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.
Dana, the non-climate scientists forgot to tell these climate scientists. Dana is living in a world or denial.
@ur momisugly M Courtney says:
January 14, 2014 at 5:18 a
@ur momisugly jones says:
January 14, 2014 at 5:16 am
With my documented experience as well this makes a pattern. Shub Niggurath helped me get my story out, perhaps together we could collate this into a single story?.
Julian in Wales says at January 14, 2014 at 5:48 am:
Maybe.
Perhaps the mods would be kind enough to pass my email address to you, privately.
negrum says:
January 13, 2014 at 9:13 pm
” 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. ”
—-l
After looking at the 1633 Galileo trial papers and the 1616 Vatican decree, as well as Pope John Paul II’s apology to Galileo, I cannot come to the conclusion that the Church had long agreed before Galileo’s trial that the Earth orbits the Sun and not the other way about.
There may have been other scientists who supported Galileo in this theory, but the spokesmen and authorities of the church at that time seemed quite definite that the earth did not orbit the sun. Maybe I am missing something?
If anybody else is interested, I will cite what I consider relevant passages. In all other respects I consider the post an excellent thorn in the warmists side.
Typical warmist desperation propaganda. Most sensible people, when in a deep hole, quit digging and ask for a ladder or at least a hand up. The Nuttijobbies of this world ask for a bigger spade. They wibble and rant hysterically when people start to realise the pit of invalidated, post normal science that is warmist alarmism into which vast amounts of money is poured at their considerable expense and disadvantage, is nothing more than a
parasitecorporate enrichment scheme. In short, people are cottoning on to the scam and are growing angry.How typical that a libelous warmist is behaving like petulant a toddler and sharing his faith based poison with the world via the odious leftist media. Kind of sad, really. Then you look at the damage people like him have done and wonder how it was allowed to happen, how it is still happening. It’s only when you watch the BBC having conniptions about the latest go-ahead for fracking that ordinary people understand how the misinformation was spread far and wide. Fortunately the shrill protestations and smears of the Beeboids are finally being recognised for what they are; weapons grade greenie panic. I hope these panic merchants get what they deserve for creating widespread misery, baseless alarmism and the energy poverty that is costing lives. Let me be frank, I’m not talking Nobel prizes or perpetual funding from the public purse.
:0/
Nice job.
One suggestion with regard to the Central England Temperature Index. Why compare apples to oranges by comparing a four-decade interval with a ten-decade interval?
Why not just compare the century ending in 1762 with the one that ends in 2013?
Viscount Monckton says “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.”
Well that’s a new take on the UK’s defamation laws, generally considered to be the most restrictive (of free speech) of any country in the world. This is to such an extent that we have now needed to enact the Defamation Act 2013 to stop “libel tourism”, where non-residents sue each other for alleged defamatory statements having little or no relevance to the UK. And the 2013 Act also further restricts the right to jury trial of what are actually civil suits – defamation trials are heard by judge alone without a jury, unless the Court orders otherwise in individual cases.
The only persons guaranteed to benefit from libel litigation are (as always) the lawyers – Prof Lindzen (as a US citizen) should be warned firstly that the Grauniad’s “night editors” (the lawyers – and quite possibly their actual libel insurers) will have approved the Nuccitelli article for publication, and that if he comes to the UK to litigate the costs generally become more important than the actual issues: the loser almost invariably pays the costs of both parties if the case gets to trial, and liability for the opponent’s costs must be always agreed as part of any settlement.
I suggest that Prof Lindzen would be better taking the moral high ground, as a US Citizen, having the benefit (not the disadvantage) of the First Amendment, and simply publishes a forensic rebuttal of Nuccitelli’s assertions – which I am sure will make very enjoyable reading.
Libels are highly expensive and not so straightforward to win as many may think. The Guardian would most certainly fund any case and probably any appeal too.
A loss would have The Guardian, Dana and the BBC howling from the rooftops that ‘deniers’ have had their arses tanned in court, ergo man made global warming IS happening and IS catastrophic blah blah.
Go for a right to reply piece. If that fails let the world know you sought a reply but were denied the opportunity by the Guardian.
We can make our own minds up as to who we believe.
How low can Dana and the Carbonauts sink to?
Tim C.: “Well that’s a new take on the UK’s defamation laws, generally considered to be the most restrictive (of free speech) of any country in the world.”
Residents of, say, North Korea to will not doubt be comforted to learn that their country is less restrictive of free speech than the United Kingdom.
As a US citizen I have only rudimentary knowledge of UK libel laws, but frankly I don’t see libel here. I see a news organization affording space to one individual who used it to make refutable claims about another individual. Rather than going to court I think the better course would be for Professor Lindzen to demand equal space from the Guardian for a rebuttal.
@Alan Watt – good luck with the request. Like you, I am US, not UK. But somehow I do not see the Guardian granting the request. Would the Times?
And even under US law I see support for libel, since Nuccy clearly lied about what Lindzen both has published and stated. While more difficult to prove in the US, libel is still a crime if it can be proven that malice was involved. And there is a lot of malice in that article.
He should be sentenced to 17 years of non-warming.
“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% –” I got .005% did I do something wrong?
BBould says:
January 14, 2014 at 6:53 am
0.005 is 0.5%; the original value is correct:
(( 64 * 100 ) / 11944) = 0.5358
which is the way to calculate percentage.
“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.”
On top of that …. there is statistically significant evidence from one of the largest 2nd hand smoke studies of its kind that 2nd hand smoke provides a protective effect against people getting lung cancer if they were raised as children in a house with one or both parents smoking in the house.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9776409?dopt=Abstract
The heliocentric model was not new to Copernicus or anyone else. Copernicus and Galileo resurrected another more ancient Greek idea that the solar system was heliocentric (Aristarchus of Samos c.310-230BC)… partly due to the sack of Constantinople by the ‘followers of the prophet’ which sent scholars fleeing to the West with hitherto unknown (in the West) Greek material.
First; Nuccitelli is a cretin thug. At least in the intellectual world anyway.
He gets published in the media (not peer reviewed, obviously) and uses his words in the same way an enforcer uses a hockey stick; to batter opponents. (If that is a pun, its accidental)
Don’t think for a moment he doesn’t understand the difference between what Lindzen has said and what his refutation addresses. He does. He may not consider it to be significant to the argument, but he does know the difference. That is why he is a cretin.
As for suing him; something about blood out of a turnip. Sue the publisher (if that’s possible in the UK). Otherwise you are wasting your money, or worse yet, using the courts as a weapon to silence someone you disagree with.
Even in his stupidity, Nuccitelli brings value to the debate. Intelligent people can see the error of his arguments. Its not hard to understand.
Foolish people will always be easily swayed. But they usually recognize when another fool is talking. Nuccitelli is about as obvious as an opera singer at a rodeo.
Suing is for the losing team.
Just my $0.02
We don’t need rewrites of history regarding Galileo to see Dana is an enforcer of orthodoxy on behalf of hte pseudo-religion, AGW. Dana has it all: ignorance, blind faith, financial interest, an echo-chamber’s vapdity. The Church at the time of Galileo was wrong, and they were doing as Dana does with Lindzen: slandering him and calling him wrong based on a defense of of the orthodoxy, not on a discussion of the issue.
Mr. Moncton’s rewrite of history serves the purposes of the AGW orthodoxy: a new diversion has been introduced. Climate skeptics do best when focused on climate. Detours from climate should be done carefully if at all.
Before passive smoking is dismissed as being of no significance, consider this. Were the stats Monckton quotes based on a house with one tow or three or more smokers? Did they smoke 20 a day or a hundred`? was there ventilation? Were there children being exposed with longer term risks? Hopefully you get the point. It is difficult to quantify such a risk due to variables, but as a nurse of many years experience I can say that children from homes where they were exposed to second hand smoke appeared to be more likely to suffer chest infections and other respiratory complaints. Also have a look at this entry, or what the balance of opinion is before taking Moncktons advice and feeling safe to chain smoke in the same room as children and others. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_smoking
And remember, if he is as inaccurate on this as he appears to be, what does that say about his comments on climate science?
If Lindzen does deny a link between smoking and lung cancer, then he has published in a very strange place. See Lindzen “….Global Climate Alarmism and Historical Precedents” in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons Vol18(2013).
Mike M says:
On top of that …. there is statistically significant evidence from one of the largest 2nd hand smoke studies of its kind that 2nd hand smoke provides a protective effect against people getting lung cancer if they were raised as children in a house with one or both parents smoking in the house.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9776409?dopt=Abstract
Mike, the study conclusions state that :
‘Our results indicate no association between childhood exposure to ETS and lung cancer risk. We did find weak evidence of a dose-response relationship between risk of lung cancer and exposure to spousal and workplace ETS. There was no detectable risk after cessation of exposure.’
Which with due respect is not quite the same thing as you quote.
Thanks Christopher, Lord Monckton.
Yes, I think Nuttycelli libeled Professor Lindzen in his profession. Shame and consequences are due.
The Guardian? That rag survives by doing this kind of things.
The people who read it and believe what hey read? Well, they deserve it.
That “approximately 3% of climate scientists who believe the human influence on climate is relatively small” I don’t think has much to do about the debate on CO2, and whether its effect on global mean temperatures about +1 C (not reinforced by positive feedbacks) or at least +2 C.
The source for 3% (and “97% consensus”) is probably Doran & Zimmerman (2009), which says about 97 percent has two specific opinions about “human activity” (not explicitly CO2) which I guess that most skeptics has:
“1. When compared with pre-1800s levels, do you think that mean global tem do you think that mean global temperatures have generally risen, fallen, or remained relatively constant?
2. Do you think human activity is a significant contributing factor in changing mean global temperatures?”
http://tigger.uic.edu/~pdoran/012009_Doran_final.pdf
The study is used incorrect by media and CAGW propaganda, but with questions that most “deniers” answers with “Yes” it probably was designed to be used that way.
Libelous or merely just wrong? Either way, he must be very cheap. Part of the Guardian death-spiral, I suppose.
“… difference between Lindzen and Galileo was that Galileo was right.”
Actually Galileo’s heliocentric system was wrong, and resulted in no improvement in predictions of planetary prediction compared to the Ptolemaic geocentric scheme. Mathematically the two were identical.
It was Kepler’s revolutionary heliofocal system, abandoning circles and epicycles, that provided planetary predictions more accurate than the margins of error of the observations of the time.