Mike interviews Dr. Judith Curry, a prominent climate scientist, about her views on climate change, the politicization of climate science, and the challenges of transitioning to renewable energy.
Dr. Curry discusses the importance of acknowledging uncertainty in climate science, critiques the behavior of activist scientists, and emphasizes the need for a balanced approach to energy solutions that includes fossil fuels and nuclear power.
She also highlights the ethical implications of energy access for developing nations and advocates for a bottom-up approach to climate solutions.
Transcript
Dr. Curry: uh yeah there’s two issues. One was this issue was very narrowly framed by the United Nations, focused on dangerous human-caused climate change. They ignored natural climate variability that was marginalized, and they assumed warming was dangerous without considering any benefits of increased CO2 or increased warming, or considering the regional variability of impacts. You know, Northern climates would generally benefit from more warmth, for example. So it was framed very narrowly in an inappropriate way to support a particular political agenda.
Okay, with that context then, you know, scientists quickly realized that their path to fame and fortune was to embellish this narrative, you know, by cherry-picking the science, the data, and everything else—all to support this particular narrative. So yes, a lot of overconfidence, neglect of uncertainty, and in general just weak justification of many of their arguments.
Mike: the best part about doing Money Talks is I get the opportunity to talk to people like Judith Curry. By the way, her latest book is called Climate Uncertainty and Risk: Rethinking Our Response—a must-read. Dr. Curry, by the way, a climate scientist, is the author of 180 peer-reviewed articles. She is also the former chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Institute of Technology and a former member of the National Research Council Climate Research Committee. She served on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate Working Group for five years and was a member of the National Academy of Climate Research Group from 2003 to 2006. I mean, her career has included being awarded things like the Presidential Young Investigators Award from the National Science Foundation and the Henry G. Houghton Research Award. The list is long as you can tell.
And why is that noteworthy? Because after a lifetime of accolades and accomplishments, what is she best known for? Well, she’s been called a climate denier—although she doesn’t question that man has an impact on climate. No, she’s called a denier because she dares to question the political science climate establishment. I mean, it’s an incredible story.
I welcome her now; I’m very pleased to have you with us, Dr. Curry.
Dr. Curry: Thanks for inviting me; it’s always a pleasure. And that’s a heck of a list, by the way—that’s three lifetimes of accomplishments! You know this is such a difficult subject because I personally off the top of my head can’t think of anything that’s been more bastardized or thoroughly politicized by interest groups. You know—you of course know University of Colorado Professor Roger Pielke summed it up well when he said: “Can you think of any area of science with a larger difference between what everyone knows for sure—like media politicians activists—and what is actually so?” The data peer-reviewed research—but pointing those kinds of differences out has made you unpopular for well over a few decades.
Yeah, it’s been a crazy ride. My biggest sin has actually been criticizing the behavior of some activist scientists who have been behaving unprofessionally in my opinion. And that was my biggest sin; it’s not so much about my criticism of the science or talking about uncertainty and natural climate variability—it’s my criticism of the establishment such as the IPCC and organizations that support professional science and the behavior of certain activist climate scientists. That was the sin sort of—I broke the fwa by sort of criticizing these people.
Mike: Is there a consensus?
Dr. Curry: No! They throw that word around as we both know—the 97% consensus—which was an absurdity by the way as if science is consensus! It’s not! But you know they throw that around—what do scientists generally agree on though? Which part? Okay well they agree that overall global temperatures have increased since the middle 1800s; they agree that humans have been emitting carbon dioxide and other gases into the atmosphere; they agree that so-called greenhouse gases have an infrared emission spectra—which is the physical property that enables them sort of to heat the planet.
Okay—that’s what people agree on; those are the so-called facts. But the most consequential issues—like what has caused the warming over the last hundred years? How much will it warm in 2100? Is warming dangerous? Is elimination of fossil fuels going to support human well-being in the 21st century and beyond? These are the most consequential issues and there’s a great deal of disagreement and uncertainty on all those.
I mean, in Canada they talk about a carbon tax etc.—I’m not going to debate the method but the impact—I mean if we reduce—you know if I stop driving—is that going to have an impact on extreme weather? For example? No! Even in the worst incarnation of projected warming—the so-called 8.5 extreme emission scenarios—there’s still very little evidence that warming worsens extreme weather events other than heat waves! It makes cold outbreaks less likely—and an order of magnitude more people die from extreme cold than they do from extreme heat! So it seems that overall warming would be beneficial in terms of storms like hurricanes and tornadoes and hailstorms and things like that.
There’s no evidence of an increase; there’s hypotheses but there’s no observational evidence! And the climate models really aren’t fit for purpose for even simulating these extreme events in our current climate let alone making credible projections for future scenarios.
So there’s apart from heat waves—there’s very little support for thinking that warming worsens extreme weather events—and yet there’s an agenda! I mean you were there firsthand watching the politicization of this agenda that continues to this moment.
Mike: The other side of it that you just alluded to—besides the fact that they don’t even examine whether heating a planet or warming up would be beneficial in more areas—but it’s also this incredible use of resources to fight this particular scenario that should be open to a heck of a lot more questioning!
Dr. Curry: Um—you know this idea that we can prevent bad weather by eliminating fossil fuel emissions is just a fairy tale! That said it makes some sense to transition our energy systems over the course of the 21st century to move away from fossil fuels—which have their issues—and will become increasingly expensive and difficult to extract over time.
So I think even if the climate issue wasn’t on the table we would be seeing a transition in energy infrastructure over the course of this century now what this whole climate movement has done through their claims of urgency and code red existential threat—all these artificial deadlines—people say “Oh my gosh we have to do this quickly!” The only thing we can quickly do is wind and solar—but wind and solar—I mean they’re niche solutions but they can’t—you know once you get beyond like 30%—you cause great difficulties to your electric grid infrastructure!
Even with adequate storage there are asynchronicity issues—all sorts of problems—and it requires huge transmission lines huge land use footprints that just aren’t sellable in a country like Canada! You’ve got so much open space maybe it’s not a problem—but even in the US which has a fair amount open space—there’s still big pushback against every new transmission line every new wind farm proposal etc.
So people don’t want that! So you know there’s clearly better solutions that we have on the table now like nuclear power—and next generation nuclear technology—the so-called Generation 4—is extremely exciting! Advanced geothermal is also being developed—and I think this would be a good solution for many regions in Canada as well.
But bottom line is—you know we’re going to need fossil fuels for a while—and you know we just need to let this transition sort of happen driven by rapidly increasing power needs! I mean—the rate of increase for electricity demand is huge with artificial intelligence data centers blockchains things like that—and big tech companies are investing heavily in nuclear power to develop plants right near their big data centers!
So they’re leading the way—and some of these technologies just because they see them as sources for so much future demand for electricity! So if we let market forces and capitalism just have its way—we would see an orderly transition over this century towards more abundant more inexpensive cleaner energy sources!
But we’re interfering with that—you know by insisting on rapid deployment of wind and solar—which are just going to make things worse once you get beyond about 30% penetration into your grid—even with adequate storage it doesn’t help grid stability issues! So those technologies—they sound cheap—oh wind and solar radiation is free! Well it’s not—the generation may be inexpensive but it’s storage and transmission that get you into trouble!
And may I add on—is that I just can’t believe how much we ignore developing nations in all this—whether you’re talking about COP this COP that—I mean literally going so far as to say off top my head—I thought it was Glasgow Accord saying “You know we’re not going to help anybody in Africa develop with fossil fuels” which is another way saying we’d like them live in poverty!
You know—the list is long—I mean to ignore power needs in developing Africa parts South America China—you know—the list is long one—and it’s just been a blind spot!
Yeah there’s more than a billion people on this planet without access to grid electricity—in large majority are in Africa—and they still farm you know with wheelbarrows picks axes—you know without any machines or anything—it’s terrible state affairs! And there’s lots intelligent industrious people in these countries but they need electricity—and we need to give them a leg up!
You know it’s so bad they can’t even take out loans from European banks because they don’t want stigma loaning money help them develop natural gas resources—they’re very rich coal oil natural gas but can’t afford develop infrastructure use them on their continent!
And so Europe Asia are just sort effectively taking maybe purchasing—but they’re sort raping those countries fossil fuel resources support use Europe Asia—and that’s just about most unethical thing going on planet today in my opinion!
I’m with you on that—you wrote Climate Uncertainty and Risk released last year rethinking our response—and I’m looking inside book—it’s worthwhile because it frames challenges there—but you’re alluding one here—that even if you go into North American marketplace want do wind for example you’ve got huge opposition—you know well not in my backyard kind approach—you’ve got huge grid problems—you know solar uncertainty intermittent power!
I’m just astounded—you know Germany for example—it’s as if they woke up one morning said “Gee you mean sun doesn’t shine every day?” You know—that wind doesn’t blow every day? And course huge vulnerability geopolitically because they were relying Russian gas—you know now they’re massive coal importers—I mean mess sort hazy thinking has really come home roost!
Dr. Curry: Oh yeah—it’s terrible! I mean Germany’s really destroyed its whole industrial base effectively over this crazy issue! So I think people are starting realize—not everybody—but some countries some states US realizing this bad idea pushing hard nuclear—which I think really good solution!
In US regulatory environment crazy so we can’t build anything—it takes more than decade build anything when should only take two or three years just because regulatory environment needs be addressed—but nuclear great solution!
Personally I’m very excited about advanced geothermal—that’s really good solution US West many parts Canada—I’m optimistic about one! And I still think rooftop solar good solution because put energy where need it—with batteries have pretty good solution gives household company whatever energy security if grid goes down—not as great having own local nuclear power plant but think it’s very good solution households!
But issue you know net metering policies surrounding how electric utilities funded makes awkward—we need rethink all this economic infrastructures utilities terms how accommodate rooftop solar because think that’s solution—it doesn’t really hurt environment doesn’t take up additional land—it’s right your rooftop gives people autonomy security over their own energy supplies!
So I think rooftop solar around stay—the big solar farm that’s another story again huge land footprint huge ecosystem impacts—I can’t believe environmentalists buying one—you know Greenpeace got its start you know 70s save whales now with offshore wind turbines Mid-Atlantic Coast US killing all these whales—and Greenpeace doesn’t seem care—you know this whole climate issue trumps everything even real environmentalism—so common sense left room!
Mike: Your point though—that it trumps everything—is so apparent whether we’re talking amount money going into it—and no other priority—it doesn’t matter what there’s no other priority—even when look numbers western net zero haven’t costed note because couldn’t get accepted public—but been or nothing—and I think that’s where danger but—and other thing especially alarmism around we have do yesterday—that world going end if don’t do next week—which I think prevented practical solutions realistic solutions!
Dr. Curry: Okay—I mean it’s not just stupidity behind this—I mean there’s worldview political agenda sort neo-Malthusian view humans are blight planet—we’re overpopulated—we need destroy capitalism—all these kind things—we need go back nature how people lived 200 years ago—I don’t know what want—but it’s really antihuman worldview—to support all this we need world government through United Nations!
So there’s big worldview out there—you know—with its political embodiment being United Nations—that we’re up against! And so you know—the way forward is from bottom up I think—with individual countries individual state governments individual companies coming up solutions experimenting—we have all these mini laboratories all these different countries trying see works trying advance technologies!
And big tech company really pushing hard small modular nuclear reactors—and on goes—all experimentation by all these different groups going generate learning curves so figure out what works what doesn’t—we figure out how lower cost okay then we’re off running for 21st century energy transition which I think would almost be farther along at point if hadn’t been all these net zero mandates whatever because we do need more abundant more inexpensive cleaner energy everybody acknowledges!
So let’s unleash ingenuity economic tools government support some extent then let’s run with it get on with rather wasting all our energy over politics accusing people deniers misinformation so can litter environment with wind solar farms—it just makes no sense!
Mike: Well as I say there’s—as you mentioned—and I certainly agree—there’s other agendas work here besides climate—that have created opportunity much we can go into—but meantime want thank you taking time recommend book—I think people have responsibility opportunity get informed name book can get Amazon right now Climate Uncertainty and Risk: Rethinking Our Response Dr. Judith Curry thanks much finding time hope can visit again near future.
Dr. Curry: Okay thanks Mike—I enjoyed it!
This interview will be archived in WUWT Climate TV, a collection of over six hundred videos, featuring new interviews and analysis, and covering dozens of media sources discussing, debating and analyzing the latest in climate science, climate politics, and energy policy, including topics concerning temperature, sea level, polar bears, ocean acidification, extreme weather, censorship, wild fires, and more.
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Curry makes me think about a runner who is doing well but stops running just before the finish line, sits down on the track, and loses the race.
On her website, Curry has repeatedly written that there is a climate problem that must be solved. I have repeatedly, politely asked her to define that climate problem. When she responds there is a word sala non-answer. I stopped viewing her website as a result. WUWT is much better.
In her videos that I have viewed, Curry does not mention the climate problem she writes about o her website. But she does talk about an energy transition. The obvious question that she probably would not answer is: “Why do we need an energy transition?”
I wish someone would persuade Curry to answer this question
“Why do “we” need Net Zero?”
Good questions. I’m pondering, why does Biden send electric chainsaws for use in Helene affected areas that are without power?
Why electric chainsaws?
Because the bureaucrats say they are much safer when there is no electricity. And gasoline is evil.
Right, you just push it back and forth, like a carpenter saw- works great! 🙂
Reduced emissions, that is true.
You’re joking, right? 🙂
What’s that saying “the most terrifying words to hear are I’m from the government and I’m here to help”. Idiots sending cordless chainsaws to a region without mains power. And morons defending the action.
Gas powered saws are at a minimum of 2.2 HP output. For those electrically illiterate, 750 watts is 1 HP. So gas powered are putting out 1650 watts of shaft power. (bigger saws up to 4500 watts)
https://www.arborist.com/category/10590/Husqvarna-Chain-Saw-Specs.html?sort=sku
Cordless saw from a premier maker of saws, Husqvarna, only puts out just under 1/2 HP. (it has a 40V battery with 7.5 Amp-hours capacity = 300 watt-hours) And a positive review from a real customer says it runs for an hour continuously at full power, hence it puts out just under 1/2 HP. But it takes 2-3 hours to recharge.
https://www.husqvarna.com/us/chainsaws/power-axe-350i-battery-and-charger-included/
Now you could of course charge the batteries from the generator at the relief site, however you would consume far more gasoline to charge saw batteries than consuming it directly in gas powered saws!
Why you ask? Well majority of gas powered generators need to run at full 3600 rpm, whether you are drawing 20 watts or 5,000 watts, due to needing to maintain 60 Hz frequency. So the 5kW generator will be eating one or two gallons of gas per hour to recharge the saw battery and some lights, fans and a refrigerator…. the gas saw can cut for 5-10 hours on a couple of gallons of gasoline….
Yes, there are inverter generators, which do not need to stay at full throttle all the time – but they cost 2-5 times more than common generators and are unlikely to be available to these stranded folks. So you could give folks a corded chain saw (much more power than a battery powered one) and a Honda Inverter generator like the EU2200i. But that would cost roughly $2500, plus you need a gasoline supply for the Honda generator, as compared to a gas powered chainsaw at $450 and much less gasoline to carry.
Missing from the gov and supporters of the cordless chain saw fiasco is “common sense”…..
The answer is simple. We need Net Zeo somewhere off in the future because we’ll eventually run out of fossil fuel. The peak may be decades away, or more likely may be centuries away, but it will be. We have more than enough time to rationally deal with-it, but only if we stop wasting $trillions on it now and proceed rationally. Rationally means first focus on nuclear, and drop all mandatory EV, heat pump, and net zero deadlines.
“Curry has repeatedly written that there is a climate problem that must be solved.”
Does she use THOSE words? I doubt it. Please quote her exactly. And no, don’t ask me to look it up- you made the reference, now back it up.
If you follow the Marxist narrative you are rewarded with keeping your job and possibly get a promotion. Fear, not truth, is encouraged. The “narrative” needs to keep going long enough to squelch the coming drop in temperature to negate it. Even then I’m sure they’ll blame the drop on fossil fuels but that’s going to be a much harder road to take. Kudos for those, like Dr. Curry, who speak to the truth.
Another discussion with educated Americans lying about European energy: the loss of Russian energy was an act of war on NATO allies by the USA, which should mean that every single NATO member bar the USA should be at war with Washington DC.
Nordstream II was a peaceful cooperative project, developed bilaterally between Germany and Russia, which was none of the USA’s business. None whatsoever. It was destroyed by a calculated act of international terrorism co-ordinated and led by the USA.
This was an economic act of terrorism to encourage masses of German energy-intensive industry to shut down in Germany and relocate to the USA.
It was an act incompatible with the term ‘ally’ and it was incompatible with the USA’s membership in NATO, let alone its leadership of that organisation.
It’s about time that searing punishment came to Americans who continue to lie about their own nation’s actions, and think that as long as they all keep lying together then they can get away with it.
You are making assumptions that may be correct but are still assumptions none the less.
His assumptions are ignorant and show zero comprehension of 20th century history.
Got any views on the Ukraine famine, or the Great Terror, or the Nazi-Soviet Pact, while we are at it?
Or, thinking about it again, maybe not:
wattsupwiththat.com##.comment-author-rtj1211
Proof of your assertions would be of some value. Otherwise, it is merely rubbish.
Dr. Curry has a good command of the subject, from the models (“not fit for purpose”) to the energy system impacts (e.g., the grid issues from asynchronous, intermittent sources). But I wish there were a stronger conclusion to the core question about climate risk, like, “No, incremental CO2 is not capable of driving any of the climate metrics or extreme weather trends to a bad outcome.”
So the continued use of the word “solutions” is unfortunate, in my opinion. There is no problem to be solved in respect to climate. And there is no reason to treat the eventual depletion of easily extracted hydrocarbons as any kind of crisis or urgent matter. This is similar to the views of Bjorn Lomborg, who generally says (my paraphrase) that “yes, there is a climate problem but we need to be smart about it.” The “problem” is a fashionable illusion. The smart thing is to snap out of it and get on with making things better for people.
I agree that the planet is warming and the humans/co2 increases contribute to the warming.
How much of the warming is due to CO2 increase is unknown. Currie has a very good point on that, The effect of natural variability is unknown and quite frankly has been ignored in the pursuit of the agenda.
that being said, the research should be focused on the why.
Whether the increase warming is beneficial or if the increase is detrimental has no place in the research and has no place in the agenda . I realize that statement is controversial, though it should be said.
The ocean temperature is limited to a sustainable 30C. Milton is yet more proof of that. The reflected solar goes up twice as fast as the OLR comes down over tropical warm pools when they are in regulating mode so very powerful negative feedback to regulate the surface temperature.
The limiting temperature is a function of the atmospheric mass. CO2 is not adding much to the mass its influence is unmeasurable.
Current warming is due to cloud reduction. All latitudes exhibit a trend in cloud reduction apart from a small region north of the Equator and a small region of Antarctica.
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The data clearly shows the warming is the result in changing cloud. So how does CO2 alter the could formation and why are all latitudes experimenting less cloud apart from the two regions where cloud is increasing.
Story tip
Ed Miliband to roll out pylons despite official report showing burying cables can be cheaper
Campaigners accuse the Energy Secretary of pursuing ‘dogmatic’ agenda and warn of ‘pitchfork battles’ with rural communities
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/10/12/ed-milliband-pylons-report-underground-cables-cheaper/
Judith Curry is a jewel.
Michael E Mann is a stain.
It’s just more of the Long March which has ironically been due to the productivity success of fossil fuels facilitating a cadre of dilettantes and stinkers in residence-
‘Absurd’: Labor gives tens of millions to ‘every far-left obsession’ (msn.com)
The theory of surplus value in practice you might say.
One was this issue was very narrowly framed by the United Nations, focused on dangerous human-caused climate change. They ignored natural climate variability that was marginalized, and they assumed warming was dangerous without considering any benefits of increased CO2 or increased warming, or considering the regional variability of impacts.
Why is France destroying 30,000 hectares of vineyards? (msn.com)
French Gummint preparing for the Moscow Muscatels and Eskimo Whites.
Thankyou.
Michael Campbell is a financial advisor and commentator out of the Vancouver BC region.