From the Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society
First Published November 20, 2019 Research Article
https://doi.org/10.1177/0270467619886266
Abstract
The consensus among research scientists on anthropogenic global warming has grown to 100%, based on a review of 11,602 peer-reviewed articles on “climate change” and “global warming” published in the first 7 months of 2019.
Keywords global warming, climate change, anthropogenic global warming, consensus, climate
We can date the beginning of consensus-building on anthropogenic global warming (AGW) to Manabe and Wetherald (1967). Their pioneering computer modeling showed that doubling atmospheric CO2 would raise global temperature by about 2°C, lower than the present best estimate but not by much. Their finding convinced the late Wallace Broecker that what he named “global warming” was “a thing to worry about” (Broecker, 1975; Weart, 2009).
As computer modeling steadily improved and global temperatures began their erratic but inexorable climb in the 1970s, a consensus grew first among climate scientists and then more broadly that AGW was true and indeed worrisome. Governments became concerned about the damaging potential of AGW, as reflected in the objective of the first United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, held in Rio in June 1992: “To achieve . . . stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system” (United Nations, 1992, p. 4).
Because the use of fossil fuels has become so embedded in the world economy, it was clear that “stabilizing” greenhouse gases might require large-scale government intervention and regulation, anathema to some, including some scientists. This recognition gave rise to the repeated claim of global warming denialists: “There’s no consensus.”
Consider as examples two statements 20 years apart from Richard Lindzen of MIT. In 1992, he published an article titled, “Global Warming: The Origin and Nature of the Alleged Scientific Consensus” (Lindzen, 1992). It appeared in Regulation, a non–peer-reviewed periodical from the Cato Institute, a libertarian “think-tank.” The article began, “Many aspects of the catastrophic scenario have already been largely discounted by the scientific community [and] fears of massive sea level increases have been steadily reduced by orders of magnitude” (p. 87). In 2012, Lindzen and 15 coauthors published a letter to the Wall Street Journal titled, “No Need to Panic about Global Warming” (Lindzen, 2012). It opened with this paragraph:
A candidate for public office in any contemporary democracy may have to consider what, if anything, to do about “global warming.” Candidates should understand that the oft-repeated claim that nearly all scientists demand that something dramatic be done to stop global warming is not true. In fact, a large and growing number of distinguished scientists and engineers do not agree that drastic actions on global warming are needed.
The signatories included not only Lindzen but also a former astronaut and senator, the co-founder of the Journal of Forecasting, the President of the World Federation of Scientists, and a member of both the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences. This impressive list seemed to show not only that there was no consensus on AGW, but that distinguished scientists thought it might well be false. However, Lindzen was the only one of the 16 who had done climate research.
Scholars responded to the controversy by surveying the opinion of scientists. The results of eight such studies conducted between 2009 and 2015 showed a consensus on AGW ranging from 83.5% to 97% (Cook et al., 2016). But given the ingrained caution of scientists and their reluctance to affirm findings outside their own field, opinion surveys are likely to underestimate the consensus. Moreover, as shown by the controversy over continental drift, even a near-unanimous consensus among scientists can turn out to be wrong. If we look back at the early decades of continental drift, however, we find that there was little peer-reviewed evidence for or against the theory. As a result, early articles on continental drift contained much more opinion than evidence. Thus, we could say that although scientists turned out to be wrong about continental drift, the peer-reviewed literature was not wrong, only thin and inconclusive. This affirms that the most reliable way to gauge a consensus among scientists is to turn to the peer-reviewed literature and the evidence therein. This method also has the advantage of directly showing how likely a theory is to be true.
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How does the current CO2 level compare to historical CO2 levels? And not just the past couple hundred years. I was under the impression that they are at a historic low.
I propose that all Universities and scientific organizations change their employees $10,000 per year for parking privileges. To combat climate change.
ROFLOL!
“The consensus among research scientists on anthropogenic global warming has grown to 100% …”.
Sort of circular: ‘smuggling into the premise the conclusion to be deduced’.
No doubt a similar survey of, say, chiropractors as to the efficacy of their treatment would yield a similar result but no realistic person would accept that necessarily as a reliable endorsement.
All the same it sounds implausible, even the most repressive regimes would not claim 100% support, for instance in the German election of 1936 the N@zis claimed only 98.8% support.
“The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.”
Then it must be so … unless we have a consensus it isn’t.
Yay! It means they don’t need any more grant money!
“This affirms that the most reliable way to gauge a consensus among scientists is to turn to the peer-reviewed literature and the evidence therein. This method also has the advantage of directly showing how likely a theory is to be true.”
This is not a joke! No wonder argument is fruitless with totally corrupted “science” like this. This guy is an MIT PhD in geochemistry. I think we have to build entirely new schools and let these drones keep the ruins.
Gary
I think that what their numbers demonstrate, at best, is how effective the gate keepers are at keeping dissenting views from being published in peer reviewed journals. It also demonstrates that the authors are unacquainted with Chamberlain’s Method of Multiple Working Hypotheses.
Yea!!!!
100%!!!!!
Except for these:
https://notrickszone.com/2019/07/04/90-leading-italian-scientists-sign-petition-co2-impact-on-climate-unjustifiably-exaggerated-catastrophic-predictions-not-realistic/
https://clintel.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Science-behind-the-World-Climate-Declaration.pdf
Email Prof Berkhout and he will send you a complete list of signers. The list he sent me had about 800 names.
My survey of Christian church leaders affirmed that 100% of them believe in one God and all other religious observers are denialists.
Can we believe anything related to climate science from a person such as: “James Powell has a PhD from MIT in Geochemistry”?
Do geos have their own chemistry?
“This affirms that the most reliable way to gauge a consensus among scientists is to turn to the peer-reviewed literature and the evidence therein. This method also has the advantage of directly showing how likely a theory is to be true.”
Could someone please spell out the chain of reasoning from literature to probability of truth?
Maybe he means “how likely a theory about the scientific literature is to be true”. Then you could read 1000 random papers and make some probability estimates about what the corpus of all papers would indicate.
You can find the list here. No need to email.
https://clintel.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/WCD-A4versionMADRID.pdf
But according to Connecticut-based fiction writer Naomi Oreskes (when she’s not too busy saying the precise opposite), scientists had already reached 100% consensus in 2004.
Sixteen years ago.
Excellent, maybe now they will start to talk about the actual issue, the climate sensitivity.
A 100%? Why not 110%? They can manage that in sports, are the great minds of our times incapable of 110% percent belief? Are they deniers? They are clearly not trying hard enough…now there is some nice sarcasm.
I come onto this site, read the articles I am interested in and participate intermittently…I notice this site is chockers with scientist and otherwise knowledgeable people, practically all of whom…ridicule climate alarmism.
This is an excellent site, I’m sure you all agree, and I will continue to read the articles and comments here and Climatism etc to inform myself factually thank you very much….where almost 100% of the most informed people I have come across on these issues and many more besides, have an entirely different consensus.
Remember the scene in the movie zero dark thirty where Jessica Chastain says she is 100% sure Bin Laden is where she says she is and then retracts that statement and says it makes the analyst cringe? Consider the context of 100% scientists believing (emphasis added) that AGW is a problem and real.
This is a lie, call it what it is. Pure propaganda. 100%!
There’s enough to counter the alleged ‘100%’ here in the article linked below which recaps 2019 to give everyone reason to think AGW is now on its heels surviving on sheer BS, on a repetitively hypnotic narrative intended to disarm skeptics and lull the body politic into submission.
https://notrickszone.com/2019/12/31/2019-science-refutes-climate-alarm-on-every-front-shrinking-deserts-growing-islands-crumbling-consensus-weaker-storms-cooler-arctic-etc-etc-etc/
I am a research scientist on anthropogenic global warming yet disagree with the conclusion of the “100% of research scientists.” The method of the research of the “100%” exhibits an obvious flaw. This is that the models that are the result of this research make no predictions, thus providing a regulatory agency with no information about the outcomes of the events of the future for Earth’s climate system to a regulatory agency e.g. the EPA. Instead of making predictions, these models make projections and while a model that made predictions would convey information to a regulatory agency about the outcomes of the events of the future for Earth’s climate system, a model that makes projections does not do so. Thus, while a model that made predictions would support regulation of Earth’s climate system a model that makes projections does not do so.
Exactly right. The models allow them to test hypotheses based on known processes and parameters. That said, the known features are incompletely or insufficiently characterized and computationally unwieldy, thus chaotic and unpredictable outside of a limited frame of reference. The rest is a game of inference, the art of plausible, and the sociopolitically sustainable.
The only questions worth asking scientists:
1. How many papers can you publish if your data leads you to say: ‘Carbon dioxide is not the primary driver of warming since 1810’?
2. How much grant money exists for climate posturing and how much exists to do sceptical research with no foregone conclusion?
3. How long does your tenure last if you tell the truth on climate science?
4. Given all the previous answers, how can any sane judge and jury consider you to be a credible witness, when your economic survival depends on you maintaining the fiction of CAGW?
The key to demolishing this nonsense is removing the figleaf that climate scientists are trustworthy, dispassionate witnesses.
They are crooked salesmen who could teach lessons to Wall Street hustlers……
They have sacked, fired, dismissed, deplatformed, unpublished and retracted all the scientists that don’t believe
The results of eight such studies conducted between 2009 and 2015 showed a consensus on AGW ranging from 83.5% to 97%
A consensus that what? Its getting warmer? Cooler? What? What’s the consensus?
If I asked thousands of citizens of Vancouver if it rains a lot in January, I’m pretty certain I would get a consensus of 100%. If I asked them if the rain in January is catastrophic, I expect I would get a consensus of 0%. So I want to know, a consensus of what?
But I can rest with this refreshing thought in mind. Having reached a consensus of 100% sometime in 2019, I think it safe to say that the consensus hasn’t increased since then and in fact is most likely declining now. 2019 will be remembered as peak consensus.
And with the 100% consensus, we have this;
https://www.smh.com.au/national/australia-s-first-climate-change-refugees-20200103-p53okp.html
Still, nobody has answered my favourite question…
If Downwelling Longwave Radiation (DLR) is not increasing, then any warming cannot be caused by greenhouse gasses (because DLR is the very foundation of the greenhouse effect). So is there any evidence that DLR is increasing? I cannot find it.
There is one paper out there that purports to have found a DLR increase, but it absolutely tortured the data to death and can be discounted. So where is the evidence?
Ralph
Salute!
Great point, Ralph.
Maybe the Co2 molecules in the atmosphere of Mars “re-radiate/radiate” back out to space more than toward the surface of the planet. I need someone to explain why Mars is not a hellhole considering the amount of Co2 it its atmosphere. I understand the solar radiation is less than here. And I understand the atmosphere is much thinner/less dense. But surely it has more molecules of Co2 per cubic “anything” than we have on Earth.
Gums wonders….
Evolution and relativity are two other theories discovered around the same time as greenhouse gas climate regulation. They have a 100% consensus too.
a) they were deduced, not discovered
b) aspects of both are still hotly contested
c) after both theories were proposed, the reigning climate consensus was that the earth was cooling and another ice age might be coming. Then it changed to a warming consensus.
See the problem with consensus?
But perhaps you could answer a question? The consensus that has been reached is…. what? That the planet is warming? Certainly (for the moment). The humans are affecting climate? Certainly, we’re all over the thing farming, cutting down trees and building cities and such, how could we not? That the climate change is catastrophic? I don’t think so. And neither do thousands of scientists who’ve signed their names to various letters and statements saying so. Not one has recanted to my knowledge. So the consensus is that…. blank.
Fill in the blank Simon.
That’s what I thought Simon. Already the 5th and you still haven’t answered.
‘Start of the consensus building began…’
Sounds like something from the Borg.
This statement alone shows they gave no idea.
The purpose of science is not to ‘build a consensus’, it is true one paradigm may evolve and replace another, but the danger of ‘building consensus’ per say within science, is that it can mean science is beholden to whatever political interest or political paradigm exists at the time, and then ‘requires’ it to conform. This is a political process not a scientific one.
So there’s nowhere to go but down. We’ve reached peak absurdity.
“We’ve reached peak absurdity.”
Exactly. Nicely put.
To infinity, and beyond!
Next up, 110% consensus!
Didn’t Nazi Germany produce a book called “100 Scientists against Einstein”, whereupon Einstein remarked drily “100 ? Had I been wrong, one would have been enough.” ?
As I understand (and still seek to expand my understanding – “merely “believing” does not work) science does not advance by consensus.
Science is advanced by theory, evidence, proof, disproof and testing against the “real world”
It is religion that advances (and is rewritten) by consensus (so should politics, but more generally consensus ends up meaning “none of us is as dumb as all of us”)
This 100% pseudo-scientific consensus is a clear tipping point in the climate clown show :
– the climate buffoons just played their last card and it’s rotten.