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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These people have no shame whatsoever. When I got into this subject I didn’t believe that these global warming people would make the kind of statements sceptics were telling us, I didn’t expect them to offer arguments that belong in the kindergarten. They are emotional, paranoid, blinkered and utterly not interested in the facts. they make me F*&ing sick.
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lurker [passing through laughing on],
I would tend to agree about the lead post’s treatment of the Roman Catholic Church versus Galileo.
Only one repartee is needed in order to fully address Nuccitelli’s puerile quip “The major difference between Lindzen and Galileo was that Galileo was right.” Just need to point out that both Lindzen and Galileo honor the independent freedom needed in the scientific process toward increasingly objective knowledge of reality.
I see Nuccitelli dishonoring it by myopically parroting the alarm biased findings yielded by the explicitly subjective new concept of science pioneered in the last 2+ decades by the IPCC Bureau.
One does not need to agree with him in order to thank Monckton for indeed serving up so well this intellectually tasty dish of great dialog on CAGW fallacies.
John
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Nah. 18 at least. And without a computer or iPhone. Just an outside thermometer. (And no way to close the window.)
To: CSRRT and/or UCS members reading this thread,
Please pass my message on to Scott Mandia, who has been known to be involved in managing a legal fund for climate scientists falsely wronged.
My message to Scott Mandia => Will you intervene in providing legal support of Lindzen, a prominent senior climate scientist, who has been so grievously and falsely accused by Nuccitelli who is a known junior grade activist from Cook’s activist pro-IPCC site?
John
The overall life time risk of lung cancer is about 1 in 14, not 1 in 10 million!
I realise that Mr Watts does not want protracted debates about smoking but I hope this comment is sufficiently relevant to be allowed.
[SNIP – thank you for asking, but no – Anthony]
Frankly I think there we be no chance in hell of getting any sort of libel proved on the scientific points, given most of the climate science community would agree with what is written by the author.
After all, whether you like it or not, Lindzen’s views are not mainstream when it comes to climate science. He has some respect in the community, but more for his cleverness and doggedness, not so much for his views.
The smoking one may have an outside chance, but given there is an acknowledged link between passive smoking and cancer, I still think it would be a waste of time and money. But hey it would be fun to watch if it did go to court.
Jones said-
“I am beginning to suspect that this man would have trouble lying straight in bed…”
Dana doesn’t use a bed. He hangs upside down from the rafters…:)
Scenario B can reasonably be defended as most of the differences in this old Hansen model between A and B relate to the composition of “other” greenhouse gases besides CO2, such as methane levels. So although CO2 has matched or exceeded scenario A, it’s defensible to argue that scenario B is the better match. (But there is not a great deal of difference between A and B anyway.)
I cannot make much sense of the claim, however, that Galileo was wrong because his arguments were primarily (?) theological rather than scientific. That’s news to me and I’ve studied this historical episode carefully in academia. I will observe that Galileo did publish a pamphlet in vernacular Italian, rather than the more learned Latin of philosophy, where he setup a debate between, essentially, the Church and himself. The character defending the official Church position was named the equivalent of simpleton or idiot. (The traditional narrative that an evil Church set out to crush science and Galileo in particular is not quite as black and white as some defenders try to make out.)
Reply @ur momisugly Will NItschke (January 14, 2014 at 6:24 pm)
Well, Galileo was making very precise scientific arguments, but the theologians (esp. the Jesuits and the theological faculty at the University of Paris) felt like he had stepped too far into their domain, claiming that empirical science can and should be a factor in Biblical interpretation. He was on their playground and they didn’t like it.
And yes, in the Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems, Galileo put the RC Church’s position into the mouth of the character named ‘SImplicius.’ More specifically, this character represented Maffeo Barberini, who by this point was better known as Pope Urban VIII.
Galileo was not a student of Dale Carnegie.
I just don’t see these statement rising to the level of a libel suit.
I wish you success Lord Monckton.
Will Nitschke: good paragraph two. My extensive reading on this indicates that Galileo claimed *theological* implications of his astronomical ideas, going beyond the boundaries of science, and that the gentler of the ecclesiastical authorities said, “look, you can put the Sun and the Earth anywhere you want but you have to get out of the theology business”. My understanding is that Galileo refused any sort of accommodation, whatsoever, partly as a proud, furious response to some high-handed rhetoric from a Church hard-liner. (Of course some of the Church officials were similarly motivated by wounds to their pride.)
I believe Lord Monckton may have a point about the Church’s heliocentrism, although it was more “openness” than an embrace as the Galileo situation was unfolding. This was an age where Aristotle had already been proven wrong on several fronts, and various parts of the Church hierarchy were starting to realize that the scientific method was going to leave much of the old knowledge of nature behind. They also showed signs of the modern idea of trying to harmonize faith and reason in a way that gave much more respect to evidence-based reasoning.
It’s not terribly inaccurate to call the whole affair a tragic misunderstanding.
If the case is solid, then libel action MUST be taken, as it will send shivers up their spines.If they have to pay up a large sum of money in compensation, they could be forced to close, or at least go begging to George Soros or Greenpeace for money. A mere retraction in the web site will not be adequate as this sort of thing is rarely read. Retraction would have to be widespread -perhaps emails sent to all subscribers, who cannot be allowed back to the site unless they have read the retraction statement and answered a couple of questions to ensure it has been read.The same would have to apply to FaceBook and Twitter shares-banned from their accounts until they can answer the questions.Facebook would have a record of every person who has received and clicked on to the links.
It would only be fair if it became compulsory to inform all readers of the mis-information or cough up enough money for Professor Lindzen to get the message out himself(100s of millions here-TV, radio, newspaper full page ads.)Love to see them trying to create BS excuses to avoid admitting their deception.
David Irving (Holocaust denier- a real “denier”)was comprehensively debunked in a legal battle, which basically destroyed him financially, which is why we have not heard from him for a number of years.The Holocaust was real. My father recounted to me his experiences from the war many years before Holocaust denial even started! You would have to ask yourself why anyone would make up accounts over a decade before denial of corroborating accounts was even mooted.
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/refute
prove (a statement or theory) to be wrong or false; disprove:these claims have not been convincingly refuted
prove that (someone) is wrong:his voice challenging his audience to rise and refute him
deny or contradict (a statement or accusation):a spokesman totally refuted the allegation of bias
Everybody will agree that the Iris Effect has been refuted in the third sense (deny or contradict). Lindzen appears to believe that the Iris Effect has not been refuted in the first sense (proven false).
See his presentation for Doctors for Disaster Preparedness, @ur momisugly 44.00 minutes.
http://youtu.be/6O6yJRUycFQ?t=44m7s
Question. Is it possible for a PhD candidate or someone seeking tenure at one of these institutions to be critical of the global warming alarmism?
Lindzen: Not openly … I don’t think a young person today could make a career if they were openly critical of global warming – instead there are secret sceptics … papers written – I could cite a few …
A paper by Horwath and Soden where they confirmed the Iris Effect I worked on 12 years ago …. but they have to add a paragraph, and I’m sure the reviewers insisted on it, that said although this would appear to confirm it, we wish to refer the reader to the articles that criticise it and point out that it’s wrong.
(@ur momisugly Jack C)
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wrecktafire,
Galileo was subjected to Inquisition. Wouldn’t you say the many centuries of the Inquisition’s widespread activities were known to be tragic only to its many victims? The Inquisition was the church authority forcefully correcting its victim’s understanding. The correction of their victim’s understanding often involved a final fatal step for the victims.
John
@John Whitman: Yes, the Inquisitions were bad, but I think your concerns are off-topic in this thread. Lord Monckton was discussing what was believed by whom re: the Sun and the Earth.
Figure 2, Manley’s Central England Temperature instrumental record between 1694 and 1723 is rather a weak link, as some of it is not instrumental, some is not in England, and some is not outdoors, but rather in unheated rooms.
Now Eli could be snarky about this, but it is a fine point upon which many have foundered until it was pointed out to them.
– – – – – – – – –
wrecktafire,
Thank you for replying.
A topic on this thread introduced by Monckton is about Galileo’s situation And the church’s situation. Monckton said,
As you can see Monckton wanders voluntarily into the area of the world view of the Church versus Galileo’s independent renaissance man world view. Monckton expands on it in his subsequent comments. So further expansion on the situation by other commenters is in like kind, not off topic.
The Church was paranoid and it saw fearful conspiracies everywhere , therefore the Inquisition. One of its fears is that it was losing its total society, that total society had included up to Galileo the requirement to enforce an official church science position. Galileo was a serious threat because he opposed the church’s role as science authority. Galileo was not wrong in this regard as Monckton claims, the church was wrong to act as an authority in science over individual scientist thought.
Galileo was not wrong in his science approach and process. His research may have been corrected through the centuries but that just makes it a typical part the normal process of the evolution if society.
John
Dear Editors,
Eli is fully aware that you have retreated into CYA mode, but still, give a bunny a break. The bit about CET between 1690 and 1725 is so strange that even you must take pause. Parts were not insturmental, parts were not in Europe and most were indoors.
Take all this as a true sign of desperation. Very encouraging
Deli
Cet not reliable before 1730?
Having looked through many thousands of references at the met office archives concerning weather for cet in the period 1538 to 1750 i believe, as do many others, that Manley made a good fist of representing the climate of the period 1659 to 1730, always remembering the maxim of Hubert lambs ‘ we can can understand the tendency but not the precision.
Many reconstructions are made using weather references by adapting a score that relates to the likely temperature. Very many people have gone through the Manley data, including myself. You quote David Parker who constructed the daily series from 1772? ‘ I had the pleasure of meeting him at the met office a few weeks ago and he would not dismiss manleys work in the manner you do.
I suspect your concern is about the hockey stick apparent from around 1690 to 1740. Phil jones wrote a paper about this and his conclusion was that natural variability might be greater than hitherto suspected.
Camuffo and jones were given a large grant by the EU to look at historic weather records in Europe some of which came from unheated rooms. This was a short lived vogue instituted by jurin of the royal society, it was by no means the only means of recording temperatures.
I would sooner use the numerous weather references we have, augmented by instrumental records, plus other studies, rather than tree rings, wouldn’t you?
Tonyb
Eli
Sorry, my iPad changed your name without my noticing.
Tonyb
REPLY: Don’t apologize, his name isn’t “Eli” either. It’s Dr. Joshua Halpern of Howard University, who has some silly reason for continuing to play the part of an annoying rabbit on the Internet.
While I think Dr. Halpern is mentally aberrant in his presentation, the point about Manley’s measurements has some merit.
This CET entry in Wikipedia may or may not be accurate, it depends on how Connolleyized it is:
If true, what that exposure will do is limit the diurnal variation, since the mass of the home acts as a heat sink, retarding reaching what would be a normal Tmax and Tmin, much like what we’ve seen with poorly sited weather stations in the present.
So, some caution should be used with that data, just like present day data that isn’t properly corrected for siting issues. if the rooms still exist, a bias correction might be established empirically. Maybe that’s already been done, I don’t know as I haven’t time to research it all now.
Dr. Halpern has no interest in real answers however, his real interest is disruption, since he long lost his ability to be scientifically curious. Between his snark, disruption, taunting with juvenile names, and the hiding behind the rabbit mask, that’s why he doesn’t get much face-time here. If he wants to post as his own name, I’ll take him off moderation. He’s long known this but won’t do it. Because somehow his need for continuing this silly schtick is greater than his need for honesty in his presentation.
He’s really a sad commentary on professional behavior.
– Anthony
Eli Rabett seems upset at my citing the Central England Temperature Record from 1695-1735. He finds it strange that there could have been so much warming then. However, that period coincided with the end of the Maunder Minimum, when the sunspot record shows solar activity recovering very rapidly. It is not, therefore, in the least an implausible result. And it is a whole lot better than measuring tree-rings from a single tree.
The truth is that there is no sound evidence that the temperature change in the last century was “unprecedented in 11,000 years”; and there is much evidence that the 0.7 K warming over the past 100 years is well within natural variability. Mr. Nuccitelli was wrong to try to suggest otherwise on the basis of a single discredited paper whose author has himself said that the conclusion drawn by Nuccitelli from it is not justified by the paper itself.
Eli:
Well I think I would give the fairly careful work and research undertaken over many years by Manley over ‘tree-mometers’ and the like preferred by others for the same period but you believe (or trust) what you believe.