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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July 11, 2014 5:49 pm

Richard D says:
July 11, 2014 at 5:36 pm
Svalgaard has a beef with Monckton
I think you have this backwards. Monckton has done his best to defame me [not that I really care].
Bill_W says:
July 11, 2014 at 5:44 pm
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%”
So now they will just say “100%”.

July 11, 2014 5:53 pm

Some here might want to re-read this:
“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.
Bold mine.
Many above comments seem to reflect the bolded phrase.
I don’t see where Monckton has posted this as if it were some sort of serious scientific survey either. Just a simple raise, or in this case non-raise, of hands that was easily counted, or, again, in this case non-counted.
Regarding the credentials of the attendees, I think the more important point would be that they were a reasonable microcosm of the climate science skeptical viewpoint. Not all proponents of the skeptical view would be considered “climate scientists” just as not all of the alarmists are “climate scientists”. (“climate scientists” in quotes because it is evident there are differing views on what the qualifications are.) Arguing over whether one is a “climate scientist” while at the same time praising Al Gore’s movie, seems a little absurd to me.
Most importantly, we should not let the MSM or the Alarmists define what we believe. Monckton’s informal survey at least allows us to portray ourselves more correctly than, say, a CNN reporter might.

July 11, 2014 5:53 pm

A C Osborn says, July 11, 2014 at 12:04 pm:
“4. Other things being equal, is it likely that adding CO2 to the atmosphere will cause some global warming?
You can all go along with Lord Monckton if you want, but not me.
Based on this from Wiki which no one seems to disagree with too much
” there is evidence for very high CO2 volume concentrations between 200 and 150 million years ago of over 3,000 ppm, and between 600 and 400 million years ago of over 6,000 ppm.”
If this is true and CO2 is really such a potent Greehouse Gas how could we possibly have had Ice Ages with levels that high?
As temperatures were also high at those times, how could they have become low enough for Ice Ages?”

Note how the operative term here is “other things being equal”. Other things being equal, there are reasons to believe that adding CO2 to the atmosphere would cause some ‘global warming’. This is what they do in the lab. They measure the temperature effect inside an closed glass box. In such a situation ‘the top of the atmosphere’ can’t lift and convection and evaporation cannot increase in efficiency. All that can happen is a reduction of the temperature gradient away from the externally heated bottom surface, because the top lid warms.
So I would answer YES to all the first 5 questions, but a resounding NO!!!!!!!!!!! to the last.
The surface/atmosphere system isn’t even remotely resembling a closed glass box in a lab.

4TimesAYear
July 11, 2014 6:11 pm

By virtue of being alive and having a body temp of 98.6 (or thereabouts) we contribute to global warming “some” but it matters very little in the natural course of things. I doubt even the UHI has much effect on “global warming” – this is particularly *not* noticeable in the winter months that are bitterly cold even with the sun shining all day. The heat just isn’t permanent enough to achieve any warming – much less hold onto it. So while man contributes “some” – it is precious little, and certainly not enough to cause the climate to change.

HaryG
July 11, 2014 6:13 pm

says:
July 11, 2014 at 1:09 pm
@kenw:
“define ‘bona fide climate scientist’. The term itself is a strawman.”
My answer: Someone with a Ph.D. in a physical science, including one or more of the following disciplines:
climate science, atmospheric science, meteorology, physics, geology or oceanography.
Ooooh – I am a Climate Scientist and I didn’t know – where’s my grant?
(Bsc hons physics specializing in Atmospheric circulation, pollution and meteorology!!!!)
PS Never used it in anger but must still be a “Climate Scientist”
PPS – Leif you are being a bit hard on Christopher – he was using the exercise merely to demonstrate a point – something that is done quite a lot a conferences all over the world.

July 11, 2014 6:17 pm

okulaer says, July 11, 2014 at 5:53 pm:
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
Sorry, meant to post as ‘Kristian’ as usual …

July 11, 2014 6:22 pm

HaryG says:
July 11, 2014 at 6:13 pm
PPS – Leif you are being a bit hard on Christopher – he was using the exercise merely to demonstrate a point – something that is done quite a lot a conferences all over the world.
That is like saying that smoking is healthy, because so many do it.
But, I realize that my bar for what is reasonable is set a bit higher than his. Just sad to see all the oohs and aahs that applaud sinking so deep.

Eeyore Rifkin
July 11, 2014 6:26 pm

y.y.y.y. y-but I’d rather say “not unlikely” because of crummy data. y–same caveat as the previous, which it takes as one of its premises.

Latitude
July 11, 2014 6:27 pm

LOL…..he didn’t write it up as a peer reviewed paper!

BruceC
July 11, 2014 6:30 pm

Speaking of PR stunts Leif, Chris Turney* has been quiet since January of this year.
*Expedition costs – AUS$1.5 million. Does NOT include rescue and recovery costs.

Niff
July 11, 2014 6:39 pm

Lord M had a classical education, which accounts for the latin and the VB…LOL

July 11, 2014 6:42 pm

lsvalgaard says:
This whole thing was clearly a PR-stunt and carries no significance.
Of course it can be labeled a “stunt”. It was aimed at debunking the “stunt” that promotes the 97% consensus. What interests me most about your reply is did you likewise post about the 97% consensus as also being “a stunt that carried no significance”?

July 11, 2014 6:49 pm

Climate change is very real. For example, the average climate of the northern hemisphere is so cold as to cause the ground to be buried under a thousand feet of ice. The cycle of glacier on/glacier off takes place every several hundred thousand years and can be clearly seen in many ways. Even as the science is settled that glaciation has taken place, the causes are still undergoing vigorous debate.
With respect to the idea that humans are causing harmful changes to the climate at this very moment, I am waiting for some peer-reviewed papers that proposes what the optimum climate is for our biosphere. The first question that would naturally flow would be where is our current climate and trend in relation to this finding.
That nobody seems interested in this vital comparison indicates that there climate is being studied for other purposes. Since all the urgent demands that flow from today’s climate science all converge on policy solutions that involve statism, bigger government, higher taxes, less personal liberty, the bigger picture tells me all that I need to know about “climate science”.

July 11, 2014 7:05 pm

There’s a scene in the movie World War Z in which the hero learns how one group of people managed to defend itself against the zombie infection:
“When nine people agree on something, it’s the tenth man’s responsibility to disagree no matter how improbable the idea.”
Peer review, party opposition and, sadly, watchdog journalism seem to have driven us to a point where evidence no longer matters except to the extent it can be twisted by PR and marketing firms.
Thankfully for climate science, the tenth man role is being played by the publishers of this blog and its contributors.
Here’s to hoping we all keep seeking evidence and, should a time arise when evidence conflicts with our beliefs, notions and interests, maintain the ability to wriggle ourselves from entrenched positions.

wobble
July 11, 2014 7:10 pm

lsvalgaard says:
July 11, 2014 at 2:01 pm
There is also the strong effect of peer pressure.

Which is exactly the reason far too many “scientists” claim a belief in CAGW.
Also, I’m amused by your frustration that commenters aren’t complying with your strict instructions in this thread. How dare they, eh?

July 11, 2014 7:11 pm

jim Steele says:
July 11, 2014 at 6:42 pm
did you likewise post about the 97% consensus as also being “a stunt that carried no significance”?
No need to, as we all know it is garbage. But why must we stoop to their level? Because we think the general public is too stupid to understand anything else?

July 11, 2014 7:14 pm

wobble says:
July 11, 2014 at 7:10 pm
Also, I’m amused by your frustration that commenters aren’t complying with your strict instructions in this thread.
People show their understanding and astuteness by their actions and their comments. Some don’t come across very positively, but I guess it takes all kinds…

wobble
July 11, 2014 7:32 pm

lsvalgaard says:
July 11, 2014 at 7:14 pm
People show their understanding and astuteness by their actions and their comments.

These aren’t the only things people show. It seems as if you’re missing obvious elements.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
July 11, 2014 7:37 pm

Dear Anthony Watts,
Please consider adding to the Blogroll under “Political Climate” a new entry, “WND – Lord Monckton” using the link below, so others may more easily enjoy his written wit that might not be climate related but is still informative and entertaining, currently arriving as weekly missives.
http://www.wnd.com/author/cmonckton/
The most-current posting is July 9, “Climate of Freedom in Las Vegas”, and well worth reading.
Thank you for reading this suggestion.

Werner Brozek
July 11, 2014 7:38 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
For the record, I would have said “yes” to all six questions.
As for the claims of no warming, I write a post every month in which I give the time for which six different data sets show no warming. However that does not mean that I believe there is no warming at all. There is some warming, but it is just over a longer period of time than the time at which the slope is zero for that particular data set.
I could make the following three statements, all of which are true:
1. There has been no warming on RSS for 17 years and 10 months.
2. There has been no statistically significant warming at the 95% significance level on RSS for 21 years and 8 months.
3. The warming on RSS since 1979 is much less than the average model projection.
If you got into a conversation with someone over a coffee and you mentioned points 2 or 3, chances are their eyes would glaze over and you may as well stop talking. But #1 is very straight forward and easily gets the point across that nothing catastrophic is happening. And until the next super El Nino makes that claim not true, we may as well use argument #1. At some point, we may have to go to argument #2.

July 11, 2014 7:47 pm

wobble says:
July 11, 2014 at 7:32 pm
These aren’t the only things people show. It seems as if you’re missing obvious elements.
Such as? Educate me!

RoHa!
July 11, 2014 7:59 pm

1. Does climate change?
So I’m told. I haven’t noticed any real change in my lifetime.
2. Has the atmospheric concentration of CO2 increased since the late 1950s?
They tell me it has. I haven’t tried measuring it myself.
3. Is Man likely to have contributed to the measured increase in CO2 concentration since the late 1950s?
If you already know there has been a measured increase, why did you ask question 2?
And I suppose it seems likely, since we burn stuff and make beer and breathe.
4. Other things being equal, is it likely that adding CO2 to the atmosphere will cause some global warming?
I don’t know what has to be equal.
5. Is it likely that there has been some global warming since the late 1950s?
That’s what the official figures show. Can I trust them?
6. Is it likely that Man’s emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse gases have contributed to the measured global warming since 1950?
Look, if it has been honestly measured, what is the point of asking question 5? And I’m not even a mala fide climate scientist, so I don’t know what effect CO2 has on the climate system. Does anyone?

thingadonta
July 11, 2014 8:06 pm

One way of looking at the Cook et al paper, is confusion between ‘ought’ and ‘is’.
They live in a dreamworld where the two words are interchangeable. In other words, what they are essentially trying to say is ‘97% of climate scientists ought to believe in the consensus’, but they get semantically confused and say ‘97% of climate scientists believe in the consensus’. The deep seated confusion between ought with is, is the main problem.
Add to that, why they WANT people to believe in the consensus in the first place, and you have the answer, social control. The moral imperative. Its surprising how strong it is in some people, when they can no longer even tell the difference between moral causes and reality. Moral causes trump reality. Trouble is, that isn’t science.

Pamela Gray
July 11, 2014 8:09 pm

People, RSS has a calibration fix tacked onto the raw data due to changes in the satilite’s orbit affecting its accuracy. Stop using RSS. The other satilite data sets won’t come back to bite your comments in the arse.

July 11, 2014 8:11 pm

Not sure why everyone is busting Leif’s chops since he is correct. I wasn’t going to make a big deal about it, but the very first thing that went through my mind as I was reading the article was…OMG, a show of hands? Worse, a show of hands for a dissenting vote? The result is meaningless!
I understand the goal, it was well intention-ed, but given the circumstances, it was unlikely to have had any other result, so fair to call it a well intention-ed PR stunt. That said, I think it fair to say that most skeptics accept that the GHE exists, and it drives me nuts when people in this forum claim “experimental” or other evidence to show that it doesn’t. They should be taken to account in exactly the same manner as those who claim catastrophe is on the horizon, for both are disseminating false information and calling it science.

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