“The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present – and is gravely to be regarded.” – President Dwight D. Eisenhower, farewell address, 1961.
By Patrick J. Michaels and Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger |
In our post last week titled “Climate Alarmism: When is this Bozo Going Down?” we described how new research increasingly casts doubt on the validity of climate models and their projections of future climate change. It is increasing clear that climate models simply predict too much warming from human greenhouse gas emissions.
But the scientific community, or at least that part of it which makes its living off climate alarm, is slow to accept this.
Who can blame these folks? More money flows from the government into universities (or government labs) to study the effects of climate change if we all agree that human greenhouse gas emissions are leading to climate change of a dangerous magnitude.
So it is left to the emeritus or retired profs to lay bare the truth.
A fine example of this can be found in a recent article in the New York Times’ DotEarth blog run by ex-Times science reporter Andy Revkin. In his story looking into the implications of new scientific findings concerning the potential impacts of ocean circulation variability on our understanding of the behavior the global average surface history (parts of which we described in our last post), Revkin interviewed four prominent climate researchers. The level of confidence that each showed in the mainstream (climate model-driven) global warming meme (despite this new research suggesting that something may be rotten in the state of Denmark) appears proportional to how much professional advancement still lies ahead.
Josh Willis’ (a young scientist from the government’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory) views on climate change seemed unshaken by the new research:
In regards to your question, if you mean how robust is the “slowdown” in global surface warming, the answer is it just probably just barely statistically significant. If you are wondering whether is it meaningful in terms of the public discourse about climate change, I would say the answer is no. The basic story of human caused global warming and its coming impacts is still the same: humans are causing it and the future will bring higher sea levels and warmer temperatures, the only questions are: how much and how fast?
Andrew Dessler, a mid-career professor at Texas A&M, appeared pretty much equally unmoved:
Second, I think it’s important to put the hiatus in context. This is not an existential threat to the mainstream theory of climate. We are not going to find out that, lo and behold, carbon dioxide is not a greenhouse gas and is not causing warming. Rather, I expect that the hiatus will help us understand how ocean variability interacts with the long-term warming that humans are causing. In a few years, as we get to understand this more, skeptics will move on (just like they dropped arguments about the hockey stick and about the surface station record) to their next reason not to believe climate science.
John Michael Wallace, a late-career professor at the University of Washington who recently became emeritus, expressed much more interest in the idea that the new research could lower confidence in just how much human greenhouse gases were impacting climate change:
…It seemed to me that the hiatus in the warming, which by then was approaching ten years in length, should not be dismissed as a statistical fluke. It was as legitimate a part of the record as the rapid rises in global-mean temperature in the 1980s and 1990s…
The new paper by Tung and Chen goes much farther than we did in making the case that Atlantic multidecadal variability needs to be considered in the attribution of climate change. I’m glad to see that it is attracting attention in the scientific community, along with recent papers of Kosaka et al. and Meehl et al. emphasizing the role of ENSO-like variability. I hope this will lead to a broader discussion about the contribution of natural variability to local climate trends and to the statistics of extreme events.
And finally Carl Wunsch, late-career professor emeritus at M.I.T. was pretty frank about the new research and the state of climate science:
The central problem of climate science is to ask what you do and say when your data are, by almost any standard, inadequate? If I spend three years analyzing my data, and the only defensible inference is that “the data are inadequate to answer the question,” how do you publish? How do you get your grant renewed? A common answer is to distort the calculation of the uncertainty, or ignore it all together, and proclaim an exciting story that the New York Times will pick up.
We couldn’t have said that better ourselves!
Global Science Report is a feature from the Center for the Study of Science, where we highlight one or two important new items in the scientific literature or the popular media. For broader and more technical perspectives, consult our monthly “Current Wisdom.”
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The Tung & Chen paper never would have made it past the hockey team peer review 5 years ago.
Since nature stopped cooperating with model projections a decade and a half ago, some sanity is now returning to the field, however begrudgingly.
Yes. When the paymaster pays for a different tune, the piper will play it.
Once upon a time in the rebellious Flower Power days, government money funding research was evil. Now it is influencing and driving research on priorities set by politicians.
And in no small part the money is going to senior managers from those days!
Well, duh!
My brother recently told me that when he was doing his Ph.D. in geology at Brown in the 1980s, and global warming alarmism was just bubbling up, fellow earth science graduate students and early-career professors were rubbing their hands at the prospect of all the $$$$ to be mined out of the government on global warming research.
A shame he is dubious about WUWT based on reviews on ‘skeptical’ ‘scientific’ websites (he’s no longer in the sciences, realizing yeare ago that more personal profits were to be gained by working in the financial sector).
To the question: ABSOUTLY !
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Hmmm……Well, it seem seem “The Hockey Stick” is only being defended in the “I sue you” courts rather than the “courts” of the scientific method. Why not move on in those circles?
“The Surface Station Record”? Well, since the climate models say they are in need of adjustment then I guess the jury is still out.
Make them all appear before of Congress – hooked up to a lie detector.
Lie detectors can be defeated by clenching the buttocks and/or grinding the teeth, though, so they will have to have sensors inserted in both ends to detect cheating.
… hooked up to a generator !
You see what he did there?
As a reminder to fellow WUWT readers; the fatal flaw of the global warming theory:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/08/10/the-diminishing-influence-of-increasing-carbon-dioxide-on-temperature/
This represents knowingly willful slander by alarmists, not naivete. All these guys are fully aware that climate models rely not on the greenhouse effect itself for alarm, but vast 2-3X amplification of it along with eventual runaway feedback scenarios. As this continues, this slander, it starts to form a pattern and becomes actually libelous as far as class action or the RICO statute is concerned. Their statement is a weasel worded lie. They are well aware that they may indeed find out that, lo and behold, water vapor is a negative instead of positive feedback, as skeptics have suggested for years, as they are very much well aware of.
It’s lying by omission, or suppresso veri, suggesto falsi.
OK… $2Billion/year new $$ thrown at ~1000 climatologists. Doing anything that might interrupt that flow of largess might turn your colleagues against you. Plus… obscure practitioners of “not really a mature science yet” get elevated (ficitiously) to “real scientist” status. And you get to be the heroes that saved the world. TRUTH BE DAMNED!
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. The way to solve the whole global warming “problem” is to terminate all funding to the “cause.” Of course, once the well runs dry, the true believers will find another hobgoblin to torment us with and raid our wallets.
I’ve far from moved on. Seems to be the essence of the whole argument that early temps were cooled and later temps warmed.
We shouldn’t let the artic ice norm be dictated by how much ice there was in 1979 either. This year could be very much closer to the norm than 1979 .
I suggest we employ the following phrase when we refer to those “scientists” who make their living touting CAGW:
“Tax payer subsidized climate scientist”
or
“Government subsidized climate scientist”
Extensive use of this appellation in all correspondence and skeptic articles might get through to the public and lower their unjustified trust/esteem for the so called “scientists
It mirrors the name calling tactic employed by the progressives.
When I was Virginia State Climatologist, I used to (and still do) call them “Federal Climatologists”
I regularly have lunch with a group of retired scientists and engineers. Our former employer, a national laboratory, takes the position that global warming is real. None of us who are retired believe that global warming is real. If global warming is real the only solution is nuclear energy and there is relatively little effort in the nuclear energy field.
There is no job in this administration for anyone who does not toe the party line. Just look at how many military Generals have been fired. Or look at the healthcare debacle.
“You tell me whar a man gits his corn pone, en I’ll tell you what his ‘pinions is.”
Twain
Carl Wunsch wonders “If I spend three years analyzing my data, and the only defensible inference is that “the data are inadequate to answer the question,” how do you publish?”
Follow the party line, start out with the word “may” and end with “further research is needed”.
Incidentally it seems to be necessary to watch the press drop the “may” and say nothing. Then watch people who should know better pick up on the “result” and work it into their beliefs as though the “may” never existed.
The problem is “who hands out the grants”?
They mostly flow from the National Science Foundation (NSF) which needs new members who are not so beholden to the global warming scam. As in, they all need to be sent out to pasture/to the penalty box for a 50 year match penalty.
We need someone to re-write or hockey stick what the NSF is about. The other grant funding agencies (of which there are many) can be hockey sticked/butt-ended next.
What is needed is NOT a simple minor high sticking penalty, but more of a good old Canadian/Bobby Clarke slash to Kharlamov’s ankle on purpose as directed by the coach/congress.
I believe this debate was set straight some time ago when a conversation between a physicist and and UN climatologist became unintentionally public. It seems the timing is right to run the story again for the full viewership to consider:
Climatologist; I have a system of undetermined complexity and undetermined composition, floating and spinning in space. It has a few internal but steady state and minor energy sources. An external energy source radiates 1365 watts per meter squared at it on a constant basis. What will happen?
Physicist; The system will arrive at a steady state temperature which radiates heat to space that equals the total of the energy inputs. Complexity of the system being unknown, and the body spinning in space versus the radiated energy source, there will be cyclic variations in temperature, but the long term average will not change.
Climatologist; Well what if I change the composition of the system?
Physicist; see above.
Climatologist; Perhaps you don’t understand my question. The system has an unknown quantity of CO2 in the atmosphere that absorbs energy in the same spectrum as the system is radiating. There are also quantities of carbon and oxygen that are combining to create more CO2 which absorbs more energy. Would this not raise the temperature of the system?
Physicist; There would be a temporary fluctuation in temperature caused by changes in how energy flows through the system, and perhaps a change in temperature distribution from surface to top of atmosphere, but for the long term average of the system as a whole… see above.
Climatologist; But the CO2 would cause a small rise in temperature, which even if it was temporary would cause a huge rise in water vapour which would absorb even more of the energy being radiated by the system. This would have to raise the temperature of the system.
Physicist; There would be a temporary fluctuation in the temperature caused by changes in how energy flows through the system, but for the long term average of the system as a whole… see above.
Climatologist; That can’t be true. I’ve been measuring temperature at thousands of points in the system and the average is rising.
Physicist; The system being chaotic, it may be due to one or more cyclic variations that have not completed, or are coincidental, and a few thousand measuring points across an entire planet are insufficient in any event, even if you have thousands of years of data, which you don’t. Unless the energy inputs have changed, the long term temperature average would be… see above.
Climatologist; AHA! All that burning of fossil fuel is releasing energy that was stored millions of years ago, you cannot deny that this would increase temperature.
Physicist; Is it more than 0.01% of what the energy source shining on the planet is?
Climatologist; Uhm… no.
Physicist; rounding error. For the long term temperature of the planet… see above.
Climatologist; Methane! Methane absorbs even more than CO2.
Physicist; see above.
Climatologist; Clouds! Clouds would retain more energy!
Physicist; see above.
Climatologist; Ice! If a fluctuation in temperature melted all the ice less energy would be reflected into space and would instead be absorbed into the system, raising the temperature. Ha!
Physicist; The ice you are pointing at is mostly at the poles where the inclination of the radiant energy source is so sharp that there isn’t much energy to absorb anyway. Anyway, removing the ice would expose water that is warmer than the ice which would then radiate more heat to space, cooling the planet and…. see above.
Climatologist; Blasphemer! Unbeliever! The temperature HAS to rise! I have reports! I have measurements! I have computer simulations! I have committees! United Nations committees! Grant money! Billions and billions and billions! I CAN’T be wrong, I will never explain it! Billions! And the carbon trading! Trillions in carbon trading!
Physicist; (gasp!) how much grant money?
Climatologist; Billions…. Want some?
Physicist; Uhm…
Climatologist; BILLIONS AND BILLIONS
Climatologist; Hi. I used to be a physicist. When I started to understand the danger the world was in though, I decided to do the right thing and become a climatologist. Let me explain the greenhouse effect to you…
Ah thanks so much for this. I hadn’t seen it before. I think it just about cover the sorry mess we find ourselves in, nicely. Excellent!
Eamon.
It’s interesting to note that the hockey stick is, to this day, (see latest post at Climate Audit), still being dismembered. In fact the story has come alive again, partly induced by the Mannboy/Steyn court case.
Pope, bears, and all that.
Just wondering if you guys can find evidence of man-made global change?
The last time I saw the figures for United States , the government hands out about $21 billion/annually of free money for climate warming related projects Globally it is a $ billion per day business . This kind of money will stoke a lot of global warming fires and produce a steady stream of alarmist papers .
just like they dropped arguments about the hockey stick and about the surface station record
So he thinks Anthony and the rest of us have dropped the argument about the surface record, does he? Like the Tweety said: “He don’t know me vewy well.”