of models to match reality and is dishonest in that the problem with the models is not only how wrongly they handle aerosols. I think a fine counter strategy for handling this is for a sceptic climatologist to write a forecast of where aerosols will be in 2030. Let me even estimate they will be at least 50% higher – this will be closer to reality than Ms Haight’s and IPCC’s.
I think a “counter” publication timed to come out ahead of IPCC’s AR5 should be prepared dealing with all these issues in anticipation of the sleight of hand IPCC will be publishing. Heartland sounds like a good organization to do this. I would boldly also forecast the flat or declining temps and see whose graph reality’s path chooses. Shame, shame, shame.
LazyTeenager says:
December 23, 2012 at 4:43 pm
“The basic problem is making decent assessments of the evidence and the risks involved takes some insight, clear thinking and courage. Risk assessment is not something people do well. And we can’t afford to stay at home like some neurotic.
=============
What was the problem ?
I forget.
Which is why weather models fail miserably after just a day or two.
Just watch your local weather forecast carefully. As the 3 or 4 day out forecast gets closer, it changes, and sometimes matches reality.