My one-on-one meeting with Bill McKibben

UPDATED 6/8/15 (comment added by Bill McKibben, see end of article) About a month ago I got an e-mail from Bill McKibben telling me that he would be in my town to do a presentation on June 5th. He wanted to know if he could meet with me and just sit down over a beer and talk about things. I jumped at the chance. This photo below was taken yesterday, June 5th, at the Sierra Nevada Taproom in Chico, CA just before 6PM PDT after I had a two hour conversation with Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org.

mckibben-watts-06-05-2014
Bill McKibben at left, Anthony Watts, at right

One of the most interesting things about Bill McKibben is that he has always been civil and courteous to me unlike some others that are on the other side of the climate debate aisle. So, I didn’t think twice about meeting him because I knew that despite our differences we would likely have a very interesting and productive conversation.

My prediction came true. We had conversations that spanned everything from stories about our families and how we grew up to the current debates over climate and energy. We also spoke of the personal challenges that each of us face due to who we are and how we are perceived by others.

I didn’t make any recordings and I didn’t make any notes, I also did not tell anyone I had a time of this meeting and I don’t think Bill did either. I really didn’t want to because the last thing I wanted was to have someone come along and disrupt it. As I mentioned to Bill that some of the local environmentalists have what I would describe as a “severe hatred” of my position on climate change and because I have the to temerity to dare write about it. In fact, he was going to be addressing a number of environmentally oriented people right after our meeting at an event cosponsored by our local alternate radio station and the Butte Environmental Council. I suggested to Bill that perhaps he should mention that we had a pleasant and productive meeting to see if a “groan” might erupt from the audience. He said he would but I have not heard back from him yet as to whether or not my prediction came true.

Bill and I both had a couple of beers and we shared a dessert all the while chatting away as if we’d known each other for years. Essentially we have, but we just never met in person before.

Below are a few highlights that I remember from our conversation.

What we agreed upon:

We both agreed that tackling real pollution issues was a good thing. When I say real pollution issues, I mean things like water pollution, air pollution, Ocean plastics pollution, and other real tangible and solvable problems.

We both agreed that as technology advances, energy production is likely to become cleaner and more efficient.

We both agreed that coal use especially in China and India where there are not significant environmental controls is creating harm for the environment and the people who live there.

We both agreed that climate sensitivity, the response to a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, hasn’t been nailed down yet. Bill thinks it’s on the high side while I think it’s on the low side neither of us thought the number had been correctly defined yet.

We both talked about how nuclear power especially Thorium-based nuclear power could be a solution for future power needs that would provide a stable base electrical grid while at the same time having far fewer problems than the current fission products based on uranium and plutonium.

We both agreed that the solar power systems we have put on our respective homes have been good things for each of us.

We both agreed that there are “crazy people” on both sides of the debate and that each of us have suffered personally at the hands of some of the actions of these people (you know who you are). We both spoke of some of the hatred and threats that we have endured over the years, some of which required police intervention.

We both agreed that if we could talk to our opponents more there would probably be less rhetoric, less noise, and less tribalism that fosters hatred of the opposing side.

We both agreed that we enjoy the musings of Willis Eschenbach on WUWT, and we spoke about his most recent essay describing the self-regulating mechanism that may exist due to albedo changes in the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ).

We both agreed that it would be a great thing if climate skeptics were right, and carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere wasn’t quite as big a problem as we have been led to believe.

What we disagreed upon:

Climate sensitivity was the first issue that we disagreed about. While we both thought the number has not been nailed down yet, Bill thought the number was high, while I thought the number was lower such as the kind of numbers we were getting from the recent climate sensitivity analysis of Judith Curry and Nicolas Lewis. I spent a fair amount of time explaining to Bill how I believe, as do many others, that the effect of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere is now approaching saturation point, such that a doubling of CO2 from this point forward might not be as catastrophic rise problematic as we have been told.

Bill seems to think that carbon dioxide influences along with other man-made influences have perturbed our atmosphere, which he considers “finally finely tuned”, enough to create some of the severe weather events that we have witnessed recently. He specifically spoke of the recent flooding in Texas calling it an “unnatural outlier”, and attributed it to man-made influences on our atmospheric processes. I pointed out that we only have about 100 years or so of good weather records and that we don’t really know for sure what the true outlier bounds are for such kinds of events. For example I told him of the great 1861 flood in California, followed by an exceptional drought within a few years. At the time, both events seemed like fantastic outliers. I also spoke of studies that have been attributing more extreme rainfall to the effects of cities.

And there just doesn’t seem to be any significant trend as this graph shows:

Global Precipitation, from CRU TS3 1° grid. DATA SOURCE

[Willis Eschenbach writes] As in all of the records above, there is nothing at all anomalous in the recent rainfall record. The average varies by about ± 2%. There is no trend in the data.

As does this one:

https://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/us-rainfall-events-trend.jpg

Bill also seem to think that many other weather events could be attributable to the changes that humans have made on our planet. He was quite sincere about this belief and cited many examples of events he witnessed or saw the aftermath of. I could tell that his perspective was one of empathy as were many of his concerns. But I came away with the impression that Bill feels such things more than he understands them in a physical sense. This was not unexpected because Bill is a writer by nature, and his tools of the trade are to convey human experience into words. I can’t really fault him for feeling these things and expanding on them but I did note he seemed quite resistive to factual rebuttals because they didn’t assuage the feelings he harbored.

For example I tried to explain how the increase in reporting through cell phones, video cameras, 24-hour cable news, and the Internet have made severe weather events seem much more frequent and menacing than they used to be.

Bill and I disagreed about the usefulness of computer models and I pointed out how models have been diverging from the measurements. Bill seemed concerned that we have to act on the advice of the models and the people who run them because the risk of not doing so could be a fateful decision. I pointed out that mankind has been quite adaptable and resilient, and thrived on warmer periods of Earth’s history than cooler ones, while he seemed to think that we are more fragile especially when it relates to crop production then one might think.

A few other points that we discussed:

Bill and I talked about how government can sometimes over-regulate things to the point of killing them, such as some of the problems I had with the California Air Resources Board and my attempt to start an electric car company in 2008. He was surprised to learn that electric cars in California have to be emissions tested just like gasoline powered cars, instead of simply looking into under the hood and noting the electric motor and checking a box on a form. He laughed all the way through my tales of woe trying to deal with that insane bureaucracy, and was quite sympathetic.

I told Bill that up until recently I had trusted (but considered misguided) the climate scientists at NOAA/NCDC, but with the recent publication of the Karl 2015 paper and some of the data manipulation shenanigans that I witnessed, I no longer have that trust. Bill responded with he doesn’t know those people but he believed that Dr. James Hansen had integrity. I asked Bill that if the people at NOAA/NCDC had the same integrity he believed Jim Hansen has, why would they have to adjust data that had been previously considered okay, and why would they not publish data from the most state-of-the-art Climate Reference Network in our monthly and yearly US. State of the Climate reports, but instead rely on the old and problematic surface temperature network that is full adjustments, assumptions, and biases – none of which exist in the Climate Reference Network? He didn’t have an answer.

Bill and I both lamented how some people perceived us on opposite sides of the aisle. He was annoyed that some people see him as an “idiot”, while I spoke of my annoyance of being called a “denier” when I don’t deny that the climate has warmed; I just don’t think it’s as big a problem as some others do. I can tell you this: I don’t think Bill McKibben is an idiot. But I do think he perceives things more on a feeling or emotional level and translates that into words and actions. People that are more factual and pragmatic might see that as an unrealistic response.

Bill was amazed at my ability to keep WUWT going all these years without having any budget, sponsor or funding. I explained to him, as I have many times to readers that doing this is little more than an extension of all my years in broadcasting. In broadcasting we never allow for “dead air”; we always have to keep fresh content going and thanks to the help of many people who contribute their time for moderation, in the form of guest articles, and in the form of comments I am able to keep this enterprise fresh and relevant. Bill says he reads every day and I took that as a compliment.

In closing:

I offered Bill the ability to inspect what I was going to write about our meeting before I published it. He declined saying it’s okay, that he’ll just comment on whatever I write.

All in all it was a good meeting and while we might fervently disagree on some (but not all) issues, I can say that Bill McKibben was a pleasant individual to talk to and that I could count him among one of the more friendly people in the climate debate.


 

UPDATE: 6/8/15

In comments Bill says that he really isn’t for nuclear power of any kind. I got the impression that he was against conventional fission reactors, due to the problems and costs, but because he voiced no strong opinions to me about Thorium power,( that Jim Hansen also agrees with me on) I got the impression he was open to such new technology. Apparently, he isn’t. His comment is reproduced below:

Just a couple of points

1) It doesn’t actually bother me when people call me an idiot–I’m used to it, and it’s always possible it’s true

2) I don’t think thorium or cold fusion or anything like it is the future of power; I’d wager all things nuclear are mostly relics of the past, in no small part because they cost like sin. But the point I was trying to make is that the new fact in the world is the remarkably rapid fall in the price of renewable energy. That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view

3) Sierra Nevada beer is even better fresh out of the tap at the brewery than it is in a bottle

I had a fine evening at the Masonic Hall in Chico following with a large crowd of local environmentalists, celebrating the week’s many big divestment victories. For the record, I mentioned my drink with Anthony and no one hissed or groaned. A few did chuckle.

 

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Peter Brunson
June 6, 2015 6:09 pm

Locally there has been a softening with an effort to be more congenial.
I fear it is just the latest tactic to deal with skeptical folks.

Mickey Reno
June 6, 2015 6:11 pm

I’d be interested in both seeing Bill McKibben post a reply here to offer his judgement on the accuracy of Anthony’s report, and then to hear about his side’s reaction to this meeting with Anthony.
I can imagine lots of derision of the general flavor, “Bill, you’re giving credibility and attention to deniers.”
I’d like to know about that. Bill?

Rick
June 6, 2015 6:15 pm

I read McKibben’s book “Long Distance: A Year of Living Strenuously” when it was first published in 2000. Much of it I truly enjoyed, but some of it was imbued with worry about the poor season of XC season he had as he authored the book and his father was dying. It was unsettling to the point that even though I would recommend it to friends, I always had a cautionary note warning them there were things to look past.
I think he is an emotional man to the point where he becomes passionate to the point of blindness. And one cannot deny, his worrying about the fate of the planet has served him very well financially.

June 6, 2015 6:20 pm

Mazel! To the both of you … now if we can just get McKibben to engage with factual reality.

Charlie
June 6, 2015 6:25 pm

The debate needs more of these meetings with the non crazies on both sided. Then eventually on the mainstream media. This is honest. This is not a show.

PiperPaul
Reply to  Charlie
June 6, 2015 7:43 pm

But it is a show, for the True Believers.
“The followers of a mass movement see themselves on the march with drums beating and colors flying. They are participators in a soul-stirring drama played to a vast audience–generations gone and generations yet to come. They are made to feel they are not their real selves but actors playing a role, and their doing a ‘performance’, rather than as the real thing.”
The True Believer
Eric Hoffer
1951

steve in seattle
Reply to  PiperPaul
June 7, 2015 12:52 pm

So perfect a fit – with regard to the green peas and 350s here in Seattle, protesting Shell as it preps for the coming summers activities in the arctic. BM may not be an idiot, however his actions and almost religious emotional sound bites sure make him out to be one.
350.org flies the colors, beats their drums.

bones
June 6, 2015 6:32 pm

Did Bill say anything about his sources and amounts of funds?

Bennett In Vermont
Reply to  bones
June 6, 2015 8:24 pm

No, but he paid for lunch and tipped 25%…

steve in seattle
Reply to  Bennett In Vermont
June 7, 2015 12:53 pm

he paid 97 % of the lunch bill and tipped three – fifty.

June 6, 2015 6:37 pm

Gentlemen at work.
Kudos to both of you!

David A
Reply to  Mike Smith
June 7, 2015 6:37 am

Not certain Bill is a “gentlemen” Was Bill asked why he blew up children in a video?
It is a fair question, and not inflammatory. The video was inflammatory and not the mark of a
“Gentlemen” . The phrase, “The road to hell is paved with sincerity” does have an appropriate application,
I would have liked to see this question respectfully asked.

commieBob
June 6, 2015 6:41 pm

I could tell that his perspective was one of empathy as were many of his concerns. But I came away with the impression that Bill feels such things more than he understands them in a physical sense.

Facts and logic are highly over-rated. Seriously.

If you argue with a madman, it is extremely probable that you will get the worst of it; for in many ways his mind moves all the quicker for not being delayed by the things that go with good judgment. He is not hampered by a sense of humour or by charity, or by the dumb certainties of experience. He is the more logical for losing certain sane affections. Indeed, the common phrase for insanity is in this respect a misleading one. The madman is not the man who has lost his reason. The madman is the man who has lost everything except his reason. http://www.pagebypagebooks.com/Gilbert_K_Chesterton/Orthodoxy/The_Maniac_p3.html

Logic and facts disconnected from something like ‘gut feeling’ are just as dangerous as ‘gut feeling’ divorced from facts and logic.

Charlie
Reply to  commieBob
June 6, 2015 6:56 pm

Well there is a time for feelings and passion. Climate skeptics have these human qualities like anybody else. Climate change should be about science and logic though. That is all.

commieBob
Reply to  Charlie
June 7, 2015 2:46 am

I am a skeptic because Michael Mann tried to erase the Medieval Warm Period. My knowledge of history told me he was wrong.
Your gut feeling will alert you to when you should be wary of so called ‘Facts’ and ‘Logic’. Facts and logic will tell you when you should not trust your gut feelings. You need both.
Part of your brain puts things in context. It isn’t articualte whereas the part of your brain that handles logic also handles speech and is therefore quite articulate. When a ‘fact’ conflicts with a person’s lived experience that should cause an alarm from the part of the brain that puts things in context. Since that part of the brain is inarticulate, the alarm takes the form of something like a gut feeling.
Sane people have the ability to check ‘facts’ and ‘logic’ against their lived experience. Insane people lack that ability.

Amatør1
Reply to  commieBob
June 7, 2015 2:12 am

Logic and facts disconnected from something like ‘gut feeling’ are just as dangerous as ‘gut feeling’ divorced from facts and logic.

Intuition without logical data collection and critical thinking is being a dangerous cultist. Data collection without intuition is being a book-keeper with no interest in the sums. A true scientist must use intuition to generate hypotheses. He must also use factual data + critical thinking to try to dismantle the same ideas in every possible way.
What remains may be of some value.

Tom Harley
June 6, 2015 6:49 pm

A good story, Anthony. I can see now some more dialogue, such as Bill McKibben in discussion with, for example the Idso Brothers at ‘co2science’, for further education. CO2 is not the boogeyman his side perceives, but is a huge benefit in higher concentrations.

johann wundersamer
June 6, 2015 6:49 pm

For Brutus is an honourable man;
So are they all, all honourable men–
Shakespeare saw it.
____
appeasement isn’t negotiations.
Al Gore, Ghengis Khan, Pachauri – womanizers don’t tend politics but dynastic strategies.
____
can’t help but I see US as strongly naive.
Regards – Hans

Alan Robertson
Reply to  johann wundersamer
June 6, 2015 9:39 pm

Thanks Hans- If civilization would once again embrace the study of Shakespeare, perhaps more of us would operate from a point closer to the profound nature of Shakespeare’s mind (with some Mencken thrown in for good measure.)

K. Kilty
June 6, 2015 6:52 pm

Using empathy to deal with things one does not understand well, especially if one can command a large number of others who also feel deeply and do not understand, is where the phrase about paving the road to hell came from.
McKibbens has said he wishes that Obama would simply outlaw fossil fuels. Authoritarian, simple-minded, and likely to cause unimaginable damage. I’d love to know if he actually wishes for such a thing, or if his words were mangled in some way.

k. kilty
Reply to  K. Kilty
June 7, 2015 8:11 am

I see that McKibben showed up here 8 minutes after I posted this question and didn’t bother to address it. If he thinks nuclear energy is a thing of the past because it is “expensive as sin” he ought to ponder how expensive poverty is.

RACookPE1978
Editor
Reply to  k. kilty
June 7, 2015 10:08 am

k. kilty

I see that McKibben showed up here 8 minutes after I posted this question and didn’t bother to address it. If he thinks nuclear energy is a thing of the past because it is “expensive as sin” he ought to ponder how expensive poverty is.

But, by his own actions and the evidence of his organization’s goals and methods, Bill McKibben does seek to end poverty worldwide. By demanding the early death in unneeded squalor of billions of innocent poor people by denying them access to cheap energy, clean water, good roads and brideges and canals and water treatment, and pumps, and pipes, and buildings, and refrigerators, and clean food storage areas in well-lit homes with power, water, lights, and plumbing.

Michael 2
June 6, 2015 6:54 pm

That’s a refreshing report. I look forward to more.

June 6, 2015 7:03 pm

Just a couple of points
1) It doesn’t actually bother me when people call me an idiot–I’m used to it, and it’s always possible it’s true
2) I don’t think thorium or cold fusion or anything like it is the future of power; I’d wager all things nuclear are mostly relics of the past, in no small part because they cost like sin. But the point I was trying to make is that the new fact in the world is the remarkably rapid fall in the price of renewable energy. That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view
3) Sierra Nevada beer is even better fresh out of the tap at the brewery than it is in a bottle
I had a fine evening at the Masonic Hall in Chico following with a large crowd of local environmentalists, celebrating the week’s many big divestment victories. For the record, I mentioned my drink with Anthony and no one hissed or groaned. A few did chuckle.

bones
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 6, 2015 7:17 pm

I think that we are all for more renewable energy but unless one wants to destroy the world economy, we will have to rely heavily on fossil fuels for another two or more decades.

Reply to  bones
June 7, 2015 9:53 am

“There is a time to every purpose under heaven.”
I say let economics sort out our energy sources. If oil ever gets too expensive, alternatives will rise naturally, on their own merits. Government subsidy only skews the economics. subsidy doesn’t justify the alternatives or make them more viable.

Tsk Tsk
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 6, 2015 7:36 pm

2) I don’t think thorium or cold fusion or anything like it is the future of power; I’d wager all things nuclear are mostly relics of the past, in no small part because they cost like sin. But the point I was trying to make is that the new fact in the world is the remarkably rapid fall in the price of renewable energy. That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view

Just more green wishful thinking. Nuclear “costs like sin” because of the regulatory burden placed on it from your camp coupled with a patently broken system of torts in this country. In actuality we can (and are) recertify the older, fully-depreciated nuclear fleet to get decades more life out of them. Their production cost/kWh blows away even the disingenuous numbers that the greens like to claim for their feel good projects.
Now let’s talk about future possibilities. MSR’s –no reason you have to go to Thorium, but it would be convenient because you have a huge radioactive waste problem mining the rare earths you need for your panels and your pinwheels– would be substantially cheaper to produce than existing PWR and BWR designs. Some of the most expensive failure modes of PWR/BWR designs simply can’t happen with molten fuels, i.e. there’s no water and no Zirconia so there can be no hydrogen explosions. And these designs would be capable of load following. Really, they’re your only hope for being the wizard behind the curtain propping up your green fantasy.
So called renewables have managed to reduce costs of some components (panels and turbines) but completely neglect the single largest expense: labor. That cost is only rising, so the notion that solar is going to save us is, well, something beginning with the letter ‘i.’ There is no magic bullet on energy storage, so these technologies have not and will not replace base load capacity for decades, if ever. And since there is no scalable, cost-effective grid storage, you’re left with running conventional plants in just about the worst maintenance and economic regime possible. You’re either spinning reserve just burning fuel but generating no return, or you’re rapidly-cycling reserve which is artificially aging your asset prematurely and driving up costs (see Germany if you’d like a modern example). NONE of that cost is included in so called renewables, which in my opinion is pure fraud.
Finally, we haven’t even broached the obscene amount of subsidy that green projects have received for decades. And no, I’m not really interested in the OECD report that quotes just how much vehicle fuel subsidy Venezuela, Iran, Saudi Arabia, etc. give to their citizens. I’m talking about the per kWh subsidy that each form of energy receives in the developed world and specifically in the US. It’s disgusting just how much is stolen from taxpayers so that a few well-off, upper middle to upper class socialists can feel good about themselves. If you want to put up shiny panels on your roof, that’s your business. I won’t try stop you. But stop stealing my money to subsidize your hobby.

dmh
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 6, 2015 7:54 pm

Bill McKibben;
That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view
If they were FREE and 100% efficient they STILL would not be able to replace fossil fuels. Most of our energy use is NOT electricity, and even accepting the flawed premise that they might be free and 100% efficient, they STILL would not be able power our electricity needs by themselves.
More to the point, if your claim that their decreasing costs are a “destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view” is true, then there would be no need for subsidies, carbon credit schemes, or the propaganda efforts from which you and your organization earn a living. If your statement was true, then adoption would be ramping up on its own by governments and private industry alike.

David Springer
Reply to  dmh
June 7, 2015 7:00 am

Yeah, actually solar cells would be able to replace fossil fuels if the cells are free. No need to be more efficient just free. You see, if you have free electricity you can use it to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. Once you have free hydrogen the world is your oyster.
Recycling CO2 into Sustainable Hydrocarbon Fuels: Electrolysis of CO2 and H2O

markl
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 6, 2015 7:54 pm

Bill McKibben commented: ” That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view.”
And yet very few people can afford them nor can they replace current energy sources. Everyone should want to save our environment but never, ever, at the price of humanity. Fresh beer is tough to beat but I can only drink a couple of gallons at a sitting.

mebbe
Reply to  markl
June 6, 2015 9:22 pm

Well. there we have it!
Anthony had a “one-on-one meeting with Bill McKibben” and Bill McKibben had a “drink with Anthony”.
Civility is good; it helps us avoid fisticuffs and we can find some common ground.
I agree with Bill that it’s possible that he is an idiot. 😉

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 6, 2015 8:20 pm

Bill, I am organising a response to your 350.org sponsored attempt to get Queens University to divest themselves, along with dozens of other universities, of all investments in oil, gas and coal around the world and every company and fund that has an iota of such an investment themselves. It is my one man one comment response to a plan that would have the result, if taken to its logical conclusion, of bringing Canadian society to a halt, leaving about 30 million people to freeze in the dark. No greater catastrophe could befall this nation.
The plan is manifestly evil, and if it is not intended to extend to its logical conclusion, patently facetious. You are training young Canadians to call an entire economic sector ‘racist’ while seeking to close the industry that provides the tax revenue to fund Alberta’s entire social welfare and school system on aboriginal lands.
It is apparently your ‘feeling’ that health, welfare, agriculture, manufacturing and transport should cease using oil products. May the Titanic of your ambition hit the iceberg of Canadian intelligence and insight.

dmh
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
June 6, 2015 9:12 pm

I think those that are congratulating McKibben for having a civil discussion with Anthon_ny should read Crispin’s comment above over an over until they get it. Judge McKibben not by his civil discussion that he knew full well would get reported, but by his actual actions. The lobby efforts he supports, the policies he promotes, and the negative consequences, DIRE negative consequences for millions, perhaps billions, that he ignores in pursuit of more funding for his activism. Judge him by his actions, for they alone define him.

David A
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
June 7, 2015 6:44 am

I agree. Was Bill asked why he blew up children in a video?
It is a fair question, and not inflammatory. The video was inflammatory and not the mark of a
“Gentlemen” . The phrase, “The road to hell is paved with sincerity” does have an appropriate application,
I would have liked to see this question respectfully but directly asked.

Alan Robertson
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 6, 2015 9:28 pm

Bill M says: “I’d wager all things nuclear are mostly relics of the past…”
———————–
I disagree. I think power from the atom is something from the future, something developed before we were supposed to have it, before our consciousness had reached what it should have been before we unlocked that door. Even now, we still can’t put it all together.

Scott Basinger
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 7, 2015 11:13 am

Bill,
No, you’re wrong about nuclear. Nuclear is not expensive when compared to other non-carbon generating technologies (1/4th the cost or less per kWh produced).
That, and some of the newer reactors have the benefit of being able to somewhat load follow. Intermittent generation (wind and solar) sources, will require some either very expensive grid storage or load-following coal or gas units running on standby for when variations in wind and solar occur.
You owe it to yourself and your readership to educate yourself about electrical generation.
http://thebreakthrough.org/index.php/programs/energy-and-climate//cost-of-german-solar-is-four-times-finnish-nuclear/

Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 7, 2015 11:23 am

A serious question that I hope you at least ponder.
I am sure you have considered the potential costs to Mankind if you are correct about the evils of CO2 and we take no action, but have you ever examined the costs to Man if we take the actions being encouraged by you and you are wrong?
Reduction of cheap, available energy comes with a price on the health and welfare of many. Making energy “necessarily expensive” also means making it “necessarily harmful,” particularly to the less affluent. You might want to start by looking at what has been classified as “unnecessary deaths” in the UK in winter due to high energy costs.
Finally, examine the cost of remediation. Since that would be after-the-fact, it requires no speculative costs that could one day prove to provide no value, or worse, exacerbate the problem, i.e., good intentions producing bad outcomes.
You may come to the same conclusions you have today, but at least know what the penaties are should you be wrong, and understand that skeptics are not evil.

Janice the Elder
Reply to  Bill McKibben (@billmckibben)
June 7, 2015 2:12 pm

Mr. McKibben, though you think that nuclear is a relic of the past, perhaps you haven’t been aware that the world is quickly running out of Plutonium-238. It has to be created in specific types of nuclear power plants. Once it is gone, the world will no longer have the ability to send probes or rovers to any of the outer planets. Pu-238 is what has allowed us to have a viable space program. Please reconsider your stand about nuclear power plants, as the loss of Pu-238 production will impact all of us in many ways.

JFD
June 6, 2015 7:03 pm

A nice story about your visit with Bill McKibben, Anthony There may not be trends in the rainfall graph but natural ocean cycles are certainly visible.

Tsk Tsk
June 6, 2015 7:09 pm

The dirty burning of coal in China and India has been a net positive just like it was three hundred years ago in Britain. The lack of adequate supplies of energy is far worse than the effect of particulates and metals emitted by crudely burning coal. It’s only when a society becomes rich enough and can access sufficient energy resources that are cleaner that the real pollution costs net out to be a negative. Bottom line: being poor is bad for your health regardless of how pristine your environment is and fossil fuels along with nuclear are the only games in town.

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
Reply to  Tsk Tsk
June 6, 2015 8:22 pm

Tsk Tsk
The particulates are unburned coal. Modern coal combustor don’t waste fuel like that. The rest is ash blown up by fans. It too is gone. It is not about combustion quality any more. It is about CO2.

Tsk Tsk
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
June 6, 2015 8:29 pm

The dirty burning of coal in China and India

I’m away of what modern scrubbing technology can achieve with added cost. My point is that on balance even the dirty combustion in China and India to date has been a significant net positive, i.e. it has saved far more life hours than it has prematurely ended. I was responding to the agreement between Anthony and McKibben where they agreed it was a bad thing(tm).

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Jakarta
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
June 7, 2015 1:31 am

Tsk Tsk
I take your points as positive. What I am tired of is hearing how ‘dirty’ a fuel is. ‘Dirt’ is the result of a combination of factors resulting in poor combustion. ‘Dirt’ is not removed by filtering – it is remove by complete combustion. We don’t put bag filters on cars, we build better engines. What is happening is the anti-coal crowd are trying to tie 50 year old ‘dirty’ power stations to ‘CO2 is a form of dirt’ in the minds of the indoctrinated. 350.org has this as a policy goal, meaning they have set believing this lie as a policy goal and they seek funding to accomplish it. They won’t accomplish it be being mean, they accomplish it by being smooth, slick and populist.
Success relies on keeping the target population (the youth, for the most part) ignorant and snuffing their natural and healthy tendency to investigate the world for themselves. Demonising people, classes of thought, outlets of information and an us-vs-them mentality.
Classic dialectical argumentation strives to create polar opposites so there is only one ‘reasonable’ result, a point achieved by manipulating the listener around various paths to arrive at a desired conclusion. The greatest danger to such manipulator is an informed listener capable of conceptual and logical analysis. That is why 350.org targets those who are still forming those capabilities. They brag about it on their web site. Have a look, with seeing eyes.

Yirgach
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta
June 8, 2015 2:26 pm

A good example of classic dialectical argumentation is the following James “Integrity” Hansen’s quote:

If we cannot stop the building of more coal-fired power plants, those coal trains will be death trains — no less gruesome than if they were boxcars headed to crematoria, loaded with uncountable irreplaceable species.

Richard M
June 6, 2015 7:09 pm

Now you know why so much of the AGW propaganda is tuned to get an emotional response (polar bears, mass extinctions, etc.). This is how you control people who think with their hearts and not their heads.

June 6, 2015 7:18 pm

There are a few comments above that reflect on human nature which throws out science, logic, reason. Per one of these, U.S. is naive. Etc.
I agree. When Obama calls those opposing his political agenda the ‘d’ word, he is not aiming at scientists. He is using his authority figure to cement AGW to the wavering believers and attempt to convince others to join his viewpoint. He is courting public opinion. The skeptic side must do the same if you want to win the war.

robert_g
June 6, 2015 7:18 pm

“Bill also seem[s] to think that many other weather events could be attributable to the changes that humans have made on our planet. He was quite sincere about this belief and cited many examples of events he witnessed or saw the aftermath of. I could tell that his perspective was one of empathy as were many of his concerns. But I came away with the impression that Bill feels such things more than he understands them in a physical sense. This was not unexpected because Bill is a writer by nature, and his tools of the trade are to convey human experience into words. I can’t really fault him for feeling these things and expanding on them but I did note he seemed quite resistive to factual rebuttals because they didn’t assuage the feelings he harbored.”
Our own personal (anecdotal) experiences are parochial in both time and space and–by definition–inadequately sample reality. Thus, conclusions based on our personal samples can be potentially misleading–particularly so, in the context of disparity in the life span of a typical individual compared to the time-and-space domain of “climate” and “weather extrema” records. Failure to recognize these physical limits and to guard against our natural emotional biases and the evolutionarily-imposed, heuristic hard-wiring of our brains to construct a “story,” and confirmation bias is an easy trap to fall into. We are all primed to do so! Unfortunately, it takes actual knowledge of the trap, and real self-knowledge and an act of will not to go down this garden path of self-deception.
The best antidote I know of to correct this form of self-blindness is rational skepticism. A constant willingness to question, a willingness to so one’s best to objectively look data and not let emotion insert a veil of ignorance. A precondition for skeptical inquiry, is to know why one should be skeptic: the ever-present danger of self-delusion. Perhaps education is one effective avenue that the skeptic can reach those on the “other side” who are genuinely seeking the “truth.” Who really wants to be deluded? [even the sociopath who wants to manipulate others, typically doesn’t want to delude himself]
Somewhat tangential, but apropos of one’s susceptibility to genuinely feeling “This must be so,” is captured by one of my favorite article titles: “The Moon and Mental Illness: A Failure to Confirm the Transylvania Effect”

Reply to  robert_g
June 6, 2015 7:24 pm

The first principle is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest person to fool. – R.F.

June 6, 2015 7:19 pm

Plant food increases in the atmosphere are not a problem.

simon
June 6, 2015 7:42 pm

M Simon…. yes plants seem to do well, it’s just the rest of us who may well struggle.

Reply to  simon
June 6, 2015 7:56 pm

I dunno. Not enough plant food is a problem for ALL life. As I understand it there is no chance under current conditions of reaching a condition of too much plant food.

philincalifornia
Reply to  simon
June 6, 2015 8:04 pm

With a 1 degree C temperature rise in the next 100 years, most or all of it of it natural anyway. Yeah right !!!
Not to mention that it may go the other way too. Then we may well struggle, depending on how steep the descent.
At least this sorry episode has taught us that atmospheric CO2 levels will not help and we will need other solutions.

Reply to  simon
June 7, 2015 11:35 am

We MAY struggle with increased CO2 in youropinion, but we know for a fact that many WILL struggle if energy is made more expensive. You are advocating for a deliberate harm to others (clearly you can afford more expensive energy) to avoid a speculative inconvenience to you.

June 6, 2015 7:44 pm

Thanks, Anthony. Good article, and congratulations on your honesty and civility.
You have again shown that the debate is just starting.

R. Shearer
June 6, 2015 7:46 pm

From the picture I see that his thinning hair (undoubtedly correlated with a rise in CO2) appears to be wind blown. I believe that is perhaps due to his long bike ride from the East Coast.

takebackthegreen
June 6, 2015 8:01 pm

One of the most encouraging and admirable posts I’ve read on the tortured subject of Climate in a very long time. It concretely demonstrates why so many consider your blog an indispensable resource.
You present a glimpse of what is possible, a model of a way forward.
Well done.

Harold
June 6, 2015 8:03 pm

Call me cynical, but maybe Bill read the LaCour paper, and had an epiphany that he could talk Anthony into a complete change of outlook.
Oops. The LaCour paper is bumf too, you say?

JohnB
June 6, 2015 8:04 pm

An interesting account, and one that helps confirm my thoughts on the basic difference between those worried about climate change and those who are not.
Those like Mr. Mc Kibben tend to view the climate and the planetary ecology as stable. They use terms like “finely tuned” or “balance of nature”, while accepting change over long time periods, they assume incredible stability over mere centuries. As this is the perceived natural order, any short term interruption or change is therefore (quite logically) “unnatural” and therefore caused by man.
Those on the sceptic side tend to view the climate as naturally chaotic and quite capable of rapid change without any action by man. Therefore to the sceptic, the mild warming of the 20th Century is (quite logically) nothing out of the ordinary.
This is illustrated by the conversation;
“Worrier: “The climate is changing! The climate is changing!”
Sceptic: “Yes it is. What’s you point?”
As the two positions are logically derived from a fundamental idea about the natural rate of change then it’s inevitable that each side thinks the other is illogical or ignoring the evidence. Rather than facts being ignored, they are simply being interpreted differently. A persons position on the Worrier/Sceptic scale is almost entirely derived from their answer to the question “How fast can the temperature change naturally?”. The lower the figure, the more worried the person is.
There may be some ego involved, but it isn’t required. Mankind has long tried to and believed he could control the forces of nature. We prayed to a multitude of Gods and supported a priestly class who vowed that the Gods listened to them and would show mercy/favour/whatever, bringing the good rains or ending the rain. The Gods controlled the weather, the priests had the ear of the Gods and so the tribe, by appeasing the Gods, controlled the weather. Rather than being at the mercy of forces beyond his comprehension or power, man was in control.
This attitude holds true for the worrier as well. If nature and climate are chaotic and large changes are the norm, then man is at the mercy of vast impersonal forces far beyond his control. However, if the natural world is stable then all deviations are the result of the actions of man and can be reversed by appropriate actions. IOW, it allows the belief that man is not at the mercy of the natural world, but actually controls it. This idea of control is inherent in the belief system of the worrier (how often have we heard about stopping climate change?)
The bottom line is that most of the differences in outlook between the worrier and the sceptic can be traced to their basic belief about the natural rate of change of the climate system.