The climate consensus is not 97% – it's 100%

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Shock news from the Heartland Institute’s Ninth International Climate Change Conference: among the 600 delegates, the consensus that Man contributes to global warming was not 97%. It was 100%.

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During my valedictorian keynote at the conference, I appointed the lovely Diane Bast as my independent adjudicatrix. She read out six successive questions to the audience, one by one. I invited anyone who would answer “No” to that question to raise a hand. According to the adjudicatrix, not a single hand was raised in response to any of the questions.

These were the six questions.

1. Does climate change?

2. Has the atmospheric concentration of CO2 increased since the late 1950s?

3. Is Man likely to have contributed to the measured increase in CO2 concentration since the late 1950s?

4. Other things being equal, is it likely that adding CO2 to the atmosphere will cause some global warming?

5. Is it likely that there has been some global warming since the late 1950s?

6. Is it likely that Man’s emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse gases have contributed to the measured global warming since 1950?

At a conference of 600 “climate change deniers”, then, not one delegate denied that climate changes. Likewise, not one denied that we have contributed to global warming since 1950.

One of the many fundamental dishonesties in the climate debate is the false impression created by the Thermageddonites and their hosts of allies in the Main Stream Media (MSM) that climate skeptics would answer “No” to most – if not all – of the six questions.

That fundamental dishonesty was at the core of the Cook et al. “consensus” paper published last year. The authors listed three “levels of endorsement” supporting some sort of climate consensus.

Level 1 reflected the IPCC’s definition of consensus: that most of the global warming since 1950 was man-made. Levels 2 and 3 reflected explicit or implicit acceptance that Man causes some warming. The Heartland delegates’ unanimous opinion fell within Level 2.

Cook et al., having specified these three “levels of endorsement”, and having gone to the trouble of reading and marking 11,944 abstracts, did not publish their assessment of the number of abstracts they had marked as falling into each of the three endorsement levels. Instead, they published a single aggregate total combining all three categories.

Their failure to report the results fully was what raised my suspicions that their article fell short of the standards of integrity that the reasonable man on the Clapham omnibus would have expected of a paper purporting to be scientific.

The text file recording the results of Cook’s survey was carefully released only after several weeks following publication, during which the article claiming 97% consensus had received wall-to-wall international publicity from the MSM. Even Mr Obama’s Twitteratus had cited it with approval as indicating that “global warming is real, man-made and dangerous”.

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The algorithm counted the number of abstracts Cook had allocated to each level of endorsement. When the computer displayed the results, I thought there must have been some mistake. The algorithm had found only 64 out of the 11,944 papers, or 0.5%, marked as falling within Level 1, reflecting the IPCC consensus that recent warming was mostly man-made.

I carried out a manual check using the search function in Microsoft Notepad. Sure enough, there were only 64 data entries ending in “,1”.

Next, I read all 64 abstracts and discovered – not greatly to my surprise – that only 41 had explicitly said Man had caused most of the global warming over the past half century or so.

In the peer-reviewed learned journals, therefore, only 41 of 11,944 papers, or 0.3% – and not 97.1% – had endorsed the definition of the consensus proposition to which the IPCC, in its 2013 Fifth Assessment Report, had assigned 95-99% confidence.

Now that we have the results of the Heartland Conference survey, the full extent of the usual suspects’ evasiveness about climate “consensus” can be revealed.

Cook et al. had lumped together the 96.8% who, like all 100% of us at ICCC9, had endorsed the proposition that we cause some warming with the 0.3% who had endorsed the IPCC’s proposition that we caused most of the warming since 1950.

In defiance of the evidence recorded in their own data file, they had then explicitly stated, both in their article and in a subsequent article, that 97.1% had endorsed the IPCC’s proposition.

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Amusingly, 96.8% is 97% of 97.1%. In other words, 97% of the abstracts that formed the basis of the “97% consensus” claim in Cook et al. (2013) did not endorse the IPCC’s definition of the consensus, as the article had falsely claimed they did. However, those abstracts did endorse the more scientifically credible Heartland definition.

Among the unspeakable representatives of the MSM who came to the Heartland conference to conduct sneering interviews with climate “deniers” was a smarmy individual from CNN.

He asked me, in that supercilious tone with which we are all too familiar, how it was that I, a mere layman, dared to claim that I knew better than 97% of published climate scientists. I referred him to Legates et al. (2013), the peer-reviewed refutation of the notion that 97% of scientists endorse the IPCC’s assertion that most of the warming since 1950 was man-made.

The CNN reporter said that the result in Legates et al. was merely my “interpretation”. So I pointed to a row of internet booths nearby and said, “If I count these booths and find that there are, say, 12 of them, and if you count them and find there are indeed 12 of them, then our finding is not a matter of interpretation. It is a matter of fact, that any third party can independently verify.”

I challenged him to go away, before he broadcast anything, and count how many of the 11,944 abstracts listed in the Cook et al. data file were marked by the authors themselves as falling within Level 1. If he counted only 64, I said, then his count would accord with mine. And our counts would not be an “interpretation” but a fact, whose truth or falsity might readily and definitively be established by any third party performing exactly the same count as ours.

He said he would check, but with that look in his eye that seemed to speak otherwise.

The results of my survey of the 600 Heartland delegates reveal that the difference between the Thermageddonites and us is far less than they would like the world to think. Like most of them, we fall within Cook’s endorsement levels 2-3. Unlike them, we do not claim to know whether most of the global warming since 1950 was man-made: for that is beyond what the current state of science can tell us.

Above all, unlike them we do not misreport a 0.3% consensus as a 97.1% consensus.

You may like to verify the results recorded in Cook’s data file for yourself. I have asked Anthony to archive the file (it resides here: cook.pdf ).

[UPDATE: David Burton writes:  I’ve put the Cook 2013 data into an Excel spreadsheet, which makes it a lot easier to analyze than from that cook.pdf file.  There’s a link to it on my site, here: http://sealevel.info/97pct/#cook ]

If the reporter from CNN who interviewed me reads this, I hope he will perform the count himself and then come back to me as he had undertaken to do. But I shall not be holding my breath.

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MarkW
July 11, 2014 2:46 pm

I’d answer yes to all 6.

John A. Fleming
July 11, 2014 2:47 pm

1. Yes
2. Yes, the data seems clear, but …
3. Unknown, the scientific research is completely untrustworthy. Not worth a bucket of spit. All of it. I don’t care how eminent a scientist you are, your funding comes from agencies that are bureaucratically and politically corrupted by CAGW fever, and scientific research that doesn’t support the political orthodoxy is not funded, and if inadvertently discovered it is suppressed.
4. Same as 3.
5. Same as 3.
6. Same as 3.
Using the phrase I picked up from the resident eminent scientist, the science is worse than useless. It’s time to disallow all cites prior to 2014, burn all the data, and start again with fresh new data sets.

MarkW
July 11, 2014 2:48 pm

Steven Mosher says:
July 11, 2014 at 1:22 pm
=====
About a dozen posters had made a liar out of you even before you posted this.

July 11, 2014 2:56 pm

Smelling a rat in 2007, I began my own internet research into the veracity of AGW doom-sayers.
I found WUWT and since have been a near daily visitor.
If someone were to ask me if I’ve learned the effects of CO2 on our atmosphere, Here’s my answer.
1) CO2 absorbs IR radiation.
2) At 380 PPM, CO2 IR absorption is almost at saturation and as CO2 increases there will be less and less added IR absorption.
3) Since CO2 can be proved to absorb IR, thereby warming, and the RSS satellite data shows no increase in the rate of temperature rise since 1979 and no temperature rise at all since 1998, While all along there’s a steady rise in atmospheric CO2. There must be a mechanism, a negative feedback that cancels this warming.
Clouds, clouds cause cooling. They are a result of warming yet cause cooling, a negative feedback, a stabilizer.
Given our atmosphere’s “recovery” from jolts like El Nino, and volcanic eruptions, our atmosphere displays the characteristics of a stable system. One not prone to “run-away” temperature.
I learned all this here at WUWT.
It’s as clear as the nose on my face.
But that face is not one of a “Climate Scientist”
so don’t pay any heed to this screed.
There is nothing to fear from the climate.
But, there is plenty to fear from “Climate Charlatans”

Rud Istvan
July 11, 2014 3:00 pm

Cook’s paper served its media purpose. Absent media worthy retraction (now unlikely, as predicted when given a last shot months ago), best to move on. It was a battle lost in a war to be won. Skeptics appear to be starting to win, since Mother Nature herself (pause, Antarctic ice, Arctic ice recovery, stadium wave, weak 2014 El Niño) is on our side.
The increasing vitriol and attempts to silence (BBC re Lord Lawson), growing public rejection of those tactics (Rasmussen poll), and growing resort to extra legal means (EPA) are increasing evidence this is likely so. Focus on the future.

Latitude
July 11, 2014 3:01 pm
July 11, 2014 3:02 pm

MarkW says:
July 11, 2014 at 2:48 pm
Steven Mosher says:
July 11, 2014 at 1:22 pm
=====
About a dozen posters had made a liar out of you even before you posted this.
“I think what you will find is that many people will try to weasel out of answering the questions simply”
do a count. “many” did weasel out of answering “simply.”
counting those who didnt weasel doesnt answer the question.
when monkton asked the question nobody weaseled.
now did they?
leif also posed a question simply.
count the answers that contain caveats, weaseling,
count the answers like those given to monkton. simple Y/N
give your own answers like you were in the room
yyyyyy

Reply to  Steven Mosher
July 14, 2014 5:26 am

@Steven Mosher – actually “many” did not “weasel” out of answering. The question was not asked of us. So “many” commented on the over all content of the post.
Should WUWT put up an actual poll, I am sure most would take it.

Brute
July 11, 2014 3:03 pm

Please allow me to correct you, Monckton. The consensus is off 300% since it includes three decades of future generations of scientists.

July 11, 2014 3:04 pm

yes leif. a nice stunt.

u.k.(us)
July 11, 2014 3:41 pm

lsvalgaard says:
July 11, 2014 at 11:14 am
Those findings clash a bit with the often made claims here at WUWT that there is no warming at all, that CO2 cannot cause any warming, etc. Perhaps we should have a poll to see how many here answers NO to all six questions…
==================
Write a post, ask some questions.
Should get a pretty good turnout 🙂

July 11, 2014 3:43 pm

1. Does climate change? YES. The climate has changed drastically over time and did so long, long before mankind appeared on this planet.
2. Has the atmospheric concentration of CO2 increased since the late 1950s? Unknown. The data is very unreliable, but it seems to indicate that CO2 has risen.
3. Is Man likely to have contributed to the measured increase in CO2 concentration since the late 1950s? Unknown. We don’t know what NET effect mankind has had on CO2 since 1950, but it is likely that human activities has had a slight upward effect on CO2 levels.
4. Other things being equal, is it likely that adding CO2 to the atmosphere will cause some global warming? Unknown. CO2 both cools and warms depending on location and other factors; and we don’t know what its net effect is but data would indicate the additional CO2 has had precious little effect.
5. Is it likely that there has been some global warming since the late 1950s? Unknown. The data sets are not reliable due to “adjustments”, incompetence and bias. The non-adjusted temps seem to indicated no warming at all since 1900.
6. Is it likely that Man’s emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse gases have contributed to the measured global warming since 1950? Unknown. See other answers.

July 11, 2014 3:49 pm

“But no, [Mr. Watts] has chosen not to enforce censorship on his site. Shame the pro-CAGW police allow no such discourse on theirs.”
I think that the site is pretty open to different views, but there are some people not allowed to post here, some topics not allowed to be discussed, and sites that one is not supposed to link to. These things relate to the poll above. So, this site is much better than the pro-CAGW sites as you say, but perfection is still aways off.
[The topics you refer to are not related to the poll above. .mod]

Alan McIntire
July 11, 2014 4:09 pm

I’d answer “Yes” to all six questions. As to CO2, I like to give my “pie” analogy. Eating an extra 150 calorie piece of pie for desert every night, a person will gain weight, but their weight won’t increase indefinitely at 1 pound every 20 days- 3000 calories. A person quickly reaches a new weight balance somewhat higher than their pre pie weight. Likewise,, fossil fuel energy use has been increasing worldwide, so .naturally CO2,( weight) continues to rise, but once fossil fuel use levels out, the world will quickly reach a new, somewhat higher, CO2 balance.
As to increased heat, nobody mentioned another factor involved- energy use. We’ve been drastically increasing energy use over the last 200 + years, most of that energy is released in urban areas, and ultimately winds up as heat. Most of our temperature measurements are in urban areas. The temperatures of URBAN areas will continue to rise as long as we continue to use more energy, regardless of whether that energy is fossil fuel, hydropower, wind, or solar.
– that energy is finally going to wind up as heat regardless of the source.

July 11, 2014 4:11 pm

lsvalgaard says:
July 11, 2014 at 11:14 am
“Those findings clash a bit with the often made claims here at WUWT that there is no warming at all, that CO2 cannot cause any warming, etc.”
Yes Leif, but you know that the bin of so-called deniers also include a nut fringe and an ignorant anti-just-about-anything type (no one is excluded here who follows the common sense rules of WUWT), just like one finds ideologue malthusians and legions of know-nothing useful idiots along with honorable and corrupt scientists on the other side. A sceptics’ scientific conference is a natural filter for thoughtful sceptics. People haters and end-of-the-world types that side with CAGW scientific proponents on the other hand are all invited to join in in the love-in. I’m not surprised that 100% of skeptics at such a conference would accept that man is having some effect on climate. Exactly what it is, how much and how caused, in light of natural variability, is the issue with such sceptics.

Latitude
July 11, 2014 4:12 pm

Did Leif and Mosh answer the questions?….
BTW….my answers are exactly the same as Mark

July 11, 2014 4:17 pm

Latitude says:
July 11, 2014 at 4:12 pm
Did Leif and Mosh answer the questions?….
My answers to this cleverly designed PR-stunt would, of course, be yyyyyy. What is wrong with the poll is that there are no numbers, no error bars, no confidence intervals, no ‘how much’. Totally useless and without any scientific value. Pure PR bullshit, by that well-known master of BS.
[Unless all who answered the poll also answered yyyyyy. .mod]

Randy
July 11, 2014 4:20 pm

lsvalgaard says:
July 11, 2014 at 4:17 pm
I am pretty sure you missed the whole point.

James Abbott
July 11, 2014 4:20 pm

Latitude – I checked those references. There are references to the Keeling data having been manipulated, the pre-industrial levels being wrong, etc. All tosh. The Mauna Loa smoothed curve is exactly that – smoothed on a running mean (standard method) but they still show the seasonal “breathing” of the biosphere. Location differences ? Nope – the global trend, based on a network of sites shows a very similar record to the Mauna Loa data taken at altitude.
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/global.html#global
The pre-industrial level of 280ppm is confirmed from ice cores:
http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/bas_research/science_briefings/icecorebriefing.php
There is no real evidence that this data has been “deliberately corrupted”. Its just more wishful thinking from those that delude themselves that the entire scientific community is working to a conspiracy plan.

July 11, 2014 4:23 pm

Randy says:
July 11, 2014 at 4:20 pm
I am pretty sure you missed the whole point.
If I did, it just shows how lousy the stunt was. The purpose of a PR-stunt is to make the point come across, and so they failed in my case.

July 11, 2014 4:41 pm

It’s 100% Mann made

JimS
July 11, 2014 5:29 pm

I would still like to have an overall understanding of the 600 delegates and their credentials as being climate scientists. Were half of them climate scientists? One quarter? One hundred per cent? Those are the issues I have to contend with when discussing AGW with various people. Therefore, no matter what consensus the 600 came up with, unless others regard them as qualified, it was a useless exercise. Telling me that a climate scientist can not be defined, or, that there is no such thing, doesn’t cut it.

July 11, 2014 5:33 pm

I used to read posts from Leif Svalgaard and Steven Mosher with great interest, always intelligent, sharp and to the point.
Now they both come across as mildly bitter, sarcastic and condescending…., I wonder what happened…..!

Richard D
July 11, 2014 5:36 pm

We get it. Svalgaard has a beef with Monckton, who called him out recently. I hope mods will not allow Svalgaard to continue flaming this thread with his serially inane comments.

RACookPE1978
Editor
July 11, 2014 5:37 pm

JimS says:
July 11, 2014 at 5:29 pm
I would still like to have an overall understanding of the 600 delegates and their credentials as being climate scientists. Were half of them climate scientists? One quarter? One hundred per cent? Those are the issues I have to contend with when discussing AGW with various people. Therefore, no matter what consensus the 600 came up with, unless others regard them as qualified, it was a useless exercise.

Gee, Jim, I’m a bit confused.
Is a climate scientist the one who gets paid hundreds of thousands of dollars each year using billions of taxpayer monies to make bad decisions about the climate and publicize only what the government wants to publicize about climate “science” ?
Or is a climate scientists one uses “science” and “research” and “technology” to study the climate and report to others what the climate is actually doing? +
Do you have to get a PhD before or after you are wrong about the world’s climate in order to be a climate scientist?
Do you have to both have a PhD AND be wrong about the world’s climate in order to be a climate scientist, or can you be right about the world’s climate and NOT be a climate scientist?
What is more important in being called a climate scientist: Being right about the climate or being paid to get a PhD by the government?
If science can be bought by $24,000/00 from an oil company, how much science is being bought for 200 billion from the government?
(If a climate scientist lies in the woods but no one smells his polluted paper, does he still get his research grant renewed next year?)

Bill_W
July 11, 2014 5:44 pm

Leif,
Yes to all six. It was just as much as PR stunt as the Cook paper that he is comparing it to.
He does have a point that rather than engage in open debate, some would rather resort to name calling and arguments based on “consensus” and authority. The climate issue has been deeply politicized and many without any ability to read the science and with very limited math ability, whether in the media or on the street, can simply dismiss anything they don’t agree with by saying “97%”. And they don’t take the time to even try to ask questions or learn anything at all about climate. That is the frustrating part and it is important to put a stake through this 97% meme as it is inaccurate. And one way to do that might be through a PR stunt that gets people to realize that skeptics agree 100% on what their “enemies” say they deny. It actually is the truth, even if it is also a PR stunt.

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