By Larry Kummer. From the Fabius Maximus website.
Summary: Despite thirty years of efforts by most of the elite institutions of America, US governments have done little to fight climate change. While a bout of awful weather might panic America into enacting activists’ wish list, as of today this is one of the great political failures of modern American history. It is rich with lessons for when scientists warn of the next disaster. The 21st century will give us more such challenges. Let’s try to do better.

The puzzle of the climate change crusade
Since James Hansen brought global warming to the headlines in his 1989 Senate testimony, scientists working for aggressive public policy action have had almost every advantage. They have PR agencies (e.g., the expensive propaganda video by 10:10). They have most of America’s elite institutions supporting them, including government agencies, the news media, academia, foundations, even funding from the energy companies. The majority of scientists in all fields support the program.
The other side, “skeptics”, have some funding from energy companies and conservative groups, with the heavy lifting being done by a small number of scientists and meteorologists, plus volunteer amateurs.
What the Soviet military called the correlation of forces overwhelmingly favored those wanting action. Public policy in America and the West should have gone green many years ago. But America’s governments have done little. Climate change ranks at the bottom of most surveys of what Americans’ see as our greatest challenges? (CEOs, too.) In November, Washington voters decisively defeated an ambitious proposal to fight climate change.
And not just in the USA. Climate change policy toppled Australia’s government. The Yellow Vest protests in France are the death knell for large-scale action in France. What went wrong?
The narrative gives answers
The usual answers use the information deficit model, in which the public’s skepticism about the need for radical action results from a lack of information. Thirty years of providing information at increasing volume and intensity has accomplished nothing. Pouring more water on a rock does not make it wetter.
“Insanity is repeating the same mistakes and expecting different results.”
— Ancient adage of Alcoholics Anonymous. More about that here.
Others give more complex explanations, such as “Between conflation and denial – the politics of climate expertise in Australia” by Peter Tangney in the Australian Journal of Political Science.
“This paper describes an ongoing tension between alternative uses of expert knowledge that unwittingly combines facts with values in ways that inflame polarised climate change debate. Climate politics indicates a need for experts to disentangle disputed facts from identity-defining group commitments.” {See Curry’s article for more about this paper.}
There are simpler and more powerful explanations for the campaign’s failure. Lessons giving us useful lessons for dealing with future threats.
Lesson #1: Standards are high for those sounding the alarm
“Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion.”
— A harsh but operationally accurate Roman proverb.
We have seen this played out many times in books and films since the publication of When Worlds Collide in 1932. A group of scientists see a threat. They go to America’s (or the world’s) leaders and state their case, presenting the data for others to examine and answering questions. There are two levels to this process.
First, the basis for the warnings must be evaluated by an interdisciplinary team of experts outside the community sounding the alarm. Climate models are the core of the warning about climate change. They have never been so examined. Perhaps we can end the climate policy wars by a test of the models. Whatever the costs of such reviews and tests, they would be trivial compared to the need to establish public confidence in these models.
Second, questions from the public must be answered. Of course, such warnings are greeted with skepticism. That is natural given the extraordinary nature of the threat and vast commitment of resources needed to fight it. Of course, many of the questions will be foolish or ignorant. Nevertheless, they all must be answered, with the supporting data made publicly available. Whatever the cost of doing so, it is trivial compared to the need.
Scientists seeking to save the world should never say things like this…
“In response to a request for supporting data, Philip Jones, a prominent researcher {U of East Anglia} said ‘We have 25 or so years invested in the work. Why should I make the data available to you, when your aim is to try and find something wrong with it?’”
– From the testimony of Stephen McIntyre before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce (the July 2006 hearings which produced the Wegman Report). Jones has not publicly denied this.
Scientists seeking to save the world should not destroy key records, which are required to be kept and made public. They should not force people to file Freedom of Information requests to get key information. And the response to FOIs should never be like this…
“The {climategate} emails reveal repeated and systematic attempts by him and his colleagues to block FOI requests from climate sceptics who wanted access to emails, documents and data. These moves were not only contrary to the spirit of scientific openness, but according to the government body that administers the FOI act were ‘not dealt with as they should have been under the legislation.’” {The Guardian.}
Steve McIntyre has documented the defensive and self-defeating efforts of climate scientists to keep vital information secret, often violating the disclosure policies of journals, universities, and government funding agencies. To many laypeople these actions by scientists scream “something wrong”.
Yet these were common behaviors by climate scientists to requests for information by both scientists and amateurs. This kind of behavior, more than anything else, provoked skepticism. Rightly or not, this lack of transparency suggested that the scientists sounding the alarm were hiding something.
The burden of proof rests on those warning the world about a danger requiring trillions of dollars to mitigate, and perhaps drastic revisions to – or even abandoning – capitalism (as in Naomi Klein’s This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate and “In Fiery Speeches, {Pope} Francis Excoriates Global Capitalism“).
Lesson #2: don’t get tied to activists
Activists latch onto threats for their own purposes. They exaggerate threats, attack those asking questions, and poison the debate. Scientists who treat them as allies must remember the ancient rule that “silence means assent.” Failure to speak when activists misrepresent the science discredits both groups.
For a sad example, look at “the pause.” Starting in 2006 climate scientists noticed a slowing in the rate of atmospheric warming. By 2009 there were peer-reviewed papers about it (e.g., in GRL), and it was an active focus of research (see links to these 29 papers). In 2013 the UK Met Office published a series of papers about the pause, which shifted the frontier of climate science from discussion about the existence of the “pause” to its causes (see links to these 38 papers). Some scientists gave forecasts of its duration (see links to 17 forecasts) – since a pause is, by definition, temporary.
During this period activists wrote scores, or hundreds, of articles not only denying that there was a pause in warming – but mocking as “deniers” people citing the literature about it. For example, see Phil Plait’s articles at Slate here and here. The leaders of climate science remained silent. Even those writing papers about the pause remained silent while activists ignored their work.
While an impressive display of climate scientists’ message discipline, it blasted away their credibility for those who saw the science behind the curtain of propaganda.
Conclusions
“The time for debate has ended”
— Marcia McNutt (then editor-in-Chief of Science and now President of the NAS) in “The beyond-two-degree inferno“, an editorial in Science, 3 July 2015.
I agree with McNutt: the public policy debate has ended. A critical mass of the US public has lost confidence in climate science as an institution (i.e., rejecting its warnings). As a result, the US probably will take no substantial steps to prepare for possible future climate change, not even preparing for re-occurrence of past extreme weather. The weather will determine how policy evolves, and eventually prove which side was right.
All that remains is to discuss the lessons we can learn from this debacle so that we can do better in the future. More challenges lie ahead in which we will need scientists to evaluate risks and find the best responses. Let’s hope we do better next time.
For More Information
For more information about this vital issue see the keys to understanding climate change and these posts about ways to end the climate wars…
- Important: climate scientists can restart the climate change debate – & win.
- Thomas Kuhn tells us what we need to know about climate science.
- Daniel Davies’ insights about predictions can unlock the climate change debate.
- Karl Popper explains how to open the deadlocked climate policy debate.
- Paul Krugman talks about economics. Climate scientists can learn from his insights.
- Milton Friedman’s advice about restarting the climate policy debate.
- A candid climate scientist explains how to fix the debate.
- Roger Pielke Jr.: climate science is a grab for power.
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What went wrong? When you want to reorganize civilization, you need a plan, and you need to move to something better, and you need to fund it. What we got was higher taxes to cause deprivation and poverty to force the middle class to convert to something that does not work. Oh my, I see that conversion through starvation ended badly. Who could have guessed. I suppose a plan to a new utopia based on slogans and bull with no details or substance is not a good social plan. The conversion is so complex and so vast, it is unplannable by human society.
COP24 is proof that this post by Kumer is a complete load of B.S. He is continuing to pursue this well-worn theme even though very few are still listening. Disagree with bim and he blocks you from his site!
Even global businesses are now clamouring for action on climate change: http://mankindsdegradationofplanetearth.com/2018/12/15/businesses-want-action-on-climate-change-the-high-carbon-system-is-no-longer-sustainable/
Ivan,
They don’t want to miss the tax payer funded gravy train.
” Disagree with bim and he blocks you from his site!”
Mr Kinsman, how right you are. I looked at a 2009 article
with some 58 posting. None of the posters are present today.
Mr Kummer is a smart man, however, banning and condescending
are a well known trademark of him. He blames the left, he blames
the right, but he himself is blameless.
Very sad because his website present many significant topics. I am afraid
that he is his worse enemy.
Couldn’t agree more. There is only the Kummer ideology which, if you dare to disagree with, sends him into a complete hissy fit and you normally receive a rude rejoinder. I gave up reading his blogs a long time ago.
+1
Sad to say, Mr Kinsman, but you entirely correct.
I too have left or was ban. His final comment was
Bye-bye, after telling me to buy an economic 101
book.
I have removed FM, from my bookmarks.
Merry Christmas to you.
Mr. Kummer, you not only missed, but continued to propagate, one of the chief failings of “climate change” alarmists: that is, objectively defining what you mean when you use the phrase “climate change”.
To wit:
1) NASA itself says* that “climate” is defined as the average weather for a particular region and time period, taken over at least a 30-year span.
2) Science has clearly documented that across the Earth, past climates have varied greatly on the time scales of decades, centuries, millennia, millions of years, and billions of years. Just look up “Ice Ages”, “interglacial periods”, “Younger-Dryas event”, “Medieval Warm Period” and “Little Ice Age” for the supporting scientific facts.
3) Many past events of changing climate have had both absolute changes and rates-of-change in global atmospheric CO2 content and global atmospheric temperatures much greater than what has occurred over the last 200 since humans became largely industrialized and began emissions of CO2 from burning fossil fuels. Clearly, mankind was not responsible for any climate change that occurred earlier than around 200 years ago . . . so why does anyone think for a second that we can “fight” climate change, the natural forces in play on Earth?
4) If we humans are so presumptuous as to think we can fight, let alone stop climate change, don’t we first have to decide what is the ideal “climate” that we want to prevent from having any change? I’m waiting for someone, ANYONE, to precisely define what that ideal climate is . . . nobody else has done it yet. So, what 30-year period in Earth’s history is the condition that mankind’s leaders want to pick as the climate that we select to keep from changing. The last 30 years (remember atmospheric CO2 levels over this period are about 30% higher than they were from 200-500 years ago)? How about the period of 200-230 years ago? Why not the period of 10,000-10,030 years ago?
5) And who decides that any given selected 30-year period of climate from our historical record will be agreeable to all human populations scattered over the Earth? Will Eskimos like their climate to be “fixed” at what someone else decides is “ideal”. How about those people in and around the Sahara desert? Remember, the complex interactions of solar radiation, atmospheric circulations, ocean circulations/thermal inertia, geological and ocean organic and inorganic chemistry, and biomass life cycles on Earth all mean that one regional climate is sure to impact another over long time scales.
So, please talk to me about fighting “climate change” when you can properly address each of the above issues.
“If you can’t define something you have no formal rational way of knowing that it exists. Neither can you really tell anyone else what it is. There is, in fact, no formal difference between inability to define and stupidity.” — Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
* https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/noaa-n/climate/climate_weather.html
Well stated, Mr Dressler.
It is not AGW but rather Nebulous Global Warming.
I too have ask several of your questions to Fear Mongers
and never or rarely do I receive a clarion answer.
Thank you, Hans.
And isn’t it very strange that most of the world’s leaders (uhh, make that professional politicians) that presume to lead mass populations in response to the “climate change” meme apparently never stop for even one second to ask themselves: “Exactly what-the-hell am I talking about?”
“First, the basis for the warnings must be evaluated by an interdisciplinary
team of experts outside the community sounding the alarm.”
Mr Kummer, yes that would be entirely proper. Of course, it
will never happen because it would expose the ruse in its
entirety. The AGW complex will not even debate skeptics. I have seen
only a single debate involving opposing parties.
“Climate models are the core of the warning about climate change.
They have never been so examined. Perhaps we can end the climate
policy wars by a test of the models.”
The inputs are all “guesswork” feed into a machine. Time and time
again, their projections, in the main , they have failed their underlying
thesis; the distortions, misrepresentations and outright lies are used
to subjugate the truth.
These scientific tests (modeling) are no more successful than your
run-of-the-mill economic models, which like their brethren have
an extremely high rate of failure.
“Whatever the costs of such reviews and tests, they would be trivial compared to the need to establish public confidence in these models.”
Establish confidence you declare! What needs to be established is
common sense and not the intellectual serfdom of academia,
Scientists nor pundits.
For the intelligentsia, the solution for complex issues are the use
of complex structures. The average man has devised a simpler
and cost effective method of problem solving. Simple reason,
perceptions and wisdom, provides the needed tools to render a
general judgement and not the pursuit of an army of professors or bureaucrats.
Even remedial individuals such as myself, fully recognized and
comprehend the massive complexity of both the climatic and
economics; which will never be fully understood, irrespective
of the resources brought to bear.
There are many a times, when the quality of wisdom bear
more fruit than intellectual mind.
I was listening to CNN this morning reporting on the COP24 in Katowice, Poland, discussing the role of the US in the climate talks.
Although it can ultimately leave in 2020, there were still US delegates present during the discussions and who also signed off on the final deal agreed upon by 200 nations. As the CNN reporter commented – which I thought was very apt – the current US stance is “simply an aberration in the progress of science”.
A very successful agreement on a range of measures that will make the Paris climate pact operational in 2020 has been reached: https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-46582025
Unless the deal will be ratified by Congress, it’s not a treaty and thus has no legal weight in the US. Just like Paris, it will be meaningless and just as “successful” (ie Not at all successful).
Ah, memories of a better, non-partisan time:
https://www.congress.gov/bill/105th-congress/senate-resolution/98
Sponsor: Sen. Byrd, Robert C. [D-WV] (Introduced 06/12/1997)
Committees: Senate – Foreign Relations
Committee Reports: S. Rept. 105-54
Latest Action: Senate – 07/25/1997 Resolution agreed to in Senate without amendment and with a preamble by Yea-Nay Vote. 95-0. Record Vote No: 205. (All Actions)
“Shown Here:
Introduced in Senate (06/12/1997)
Declares that the United States should not be a signatory to any protocol to, or other agreement regarding, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change of 1992, at negotiations in Kyoto in December 1997 or thereafter which would: (1) mandate new commitments to limit or reduce greenhouse gas emissions for the Annex 1 Parties, unless the protocol or other agreement also mandates new specific scheduled commitments to limit or reduce greenhouse gas emissions for Developing Country Parties within the same compliance period; or (2) result in serious harm to the U.S. economy.
Calls for any such protocol or other agreement which would require the advice and consent of the Senate to ratification to be accompanied by: (1) a detailed explanation of any legislation or regulatory actions that may be required to implement it; and (2) an analysis of the detailed financial costs which would be incurred by, and other impacts on, the U.S. economy.”
Wonder what’s changed?
Trump is an old man and will either be kicked out or will not be reelected in 2020. Plenty of time for the Dems to bring the US back in line with all the other 199 signatories. I think even another GOP President would see that the writing is on the wall and follow the same course of action.
I would like to thank all posters whom took
time and effort to read and comment on this
“piece” of work.
Merry Christmas to one and all.
Since James Hansen brought global warming to the headlines in his 1989 Senate testimony, scientists working for aggressive public policy action have had almost every advantage. They have PR agencies (e.g., the expensive propaganda video by 10:10). They have most of America’s elite institutions supporting them, including government agencies, the news media, academia, foundations, even funding from the energy companies lots of –
https://www.google.com/search?q=teacher%27s+reeducations&oq=teacher%27s+reeducations&aqs=chrome.
The majority of scientists in all fields support the program.