Roger Pielke Jr.: My unhappy life as a climate heretic

My research was attacked by thought police in journalism, activist groups funded by billionaires and even the White House.

By Dr. Roger Pielke Jr. writing in the Wall Street Journal h/t to multiple sources

Much to my surprise, I showed up in the WikiLeaks releases before the election. In a 2014 email, a staffer at the Center for American Progress, founded by John Podesta in 2003, took credit for a campaign to have me eliminated as a writer for Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight website. In the email, the editor of the think tank’s climate blog bragged to one of its billionaire donors, Tom Steyer: “I think it’s fair [to] say that, without Climate Progress, Pielke would still be writing on climate change for 538.”

WikiLeaks provides a window into a world I’ve seen up close for decades: the debate over what to do about climate change, and the role of science in that argument. Although it is too soon to tell how the Trump administration will engage the scientific community, my long experience shows what can happen when politicians and media turn against inconvenient research—which we’ve seen under Republican and Democratic presidents.

I understand why Mr. Podesta—most recently Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman—wanted to drive me out of the climate-change discussion. When substantively countering an academic’s research proves difficult, other techniques are needed to banish it. That is how politics sometimes works, and professors need to understand this if we want to participate in that arena.

More troubling is the degree to which journalists and other academics joined the campaign against me. What sort of responsibility do scientists and the media have to defend the ability to share research, on any subject, that might be inconvenient to political interests—even our own?

I believe climate change is real and that human emissions of greenhouse gases risk justifying action, including a carbon tax. But my research led me to a conclusion that many climate campaigners find unacceptable: There is scant evidence to indicate that hurricanes, floods, tornadoes or drought have become more frequent or intense in the U.S. or globally. In fact we are in an era of good fortune when it comes to extreme weather. This is a topic I’ve studied and published on as much as anyone over two decades. My conclusion might be wrong, but I think I’ve earned the right to share this research without risk to my career.

Instead, my research was under constant attack for years by activists, journalists and politicians. In 2011 writers in the journal Foreign Policy signaled that some accused me of being a “climate-change denier.” I earned the title, the authors explained, by “questioning certain graphs presented in IPCC reports.” That an academic who raised questions about the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in an area of his expertise was tarred as a denier reveals the groupthink at work.

Yet I was right to question the IPCC’s 2007 report, which included a graph purporting to show that disaster costs were rising due to global temperature increases. The graph was later revealed to have been based on invented and inaccurate information, as I documented in my book “The Climate Fix.” The insurance industry scientist Robert-Muir Wood of Risk Management Solutions had smuggled the graph into the IPCC report. He explained in a public debate with me in London in 2010 that he had included the graph and misreferenced it because he expected future research to show a relationship between increasing disaster costs and rising temperatures.

When his research was eventually published in 2008, well after the IPCC report, it concluded the opposite: “We find insufficient evidence to claim a statistical relationship between global temperature increase and normalized catastrophe losses.” Whoops.

The IPCC never acknowledged the snafu, but subsequent reports got the science right: There is not a strong basis for connecting weather disasters with human-caused climate change.

Yes, storms and other extremes still occur, with devastating human consequences, but history shows they could be far worse. No Category 3, 4 or 5 hurricane has made landfall in the U.S. since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, by far the longest such period on record. This means that cumulative economic damage from hurricanes over the past decade is some $70 billion less than the long-term average would lead us to expect, based on my research with colleagues. This is good news, and it should be OK to say so. Yet in today’s hyper-partisan climate debate, every instance of extreme weather becomes a political talking point.

For a time I called out politicians and reporters who went beyond what science can support, but some journalists won’t hear of this. In 2011 and 2012, I pointed out on my blog and social media that the lead climate reporter at the New York Times,Justin Gillis,had mischaracterized the relationship of climate change and food shortages, and the relationship of climate change and disasters. His reporting wasn’t consistent with most expert views, or the evidence. In response he promptly blocked me from his Twitter feed. Other reporters did the same.

In August this year on Twitter, I criticized poor reporting on the website Mashable about a supposed coming hurricane apocalypse—including a bad misquote of me in the cartoon role of climate skeptic. (The misquote was later removed.) The publication’s lead science editor, Andrew Freedman, helpfully explained via Twitter that this sort of behavior “is why you’re on many reporters’ ‘do not call’ lists despite your expertise.”

I didn’t know reporters had such lists. But I get it. No one likes being told that he misreported scientific research, especially on climate change. Some believe that connecting extreme weather with greenhouse gases helps to advance the cause of climate policy. Plus, bad news gets clicks.

Yet more is going on here than thin-skinned reporters responding petulantly to a vocal professor. In 2015 I was quoted in the Los Angeles Times, by Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Paige St. John, making the rather obvious point that politicians use the weather-of-the-moment to make the case for action on climate change, even if the scientific basis is thin or contested.

Ms. St. John was pilloried by her peers in the media. Shortly thereafter, she emailed me what she had learned: “You should come with a warning label: Quoting Roger Pielke will bring a hailstorm down on your work from the London Guardian, Mother Jones, and Media Matters.”

Or look at the journalists who helped push me out of FiveThirtyEight. My first article there, in 2014, was based on the consensus of the IPCC and peer-reviewed research. I pointed out that the global cost of disasters was increasing at a rate slower than GDP growth, which is very good news. Disasters still occur, but their economic and human effect is smaller than in the past. It’s not terribly complicated.

That article prompted an intense media campaign to have me fired. Writers at Slate, Salon, the New Republic, the New York Times, the Guardian and others piled on.

In March of 2014, FiveThirtyEight editor Mike Wilson demoted me from staff writer to freelancer. A few months later I chose to leave the site after it became clear it wouldn’t publish me. The mob celebrated. ClimateTruth.org, founded by former Center for American Progress staffer Brad Johnson, and advised by Penn State’s Michael Mann,called my departure a “victory for climate truth.” The Center for American Progress promised its donor Mr. Steyer more of the same.

Yet the climate thought police still weren’t done. In 2013 committees in the House and Senate invited me to a several hearings to summarize the science on disasters and climate change. As a professor at a public university, I was happy to do so. My testimony was strong, and it was well aligned with the conclusions of the IPCC and the U.S. government’s climate-science program. Those conclusions indicate no overall increasing trend in hurricanes, floods, tornadoes or droughts—in the U.S. or globally.

In early 2014, not long after I appeared before Congress, President Obama’s science adviser John Holdren testified before the same Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. He was asked about his public statements that appeared to contradict the scientific consensus on extreme weather events that I had earlier presented. Mr. Holdren responded with the all-too-common approach of attacking the messenger, telling the senators incorrectly that my views were “not representative of the mainstream scientific opinion.” Mr. Holdren followed up by posting a strange essay, of nearly 3,000 words, on the White House website under the heading, “An Analysis of Statements by Roger Pielke Jr.,” where it remains today.

I suppose it is a distinction of a sort to be singled out in this manner by the president’s science adviser. Yet Mr. Holdren’s screed reads more like a dashed-off blog post from the nutty wings of the online climate debate, chock-full of errors and misstatements.

But when the White House puts a target on your back on its website, people notice. Almost a year later Mr. Holdren’s missive was the basis for an investigation of me by Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva, the ranking Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee. Rep. Grijalva explained in a letter to my university’s president that I was being investigated because Mr. Holdren had “highlighted what he believes were serious misstatements by Prof. Pielke of the scientific consensus on climate change.” He made the letter public.

The “investigation” turned out to be a farce. In the letter, Rep. Grijalva suggested that I—and six other academics with apparently heretical views—might be on the payroll of Exxon Mobil (or perhaps the Illuminati, I forget). He asked for records detailing my research funding, emails and so on. After some well-deserved criticism from the American Meteorological Society and the American Geophysical Union, Rep. Grijalva deleted the letter from his website. The University of Colorado complied with Rep. Grijalva’s request and responded that I have never received funding from fossil-fuel companies. My heretical views can be traced to research support from the U.S. government.

But the damage to my reputation had been done, and perhaps that was the point.

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michael hart
December 4, 2016 1:17 pm

Pedant alert.
The Guardian is actually a paper which ought to come from London, but doesn’t deserve to.
Its roots are in Manchester.
(I believe Scots from Glasgow say something similar about Edinburgh being a city which ought to be in England, but doesn’t deserve to be.)

johan
December 4, 2016 1:25 pm

This is such a heartbreaking story that one would rather place it in Nazi Germany or the defunct Soviet Union than in the country held as the final bulwark against bigotry and tyranny. It is now of crucial importance that the authorities to be chosen to work on matters related to climate and environment should be systematically informed of the deception and iies that the present administration has nurtured during the regime soon step aside! Signs are that the President-elect does not subsribe to the present climate dogma, but it must now be made sure that his and his coming administration’s convictions are substantiated by accurate and carefully formulated objective information. There surely is going to be a scream all over your continent from those who then must acknowledge the truth. On the other side, to be a little mean, they had it coming!
Professor Pielke, esteemed colleague, please try to hold out! Do not despair, truth will eventually prevail.

Reply to  johan
December 5, 2016 2:28 am

one would rather place it in Nazi Germany or the defunct Soviet Union than in the country held as the final bulwark against bigotry and tyranny.
That is because it is simply a symptom of imposing a political view upon the population, rather than letting them arrive at one naturally, or by rational discourse.
Calling someone a ‘denier’ is not rational discourse.
Its hard to discern when the Left as a whole became a vehicle for oppression, and suppression of discourse. OK it was always that away at the hardcore end, the Trotskyites and Communists, but the broader left used to favour democracy. Now the cry is all ‘the people are to stupid and ill informed to be allowed to make decisions for themselves’ (and in fact Boaty McBoatface tends to support that view, or perhaps that the public has more seen of humour than politicians realise).
Of course all this is helped by the fact that the purpose of Western Democracy is completely misunderstood. It was never about ‘exercising the will of the people ‘ at every instant. IT was conceived and implemented and originally understood as a way of placing limits on the powers of first monarchs, and then parliament itself. A ruling elite there would always be, but democracy was a way to sack the bar stewards without a long costly and bloody revolution.
Having killed the king, and created a sort of quasi religious communism (Cromwell’s ‘commonwealth’) the attempts by Cromwell to create a political dynasty as unpleasant and oppressive as any monarchy, led to men of letters calling for both the return of a King, but with some sort of mechanisms to limit his absolute authority. The result was parliamentary democracy as we know it.
This has been an inconvenience to men who would be kings, ever since.
Democracy is about achieving bloodless coups and revolutions, because civil wars are mainly bad for business as they result in a lot of property destruction.
What is most sinister, is that forces in the West would prefer to see violence and oppression and a police state, rather then democracy, in order to impose a system upon those that do not want it. Leaving the door open for that system to be subverted by far far worse people …Once you are powerless to remove an elite that is past its sell by date by peaceful means, only one method remains.

CheshireRed
December 4, 2016 1:33 pm

It’s a pathetic state of affairs but par for the course in the absurd world of climate activism.

December 4, 2016 1:47 pm

Folks,
Here’s the real gem in this article. Dr(s) Pielke(s) have the guts to stand up and talk about what they think the data tells them – and do it publicly. Agree with their ideas or not, at least the debate is in the open, face to face, and let the conclusions fall where they may. How many times have one on one (or group on group) debates been held between those fearing flying toast and those stamping the status quo?
I for one am glad to see Dr Jr (sorry had to do it) back at the keyboard. We need serious researchers talking – not necessarily agreeing – and taking their conclusions at least to the general public. Let’s get back to doing science the way it should be.
“If one person can prove my theory wrong….” OK maybe not a direct quote – but Albert had it right….
Mike

CheshireRed
Reply to  Michael Bentley
December 4, 2016 2:32 pm

All true except your honourable intentions are not shared by climate activists. They demand only the outcome their motives seek, and science be damned.

December 4, 2016 1:53 pm

Dear Roger,
You gave testimony before Congress. The Center for American Progress et al attacked you for your testimony, attempting to shut you up and to deter others from testifying. These actions constitute witness tampering (18 US Code § 1512), conspiracy to interfere with civil rights (42 U.S. Code § 1985), and violations of other Federal and state laws.
You do not have to live unhappy life. Call a good lawyer, and stand up for yourself and the Constitution.

Reply to  Leo Goldstein
December 4, 2016 8:05 pm

I agree with Leo, Roget – stand up for your rights and fight.- this is your time to do so.
Also, consider supporting a group that is suing the climate fraudsters under Civil RICO.
In the USA, lawsuits under Civil RICO have finally been initiated, as I suggested on wattsup in 2014:
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/09/27/the-first-climate-change-rico-lawsuit-is-filed-by-defyccc-com-editor/#comment-2307586
My only problem is that you are a luke-warmer, and I think you do not have that correct – unless you agree with me that manmade warming is so small as to be insignificant, or even beneficial.
Regards, Allan.

Reply to  Allan M.R. MacRae
December 5, 2016 7:03 am

Luke-warmers might be mistaken on the science, but have all the rights under the law.

Reply to  Allan M.R. MacRae
December 5, 2016 8:13 am

Of course I agree with you Leo re Roger’s rights – which have been tramped by scoundrels and imbeciles.

Reply to  Allan M.R. MacRae
December 5, 2016 8:28 am

Even though Roger and I probably do not agree on climate sensitivity to increasing atmospheric CO2, I am concerned that too many of the comments here are far nasty and vindictive.
Roger does not have to agree with me on all points for me to defend his rights, which have been badly abused by the usual suspects.
I think those of you who used this opportunity to do a drive-by shooting aimed at Roger should reflect that this is what the warmists have been doing to skeptics for decades. An apology is in order.
FYI, my friend Sallie Baliunas was pushed out of Harvard-Smithsonian, reportedly by Obama’s Chief Scientific Advisor John Holdren. This was a great loss for science and humanity – Sallie is one of the best and smartest people I know.
The same people have now attacked Sallie’s colleague Willie Soon, but Willie has managed to hang on.
Regards, Allan
Post Script:
Some history: “Drive-by shootings in Kyotoville” – E&E 005
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/09/09/syun-akasofus-work-provokes-journal-resignation/#comment-1412549
Sincere thanks to all here for the kind (and accurate) words about the courage of Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen.
Sonja has taken a strong stand for her scientific and ethical principles, and has stood firm against unethical attacks by global warming extremists.
I published the following article in E&E in early 2005. The thuggish bullying by the pro-Kyoto camp was evident years before the Climategate emails provided incontrovertible proof of their unethical and even criminal behaviour.
This bullying by global warming extremists continues to this day, but it will not continue much longer. Their attack has faltered, and some of their company are starting to retreat.
One already sees papers published by global warming alarmists that acknowledge the significant role of natural climate variation. The significance of these papers is not that they say anything scientifically new – many if not most skeptics believed decades ago that natural climate variation was highly significant – the significance of these recent warmist apologia is that they are primarily political – I suggest that these authors are gradually retreating from their extremist views as the credibility of their warmist alarmism becomes scientifically and politically untenable.
Natural climate variability trumps global warming extremism.
Regards, Allan
Drive-by shootings in Kyotoville
The global warming debate heats up
Allan M.R. MacRae
[Excerpt]
But such bullying is not unique, as other researchers who challenged the scientific basis of Kyoto have learned.
Of particular sensitivity to the pro-Kyoto gang is the “hockey stick” temperature curve of 1000 to 2000 AD, as proposed by Michael Mann of University of Virginia and co-authors in Nature. Mann’s hockey stick indicates that temperatures fell only slightly from 1000 to 1900 AD, after which temperatures increased sharply as a result of humanmade increases in atmospheric CO2. Mann concluded: “Our results suggest that the latter 20th century is anomalous in the context of at least the past millennium. The 1990s was the warmest decade, and 1998 the warmest year, at moderately high levels of confidence.”
Mann’s conclusion is the cornerstone of the scientific case supporting Kyoto. However, Mann is incorrect.
Mann eliminated from the climate record both the Medieval Warm Period, a period from about 900 to 1500 AD when global temperatures were generally warmer than today, and also the Little Ice Age from about 1500 to 1800 AD, when temperatures were colder. Mann’s conclusion contradicted hundreds of previous studies on this subject, but was adopted without question by Kyoto advocates.
In the April 2003 issue of Energy and Environment, Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and co-authors wrote a review of over 250 research papers that concluded that the Medieval Warm Period and Little Ice Age were true climatic anomalies with world-wide imprints – contradicting Mann’s hockey stick and undermining the basis of Kyoto. Soon et al were then attacked in EOS, the journal of the American Geophysical Union.
In the July 2003 issue of GSA Today, University of Ottawa geology professor Jan Veizer and Israeli astrophysicist Nir Shaviv concluded that temperatures over the past 500 million years correlate with changes in cosmic ray intensity as Earth moves in and out of the spiral arms of the Milky Way. The geologic record showed no correlation between atmospheric CO2 concentrations and temperatures, even though prehistoric CO2 levels were often many times today’s levels. Veizer and Shaviv also received “special attention” from EOS.
In both cases, the attacks were unprofessional – first, these critiques should have been launched in the journals that published the original papers, not in EOS. Also, the victims of these attacks were not given advanced notice, nor were they were given the opportunity to respond in the same issue. In both cases the victims had to wait months for their rebuttals to be published, while the specious attacks were circulated by the pro-Kyoto camp.
*************

December 4, 2016 1:58 pm

For a complete, non-paywalled version of this excellent article, try this google search:
https://www.google.com/search?q=Pielke+%22Unhappy+Life%22+groupthink+Hurricane+Wilma+misreferenced+graph+FiveThirtyEight+Wilson+demoted+engaging+climate+change+decidedly+less+fun&filter=0
For other discussions, leave out some of those words.
It irks me that the WSJ asserts ownership over material that they didn’t write or pay for.

Marcus
Reply to  daveburton
December 4, 2016 2:21 pm

comment image

December 4, 2016 3:22 pm

Pielke suffers from what all us skeptical scientists have endured. Soon and Baliunas were ruthlessly attacked for simply compiling a multitude of peer reviewed papers showing the Medieval Warm Period experienced temperatures higher than today. Reading the leaked emails, Mann and his ilk tried to intimidate editors and sought to have Harvard administrators marginalize the authors and obscure past climate change simply because they disagreed with Mann’s interpretations.
Similarly I posted an article on WUWT synthesizing the peer reviewed literature about coral resilience resulting from symbiont shuffling and shifting..
http://landscapesandcycles.net/coral-bleaching-debate.html
The Australian picked up on that research. So the Australian Broadcasting’s Media Watch tried to marginalize that science and protect their bogus climate catastrophe scenarios by denigrating my expertise. Clearly the liberal media is dedicated to promoting climate catastrophes and denigrating sound science that demonstrates otherwise.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/07/23/a-response-to-abcs-media-watchs-shoot-the-coral-messenger-flimflam/

george e. smith
Reply to  jim steele
December 4, 2016 6:04 pm

Jim, I read that Baliunas / Soon review paper, and I believe they went through something like 200 peer reviewed journal articles from all over the world, establishing that the MWP and the LIA truly were global phenomena reflected in climate changes worldwide.
Contrast that with Mann’s first publishment of the Hockey Stick graph, in (I think) the first IPCC report, in which he clearly labeled his graph ” Northern Hemisphere ” showing that his hockey stick theory was simply a local event; not a global trend.
Well we eventually learned from his Charlie Brown Yamal Christmas tree just how localized his theory was.
Soon and Baliunas were then posting occasionally at the Tech Central Station web site, which for all I know may no longer exist.
G

pkatt
December 4, 2016 3:40 pm

What you suffered is a symptom of consensus science. Your treatment was mild compared to the work of those whose scientific career was ruined even though their work eventually becomes proven. This is not a new phenomena nor will it end soon. Apparently it is the price of funding whether it be by monarchy, institution or government.

Reply to  pkatt
December 5, 2016 4:08 am

This is not the same as consensus science. Most of the people enforcing climate alarmism are politicians, bureaucrats, green businessmen, journalists and activists. They are a minority of no more than 10%; not a consensus. They push their policies by bullying and blackmail. It may be politically dominant but it is intellectually feeble. Barely 1 in 20 of them understand anything of the supposed science. In addition, the alarmists are split between nuclear power supporting, and 100% renewable camps.

temp
December 4, 2016 3:45 pm

I have very mixed feeling about this piece… alot of them are bad in that mix bunch.
First I think Dr. Roger Pielke Jr. should have really done a better job writing this piece.
Second and more importantly he should have taken the time to look at how this piece would play out. Its fairly disgraceful on his part if he willingly and with foreknowledge wrote this in this fashion.
Right now the climate cultists are in a panic because of trump. They are trying to save their religion, save their jobs and most of all keep themselves out of prison for fraud among other things.
This letter is a propaganda bonanza. It will be held up for years to show “yeah we made mistake but so what, we NEED to be forgiven and everyone NEEDS to move on as business as usual”. It very “ends justify the means”.
Dr. Roger Pielke Jr. near demanded that no one be held accountable by any means. Be it people being fired, people being jailed for crimes such as fraud, is unbelievable disheartening. When I read this letter it sounds more like a rape victim trying to say how they had to completely change their life after they were raped. Gave up everything they worked for and loved… but you shouldn’t punish the rapist, because even though it was clearly rape and the facts are overwhelming, punishing the rapist is somehow wrong. Like a person with stockholm syndrome pleading with judges and cops not to press charges against their kidnappers and abusers.
One wonders if hitlery was elected president would the WSJ even entertain a letter of this type…
Dr. Roger Pielke Jr. is providing cover to protect some of the worst of the fake science community. Further he is enabling them to do it yet again. In 4 or 8 years when trump leaves office and a full blown cultist were elected to replace him… does anyone believe that these people will not immediately go right back to the way they were before?
Does he not understand that he is enabling these people to do what happened to him to others, once the spot light is turned off? Further while he has managed to skate without much problem being a tenured professor. What about the countless number of people who have been fired? Careers destroyed? Further what about the careers that never were? Where these people forced young scientists out solely because they didn’t believe in a cult. What does he have to say to those people? What about their families? Or the families they never had because the once promising future was ripped away from them. What about the constant attempt to criminalize skeptic to include peer reviewing them into into mental illness and having them locked up?
These people are morally and ethically corrupt that alone should be cause for him and any scientist to demand they be fired. Many of them have committed crimes most commonly fraud. Yet he seems to think that by letting this people off its somehow “good” for “science”. Maybe he somehow thinks he’s taking the high road by letting them prey on future scientists and the public at large. He would be unbelievable ignorant of the real world if he did. Maybe he supports the actions taken, but was only upset they were taken against him. Maybe he’s just cowardly. Only he can know for sure.
Without punishment… without action, not only will these current actions continue but they will escalate further and further. These people will be emboldened to push the limit until such time they are stopped. Stop them now… not after they’ve put millions in straight jackets and jail cells. At the very least don’t say in round about way that what they did justified.

Reply to  temp
December 4, 2016 9:36 pm

Temp
You obviously have never been subjected to this type of intimidation. It can be intense, hurtful, even devastating. One has to make a decision regarding the personal price to pay to gain some level of satisfaction vis-a-vis the “truth”. There is no guarantee that you can win anything. I have been there, I fought, I still lost, and fighting only made it worse. My issue didn’t deal with climate but the game was the same. I retired a year early because I had lost my desire to stay engaged.

temp
Reply to  R2Dtoo
December 5, 2016 2:51 pm

This comment is amazingly ignorant did you even read my post? First you know nothing about me because if you did you’d understand that the intimidation he got was nothing compared to me just doing my job. I have been a vocal denouncer of global warming since the earlier 2000s. People like me that stood up and fought are the reason sites like WUWT even exist today. I’m not tenured professor… on the other hand he is. He choose to become a tenured professor he has a great deal of power and privilege with that position… he has some moral and ethical obligations to stand up for what is right and for what is science. Its the whole reason tenured positions exist.
Further in this because you clearly can’t read i will repost again.
He is borderline demanding these people not be punished. Not just for the actions against him but for their actions against everyone. He has no right to demand such a thing.
As above he is a tenured professor with moral and ethical responsibilities. What do you say to all the people who did get fire? What about the people who never were able to get jobs because of their non-cult views. If he can’t handle being a tenured professor and the responsibilities it entails then he can ask for his tenured to be revoked so a better person can take that position.
Once again he is doing everything possible to protect those that abused him and others… thats not right.

RoHa
December 4, 2016 6:00 pm

“But when the White House puts a target on your back on its website,” it might be time to take your back off the website.

December 4, 2016 6:48 pm

While I respect your belief that human CO2 does cause warming, and I agree that it is a very reasonable position, in thousands of hours of private research I have been unable to find any evidence this is the case.
My position is that science is the exercise of suspending belief and relying exclusively on the available data.
Why, as CO2 is such an astonishingly powerful absorber in the fundamental bend, is there no evidence of it ever controlling planetary temperature in the ice cores, benthic cores, paleosols, stomata, or any other proxy we have developed?
Could it be it is just 2 good? That it saturates the first 400 meters where the atmosphere radiates as a brick, essentially an extension of the surface, and thereafter cools the “planet”?
Annh, a hypothesis anyway.

December 4, 2016 7:21 pm

In any war, those who sit on the fence are caught in the crossfire.
You’ve tried to eat the cake, and have it, too, haven’ t you, Dr. Pielke, Jr.?
Never works.

Charliehustle
Reply to  Alexander Feht
December 4, 2016 7:58 pm

Perhaps he just called it how he saw it.

December 4, 2016 7:30 pm

Dr Pielke Jr, with alll due respect, but you WANT agw to be true. Your own science proves it wrong, the climate models have been proven wrong, there is still not a shred of evidence of CO2 controlling anything climate related.
You should stop taking your believe in the agw theory so serious and just follow the scientific method. If the data proofs your theory wrong, it’s WRONG. Just come clean with the fact that CO2 is not a driver of climate.
When I think badly I would think you have a father son issue that makes you so stubborn, but I wont go there. Just follow the data will be enough to convince you that agw is wrong. Give it a try. And dont expect any credits fot having been an outcast. Science is not about inclusiveness. It’s about excellence, so get your act together and be a scientist. Proof agw right or reject it. Action!

Tony
December 4, 2016 10:24 pm

“I believe climate change is real and that human emissions of greenhouse gases risk justifying action, including a carbon tax. ”
Where’s the EVIDENCE ? There is none.
Even the IPCC states that there has never been a study that has been able, in whole or part, to attribute global warming to man’s actions.
There is not a section, page, or paragraph in any IPCC report titled “The EVIDENCE”.

John
Reply to  Tony
December 5, 2016 12:12 am

What’s the purpose of a carbon tax? Punish people into utilizing less? Profiteering? Wealth redistribution? I’m not sure how putting a tax on something fixes something, if it does indeed need to be fixed.
Why not green the earth more? The current greening impact by CO2 is significant and it seems the inconvenient truth, if people think CO2 needs to be controlled, is to encourage more greening. You can’t do this, of course, when forests are chopped down for biofuel production.

Reply to  Tony
December 5, 2016 2:39 am

There is not a section, page, or paragraph in any IPCC report titled “The EVIDENCE”.
Of Anthropgenic Climate change? Why would there be?
The terms of reference of the IPCC were carefully framed to make that particular exercise ultra vires for the IPCC.
Another popular myth debunked. The IPCC is not there to examine the validity or not of the AGW hypothesis, it is there to assess the impact of it on humanity, (should it prove to be true). Except that bracketed phrase is conveniently left out.
The wsay it works is this:
(some) ‘scientists’ produce a hypothesis.
The IPCC is set up to examine the political and economic implications of that hypothesis.
The IPCC has nothing to say about the validity, only about the implications. Its not even particularly interested in the magnitude of the problem. It merely averages model outputs and calls that ‘scientific consensus’ or something.
And its at heart a political institution, not a scientific one. Like the EU, the name of the game is to get a lot of little countries, and feed their leaders cash from the big countries, under the guise of that being socially justified, and then use them to ‘democratically’ vote themselves even more cash at the big countries expense.
Then democracy becomes the tool of rent seeking racketeers.

Griff
December 5, 2016 3:34 am

I’m under the impression he got ‘fired’ from 538 because his offerings did not stand up to criticism… e.g. that he had cherry picked insurance data to downplay the link between climate change and extreme weather.
He’s got a track record in misrepresentation – he does not uphold the standards science expects and has linked himself to a political party.
I don’t know why given his record he expects any different treatment.

Pethefin
Reply to  Griff
December 5, 2016 6:27 am

Disgusting to throw anonymous accusations without the slightest hint of proof. That is though the standard MO for low quality trolls like you.

Joel Snider
Reply to  Pethefin
December 5, 2016 12:17 pm

Well, he’s a pretty low-rent troll. He pretty much parrots press releases and media spin.

JasG
December 5, 2016 3:36 am

The question I’ve always had is just why are so many educated folk so animated about this issue? They are ostensibly clever enough to notice that they are lying to protect climate actions that could very well do far more harm than good. However it seems to take them so long to finally admit it. And even when they do, they still pretend all this immediate pain will turn out to be for the greater good someday, somehow.
The ‘climate change’ meme is a fashionable moral crusade akin to medieval witch-hunting! The main objective is seemingly to make the believer feel virtuous despite having done nothing to merit it. Will it really take widespread blackouts and starvation to make the chattering classes think twice about their misplaced morals?

Coach Springer
December 5, 2016 4:42 am

Dear Jr., endorsing political attacks on academics when they participate in “that arena” pretty much gets you all the way to your attacks from the media and academicians. A scientist does not remain a scientist when influencing or influenced by politics.
Also, better off in the interest of science not to endorse a carbon tax, which is entirely political?

December 5, 2016 4:47 am

Dr. Pielke,
I’d read about some of the incidents in your articler and am grateful to you for reporting on them and your experiences firsthand here. It helps with the current effort to shine the light of truth on the widespread darkness of political scheming used to hijack authentic climate science.

Cliff Hilton
December 5, 2016 6:48 am

@Coach, “Also, better off in the interest of science not to endorse a carbon tax, which is entirely political?”
I would, also, discourage further taxation. More taxes have lead to…? Misuse? Vote-buying? Vote-influencing? Corruption in general. Do we really want someone else using my tax dollars for their end?
No new taxes for you!!
Roger Pielke Jr, otherwise, I wish you all the luck and thank you for sharing your experience.

radzimir
December 5, 2016 9:40 am

„something tax“ means a payment for using something, not for producing it.
I’m for CO2 tax.
Let all the free riders ( agrar industry ) to pay, no more for free riding.
Not every consumer is driving SUV contributing to help the poor by lowering food prices, so let account contributions properly. I’m expecting some kickbacks.
A redistribution scheme from poor countries to rich industrial ones would be a final strike of social justice. Let account for all the lives of miners dying in accidents in the industrial nations while the rest of the world is watching and doesn’t give a damn fully obsessed with consuming their bananas.

December 5, 2016 10:15 am

On balance, Pielke did admirable work in debunking many falsehoods spread by climate alarmists. But, Pielke and I did not always see eye to eye. This is a (largely outdated) link to my personal blog which documents a fundamental question Pielke always dodged & never did answer: http://sbvor.blogspot.com/2009/11/my-problem-with-roger-pielke-jr.html

Reply to  SBVOR
December 5, 2016 10:26 am

[snip – I’m not interested in promoting a blog making anonymous personal attacks on Dr. Pielke Jr. Come out of the dark, put your name to it, and I might consider it a valid alternate viewpoint worth promoting here. In the meantime, feel free to be as upset as a you wish – Anthony]

Reply to  SBVOR
December 5, 2016 10:56 am

Anthony: Directly quoting Dr. Pielke does *not* constitute a “personal attack” (even when Pielke subsequently deletes both my (“legitimate”, by Pielke’s own assessment) question and his consistently diversionary answers). For all his good work in debunking falsehoods, Pielke was and remains an advocate for government policies aimed at reducing CO2 emissions — that’s just a fact. But, it’s your sandbox, manage it as you see fit — doesn’t upset me in the least: sbvor.blogspot.com/2009/11/my-problem-with-roger-pielke-jr.html

Resourceguy
December 5, 2016 11:34 am

The country should be sickened by the extent and depth of this attack strategy on Pielke.

Resourceguy
December 5, 2016 11:39 am

I’d like to know more about the reversal by Robert-Muir Wood. Was he saying one thing to one audience at the IPCC for political correctness and the opposite to the industry or was it simply a timing correction as described by Pielke? That sounds fishy to me. How often do you see experts flipping their conclusions like that?

Joel Snider
December 5, 2016 12:14 pm

‘But the damage to my reputation had been done, and perhaps that was the point.’
You can forget about the ‘perhaps’.

December 5, 2016 12:49 pm

I believe climate change is real and that human emissions of greenhouse gases risk justifying action, including a carbon tax. But my research led me to a conclusion that many climate campaigners find unacceptable: There is scant evidence to indicate that hurricanes, floods, tornadoes or drought have become more frequent or intense in the U.S. or globally.

My conclusion might be wrong, but I think I’ve earned the right to share this research without risk to my career

Well said Mr. Pielke, you have my full support in the entire statement.
It is relieving to see a nuanced view in this polarized debate.
/Jan

Reply to  Jan Kjetil Andersen
December 5, 2016 1:30 pm

It is, however, a pity that Roger consistently refuses to explain how he arrives at his poorly thought out conclusion that a governmental policy response aimed at reducing CO2 emissions is advisable (it isn’t — such polices do tremendous harm and have no measurable impact on climate — not even when falsely exaggerated assumptions are made regarding climate sensitivity): http://sbvor.blogspot.com/2009/11/my-problem-with-roger-pielke-jr.html