National Climate Assessment Report Raises False Alarm
By Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger
The Obama Administration’s just-released National Climate Assessment report leaves the impression that if we don’t quickly launch into action to reduce our emissions of greenhouse gases (primarily by shifting away from using fossil fuels), we will be inundated by an endless flow of misfortune unleashed by the ensuing climate change. The flood has already begun.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
First, the assessment report frequently confuses climate with climate change. The natural climate of the United States is constantly overflowing with extreme weather hazards of all sorts — hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, floods, blizzards, heat waves, hard freezes and on and on. It’s the norm. The assessment would have you think that every time one of these types of events happens, now or in the future, it is because we are emitting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Such a conclusion is a stretch and has never been proven. A thorough review of climate science would demonstrate that the impact of human-caused climate change on the behavior of most types of extreme weather is poorly understood. Instead, the vagaries of climate dominate our experiences.
Second, greenhouse gas emissions from the United States have a truly minimal and diminishing effect on the future course of the Earth’s climate. Rather, that course is being set by developing nations such as China and, soon, India. Research has shown that eliminating all greenhouse gas emissions from the United States now and forever only mitigates less than two-tenths of a one degree of warming by the end of the century — but the cost to do so would hurt our economy dearly. Few folks are willing to pay such a price for no measureable return.
Third, a growing body of scientific evidence — which is based in observations rather than climate models — strongly suggests that future climate change is going to be smaller than we are commonly told in reports such as this National Climate Assessment or those from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. This means that reducing carbon-dioxide emissions from the United States will have even less of an impact than the tiny number mentioned above.
Finally, suggesting that we will be overwhelmed by negative impacts from climate change ignores our demonstrated human ability to respond to environmental challenges. A changing climate is only filled with negatives if we sit unresponsive and let it sweep over us. However, such an outcome is completely at odds with human civilization. The National Climate Assessment seems to sparingly recognize this fact, but then is quick to dismiss it as a way forward.
A glaring example concerns the death toll from heat waves. The assessment tells us that incidents of extreme heat have become more common and longer-lasting, and that we should expect the trend to continue into the future (until presumably that we stop emitting greenhouse gases). The report recognizes that “[s]ome of the risks of heat-related sickness and death have diminished in recent decades, possibly due to better forecasting, heat-health early warning systems, and/or increased access to air conditioning for the U.S. population.” It ignores those findings, though, to conclude “increasingly frequent and intense heat events lead to more heat-related illnesses and deaths.” This is not only a non sequitur but it is also completely wrong.
Scientific literature is chock full of studies that demonstrate that the population’s sensitivity to extreme heat is decreasing, resulting in lower rates of people dying during heat waves. This is true across the United States and in major cities around the world. A new paper by researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health examined trends in heat-related mortality across the United States and concluded “[t]his study provides strong evidence that acute (e.g., same-day) heat-related mortality risk has declined over time in the U.S., even in more recent years.” Another recent look into heat-related mortality published in the prominent science journal Nature Climate Change concluded that “climate change itself leads to adaptation” a finding that “highlights one of the many often overlooked intricacies of the human response to climate change.” Such an observation applies directly to the National Climate Assessment.
Let’s get one thing clear: The National Climate Assessment is a political call to action document meant for the president’s left-leaning constituency. What pretense of scientific support that decorates it quickly falls away under a close and critical inspection.
Perhaps most telling is the letter to the members of Congress that introduces the just-released report, co-signed by White House Science Adviser John Holdren and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration head Kathryn Sullivan. The letter concludes, “When President Obama launched his Climate Action Plan last year, he made clear that the essential information contained in this report would be used by the Executive Branch to underpin future policies and decisions to better understand and manage the risks of climate change.”
When the president launched his Climate Action Plan last year, the National Climate Assessment was still being revised and reviewed. Yet somehow, the president already knew that it would help his environmental agenda and imminent executive actions on the issue. It seems the message was preordained — the mark of politics trumping science.
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Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger:
What research? AFAIK there is no evidence, aside from speculation based on hypothetical effects of CO2 in the atmosphere, that the small percentage of CO2 from burning fossil fuels has any measurable effect on global temperature (assuming such a thing can be measured). It is the Alarmists who claim that it does. Well, let them show it, empirically. They can’t. Game over. No point in arguing about the effect of actual or hypothetical levels of US-generated CO2 when the effect itself cannot be demonstrated to exist aside from calculations on the back of an envelope.
The Alarmists are accustomed to taking a mile for every inch we give them. Don’t give them the inch.
/Mr Lynn
They do mix pollution with human made activities. The larger population you have in one area, the more pollution they will create. Anyway, as they say, ‘The truth will out?’ If they believe that green energy will create less warming, let them spend their dollars, and watch the effect on their climate. I’ve just received an email to ask me to put in a submission to keep the clean energy bill going in Australia. Needless to say, I won’t be submitting one, that is not rude.
Chip Knappenberger:
L. E. Joiner has a point. Why do you cite such garbage as these unsupported AGW hypotheses which you seem to have swallowed as fact?
Three observations at http://www.middlebury.net/op-ed/pangburn.html demonstrate that CO2 change has no significant effect on climate
1) In the late Ordovician, the planet plunged into the Andean/Saharan ice age and later emerged from it while the CO2 level was about 10 times the present.
2) During the last glacial period, warming trends changed to cooling trends while the CO2 level was higher than it had been during the warming trend.
3) During the 20th century, average global temperature trends went down, up, down, up, flat (soon to be down) while the CO2 level went steadily, progressively up. Lack of correlation demonstrates lack of causation.
Two drivers of climate change have been discovered that accurately (R^2>0.9) explain average global temperatures since before 1900. The drivers are given at http://agwunveiled.blogspot.com/ . CO2 is not one of them.
Of the surface temperature trend change from 1909-2005, 62.2% is due to the time-integral of the difference between the sunspot number each year and the average 1610-1940 (34) (times a proxy factor). The rest, 37.8%, is due to the combined effect of ocean oscillations.
I am no scientist but I am a historian (Ph.D., UC Santa Barbara, 1970) and I can assure everyone that there were hotter periods in the past without benefit of carbon-based industry, all well documented in the historical record. This alone is sufficient to prove to me that AGW is rubbish. The hard science underscores this but isn’t even necessary to prove it.
Does climate change on Earth?
You betcha all the time.
Did man do it?
Nope we’ve only been around for .00002% of Earth’s existence.
The sun causes Earth’s climate to change and has done so for 4.5 billion years.
Milankovitch Cycles easily explain why Earth’s climate is always changing:
1) The shape of Earth’s orbit around the sun (eccentricity) 100,000 year cycle
2) The tilt of Earth’s axis (Precession) wobbles in a 26,000 year cycle
3) Obliquity (Earth’s axis relative to the plane of its orbit) cycles lasting 40,000 years
Mix up the 3 cycles and you get climate change on Earth;
vacillating sun energy cycles make Earth’s dynamic climate.
Warmers ALWAYS leave out Milankovitch cycles from ALL of their analysis.
since man has nothing to do with any of the cycles……
Make no mistake, this is a desperate dash for the controllers to get in front of the climate before it is too late to take credit for the cooling, reduced frequency of storms, slowdown in sea level rise, more moderate droughts, recovering sea ice, growing pop of polar bears… that is taking place naturally….If they manage to put forth a bigger load of regulations, shut down coal, pipelines, hyro-fracking and expand windmills and solar panels, and give heart to the EUSocialist Republics that are about to throw in the towel, then we have allowed cementing of CAGW science for a century, subjugation of all science to become a political tool for any purpose, promulgation of laws to punish dissent, repeal or, as is in process, reinterpretation of the First Amendment, neutering and repurposing of all education, final death of civilization and the beginning of a new, long Dark Age without the monasteries to preserve and study unsanctioned knowledge and ideas.