Guest essay by Barry Brill
I’ve had it with tax-funded over-educated fools like Lewanadowsky presuming to categorize me on the basis of his own delusions. And I don’t appreciate Cook & co locating people in a 3% minority on the basis of infantile spin-driven surveys.
The debate over climate change is not, and never has been, divided into two monochromatic tribes who have been brainwashed into unanimity . There are as many different opinions are there are participants in the discussion. (“quot homines tot sententiae” as Christopher Monckton might say).
For those who insist upon a tidy taxonomy, I offer the following first draft:
[Note: this table was updated at request of the author on 10/9/13 to correct decimal point placements in the first three rows]
Whilst there are quite large numbers of people who are unconvinced that human activities can have any material effect on global average temperatures, the “Principia Scientific International” consortium, aka “Slayers of the Sky Dragon” strongly reject the enhanced greenhouse effect theory (AGW) which underpins mainstream climate science.
I’ve appropriated the term “Skeptics” to cover the broad tent of opinion which accepts that there has been some global warming since the LIA, to which human activities would have made some (probably trivial) contribution, through increased GHG emissions.
There is a collective view that average temperatures would increase by about 1°C if atmospheric CO2 concentration were to double from 280ppm (pre-1950), but a wide disparity of views regarding the sign and amplitude of net feedbacks. Most believe warming will be beneficial in the foreseeable future and none believes it poses a significant threat.
Lukewarmers are a subset of skeptics, who believe net feedbacks from warming to be slightly positive.
The ‘Breakthrough’ label is borrowed from the “Breakthrough Institute” but covers all who favour (limited) Government action other than emission-mitigation. This grouping broadly accepts IPCC temperature projections but believes the impacts have been exaggerated. They consider that an element of future threat arises and would combat this by promoting Government-sponsored breakthroughs in energy technology.
The IPCC, which presents “official” or “governmental” views, covers the broad tent which believes AGW is dangerous and should be combated by expensive emission-reduction programs. Its main controversial drivers are a belief in large net feedbacks (high ECS) and the use of unlikely scenarios to supply worst-case impacts.
Alarmists believe that irreversible and abrupt climate change is much more likely than indicated by Table 12.4 of AR5WG1, re-interpret the SREX report, and blame AGW for numerous other current or potential ills. They see climate change as a great moral challenge and believe decarbonization of the global economy is inevitable. This group (along with activists) controls a host of spin levers and secures a hugely disproportionate share of mainstream media attention.
Activists are usually members of groups which make a living from public donations and whose success depends upon maximising public fears. A sizeable proportion are malthusians or doomsayers who are philosophically opposed to economic growth/capitalism. Other members are lobbyists for commercial interests such as suppliers of renewables, carbon traders, consultants, gas producers, re-insurers, foresters and (until recently) bankers. They ignore all scenarios except the most extreme and are now adherents of the new RCP8.5.
The futility of consensus-seekers such as Cook and Oreskes is clear from the fact that the majority of almost all groups accept some 20th century warming (although now aware of “the pause”) as well as AGW theory. The dividing lines lie elsewhere.
The most visible division between climate opinion groups is the value they ascribe to equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS). This, along with the associated transient climate response (TCR), is the key determinant of future temperatures and the extent of future threats, if any.
For 20 years or more, there has been a clear gap between the ‘most likely’ positions held by mainstream (3°C) and skeptic (1°C) groups. But the WG1 report of AR5 largely bridges that gap, and there is widespread expectation that the gap will close further when post-cut-off papers are brought into account.
AR5 recognises that those who calculate ECS at 1.5°C and/or TCR at 1°C are now mainstream scientists. An IPCC scientist modeling RPC2.6 and applying the lower end of the IPCC’s TCR will project warming of 1°C to be reached by about 2083 – of which about 0.8°C has already occurred. That result would not differ from the expectations of Skeptics. With warming much lower than last century, this science, now mainstream, clearly doesn’t justify anxiety or precipitate action.
We are now all part of the orthodoxy, separated only by a tendency to prefer higher or lower segments within the IPCC’s accommodating ranges.
At the Stockholm 4-day meeting of politicians/bureacrats, the AR5 scientists were directed that no ‘likely’ value for ECS/TCR was to be disclosed to the public. But everybody already knows the answer and the Stockholm ‘finger in the dyke’ manoevre will buy very little extra time.
The cut-off date for the 2013 WG1 was in February. A few weeks later[1], The Economist reported two peer-reviewed Norwegian papers, one finding a most likely ECS of 1.9°C and the other a 90% likelihood of a 1.2-3.5°C range. It declared there was “much less controversy about the TCR. Most estimates put it at 1.5°C with a range of 1–2°C”.
In August, the Otto et al paper (whose author list includes several IPCC notables) found that TCR was 1.3°C and ECS was most likely 2°C but the 90% range should should extend down to 1°C. Pat Michaels has listed[2] a raft of other authoritative papers which agree.
It is only a matter of time (and not much time) before the ECS is repositioned to 1-3°C and the TCR to1-2°C. At that point, many more people who are near the upper end of the ‘Sceptics’ grouping with join with those multitudes who are at the lower end of the ‘Mainstream’ grouping to form a new “Orthodox” group.
This merging could be an uncomfortable time for both parties. Kuhn argues in “The Structure of Scientific Revolutions” that rival paradigms are incommensurable—that is, it is not possible to understand one paradigm through the conceptual framework and terminology of another rival paradigm. Will that remain the case when views of TCR are only a fraction of a degree apart?
If further science grants are extended to Lewandowsky and his voyeuristic ilk, they should analyse the new minority groups – the alarmists and activists – not those who are now barely distinguishable from the mainstream.
[1] http://www.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21574461-climate-may-be-heating-up-less-response-greenhouse-gas-emissions
[2] http://www.cato.org/blog/still-another-low-climate-sensitivity-estimate-0

You forgot a category.
Climate Infidels.
That would be me over here in the corner.
An interesting categorization, thank you Mr. Brill.
“In Earth’s natural system, temperature primarily drives atmospheric CO2, not the reverse.”
What category will this fit in, I wonder?
Sensible, informed people already understand this is the case. The evidence is everywhere. See the beautiful 15fps AIRS data animation of global CO2 at
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a003500/a003562/carbonDioxideSequence2002_2008_at15fps.mp4
Human activities (fossil fuels or other) may be driving the increase in atmospheric CO2, but this is essentially irrelevant to climate since ECS is very small, if it exists at all.
Increased atmospheric CO2 just makes little plants happy (and big ones too).
Natural climate variability dwarfs all human impacts on global temperatures (except for course the significant warming bias in ST measurements). 🙂
I suggest this will all become the conventional wisdom in about a decade.
I also expect we will see a cooler, possibly a colder climate by then. Bundle up!
Regards, Allan
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/10/01/dr-kiehls-paradox/#comment-1434087
Willis said at http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/10/01/dr-kiehls-paradox/#more-94963
“I think the whole concept of “climate sensitivity” is meaningless in the context of a naturally thermoregulated system such as the climate.
Hi Willis,
I agree that ”climate sensitivity” is meaningless, but perhaps for different reasons.
The only signal apparent in the modern data record is that dCO2/dt changes very soon AFTER temperature and CO2 LAGS temperature by ~9 months.
http://icecap.us/index.php/go/joes-blog/carbon_dioxide_in_not_the_primary_cause_of_global_warming_the_future_can_no/
Atmospheric CO2 also LAGS temperature in the ice core record by ~800 years on a longer time scale.
So atmospheric CO2 LAGS temperature at all measured time scales.*
So “climate sensitivity”, as used in the climate models cited by the IPCC, assumes that atmospheric CO2 primarily drives temperature, and thus assumes that the future is causing the past. I suggest that this assumption is highly improbable.
Regards, Allan
______
Post Script:
* This does not preclude the possibility that humankind is causing much of the observed increase in atmospheric CO2, not does it preclude the possibility that CO2 is a greenhouse gas that causes some global warming. It does suggest that neither of these phenomenon are catastrophic or even problematic for humanity or the environment..
As regards humanity and the environment, the evidence suggests that both increased atmospheric CO2 and slightly warmer temperatures are beneficial.
Finally, the evidence suggests that natural climate variability is far more significant and dwarfs any manmade global warming, real or imaginary. This has been my reasoned conclusion for the ~three decades that I have studied this subject, and it continues to enable a more rational understanding of Earth’s climate than has been exhibited by the global warming alarmists and the IPCC.
If you really want an accurate understanding of the range of opinions on climate change in a given country, you just take the population and divide by 1. This will then give the full range of opinion. Then again if you want to stick your head in the sand you divide by 2, believers and non believers and claim 99.999% accuracy.
@CodeTech
…Honestly I started out believing and only became skeptical about warming claims when it became obvious that what we were being told would happen just plain didn’t…
I think that an item on ‘How people came to believe or not’ would be a very useful one, now that large numbers of people are likely to be changing their minds…
In my case, I first came across this issue through the Numberwatch and John Daly blogs. The stories there typically depicted disagreements with various authorities, and I will always take those with a pinch of salt, since blogs are a good way of putting just one side of a story out. I was, however, rather sceptical of the alarmist warnings I started to see, since there have been many such mistaken ones in the past – Acid Rain and the like – and it seemed fairly likely that the climate, having been stable for long periods of history, must have some inherent stability features. So I suppose that my views were neutral at that time, but I was interested in the issue.
All that changed in the early 2000s, when Steve McIntyre put up his Climate Audit blog, and I was able to check his claims of (effectively) scientific malpractice against published information in Nature. It seemed very clear that a major mathematical error had been asserted, and that, rather than investigating and correcting if proven, the preferred response from the climate scientists was to run a smear campaign against McIntyre. And that this was being actively supported by the premier scientific publication in the world!
At that point I hardly needed to understand PCA. Something very strange was going on in the scientific establishment. And I watched, open-mouthed, as the whole circus developed from there…
I think any anthropogenic warming isn’t global and the warming effect of CO2 is negligible to the point that its signal is swamped by noise, so where does that put me?
Is there a typo in the table? There seems to be a hole in the spectrum. Shouldn’t the ECS for ‘lukewarmers’ range from 0.1 to 1.2 (not 0.1 to 0.2).
Otherwise anyone, like me, who thinks ECS is in the range 0.2 to 1 is unrepresented.
To name the IPCC as “mainstream” is a mistake. This is the “political agenda group” — as we have just so vividly seen in the writing of the last IPCC summary. The summary is everything — the body of the report means nothing — to the leftest politicians. The IPCC was set up to support an already active political agenda — not give an unbiased opinion. If it deviate from that support the leftest politicians “correct it”.
Now isn’t that really the truth? So get rid of the term “mainstream”. It seems to almost “deliberately” mislead about what the IPCC is really all about. “Political agenda group” or “leftest agenda group” are vividly descriptive of the IPCC’s extant purpose.
Eugene WR Gallun
Solomon Green says:
October 8, 2013 at 4:37 am
“And let us not forget that some scientists believe that agriculture forms a significant part of man’s contribution to rising CO2 levels.http://www.worldwatch.org/agriculture-and-livestock-remain-major-sources-greenhouse-gas-emissions-1
”
That’s not Lester Brown’s “Worldwatch Institute” or is it? Well in that case place yourself in the “snakeoil customer” box.
I would say the skeptic and luke warmer ECS is way too low…and why are they virtually the same?
I agree with whoever said that those two categories look about an order of magnitude too low. I don’t know any lukewarmers who think ECS is near 0C and most skeptics don’t either.
CodeTech says:
October 8, 2013 at 4:15 am
There’s evidence that Global Warming is cyclic and regional.
http://www.science20.com/virtual_worlds/blog/global_warming_really_regional_warming-121820
This to me puts ECS near zero, though if asked a few weeks ago I’d have put it at ~1.0C
You have my appreciation for this excellent condemnation of the idiocy of over-simplistic categorization created by charlatans such as Lewandowsky and Cook and subsequently employed by scoundrels for political purposes.
Very interesting article. I never thought of the various catagories out there, but I do agree with this first draft. Nice job!
At first glance I thought that the ‘Dangerous’ column indicated whether that group should be considered dangerous.
Made total sense 🙂
I’m clearly a Skeptic. Hey, Anthony, how about a poll of WUWT readers on this?
My own opinion is that climate science isn’t even a science.
* You can’t measure the earth’s temperature to within a few tenths of a degree.
* There are little to no physical experiments done in climate science.
* Far too much weight is put on computer models.
* Climate science doesn’t even rest on a foundation of valid physical science. For example, the claim that Venus has such a high temperature due to CO2, when in fact it’s due to atmospheric pressure.
I prefer to call climate science exactly what it is: political driven mumbo jumbo.
I agree with others that the Skeptics and Lukewarmers ECS values seem to be too low.
What people believe is not interesting. What can be proven or disproven, that is interesting.
Barry Brill, in the next draft of your “tidy taxonomy” you might consider a grouping for the “deniers” …. and an additional category denoting the IGW (Interglacial Global Warming).
I am a firm believer in/of the IGW, ….. but a vocal denier of the AGW.
Guest essay by Barry Brill
I’ve had it with tax-funded over-educated fools like Lewanadowsky presuming to categorize me on the basis of his own delusions. And I don’t appreciate Cook & co locating people in a 3% minority on the basis of infantile spin-driven surveys. …
Tell us how how you really feel, Barry! (/only mild sarc)
PS +1 and ditto
.
Aren’t there some who believe that while atmospheric CO2 may effect the atmospheric temperature, we are close to a “saturation point” of atmospheric CO2 and further doublings will not have any noticeable/measurable warming effect?
I also agree with some others who point out that the word “pause” implies continuation. Better to call it what it is – a halt in warming. It can only be characterized as a “pause” if warming resumes.
PSI? Principa?
You failed to realise this was a “false flag” operation?!!
The stupid. It burns.
I guess that means you have no clue as to who the sleepers are…
Brill is just another consensus-seeker without a clue:
Climate Sensitivity vs. Reality
There are no competent climate scientists (just a lot of scientists, and their “defenders”, expostulating on local and transient, not global, atmospheric conditions and a thermodynamically irrelevant radiative transfer theory). There is no valid climate science. It is a failed science, as is the cherished idea of self-correction of science. The system is thoroughly broken, courtesy of incompetent scientists and the political Insane Left.
It might be interesting to add a “vote for it” or “survey” exercise to see where the readership lines up.
Scientifically speaking, AGW is still just conjecture. The “human fingerprint” to warming, though probably there somewhere, is just too small. Consequently, those who loudly proclaim that AGW most certainly does exist, yet can not show it, are simply talking through their hats.
Here’s where I stand: If I turn on a 100W lamp in my house, it will measurably increase the air temperature. But that lamp is not why my house gets hot in mid-July.
Carbon dioxide is that 100W lamp.