'Let’s face it. The climate has never been more boring.'

Image from an essay by Cliff Mass on “boring weather” Click

Why you won’t see headlines as climate science enters the doldrums

Guest post by Dr. Robert G. Brown, Physics Department of Duke University (elevated from a  comment on this thread: RSS Reaches Santer’s 17 Years)

This (17 years) is a non-event, just as 15 and 16 years were non-events. Non-events do not make headlines. Other non-events of the year are one of the fewest numbers of tornadoes (especially when corrected for under-reporting in the radar-free past) in at least the recent past (if not the remote past), the lowest number of Atlantic hurricanes since I was 2 years old (I’m 58), the continuation of the longest stretch in recorded history without a category 3 or higher hurricane making landfall in the US (in fact, I don’t recall there being a category 3 hurricane in the North Atlantic this year, although one of the ones that spun out far from land might have gotten there for a few hours).

We (the world) didn’t have an unusual number of floods, we don’t seem to have any major droughts going on, total polar ice is unremarkable, arctic ice bottomed out well within the tolerances slowly being established by its absurdly short baseline, antarctic ice set a maximum record (but just barely, hardly newsworthy) in ITS absurdly short baseline, the LTT temperatures were downright boring, and in spite of the absurdly large spikes in GASTA in GISS vs HADCRUT4 on a so-called “temperature anomaly” relative to a GAST baseline nobody can measure to within a whole degree centigrade, neither one of them did more than bounce around in near-neutral, however much the “trend” in GISS is amplified every second or third month by its extra-high endpoint.

The US spent months of the summer setting cold temperature records, but still, aside from making the summer remarkably pleasant in an anecdotal sort of way (the kind you tell your grandchildren when they experience a more extreme weather, “Eh, sonny, I remember the summer of ’13, aye, that was a good one, gentle as a virgin’s kiss outdoors it was…”) it was unremarked on at the time.

Let’s face it. The climate has never been more boring. Even the weather blogs trying to toe the party line and promote public panic — I mean “awareness” — of global warming are reduced to reporting one of GISS’s excessive spikes as being “the fourth warmest September on record” while quietly neglecting the fact that in HADCRUT4, RSS and UAH it was nothing of the sort and while even more quietly neglecting the fact that if one goes back a few months the report might have been that June was the fourth coldest in 20 years. Reduced to reporting a carefully cherry-picked fourth warmest event? Ho hum.

So, good luck in getting any news agency to report reaching 17 years in any or all of the indices — this isn’t news, it is anti-news. It is old. It is boring.

It is also irrelevant. If GASTA (Global Average Surface Temperature Anomaly) stubbornly refuses to rise for five more years, stretching the interval out to 20 to 22 years in a way that nobody can ignore, does this really disprove GW, AGW, or CAGW? It does not. The only thing that will disprove GW or CGW is reaching 2100 without a climate catastrophe and without significantly more warming or with net cooling. A demonstrated total climate sensitivity of zero beats all predictions or argument. The “A”(nthropogenic) part is actually easier to prove or disprove in a contingent sort of way, although it will probably take decades to do so. Contingent because if there is no observed GW at all, AGW seems difficult to prove. But since we are in the part of the periodic climate cycle observed over the last 150 years where the climate remains neutral to cools around an overall warming trend, we might well see neutral to very slow warming even if AGW is correct, if there is an anthropogenic component to the long term trend and oscillation that we can observe but not really explain over the last 150 years.

The one thing the 33 years of satellite measurements and increasingly precise surface temperature measurements have been able to prove is the one thing that the 17 year interval is truly relevant to. The GCMs used to predict CAGW suck. The GCMs in CMIP5 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project) that contribute to the conclusions of AR5 are almost without exception terrible predictors of the Earth’s actual climate.

This conclusion is unavoidable. Even if they all cannot be rejected at the “95% confidence level”, almost none of them are close to predicting even GASTA alone, let alone RSS/UAH, global rainfall, frequency and violence of storms, etc. As we leave 2013′s hurricane season behind with almost no chance for an Atlantic storm this year, which GCM predicted the paucity of hurricanes and tornadoes over the last few years? Where are the droughts and floods? Which GCMs actually got the temperature distribution right (when they didn’t get the average or average anomaly right, the answer is almost certainly “none of them”)?

We are told “Catastrophic warming is coming, it is just around the corner”. We ask why and without exception we are told “Because the 30 or more GCMs we carefully built in the 1990′s in response to the CAGW threat and normalized with the warming data from the 70′s and 80′s (not to mention Hansen’s initial model report from the late 1980′s) all say so.” We then quite reasonably ask what they predicted for the last 20 years, and of course we can see that they all did indeed predict shockingly rapid warming. We then compare this to what actually happened, which is almost no warming over the last 20 years — a single warming pulse associated with the 1997/1998 ENSO event and then neutral ever since. We note that the warmest of the models that are still included in the CMIP5 data because nobody ever rejects a model just because it doesn’t work are a whopping 0.5 to 0.6C warmer than reality — they are the models with a total sensitivity of 5 or 6 C by 2100, so they have to warm at 0.5C a decade to get there.

This really is shocking. Shockingly bad science, shockingly dishonest political manipulation of policy makers on the part of scientists who participated in the creation of AR5 and permitted their names to give the report its weight.

As I’ve pointed out once and will point out again, by failing to be honest in AR5, by removing words that expressed honest doubt from the earlier draft and redrawing the figure to obscure the GCM failure, the IPCC has now gone far out on a limb that will end the career of many scientists and politicians before AR6 if there is no significant warming by that time. Not only significant warming, but a resumption of some sort of regular upslope to GASTA. Even if there is another ENSO-related burst of warming (which I’m sure is what they are hoping for) if it is only 0.2 C — and it is difficult to imagine that it could be much more given evidence from the past — it will barely suffice to restore the warming trend to 0.1 C/decade give or take a hair, roughly half of the lowest estimates of climate sensitivity. And they run the very real risk of getting to 2020 with GASTA basically the same as it was in 2000.

At that time, the hottest GCMs are going to be almost a full degree C too hot compared to reality. The people who contribute to the IPCC reports aren’t fools — most of them know perfectly well that the high sensitivity models are trash at this point, and they know equally well that it will no longer be possible to conceal this fact even from ignorant politicians by 2020 if there is no statistically significant warming by that time. Because it is an open secret that there was a cover-up that deliberately concealed this, effectively lying to policy makers, there will be a public scandal. Heads will roll.

The only way the IPCC can possibly avoid this as it proceeds is to issue a correction to AR5. Go back in and eliminate the GCMs with absurdly high sensitivity, the ones that obviously fail a hypothesis test when compared to the actual climate record. Personally I would advise eliminating at a much more generous level than 95% — a complete idiot with experience in computational modeling could go into these models and figure out what is wrong, given an additional 16 years of data — simply retune the models until they can manage both the warming of the late 20th century AND the warming hiatus since. Models for which no tuning can reproduce the actual past go into the dustbin, period — ones that can manage it will all have a vastly lowered climate sensitivity and will produce a much larger fraction of warming from “natural” variability, and less from CO_2. Finally, insist that all models use common numbers for things like CO_2 and aerosol contributions instead of individually tuning the largely cancelling contributions to reproduce an interpolated temperature change.

I’m guessing that over half of the participating models will simply go away at this point. They can then reconstruct figure 1.4 in the SPM, note the good news that even though the remaining models will all still predict more warming than actually occurred the warming that they project by 2100 will be between 0.5 and 1.5 C, not 2.5 C or more. This is almost precisely in line with what was observed in the 19th and 20th century without CO_2, and will grant a far larger role to natural variability (and hence a smaller one to CO_2).

Why should they do this, even though it is near-suicide to do it at this point? Because it is sure thing suicide not to do it. Because it is the right thing to do. Because they have a queasy feeling in their tum-tums every time they look at figure 1.4 in the AR5 SPM and realize that the dent that they made in the car isn’t going to go away and Dad is going to be even more pissed when he finds out if they lie about it. After all, everybody knows that the worst models in CMIP5 are wrong at this point. The people that wrote the models and ran the models, they know that their models are broken at this point. It’s not like the failure of a model is difficult to detect or something.

If it were “just science”, all of this would have been happening in the literature for some time anyway. People would jump all over models that fail, because in the usual realm of science there is little money on the line and because trial and error and try try again is the normal order of business and what keeps you getting paid. Not so in climate science. Here it is all political. Hundreds of billions of dollars and the directed energy of the entire global civilization ride on the numbers. Here there is a real risk of congressional hearings where a flinty-eyed committee chair grills you by showing you GCM curves selected from figure 1.4 of the AR5 SPM and asks you “Sir, at what point was it obvious to you that this curve was not a good predictor of the future climate?” Because if the answer was “2012″ — and given the REMOVED TEXT from the earlier draft of AR5 everybody knows that it was 2012 at the latest — that’s contempt of congress right there, given that AR5 directs billions of dollars in federal research money and hundreds of billions of dollars of subsidies and misdirected governmental energy at all levels from federal to state to local to personal.

We pay, pay, and pay again in the form of taxes, higher energy prices, neglect of competing services and goals — and what we pay pales to nothing compared to the terrible price paid by the third world for the amelioration of hypothetical CAGW. Millions of people die every year from respiratory diseases alone brought about because they are still cooking on animal dung and charcoal because coal burning power plants are now “unclean” and have artificially inflated price tags at every level.

If CAGW is a true hypothesis, then maybe — just maybe — it is worth sacrificing all of these people, most of them children under five, on the altar to expiate our carbon sins. But given this sort of ongoing catastrophe, this ongoing moral price we pay on the basis of the “projections” of the GCMs, how great is the obligation of the scientists who wrote AR5 towards “mere honesty”, to put down not their own beliefs but to put down the objective support for their beliefs given the data?

For some time the data has been sufficient to prove that the tools that claim the biggest, scariest AGW are simply incorrect, broken, in error, failed. Yet their predictions are still included in AR5 because without them, the “catastrophe” disappears and we are forced to rebalance the cost of gradual accommodation of the warming while continuing to civilize and raise the standard of living of the third world against the ongoing catastrophe of adopting measures that everybody knows will not prevent the catastrophe anyway (if the extreme models are correct) at the cost of a hundred million or more lives and unspeakable poverty, disease, and human misery perpetuated for decades along the way.

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taxed
November 4, 2013 1:02 pm

l don’t think we should be so quick we welcome boring weather.
Because its when the weather does become stable with little in the way of change over the longer term, is just when you do get extremes in climate.
lts what causes deserts to form, and l also think its what causes ice ages to form when the weather gets locked into a certain pattern

clipe
November 4, 2013 1:03 pm

clipe says:
November 4, 2013 at 12:37 pm
Grrr… Forgot to link.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/03/13/climategate-3-0-has-occurred-the-password-has-been-released/

taxed
November 4, 2013 1:04 pm

Sorry should have been a “to” not “we”.

November 4, 2013 1:05 pm

Walt The Physicist says at November 4, 2013 at 12:54 pm…
Fraud is too strong a word. The framework of the “science” is determined by the field. Climatology uses models to overcome short-term chaos and understand the long-term trend. It may be a daft idea but that is the idea of the field. How can they stop?
Think about that, how can they stop? How many academic subjects have been abandoned? Any?
Lots of new departments have been created in the arts and sciences but none have died out.
That is none have ceased operating in academia. They may be dead.

SandyInLimousin
November 4, 2013 1:10 pm

@waterside
Dull is very proud of its twinning with Boring.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dull_and_Boring.JPG
The builders of the power line are also proud of progress.
http://www.bbusl.com/2013/10/balfour-beatty-reaches-half-way-milestone-on-sses-beauly-denny/

elftone
November 4, 2013 1:11 pm

ian005 says:
November 4, 2013 at 10:18 am
…” It is olds. It is boring.” [Not really sure what the first sentence means – is it some idiom?]

“Olds” as opposed to “News”.

November 4, 2013 1:18 pm

I have been reading comments here for a long time. I have made only a few comments myself but have read many. There is this one name, “Steven Mosher”, that shows up a lot and I am beginning to think it is a parody account. Does anyone know if this is a real fellow and not a regular playing games just to keep the comments section lively?
TIA, Mark
[Reply: I have met Steven several times. We disagree on some things, but he is certainly real, and a nice guy in person. — mod.]

November 4, 2013 1:22 pm

M Courtney:
re your post at November 4, 2013 at 1:00 pm.
No, for example, your list ignores my reply to Steven Mosher at November 4, 2013 at 11:41 am provided evidence and argument that he made an assertion which is plain wrong. This link jumps to it
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/11/04/lets-face-it-the-climate-has-never-been-more-boring/#comment-1465952
Dad

chris y
November 4, 2013 1:23 pm

As Steve McIntyre recently disclosed, Guy Callendar’s 1937 climate model is currently beating the pants off most of the AR5 GCM’s.
http://climateaudit.org/2013/07/26/guy-callendar-vs-the-gcms/
Callendar published his results in 1938.
Callendar wasn’t a scientist, climate or otherwise. He wasn’t even an engineer. He was a steam technologist.
Callendar had to rely on a Royal Society Fellow (Dr. Dobson) to grease the skids for publishing in a scientific journal.
By a wonderful coincidence, this year is the dodranscentennial anniversary of the publication of Callendar’s climate model.
Hopefully SOTA GCM’s can match the performance of Callendar’s model before it’s centennial anniversary in 2038.
🙂

November 4, 2013 1:23 pm

markstoval Steven is a real person. I have seen a photograph of him.

Reg Nelson
November 4, 2013 1:26 pm


He is a real person. Here’s a link to the paper he contributed to (that I mentioned in a previous post).
http://www.scitechnol.com/2327-4581/2327-4581-1-103.pdf

Chairman Al
November 4, 2013 1:33 pm

Dr. Brown has great writing skills and arguments that deserve an audience more influential than the readers of this great blog.
We need as many academics and knowledgeable individuals as possible to respond to the UK government enquiry into AR5.
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/energy-and-climate-change-committee/news/ipcc—tor/
The Committee invites responses, by 10 December 2013, addressing some or all of the following questions:
How robust are the conclusions in the AR5 Physical Science Basis report? Have the IPCC adequately addresses criticisms of previous reports? How much scope is there to question of the report’s conclusions?
To what extent does AR5 reflect the range of views among climate scientists?
Can any of the areas of the science now be considered settled as a result of AR5’s publication, if so which? What areas need further effort to reduce the levels of uncertainty?
How effective is AR5 and the summary for policymakers in conveying what is meant by uncertainty in scientific terms ? Would a focus on risk rather than uncertainty be useful?
Does the AR5 address the reliability of climate models?
Has AR5 sufficiently explained the reasons behind the widely reported hiatus in the global surface temperature record?
Do the AR5 Physical Science Basis report’s conclusions strengthen or weaken the economic case for action to prevent dangerous climate change?
What implications do the IPCC’s conclusions in the AR5 Physical Science Basis report have for policy making both nationally and internationally?
Is the IPCC process an effective mechanism for assessing scientific knowledge? Or has it focussed on providing a justification for political commitment?
To what extent did political intervention influence the final conclusions of the AR5 Physical Science Basis summary?
Is the rate at which the UK Government intends to cut CO2 emissions appropriate in light of the findings of the IPCC AR5 Physical Science Basis report?
What relevance do the IPCC’s conclusions have in respect of the review of the fourth Carbon Budget?
Unless well presented arguments get into the system there is nothing for supporters to work with.

rogerknights
November 4, 2013 1:39 pm

Doug Proctor says:
November 4, 2013 at 11:18 am
“-0.02 in 2″: that will end scary GCMs, Al Gore and CAGW, nothing less.

I think you meant “-0.2 in 2”
I have a hope that such a drop may occur.

waterside4
November 4, 2013 1:41 pm

SandyinLimousin says
Dull is very proud to be twinned with Boring — i could not agree more, more power to their elbow.
As regards your second point that ‘Balfours is very pleased to being half way (to desecrating a nation with poor peoples tax on their energy bills) to build an unecessary power line, then i am afraid we will agree to disagree.
Perhaps you are driving about in a limousine funded by income from windmills
Enjoy France.

Pamela Gray
November 4, 2013 1:41 pm

I’ve been to Boring…and Dufus! I’ve also been to Christmas Valley and Paisley. Let’s not forget Sumpter and Dead Man Pass. Plus Cabbage Hill, a trucker’s worst nightmare in windy conditions. And you haven’t lived till you have spent a cold night in Meacham or Seneca! Fremont Forest, near Fort Rock, Oregon has 288 days of freezing temperatures year round. Long live Boring!
The interior of Oregon is such a wonderful place. And wild as a March hare! So just how isolated are we? There are not many isolated counties in the US and Oregon has one of the most isolated counties in the US. Wallowa County has just two roads into that county that are open year round: one road in and out from LaGrande, Oregon, a twisty cliff road, and another one in and out to Lewiston, Idaho, yet another twisty cliff road. Neither one are roads a double would want to be on.
My family homesteaded in Oregon and I will forever be an Oregon gal. Love my Oregon. It would be even better if the liberals would go back to Californ I A. I suggest they take the non-native wolves back with them. It isn’t a pleasant site to see the carnage they leave behind just up the hill from where I currently live. Given their ever expanding range, wolves will be at my back door within the next 5 years.

rogerknights
November 4, 2013 1:48 pm

Chairman Al says:
November 4, 2013 at 1:33 pm
…………
The Committee invites responses, by 10 December 2013, addressing some or all of the following questions:

It’s too bad the Committee apparently didn’t number the questions, as that would have made things simpler for all, especially for persons answering only a subset of the questions.

F. Ross
November 4, 2013 1:55 pm

Dr. Brown is like E. F. Hutton, …when he speaks, people listen.
Thanks for your fine essay.

Jeff
November 4, 2013 1:56 pm

Dr. Brown – Climate may never have been more boring but your article was the polar (pick your preferred ice cap) opposite. Very good. Sharp and clear.. What do they put in Duke’s coffee? 🙂

Gary Hladik
November 4, 2013 1:57 pm

markstoval says (November 4, 2013 at 1:18 pm): ‘There is this one name, “Steven Mosher”, that shows up a lot and I am beginning to think it is a parody account.’
Co-author of Climategate: The CRUtape Letters.
http://www.amazon.com/Climategate-Crutape-Letters-Steven-Mosher/dp/1450512437/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1383597958&sr=1-1&keywords=the+crutape+letters
I get the impression that Mosh, while a CAGW skeptic/lukewarmer himself, is something of a purist who tries to keep the CAGW skeptics as skeptical of themselves as they are of the warmists.

November 4, 2013 1:59 pm

Dr. Brown
You might like to look at the SPM.10 graph as well. I’d be delighted if you did a piece on that too. I did an article on it here:
http://tallbloke.wordpress.com/2013/10/01/andrew-cooper-ipcc-using-differing-graph-versions/comment-page-1/#comment-60173
Differing graph versions is bad enough but it’s not even half the problem. The true horror plays out in the comments after a contribution by Tim Osborn from CRU.

Latitude
November 4, 2013 2:00 pm

Steven Mosher says:
November 4, 2013 at 10:26 am
====
Who are you kidding?…no one would know if it got it right or not

milodonharlani
November 4, 2013 2:25 pm

Pamela Gray says:
November 4, 2013 at 1:41 pm
The wolves are already literally at the door in my neck of the woods (Umatilla County), taking not only livestock, but pets from backyards. A pack is allowed four confirmed kills before citizens impacted can apply for retaliation with extreme prejudice.
http://www.capitalpress.com/article/20131024/ARTICLE/131029936
The creepy thing is that they’re radio-collared, so an ODFW on-line site allows ranchers like my cousins to watch the wolves watching them & their livestock with impunity from the tree line.

Tetragrammaton
November 4, 2013 2:26 pm

I am thrilled that Dr. Brown so well expresses the exasperation which so many of us have felt for so long, regarding the ongoing foolishness of basing energy policy on such fallacious computer simulations and models. It would be great if a similarly-gifted analyst — perhaps even Dr. Brown himself — could write a companion screed on head-rolling.
Whose heads should roll? Who should chop them off? What civilized or uncivilized procedures should be brought to bear? Who will construct the required guillotines or sharpen the appropriate axes? Or, on a more realistic level, what political and judicial procedures are needed to terminate the profusion of “climate change” bureaucracies at the federal level? How can these efforts be initiated?
Are there appropriate penalties for fraudulent science at the university level? Is Congressional action necessary to require academic institutions to terminate offenders, dock their pension, or whatever? And can a scientific basis be established, such that fair tribunals can properly make judgments on the guilt or innocence of the “climate change scientists” singled out for attention.
Lots of questions. Few answers. Little or no funding. Big professional public-relations campaigns to be elbowed aside. Few friends in the press. I hope we can get movement towards some elucidation of the appropriate strategies, tactics and participants who can help sweep aside the AGW nonsense.

November 4, 2013 2:34 pm

Many thanks to Dr. Robert G. Brown for an excellent commentary on the AR5 and CAGW. He ably removes so many bricks from the wall of Catastrophic Global Warming Mythology. How much longer can this wall hold together? How many scientists are heading for the exit door now?

more soylent green!
November 4, 2013 2:35 pm

Steven Mosher says: November 4, 2013 at 10:26 am
You doth protest too much.
I’m from Missouri and don’t need to step in cow manure in order to recognize it and I don’t need to attempt to build a model to know the models are [wrong], either.