Guest Post hosted by Willis Eschenbach.
My friend Dr. Willie Soon is both a charming man and a most courageous scientist, who has taken a lot of heat for his principled stands on climate issues. He recently wrote a piece about climate alarmism along with Kesten Green and J. Scott Armstrong which deserves much wider circulation, which WUWT is glad to provide.

My thanks to Drs. Green, Armstrong and Soon for the following important analysis.
Alarming Climate: Expert opinions and government funding versus scientific forecasting
Kesten C. Green, J. Scott Armstrong, and Willie Soon
July 14, 2017
On June 17, we and our co-authors received a response to our letter to MIT President, Professor Reif, raising concerns about his letter to the MIT community in support of the Paris Climate Accord. Professor Reif’s response stated that he was confident in his position on the issue because it is consistent with the beliefs of experts that implementation of the Paris Accord is necessary to save the world from harmful effects of man-made global warming. We are not reassured.
Not only have leading experts expressed directly opposing beliefs—including MIT’s own Professor Lindzen, and Princeton’s Professor Dyson—Professor Reif’s argument by authority runs counter to conclusions from decades of research on the value of expert opinions about what will happen in the future. They are no more accurate than those of non-experts and—for complex situations particularly—neither is much better than guessing.
The first review of the literature on expert opinion forecasts was published in MIT’s Technology Review under the title “The Seer-Sucker Theory: The Value of Experts in Forecasting” (Armstrong 1980). Many other studies have supported that review’s conclusion that expertise on a subject does not confer superior ability to see into the future. Tetlock’s (2005) landmark book, Expert Political Judgment, is notable.
The physical sciences are not immune. Not even when leading experts make predictions about the implications of their own work. For example, when Ernest Rutherford split the atom in 1933 he predicted that the energy released was too small to ever be of practical use. Albert Einstein concurred a year later, predicting that man would never be able to harness nuclear energy from shattering atoms.
Efforts in recent years to create alarm by promoting the hypothesis of dangerous man-made global warming as a scientific fact—and to thereby influence public policy—is not a new phenomenon. Scientists acting as advocates—in concert with lobbyists and politicians—have been responsible for at least 26 analogous environmentalist alarms in the past; most of them over the last 100 years.
Green and Armstrong (2011) found that all of the alarms were the product of an unscientific forecasting method: experts’ unaided judgment. All 26 turned out to be false alarms, which suggests a strong bias towards alarm. Governments took action in response to 23 of the alarms to no apparent benefit. Indeed, the policies and regulations implemented by governments were clearly harmful in the case of most (20) of the alarms.
Given the history of environmentalist alarms, it would be a surprise if the dangerous manmade global warming alarm were an exception. It isn’t, as Green and Armstrong (2007) showed. The IPCC’s temperature projections were the outcome of procedures that violated 81% of the scientific forecasting principles that the IPCC report provided sufficient information to rate.
Surprisingly, given the extraordinary level of research grant funding that has been thrown at the topic of climate change, we are aware of only one attempt to apply scientific (evidence-based) forecasting to long-term global temperatures. That effort at scientific forecasting resulted in the Green, Armstrong, and Soon (2009) no-change forecast. As the name implies, the no-change forecast gives no cause for alarm.
Our Green-Armstrong-Soon forecast of no-change in global average temperatures over the 21st Century is consistent with the state of knowledge on climate as described in the last paragraph of Section 14.2.2.2 in Chapter 14 of the IPCC Third Assessment Report. The report states: “In climate research and modeling, we should recognize that we are dealing with a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore that the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible.” In other words, the IPCC report authors believe that forecasting long-term trends in climate is impossible.
Readers might be excused for not being familiar with that statement of profound uncertainty about the climate. It was not included in the Summary Report for Policymakers given to the media and to political leaders.
The Green, Armstrong and Soon (2009) no-change forecast has been shown to be substantially more accurate than the IPCC dangerous manmade global warming projections (Green and Armstrong 2014). The longer the forecast horizon, the less accurate are the IPCC projections. For example, the IPCC projection errors were 12 times larger than those of the no-change forecast for horizons from 91 to 100 years ahead.
The IPCC’s climate modelers recently conceded that their projections of CO2-caused global warming have been at odds with measured temperatures over the 21st Century, which have shown no trend while atmospheric CO2 levels have continued to increase unabated. As the modelers quaintly put it: “Over most of the early twenty-first century… model tropospheric warming is substantially larger than observed” (Santer et al 2017). These facts should be sufficient to reject a hypothesis that has claims to being scientific.
The extraordinary 100% false alarm rate of environmental alarms raised by scientists (Green and Armstrong 2011) is not evidence of a failure of science, but of a failure of scientists to follow the scientific method. Scientists are subject to incentives and pressures that lead them away from following the scientific method, and to instead become advocates posing as scientists.
Most damagingly to science, scientists are rewarded for obtaining large research grants—especially from government. Governments do not fund blindly, they and their agents have political agendas. Rather than scientists as the experts in their fields deciding how they can best contribute to advancing knowledge, politicians, and bureaucrats determine what to research and how. Moreover, researchers are expected to deliver findings that are consistent with political objectives.
Warnings about the harm caused by governments becoming involved in science—such as President Eisenhower delivered in his Farewell Address in 1961—have been made for decades. In Armstrong and Green (2017), we provide solutions to the deterioration in the practice of science. Our solution is in the form of a checklist of Guidelines for Science that is based on the definition of science developed by Bacon, Newton, Franklin, and other pioneers of the scientific method.
We suggest that the practice of science could be saved from its deterioration into advocacy if universities used the checklist for choosing potential new hires and for rewarding current faculty on the basis of their contributions to useful knowledge. We hope that university presidents will show leadership by taking this important step in asserting independence for their scientists and reforming scientific practice.
Regards to all on a beautiful summer afternoon,
w.
PS—As always, when you comment please QUOTE THE EXACT WORDS THAT YOU ARE REFERRING TO, so we can all be clear as to precisely what you are discussing.
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Wonderful clear article.
Dr Soon has attracted criticism simply because he appears to have taken money from a special interest group to do specific research which related to that special interest group, without declaring it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/22/us/ties-to-corporate-cash-for-climate-change-researcher-Wei-Hock-Soon.html
I don’t know the truth in that allegation. I don’t see however he has been absolved of misconduct.
Any article to do with the good doctor therefore still requires that that point be addressed….
Whatever happened innocent until proven guilty Griff? He is still under employment which means Harvard Smithsonian isn’t about to be pressing charges soon (since it appears they handle the funding vehicle). Besides, your own bias and reputation around here requires us to measure your posts with caution. I know I’ve found many of your links lacking. My favorite was the “back of the napkin” calculation on how little electric vehicles will impact a grid. Sadly, reality always brings unknowns and few things are ever straightforward.
Well, at least I put in links whenever I can.
And I do not ever call people names or accuse them of lying.
@Griff – And I do not ever call people names or accuse them of lying.
A good practice in general, unfortunately we are all guilty of it, whether we type it or not. My biggest issue is you always seem to try to post counter arguments, but you never seem aware of the issues concerned with the links you provide. True many responses to you can get ugly, but you never seem to address the good responses. As with any site there will be a bias, and countering the bias can broaden the discussion. A true word of advice, look a little more under the surface. Based on past posts you are very much into “renewables.” Nothing wrong with that, many people are not completely opposed to them, but many are opposed to brute force methods of implementation. Implementation and integration are never simple, even on small projects, much less large scale. Try to find the common ground you do have with others and find a way to discuss that further, gets you much farther than trying to convince everyone to your own viewpoint.
Finally, as far as your post about Soon, the topic has been discussed extensively here at WUWT over the last two years and if we are to judge all of Soon’s work on supposed ties to commercial industry should we not also judge many of the others on both sides of this argument with their ties to interested parties? Does that supposed collusion make this current paper/letter wrong? The implication you make is take Soon’s words with a grain of salt. That’s fine, that would mean we should look at what he is saying and compare to actual evidence/data. Let’s go ahead and do the same with Mann, Gore, and not least the IPCC assessments.
“And I do not ever call people names or accuse them of lying.”
Except when they happen to be female polar bear experts, right?
Ol’ Griff, when will your side ever learn? It isn’t that you have not seen that Dr Soon has been absolved of misconduct, it is that you’ve never seen any hard evidence that any skeptic climate scientist is in any kind of pay-for-performance arrangement with the fossil fuel industry or any other sources of illicit money. Look at the 20-year history of the accusation – all there ever is is “he was paid X”, not “X payments can be directly placed to Y lies which are irrefutably debunked by Z evidence, where all parties involved are proven by AA leaked documents to have openly agreed on what lies were to be spread to the public.” And in case you missed it, I covered what was wrong with that particular NYT article and others related to it which relied on one single highly questionable source: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/02/26/the-origin-of-climate-smear/
Thanks for demonstrating how your side is a one-trick pony. You are welcome to comment here, but you embarrass yourself each time you do.
Griff, Willie Soon is traveling and unable to respond. However, he pointed me to this WUWT post …
This stuff is all public record. If the Smithsonian has problems with Willie, I’m sure they will deal with it. So far it has not been a problem for them.
Next, you say:
Nope. The part you don’t seem to get is that arguments against funding are ad hominem arguments. These are arguments against the man rather than against his science. Regardless of who funded it, either his scientific claims and conclusions are valid or they are not …
And that is why this funding argument is so popular with the NYT and with alarmists like yourself. It’s also why this argument is so damaging to your reputation. Because you are either unable or unwilling to attack his science, instead you attack the man … doesn’t make you look good, Griff.
Finally, bear in mind that I often disagree with Willie, particularly regarding his claims for a large solar role in climate variations. But I don’t give a rat’s caboose who is funding him …
w.
There is the theme that only “industry” has bias that must be automatically disclosed, and the people funded by “industry” are hacks. As if governments and advocacy groups do not have biases, and only seek “truth”.
“Because you are either unable or unwilling to attack his science, instead you attack the man”
Or the woman…
Ol’ Griff, when will your side ever learn? It isn’t that you have not seen that Dr Soon has been absolved of misconduct, it is that you’ve never seen any hard evidence that any skeptic climate scientist is in any kind of pay-for-performance arrangement with the fossil fuel industry or any other sources of illicit money. Look at the 20-year history of the accusation – all there ever is is “he was paid X”, not “X payments can be directly placed to Y lies which are irrefutably debunked by Z evidence, where all parties involved are proven by AA leaked documents to have openly agreed on what lies were to be spread to the public.” And in case you missed it, I covered what was wrong with that particular NYT article and others related to it which relied on one single highly questionable source: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/02/26/the-origin-of-climate-smear/
Thanks for demonstrating how your side is a one-trick pony. You are welcome to comment here, but you embarrass yourself each time you do.
Then you neither followed-up nor paid attention, Griff.