Claim: 2°C temperature increase will make people angry

From Princeton University (with help from Berkeley)

Cool heads likely won’t prevail in a hotter, wetter world

Should climate change trigger the upsurge in heat and rainfall that scientists predict, people may face a threat just as perilous and volatile as extreme weather — each other.

Researchers from Princeton University and the University of California-Berkeley report in the journal Science that even slight spikes in temperature and precipitation have greatly increased the risk of personal violence and social upheaval throughout human history. Projected onto an Earth that is expected to warm by 2 degrees Celsius by 2050, the authors suggest that more human conflict is a likely outcome of climate change.

Caption: Researchers from Princeton University and the University of California-Berkeley suggest that more human conflict is a likely outcome of climate change. The researchers found that even one standard-deviation shift — the amount of change from the local norm — in temperature and precipitation greatly increase the risk of personal violence and social upheaval. Climate-change models predict an average of 2 to 4 standard-deviation shifts in global climate conditions by 2050 (above), with 4 representing the greatest change in normal conditions. Credit: Image by Science/AAAS

The researchers analyzed 60 studies from a number of disciplines — including archaeology, criminology, economics and psychology — that have explored the connection between weather and violence in various parts of the world from about 10,000 BCE to the present day. During an 18-month period, the Princeton-Berkeley researchers reviewed those studies’ data — and often re-crunched raw numbers — to calculate the risk that violence would rise under hotter and wetter conditions.

They found that while climate is not the sole or primary cause of violence, it undeniably exacerbates existing social and interpersonal tension in all societies, regardless of wealth or stability. They found that 1 standard-deviation shift — the amount of change from the local norm — in heat or rainfall boosts the risk of a riot, civil war or ethnic conflict by an average of 14 percent. There is a 4 percent chance of a similarly sized upward creep in heat or rain sparking person-on-person violence such as rape, murder and assault. The researchers report that climate-change models predict an average of 2 to 4 standard-deviation shifts in global climate conditions by 2050.

Establishing a correlation between violence and climate change now allows policymakers and researchers to examine what causes it and how to intervene, said lead author Solomon Hsiang, who conducted the work as a postdoctoral research associate in the Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy in Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.

IMAGE: The researchers analyzed 60 studies from a number of disciplines that have explored the connection between weather and violence in various parts of the world, and throughout human history. A…

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“We think that by collecting all the research together now, we’re pretty clearly establishing that there is a causal relationship between the climate and human conflict,” Hsiang said. “People have been skeptical up to now of an individual study here or there. But considering the body of work together, we can now show that these patterns are extremely general. It’s more of the rule than the exception.

“Whether there is a relationship between climate and conflict is not the question anymore. We now want to understand what’s causing it,” Hsiang said. “Once we understand what causes this correlation we can think about designing effective policies or institutions to manage or interrupt the link between climate and conflict.”

The existing research had essentially shown an overall link between climate conditions and these conflicts, but that link needed to be extracted from reams of figures from various disciplines in order for the research to reach general conclusions, Hsiang said. Hsiang, who is now an assistant professor at Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public Policy, worked with co-first author Marshall Burke, a doctoral candidate in Berkeley’s Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, and Edward Miguel, the Oxfam Professor of Environmental and Resource Economics at Berkeley.

“We attained a huge amount of the data that was available and we used the same method on all of the data so that we could directly compare studies,” Hsiang said. “Once we did that, we saw that all of the results were actually highly consistent — previously they just weren’t being analyzed in a consistent way.”

The researchers examined three categories of conflict: “personal violence and crime,” which includes murder, assault, rape and domestic violence; “intergroup violence and political instability,” such as civil wars, riots, ethnic violence and land invasions; and “institutional breakdowns,” which are abrupt and major changes in governing institutions or, in extreme cases, the collapse of entire civilizations.

Extreme climatic conditions amplified violence in all three categories, regardless of geography, societal wealth or the time in history. An aberrant climate coincided with incidents including spikes in domestic violence in India and Australia; increased assaults and murders in the United States and Tanzania; ethnic violence in Europe and South Asia; land invasions in Brazil; police using force in the Netherlands; civil conflicts throughout the tropics; the collapse of ancient empires; and wars and displacement in Middle-Ages Europe.

“We find the same pattern over and over again, regardless of whether we look at data from Brazil, Somalia, China or the United States,” Miguel said. “We often think of modern society as largely independent of the environment, due to technological advances, but our findings challenge that notion. The climate appears to be a critical factor sustaining peace and wellbeing across human societies.”

And the climate does not have to deviate much to upset that peace and wellbeing, Burke said. The 1 standard-deviation shift he and his co-authors uncovered equates to a seemingly paltry change in weather: it’s roughly equal to warming an African country by 0.35°C, or by 0.63°F, for an entire year, or warming a county in the United States by 2.9°C, or by 5.2°F, for a given month.

“These are pretty moderate changes, but they have a sizable impact on those societies,” Burke said. Many global climate models project global temperature increases of at least 2 degrees Celsius over the next several decades, which, when combined with the Princeton-Berkeley findings, suggest that warming at that level could increase the risk of civil war in many countries by more than 50 percent, the researchers said.

The factors that interact with climate to produce chaos and discord are varied. A popular theory is that drought and flooding cripple an economy, especially one based on agriculture or that is already weak. When people look for someone to blame, governmental leaders have a target on their backs, as do any people with whom there is existing tension, such as an ethnic minority or a migrant group from stricken hinterlands.

But sometimes heat just makes people more aggressive. The researchers found that personal violence was far more influenced by a leap in temperature. Hsiang and his colleagues cite studies that equate excessive heat with spikes of violence in the United States and other stable, wealthy countries. For example, a 1994 study found that two groups of police officers undergoing the exact same simulation training were more likely to draw their weapons if the room was uncomfortably warm.

“There’s a large amount of evidence that environmental conditions actually change a person’s perception of their own condition, or they also can change the likelihood of people using violence or aggressive action to accomplish some goal,” Hsiang said.

“Our study is not saying that climate is the only cause of conflict, and there’s no conflict that we think should be wholly attributed to some specific climatic event,” he said. “Every conflict has roots in interpersonal and intergroup relations. What we’re trying to point out is that climate is one of the critical factors the affect how things escalate, and if they escalate to the point of violence.”

###

The paper, “Quantifying the influence of climate on human conflict,” was published in Science Aug. 1. The study was funded by a Princeton University postdoctoral fellowship in science, technology and environmental policy, a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation, and the Oxfam Faculty Chair in Environmental and Resource Economics at Berkeley.

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Ilma
August 2, 2013 2:13 am

Funny how these studies always assume a change (in temp) is in the upwards direction! What about the downward.
As a friend has commented…
“If my history serves me correctly, it was just a tad violent during the Dark Ages (cooling after the Roman Warm Period) and the Hundred Years War which accompanied the start of the Little Ice Age after the Medieval Warm period. Cooling reduces harvests and causes misery, disease and violence as people raid others’ food etc. The latter part of the LIA was only redeemed by the introduction of crop rotation and a more organised use of agriculture.”

Firey
August 2, 2013 2:14 am

These are temperatures from down-under on 2nd August 2013 in celsius. There are more than 2 degree variations on a daily basis. Those in Darwin, Singapore & Port Moresby most be mighty angry already. Willis Eschenbach has spent some time in the Pacific (as I have). He will know how hot it can be all year round, both hot & humid with verdant growth. It is very lush. in these places & by & large people are friendly. If the modelling is correct, in 2050 Sydney will only be as hot as Brisbane is today. I doubt if that would be the cause of an aggressive outbreak.
Temp Celsius 2 Aug 2013 2050
City Min Max Min Max
Sydney 9 18 11 20
Melbourne6 15 8 17
Brisbane 11 23 13 25
Perth 7 23 9 25
Adelaide 10 16 12 18
Canberra 1 11 3 13
Hobart 3 12 5 14
Darwin 17 33 19 35
Port Moresby 25 27 27 29
Singapore 17 29 19 31

BrianMcL
August 2, 2013 2:52 am

Interesting study but you can’t help but wonder about their selection criteria. For example, the English Civil War happened during the little ice age, as did both of the Jacobite uprisings. All of these had significant social impacts, to say the least. From that point of view therefore cold must cause societal dislocation as well.
Also, it’s probably worth noting the growth of learning and education which occurred across Europe between the 9th and 12th centuries, or the MWP as it’s also known. This might mean that warmer temperatures bring benefiAlso, it’s probably worth noting the growth of learning and education which occurrAlso, it’s probably worth noting the growth of learning and education which occurred across Europe between the 9th and 12th centuries, or the MWP as it’s also known. This might mean that warmer temperatures bring benefiAlso, it’s probably worth noting the growth of learning and education which occurred

BrianMcL
August 2, 2013 3:08 am

Apologies for my previous post. I’m in an area with a very weak mobile signal and it got corrupted.
The point I was trying to make is that since the growth of learning ocurred during the MWP and that there were several near collapses in social order during the LIA it does make me wonder what criteria were required for inclusion in the study.
As a long time student of medieval and middle age Scotland I’ve no doubt that the changing climate over the last 2,000 years has had massive impacts on society and the level of violence and war.
However, from my perspective there was more good stuff happening when the climate was warmer and more bad stuff happening when it got colder.
Having said all that I’ve got serious doubts about any of the conclusions of this study and I’d love to see what Wilis would make of it.

August 2, 2013 5:00 am

Just some statistics from the Chicago police blotters and NOAA temperature records:
Five day July 4 Weekend 2012: Record temperature of 102 degrees F. 11 homicides
Four day July 4 Weekend 2013: Temperature: 83 degrees F. 11 homicides.
Four day July 4 Weekend 2009: Temperature: 82 degrees F. Record 17 homicides.
If climate is a factor, then we should expect more homicides as global cooling sets in.

Gail Combs
August 2, 2013 5:48 am

Gary Pearse says: August 1, 2013 at 6:20 pm
….So are you all going to keep voting in progressives until progress finally stops?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Unfortunately 1/2 the population has an IQ below 100 and as co-founder (Fabian) George Bernard Shaw said:
“A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.”
Of course Paul has no idea of what good old George and his buddies has planned for him once in control. The intent is shown in the Fabian stained-glass window designed by Shaw in 1910. Prime minister Tony Blair officially unveiled and installed the window at the London School Of Economics on Thursday 20 April 2006. It shows Sidney Webb and Shaw striking the Earth with sledge hammers. Across the top of the window is printed:
Dear love, couldst thou and I with fate conspire
To grasp this sorry scheme of things entire,
Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
Remould it nearer to the heart’s desire!

Above the Earth is the Fabian shield with the Fabian Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
Announcement by LSE: http://www.lse.ac.uk/newsAndMedia/news/archives/2006/FabianWindow.aspx
As if the window is not bad enough you have Shaw’s words too.

The moment we face it frankly we are driven to the conclusion that the community has a right to put a price on the right to live in it … If people are fit to live, let them live under decent human conditions. If they are not fit to live, kill them in a decent human way. Is it any wonder that some of us are driven to prescribe the lethal chamber as the solution for the hard cases which are at present made the excuse for dragging all the other cases down to their level, and the only solution that will create a sense of full social responsibility in modern populations?”
Source: George Bernard Shaw, Prefaces (London: Constable
and Co., 1934), p. 296. link

This is not isolated statement. This statement and many others were made over decades consistently and repetitively by Shaw and others. Think of the Eugenics Movement and John Holdren, Obama’s Science Czar who says: Forced abortions and mass sterilization [are] needed to save the planet and who wants to Use ‘Free Market’ to ‘De-Develop the United States’ So that is what Clinton’s World Trade Organization “Free Market” was about and what the current negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership is about. Even Huff’nPuff is having problems with it.
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is potentially the biggest so-called “free trade” agreement in the world. And you’ve probably never heard about it.
TPP negotiations are being held in secret. Right now. Behind closed doors. Even the U.S. Congress, which is granted sole authority under the Constitution to debate and approve trade deals, has been cut out. But big business has a giant seat at the negotiating table….

VERIFICATION:
The Guardian: Eugenics: the skeleton that rattles loudest in the left’s closet
The eugenics movement Britain wants to forget
How eugenics poisoned the welfare state: A century ago many leading leftists subscribed to the vile pseudo-science of eugenics, writes Dennis Sewell, and the influence of that thinking can still be seen today
And yes you can still see it happening today:
Newborn DNA Banking (USA)
DNA from millions of newborn babies is secretly stored on NHS database (UK)
BBC News – UK government backs three-person IVF (Creating Babies With DNA From 3 Parents)
Sick children are being placed on a controversial end-of-life “pathway” previously only thought to have been used for elderly and terminally-ill adult patients
Why is Royal Society hosting a pro-eugenics conference? (2004)
March 25, 2013: Challenging West Virginia’s Forced Sterilization Law
24,000 die in winter as fuel poverty climbs: New figures show more pensioners have to choose between heating and eating
Of course the UK is doing something about Fuel Poverty…
Government takes 1m out of fuel poverty – by changing the rules” Campaigners criticised the Government after ministers took 1m people out of fuel poverty – by changing the way the measure is calculated.
The UK is following in Clinton’s foot steps. In dealing with the unemployment statistics that would show his ‘Free Trade’ policies and his wooing of China, worsened conditions employment conditions in the USA. [t]he Clinton administration dismissed to the non-reporting netherworld about five million discouraged workers who had been so categorized for more than a year…. The Clinton administration also reduced monthly household sampling from 60,000 to about 50,000, eliminating significant surveying in the inner cities. Despite claims of corrective statistical adjustments, reported unemployment among people of color declined sharply, and the piggybacked poverty survey showed a remarkable reversal in decades of worsening poverty trends.
The more I learn the sicker at heart I get.

August 2, 2013 6:08 am

Gail COmbs says:
August 1, 2013 at 6:14 pm
“Dr. R.J. Rummel has spent his career assembling data on collective violence and war. He has found another cause. The real killer is GOVERNMENT –”
I was a civil servant in Nigeria in the 60s (Geological Survey of Nigeria) and was witness to tribal riots, bodies in the street and all that led up to a civil war that killed over 3 million people, many of whom died of starvation because of the conflict. It was basically Sandhurst-trained colonels who engineered a few military coups (killing each other) and then doing battle with their own – a Christian military government killing Muslim northerners (where I was stationed). The US Navy (7th fleet?) appeared offshore and chartered Transworld Airlines planes flew in a scooped up US citizens, technical aid folks, teachers, etc. Canada’s response? The Canadian High Commissioner came up to Jos, invited the handful of Canadians there for cocktails and hors d’oeuvres and told us to stick by our posts (very British you know) and don’t interfere in anything – gee and I wanted to go out and wave a protest placard at the army and fire shots in the air! Two weeks before this, I (as a senior civil servant and along with other civil servants) was commanded by the then General Ironsi, Head of State and Chief of Staff of the Nigerian Armed Forces (he decorated himself with all these titles) for attendance upon his arrival at the airport followed by cocktails and hors d’oeuvres at the same establishment – thanks but I had already filled up on fingernails. Two weeks later, he was beheaded at another such gathering in Ibadan. A year later, I got out there with my wife and two children on one of the first BOAC flights to land at Kano during a lull in the war. I’ve reflected a great deal over the years on the purpose of a military in African countries – they seldom fight anyone other than their own citizens.

August 2, 2013 6:10 am

Re “thanks but I had already filled up on fingernails” – I did of course attend but wasnt too hungry.

John Eliyas
August 2, 2013 7:36 am

Leave it to an economist to think he is a criminologist, let alone a climate scientist. Studies like this have been going on for 50 years. While in graduate school we looked at studies trying to correlate heat waves and violence, know what we found? When it gets warm people commit crime, up to a point and then it tapers off. Why? Cold weather is not conducive to the hassle of leaving shelter to commit said crime. When it warms up, people come out of their “caves” and commit crimes. If it gets really really hot, like soome of the NY heatwaves of the 70’s crime goes down as people become lethargic and don’t want the hassle.

August 2, 2013 7:45 am

let me guess: this paper was peer-reviewed?

mkelly
August 2, 2013 7:59 am

Well this report explains the Vikings.

son of mulder
August 2, 2013 8:04 am

I’ve tested this hypothesis countless times in my life. In the winter when I walk into my warmer house I don’t get angry. In summer when I walk from my house into a warmer outside i don’t get angry. They hypothesis has failed.

Gail Combs
August 2, 2013 8:24 am

Gary Pearse says: ….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Thanks for an eyewitness view.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Perhaps since the Luddites want to wipe out Modern Western Civilization we should revert to the ancient Celtic traditions.

Bog bodies are kings sacrificed by Celts says expert
An expert has stated that the latest bog body found in Ireland has proven that belief that the Celts ritually sacrificed their kings to the Gods.
The body also proves they underwent horrible deaths, if the times turned bad under their reign.

The latest Iron Age bog body dating back to at least 2,000 BC was discovered near Portlaoise in the Irish midlands by an alert bog worker and it bears the same hallmarks of ritual torture that two other famous bodies have.
Ned Kelly, keeper of antiquities at the National Museum of Ireland told the Irish Examiner that a clear pattern has emerged in each case….

So maybe we do need to return to worship of GAIA along with the sacrifice of out political leaders if they screw up. It might actually keep them a bit more honest.
…. Now what was that you said about rethinking your position on Modern Western Civilization Mr. Lamy? /sarc

Admad
August 2, 2013 8:37 am

That’s just weather.

Tim Clark
August 2, 2013 9:10 am

{ OldWeirdHarold says:
August 1, 2013 at 4:08 pm
So the solution to climate change is anger management? }
I don’t know if that’s the solution, but it’s the only way to cope with the loonies.

Tim Clark
August 2, 2013 9:16 am

{ David L. Hagen says:
August 1, 2013 at 3:58 pm
Liberals migrate from cold to warm states
U.S. Population Shift Accelerates to South, West States, 2010 Census Shows
The Northeast grew 3.2 percent and the Midwest 3.9 percent; that was far outstripped by a 13.8 percent gain in the West and 14.3 percent in the South. By such empirical evidence, cold northeast liberals pragmatically prefer moving to conservative southern States even though they are 10 C warmer, compared to the IPCC’s alarmist warnings of 2 C warming by 2050 (compared to 0.7C warming from 1900 to 2000). }
Excellent. Your hypothesis is cold northeast liberals cause crime when warmed.
I concur.

mkelly
August 2, 2013 10:09 am

Doing a small amount of internet research we find that when comparing Dallas and Chicago
Dallas violent crime per 100000 6.82
Chicago ” ” ” ” 10.33
August average temperature for Dallas 96 F
Chicago 81 F.
The report is highly suspect.

Tom in Florida
August 2, 2013 10:25 am

mkelly says:
August 2, 2013 at 10:09 am
“Doing a small amount of internet research we find that when comparing Dallas and Chicago
Dallas violent crime per 100000 6.82
Chicago ” ” ” ” 10.33
August average temperature for Dallas 96 F
Chicago 81 F.
The report is highly suspect.”
Yeah, BUT
Chicago has the strictest gun laws in the Country so when you consider that………. oops.

Editor
August 2, 2013 11:40 am

New Scientist took that story and came up with the headline

Climate change may make civil wars much more common

see http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23975-climate-change-may-make-civil-wars-much-more-common.html which says in part:

As the mercury rises, so too will a tide of human violence, according to a new analysis that puts a fresh spin on the phrase “dangerous climate change”.
Indeed, if societies respond to future warming in the same way as they have responded to historical surges in temperature, the frequency of civil wars could increase by more than 50 per cent by the middle of the century.
But this provocative attempt to quantify the influence of climate on human conflict is itself setting off clashes among researchers who study the issue. “I would take their projections with a huge grain of salt,” says Halvard Buhaug of the Peace Research Institute Oslo in Norway.

Editor
August 2, 2013 12:01 pm

Luther Wu et al say:
August 1, 2013 at 2:18 pm

* Try using Alt0176 to get the degree sign °
That is on a MS-Windows keyboard; hold Alt down, type the four digits.
======================================================================
Thanks for the tip. I can’t guarantee I’ll remember the next time I want to make a “°” sign.
__________________________
Alternatively on a Windows keyboard… using numeric keypad- hold Alt, type on pad- 248, like so; 32°
[Reply: As usual, it’s even easier on a Mac: Option + zero gives you “º” ~mod]

Or, just use “°” or cut and paste from my Guide to WUWT.
~mod – my editor is showing what looks like an underlined degree sign. That’s a completely different symbol, the masculine ordinal indicator, but displays as a degree sign in some fonts. We had a big discussion at work about it when someone with a Mac sent Email with that in it. I think Apple got it wrong.
http://info.moravia.com/blog/bid/257228/Always-beware-the-small-and-good-masculine-ordinal-indicator-Why-automatic-checks-matter
Note that says the degree sign is Alt+0176 I don’t know what that 248 thing is about, my Linux system doesn’t use those for the most part. Hmm, xterm displays something that looks good for Alt+0, “°”. Yep, real degree sign. Doesn’t work in emacs though.

george e. smith
August 2, 2013 1:15 pm

“””””……JimS says:
August 1, 2013 at 4:34 pm
I am an historian, and from my studies of climate change throughout history, the exact opposite is what I have found…….”””””
Izzat also ESL status ? I’m trying to determine, if you are an istorian, or a Historian; or perhaps just a typologist ??

August 2, 2013 2:03 pm

I’m going to get angrier if the temperature gets two degrees warmer? well, when I went on that trip to the tropics, I was pretty relaxed – not angry.

Chris R.
August 2, 2013 3:02 pm

Okay, so we have the lead author being “…Solomon Hsiang, who conducted the work as a postdoctoral research associate in the Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy in Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.”
Okay, a POSTDOC in the Woody Woo school (as those who went to Princeton refer
to it) is the lead author? No full professor wanting to grab the credit? That, all
by itself, shows this study is the brain child of this postdoc. If they had real
confidence in it, the full professors listed as co-authors would have been lining up
to grab the credit, not as co-authors, but as the principal
author. This way, when this study is discredited, they can just shrug their
shoulders and say, “Oh, well, Dr. Hsiang made all the errors…you know how
postdocs are.”

Jer0me
August 2, 2013 5:06 pm

Lewis P Buckingham says:
August 1, 2013 at 2:17 pm

Well at least it goes with the Australian ‘angry weather’ narrative that we are supposed to be experiencing.
The East Coast has had some delightful winter weather, warmer than average, but people don’t seem to be fighting.
I am a bit worried though.People from the Southern states will be migrating to Queensland in the sub tropical to tropical zone at Christmas.
That’s well over a 2 degree centigrade jump.
If they read this study they should all be going for a fight, not to relax.
But then,what would they know?

And you are more than welcome (bring dollars!)
Heck, I’ll even invite a limited number to a pool party (bring beer!)
Optional punch-up in the top paddock for those too hot and aggressive (bring … dunno for that one …)

Jer0me
August 2, 2013 5:13 pm

Tom in Florida says:
August 2, 2013 at 10:25 am

Chicago has the strictest gun laws in the Country so when you consider that………. oops.

I’ll never forget a wonderful sign I saw at Chicago airport. It read:
“All handguns must be unloaded before passing through the scanner”
I could not stop laughing, but foolishly forgot to photograph it, and it has since been removed. I assume it was for Air Marshalls (a valuable deterrent IMO), but it was hilarious to see, especially in Chicago.