Guest essay by Dr. Richard Lindzen
Each IPCC report seems to be required to conclude that the case for an international agreement to curb carbon dioxide has grown stronger. That is to say the IPCC report (and especially the press release accompanying the summary) is a political document, and as George Orwell noted, political language “is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”
With respect to climate, we have had 17 years without warming; all models show greater tropical warming than has been observed since 1978; and arctic sea ice is suddenly showing surprising growth. And yet, as the discrepancies between models and observations increase, the IPCC insists that its confidence in the model predictions is greater than ever.
Referring to the 17 year ‘pause,’ the IPCC allows for two possibilities: that the sensitivity of the climate to increasing greenhouse gases is less than models project and that the heat added by increasing CO2 is ‘hiding’ in the deep ocean. Both possibilities contradict alarming claims.
With low sensitivity, economic analyses suggest that warming under 2C would likely be beneficial to the earth. Heat ‘hiding’ in the deep ocean would mean that current IPCC models fail to describe heat exchange between surface waters and the deep ocean. Such exchanges are essential features of natural climate variability, and all IPCC claims of attribution of warming to mans activities depend on the assumption that the models accurately portray this natural variability.
In attempting to convince the public to accept the need to for the environmental movement’s agenda, continual reference is made to consensus. This is dishonest not because of the absence of a consensus, but because the consensus concerning such things as the existence of irregular (and small compared to normal regional variability) net warming since about 1850, the existence of climate change (which has occurred over the earths entire existence), the fact that added greenhouse gases should have some impact (though small unless the climate system acts so as to greatly amplify this effect)over the past 60 years with little impact before then, and the fact that greenhouse gases have increased over the past 200 years or so, and that their greenhouse impact is already about 80% of what one expects from a doubling of CO2 are all perfectly consistent with there being no serious problem. Even the text of the IPCC Scientific Assessment agrees that catastrophic consequences are highly unlikely, and that connections of warming to extreme weather have not been found. The IPCC iconic statement that there is a high degree of certainty that most of the warming of the past 50 years is due to man’s emissions is, whether true or not, completely consistent with there being no problem. To say that most of a small change is due to man is hardly an argument for the likelihood of large changes.
Carbon restriction policies, to have any effect on climate, would require that the most extreme projections of dangerous climate actually be correct, and would require massive reductions in the use of energy to be universally adopted. There is little question that such reductions would have negative impacts on income, development, the environment, and food availability and cost – especially for the poor. This would clearly be immoral.
By contrast, the reasonable and moral policy would be to foster economic growth, poverty reduction and well being in order that societies be better able to deal with climate change regardless of its origin. Mitigation policies appear to have the opposite effect without significantly reducing the hypothetical risk of any changes in climate. While reducing vulnerability to climate change is a worthy goal, blind support for mitigation measures – regardless of the invalidity of the claims – constitutes what might be called bankrupt morality.
It is not sufficient for actions to artificially fulfill people’s need for transcendent aspirations in order for the actions to be considered moral. Needless to add, support of global warming alarm hardly constitutes intelligent respect for science.
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Richard S. Lindzen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 5th, 2013
dbstealey says:
October 19, 2013 at 5:00 pm
As Mario Lento observes, past rises in CO2 have always followed rises in temperature, on all time scales.
Clearly this has not been true for the last 17 years if the original post is to believed “we have had 17 years without warming”, during which time the CO2 has increased by 30ppm.
Phil., cherry-picking again.
Emphasis on “always”, instead of where it should be, on: “followed”.
Martin Lack: dbstealey laid out some simple 1+1=2 facts that are not argued. Please go do some research and look at ice core sample data overlaid with CO2 levels over time scales and see for yourself and then reassess what you believe. You can either choose to ignore the data, which is what the people controlling your mind want you to do in their quest to create useful idiots, and look foolish or check them out and try to do some basic research.
Your ilk remind me of the people who were so sure others were witches and forced people to be hanged –just like your ilk intends to force people into poverty believing in the tripe of CO2 = CAGW. They had your same conviction, but failed to do the basic research needed to escape ignorance. People like you look for answers that confirm your ignorant rants. You’ve been given the chance to grow and learn. That you choose to be lazy and ignorant is a sign you don’t know 1+1=2.
dbstealey says:
October 19, 2013 at 9:00 pm
Phil., cherry-picking again.
Emphasis on “always”, instead of where it should be, on: “followed”.
You appear to have a reading comprehension problem!
You said:”As Mario Lento observes, past rises in CO2 have always followed rises in temperature, on all time scales.
On the time scale of the last decade the rise in CO2 has not followed a rise in temperature.
@Phil – Uh yes it has. Temperatures did INDEED rise from 1980-1998, and CO2 has risen since.
Phil: I agree with you, that there is not a good correlation in the chaotic system. However, past history shows on all longer time scales where significant changes in climate match CO2, there is a correlation lag. Noise in a system can be misleading, as was the short term rise in temperatures from the 70’s through the 90’s while CO2 was going up.
So now instead of cherry picking, Phil. is nit picking.
http://c3headlines.typepad.com/.a/6a010536b58035970c0177447d843a970d-pi
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/esrlco2/isolate:60/mean:12/scale:0.25/plot/hadcrut3vgl/isolate:60/mean:12/from:1958
http://www.robles-thome.talktalk.net/carbontemp.pdf
http://suyts.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/image264.png
http://www.climate4you.com/images/GISP2%20TemperatureSince10700%20BP%20with%20CO2%20from%20EPICA%20DomeC.gif
dbstealey says:
October 20, 2013 at 8:30 pm
So now instead of cherry picking, Phil. is nit picking.
No just correcting your misleading statements!
http://c3headlines.typepad.com/.a/6a010536b58035970c0177447d843a970d-pi
And your response is to produce graphs with dodgy axes which actually support my point.
You graph shows a period of zero growth in T plotted with consistently growing CO2, different zero points on each axis to make the difference look smaller.
Throwing out random badly drawn graphs with no attempt to explain their relevance is not particularly useful.
“the minority of scientists who accept the assertions of the IPCC “ – Richard S Courtney.
I really cannot be bothered to respond to most of the BS posted by people on this website. However, given Courtney’s expertise as a meteorologist, this must surely be a willfully deceptive statement.
The relevant test is not whether the vast majority of the World’s scientists accept what the IPCC says. The relevant test is whether the vast majority of relevant expertsaccept it. However, this is tautological because the IPCC is an international body tasked by the UN to analyse and summarise the opinion of those experts. Since our governments try very hard to neutralise the impact of IPCC reports, rejecting their findings can only be justified by belief that the genuine experts are simply trying to perpetuate their research funding.
Martin Lack:
I gather that the Lack method of investigation differs from the scientific method of investigation in drawing conclusions by majority vote of Lack-picked experts. Under the scientific method, one draws conclusions through application of logical principles.
That’s right, Terry. If all else fails, resort to mockery. I did not choose the experts; but neither do I reject them simply because they tell me what I don’t want to hear. I am probably more conservative than you are in many respects, but I do not allow my ideological bias to prejudice my attitude towards scientists. My comment was entirely logical; and the truth is you can’t cope with it.
Martin Lack:
There’s no mockery nor need for same, only an accurate description of how the Lack approach to an investigation differs from the scientific approach. The Lack approach allows Lack to disregard proofs, such as mine, of the illogic of arguments by Lack and those of his pseudo-scientific “experts.”
Terry Oldberg: Anyone who can glibly dismiss the IPCC as pseudo-scientific “experts” does not deserve to be taken seriously.
Terry Oldberg,
You are right about Martin Lack. He has no concept of the Scientific Method. He simply does not understand it.
And as for ‘logic’, Mr Lack lacks any understanding of it.