Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
Dana Nuccitelli of Unskeptical Science has written a characteristically spiteful piece in the Guardian about Professor Lindzen. The piece constitutes a grave libel.
Britain, still to some extent a free country, is one up on the U.S. in allowing anyone – even a public figure – to sue for libel, especially where, as here, he is libeled in his profession. That typically triples the damages.
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, here are Nuccitelli’s allegations, in bold and in order of appearance, followed in each instance by the truth.
Lindzen “is one of the approximately 3% of climate scientists who believe the human influence on climate is relatively small”.
Yet the data file attached to a paper Nuccitelli co-authored last year marked only 64 papers out of 11,944 – or just 0.5% – as stating they believed the human influence on climate is not “relatively small”, in that they agree with the IPCC that more than half of the global warming since 1950 was manmade. Nuccitelli knew there was no consensus.
Lindzen’s iris hypothesis that changes in water vapor would dampen global warming “have been refuted”, in that measurements show water vapor increasing in the atmosphere and amplifying global warming.
Figure 1. Column water vapor, showing a decline from 1984-2012 at the crucial mid-troposphere pressure altitude.
Water vapor is not a well-mixed greenhouse gas and cannot be reliably measured. There are some measurements that purport to show column water vapor increasing in the atmosphere, and others, equally reputable (Fig. 1), that purport to show it decreasing.
In any event, Professor Lindzen’s iris hypothesis is concerned less with column water vapor and more with the occurrence and influence of a specific cloud type at altitude.
Lindzen was wrong to say climate change in the past 100 years has been minimal, in that “the current rate of warming is unprecedented over the past 11,000 years”.
The world warmed by 0.72 Cº in the past 100 years (HadCRUt4, December 1913 to November 2013). This rate of warming is far from “unprecedented over the past 11,000 years”. In Central England, warming at a rate equivalent to 4.33 Cº/century (Fig. 2) was measured over the four decades 1694-1733. That rate, six times the rate observed in the past 100 years, occurred before the Industrial Revolution even began.
Figure 2. Central England temperature anomalies and trend, January 1694 to December 1733.
The Central England record is a reasonable proxy for global temperature change because the region is at an appropriate latitude. To verify this, I compared the Central England regional temperature record and the mean of the HadCRUt4, GISS, and NCDC global temperature datasets over the 120 years December 1893 to November 2013. The 120-year period was chosen because it is a multiple of 60 years, canceling out any distorting effects of the 60-year cycles of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.
Results (Fig. 3) show that the Central England record, which began in 1659, is indeed a respectable proxy for global temperature change in the period before the global instrumental record began in 1850.
Figure 3. The global temperature anomaly record (above) shows warming at a rate equivalent to 0.74 Cº/century. The Central England record (below) shows much the same: 0.78 Cº/century equivalent.
The warming of the 20th century was not “unprecedented”. On the evidence of the warming of 1694 to 1733 in central England, it was well within natural variability.
The “15-year pause myth” is “completely debunked … surface warming over the past decade turns out to be more than double previous estimates”.
Once again, it is necessary to look at the actual data. The mean of all five principal global temperature datasets shows no global warming for almost 13 years; the RSS satellite dataset shows no global warming for 17 years 4 months; and the Central England dataset shows no warming for 25 full years (Fig. 4).
Figure 4. Zero global warming for 13, 17, and 25 years respectively.
Given the unanimity of the global temperature records demonstrating The Pause, it cannot be credibly stated that it has been “completely debunked”: and still less was it appropriate for Mr. Nuccitelli viciously to attack Professor Lindzen on this ground.
The climate “continues to accumulate heat at a rate equivalent to 4 Hiroshima bomb detonations per second”.
That statement is tendentiously political, not scientific, and it has no scientific basis. Since the outer boundary of the Earth-atmosphere system is outer space, the appropriate measure to determine whether radiant energy is in net terms accumulating in the atmosphere is the time-integral of total solar irradiance. On that basis, even if one were to believe the IPCC’s now-discredited estimates of climate sensitivity, it is possible – indeed, quite likely – that a net loss of energy from the Earth-atmosphere system is now underway. If so, global temperature may even fall, in which event the “4 Hiroshimas per second” meme is still more clearly demonstrable nonsense.
Figure 5. The IPCC abandons the models’ more extreme projections.
“The accuracy of climate models” has been “much better than Lindzen claims”.
Even the IPCC no longer buys that one. For the first time in its undistinguished history, it has explicitly accepted that the models are unreliable and has substituted its “expert judgment” for the models’ output. It is worth repeating the two graphs (Fig. 5) showing the IPCC’s startling but universally-unreported climbdown.
The first graph shows, in pink, the IPCC’s 0.4-1.0 Cº projection for the next 30 years, visibly in line with the models, from the pre-final draft of the 2013 Fifth Assessment Report. The second graph shows, in green, the drastically-revised projection of 0.3-0.7 Cº, with a best estimate below the mid-range and hence in the region of 0.4 Cº. Thus, the former mid-range estimate becomes the high-end estimate, and the former low-end estimate becomes the best estimate – a drop of almost half compared with the previous mid-range estimate.
Even this new, drastically-reduced estimate may well be excessive. The monthly Global Warming Prediction Index (Fig. 6), now adjusted to show the lower IPCC projections, still shows the prediction running hot compared with observed reality.
Figure 6. The Global Warming Prediction Index, showing the IPCC’s predicted temperature change in the nine years 2005-2013 overshooting observation by an eighth of a Celsius degree, equivalent to 1.5 Cº/century.
Lindzen was wrong to say that the likelihood over the next century of greenhouse warming reaching magnitudes comparable to natural variability seemed small.
Since natural variability has yielded warming at 4.33 Cº/century within the past 350 years, Professor Lindzen is very likely to prove correct in saying that warming by 2100 will be unlikely to exceed natural variability. Here Nuccitelli is blaming Professor Lindzen for exercising his professional judgment, which is very likely to prove a great deal closer to the mark than the amateur prejudice of Nuccitelli.
There is “much more [warming] to come over the next century”.
Nuccitelli is entitled to his no-doubt profitable opinion, but on the evidence there could be as little as 1 Cº global warming between now and 2100.
Hansen’s prediction of future warming made in 1988 has proven closer to reality than a prediction based on statements by Lindzen in 1989
Mr. Nuccitelli’s chief evidence for this claim is Fig. 7, which purports to show the global temperature record compared with James Hansen’s 1988 temperature projection and with an imagined projection by Professor Lindzen.
Figure 7. Nuccitelli’s graph purporting to show that Hansen’s global warming projection of 1988 proved closer to outturn than Lindzen’s supposed projection of 1989.
However, Nuccitelli’s graph is gravely defective at the four points labeled A to D in Fig. 6:
Figure 6. The four defects A-D in Nuccitelli’s graph.
The four defects in Nuccitelli’s graph are as follows. A jury would take a dim view:
A: Before the U.S. Senate on 23 June 1988, Hansen said that his Scenario A, which predicted 0.5 Cº/decade warming to 2060, was the “business-as-usual” case; yet Nuccitelli has only shown Hansen’s less exaggerated Scenario B.
B. Nuccitelli talks of Professor Lindzen having made a prediction in 1989: yet his fictitious graph of Lindzen’s imaginary “prediction” is fully half a Celsius degree below the observed temperature in 1989.
C: Nuccitelli carefully omits to show the last few years of no global warming, concealing the fact that the observed outturn is now well below even Hansen’s Scenario B.
D: Nuccitelli assumes negligible natural variability, when it is not less than 1 Cº/century.
The major difference between Lindzen and Galileo was that Galileo was right.
Actually, Galileo was wrong. The Church, as well as informed scientific opinion, had long agreed that the Earth orbits the Sun and not the other way about. However, Galileo had drawn inappropriate theological conclusions from heliocentricity, perpetrating the notorious non sequitur that since the Earth was not the centre of the Universe the Incarnation and Crucifixion were of less importance than the Church maintained. It was Galileo’s theological conclusion the Church objected to, not the scientific conclusion that the Sun is at the center of the solar system. Galileo had persisted in a curmudgeonly refusal to recant his non sequitur. Seven of the ten cardinals who tried him offered him a compromise: if he would recant his assertion that the Earth went round the Sun his theological conclusion would fall away and there would be no need for him to recant it. He agreed to this: but three of the Cardinals, to their credit, refused to sign this nonsensical agreement, to which neither the majority of the Bench nor the accused ought ever to have assented.
Professor Lindzen is “an outlier whose arguments have been disproved time and time again, including about the link between smoking and lung cancer”.
Not one of Professor Lindzen’s arguments has been “disproved”, though several have not been fashionable and have been opposed, on various generally shaky grounds, in the literature. It is a serious libel to suggest that his arguments have been “disproved” when they have merely been disagreed with in some quarters.
And, as far as I know, Professor Lindzen does not dispute the well-established link between smoking and lung cancer, though he would be within his rights to dispute the imagined link between passive smoking and lung cancer. There is a 1:10 million risk that a non-smoker will contract lung cancer, and a 1:8 million risk that a passive smoker will contract lung cancer. The difference between the two risk rates is statistically insignificant.
The EPA’s decision to regulate passive smoke as though it were a class A carcinogen was vacated by a U.S. Federal District Judge in North Carolina in 1998. The judge said: “The court is faced with the ugly possibility that EPA adopted a methodology for each chapter, without explanation, based on the outcome sought in that chapter.” The court also noted an EPA internal document admitting that the evidence was insufficient to classify passively-inhaled smoke as a class A carcinogen, and that the EPA had not followed its own classification guidelines. The court found evidence that the EPA had cherry-picked its data, and used the term “cherry-picked” in its judgment. The court held that EPA’s exclusion of nearly half the available studies violated its own guidelines, which required it to review all the available evidence. EPA was also held to have fallen foul of the law by explicitly refusing to research all aspects of indoor air quality.
Interestingly, the court also found that EPA, in switching from the usual 95% to a 90% statistical confidence interval, “to increase the likelihood that its meta-analysis would appear statistically significant”. That is exactly what the IPCC did in 2007. Even then, the EPA found a relative risk of only 1.19, which is only “weakly associative”; and, if it had included the studies it had excluded, it would not have been able to demonstrate a relative risk greater than unity at all. EPA had adopted an a priori position and had then adjusted the statistical methodology and sampling in an attempt to confirm that position.
The court concluded that, “Using its own methodology and its selected studies, EPA did not demonstrate a statistically significant association between ETS and lung cancer. … EPA changed its methodology to find a statistically significant association.”
If, therefore, Professor Lindzen challenges the EPA’s self-justifying association between passive smoking and lung cancer, he is in excellent company.
Gentlemen of the jury, those are the facts. You have heard Mr. Nuccitelli’s arguments, and you have heard the response of science to them. Briefly, let us consider the law.
At many points, Nuccitelli has flagrantly misrepresented the scientific position with intent to harm Professor Lindzen’s reputation, and at some point it can be shown that he knew the truth but chose to suppress or misstate it. At many other points, he has presented the science as though it were settled when in fact Professor Lindzen’s position remains undisproved, even though some may disagree with it. And Nuccitelli’s attempt to smear him by falsely accusing him of repudiating the link between lung cancer and smoking was calculated still further to damage his reputation, at the point of his retirement, by suggesting – incorrectly – an entire disregard of the scientific method on his part.
Gentlemen of the jury, you are also entitled to take into consideration the unpleasant, malicious, spiteful tone of Mr. Nuccitelli’s article, its wide circulation on the website of a substantial national newspaper, and Mr. Nuccitelli’s failure to consult Professor Lindzen to verify the facts before what you may well regard as a malevolent and wholly unjustifiable attempt at professional and character assassination for purely partisan political reasons, and without a shred of scientific justification at any point.
What is your verdict? From my own knowledge of the Professor and his distinguished work, I find Nuccitelli’s piece misleading, offensive, and cruel. Damages will be huge.
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Sooner or later we are going to have to take someone to court, particularly to stop this “denier” lie from the likes of the BBC. What are we supposed to be denying? It is not that the world warmed since the little ice-age, it is not that CO2 has a greenhouse effect and it is certainly not that climate changes.
So to what does this “denier” label refer? We don’t deny science, we don’t deny the temperature data showing it has not warmed for 15+ years.
This is the biggest libel, because the real truth of this “denier” label was overtly expressed on the BBC radio 4 program when they linked it to holocaust denial.
In other words this “denier” label is pure slander used maliciously to damage the reputations and job prospects of anyone who would dare to be sceptical of the propaganda on global warming.
Unfortunately, it is unlikely to be those scurrilous broadcasters and journalists who encourage this “denier” lie, as usually they are careful to avoid slandering an individual like Lord Monckton, me or Lindzen.
No, it will be some poor daft environmentalist, wet behind the ears, egged on by the vitriol from those running this propaganda campaign, and it will be this daft individual who really knows no better who will end up in court unless Lindzen does sue Nuccitelli.
So, please, please lets get a case like this to court, where the real culprits are in the dock.
IMHO, very little of this is libelous. Incorrect, likely, but even under the UK’s generous (to the defendant) rules at most it is an “I’m right,” ” nuh uh, I am!” argument, i.e., arguing interpretations.
Seriously…
Mark
Dana is no longer just whistling past the graveyard of his reputation. He’s doing laps on his scooter.
I should point out that claiming Nutty committed libel if he has not IS libelous… Just sayin…
Mark
Glenn Donovan says:
January 13, 2014 at 9:10 pm
Lawsuits of this type are exactly what we need. Just like the Dover case on Intelligent Design was a watershed moment for the ID crowd (Google it if you don’t know of it, the conservative judges 30 page opinion essentially laughing the IDers out of court is worth the reading). You see, a court is governed formally be reason on logic. A court will take whatever time necessary to hear all the relevant testimony, and the judge and jury will spend months if need be pouring over the evidence. If Monckton’s case is as ironclad as it seems, it would be a very worthwhile exercise. I also think Lindzen’s standing and demeanor make him an ideal plaintiff for such an action.
Sorry, Glenn, but judges rule on the law, not the validity of scientific hypotheses. IDers have been on a roll of late, what with the discovery of a nested code inside the DNA code, the publication of Darwin’s Doubt about the Cambrian Explosion, and the hot field of biomimetics. Not to mention that even non-ID biologists now admit that the emergence of functional folding proteins by chance processes is “almost a miracle.”
Let me ask you this: If a judge ruled that, in his opinion, catastrophic anthropogenic global warming was real, would that settle the debate in your mind?
With all due respect, I reckon it is a mistake to try exonerating the Church in Galileo’s case. Lord Monckton’s sophistry, designed to weave a Christian apology into his critique of another, pagan green religion, reads needless and inordinate.
It is the persecution of a single, practically defenseless scientist by the all-powerful Catholic Church that was a non sequitur, because any religious faith, however interpreted, is absurd by definition (as declared by St. Thomas Aquinas), while Galileo’s mind, struggling to see reality as it is, already felt uncomfortable with the prevailing dogma.
Five centuries have passed since that shameful trial, and still there are some among us who believe that all our pants would drop without suspenders from Heaven. Please be assured, Lord Monckton, that there are individuals capable of remaining moral while facing the Unknown. It may not be possible to conquer Death yet, but at least we can out-stare it with dignity.
Looks to me that there are enough weasel words for Nuccitelli to deflect blame. The jurors might find the science hard and observe that green “charities” don’t like Lindzen.
It would be interesting to read an actual libel lawer’s opinion.
That graph is absolutely abysmal. What did he do just do his own wiggles and claim that’s what lindzen believes? Jesus that is despicable.
I can’t see Lindzen actually taking Dana to court, but it would be nice to see a high profile case forcing the MSM to report the skeptic view point for once.
DrC, and Christopher Monckton, I am intrigued by the disagreement between you on Galileo. I am sure no one is making things up, but it would be great for you both to clarify and indicate where and why you have come to the conclusions you have.
Lord Monckton’s article is a tour de force example of a complete* de-bunk of Nuccitelli and Abraham’s piece in The Guardian (6 Jan 2014). That it is libellous is, for me, well proven.
At least one preceding comment questions the economic sense of persuing a libel case which can be cost-prohibitive for individuals. I suggest that a formal complaint to the (UK) Independent Press Complaints Commission (regrettably also abbreviated to IPCC), using Lord Monckton’s article as evidence*, would be a far less expensive exercise and, if upheld, arguably more effective in getting The Guardian to be more circumspect before regurgitating Nuccitelli’s venomous opinions in future. A privately funded libel case on the back of such a judgement by the IPCC should then be considered.
Perhaps Christopher Monckton and Richard Lindzen would give us their thoughts on such an approach.
*Since the reference to Galileo has raised questions here, perhaps this should be omitted from arguments supporting the complaint. Even if Lord Monckton’s assertions are correct, the time and effort needed to support them are not justified, since the overwhelming science-based rebuttals do the job well enough. IMHO!
“on the evidence there could be as little as 1 Cº global warming between now and 2100”
Or minus 0.5C. The recovery from the LIA won’t go on forever.
The Warmista side must be really desperate–they’re resorting to an unusual number of lies lately.
Maybe this cold weather is really getting to them, along with the plight of the “ship of fools” still stranded in Antarctica.
How thin their skin really is.
The UK Defamation Act 2013 came into effect on 1 January. The effect is that you have to prove real substantial damages to reputation. And there is a defence of justified opinion.
Its an amusing piece, the arguments are basically correct, except maybe for the excursus into Church history, but the chances of success in a real suit are just about zero.
And yes, Nuccitelli is a nasty spiteful propagandist. As for the Guardian, it was once an excellent paper, but increasingly as its readership has fallen it has drifted into some very weird company, of which Skeptical Science is only one example.
It’s on the shoulders of men like Lindzen that others stand on to see the truth while men like Dana others stand on their shoulders to keep them from surfacing 😉
Regards
Mailman
Anyone who is familiar with Dana’s previous rants will know that Dana, if ever dragged to court, will doubtless plead insanity.
An organization labeled “Unskeptical Science” says it all?
Since no science can be based on being unskeptical this really means that it’s not based on science.
Further more being skeptical of Lindzen claims is really not an unskeptical act is it?
So the proclaimed unskeptical science organization are really only unskeptical about some things?
Let me guess the political decided UNFCCC and Agenda 21?
So the real name should have been:
The Unskeptical UNFCCC policy based “science” only.org
?
I’d like to see a point by point rebuttal from Professor Lindzen on Youtube – one video per point. Less expensive and possibly more effective than a libel suit.
He projects dignity and integrity.
Lew Skannen says:
January 13, 2014 at 8:48 pm
“Sueing is an expensive, difficult and risky process. Better to get a peice in the Graun refuting the garbage so all the Nuttycherry sycophants can have their noses rubbed in it.”
Guardian is an MI5/MI6 PsyOp outlet, part of the NYT/Guardian/Spiegel axis (see Snowden releases). So good luck with that.
In Central England, warming at a rate equivalent to 4.33 Cº/century (Fig. 2) was measured over the four decades 1694-1733. That rate, six times the rate observed in the past 100 years, occurred before the Industrial Revolution even began.
The Central England record is a reasonable proxy for global temperature change because the region is at an appropriate latitude. To verify this, I compared the Central England regional temperature record and the mean of the HadCRUt4, GISS, and NCDC global temperature datasets over the 120 years December 1893 to November 2013
Fail. It may be a good proxy during the modern instrumental record but extrapolating backwards three hundred years is ridiculous. The mercury in glass thermometer was not even invented until around 1710. Readings were taken in unheated rooms, rather than outdoors (we’re hot on station siting around here right?) and some of the data series is not even from England at all but Utrecht in the Netherlands.
Article:
“The climate “continues to accumulate heat at a rate equivalent to 4 Hiroshima bomb detonations per second”.”
—————————————–
I love it when I see this comment. I just direct people to a page I setup with a “4 Hiroshima” counter plus a “Reality” counter next to it. Opens everyone’s eyes to the misleading BS that Dana peddles.
http://www.brrgames.com/hiroshimas/index.html
“Can we make it a class action lawsuit since nuticelli has essentially slandered everyone who opposes his views? I am going to need help paying my increased energy bills.”
Yes he has been very skeptical to a great deal of people. Mostly towards critique put forward from climate scientists. Strange that they call them self an uncritical science org?
I mean there is probably no one more critical to an ordinary scientific debate about climate than the unskeptical science org?
“An organization labeled “Unskeptical Science” says it all?
Since no science can be based on being unskeptical this really means that it’s not based on science.”
Except being unskeptical about being skeptical?
I apologise in advance if this appears a little messy but I hope the message still seems clear.
I was taken by a comment posted by Nuccitelli on the current article where he stated ..
.
“DanaNuccitelli MCourtney
07 January 2014 12:35am
Recommend
17
MCourtney – paper is here (free to download) and post about it is here. juana –
“You have made a hobby out of denigrating people who disagree with you with rude terms like “denier.””
“Denier” is simply a descriptive term for someone who denies something, but it’s also a term I rarely use, and have never used at The Guardian.
Lindzen is in the 3 percent. Sorry if you disagree based on misunderstanding our methods, but that’s the factual reality of the situation.
.
I was taken by his assertion that he NEVER used the term “denier” as it didn’t seem to gel with my memory of his writings. I then looked back through his archive ( http://www.theguardian.com/discussion/user/id/4434349 ) to see if he was being completely honest and found….
.
“DanaNuccitelli
19 December 2013 3:28pm
2
Newspapers should ban climate deniers from publishing editorials or letters to the editor. If they wouldn’t publish a piece by a flat earther, or somebody claiming smoking doesn’t have adverse health effects, then they shouldn’t publish climate denial misinformation either.
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/dec/19/newspapers-ban-climate-deniers-reddit-science
There were others but it would be too cumbersome to post I’m afraid.
I am beginning to suspect that this man would have trouble lying straight in bed…
Bugs Man says:
January 13, 2014 at 11:22 pm
” …Even if Lord Monckton’s assertions are correct, the time and effort needed to support them are not justified, ….”
—-l
Not even a single citatation? The matter is clearly more complex than I originally thought 🙂
As a rule, CAGW supporters are filetted here when stating contentious views without adequate backup or reasoning. I feel that this sceptical method should apply to everyone, no matter how noble their cause or educational their post.
Robert Sheaffer says at January 13, 2014 at 10:22 pm
Oh yes he did.
I commented on that article. I submitted comments refuting each of the ways that Lindzen was “wrong” with references to the IPCC AR5. Dana kept some of the comments (in part) and replied to them. Thus it appeared that my comments were unsubstantiated… but they weren’t!
He had censored the comments that linked to the IPCC AR5 so as it looked like my opinion vs his. Not the IPCC’s opinion vs his.
He knew he was misinforming his readers.
He read the comments and the links to the IPCC
But he deliberately lied.
Libel in the English courts is an expensive and risky business and should be avoided unless seeking publicity and you can afford to lose.
Seems to me the the Granadiad readers will believe Nuccitelli 100 times out of a 100 as his words fit their world view. True believers don’t want to be bothered by facts or debate. The new religion won’t be diminished by rationality. Follow the money and the politics.