
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.
Hurricane frequency was not predicted to increase.
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch10s10-3-6-3.html
http://www.grida.no/publications/other/ipcc_tar/?src=/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/368.htm
You’ve been at this for at least 6 years and you still get this wrong?.
There’s no long-term drought data at that link. This study should suit your purpose, though.
http://sa.indiaenvironmentportal.org.in/files/file/global%20drought.pdf
I’ve read pretty widely on it in the last few months. Drought monbitoring is extremely difficult for many reasons, one of them being the difficulty in establishing start/end points for drought events. It seems there may be a slight increase in ‘dryness’ (PDSI index) on drought, and either a slight increase in drought area, or no statistically significant trend. That’s the global record. For many already dry regions around the world, the trends are stronger. But that is not unexpected, as it has been predicted that precipitation and flooding will increase in some areas, and drought in others. The value of improved regional forecasting is obvious, and still leaves a lot to be desired.
Spencer is showing 5-year running means for UAH tropical mid-troposphere data against what appear to be surface data (he hasn’t specified when asked). As the years since 2005 have been dominated by la Ninas, the 5-year averages he applies will pull the values downwards in the latter part of the record – satellite data have more pronounced peaks on ENSO events than surface. No wonder his chart produces the greatest model/obs divergence amongst even the qualified skeptics.
Lucia at The Blackboard (skeptic blog, she’s a competent statistician) compares apples with apples – surface data. As most people here know, current temps are at the bottom of the model ensemble envelope.
http://rankexploits.com/musings/2013/models-v-observations-ar5-rcp4-5/
“How do you explain decreasing temperatures in the stratosphere?”
“How do you explain the stratospheric cooling hiatus since circa 1995?”
A negative feedback mechanism loop kicked in, perhaps at just that time? It would also explain the leveling off of surface temperatures a few years later.
If there weren’t mechanisms to normalize our climate, I’m guessing it would have gone rogue billions of years ago, one way or another, killing all life on earth.
But none of this disproves the AGW by CO2 theory. In fact it supports it. It simply suggests the effect of the CO2 on temperature will be much less than we previously believed at least within the concentrations of CO2 we’ve encountered in the recent past (or maybe even over the Earth’s history)
‘And that’s why and how it’s easy to show that the 20% increase in total atmospheric CO2 content has had zero effect on global temperatures during the entire recent period of global warming’
It’s hard to prove a negative. My point is that unless we can prove what would have happened we have no way of knowing whether or not the CO2 had an effect. And even if we did, it could simply be that because of negative feedback loops (see above), the effect was simply to small to measure.
‘Here is but one of the many explanations.’
Many explanations? Really? Sounds to me like darts thrown at a board, hoping something hits. You need to figure out which explanation makes the most sense and make that your hypothesis. Then test it. That’s how science works. But ‘darts at a board’ seems to describe most of the AGW skeptic community.
There is a real big problem with the explanation you linked to. Something to do with apples and oranges or yearly fluctuations vs. long term averages but I’ll let you think it through. All I will say is that this data only proves that stratospheric temperatures are very sensitive to solar fluctuations and that we should be extremely careful interpreting it; a conclusion somewhat favorable to your point of view I suppose, but definitely not a slam dunk.
Tucci78 says:
July 25, 2013 at 8:04 pm
“I don’t doubt that others have sickened of my own story, but I first got wind of this preposterous bogosity by way of a letter from Prof. (Emeritus) Petr Beckmann back in 1981, when he sent along information that’d been pushed to him by a few of his other regular correspondents.”
—
I’m so far behind in reading WUWT that it’s not funny. However, seeing the menition of Beckmann leads me to mention that he, too, was the inspiration for me in his “Access to Energy” newsletter. Someone (not Beckmann) asked me to write a short article, but it turned into a larger one, which Beckmann publised on his dial-up bulletin board. The article (www.fortfreedom.org/s27.htm), and the rest of Beckmann’s “Fort Freedom” is on the Web. That was 1988. Oh, I’m an engineer, too.
Friends:
I am returned from Indonesia, I have yet to unpack, and I am weary from the long journey, but I am writing in response to the email my son repeatedly reported in this thread that he had sent to me.
I am grateful for all the kind comments about me in the thread. They were completely unexpected and they are appreciated. The following is an attempt to address the issues raised in the above posts which mention me.
Firstly, I did try to support WUWT as best I could in many ways over several years. And that support did include slamming trolls. Please note that I welcome dissent because dissent engenders debate, discussion and dialogue from which I learn. Indeed, the great value of WUWT threads is their presentation of a wide diversity of opinions from people with varieties of backgrounds, nationalities, political persuasions, and religious beliefs. But I revile trolls. The purpose of trolls is to prevent debate, discussion and dialogue by deflecting threads from the subject under discussion and, thus, trolls intentionally inhibit any learning about a subject under discussion. The changes to Moderation on WUWT initially led to a great troll infestation which has (fortunately) since assuaged. But I count myself among those who defended against that infestation.
Secondly, and most importantly, I want it to be clearly understood by all that I hold Anthony Watts in the highest regard. He is a gentleman. Also, his achievement in establishing WUWT as the ‘Best Science Blog’ demands respect for his work and ability.
If I have ever said anything which implies I have any lack of respect for Anthony Watts then that was an unintended error for which I wholly apologise.
Thirdly, the facts of my departure from WUWT without making a “Goodbye” are as follows.
I made a mistake (n.b. not on this or any blog) which revealed the email address of Anthony Watts to a person with whom he did not want contact. It was an honest error but it severely offended Anthony Watts who banned me from WUWT for a week. Thus, at that time, I could not say “Goodbye” on WUWT as it seems some would have wished. And I understood the manner of the messages which stated Anthony’s reason for the temporary ban to indicate that he did not value my attempts to support WUWT. Hence, I decided to not return after the ban. Clearly, it would have caused unwarranted and undesirable disturbance if I had posted a “Goodbye” on WUWT after the ban had expired, so I did not. I merely ‘walked quietly into the night’.
Simply, I saw no reason to bother making contributions which were not valued, and I thought it would be unhelpful if I were to say why I was discontinuing my contributions.
Importantly, WUWT is a quality blog. It has no need of any specific contributor and, therefore, I did not (and do not) consider my departure as a discernible loss to WUWT.
In conclusion, I point out that – as I have repeatedly said on WUWT – AGW is a political issue which has used ‘science’ as its excuse. AGW is not – and never has been – a scientific issue (it has no supporti empirical evidence and is refuted by much empirical evidence). Also, AGW is not – and never has been – a ‘left vs right’ issue. AGW is a means to obtain totalitarianism which is desired by a dangerous minority of politicians of all political persuasions. And totalitarianism is opposed by good people of all political persuasions.
Importantly, AGW is dead. It died at Copenhagen in December 2012. It was then defenestrated by failure to provide any way to obtain a successor to the Kyoto Protocol. Now, like a headless chicken that runs around a farmyard, AGW continues to provide the movements of life but it is dead and will soon stop moving.
I put much effort into opposing the political issue of AGW over three decades. Such effort is no longer needed because AGW has been defenestrated. Instead, the need is now to avoid the movements of the deceased from creating harmful bureaucracies before it stops moving.
My interest was always an attempt to defend science from the harm caused by the pseudoscience of AGW. Others are better able to fulfil the present need to oppose creation of the political bureaucracies.
I hope this explanation is an adequate and clear answer to the several posts about me in he above thread.
Richard
REPLY: adequate, ban lifted. I hope you won’t give my personal email address out to people that I don’t want to get invoolved with again. I realize you were coming to my defense, but at the same time that opened up a crapstorm in my inbox that continues today. – Anthony
Hello Richard,
I for one would very much welcome your return to WUWT.
When I published my January 2008 article on icecap.us stating that dCO2/dt varied almost contemporaneously with Lower Tropospheric (LT) temperature, and its integral atmospheric CO2 lagged LT by about 9 months, I was harshly criticized from almost all sides – and you were the notable exception. Thank you very much for that. You provided me with references I was unaware of that predated and supported my hypothesis – that temperature drives CO2 much more than CO2 drives temperature – climate heresy at the time, and still often deemed worthy of death my fire.
Murry Salby’s similar work since 2011 has made my hypo more well-known, and perhaps a tiny bit less scary for the climate mainstream – but Salby is now experiencing his own tribulations.
Sincerely Richard, you have the rare capability to express highly complex issues in a manner that is understandable for most educated people. I found your debate with Ferdinand on the Mass Balance Argument highly worthwhile.
As far as CAGW being truly dead, I wish it were so. CAGW science has been demonstrated to be severely flawed, CAGW proponents have been proven to be charlatans and fraudsters by the Climategate emails, and yet the CAGW ship sails on.
Two factors will ultimately stop the CAGW movement:
1. Energy costs will rise to prohibitively high levels in those countries that foolishly embraced CAGW mania; and
2. Earth will start to get cooler, and everyone will finally realize how badly they have been fooled by CAGW alarmists.
In the meantime, there are interesting scientific and political challenges that remain to be resolved…
Hope you decide to stay around.
Best, Allan