By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
At The Conversation, a taxpayer-funded propaganda website based in Australia, Dr Rod Lamberts has suggested that in the climate debate those pushing the Party Line should disregard the mere facts and should advance their invaluable opinions instead.
He writes that Tony Abbott, Australia’s prime minister, Andrew Bolt, Australia’s chief sceptic, and one Monckton, Australia’s honorary visiting sceptic, should not be heeded, for we are mere “deniers” (that hate-speech word again).
I wrote the following article in reply, but The Conversation refused to publish it.
Their ground was that a mere expert reviewer for the IPCC with several reviewed publications to his credit did not have sufficient academic qualifications to be allowed to reply to a personal attack accusing him by name of lying and inviting an odious comparison with Holocaust deniers.
They told me that the site was for academics who could not get the sort of publicity I can get. They pretend to believe it is easier for skeptics than for true-believers to air their point of view.
I have replied that, if The Conversation will not allow me to answer this or any of numerous other unpleasant and often libellous personal attacks, other than in comments under the head postings, the matter will have to be dealt with in different and more impartial forum.
In the meantime, here is the article The Conversation dared not print.
In science, facts are all, opinions nothing
Rod Lamberts argues that in the climate debate opinion should supplant fact: “The time for fact-based arguments is over”.
He echoes the chair of the Climate Change Authority in suggesting that sceptics – whom he implicitly compares with Holocaust deniers by labelling them “deniers” – are circulating “deliberate misinformation”.
He says: “Forget the Moncktonites, disregard the Boltists, and snub the Abbottsians. Ignore them, step around them, or walk over them.”
So much easier than answering us fact for fact.
Since Mr Lamberts names me, albeit in honourable company, let me reply with a dozen key facts.
Fact 1. There has been no global warming for up to 17 years 6 months.
True, one might argue that the mean of all five major global-temperature datasets shows no warming for only 13 years; or that no uncertainty interval is shown; or that the warming lurks in the deep ocean; or that natural cooling temporarily overwhelms manmade warming. Yet for well over a decade the atmosphere has not warmed, notwithstanding CO2 increases unprecedented in 800,000 years. No model predicted that as its best estimate.
Even Dr Pachauri, the IPCC’s climate-science chair, admitted the 17-year “pause” in Melbourne last year.
Fact 1 casts doubt on models’ predictive skill, leading to Fact 2. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, for which I am an expert reviewer, has explicitly substituted its own “expert assessment” for the models on which it formerly relied, cutting its predicted warming over 30 years by almost a third from 0.7 to 0.5 Cº. It has moved significantly towards the sceptics whom Mr Lamberts disfiguringly excoriates as “deniers”.
Fact 3. The uncertainty intervals in all the key climate datasets are uncommonly large. In physics, every measurement is subject to uncertainty. The uncertainty in the RSS satellite temperature dataset is so great that there may have been no warming for 25 years.
Fact 4. Likewise, we cannot measure ocean heat content precisely. Since the atmosphere is not warming, the ocean – 1000 times denser and right next door – is probably not warming much either. On such measurements as we have, it is warming at one-sixth the model-predicted rate.
Fact 5. By the same token, we cannot measure whether the ocean is becoming less alkaline. All we can say is that mean pH is 7.8-8.4, with still wider coastal variations. The acid-base balance cannot change much: the oceans are overwhelmingly buffered by the basalt basins in which they lie.
Given measurement uncertainties, any assertion that “the science is settled” is meaningless.
It is trivially true that returning CO2 to the atmosphere whence it came will – other things being equal – cause warming. But the central question in the climate debate is “How much?” The answer, so far, is “Very little”. The world has warmed by just 0.7 Cº in the 60 years since 1954.
Yet in the previous 60 years, when our influence was negligible, the world had warmed by 0.5 Cº. The supposedly massive influence of Man has pushed up the warming rate by the equivalent of a third of a Celsius degree per century, and that is all.
In central England, a good proxy for global temperature (over the past 120 years the warming rate in the region was within 0.01 Cº of the global rate) the warming rate was equivalent to 4 Cº per century from 1695-1735.
Fact 6, then: the rate of global warming since we might first have influenced it in the 1950s is far from unprecedented.
Fact 7: Two-thirds of the global warming once predicted by the now more cautious IPCC arose not from greenhouse gases directly but from “temperature feedbacks” – forcings that may arise in response to direct warming.
Though the IPCC once tried to claim that the values of these temperature feedbacks were well constrained, they are not. The most important feedback is from water vapour. By the Clausius-Clapeyron relation, the atmosphere is capable of carrying near-exponentially more water vapour as it warms. But just because it can there is no certainty that it will. On some measures, column water vapour is declining. Measurement uncertainty again.
Fact 8 follows. The equation by which models represent mutual amplification of the feedbacks they take as net-positive comes from electronic circuitry, where at a loop gain of unity the voltage transitions instantly from the positive to the negative rail.
However, this singularity has no physical equivalent in the climate. Accordingly, a damping term is required, to allow not only for the fact that positive feedbacks such as the water-vapour feedback cannot, as voltage can, suddenly reverse their effect when the loop gain exceeds 1 but also for Fact 9. Global temperature is remarkably homoeostatic.
For the past 420,000 years, absolute mean global surface temperature has varied by little more than 1% from the long-run average. It is very difficult to warm the world. Our changing 1/2500 of the air from oxygen to plant food on business as usual over the next 100 years may well prove irrelevant. Any realistic damping term in the feedback-amplification equation removes the global warming problem altogether.
So to Fact 10. An increasing body of papers in the reviewed literature is following my own 2008 paper in Physics and Society in finding climate sensitivity very much lower than the models: perhaps below 1 Cº.
Fact 11 follows. Climate scientists know these uncertainties. The widest survey of scientific opinion ever conducted found that only 0.5% of 11,944 climate papers published from 1991-2011 had said most global warming since 1950 was manmade. Given the uncertainties, Mr Abbot’s government should enquire whether it is cost-effective to mitigate today or to adapt the day after tomorrow.
Fact 12. The economic literature overwhelmingly concludes that it is vastly cheaper to adapt the day after tomorrow than to act today. Even if the science were settled, Dr Lamberts is wrong to say the ends justify the means. For the game may well not be worth the carb0n-emitting candle.

The problem is that it has never been about CAGW. It’s about control of the means of production and society. Those who wish to impose their control over society are just using CAGW as a lever to implement that control. If it was shown that CO2 prevented climate change, the present proponents of CAGW would reverse themselves and declare that preventing climate change was immoral and against nature.
Getting attacked for standing up for the truth are badges of honour. They do not want debate and they do not want facts or openness. Like the shinning eyed taliban they want submission.
My, how carefully Chris picked a particular graph to use.
“TLT is constructed by calculating a weighted difference between MSU2 (or AMSU 5) measurements from near limb views and measurements from the same channels taken closer to nadir […]. This has the effect of extrapolating the MSU2 (or AMSU5) measurements lower in the troposphere, and removing most of the stratospheric influence. Because of the differences involves measurements made at different locations, and because of the large absolute values of the weights used, additional noise is added by this process, increasing the uncertainty in the final results.”
– – – – – – – –
I agree with Monckton’s assessment on the future of climate sensitivity work.
The trend of work on climate sensitivity has fundamentally changed in the past few years, due to an accelerating increase in the highly vigorous and more balanced debate occurring outside of the small cliques of scientists subservient to the IPCC commitment to finding alarming warming from fossil fuels.
Climate work is now focused away from the non-debate by small cliques of scientists claiming a so-called consensus and is now focused toward a more open and critical debate by a much broader community of scientists.
The whole foundation of the conceptual framework surrounding the past ~20+ years of ‘climate sensitivity’ (ECS & TCR) efforts has now shifted toward the possibility of entering the range of <1 C ECS & TCR.
Science is finally self-correcting the false 'a priori' premise that unscientifically predetermined the science finding; the false premise is alarming warming is the only valid finding for IPCC consideration in its assessments.
John
Yeah the question one needs to ask, Conversation with???
Another example of talking to the hand?
Classic academia, of today, shout down all inquiring minds,blank all written response, then insist we are correct because no one questions us.
Like “Real Climate” the conversation gets very small and quiet, when you are talking to like minded individuals.
Lord Monckton and Anthony, you have probably given the visitor rate of this dying website a significant bump.
The cause is going through all the phases of an exposed and discredited cult,soon they will eat their own.
Popcorn futures rising.
Rod Lamberts argues that in the climate debate opinion should supplant fact: “The time for fact-based arguments is over”.
Clearly for their side that time ended in the 1980s.
Bruce Cobb says:
March 18, 2014 at 9:24 am
Oops, I see Mr. Monckton coming, strap in hand, ready to take Mosher to the whipping shed. (breaks out popcorn).
============================
Not heard of that but sometimes I feel like I’ve been tied to The Whipping Post
One day I’ll learn to fix these clips straight in …
Oh, by the way, Mr Mosher. I guess you never learnt the maxim that it’s better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than open it and remove all doubt. It works in print too.
Excellent, looks like I did …
Seems the good Lord has too much time on his hands.
Why bother to respond to a clear incompetent idiot?
In climate change the academic world is full of them.
Steven Mosher says:
March 18, 2014 at 8:46 am
What do the radiosondes measure?
When AGW fanatics are not being self righteous bullies, they are being self righteous cowards.
I think hate speech just about seems to be all the other side has. It’s sickening that the debate has finally sunk so low.
My family owns a Broholmer puppy that can communicate its message far more effectively than any CAGWarmist, Food, poop, pat me — oh yeah!!!! Whose leg do I have to hump for my favourite treat ???? http://www.glenryck.co.uk/images/products/pilchardcans3.jpg
In accordance with current nutritional guidelines, we are also training him to eat watermelons, one bite at a time. Problem is, one watermelon is not enough!
The Denmark Broholmer is a dog that strongly resembles a mastiff. It is large and powerful, with a loud, impressive bark and dominant walk. A well trained Broholmer should be calm, good tempered, and friendly, yet watchful towards strangers. Will eat watermelons, two at a time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broholmer
Ye gods & little fishes. They are handsome beauties & require honest owners.
http://www.broholmeren.dk/index.php?id=45&L=1.html
The sneakily pseudonymous “Magma” suggests I cherry-picked my choice of graph to illustrate the long Pause. My answer to Mr Mosher applies to “Magma” too. There are uncertainties in all of the datasets: indeed, in the HadCRUT4 dataset they are published, and amount to 0.15 Celsius degrees either side of the central estimate.
I say to “Magma” what I said to Mr Mosher: the IPCC is indeed remiss in not publishing the very wide error-bars either side of the best estimates of measured temperature change that it publishes: but, rather than sneering at me because the IPCC does not do its job properly, he should write to the IPCC and make it do its science properly.
One of MIT’s most celebrated professors used to begin his lectures by saying, “There are three fundamental physical units: of mass, of distance, and of time. All the others are derivatives of these. Every measurement is subject to a measurement uncertainty. Every measurement in which the uncertainty is not explicitly stated is worthless. Every result in physics depends ultimately on measurement. Every result in physics is, for that reason alone, uncertain. If anyone tells you ‘the science is settled’, he is wrong.”
It is good news that “Magma” has begun to understand the concept of measurement uncertainty. But it has drawn the wrong conclusion. The wider the uncertainty, the less capable we are of determining whether any global warming at all has occurred, and the longer the period over which we are unable to determine that there has been any global warming at all.
As Professor Brown has often said here, the publication of all those temperature graphs without error bars is bad science. From time to time I publish graphs with the error bars shown and, exactly as the Professor has pointed out, when one sees how minuscule the temperature variations are, and how wide the error bars are, it is difficult to imagine that we have any kind of serious problem with rising temperature.
What about an explanation of this gibberish?
“The equation by which models represent mutual amplification of the feedbacks they take as net-positive comes from electronic circuitry, where at a loop gain of unity the voltage transitions instantly from the positive to the negative rail.
However, this singularity has no physical equivalent in the climate. Accordingly, a damping term is required, to allow not only for the fact that positive feedbacks such as the water-vapour feedback cannot, as voltage can, suddenly reverse their effect when the loop gain exceeds 1″
The Conversation has a position on global warming, and a tribe of bulldogs to guard the comments section. Coincidentally, I have focussed my post today on the same lamentable essay by Mr Lamberts, and the other disturbing piece by Mr Torcello, also in The Conversation.
http://donaitkin.com/as-warming-slows-denunciation-grows/
I am glad that someone is calling The Conversation the spade that it is. My science news accumulator accumulates also that muck as science.
Publishing this article on WUWT ensures that it will be read by a far larger audience than if it was on The Conversation, by the way……
Keep speaking.
I don’t have the numbers but I imagine more people (on both sides of the non-debate) heard you here than they would have in “The Conversation”.
this says so much about CAGW:
17 March: Reuters: Chris Helgren: HSBC appoints new climate change chief
HSBC has appointed a new head of climate change research to replace Nick Robins, who stepped down earlier this year to help lead a United Nations-led project into how to decarbonizes the global economy…
Zoe Knight, formerly climate change strategist at the UK-headquartered bank, takes over as head of HSBC’s Climate Change Centre of Excellence, the bank said in an email on Monday.
Robins left the bank to help lead a United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) inquiry into developing a more environmentally sustainable global financial system.
(Reporting by Michael Szabo; editing by Keiron Henderson)
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/17/us-hsbc-climatechange-idUKBREA2G11W20140317
@dp
You know you are really on the right track here:
>Name them, name their enablers, name their educators, mock their work, trumpet their gross and compounding errors and groundless theories, stop paying them for shoddy work, vote like your climate dollar depends on it.
It may not even be necessary to mock them. The point is to get their names attached to their science, their publications, their claims, their projections. If they stand, no problem. If they fail, let their skillset be known for its true value.
The XYZ-5 climate model should be know as the work of Profs Y, B and M with a link embedded to the full list of those who dare to put their names on their creations. No more hiding behind a model name. There is a great deal of merit in this.
I favour naming peer reviewers as AG freaks make a great deal out of a paper being or not being ‘peer reviewed’. Let’s find out who is reviewing and approving so much crap science. Put their names on it as ‘validated’ in their opinion. Perhaps review needs to be divided into two categories: peer review, and external, independent evaluation because sure as heck the peers are not helping much. The reputation of an engineering consulting company rides on everything above their signature and stamp. Why not climate scientists? How about a little accountability?
It should be competitive bidding: you get a 1 in 2 change to be funded (out of 10 chances) as we will fund those who climate models most closely match real temperatures going forward. If you model is the 11th most accurate, you and everyone worse is de-funded. Kick one fund recipient off each year and let the junior leagues send up their best. Football works that way, why not performance-based funding for climate scientists?
The reason for wanting this change is they have been so universally wrong for so long. A generation, for heaven’s sake.
As for “The Conversation” that isn’t, it really would be appropriate to use parallel media to make a reply, but only after forcing the proprietor to publish a response to a personal attack. Can’t one lose a license or two over such a refusal?
Wow…did anyone read Mosher’s ‘denialist outburst’ above!
Whilst reputable organs openly discuss ‘the pause’ he tries to wriggle away from it.
He doesn’t like what the data says so he’s attacking the data.
They are getting desperate. Sweet.
Nicely written Anthony but unfortunately I suspect that even this letter is too technical for most of the academics reading it to understand it. Dr Rod Lamberts for example, has a degree in psychology, which makes him distinctly unqualified to understand the technicalities of the debate.
I’m still pissed that we’ve let them get away with the name change.
Global warming was the name given to their fraud by themselves.
When that was first being exposed for what it was in the climategate emails.
(hide the decline)
The fraudsters ever so subtlety renamed the fraud climate change.
Anybody that lets them get away with that needs their head read.
The millstone they’ve hung around their collective necks has the words clearly chiseled into it GLOBAL WARMING!
My suggestion is make them wear it.
The fraud is global warming.
Not climate change.
They know the temperature numbers dont add up to what their models predicted.
So every time they attempt to change “history” by them refering to their fraud as climate change.
Slap them back into line with a firm,” no where talking about global warming here, not daily weather”.
The snarkily hemionymous “Raymond” sneers that a point I had made in the head posting about temperature feedbacks is “gibberish”. If “Raymond” considers that something is wrong with what I had said, let him say what is wrong and why. If he does not understand what I said, he has no basis for alleging that it was “gibberish”. A more grown-up approach is expected here,