Fauci-Birx climate models?

Honest, evidence-based climate models could avoid trillions of dollars in policy blunders

Paul Driessen and David R. Legates

President Trump and his Coronavirus Task Force presented some frightening numbers during their March 31 White House briefing. Based on now 2-week-old data and models, as many as 100,000 Americans at the models’ low end, to 2.2 million at their high end, could die from the fast-spreading virus, they said.

However, the President, Vice President Pence, and Drs. Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx hastened to add, those high-end numbers are based on computer models. And they are “unlikely” if Americans keep doing what they are doing now to contain, mitigate and treat the virus. Although that worst-case scenario “is possible,” it is “unlikely if we do the kinds of things that we’re essentially outlining right now.”

On March 31, Dr. Fauci said, the computer models were saying that, even with full mitigation, it is “likely” that America could still suffer at least 100,000 deaths. But he then added a very important point:

“The question is, are the models really telling us what’s going on? When someone creates a model, they put in various assumptions. And the models are only as good and as accurate as the assumptions you put into them. As we get more data, as the weeks go by, that might change. We feed the data back into the models and relook at the models.” The data can change the assumptions – and thus the models’ forecasts.

“If we have more data like the NY-NJ metro area, the numbers could go up,” Dr. Birx added. But if the numbers coming in are more like Washington or California, which reacted early and kept their infection and death rates down – then the models would likely show lower numbers. “We’re trying to prevent that logarithmic increase in New Orleans and Detroit and Chicago – trying to make sure those cities work more like California than like the New York metro area.” That seems to be happening, for the most part.

If death rates from corona are misattributed or inflated, if other model assumptions should now change, if azithromycin, hydroxychloroquine and other treatments, and people’s immunities are reducing infections – then business shutdowns and stay-home orders could (and should) end earlier, and we can go back to work and life, rebuild America’s and the world’s economies … and avoid different disasters, like these:

Millions of businesses that never reopen. Tens of millions of workers with no paychecks. Tens of trillions of dollars vanished from our economy. Millions of families with lost homes and savings. Millions of cases of depression, stroke, heart attack, domestic violence, suicide, murder-suicide, and early death due to depression, obesity and alcoholism, due to unemployment, foreclosure and destroyed dreams.

In other words, numerous deaths because of actions taken to prevent infections and deaths from COVID.

It is vital that they recheck the models and assumptions – and distinguish between COVID-19 deaths actually due to the virus … and not just associated with or compounded by it, but primarily due to age, obesity, pneumonia or other issues. We can’t afford a cure that’s worse than the disease – or a prolonged and deadly national economic shutdown that could have been shortened by updated and corrected models.

Now just imagine: What if we could have that same honest, science-based approach to climate models?

What if the White House, EPA, Congress, UN, EU and IPCC acknowledged that climate models are only as good and as accurate as the assumptions built into them? What if – as the months and years went by and we got more real-world temperature, sea level and extreme weather data – we used that information to honestly refine the models? Would the assumptions and therefore the forecasts change dramatically?

What if we use real science to help us understand Earth’s changing climate and weather? And base energy and other policies on real science that honestly examines manmade and natural influences on climate?

Many climate modelers claim we face existential manmade climate cataclysms caused by our use of fossil fuels. They use models to justify calls to banish fossil fuels that provide 80% of US and global energy; close down countless industries, companies and jobs; totally upend our economy; give trillions of dollars in subsidies to fossil fuel replacement companies; and drastically curtail our travel and lifestyles.

Shouldn’t we demand that these models be verified against real-world evidence? Natural forces have caused climate changes and extreme weather events throughout history. What proof is there that what we see today is due to fossil fuel emissions, and not to those same natural forces? We certainly don’t want energy “solutions” that don’t work and are far worse than the supposed manmade climate and weather ‘virus.’

And we have the climate data. We’ve got years of data. The data show the models don’t match reality.

Model-predicted temperatures are more than 0.5 degrees F above actual satellite-measured average global temperatures – and “highest ever” records are mere hundredths of a degree above previous records from 50 to 80 years ago. Actual hurricane, tornado, sea level, flood, drought, and other historic records show no unprecedented trends or changes, no looming crisis, no evidence that humans have replaced the powerful natural forces that have always driven climate and weather in the real world outside the modelers’ labs.

Real science – and real scientists – seek to understand natural phenomena and processes. They pose hypotheses that they think best explain what they have witnessed, then test them against actual evidence, observations and data. If the hypotheses (and predictions based on them) are borne out by their subsequent observations or findings, the hypotheses become theories, rules or laws of nature – at least until someone finds new evidence that pokes holes in their assessments, or devises better explanations.

Real scientists often employ computers to analyze data more quickly and accurately, depict or model complex natural systems, or forecast future events or conditions. But they test their models against real-world evidence. If the models, observations and predictions don’t match up, real scientists modify or discard the models, and the hypotheses behind them. They engage in robust discussion and debate.

Real scientists don’t let models or hypotheses become substitutes for real-world data, evidence and observations. They don’t alter or “homogenize” raw or historic data to make it look like the models actually work. They don’t tweak their models after comparing predictions to actual subsequent observations, to make it look like the models “got it right.” They don’t “lose” or hide data and computer codes, restrict peer review to closed circles of like-minded colleagues who protect one another’s reputations and funding, claim “the debate is over,” or try to silence anyone who asks inconvenient questions or criticizes their claims or models. Climate modelers have done all of this – and more.

Put bluntly, what climate modelers are essentially saying is this: We don’t need data; we have models. If real world observations don’t conform to our computer model predictions, the real world must be wrong.

Climate models have always overstated the warming. But even though modelers have admitted that their models are “tuned” – revised after the fact to make it look like they predicted temperatures accurately – the modelers have made no attempt to change the climate sensitivity to match reality. Why not? 

They know disaster scenarios sell. Disaster forecasts keep them employed, swimming in research money – and empowered to tell legislators and regulators that humanity must we take immediate, draconian action to eliminate all fossil fuel use – the economic, human and environmental consequences be damned. And they probably will never admit their mistakes or duplicity, much less be held accountable.

“Wash your hands! You could save millions of lives!”  has far more impact than “You could save your own life, your kids’ lives, dozens of lives.” When it comes to climate change, you’re saving the planet.

With Mann-made climate change, we are always shown the worst-case scenario: RCP 8.5, the “business-as-usual” … ten times more coal use in 2100 than now … “total disaster.” Alarmist climatologists know their scenario has maybe a 0.1% likelihood, and assumes no new energy technologies over the next 80 years. But energy technologies have evolved incredibly over the last 80 years – since 1940, the onset of World War II! Who could possibly think technologies won’t change at least as much going forward?

Disaster scenarios are promoted because most people don’t know any better – and voters and citizens won’t accept extreme measures and sacrifices unless they are presented with extreme disaster scenarios.

The Fauci-Birx team is trying to do science-based modeling for the ChiCom-WHO coronavirus – feeding updated data into their models. Forecasts for infections and deaths are down significantly. Thankfully.

So now we must demand honest, factual, evidence-based climate model as well. No more alarmists and charlatans setting climate and energy policy. Our economy, livelihoods, lives and liberties are too vital.

The fact is, models are also only as good as the number of variables they can handle, and the data quality for every variable. There is no way models can possibly factor in the hundreds of infection, treatment, death and other variables associated with COVID – and Earth’s climate is vastly more complex. Simply put, models play a role but should never be a primary driving force in setting important public policies.

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of books and articles on energy, environment, climate and human rights issues. David R. Legates is a Professor of Climatology at the University of Delaware.

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Jon Ranes
April 13, 2020 7:45 am

Spooked Herd + Grand Theft Planet

Stevek
April 13, 2020 7:51 am

Did any of these models account for summer coming in either the death expectation or variance of number of deaths?

Jeffery P
Reply to  Stevek
April 13, 2020 9:02 am

We don’t know because we never get to see the source code. Sound familiar?

Stevek
Reply to  Jeffery P
April 13, 2020 9:27 am

Yes it does. Totally ridiculous and NOT transparent. We must all bow down to the new Models and to question them is blasphemy.

ren
April 13, 2020 7:56 am

HTCC vs. SARS-CoV-2
We developed HTCCs some time ago as broad-range inhibitors of coronaviral entry. Now we show that they are effective against SARS-CoV-2 and MERS-CoV in vitro and ex vivo. A long way to the clinic, but they work really well! Keep your fingers crossed.
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.29.014183v1

We developed these broad range anticoronavirals together with the team led by prof. Nowakowska & prof. Szczubialka from the Faculty of Chemistry, with great support from the research teams in China. We also would like to thank the University of Gdańsk and Slaskie Centrum Chorób Serca.
https://www.facebook.com/virogenetics/?__tn__=kCH-R&eid=ARClXwCS_vc1HetHd1Uo0YqcRgp-1Jv3tCzIiI_nXNnTtcbyL1pjJZDWf5w1_DBbrBrL82LfJZfSII9L&hc_ref=ARReGTP6GbvrchYPqz0Rn6zkvTLL2MHjYlGh4sspdTCQ_0mzxWHguFis9TuDTJ7a7_o&fref=nf&__xts__%5B0%5D=68.ARAOKj85cvtGdsca7zY-S9gmnkHVu-3De_Kx3MOqV-k0B38tp1dlG3Ibn6DleZSOFrtY3KtxTBeq6D2rFoTHFIh9Igv2Aoe0IhI9KvK0FGv23K5T-pI6Inw_HFqqaPY0tonhgWq_omSkFdjuJY2mvxY7L1b1Jlto0TfzzTKiSXpxip04KsvAWnWExNM3wfDY82gus9x-HIf-5azee4ITmeRIwyq0ZnWTLefFwQSdgq5M-tHWjhWXakxDLHWJJvPg2go8fm8_VtvtGLyd_SXWJLPiXu3DGgXaspcQZ7x93OEZ0d_1vIIorSHo4QjH9f4T34f_bnEk8t6-Yf1_T7j0OgDzu9cbl1oYlgJRASU7PLPrRKgEwfROKkEC4dOT72A95vSYgZDkhXDmsA_0jYdenzuXlDtq0CFBUqGIBqXKd555tJcStHGqOHthroKpym7VxT6QuC8fMTS2mrhKftNCuMjMWrxvToDAWS9lVsSC0vqV_9e_sJoat4-k6w

SAMURAI
April 13, 2020 8:03 am

I think there is going to be a huge backlash against Leftists who sensationalized model claims that 2.2 million Americans would die from the Wuhan flu by August, but in reality, only 40,000 will die, which is fewer than regular flu’s annual toll.

Of course Leftists will claim shutting down the economy and wasting $6 trillion of taxpayers’ money is why so few Americans actually died, but Americans aren’t that stupid.

Leftists want to waste another $96 trillion over 10 years on CAGW mitigation based on spurious doom and gloom climate projections, which again, is completely devoid from reality.

Unfortunately, the global economy will likely collapse from the monetary effects of trusting Leftists‘ damned computer models because Leftism is the party of “SCIENCE!” (TM)…

April 13, 2020 8:04 am

“100,000 Americans at the models’ low end” at 2000 a day it wont take long for the US to get there.

Lancifer
Reply to  Matt_S
April 13, 2020 9:08 am

You should look up Gompertz distribution. We are, apparently, near the peak of the curve. Getting to 100K would require a sustained 40 or more days of deaths at or near the peak number.

That’s not how these things work.

Eustace Cranch
Reply to  Lancifer
April 13, 2020 9:42 am

What Lancifer said.

Leitwolf
April 13, 2020 8:10 am

The funny part is this: If 2% die of this infection and the USA has 330 Mio residents, then we definitely will need a computer model to estimate the potential outcome..

When have computer models started to replace primary school mathematics???

Anyhow, this is not fun but serious business. With an official death toll of 22k, rising by 2k a day and yet a certain underreporting in these numbers, it is not hard see a 100k death toll coming up at least. Also the virus has likely spread to 2-3 mio by now in the USA – which again can be derived from the death toll.

It could potentially be about 100 times worse with 200.000 people dying a day. I just don’t think it is an option.

Eustace Cranch
Reply to  Leitwolf
April 13, 2020 2:04 pm

Yeah, right. And if you projected my growth rate at age 11 to my current age, I should be 22 feet tall.

I’ll say it once again- the curve at the moment is NOT a predictor of the future.

Robert Clement
April 13, 2020 8:11 am

I agree completely with you criticism of the level of science applied to climate modeling. But the way to resolve that problem is not to expect the biased climate modelers to improve their models but to create a better model yourself and prove them wrong. Where are the good scientists building better models with more predictive power? It seems to me that this is the best way to win the debate.

Mike Bryant
Reply to  Robert Clement
April 13, 2020 8:41 am

The really, really great modelers are employed doing the Covid-19 and the Climate models. The best modelers in the world can NOT get the climate or the virus vectors right. Why not? Because it is a fool’s errand. Look elsewhere for fools.

Klem
Reply to  Robert Clement
April 13, 2020 9:15 am

And now that we’re not distinguishing “deaths from CVD-19” from “deaths with CVD-19”, we should hit our 100,000 target no problem.

If we really push it, maybe even reach the holy grail 2.2 million.

Looks like those models were right after all. Wahoo!

Goldrider
Reply to  Klem
April 13, 2020 9:56 am

Naked skydivers who forgot parachutes now lumped in as “COVID-19,” too! 😉

Eliza
April 13, 2020 8:25 am

The Willis monitoring graph page seems to be showing that SWEDEN is the only country that seems to have a flat or falling curve compared with all other countries thats yesterdays graph 13/4/20. Can’t wait to see today’s and tomorrow’s. If it keeps falling and others keep rising, a lot of heads will role in the CDC, FDA ECT

TRM
Reply to  Eliza
April 13, 2020 4:16 pm

Sweden and Belarus will be interesting case studies when this is done. If they do no worse than everyone else then there will be trillion dollar egg on a lot of faces.

April 13, 2020 8:27 am

We do have a major problem with this virus throughout the country but our solutions should be aligned to the specific nature and scope of the problem. The same applies probably to Climate Change.
For example, yesterday, prompted by an image of the crowded #2 Train in NYC from March 30th, I reworked the Worldometer numbers and realized that much of the problem emanates from the Tri-State area which has 10% of the population, 47% of the cases and 55% of the deaths as of April 12! An analysis by county rather than by States of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut would make this pattern even starker.
This is the area where it is most difficult to impose a lock down, yet it is most needed. De Blasio and Cuomo have their work cut out.

Stevek
April 13, 2020 8:30 am

Of course no politician will say what is an acceptable level of deaths. There will be deaths from this for many years even if vaccine is found, just less deaths. What is the acceptable number given that we can’t stop all deaths ?

Without being told a realistic goal along with the economic loss due to making that goal it is not possible to come up with effective policy.

Also if enabling tracking systems for citizens we need to know what loss of liberty American people will accept.

DocSiders
April 13, 2020 8:41 am

The CDC never aggressively went after the critical data required to make the epidemiological models very predictive. R0 still is not known with the accuracy required…because it is not known how many people have, or did have the disease to derive R0.

These models are orders of magnitude more reliable for predictive skill than Climate Models…and usually very useful. But you must have good data.

Did the CDC make a great effort to get the data? They made just about no effort. R0 requires actual infection numbers (not just confirmed infection numbers) and population infection rate information. Neither is know because the forensic work using Serum Antibody Testing was given no priority…and is just now starting. Basic data, easily obtained, was not sought after. Almost exactly like estimating how long a journey will take when there is no velocity data available…only potential velicity limits.

That’s bad science and horrible Public Health…very poor Policy recommendations (wasteful, sloppy, and damaging) results should be expected.

April 13, 2020 8:43 am

Modelling is an understandable exercise in the midsts of a new epidemic. It is also understandable that initial models will be wrong and that, with additional data and revision, the models will gradually approach a semblance of what happens in the real world. That said, I am concerned that the models for CoVID have initially taken their lead from outlier events in large urban centres that were highly impacted early on by unique factors. The models made some very naive and wrong assumptions about the proportion of the population susceptible by reason of genetics/immunity/behavioural factors, the natural mortality rate and rate of critical illness requiring ICU support. We know the initial models were way off because the projections from those highly affected regions such as Spain, Italy, Iran and New York failed entirely to predict the thankfully early plateau of cases and deaths we are now seeing. Thankfully, unlike in climate “science”, the errors are immediately and glaringly evident for CoVID models and the modellers are compelled to revise on the fly to acknowledge the real world evidence. This is on top of the fact that nearly everyone has already been massively impacted by the measures that were predicated on the models and those effects are tolerable for only a very short period of time if they cannot be justified by accurate predictions. None of this seems to apply in the climate world where simply predicting Armageddon and getting on the interview circuit is a full and “Mannly” academic career. Reality seems irrelevant.

Working Dog
April 13, 2020 8:48 am

Obtaining and using reliable data would be a good start. Here is a video from a doc in Idaho. They are going about this correctly given the mess the Chinese Communist Party, WHO and lots of other psychopaths have pushed on us.

He explains the various tests (eg. RT-PCR, Antibody (IgM and IgG) and their uses. He also highlights the limitations of the PCR test.

He further notes that so far 5% of the tested population has antibodies and about 50% never show any symptoms.

Why CDC did not jump on the development of a complete and reliable set of assays much earlier than they did boggles the mind.

JohnWho
April 13, 2020 8:49 am

Virtually everyone seems to understand that one should re-tune the model(s) as more data is available, except “climate change” proponents.

Whenever possible in a conversation or in social media I try to point this out.

Maybe some folks will re-tune their thought models?

B. Kindseth
April 13, 2020 8:57 am

Two of Dr Fauci’s quotes say it all, “Data is real, a model is hypothesis,” and “Data trumps models.”

Curious George
Reply to  B. Kindseth
April 13, 2020 9:55 am

What data is real? What percentage of population is naturally immune? What percentage simply show no symptoms?
The only data approaching reality are death statistics.

Dave O.
April 13, 2020 9:09 am

We don’t know the number of variables or how influential each variable is. But, other than that, the models should be spot on.

James F. Evans
April 13, 2020 9:11 am

S.I. Hayakawa: “The map is not the territory.”

If the various projections of the models, which were wildly off, doesn’t prove the above quote, I don’t know what will.

April 13, 2020 9:26 am

Some didn’t need “models” to describe a contagious and deadly disease.
In the 1550s England suffered one called the “Sweating” sickness and in 1551 Edward VI noted:
“Came the sweat into London, which was more vehement than the old sweat. For if one took cold he died within three hours, but if he “scaped, it held him but nine hours, or ten at the most.
Also, if he slept the first six hours, as he should be very desirous to do, then he raved, and should die raving. It grew so much, that I removed to Hampton Court, with very few with me.”
That’s from Chapman, “The Last Tudor King”.

Steven Miller
April 13, 2020 9:29 am

“But if the numbers coming in are more like Washington or California, which reacted early and kept their infection and death rates down”

The odd thing about this statement… is that the hospital ICU units were already clearing out and the number of deaths were already dwindling in the eastern part of King County where this started first got a foothold in this country, BEFORE the governor’s “stay at home order. When the media began to notice, suddenly this data stopped being released because of a “software glitch”. Strangely my close friend who is a top FEMA official had no difficulties obtaining the same info the entire time.

On March 26, the Washington Post had the following headline. “Where Coronavirus outbreak started in Washington State, officials see hope as cases appear to be leveling off”. That was actually an understatement, Evergreen Hospital’s ICU unit had returned to normal, and they were only having a death every day or two. Despite our statewide death totals increasing largely through creative accounting methods the crisis in eastern King County didn’t just peak it basically went away approximately 3 weeks ago, and it happened before anything the government had done could have had any effect.

Eliza
April 13, 2020 10:01 am

https://wattsupwiththat.com/daily-coronavirus-covid-19-data-graph-page/ the 12th of April graphs shows that the ONLY country that is not rising (DEATHS) is SWEDEN! To be watched carefully over next few days. May completely overturn lockdown “theories” My guess is that total deaths everywhere would have been exactly the same over the 4 month period except that the peaks would have been higher earlier and that why everybody freaks out but the result is the same my 2 cents worth!

icisil
Reply to  Eliza
April 13, 2020 1:52 pm

People are dying because doctors don’t know what they’re doing. My guess is deaths will begin to plummet as more and more doctor’s realize that and change their treatments accordingly, and as more and more people are treated with hydroxychloroquine and other alternative treatments, and as spring begins to stretch her legs and the sun throws more UV our way.

Earthling2
April 13, 2020 10:02 am

I hope I am wrong, but it feels to me that that the leftists have already won, having gotten a taste of absolute power over the citizenry and the economy. It isn’t much of a leap to substitute climate emergency for COVID emergency, and they enact similar powers over us to force on us their collective will the availability of energy use. Whomever controls that, controls the world and I am sure that Red China will really double down now on the West limiting climate change through fossil fuel reduction/carbon taxation and promoting the purchasing of their solar panels and windmills. Anything to disrupt our economy, which they just caused by their delayed response to their coronavirus that they allowed escape to the rest of the world, knowingly. We know that much for a fact, that they deliberately allowed the seeding of this infection around the planet by lying to all of us the seriousness of the problem for the first 6 weeks while they took measures internally to counteract everything they were saying for us not to worry about.

Joel Snider
April 13, 2020 10:24 am

I’m sorry, but every time I see Fauci, I can’t help but see ‘Doctor Shrinker’.
comment image&exph=160&expw=195&q=dr.+shrinker&selectedindex=8&ajaxhist=0&vt=0&eim=1,2,6

Eliza
April 13, 2020 10:53 am

My guess the 2nd Task force will not include Fauci ect he doesnt have to fire him but will be able to open the country. BTW this virus is a normal flu virus and is everywhere that why you get the flu in cold countries where people should not be living cheers and LOL

April 13, 2020 11:42 am

Paul Driessen and David R. Legates:

I have been advocating your advice for years.
Forty years ago I was writing computer code used for accident analysis of Nuclear Power Plants. These models were also used in the development of Training Simulators and had to accurately mimic the plant in all phases of operation, events and accidents. My models provided information that added 2% power to the grid by optimizing feed water heater tank levels. Thy also provided data that were less than 0.1% different than the data recorded during all events experienced by the plant and used to support power upgrades and fuel change accident analysis for the NRC. If I had provided the sludge that the climate change advocates call Climate Change Models I would have been fired on the spot and black-listed from any work in the power industry. These Climate Terrorists get more funding and promotions.
WHY do we tolerate this sludge?

Dan Tauke
April 13, 2020 11:58 am

Seems like likely takeaways to this will be: (1) WHO did a horrible job; (2) This virus DID warrant a shutdown, if only to SLOW the progression until treatments and vaccines came online to save lives (3) Countries as a whole weren’t as prepared as they need to be either in their decision making (including capturing data and modelling as decision support tools) as well as supplies and logistics (testing, PPE, ventilators, et al); (4) masks and bowing may be safer cultural norms than no masks, hand shakes and kissing. I abhor the lefts take on most of this, but I think anyone with family in the high risk area can appreciate the number of lives being saved by “slowing down” the initial wave of cases. Just letting this run out and getting to herd immunity would never be accepted by the public imo, and is different than climate change where any family deaths are far into the future or much less cause-effect related to the average person.

Gwan
Reply to  Dan Tauke
April 13, 2020 3:32 pm

Well said Dan.
I congratulate you on your concise evaluation of the spread and treatment of this disease .
Do nothing and covid 19 goes through rest homes and other at risk people like the plague.
Is that what those calling for no restrictions and letting herd immunity build in the wider community ?
Graham