Foreword by Paul Driessen
A new study by climatologists Nicholas Lewis and Judith Curry concludes that Earth’s “equilibrium climate sensitivity” (ECS) to more atmospheric carbon dioxide is as much as 50% lower than climate alarmists have been claiming. That their paper was published in the Journal of Climate suggests that the asserted “97% consensus” of climate experts may be eroding.
Or as Cornwall Alliance founder Cal Beisner puts it (paraphrasing Winston Churchill) it may not be the beginning of the end of climate alarmism. But it could be the end of the beginning of alarmism as the dominant, ever-victorious tenet of our times.
Indeed, say other noted climatologists, there are good reasons to think ECS and alarmist errors are even greater than 50 percent. For one thing, there is no persuasive reason to assume our planet’s climate system and deep ocean temperatures were ever in “energy balance” back in the late 1800s – so we can’t know whether or how much they might be “out of balance” today. Moreover, solar, volcanic and ocean current variations could be sufficient to explain all the global warming over the period of allegedly anthropogenic warming – which means there is no global warming left to blame on carbon dioxide.
If this is indeed the case, there is no justification for the punitive, job-killing, poverty-prolonging energy policies that “climate consensus” and “renewable energy” proponents have been demanding.
Is climate alarmist consensus about to shatter?
Is this the Beginning of the End – or at least the End of the Beginning?
E. Calvin Beisner
On November 10, 1942, after British and Commonwealth forces defeated the Germans and Italians at the Second Battle of El Alamein, Winston Churchill told the British Parliament, “Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”
In The Hinge of Fate, volume 3 of his marvelous 6-volume history of World War II, he reflected, “It may almost be said, ‘Before Alamein we never had a victory. After Alamein we never had a defeat’.”
The publication of Nicholas Lewis and Judith Curry’s newest paper in The Journal of Climate reminds me of that. The two authors for years have focused much of their work on figuring out how much warming should come from adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. In this paper they conclude that it’s at least 30% and probably 50% less than climate alarmists have claimed for the last forty years.
In fact, there are reasons to think the alarmists’ error is even greater than 50 percent. And if that is true, then all the reasons for drastic policies to cut carbon dioxide emissions – by replacing coal, oil and natural gas with wind and solar as dominant energy sources – simply disappear. Here’s another important point.
For the last 15 years or more, at least until a year or two ago, it would have been inconceivable that The Journal of Climate would publish their article. That this staunch defender of climate alarmist “consensus science” does so now could mean the alarmist dam has cracked, the water’s pouring through, and the crack will spread until the whole dam collapses.
Is this the beginning of the end of climate alarmists’ hold on climate science and policy, or the end of the beginning? Is it the Second Battle of El Alamein, or is it D-Day? I don’t know, but it is certainly significant. It may well be that henceforth the voices of reason and moderation will never suffer a defeat.
Shattered Consensus: The True State of Global Warming was edited 13 years ago by climatologist Patrick J. Michaels, then Research Professor of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia and the State Climatologist of Virginia; now Senior Fellow in Environmental Studies at the Cato Institute. Its title was at best premature.
The greatly exaggerated “consensus” – that unchecked human emissions of carbon dioxide and other “greenhouse” gases would cause potentially catastrophic global warming – wasn’t shattered then, and it hasn’t shattered since then. At least, that’s the case if the word “shattered” means what happens when you drop a piece of fine crystal on a granite counter top: instantaneous disintegration into tiny shards.
However, although premature and perhaps a bit hyperbolic, the title might have been prophetic.
From 1979 (when the National Academy of Sciences published “Carbon Dioxide and Climate: A Scientific Assessment”) until 2013 (when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published its “5th Assessment Report” or AR5), “establishment” climate-change scientists claimed that – if the concentration of carbon dioxide (or its equivalent in other “greenhouse” gases) doubled – global average surface temperature would rise by 1.5–4.5 degrees C, with a “best estimate” of about 3 degrees. (That’s 2.7–8.1 degrees F, with a “best” of 5.4 degrees F.)
But late in the first decade of this century, spurred partly by the atmosphere’s failure to warm as rapidly as the “consensus” predicted, various studies began challenging that conclusion, saying “equilibrium climate sensitivity” (ECS) was lower than claimed. As the Cornwall Alliance reported four years ago:
“The IPCC estimates climate sensitivity at 1.5˚C to 4.5˚C, but that estimate is based on computer climate models that failed to predict the absence of warming since 1995and predicted, on average, four times as much warming as actually occurred from 1979 to the present. It is therefore not credible. Newer, observationally based estimates have ranges like 0.3˚C to 1.0˚C (NIPCC 2013a, p. 7) or 1.25˚C to 3.0˚C – with a best estimate of 1.75˚C (Lewis and Crok 2013, p. 9). Further, “No empirical evidence exists to support the assertion that a planetary warming of 2°C would be net ecologically or economically damaging” (NIPCC 2013a, p. 10).” [Abbreviated references are identified here.]
However, most of the lower estimates of equilibrium climate sensitivity were published in places that are not controlled by “consensus” scientists and thus were written off or ignored.
Now, though, a journal dead center in the “consensus” – the American Meteorological Society’s Journal of Climate – has accepted a new paper, “The impact of recent forcing and ocean heat uptake data on estimates of climate sensitivity,” by Nicholas Lewis and Judith Curry. It concludes that ECS is very likely just 50–70% as high as the “consensus” range. (Lewis is an independent climate science researcher in the UK. Curry was Professor and Chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology and now is President of the Climate Forecast Applications Network.)
Here’s how Lewis and Curry summarize their findings in their abstract, with the takeaways emphasized:
“Energy budget estimates of equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) and transient climate response (TCR) [increase in global average surface temperature at time of doubling of atmospheric CO2 concentration, i.e., 70 years assuming 1% per annum increase in concentration] are derived based on the best estimates and uncertainty ranges for forcing provided in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Scientific Report (AR5).
“Recent revisions to greenhouse gas forcing and post-1990 ozone and aerosol forcing estimates are incorporated and the forcing data extended from 2011 to 2016. Reflecting recent evidence against strong aerosol forcing, its AR5 uncertainty lower bound is increased slightly. Using a 1869–1882 base period and a 2007−2016 final period, which are well-matched for volcanic activity and influence from internal variability, medians are derived for ECS of 1.50 K (5−95%: 1.05−2.45 K) and for TCR of 1.20 K (5−95%: 0.9−1.7 K). These estimates both have much lower upper bounds than those from a predecessor study using AR5 data ending in 2011.
“Using infilled, globally-complete temperature data gives slightly higher estimates; a median of 1.66 K for ECS (5−95%: 1.15−2.7 K) and 1.33 K for TCR (5−95%:1.0−1.90 K). These ECS estimates reflect climate feedbacks over the historical period, assumed time-invariant.
“Allowing for possible time-varying climate feedbacks increases the median ECS estimate to 1.76 K (5−95%: 1.2−3.1 K), using infilled temperature data. Possible biases from non-unit forcing efficacy, temperature estimation issues and variability in sea-surface temperature change patterns are examined and found to be minor when using globally-complete temperature data. These results imply that high ECS and TCR values derived from a majority of CMIP5 climate models are inconsistent with observed warming during the historical period.
A press release from the Global Warming Policy Forum quoted Lewis as saying, “Our results imply that, for any future emissions scenario, future warming is likely to be substantially lower than the central computer model-simulated level projected by the IPCC, and highly unlikely to exceed that level.”
Veteran environmental science writer Ronald Bailey commented on the new paper in Reason, saying: “How much lower? Their median ECS estimate of 1.66°C (5–95% uncertainty range: 1.15–2.7°C) is derived using globally complete temperature data. The comparable estimate for 31 current generation computer climate simulation models cited by the IPCC is 3.1°C. In other words, the models are running almost two times hotter than the analysis of historical data suggests that future temperatures will be.
“In addition, the high-end estimate of Lewis and Curry’s uncertainty range is 1.8°C below the IPCC’s high-end estimate.” [emphasis added]
Cornwall Alliance Senior Fellow Dr. Roy W. Spencer (Principal Research Scientist in Climatology at the University of Alabama-Huntsville and U.S. Science Team Leader for NASA’s satellite global temperature monitoring program) commented on the paper. Even Lewis and Curry’s figures make several assumptions that are at best unknown and quite likely false. He noted:
“I’d like to additionally emphasize overlooked (and possibly unquantifiable) uncertainties: (1) the assumption in studies like this that the climate system was in energy balance in the late 1800s in terms of deep ocean temperatures; and (2) that we know the change in radiative forcing that has occurred since the late 1800s, which would mean we would have to know the extent to which the system was in energy balance back then.
“We have no good reason to assume the climate system is ever in energy balance, although it is constantly readjusting to seek that balance. For example, the historical temperature (and proxy) record suggests the climate system was still emerging from the Little Ice Age in the late 1800s. The oceans are a nonlinear dynamical system, capable of their own unforced chaotic changes on century to millennial time scales, that can in turn alter atmospheric circulation patterns, thus clouds, thus the global energy balance. For some reason, modelers sweep this possibility under the rug (partly because they don’t know how to model unknowns).
“But just because we don’t know the extent to which this has occurred in the past doesn’t mean we can go ahead and assume it never occurs.
“Or at least if modelers assume it doesn’t occur, they should state that up front.
“If indeed some of the warming since the late 1800s was natural, the ECS would be even lower.”
With regard to that last sentence, Spencer’s University of Alabama research colleague Dr. John Christy and co-authors Dr. Joseph D’Aleo and Dr. James Wallace published a paper in the fall of 2016 (revised in the spring of 2017). It argued that solar, volcanic and ocean current variations are sufficient to explain all the global warming over the period of allegedly anthropogenic warming, leaving no global warming to blame on carbon dioxide.
At the very least, this suggests that indeed “some of the warming since the late 1800s was natural” – which means the ECS would be even lower than Lewis and Curry’s estimate.
All of this has important policy implications.
Wisely or not, the global community agreed in the 2015 Paris climate accords to try to limit global warming to at most 2 C degrees – preferably 1.5 degrees – above pre-Industrial (pre-1850) levels.
If Lewis and Curry are right, and the warming effect of CO2 is only 50–70% of what the “consensus” has said, cuts in CO2 emissions need not be as drastic as previously thought. That’s good news for the billions of people living in poverty and without affordable, reliable electricity. Their hope for electricity is seriously compromised by efforts to impose a rapid transition from abundant, affordable, reliable fossil fuels to diffuse, expensive, unreliable wind and solar (and other renewable) as chief electricity sources.
Moreover, if Spencer (like many others who agree with him) is right that the assumptions behind ECS calculations are themselves mistaken … and Christy (like many others who agree with him) is right that some or all of the modern warming has been naturally driven – then ECS is even lower than Lewis and Curry thought. That would mean there is even less justification for the punitive, job-killing, poverty-prolonging energy policies sought by the “climate consensus” community.
Regardless, we’re coming closer and closer to fulfilling the prophecy in Michaels’ 2005 book. The alarmist “consensus” on anthropogenic global warming is about to be shattered – or at least eroded and driven into a clear minority status.
E. Calvin Beisner, Ph.D., is Founder and National Spokesman of The Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Another factor often overlooked is that while emissions may increase by 1% per year, hence about 70 years to double CO2, the actual increase rate of CO2 concentrations is only about 0.55% because of absorptions of the ocean and trees. So, the time to double CO2 is much higher, about 127 years. If the ECS is off 2, for example, the warming per year is less than 30% estimated by IPCC and others.
The next IPCC report will have to give weight to the two Lewis / Curry papers. That’ll temper the ammo alarmists can use,
Climatologists aren’t uniformly high-alarmists. There’s a spectrum in the consensus, from alarmist to mildly concerned, as revealed by the surveys by G. Mason U. ten years ago and by von Storch. Also, the L&C papers should give the less alarmist members of the fraternity “cover” to be more forthright. (This was what was happening toward the end of the Pause—the alarmists got new life and prominence after the El Niño. As its effect fades, alarmist headlines about “warmest year ever” will recede.)
So a Shift (in the midpoint of the bell curve of the consensus spectrum) to a new, less alarmist location. Not a shattering, but an erosion.
“That their paper was published in the Journal of Climate suggests that the asserted “97% consensus” of climate experts may be eroding.”
In the very first paragraph! A foolish, biased, prop’ganidist assertion! It implies that the publication is somehow extraordinary, and that it signifies a change in the editorial “climate” of the journal, and therefore of the consensus in general.
All it really means is that
– the quality of the research and presentation is up to the standards of the journal
– the journal is willing to publish quality research regardless of its political implications
That’s all. It’s just normal scientific professionalism, not the eroding of consensus. It doesn’t change the consensus at all. Curry has published hundreds of papers, just as other skeptic scientists have.
Why should I believe anything this guy writes when he starts off like that? And why should you?
” For one thing, there is no persuasive reason to assume our planet’s climate system and deep ocean temperatures were ever in “energy balance” back in the late 1800s – so we can’t know whether or how much they might be “out of balance” today. Moreover, solar, volcanic and ocean current variations could be sufficient to explain all the global warming over the period of allegedly anthropogenic warming – which means there is no global warming left to blame on carbon dioxide.”
Has this guy not read ANY of the literature?
It doesn’t matter at all because it is his GOAL to spread doubt. Maybe even his job.
“If this is indeed the case, there is no justification for the punitive, job-killing, poverty-prolonging energy policies that “climate consensus” and “renewable energy” proponents have been demanding.”
More victim verbiage. So many people suffering at the hands of climate scientists and their endless policy demands! Just think how much widespread suffering increased during Obama’s regulations! Mass unemployment! Um, well, no, not really. Poverty-prolonging? Huh. Not sure about that, either. Increased cost of electricity certainly isn’t the rule, as I know from my own participation in a solar scheme.
As for other countries, it’s their decision how to proceed. Many developing nations are feeling (and even acknowledging!) the effects of climate change, and have incentive to minimize their increase in CO2 emissions as they develop, or wish to go to renewables for other reasons. They are sovereign nations, and it is not for us to say they should follow the American model. They haven’t our unique history or land, and need to decide what is sustainable in their own nations. If they are wise, they will take from it the pieces they can use, and leave the rest.
Suburban housing developments full of 4000 sq ft McMansions on huge weed-free lawns are not practical for most residents of most nations.
When people talk about demanding huge sacrifices (often “costing trillions of dollars”), and being totally against all fossil fuel, it’s a safe bet that it’s skeptics characterizing some totally off-the-wall calculation one of them made, and that they are making erroneous assertions about what the majority of warmists want in order to portray them as heartless totalitarians. Either they are spouting the prop’ganda they heard, or they are intentionally spreading it themselves.
I get a kick out of this:
“Shattered Consensus: The True State of Global Warming was edited 13 years ago by climatologist Patrick J. Michaels, then Research Professor of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia and the State Climatologist of Virginia; now Senior Fellow in Environmental Studies at the Cato Institute. Its title was at best premature.”
Now, why does Driessen go into Michaels’s background in such detail, yet leave out the fact that he was a spokesman for the Edison Electric Institute as part of a campaign to spread misinformation? That’s going back to 1991, though – maybe he has since changed his ways.
Oh, and this is interesting: “If Lewis and Curry are right, and the warming effect of CO2 is only 50–70% of what the “consensus” has said, cuts in CO2 emissions need not be as drastic as previously thought. That’s good news for the billions of people living in poverty and without affordable, reliable electricity. Their hope for electricity is seriously compromised by efforts to impose a rapid transition from abundant, affordable, reliable fossil fuels to diffuse, expensive, unreliable wind and solar (and other renewable) as chief electricity sources.”
Apparently, this is saying that if Lewis and Curry are wrong, then CO2 cuts have to be drastic. Either way, there have to be cuts. But then it gets attached to this emotional plea for the “billions” of people without affordable, reliable electricity, placing the blame squarely at the foot of renewable energy. It doesn’t matter than a village off the grid can more easily afford a few electric panels than a coal-fired power plant, or that those countries without ample fossil fuels might not want to become totally dependent on markets for them, or the air pollution caused by fossil fuel refining and burning.
I could go on and on with one example after another of the ways in which this post is meant to manipulate opinion. That’s it’s only goal. Beisner is either a fanatic spreading the Word of demonization, doubt and distrust or he’s paid for this – I’m betting the latter. Just look at the host of scientists making comments! All familiar names. Why aren’t there responses from the rest of the scientific community if the consensus is crumbling?
Open your eyes, people! Start seeing the hyperbole, the unsupported assertions, and especially the mixing of policy with science. Start being the skeptics you say you are! If you are going to moan about warmist prop’ganda, look also at what is fed to skeptics. And for goodness sake, stop whining about CAGW political power when you’ve got not only the President, but the head of the EPA on your side, looking after industry interests.
Oy, I read the comments and it just seems hopeless. So many are convinced that there’s a conspiracy – and with such self-righteousness! It’s so sad, so wrong, that millions of people have been led to view science as they do.
PLEASE NOTE that I make not a single assessment of Lewis and Curry’s conclusions, and don’t hassle me about any perceived attack on their work.
PS I honestly don’t wish to offend anyone through this post, and I’m sorry if I do. I’ve very blunt, I know. Frustrated.
Hello Kristi.
Please read my summary comment at
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2018/05/02/is-climate-alarmist-consensus-about-to-shatter/comment-page-1/#comment-2806350
If you are interested in more technical information, read my comment at
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2018/05/02/is-climate-alarmist-consensus-about-to-shatter/comment-page-1/#comment-2805310
I will not impugn your motives and you should not impugn mine. I will simply say that, based on the evidence, your concerns are technically incorrect – there is no real global warming crisis. Increasing atmospheric CO2 is beneficial to humanity and the environment, and any moderate warming that may result is also beneficial.
Cheap, abundant, reliable energy is the lifeblood of society – it IS that simple. Increasing the costs of energy and reducing its reliability simply results in more Excess Winter Deaths – currently totaling several million souls per year.
I have children and grandchildren, and hope for their future just as much as you do for those you love. This is not a debate about right vs left – it is a debate about right vs wrong – and I am saying, with respect, that you are technically wrong in your beliefs on this subject.
Regards, Allan
Beware of false logic.
It is not because there doesn’t exist (at least not yet and possibly forever) a real solution to power a civilization of 7+ billion people with renewable energy and so ensure them a decent life that mankind cannot and does not influence (possibly adversely and in a catastrophic way) Earth climate.
gammacrux – your statement does not reflect my logic – at all. Yours is called a “straw-man” argument.
Kristi says: PS I honestly don’t wish to offend anyone through this post, and I’m sorry if I do. I’ve very blunt, I know. Frustrated.
Curious what you’re frustrated about — whether it’s the fake stuff or real issues. If it’s the real issues, I can sympathize.
beng135,
“Curious what you’re frustrated about — whether it’s the fake stuff or real issues. If it’s the real issues, I can sympathize.”
It’s not so much about the issues of climate change itself as about the way mainstream science is distrusted and considered corrupted by so many. The same people may use scientific research to argue a particular point when it suits them and it never crosses their mind how hypocritical it is.
It’s frustrating that there is no argument I can make for any position because scientific evidence has no authority anymore. It makes linking to evidence seem like a waste of time.
Also frustrating is seeing the prejudicial way ideas are presented here. The site not only caters to skeptics, but promotes animosity toward the mainstream scientific community.
But what is most frustrating – no, that’s not the word. What is tragic is reading original memos in which the energy industry describes the ideas they want to convey to the public through their prop’ganda campaigns, and realizing how successful they were.
I want people to understand what it means to be a skeptic, and practice skepticism. I want them to question where they get their ideas, and what the evidence is. Explore what others say and why (NOAA and NASA have heaps of info.) Look up the citations people give and see if they agree with the argument. Look at the full press releases, rather than excerpts. If you see a quote, and then an interpretation of that quote, QUESTION IT IMMEDIATELY! Say, What are other ways this could be interpreted? Anyone who needs to interpret common English for you wants to convey a message beyond or different from what was actually said. Why else would he do so? Why should you listen?
The wisest and greatest thinkers are those who know the vastness of their own ignorance and are comfortable with it, even grateful for the impetus it provides to think and learn.
Certainty and self-righteousness are enemies of the pursuit of truth.
Thanks for responding. It’s doubly unfortunate that your frustrations seem to be all about the fake stuff. Let us know when you wake up to the REAL frustrations such as the current marxist attempt at a coup d’état here in the US.
“It’s not so much about the issues of climate change itself as about the way mainstream science is distrusted and considered corrupted by so many”
There’s a reason that mainstream science has become so distrusted – because too many so-called scientist (like your hero Mikey Mann) are untrustworthy with their “tricks”, ‘hiding of declines”, gatekeeping, politicizing of science, non-transparent “secret science” (which you defend), etc. In short you are part of the very problem that is causing you so much frustration whether you wish to acknowledge it or not. You want science to be trusted again, then insist on transparency, insist that data and methods be available for all to examine and attempt to reproduce and reject those that refuse to do so, insist scientist stick to science and stay out of politics (you can either be a scientist or a political activist, its a total conflict of interest to be both).
“I could go on and on with one example after another of the ways in which this post is meant to manipulate opinion.”
Kristi I’m absolutely convinced that you could indeed go on and on and at the same time am truly saddened to bring you this unwelcome piece of information – but that is the unique and sole purpose of both verbal and written communication,
cephus0
“…that is the unique and sole purpose of both verbal and written communication,” By this I assume you mean manipulating public opinion?
Not so of science. Science doesn’t seek to manipulate, it seeks to inform. I know that’s not a popular belief around here, but that has no bearing on the truth. (Of course, there are exceptions, especially when industry gets involved.)
Apart from that, your idea is extremely cynical and downright bizarre, if I’m interpreting you correctly.
you’ll find that many here agree that science shouldn’t seek to manipulate and should seek to inform. Sadly, too often (particularly in the realm of climate science) that isn’t the case in practice. The bogus 97% consensus, gatekeeping (as detailed in the climate gate e-mails) calling those who don’t fall lock-step with the party line as “deniers” etc are nothing but manipulations. and that even before we get into the manipulations of statistics (such as practiced by your hero) and data (adjustments that consistently keep going in one direction) to fit a political narrative. And you wonder why science is so distrusted by the masses.
I fear that it’s too late for Oz. The conservative ( I use that term lightly) government has drunk the AGW Koolaid and is sending us back to the dark ages. Subsidies for renewable energy, on top of what has already been wasted, are forecast to be another $25B to 2030. Coal fired power stations being shut down and destroyed. Electricity prices continuing to climb. From 9c/kWh 10 years ago to over 30c/kWh today.
All of this is based on an assumption that CO2 creates warming. We no that CO2 does not create warming. Warming causes CO2. It is not the other way around. The cause can’t be the effect. CO2 has been lagging temperature for the past 1 million years by approximately 1,000 years. The greenhouse effect is a myth: The Shattered Greenhouse: How Simple Physics Demolishes the ‘Greenhouse Effect’. Timothy Casey B.Sc. (Hons.). CO2 has a net zero effect: An Updated Review About Carbon Dioxide and Climate Change Fleming, 2018. Greenhouse gases cause cooling not warming: SURFRAD Data Falsifies the “Greenhouse Effect” Hypothesis Published on October 6, 2017 Written by Carl Brehmer. CO2 fell to 180ppm during the last ice age. That is just 30ppm short of all plant life going extinct. Our food comes from plants so we were 30ppm short of human extinction. We need more CO2 in the atmosphere not less to restore the balance. THE POSITIVE IMPACT OF HUMAN CO2 EMISSIONS ON THE SURVIVAL OF LIFE ON EARTH BY PATRICK MOORE | JUNE 2016.