My personal path to Catastrophic AGW skepticism

The Road
Image by Trey Ratcliff via Flickr

Note: if the name below is familiar to you it is because of this article from Monday. This will be a sticky post for a day or two, new stories will appear below this one– Anthony

Guest essay by Jonathan Abbott

Please allow me to recount the details of my personal path to CAGW scepticism. I have never previously found myself at odds with the scientific mainstream and at times it feels quite odd. Perhaps others here have similar experiences? I am curious to know how fellow-readers came to their current views. If some have gone from genuine scepticism to accepting CAGW, I would find that especially fascinating.

My own story begins at school in England in the early 80s. Between playing with Bunsen burners and iron filings, I remember being told that some scientists predicted that we would soon enter a new ice age. This sounded quite exciting but I never really thought it would happen; I was too young then to have seen any significant change in the world around me and it all seemed rather far-fetched. A nuclear war seemed far more likely. Soon enough the whole scare melted away.

I grew up into a graduate engineer with an interest in most branches of science but especially physics. I read the usual books by Sagan, Feynman and later Dawkins (whose The Ancestor’s Tale I simply can’t recommend highly enough). I also dipped into philosophy via Bertrand Russell. I like to think this reading helped build upon the basic capabilities for critical thinking my education had provided.

I suppose it was in the early 90s that I first noticed predictions of global warming and the associated dire warnings of calamities to come. Some of these emanated from the Met Office and so I knew should be treated with a pinch of salt but other sources included NASA, which I then personally still very much respected; despite the space shuttle evidently being the wrong concept poorly executed, their basic scientific expertise seemed unquestionable. In general I was looking forward to the warmer climate predicted for the UK, and assumed that the overall effects for the globe wouldn’t necessarily all be bad.

Now, being English I knew all about the vagaries of the weather, but the warnings about CAGW always seemed to be made in the most certain terms. Was it really possible to predict the climate so assuredly? The global climate must be an extremely complex system, and very chaotic. I had recently heard about financial institutions that were spending vast sums of money and picking the very best maths and programming graduates, but still were unable to predict the movements of financial markets with any confidence. Predicting changes to the climate must be at least as difficult, surely? I bet myself climate scientists weren’t being recruited with the sort of signing-on bonuses dangled by Wall Street. I also thought back to the ice age scare, which was not presented as an absolute certainty. Why the unequivocal certainty now that we would only see warming, and to dangerous levels? It all started to sound implausible.

The whole thing also seemed uncertain on the simple grounds of common sense. Could mankind really force such a fundamental change in our environment, and so quickly? I understood that ice ages could come and go with extreme rapidity, and that following the scare of my childhood, no one seriously claimed to be able to predict them. So in terms of previous natural variability, CAGW was demonstrably minor in scale. It seemed obvious that if natural variability suddenly switched to a period of cooling, there would be no CAGW no matter what the effect of mankind on the atmosphere. Even more fundamentally, how could anyone really be certain that the warming then taking place wasn’t just natural variability anyway? The reports I read assured me it wasn’t, but rarely in enough detail to allow me to decide whether I agreed with the data or not.

The other thing that really got me thinking was seeing the sort of people that would appear on television, proselyting about the coming tragedy that it would imminently become too late to prevent. Whether from charities, pressure groups or the UN, I knew I had heard their strident and political use of language, and their determination to be part of the Great Crusade to Save the World before. These were the CND campaigners, class war agitators and useful fools for communism in a new guise. I suddenly realised that after the end of the Cold War, rather than slinking off in embarrassed fashion to do something useful, they had latched onto a new cause. The suggested remedies I heard them espouse were always socialist in approach, requiring the installation of supra-national bodies, always taking a top-down approach and furiously spending other peoples’ money. They were clearly eager participants in an endless bureaucratic jamboree.

Now don’t get me wrong: a scientific theory is correct or not regardless of who supports it. But recognising the most vocal proponents of CAGW for what they were set alarm bells ringing, and made me want to investigate further. I had always been somewhat sympathetic towards Friends of the Earth but much less so towards Greenpeace, by that time obviously a front for luddite socialism and basically shamanistic in outlook. I had deep personal concerns about the environment, having seen reports of terrible industrial pollution in developing countries and the former Eastern Bloc. I had also sailed across the Atlantic twice in a small yacht, and seen for myself floating plastic debris hundreds of miles from land. (I also saw an ‘eco warrior’ yacht in Antigua, lived on by a crusading hippy and daubed with environmental slogans. It was poorly maintained and leaked far more oil into the water than any other boat present.)

So I was quite passionate about the environment, but my focus was on keeping it clean and safe for all life to live in. I wanted people to stop overfishing and manage fish stocks sensibly, I wanted agricultural land to produce the best long-term yields possible, to provide enough food without encroaching on wilderness and wild spaces. I wanted people everywhere to have clean air to breathe and water to drink. I had hoped that the CAGW crusade would somehow also lead to more urgent progress in fighting pollution, and the other environmental issues I cared about. If anything it did the reverse. Why the absolute fixation on reducing CO2 emissions, why was it taken for granted that this was the only way to proceed? Where was the public debate about the balance between prevention and mitigation? The CAGW protagonists always came up with solutions that were anti-industrial, anti-development and always, always required more public money. Where was the encouragement for inventors and entrepreneurs to discover and develop new technologies? And most of all, why oh why not spend some of the huge sums of money thrown at CO2 instead on getting effective pollution controls enacted in developing countries?

It had become quite clear to me that the BBC and similar media organisations would never even discuss whether the science underpinning CAGW was really robust. It had simply become a truism. An occasional doubting voice would be offered a sliver of airtime in the interests of supposed impartiality, but a proponent of CAGW would always be allowed the (much longer) last word. But, if NASA kept having to adjust their course calculations as the Voyager probes entered the outer reaches of the solar system (an utterly trivial problem compared to the complexities of the global climate), how could the science possibly be settled as claimed? Surely the great joy of science is in admitting ignorance, in taking a finely honed theory and sharpening it still further, or even better in realising a fundamental mistake and stepping aside onto a new path? The claimed certainty itself seemed unscientific.

Then in 2007 I saw a trailer on television for the forthcoming documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle. I watched it excitedly, for here finally were people publicly addressing the science and the data, but drawing alternative conclusions to the mainstream. There was none of the usual hand-waving and appeals to trust the experts, who magically seemed to be the only doubt-free scientists in recorded history. The backlash against the program told its own story too, being mainly outraged appeals to authority and conscience.

Having recently become a regular user of the internet, I started digging around looking for more information and so, soon after he started it, I found Warren Meyer’s excellent web site climate-skeptic.com. Oh, the joy! Here were links to data I could see and evaluate myself; here was critical dissection of reports and papers accepted elsewhere without demur. From there, I moved onto WUWT, Bishop Hill, Climate Audit and all the other sites that have become part of my daily round of the internet whenever I have access. However late to the party compared with many regulars at WUWT, I could now see fully both sides of the argument.

When the Climategate emails were released, some further scales fell from my eyes. I had hitherto assumed that most of the most prominent scientists supporting CAGW were well intentioned but wrong, akin to those opposing the theory of continental drift. I have taken part in many lengthy email exchanges concerning technically complex projects, and instantly recognised familiar methods used by those playing the political and bureaucratic game, for whom the data is infinitely malleable in order to reach a pre-determined goal. I had fought against this kind of factual distortion myself.

Now at this point, I am sure some (perhaps many?) readers are thinking, ‘Great, an inside view of how someone becomes a believer in a conspiracy theory, perhaps I’ll base a research paper on this idiot’. My response is that like most people I have at times stumbled upon the real conspiracy theory nuts lurking on the internet. But on WUWT and other CAGW-sceptic sites criticism of the position of the website founder isn’t just tolerated but often encouraged. ‘Prove us wrong! Please! It would be fascinating!’ There are many articles and views published on WUWT that I treat with suspicion, or even downright disagree with, but it is all stimulating and usually well argued. Plus, I am an experienced professional engineer and know what real science looks like, and when people are misusing it as a smokescreen. Neil Armstrong was a great man, and most certainly did land on the moon. Right or wrong, WUWT is a site that considers real scientific issues.

So I now find myself wondering where we go from here. The global climate will continue to change, as it has always done, and although I tend to expect some cooling I am pretty agnostic about it. Nature will assuredly do its own thing. The CAGW scare is in the process of burning out, but I do not expect an outright or imminent collapse. I hope to see the deliberate manipulators of data punished, but doubt very much it will ever come to that. Whatever happens next, it will undoubtedly be interesting, and stimulate much discussion and widely varying viewpoints. This is good news, because it means that we are back to doing science.

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Jimbo
July 26, 2013 5:00 am

It is the coldest summer in the Arctic since 1958. See the current 2013 graph compared to 1979 (DMI screenshots), its colder in 2013! 1979 was the maximum sea ice extent on the record. How is it jai mitchell? You really need to look at other factors aside from hot air. 🙂
http://notrickszone.com/2013/07/22/winter-to-make-an-early-return-to-the-arctic-forecast-shows/

July 26, 2013 5:01 am

P.S. I have to give credit to the Chiefio for al the effort he put into analysing surface station data round the world. It was a revelation to me. I particularly remember one thread entitled “Andes? What Andes?” He really has been an inspiration. I hope he is OK. He has gone quiet lately.

July 26, 2013 5:01 am

Very interesting thread. I’d suggest having a permanent link to it from the main site.
This has been done before, at Jeff Id’s Air Vent blog (click on “Reader Background”) and at Judith Curry’s (click on “Denizens”). But those are both from 2010 so it’s good to have an update for new recruits.
My story:- knew little about it but thought most of it was correct until about 2007 when I started looking into it. Shocked by aggressive unscientific approach, obvious political agenda, bias and groupthink, and exaggeration from climate scientists. From my own research I knew about the perils of over-reliance on computer models of such complex systems, and that the results of such models usually just reflected the assumptions built into them by the model builders. I also knew about natural irregular oscillations in chaotic systems, so the climate science idea of everything being a response to a forcing sounded wrong. And I grew up during the 70s ice age scare. Views haven’t changed much since then. Climategate just made me more confident that I was right, and I switched to using my real name after that.

Bruce Cobb
July 26, 2013 5:13 am

Up until late in 2007, I simply assumed it was true, and was only vaguely aware that there was another side to the story by virtue of the occasional letter to the editor, by what I assumed to be a crank. So, I thought I would respond to one of those letters, and thus was forced to go digging for more information. That was my downfall. The more I dug, the more I found, to my horror, that there were serious flaws in the CAGW argument, and that much of what was being reported in the news was based on hype and disinformation. This put me at odds with family and friends, who were (and still are) firm Believers. Since I only ever assumed, and never argued in favor of CAGW, I was never an actual Believer. Believers have a psychological need which is fulfilled by their belief, and thus are able to discount any and all facts or srguments which might undermine it.

Rich
July 26, 2013 5:15 am

You all went to school in the 50’s? Heh, lots of oldies here, eh? When I left school about 9 years ago, I didn’t even know about global warming – it wasn’t covered in any of my subjects at St Augustine’s Catholic College in Trowbridge England – either it was considered pseudoscience by my physics teachers or it hadn’t yet penetrated public consciousness and school curriculum, I don’t know. I first became aware of global warming I think about 4 years after leaving school and I became a sceptic immediately when realising back then that it only comprised 0.003% of the atmosphere and that CO2 was accumulating in the atmosphere at the rate of 2ppmv/year (one molecule in every 500,000 non-CO2 molecules spread evenly though out the atmosphere). Upon that revelation, no other discourse or research was needed, as the idea that an increase one molecule in 500,000 could be responsible for increasingly hot summers was obviously ludicrous, and the product of deranged thinking. Besides the whole charade has ‘Political Scam’ written all over it.

chipstero7
July 26, 2013 5:18 am

You all went to school in the 50’s? Heh, lots of oldies here, eh? When I left school about 9 years ago, I didn’t even know about global warming – it wasn’t covered in any of my subjects at St Augustine’s Catholic College in Trowbridge England – either it was considered pseudoscience by my physics teachers or it hadn’t yet penetrated public consciousness and school curriculum, I don’t know. I first became aware of global warming I think about 4 years after leaving school and I became a sceptic immediately when realising back then that it only comprised 0.0038% of the atmosphere and that CO2 was accumulating in the atmosphere at the rate of 2ppmv/year (one molecule in every 500,000 non-CO2 molecules spread evenly though out the atmosphere). Upon that revelation, no other discourse or research was needed, as the idea that an increase one molecule in 500,000 could be responsible for increasingly hot summers was obviously ludicrous, and the product of deranged thinking. Besides, the whole charade had ‘Political Scam’ written all over it.

AndyG55
July 26, 2013 5:21 am

Gees, lots of engineers. Another one here, university degrees in both Science (maths major) and Engineering (Civil, Hons-1).
Admission time. (embarrassment)
A while ago, I was with a group called Climate Action Newcastle. We even did a big “people” sign on the beach. I have also given a presentation at NCCARF http://www.nccarf.edu.au
I vaguely remember asking a couple of questions of one of the NCCARF guys and getting some not very good answers.
Then a friend (a well know sceptic who shall remain nameless), asked if I believed in the CO2 stuff, and suggested I visit a couple of sites, (this one among them) and actually do some research instead of just going with the consensus.
The rest is obvious, as it should be to anyone who opens their mind to reality. (take the hint, jai !)
And it still annoys me that I was initially taken in by the lie.

Jimbo
July 26, 2013 5:22 am

jai mitchell,
Below is a paper out earlier this year showing Greenland warmer in the 1930s and 1400s (I had shown you others in an earlier comment).
Below that are past and current aerial photos showing faster glacier melt in Greenland in the 1930s than now. There is nothing unusual going on in Greenland right now, stop thrashing about jai.
2013 paper shows Greenland was warmer during the 1930’s and 1400’s than the present
http://www.clim-past.net/9/583/2013/cp-9-583-2013.html
Paper published in Nature Geoscience
2013: OLD PHOTOS: Greenland’s glacial ice was melting faster 80 years ago than today
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2152004/Lost-photos-prove-Greenlands-ice-melting-FASTER-80-years-ago-today.html

mike fowle
July 26, 2013 5:22 am

I was a huge admirer of Greenpeace and passionately believed that we were running out of oil in the 70s. I can understand the fervour of today’s Greens. Michael Crichton was an influence, although I bore in mind that he was novelist and not a scientist. Fred Hoyle was also an influence, especially ironically his novel The Black Cloud which contains the great exchange that in science the only test is prediction. I was puzzled therefore by all these references to peer-review. What did that prove? Like some of the above, Phil Jones’ response to a request for data appalled me, as did Climategate. Nobody who defends those scientists can expect to be taken seriously. I am a layman, who tries to understand the science arguments. I am much more convinced by evidence and reasoned argument than by bluster and passion, and by scientists who act in an ethical manner. (I find Greenpeace merely tiresome nowadays.)

AndyG55
July 26, 2013 5:22 am

marchesarosa says:
“ Every sane person is obligated to deny arrant nonsense.”
Well said , sir ! :-)))

Patrick
July 26, 2013 5:24 am

“jai mitchell says:
July 25, 2013 at 12:02 pm
It turns out that, when looking at reliable historic temperatures we are already above the global level of both the medieval warming and the roman warming period and are basically tied with the Holocene Optimum.”
Garbage! We didn’t have properly reliable temperature records before the satellite era.

July 26, 2013 5:30 am

jai mitchell says:
July 25, 2013 at 3:16 pm
I can see how you are all following the path of Goebbels , “it doesn’t matter what you say as long as you say it again. . .and again and again.
where adults who don’t have the time and/or energy capability to research the lies you promote over and over again will then teach it to their children. Trying to convince them that they have nothing to fear.
That global warming isn’t a threat.
simply a pathetic existence if you ask me.

Dbstealey forgot to add a section about your projection. Since the traits you try to accuse others of are the sins of you and your cabal.
But notice how you changed the subject as well. Ever so slightly. But very significantly. The difference between the religious faithful (and their newly converted acolytes of a mere 2 years) and the heretical scientists is not “Global Warming”. It is AGW – the A standing for the influence of Man (capital M, one N).
With a thermometer and lots of time, you can measure the temperature of the planet, and even plot it on a graph. But you cannot determine why the temperature is what it is. That requires the scientific method. A testable hypothesis, and the disproving of the null hypothesis.
Jai, Children believe because they have no knowledge. As they age, they acquire knowledge and this leads to wisdom (in about 50-70 years). Adults are supposed to be acquiring knowledge, and leaving their childhood faith at home. So why are you acting like a child? You are now stomping your foot and getting upset that adults do not believe like children, like you do. Why is it so important to you that everyone shares a faith in the unknown, instead of acting like rational thinking humans and searching out answers to the unknowns?
Yes, yours is a pathetic existence. You are not Peter Pan, but you strive to be like him. But you lost your childhood innocence a long time ago.

July 26, 2013 5:50 am

It seems there are some common themes in these testimonies. Generally, the people here can be split into one or more of these types:
1) A science or engineering background that led to the confidence to research the science itself and found that there wasn’t any evidence at all. Just wiggle fitting of unvalidated computer models.
2) People who could tell that honest-brokers don’t act like Michael Mann or Phil Jones. The rudeness of the alarmist blogs has been picked out, especially Real Climate.
3) Old-timers who’ve seen apocalyptic warnings before (“the ice age is coming” as the Clash sang) and need a very high level of proof before accepting this one.
4) People who just doubted for no apparent reason because they just doubt every new claim. These people are very rare but are featured on this thread.
5) Right-wingers who didn’t like the collectivist policies promoted in the name of AGW.
The problem for me is with option 5. Just because the solutions being promoted are disliked by you, me or anyone has no effect on the Global Climate.
Also, I quite like the left-wing solutions such as the idea of free bus travel for everyone.
It’s the right-wing solutions like privately owned windmills on the moneyed class’s land that offends me.

Stacey
July 26, 2013 5:53 am

A clip from Al Gore’s comedic film was shown on BBC and immediately I knew it was wrong, just intuitively. From memory I read Robert Carter’s piece he did for The Telegraph and I subsequently read a paper which his report was based on. From there John Daly, Watts Climate Audit and the rest is history.
I did read the UN Real Climate Blog and not only were they rude they spoke like a know it all from the sixth form talking to a new boy?
Thank you Sir for your story. And thank goodness Al Gore invented the internet, otherwise we would be none the wiser 🙂

klem
July 26, 2013 5:56 am

I used to be a vocal climate alarmist. In 2007 the UN IPCC released the AR4 Report to much media fanfare, there were 200 journalists from all over the world attending the release. The IPCC claimed that AGW was unequivocal and the time for discussion was over, it was time for action. I cheered! Then I downloaded the report and read it myself. I was stunned. Their conclusions were not unequivocal at all; it was a series of one equivocation after another. The conclusions were distorted, the science was weak and to conclude that humans were responsible for climate change represented a huge leap of faith. I concluded that they had lied to the world’s journalists, and they had lied to me. Then I realized that the report that I had downloaded was only the Summary Report, the real report would not be finished for another 6 months. I could not help but ask, how could they release the summary for a report that had not yet been completed?
It took me at least 6 months of research and wrestling with my conscience before I realized I had crossed to the dark side, the skeptic side. When one gives up ones own religious belief I suppose it usually takes more than 6 months, but that’s what I required in this case. Thank God for that AR4 report, otherwise I would be an alarmist to this day.

July 26, 2013 6:11 am

marchesarosa says:
“ Every sane person is obligated to deny arrant nonsense.”
Well said , sir ! :-)))
——–
It’s “madam”, AndyG55! There are SOME female sceptics, you know.

Alan D McIntire
July 26, 2013 6:14 am

When I read about the “faint young sun” paradox, one argument why the earth wasn’t a frozen iceball 3 billion years ago was that the atmosphere was about twice as dense as it is now. I wanted some quantitave formula so I could actually do some ballpark computations, like one can do with falling baseballs in physics calculatoins, trajectories between planets using Kepler’s
T^2 = k R^3, etc.
I did google searches on global climate, and like eco-geek, Jon, and marchesarosa,, I finally
arrived at
http://www.john-daly.com/miniwarm.htm
at John Daly’s site. The 387 watts is a little off for exactly 15C , but the general argument still holds.
From links at John Daly’s site, I ultimately found links to “Climate Audit” and Anthony Watts’ site.

Hum
July 26, 2013 6:20 am

Jai and other AGW alarmists are very selective with their proxies to infer temps are warmer now. They love to use tree rings, Hey Jai, walk up the mountain a bit and tell use what the tree line says instead. The tree line shows stumps from the medival days where trees grew that can’t grow now because it is still too cold. Look at Greenland, you use ice cores and other proxies, but fail to notice that ancient villages and farm steads are there in the permafrost where it is too cold today for agriculture, but 1,000 years ago they were farming. Look at the Alps where as glaciers are finally melting to the point where they reveal ancient mines and farmsteads that prove it was warmer 1,000 and 2,000 years ago because it is still too clod and glacier covered today to farm.
You take as fact a scientists interpretation of a proxy from 1,000 years ago, but you totally close your eyes to the archeological record right in front of you that proves that the intrepretation of those proxies is wrong. Interesting! In this caseI would term you unscientific.

klem
July 26, 2013 6:21 am

C.M. Carmichael says: For me, it was because the “hippies” were so sure about CAGW it was reflexive to doubt. Then Lenin’s birthday became Earth Day, no more doubt.”
I had no idea Earth Day was Lenin’s birthday. Wikipedia says “subbotnik instituted by Lenin in 1920 as days on which people would have to do community service, which typically consisted in removing rubbish from public property and collecting recyclable material. Subbotniks were also imposed on other countries within the compass of Soviet power, including Eastern Europe, and at the height of its power the Soviet Union established a nation-wide subbotnik to be celebrated on Lenin’s birthday, April 22, which had been proclaimed a national holiday celebrating communism by Nikita Khrushchev in 1955.”
Wow, I’d say Lenin started Earth Day.

Patrick
July 26, 2013 6:22 am

“M Courtney says:
July 26, 2013 at 5:50 am
Also, I quite like the left-wing solutions such as the idea of free bus travel for everyone.”
Although a nice idea there is a problem with that, and that is it is only free to the USER! Busses need to be bought, serviced, fuelled and last but not least driven by someone. If we look at Brisbane, Australia, bus routes have had massive, dedicated, transport corridors built, they are really impressive and work. But at what cost and to whom? I don’t have information on Brisbane, but we can safely assume taxpayers are in the mix there for funding! These all have elastic costs associated with them especially fuel and labour costs. I can’t quote buss costs to the city here in Sydney, Australia, but I can quote rail. The price of a ticket is subsidised to the tune of ~75% by state tax/rate payers.
There is no such thing as a free lunch!

Rob Dawg
July 26, 2013 6:23 am

My trip was much shorter than most. Living in one of the most moderate climate zones on the planet, coastal southern California, I noticed the temperature was consistently plus/minus 15 degrees F day to day depending on whether the sun was up. If 100% sun made 30 degrees difference I figured I could be generous with assumptions. A 0.1% change in irradiance half of the day is a 0.05% change in TSI. 0.05% of 30 degrees is 0.015 degrees per day or 5 degrees per year. Even climate buffering the change 20:1 (on top of previous assumptions) and a list of climate drivers can be made:
1. The Sun
2. Miscellaneous within error and variation

Gilles B
July 26, 2013 6:25 am

Having left school at 16 with zero knowledge in sciences , I was trusting the “experts” and the msm thinking these must be balanced in their reporting. I saw the inconvenient truth and believed everything. In 2007, a friend told me that he had seen a debate on the French tv involving skeptics versus “experts” and that the skeptical explanation seemed more believable to him, I looked at him like something was seriously wrong with him.
Being involved with logging in the Amazon forest, I was very frustrated with the amount of disinformation that circulates and trying to do something about it I came across Dr Patrick Moore web site and book. It felt good to see that a so called “expert” would not be on the alarmist side for once. That encouraged me to look for myself about the “global warming” theory and here I am, wuwt and others have opened my mind and are part of my daily routine now and I learn about sciences so much through the posts and comments.

bean
July 26, 2013 6:26 am

When the weather models begin to provide accurate weather forecasts, I’ll begin to believe some of the climate models could be correct. So far, I’m not impressed with the accuracy of weather models ashore or afloat that have infinitely more accurate data to work with.

RockyRoad
July 26, 2013 6:37 am

klem, you didnt’ cross “to the dark side” as you assert–you have been enlightened. It is the nefarious Warmistas with their political agenda that are the “dark side”. Insidiously dark.
Truth illuminates.

van Loon
July 26, 2013 6:39 am

Sounds like me, except I never believed in either the ice age nor the warming.

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