Guest post: “Climate variability research: did the sceptics make us do it?” – Professor Richard Betts

This is a guest post by Prof. Richard Betts, Head of Climate Impacts at the Met Office, (IPCC AR4 and AR5 lead author) about Lewandowsky, Oreskes et al’s forthcoming paper, which suggests that climate skeptics influence climate scientists. 

Richard’s post starts now.


 

Stephan Lewandowsky and co-authors have published an Executive Summary of their forthcoming paper* Seepage: Climate change denial and its effect on the scientific community. The authors suggest that climate scientists are allowing themselves to be influenced by “contrarian memes” and give too much attention to uncertainty in climate science. They express concern that this would invite inaction in addressing anthropogenic climate change. It’s an intriguing paper, not least because of what it reveals about the authors’ framing of the climate change discourse (they use a clear “us vs. them” framing), their assumptions about the aims and scope of climate science, and their awareness of past research. However, the authors seem unable to offer any real evidence to support their speculation, and I think their conclusions are incorrect.

As their example of scientists apparently giving undue weight to “contrarian memes”, Lewandowsky et al focus on what they describe as the “asymmetry of the scientific response to the so-called Œpause’”. They assert that “on previous occasions when decadal warming was particularly rapid, the scientific community did not give short-term climate variability the attention it has recently received”. They do not specifically identify the “previous occasions when decadal warming was particularly rapid”, but it’s fair to assume that they are referring to the 1990s, probably the period 1992-1998. This was the most recent occasion when global mean temperatures rose rapidly for a few years, and previous such occasions occurred before climate science had become established as a widely established field of research.

This assertion, however, is incorrect. Short-term climate variability did receive a lot of attention in the 1990s ­ see extensive discussion in the first 3 IPCC Assessment Reports, and brief discussion by Hawkins et al (Nature Climate Change, 2014). One specific example of a high-profile paper on this topic is Sutton & Allen (Nature, 1997), but there are others.

It is perplexing that Lewandowsky et al do not seem to be aware of this research on short-term climate variability. One explanation may be that there is more effective communication of research. Social media opens up many more channels through which climate scientists can communicate their work, instead of this communication being done by middle-men in the mainstream media or vested-interest organisations such as NGOs as in the 1990s. Those outside of the climate science community are therefore much more likely to be exposed to topics that are of interest to the scientists themselves, rather than just topics which interest newspaper editors or environmental campaigners.

Possibly Lewandowsky et al are wondering why there was not a raft of papers specifically focussing on the observed temperature record between 1992 and 1998. The reason is simple ­ this was not a particularly surprising event. When global temperatures rose rapidly few a few years after 1992, this was very easily explained by the tailing-off of the short-term cooling influence of the Mount Pinatubo eruption. This had cooled the Earth briefly by injecting large quantities of ash into the stratosphere. Indeed this cooling had been successfully predicted by Jim Hansen using a climate model shortly after the eruption. A few years later, 1998 was an exceptionally warm year globally because of a major El Nino event. The fact that these two events were well understood and even partly predicted in advance meant that there was less of a puzzle to be solved, so less motivation for extensive research on the drivers of global temperature over these specific years. In contrast, the trajectory of global temperatures in the last 15 years or so was not specifically predicted in advance. Although global temperatures remain within the envelope of uncertainty implied by multi-model studies, this is not the same as actually predicting it. So this time, there is an interesting puzzle to be investigated.

I have not actually counted or systematically reviewed the papers on variability in the 1990s compared to those in more recent years, so although there was a lot of variability research in the 1990s, it is still possible that there are more variability papers in the latter period. However, even if this is the case, there are other reasons for this. Users of climate information (and hence funding bodies) are increasingly interested in adaptation planning, which tends to require information in the nearer-term when natural variability dominates. More recently this has matured into the agenda of Climate Services, which includes forecasting on seasonal, inter annual and decadal timescales. This has led to the development of new scientific capabilities to address this need, eg. very large ensembles of climate models, initialised forecasting (where models use data assimilation to start from actual present-day data rather than pre-industrial), increased resolution, and greater computing power. So in addition to the scientific motivation to study variability which already existed in the 1990s, there is additional motivation coming from stakeholders and funding bodies, and also more extensive capability for this research.

Lewandowsky at al regard research into natural variability as “entertaining the possibility that a short period of a reduced rate of warming presents a challenge to the fundamentals of greenhouse warming.” Is there any evidence at all of climate scientists actually thinking this? I don’t think so. This indicates a fundamental misconception about the scope and aims of current climate science – the authors seem to assume that climate science is entirely focussed on anthropogenic climate change, and that natural variability is only researched as a supplementary issue in order to support the conclusions regarding anthropogenic influence. However, the truth is very different ­ natural variability was always of interest to scientists as part of understanding how the climate system works, and Climate Services and the ambitions for short­ term forecasting are now major research drivers. It is true that some papers have also used the observational record to try to understand and constrain key quantities of relevant to anthropogenic change, namely equilibrium climate sensitivity and transient climate response, but this is hardly addressing the “fundamentals of greenhouse warming”, ­it is simply trying to reduce uncertainty in one of the key aspects of it. Such studies certainly do not limit themselves purely to the “pause” period ­ instead, they include it in a much longer period of many decades, since this is the timescale of relevance to changes in greenhouse forcing. Exclusion of recent years from such studies would lead to misleading results, so of course the “pause” period is going to be included.

So the perceived “asymmetry” can be easily explained purely as an evolution of scientific focus and capability over the last 25 years. Nevertheless, the hypothesis of psychological influences is intriguing. Could it still be happening even though the specific example of increased research on variability can be explained by other factors? Lewandowsky et al suggest three mechanisms by which their proposed “seepage” may occur ­does the evidence support these proposed mechanisms? Here I focus on the situation in the UK, as this is where I am most familiar, and also because this is where a focus on the “pause” is quite common.

The first proposed mechanism is dubbed “Stereotype Threat”. The idea is that climate scientists are worried about being stereotyped as “alarmists”, and react by downplaying the threat. I agree that there may be some evidence for this in the IPCC and the global climate science community – for example, although the Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) included projections based on the high-end A1FI scenario, these were performed with the simpler Integrated Assessment Models rather than full, complex General Circulation Models. Moreover, the media focus on the projections sometimes did overlook the A1FI projection of warming up to 6.4C by 2100. (Indeed I was told by a long-established and respected environment journalist that the media were very much steered away from the A1FI result when AR4 was published in 2007.) This was indeed one of the motivations for my paper “When could global warming reach 4C?” as felt that the A1FI scenario had not received the attention it warranted. However, despite this possible example of reticence by the IPCC, the UK community does not seem to have followed suit. The A1FI scenario was used in the UKCIP02 and UKCP09 climate projections, and a number of high ­profile UK conferences focussed on the higher-end risks of climate change, eg. “Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change” in Exeter in 2005; and “4 Degrees and Beyond”, Oxford, 2009. UK research institutions are leading two major EU-funded consortia on the impacts of “high-end climate change” (I’m coordinating one of these, HELIX, myself). So while talk of the “pause” is commonplace in the UK climate science community, this does not seem to be accompanied by shying away from discussing projections and risks of higher-end climate change.

The second proposed mechanism is dubbed “Pluralistic Ignorance”, which refers to people thinking that their views are more in the minority than they really are. The authors offer the speculative example of public discourse that IPCC has supposedly exaggerated the threat of climate change. This does not seem to be the case in the UK ­ there is general public acceptance of anthropogenic climate change, and uniquely non-partisan political consensus on taking action on mitigation. For example, a recent article in the Guardian states:

“Britons are more likely to agree the climate is changing than at any time in recent years, with nearly nine in 10 people saying climate change is happening and 84% attributing this somewhat or entirely to human activity, new research has found. Two-thirds say they are concerned by global warming.”

Over the past 25 years, successive UK governments have led the world in supporting climate science and in developing climate policy both at home and internationally. The Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher personally founded the Met Office Hadley Centre, and at the same time the UK was prominent in establishing the IPCC. For the first 4 IPCC assessment reports, the UK government played a central role by supporting an IPCC Co-Chair and Technical Support Unit in the Met Office Hadley Centre. The UK has been central to the UN climate negotiations, and under the Labour government of 1997-2010 was the first country to put in place its own legislation on reducing emissions and planning adaptation (the Climate Change Act). In the 2010 election, the Conservative Party manifesto was keen to promote its environmental policies, and prior to the recent election the three main parties signed a statement supporting continuation of the Climate Change Act. Hence, if there is any country in the world where climate scientists can feel that their research is valued by both the public and politicians, it is the UK.

The final proposed mechanisms is dubbed the “Third person effect”, and refers to the idea that someone may think that others are more easily persuaded than they are themselves, and react to this. This seems quite plausible, but I fail to see why this would not apply equally to arguments from activists and politicians aiming to persuade people of the threat of climate change. In fact, given the widespread public and political agreement on anthropogenic climate change in the UK, it seems far more likely that the “Third Person Effect” would apply to being persuaded by arguments in favour of acting on climate change than by those against it.

So overall I do not see that “seepage of contrarian memes” is necessary to explain research on the recent slowdown in global surface warming, nor do I see any evidence that this is likely to be occurring in the UK climate science community where such research is prominent.

There are further intriguing questions arising from the facts that (1) UK scientists discuss the “pause/slowdown”, (2) the UK public acceptance of anthropogenic climate change and (3) successive UK governments have been, and remain, world-leaders in climate policy. If climate scientists have indeed allowed themselves to be influenced by “contrarians”, it would appear that this has not prevented widespread acceptance of anthropogenic climate change or the development and implementation of climate policy. Indeed, if scientific discussion of the “pause/slowdown” is indeed seen by the public and politicians as considering a “contrarian meme”, could it actually be the case that a clear willingness to consider a range of viewpoints could actually enhance the credibility of climate scientists? Therefore could open discussion of the “pause” actually increase the confidence of the public and the government in their advice that climate change is real and man-made? It seems fair to suggest that an intelligent and thoughtful public and politicians would take scientists more seriously if they are seen to be objective ­ indeed some research does support this supposition.

So to conclude, I think Lewandowsky et al are incorrect that scientific research and discussion into the recent climate variability has arisen as a result of the “seepage of contrarian memes”. Variability has always been a key topic in climate research, and if this has become more extensive or visible in this recently, it is simply the result of improved science communication, more specific research questions and evolving capabilities within climate science. The evidence also suggests that even if “seepage” is real, at the very least this seepage has had no influence in watering-down UK public opinion and political action compared to other countries – and that possibly the opposite has occurred because the public are more convinced by seeing scientists being objective.

Footnote:

*it seems they expected the paper to be published at the same time, but it is not yet available. Stephan offers to send the corrected proofs to anyone who emails him.

END


Note

[BarryJWoods]This article was 1st published at the AndThenTheresPhysics blog and has been republished here with permission of Professor Betts to allow it a wider audience, and for those that are unable to comment at the other blog

This is my personal opinion, I  think that it again highlights a major  difference of opinion of just how science should be communicated to the public. This was demonstrated by the twitter conversation between Dr Doug McNeall and Dr Naomi Oreskes last September where they discussed the usage of the word ‘pause’, Dr Oreskes said she was writing a paper about what words to use (presumably the ‘seepage ‘paper ) which led to Dr McNeall’s comment  below (link which was discussed further at WUWT here)

oreskes-mcneall[1]

This gave the impression, to me at least, that a number of  scientists really want to talk about the science to the public and others just want to control the message that the public hear. And for me, that the former approach rather trusts the intelligence of the public more,  than the latter communications approach of apparently wanting to control the language used publicly by scientists.

As this is a guest post I hope  that anyone that comments does so in a constructive and civil manner

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

196 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
May 13, 2015 10:04 am

Lewy claims that “seepage” from sceptics is damaging climate science.
In fact the damage is coming from the fruitcakes on their own side, Lew, Oreskes, Cook, Nutti and so on. Clearly this is very irritating to the scientists, hence this rebuttal.

May 13, 2015 10:06 am

the lecture by Professor Murry Salby delivered 17 march in Westminster London has settled once and forall the entire question of climate change and Atmospheric CO2 The human contribution of CO2 is insignificant! It mostly comes from natural sources

Louis
May 13, 2015 10:14 am

Naomi Oreskes: “Understood but there’s no pause. We should not repeated false claims. Even from scientists.”
So who is being contrarian now by telling people to ignore the scientists? If 97% of all climate scientists were to agree that warming has paused, would Dr. Oreskes still insist they were wrong?

May 13, 2015 10:28 am

Why discussions about climate change focus on temperature variation over time periods of 20 years or so while, if climates actually change, it may do so over centuries with noticeable impact on living conditions, in particular soil moisture and plant growth potential accompanied by migrating biodiversity (Lemon trees in Ireland, corn fields in Alaska)?
“Pause” or “multi-decadal oscillations” are just words, no true causal explanations.
One reason for this short-termism may be impatience coupled with a belief that we can know better by massaging more the same limited amount of available data. Such approach does not help, neither to prove or to disprove anything.
Another, more interesting, reason is that it can help invalidate models (or give them at best some limited validity) by letting them run for hindcast of the actual situation.
And looking at fig 9.8 of IPCC AR5 WGI, climatology is still in its infancy and any oracular prophecy of future climate evolution using these models should not be permitted, whatever scenarios might be construed to this effect.

jolly farmer
May 13, 2015 10:53 am

“It is perplexing that Lewandowsky et al do not seem to be aware of this research on short-term climate variability. One explanation may be that there is more effective communication of research.”
So their lack of awareness is explained by “more effective communication of research.”
Yeah, got it, Dr Betts.
“Over the past 25 years, successive UK governments have led the world in supporting climate science and in developing climate policy both at home and internationally.”
With the result that industry is leaving for countries with lower environmental standards, that the UK is generating electricity from wood chips imported from North America, and that good farmland is being covered with solar panels.
However, Dr Betts continues to profit from UK and EU support for “climate science”, so that’s all good.

Reply to  jolly farmer
May 13, 2015 11:03 am

Wouldn’t wood chips put out the same amount of co2 as coal or natural gas for the same amount of heat created?

Reply to  Dahlquist
May 13, 2015 12:27 pm

But wood has been declared “renewable” donchaknow 🙂 It could put out lots more CO2 but being renewable … However, if there are many more of these, “sustainability” will become an issue. We can kick that down the road cause politicians can only count to 4 or 5 (depending on your particular voting system) and they don’t even know what Present Value, Future Value, and Life Cycle Costs are.

May 13, 2015 10:57 am

It all started in the ’70s when we really were polluting our environment with trash and chemicals in our waters and very bad smog in our cities, etc, etc. Since then, we’ve been doing much, much better but now what excuse do the government agencies, which were created to battle these issues, have for staying as big as they have grown to support themselves. Issues must be created to stay in business.
Also, the climate has been changing on Earth as long as Earth has existed so why do we have to keep using climate “change”. It is simply the climate.

Ralph Kramden
May 13, 2015 11:19 am

I think Lewandowsky, Oreskes et al. got the idea from Flip Wilson, “the devil made me do it”.

Shub Niggurath
May 13, 2015 11:22 am

My take on the Betts post is here: ATTP: No safe space from seepage

Theo Goodwin
May 13, 2015 11:57 am

Betts writes:
“Therefore could open discussion of the “pause” actually increase the confidence of the public and the government in their advice that climate change is real and man-made? It seems fair to suggest that an intelligent and thoughtful public and politicians would take scientists more seriously if they are seen to be objective ­ indeed some research does support this supposition.”
Regarding the first sentence, Oreskes has no faith in the public’s ability to engage in open discussion or to appreciate it. Public “confidence” must be shaped by the “avant garde.”
Regarding the second sentence, Oreskes believes that the term “objective” is a tool of capitalist exploitation of the masses.

May 13, 2015 12:15 pm

Richard Betts says:
“The evidence also suggests that even if “seepage” is real, at the very least this seepage has had no influence in watering-down UK public opinion and political action compared to other countries – and that possibly the opposite has occurred because the public are more convinced by seeing scientists being objective.”
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The public is constantly being bombarded by “Global Warming” and “Climate Change”. It is amazing to me that the public isn’t totally convinced.
Especially when governments are continually telling their constituents how they are going to fight Climate Change:
http://ageherald.com/news/quebec-and-ontario-will-lead-charge-against-climate-change-couillard
Josh was kind enough to allow me to revise his cartoon so I could send it out to Canadian government representatives and media:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152817924570737&set=a.458870515736.246485.579380736&type=1&theater

May 13, 2015 12:17 pm

Typo Alert. Josh revised his cartoon and emailed it too me, I did not revise it.

sean2829
May 13, 2015 12:40 pm

Try as I might, I can’t get the the association of Oreskes and seepage separated from Olestra and leakage.

Bitter&twisted
May 13, 2015 12:53 pm

Typical Richard hedging his Bets

Hazel
May 13, 2015 2:05 pm

Here’s a quote from the WSJ:
More than 40% of U.S. honeybee colonies died in past 12 months: USDA Published: May 13, 2015 4:00p.m. ET
Who thinks this is because of global warming, raise your hands.
Who thinks this is because of global warming deniers, raise your hands.
Lower CO2 and lose plants; lose bees also.
Such concepts as the interactions of plants, CO2, and oxygen used to be taught in grammar school science classes. The loss of critical knowledge is a threat to humanity… so please tell me who are the real danger to earth and life thereon?

Reply to  Hazel
May 13, 2015 7:55 pm

Colony collapse disorder has yet to be pinned down as to cause, as far as I am aware. If anyone has information to the contrary, please share it.
For one thing, loss rates of about 20% a year have been the norm for many years, and have been attributed to a variety causes, but there is much debate as to specifics.
The term colony collapse disorder is a new name given to a phenomenon which has been documented for well over 100 years.
One idea which seemed to be getting close scrutiny is the development and widespread adoption of neonicotinoid insecticides, which are highly toxic to bees.
However, it should be noted that nearly every insecticide ever invented is highly toxic to bees.
No one knows the cause, but I will wager at long odds that if and when more becomes known, climate change will not be on the list of reasons for it.
Bees exist in a wide variety of habitats, and the variations in temperature that have always existed from day to day, month to month, year to year, decade to decade, and across wide geographic areas, dwarfs any tiny variations which have ben labelled as “climate change”.

Ivor Ward
May 13, 2015 2:05 pm

Reading Prof. Richard Betts reminds me of watching a really drunk old man walking down the sidewalk from the Bar. He thought he was walking straight but by the intersection he was on the sidewalk on the other side of the road. He looked the wrong way..Stepped out..and was run over.

Arno Arrak
May 13, 2015 3:43 pm

I quote: “… it’s fair to assume that they are referring to the 1990s, probably the period 1992-1998. This was the most recent occasion when global mean temperatures rose rapidly for a few years…”
I am sorry to say this, but tour information is incorrect. The eighties and the nineties were not a period of warming but another temperature standstill like we have now. It lasted from from 1979 to 1997, eighteen years, which is as long as the current hiatus/warming has lasted. Exactly the same thing happened then too as is happening now: carbon dioxide kept increasing but there was no warming. I discovered this in 2008 while doing research for my book “What Warming? Satellite view of global temperature change.” I also proved that official temperature sources were covering it up and even put a warning about this into the preface to the book, all to no avail. I was completely ignored, both by warmists and by climate skeptics. For the last five years I have been periodically calling attention to this but have received no response. The situation is this: ENSO was active in the eighties and nineties and created a wave train there consisting of five El Nino peaks, with La Nina valleys in between, The centers of these waves line up in a horizontal straight line, indicating that there was no warming at all during this period. This is shown in figure 15 in my book. I also doped out how HadCRUT3 was distorting the record and demonstrated that in figure 32. Since then I have learnt that they operated in collusion with GISTEMP and NCDC. They all had their temperature curves identically computer processed to present a united front in the temperature field. But unbeknownst to them their computer left traces of its work on all three temperature curves. All computer marks are in exactly the same locations. They comprise sharp upward spikes near ends of years and are easy to find by comparing their temperature curves with satellite temperature curves. It is pretty obvious that you did not know of my work because you did not do your homework. Shame on you. You are not alone in this because not going your homework is rampant among climate science. It is not simply information about temperature that you are missing that way. You are also missing important stuff about ENSO, volcanic cooling, and Arctic warming. Get busy, spring for the book at Amazon, and learn some climate science.

May 13, 2015 4:11 pm

Although global temperatures remain within the envelope of uncertainty implied by multi-model studies, this is not the same as actually predicting it.
Note the use of the word ‘implied’, and the explicit statement that the models don’t predict climate variability (termed uncertainty). I would restate this as ‘There is no scientific basis for the variability shown by climate models.’
The reality is that the variability shown by the models results from values inserted by the modellers. Educated guesses if you like. And the many claims that the models account for the pause have no scientific basis, and thus whether the claims are true or not are irrelevant.

Goldie
May 13, 2015 4:15 pm

Interesting that Oreskes and Lewandosky are being taken to task in this manner. Reading between the lines it’s fairly clear that the scientific community finds their approach too much to stomach. Climate conspiracies abound in the heads of those two :-).

old construction worker
May 13, 2015 5:57 pm

Watch out. “Alarmist” will offer olive branch with one hand while their other hand is reaching for their knife .
I don’t trust them. They have sold their souls.

Reply to  old construction worker
May 13, 2015 9:42 pm

Good point …Many have previously demonstrated that they play by Alinsky Rules.
But we skeptics are always open to listening to them..

Ken Andrews
May 13, 2015 8:22 pm

Let me get this straight – on the one hand the brilliant climate scientists (97%) who are so confident in their scientific findings (“debate is over “) are also, on the other hand, so mentally weak that they are intimated by a few clueless climate skeptics. Wow! That’s a powerful argument!! (also 97%)

May 13, 2015 9:37 pm

Wow we have 3* different discussions about a paper which is STILL UNPUBLISHED after 8 days
– An Update on ATTP’s Blog there are 86 comments now :
OK Betts is busy today – his last real comment was on ATTP at 1pm Wednesday there were 2 earlier, he says “I’ll be back”
*The 3rd is Lew’s own blog ..only 4 comments,
It’s good to keep the main dialogue here in one place, Barry has reposted his here so here’s the other 3 below, in case anyone cares to answer them
* apsmith at 06:59 AM on 9 May, 2015
I think I noticed seepage years ago with the so-called “tropical tropospheric hot spot”. I believe the thing was invented by Christopher Monckton, not by a scientist. For one thing, it’s not “hot” (just expected to have a slightly faster temperature rate increase than the surface). For another, it’s not a “spot” (more like a ring around the world centered on the equator).
I think the term stems from a misinterpretation by Monckton and other “skeptic” friends of a figure in the AR4 IPCC report, released in 2007. The term “hot spot” does not appear in this sense in the scientific literature earlier than that, as far as I can tell. RealClimate covered the topic using different terms (“tropical tropospheric trends” for instance), not “hot spot”. So my feeling is this “hot spot” idea, which rests on a misinterpretation, is another good example, much earlier than the “pause”.
* Chris Shaw at 23:06 PM on 9 May, 2015
Excellent, an important and overdue intervention. Did you get funding for the paper?
* Howard Goodall at 03:50 AM on 11 May, 2015
Vested interests and political agents?
Sounds like a conspiracy.

May 13, 2015 9:48 pm

(seems caught by the mod-bot, so I will try a repost)
Wow we have 3* different discussions about Lew/Oreskes paper which is STILL UNPUBLISHED after 8 days
– An Update on ATTP’s Blog there are 86 comments now :
OK Betts is busy today – his last real comment was on ATTP at 1pm Wednesday, there were 2 earlier, he says “I’ll be back”
*The 3rd is Lew’s own blog ..only 4 comments,
It’s good to keep the main dialogue here in one place, Barry has reposted his here so here’s the other 3 below, in case anyone cares to answer them
* apsmith at 06:59 AM on 9 May, 2015
I think I noticed seepage years ago with the so-called “tropical tropospheric hot spot”. I believe the thing was invented by Christopher Monckton, not by a scientist. For one thing, it’s not “hot” (just expected to have a slightly faster temperature rate increase than the surface). For another, it’s not a “spot” (more like a ring around the world centered on the equator).
I think the term stems from a misinterpretation by Monckton and other “skeptic” friends of a figure in the AR4 IPCC report, released in 2007. The term “hot spot” does not appear in this sense in the scientific literature earlier than that, as far as I can tell. RealClimate covered the topic using different terms (“tropical tropospheric trends” for instance), not “hot spot”. So my feeling is this “hot spot” idea, which rests on a misinterpretation, is another good example, much earlier than the “pause”.
* Chris Shaw at 23:06 PM on 9 May, 2015
Excellent, an important and overdue intervention. Did you get funding for the paper?
* Howard Goodall at 03:50 AM on 11 May, 2015
Vested interests and political agents?
Sounds like a conspiracy.

Dr. Strangelove
May 13, 2015 10:26 pm

Prof. Betts
Just ignore the psycho lady a.k.a. “Merchant of Dumb.” If you were to believe Oreskes, three dead scientists (founders of Marshall Institute) hypnotized tens of thousands of living scientists to reject man-made global warming of the catastrophic kind. She should consult a psychiatrist or an exorcist. Either she is hallucinating or skeptical scientists are possessed by evil spirits.

jdgalt
Reply to  Dr. Strangelove
May 13, 2015 10:34 pm

Or I want a truckload of their magic persuader pill, so I can be the next President.

May 14, 2015 1:21 am

The rapid increase in temperatures to 1998 was discussed by climate scientists in the Climategate emails.
In 1999, Michael Mann was keen not to give natural variability too much prominence:
“The ’99 numbers are very interesting, and should help thwart the dubious claims sometimes made that El Nino is the sole culprit in the anomalous recent warmth.”
http://di2.nu/foia/foia2011/mail/0183.txt

Shub Niggurath
Reply to  Ruth Dixon
May 14, 2015 8:34 am

I agree with Lew, but only superficially. He’s stumbled upon a well-evident phenomenon, if only clumsily and accidentally.
If you examine the penultimate emails in Climategate I, you will encounter a raft of messages set off by BBC’s Paul Hudson’s questions about the pause that include Trenberth’s “travesty” email and an undignified outburst from Stephen Schneider. Tom Wigley’s email replies are particularly interesting.

Jaime Jessop
May 15, 2015 1:28 am

What’s all this about really? To a large extent, it is about controlling language and the use of terminology in a twin attempt to blunt the sharp edge of climate change scepticism and bring wayward scientists into line on the use of politically ‘appropriate’ phrases. For all this paper’s high sounding technical jargon and psychobabble, it basically amounts to an attempt to stamp out terminology perceived to be injurious to the Great Climate Cause. I see no difference between what is happening in the climate change debate courtesy of nutters like Lew and Oreskes and what is happening in the wider community, where the unwitting use of politically incorrect words and phrases is increasingly becoming the subject of ludicrous and lengthy official investigations which amount to little more than officially sanctioned witch hunts.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-3082537/Fire-Quattro-s-hate-crime-RICHARD-LITTLEJOHN-wants-know-headteacher-used-term-special-needs-investigated-police.html

Verified by MonsterInsights