Real climate science the IPCC doesn’t want you to see

Guest essay by Paul Driessen

Once again, it’s the NIPCC versus the IPCC – facts versus gloom-and-doom assertions.

Earth’s average atmospheric temperatures haven’t increased in almost 17 years. It’s been eight years since a Category 3 hurricane hit the United States. Tornado frequency is at a multi-decade low ebb. Droughts are shorter and less extreme than during the Dust Bowl and 1950s. Sea ice is back to normal, after one of the coldest Arctic summers in decades. And sea levels continue to rise at a meager 4-8 inches per century.

Ignoring these facts, President Obama continues to insist that “dangerous” carbon dioxide emissions are causing “unprecedented” global warming, “more extreme” droughts and hurricanes, and rising seas that “threaten” coastal communities. With Congress refusing to enact job-killing taxes on hydrocarbon energy and CO2, his Environmental Protection Agency is preparing to unleash more job-killing carbon dioxide regulations, amid an economy that is already turning full-time jobs into part-time jobs and welfare.

America and the world desperately need some sound science and common sense on climate change.

Responding to the call, the Chicago-based Heartland Institute has just released the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change 2013 report, Climate Change Reconsidered II: Physical Science.

The 1,018-page report convincingly and systematically challenges IPCC claims that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are causing “dangerous” global warming and climate change; that IPCC computer models can be relied on for alarming climate forecasts and scenarios; and that we need to take immediate, drastic action to prevent “unprecedented” climate and weather events that are no more frequent or unusual than what humans have had to adapt to and deal with for thousands of years.

The 14-page NIPCC Summary for Policymakers is easy to digest and should be required reading for legislators, regulators, journalists and anyone interested in climate change science. The summary and seven-chapter report were prepared by 50 climatologists and other scientists from 15 countries, under the direction of lead authors Craig Idso (USA), Robert Carter (Australia) and Fred Singer (USA).

Unfortunately, the “mainstream” media and climate alarm industry have no interest in reading the report, debating its contents or even letting people know it exists. They have staked their credibility, reputations, continued funding and greater control over our lives on perpetuating climate disaster myths. So it is up to the rest of us to ensure that the word gets out – and we do have that long overdue debate on climate.

Perhaps most important, say the NIPCC authors, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has greatly exaggerated the amount of warming that is likely to occur if atmospheric CO2 concentrations were to double, to around 800 ppm (0.08%). In fact, moderate warning up to 2 degrees C (3.6 degrees F) would cause no net harm to the environment or human well-being. Indeed, it would likely be beneficial, lengthening growing seasons and expanding croplands and many wildlife habitats, especially since more carbon dioxide would help plants grow faster and better, even under adverse conditions like pollution, limited water or hgh temperatures. By contrast, even 2 degrees C of cooling could be disastrous for agriculture and efforts to feed growing human populations, without plowing under more habitats.

The NIPCC also lays bare the false IPCC claims that computer models “prove” recent global warming is due to human CO2 emissions, and are able to forecast future global temperatures, climates and events. In reality, the models greatly exaggerate climate sensitivity to carbon dioxide levels; assume all warming since the industrial revolution began are due to human carbon dioxide; input data contaminated by urban heat island effects; and employ simplified configurations of vital drivers of Earth’s climate system (or simply ignorethem), such as solar variations, cosmic ray fluxes, winds, clouds, precipitation, volcanoes, ocean currents and recurrent phenomena like the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (El Nino and La Nina).

In computer lingo, this can be summarized as: Faulty assumptions, faulty data, faulty codes and algorithms, simplistic analytical methodologies and other garbage in – predictive garbage out.

The NIPCC authors conclude that existing climate models “are unable to make accurate projections of climate even ten years ahead, let alone the 100-year period that has been adopted by policy planners. The output of such models should therefore not be used to guide public policy formulation, until they have been validated [by comparison to actual observations] and shown to have predictive value.”

And yet, that is exactly how the deficient models are being used: to devise and justify policies, laws and regulations that stigmatize and penalize hydrocarbon use, promote and subsidize wind and solar energy, and have hugely negative effects on jobs, family energy bills, the overall economy and people’s lives.

Countries are spending countless billions of dollars annually on faulty to fraudulent IPCC climate models and studies that purport to link every adverse event or problem to manmade climate change; subsidized renewable energy programs that displace food crops and kill wildlife; adaptation and mitigation measures against future disasters that exist only in “scenarios” generated by the IPCC’s GIGO computer models; and welfare, food stamp and energy assistance programs for the newly unemployed and impoverished. Equally bad, they are losing tens of billions in royalty, tax and other revenue that they would receive if they were not blocking oil, gas and coal development and use – and destroying manufacturing jobs that depend on cheap, reliable energy, so that companies can compete in international marketplaces.

Meanwhile, a leaked draft of the forthcoming report from the IPCC itself reveals that even its scientists are backtracking from their past dire predictions of planetary disaster. Professor Ross McKitrick, chair of graduate studies at the University of Guelph (Ontario) economics department, put it bluntly in a brilliant Financial Post article. “Everything you need to know about the dilemma the IPCC faces is summed up in one remarkable graph,” he wrote.

The graph dramatically demonstrates that every UN IPCC climate model over the past 22 years (1990-2012) predicted that average global temperatures would be as much as 0.9 degrees C (1.6 degrees F) higher than they actually were! Considering how defective the models are, this is hardly surprising.

And yet, on this basis we are supposed to trash our hydrocarbon-based energy system and economy. It’s absolutely insane!

Two Climate Change Reconsidered briefings will be held next Monday, September 23, in Washington, DC – featuring NIPCC experts. Their title says it all:

“Climate Change Reconsidered: Science the UN will exclude from its next IPCC climate report”

The first will be at noon at the Heritage Foundation’s Allison Auditorium, 214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE and will be co-sponsored by the Heartland Institute. The second will be held at 3:00 pm in room 235 of the Rayburn House Office Building, and will be sponsored by the Cooler Heads Coalition. Hard copies of the NIPCC Summary for Policymakers will be available for all attendees.

The events will be followed by a media tour of the East Coast, featuring Professor Bob Carter and other NIPCC scientists. For further information consult the Heartland Institute and NIPCC websites.

Instead of employing the scientific method to prove or disprove its CO2-driven climate disaster hypothesis, using empirical evidence, the IPCC has routinely assumed its hypothesis is correct – and used selected data that support its claims, while ignoring anything that contradicts them, and refusing to debate any scientists who disagree with them. This can no longer be tolerated. Far too much is at stake.

Climate Change Reconsidered proves there is no “consensus” on dangerous manmade global warming – and raises the debate to a new level. Read it, get the word out about it, watch this Fox News segment, and take action. Your future, and your children’s future, depend on it.

Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.

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September 20, 2013 8:07 pm

jmitchell;
The temperature projections for the next 100 years follow an exponential curve.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
They absolutely do not. Below you will find a link to the United Nations IPCC AR4 WG1 (The Physical Basis) figure 10.26 showing quite conclusively that the curve is logarithmic. If you bother to read the chapter itself, you will find that this is repeated throughout the chapter. The papers and models referenced in the chapter all show a logarithmic relationship. In other words sir, you are making a claim that the most ardent and well published warmist scientists in the world say is false. It is bad enough that you don’t understand skeptic arguments, but you don’t understand the official climate science itself either. Where your fantasies of an exponential curve come from is beyond me, but they certainly don’t originate with science, warmist or skeptic.
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/figure-10-26.html

September 20, 2013 8:15 pm

jmitchell;
with regard to the arctic losing heat as fast as it gains it, you forgot to include surface mixing after the sea ice is melted and stratification of the ocean once the ice begins to return. If what you are saying is true then the sea ice should have recovered to levels closer to the 1980-2000 average
Below you will find links to the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment results that show quite conclusively that the earth suffers a net loss of energy (proper terminology) in the arctic regions and is a net absorber of energy in the tropics. As to what should happen if what I am saying is true, I repeat, once again, the system is more complex than that and pointing out a single correct issue can result in no conclusions regarding the outcome of the system as a whole. Once again, you have over simplified matters in order to fit them to your belief system, the facts aren’t cooperating.
http://eos.atmos.washington.edu/cgi-bin/erbe/disp.pl?net.ann.
http://eos.atmos.washington.edu/erbe/

NZ Willy
September 20, 2013 10:10 pm

I suppose the IPCC scheduled their conference on the 27th September because they expected a new record minimum Arctic ice the week before, so they could trumpet this and then meet as the center of the world’s attention. But instead the Gore effect has struck, a cold arctic summer and the ice has bounced back so nobody is paying attention to the IPCC, poor guys.

Steve P
September 21, 2013 7:37 am

davidmhoffer says:
September 20, 2013 at 10:03 am

ralfellis;
And then he tried to start a war with Syria.
>>>>>>>>>>>
Really? When was this? I recall the red line which turned into a pink line which then turned into a chalk line. Then, although he nonchalantly declared that if Congress didn’t take action on climate change, he’d take action without them.(sic) But a 100,000 people are dead in Syria, many of them civilians murdered en mass by their own government, and suddenly he needs the permission of Congress to take action?
He didn’t try to start a war. He pure bluffed, the Syrians and Russians called him on it and he’s now claiming he won as he makes an agreement with pure evil that will never be enforced.

So David, in your opinion, the President of the United States has the right to impose his will on the internal affairs of a sovereign state simply because the mass media have demonized its president?
There is a 9th Commandment for a very good reason.
Rather than embracing lies from the MSM, and applying your own spin, I suggest you acquaint yourself with the UN’s Friendly Relations Declaration, which reads in part:

[…]
Every State has the duty to refrain in its international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any State, or in any other manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations. Such a threat or use of force constitutes a violation of international law and the Charter of the United Nations and shall never be employed as a means of settling international issues.
A war of aggression constitutes a crime against the peace, for which there is responsibility under international law.
In accordance with the purposes and principles of the United Nations, States have the duty to refrain from propaganda for wars of aggression.
[…]

And beyond that, we do have a law in these United States that only Congress can declare war.

“…fundamental doctrine of the Constitution that the power to declare war is fully and exclusively vested in the legislature.”
–James Madison, 1793

Steve P
September 21, 2013 8:24 am

2625 (XXV). Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations
http://www.un-documents.net/a25r2625.htm

jai mitchell
September 21, 2013 10:26 am

davidmhoffer
temperature projections:
the image you posted shows exactly what I am saying:
If you look at the first half of the CO2 and CH4 emissions profiles for the A1Fl emission scenario (the one that we are currently on) you will see that CO2 and CH4 increase until approximately 1/2 way through the time series. (about 2050) after that, emissions go down.
During that same period the temperature curve for the A1Fl follows closely to an exponential rate of increase, it actually slows down a bit from exponential just before 2050 because of the projected decreases in methane emissions (which we already know won’t happen because of what is going on in the arctic.)
So, look at the first half of the A1Fl temperature curve during the period that CO2 emissions continue to increase at current rates
then compare, does the curve look like a l0garithmic or exponential curve?

jai mitchell
September 21, 2013 10:27 am
jai mitchell
September 21, 2013 10:34 am

davidmhoffer
no one doubts that the earth absorbs energy in the tropics and releases energy in the arctic of the course of the year. That isn’t what we are talking about. What is important is how those things are changing as conditions change.
The facts are clear, as summer arctic ice cover goes away, it not only affects the amount of heat energy absorbed in the arctic during the summer months (which is more than at the tropics during those same months) it also affects precipitation and jet stream paths all over the world.

richardscourtney
September 21, 2013 10:45 am

jai mitchell:
At September 21, 2013 at 10:34 am

The facts are clear, as summer arctic ice cover goes away, it not only affects the amount of heat energy absorbed in the arctic during the summer months (which is more than at the tropics during those same months) it also affects precipitation and jet stream paths all over the world.

Really? “The facts are clear, as summer arctic ice cover goes away,” “it also affects precipitation and jet stream paths all over the world”.
Please provide your clear “facts” which show reduction of ARCTIC ice affects Antarctic precipitation and Southern Hemisphere jet stream paths.
Richard

Salvatore Del Prete
September 21, 2013 11:39 am

thanks for trimming my previous post.

September 21, 2013 2:34 pm

“existing climate models “are unable to make accurate projections of climate even ten years ahead, let alone the 100-year period that has been adopted by policy planners.”
Paul, this is all fine and good, but clinging to CO2 as the central cause of warming, they can still add on a load of feedbacks (arising from human activity) to make them fit. This may fix medium term predictions but with a totally invalid model. They will do this. What is needed is a return to the drawing board. I wish I had been seeing some thoughtful papers examining the Eschenbach Effect – what is basically wrong with the idea (supported by a few billion years of relative temperature stability) that warming or cooling is naturally countered by negative feedbacks, apparently with various lags? What if with ECS even at 10, or warming or cooling being caused by several agencies, the earth simply counters this, largely with the enthalpy of water’s phase changes, clouds, convection, speed up or slowdown of currents, biosphere reactions plus other things on the laundry list you have presented…. The inexorable swings between ice ages and interglacials with temperature amplitude restricted between 283 and 291K (or thereabouts) is the real elephant in the climatology room. Solve this first and then play with the wiggles until heart’s content. We do have a climate. Watching the crash and burn of a totally failed theory without apparent stimulus for investigating a whole new paradigm means there is not a lot of big science being done on either side of the debate.

September 21, 2013 4:14 pm

jai mitchell says:
September 19, 2013 at 3:48 pm
“4. The west is experiencing a drought that started in 2000 and has continued through to today, the Colorado river is now experiencing its lowest flow levels since modern records have begun.
………………………………….
The Colorado flood was 1,870 times more destructive than flooding in previous decades (based on area affected and length of time for high water levels) it has produced an estimate of 2 billion dollars of damage so far, Boulder received an annual amount of rainfall in 1 week.”
Serious drought now followed by serious flash flooding. Who’da thunk? Lake Powell down drastically during recent drought, jumped 2 feet in a day and probably should continue to rise for a week or two and flooding in Nevada last month bumped up Lake Mead. jai, this is how it works in dry country. Note we stopped hearing about losing the snows of Kilimanjaro, the drought in the Sahel – Lake Chad shrinking. The snow is back, the Sahel is greening. Climatology is a young science and even the experts are in a learning exercise it seems. I’m old enough to have taught them some of this stuff having seen all these things both ways – I even climbed Kilimanjaro in the mid 1980s when there was no concern and the no-concern has now returned. I lived in the Red River of the North valley when the flood of the Century hit in 1950 and then had dust in my eyes, ears, and throat in the mid 50s Great Plains drought that was almost as bad as the 1930s drought. Both had brown air filling the skys and soil drifting around fences and behind poles and buildings. I didn’t catch much of the 30s drought but heard plenty later. The experts will eventually discover that a pendulum swings back and forth. Don’t worry about it. It’s been worse.

September 21, 2013 6:47 pm

Steve P says:
September 21, 2013 at 7:37 am
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You entirely missed my point.

September 21, 2013 6:54 pm

jmitchell says:
September 21, 2013 at 10:26 am
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Sigh. I don’t see it as worthwhile to explain how the manner in which you are misreading the graphs. You clearly don’t understand what logarithmic means in this context, and you also don;t understand the science being presented to you by your own side of the argument. The IPCC’s own equation for calculating CO2’s effects is 5.35ln2(c2-c1/c1).
The ln2 in the equation represents natural log 2. If you think otherwise, I suggest you take it up with the IPCC and the various scientists on your side of the fence since it is they who you are claiming are wrong, so go argue with them.

jai mitchell
September 21, 2013 7:32 pm

davidmhoffer
your equation shows the instantaneous temperature change associated with a difference in CO2. I am talking about real world stuff. Your own equations showed that I was right. Just look at the projections of temperature for the RCP 8.5 scenario.
I understand your frustration. Look, it isn’t a big deal, you are right when you look at the instantaneous effects. I am right when you look at real scenarios that include continual buildup over time with a lag effect built in.
here is the temp projection for the new models. so far we are following the worst case scenario, but realize that even that worst case scenario shows massive cuts in CO2 emissions (and methane) beginning in the year 2050
http://www.climateemergencyinstitute.com/uploads/RCP_best_and_worst_CO2_emissions_Temp.png

September 21, 2013 8:34 pm

jmitchell;
I understand your frustration. Look, it isn’t a big deal, you are right when you look at the instantaneous effects. I am right when you look at real scenarios that include continual buildup over time with a lag effect built in.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
A better proof that you do not understand the terminology, the math, or the physics could not be had.

September 21, 2013 9:51 pm

jai mitchell appears to have a screw loose. Probably several.
How can anyone be so completely wrong about everything — and yet manage to pay his cell phone bills, his rent, and his utilities? Maybe he lives in his mom’s basement?
So maybe his mother pays his bills. It’s hard to understand how someone like jai mitchell even functions in modern society. Either that, or he is a self-serving rider on the global gravy train grant-mobile.
I suspect the latter. No human could be that disconnected from reality, and still function in modern society. So he is probably raking in whatever he can by promoting the CAGW scare. At least, that is my analysis. Really, no one can be that scientifically illiterate, and mentally function on a site like this.
Am I right, or am I right?
The odds are that I’m right…
…please debate, if anyone disagrees.

September 21, 2013 10:30 pm

dbstealey says:
September 21, 2013 at 9:51 pm
…please debate, if anyone disagrees.
>>>>.
He’s sort of a curiosity to me. His comments have grown considerably more sophisticated over the course of time since he first made his appearance on this blog, so he is certainly capable of learning. I think the problem is that he doesn’t understand how poor his grasp of the underlying math and physics is, and that the graphs he links to frequently don’t mean what he thinks they mean. Sorta reminds of an inverse version of Myrrh or Greg House.

Jimbo
September 22, 2013 5:07 am

John Finn says:
September 20, 2013 at 1:04 pm
……….Note there is NO statistically significant difference between the 2 trends……

Natural climate oscillations can flip in months. It’s just the weather but makes all the difference. 2013 has been a cold one in the Arctic. Don’t be fooled by trends and go on making assumptions. Now play with this tool and let me know whether any summer year was colder that 2013?
http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/meant80n.uk.php

jai mitchell
September 22, 2013 6:23 pm

dbstealey says:
davidmhoffer says:
haha, you guys are pretty funny. I have shown you to be wrong in your assumptions and beliefs time and time again.
It is a simple thing to check in now and then and debunk your current understanding.
for example. I said, “the dangers are increasing at an exponential level”
to which davidmhoffer says, “its logarithmic, you obviously don’t understand math”
and I say, “real world response to a constant increasing concentration with a 300-year lag time to final equilibrium produces an exponential curve. And then I show the graph for the temperature projects (<a href="http://www.pik-potsdam.de/~mmalte/rcps/graphics/RadiativeForcingRCPs.jpg&quot; shown here in red- for the years 2010 to 2050 when emissions continue to grow with no cuts).
to which dbstealey says: duh he doesn't get it
and davidmhoffer says, yeah, I know.
you guys are so busy obfuscating and giving each other emotional support that you can't face the facts. You don't understand even the most basic realities about what global warming is or how the earth will respond to it, how it has been affected in the past and what the beneficial effects will be when we actually start to cut emissions.
you don't think temperature is projected to increase on an exponential scale for the next 40 years (and longer if we don't start cutting emissions)?
look again at the graph.
http://www.pik-potsdam.de/~mmalte/rcps/graphics/RadiativeForcingRCPs.jpg

September 22, 2013 9:26 pm

jai mitchell cannot face the fact that exactly none of his nutty alarmist pseudo-science predictions have come to pass:
• Arctic ice is well within the constraints of the Null Hypothesis. During the current Holocene, Arctic ice completely disappeared in the past — during times when CO2 was extremely low. And:
• Antarctic ice is still rising, as it has for many decades. And:
• There is no “ocean acidification”, as is proven every day by the fact that the Monterey Bay aquarium’s ocean intake pipeline shows no pH change for decades. And:
• Sea level rise remains on the same long term trend line that it has been on for centuries; nothing either unprecedented or unusual is happening. And:
• The endlessly repeated prediction of a tropospheric hot spot [the so-called “Fingerprint of AGW”] has been totally debunked, via empirical observations. There is no “hot spot”, so the always shifty alarmist crowd now shifts their Belief up to the stratosphere, based on …nothing. And:
• There has now been no global warming for sixteen years, ten months. And…
…well, you get the idea. EVERY alarmist prediction has been thoroughly debunked. Not one computer climate model predicted the halt to global warming. They were all wrong! Yet ‘models’ are all that True Believers like mitchell have — because the real world is serially debunking every alarmist talking point, prediction, and belief.
We cannot reason with a True Believer like jai mitchell, whose only ‘authority’ is based on always-wrong computer models, because his Belief is emotion-based, not fact based. When compared with empirical [real world] evidence, the models are a total fail. But models are all that jai mitchell has. Planet Earth — the ultimate Authority — is debunking jai mitchell and everything he believes in. No wonder he is reduced to vague name-calling. Because the science is certainly not supporting his nutty catastrophic AGW Belief.

Ryan
September 23, 2013 2:45 am

I no longer care what Obama says about anything. He was wildly wrong about Syria to the extent he ended up making even Putin look credible. Why would we begin to imagine he could be right on the climate?

Chris
September 24, 2013 9:18 am

“REPLY: Instead of dismissing it snootily from the halls of academia, why not read it? – Anthony”
Huh? I didn’t “dismiss it snootily,” I asked a valid question. Wondering why a scientific report hasn’t been peer reviewed is “snooty” now? Especially when the promoters of said report are bragging about how it is so much better than actual peer reviewed studies?
What might be snooty is if I point out that the institution responsible for the report you’re touting, the Heartland Institute, is about the least credible source of info I can imagine, having been paid by the tobacco companies in the 90s to lie about the impact of second-hand smoke. Now they are being paid by the oil companies to lie about global warming.
“Unlike the UN’s IPeCaC, the NIPCC’s findings are based upon peer-reviewed literature, not grey area puffery & spurious pal-review that let’s anything pass which supports the Cause.” –milodonharloni
Please explain this claim. The IPCC’s findings are of course based on peer-reviewed literature. The NIPCC’s findings may be based on peer-reviewed literature, but the report itself was not peer-reviewed.
BTW, the Chris who posted on Sept. 20 in response to my comment is not me, but I do agree with him.
REPLY: Heartland offers a second opinion, tough noogies if you don’t like the second opinion, but the story stays. Again, why don’t you read it instead of dismissing it? Clearly you haven’t read one thing. – Anthony

Chris
September 24, 2013 5:42 pm

I tend not to read scientific reports claiming to undermine the scientific consensus unless said reports have been peer reviewed. It’s a time management tool.
I asked a valid question, and it still has not been answered. If the NIPCC is so confident that their methodology is better than the IPCC’s, why did they not submit their findings to the long-established process of peer review?

Steve P
September 25, 2013 10:48 am

David, I’m sure you must realize that if you claim I missed your point, it becomes incumbent on you to clarify that point.