‘Call
me a converted skeptic. Three years ago I identified problems in previous
climate studies that, in my mind, threw doubt on the very existence of global
warming. Last year, following an intensive research effort involving a dozen
scientists, I concluded that global warming was real and that the prior
estimates of the rate of warming were correct. I’m now going a step further:
humans are almost entirely the cause.’
So said Professor Richard A
Muller in an op-ed for the New
York Times on Sunday.
Muller’s apparent Damascene conversion is the result of the Berkeley Earth
Surface Temperature (BEST) project he founded with his daughter Elizabeth. In
the NYT article, he claims that the BEST
project shows ‘the average temperature of the Earth’s land has risen by
two-and-a-half degrees Fahrenheit [about 1.5 degrees Celsius] over the past 250
years, including an increase of one-and-a-half degrees [about 0.8 degrees
Celsius] over the most recent 50 years. Moreover, it appears likely that
essentially all of this increase results from the human emission of greenhouse
gases.’
There has been much rejoicing
among eco-commentators. Leo Hickman in the Guardian declared: ‘So, that’s it then. The
climate wars are over. Climate sceptics have accepted the main tenets of
climate science – that the world is warming and that humans are largely to
blame – and we can all now get on to debating the real issue at hand: what, if anything,
do we do about it?’ However, Hickman had to add ‘If only’. Apparently, while
Muller is the right kind of sceptic, some pesky critics just won’t accept the
‘facts’. ‘The power of his findings lay in the journey he has undertaken to
arrive at his conclusions’, suggests Hickman, but clearly some people don’t get
it.
It sounds like a powerful
argument: someone who has publicly taken a position for a few years, before
putting up his hands and effectively saying: ‘You know what? I was wrong, and
my fellow travellers were wrong, and we should just fall into line with the
mainstream view.’ The conversion analogy is a good one. Here, instead of the
unbeliever falling at the preacher’s feet and accepting Jesus into their lives,
no longer able to resist the power of the Lord, we have the sceptic allowing
the IPCC to drive out the devil of climate-change denial from within his soul.
Except, like many a modern
faith healer’s performance, there’s something dodgy about this widespread
interpretation. For starters, Muller was hardly what you would call a
climate-change sceptic. By and large, he has been very accepting of the IPCC’s
view of the problem of climate change. His claim to being a sceptic seems to
relate to his acceptance that the famous ‘hockey stick’ graph, which was the centrepiece of
the IPCC’s 2001 report and suggested that current temperatures are
unprecedented, was simply the product of some sloppy science.
But even then, Muller still put the case for the ‘consensus’ view. In 2004, he wrote: ‘If you are concerned about global warming (as I am) and think that human-created carbon dioxide may contribute (as I do), then you still should agree that we are much better off having broken the hockey stick. Misinformation can do real harm, because it distorts predictions.’ Another article from 2006 quotes Muller as saying that the odds that humans are to blame for global warming are ‘two in three’.
So, the most that we can say
is that Muller has always suspected a significant human role in climate change,
but he has also been honest enough to call out some poor research that appeared
to support that view and to point out (approvingly, as it happens) that Al Gore
used ‘exaggeration and distortion’ in his Oscar-winning film, An Inconvenient Truth. It is a
testament to the closed-mindedness of the climate debate that these mild
criticisms could qualify someone as climate sceptic.
Sceptic or not, it is far from
obvious that Muller has made further discussion moot. There has been criticism
that Muller’s methods in his new research are just not up to the job. Another
climate researcher, Judith Curry – who was one of Muller’s colleagues on the
first phase of the BEST project and who is a strong supporter of the IPCC’s
general position – disagrees with Muller’s newfound certainty: ‘I have
made public statements that I am unconvinced by their analysis. I do not see
any justification in their argument for making a stronger attribution statement
than has been made by the IPCC AR4.’ In other words, Curry thinks that the
IPCC’s take on the matter – that most of the warming of the past 50 years is likely to be down to humans – is about right.
Clearly, Curry is no sceptic either, but even she sees problems in Muller’s new
claims.
Muller’s new conclusions are
based on showing that the strong land-based warming in the temperature record
is correct. (The oceans show a much slower rate of warming.) His research team
has gone back over the temperature record to try to make sure that possible
confounding factors – particularly the fact that weather stations may have been
encroached by urban development and thus got warmer for reasons other than
global climate change – are taken into account. Muller thinks he has settled
the matter once and for all. Others disagree.
It’s worth noting in passing
that Muller’s work has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal and that
one reviewer, the hockey-stick critic Ross McKitrick who Muller has agreed with
in the past, has now published the critical reviews of Muller’s work he
provided for the Journal of
Geophysical Research. Sadly, Muller seems to have ignored McKitrick’s
criticisms. (For more on this, see Andrew Orlowski’s latest article in the Register.)
Hypocritically, climate-change alarmists – who are normally utterly dismissive
of anything that has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal – are only
too happy to proclaim Muller’s results.
Moreover, another piece of
research released in the past few days, led by meteorologist Anthony Watts,
claims that the corrupting of those weather stations by urbanisation has gone
much further than Muller and others have accounted for. Essentially, Watts –
with the support of many volunteers – went out to check America’s weather
stations and reclassify them according to the degree to which changes in their
surroundings might affect their readings. Watts and his colleagues conclude that when these effects are taken into
account, the rise in US temperatures has been only about half that suggested by
the previous datasets.
But to a certain extent, this
is all a false debate. There is no either/or. The leading climate sceptics all
accept that humans have had some influence on the world’s climate. The argument
is about how much human influence there is and what should be done about it.
Alarmists would argue that
greenhouse-gas emissions are threatening to cook the planet and ultimately
threaten humanity’s survival. At the very least, they see devastating
destruction arising from global warming. For them, the only answer is the rapid
decarbonisation of the world economy. Since the world is currently reliant on
carbon-based fuels, this could mean an end to the drive for economic growth and
the reorganisation of the economy and global politics. Anyone who disagrees is
a ‘denier’. Some alarmists seriously suggest that debate should end now and
anyone who continues to question the ‘consensus’ should be punished.
A few individuals aside, most
climate sceptics think the world is moderately warmer than before, that humans
have had some effect, but that most of the variation is natural and not
particularly worrisome. Another band of sceptics – those who might be called
‘policy sceptics’, like Bjorn Lomborg and Roger Pielke Jr – broadly accept the
IPCC’s view of temperature change and its causes. However, they think that the
answer lies in devoting resources to technological development in the short
term rather than a costly and probably futile attempt to decarbonise the world
overnight. But even such policy disagreement is too much for the alarmists, who
regularly pillory Lomborg in particular, yet it gets dressed up as ‘scientific
fact’.
This last point rather gives
the game away. What is really being contested is a political worldview in which
human beings are seen as a blight on the planet. If some greens had their way,
humanity would quietly shuffle off and leave Mother Earth in peace. More
realistically, the aim of environmentalists is to reduce the human population
and economic growth, so that a sustainable number of people live in a ‘steady
state’ economy in harmony with the natural world. Such an outlook is romantic,
in the worst possible sense, and downright misanthropic.
Whether the planet is warming
or not, and whether it is human beings causing that warming or not, the only
question that is worth answering is this: what is the best way forward for
humanity? Trying to close down debate through censorious demands or through
publicity stunts – which is effectively what Muller is attempting to pull off
here – is the very opposite of a human-centred outlook.
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