Why I Deny Global Warming
by David Deming
Recently
by David Deming: Doubting
Darwin
I'm a denier
for several reasons. There is no substantive evidence that the planet
has warmed significantly or that any significant warming will occur
in the future. If any warming does occur, it likely will be concentrated
at higher latitudes and therefore be beneficial. Climate research
has largely degenerated into pathological science, and the coverage
of global warming in the media is tendentious to the point of being
fraudulent. Anyone who is an honest and competent scientist must
be a denier.
Have you ever
considered how difficult it is to take the temperature of the planet
Earth? What temperature will you measure? The air? The surface of
the Earth absorbs more than twice as much incident heat from the
Sun than the air. But if you measure the temperature of the surface,
what surface are you going to measure? The solid Earth or the oceans?
There is twice as much water as land on Earth. If you decide to
measure water temperature, at what depth will you take the measurements?
How will the time scale on which the deep ocean mixes with the shallow
affect your measurements? And how, pray tell, will you determine
what the average water temperature was for the South Pacific Ocean
a hundred years ago? How will you combine air, land, and sea temperature
measurements? Even if you use only meteorological measurements of
air temperature, how will you compensate for changes in latitude,
elevation, and land use?
Determining
a mean planetary temperature is not straightforward, but an extremely
complicated problem. Even the best data are suspect. Anthony Watts
and his colleagues have surveyed
82.5 percent of stations in the U.S. Historical Climatology Network.
They have found – shockingly – that over 70 percent of these stations
are likely to be contaminated by errors greater than 2 deg C [3.6
deg F]. Of the remaining stations, 21.5 percent have inherent errors
greater than 1 deg C. The alleged degree of global warming over
the past 150 years is less than 1 deg C. Yet even in a technologically
advanced country like the US, the inherent error in over 90 percent
of the surveyed meteorological stations is greater than the putative
signal. And these errors are not random, but systematically reflect
a warming bias related to urbanization. Watts has documented countless
instances of air temperature sensors located next to air conditioning
vents or in the middle of asphalt parking lots. A typical scenario
is that a temperature sensor that was in the middle of a pasture
a hundred years ago is now surrounded by a concrete jungle. Urbanization
has been a unidirectional process. It is entirely plausible – even
likely – that all of the temperature rise that has been inferred
from the data is an artifact that reflects the growth of urban heat
islands.
The "denier"
is portrayed as a person who refuses to accept the plain evidence
of his senses. But in fact it is the alarmist who doesn't know what
they are talking about. The temperature of the Earth and how it
has varied over the past 150 years is poorly constrained. The person
who thinks otherwise does so largely because they have no comprehension
of the science. Most of these people have never done science or
thought about the inherent difficulties and uncertainties involved.
And what is
"global warming" anyway? As long ago as the fifth century BC, Socrates
pointed out that intelligible definitions are a necessary precursor
to meaningful discussions. The definition of the term "global warming"
shifts with the context of the discussion. If you deny global warming,
then you have denied the existence of the greenhouse effect, a reproducible
phenomenon that can be studied analytically in the laboratory. But
if you oppose political action, then global warming metamorphoses
into a nightmarish and speculative planetary catastrophe. Coastal
cities sink beneath a rising sea, species suffer from wholesale
extinctions, and green pastures are turned into deserts of choking
hot sand.
In fact, so-called
"deniers" are not "deniers" but skeptics. Skeptics do not deny the
existence of the greenhouse effect. Holding all other factors constant,
the mean planetary air temperature ought to rise as the atmosphere
accumulates more anthropogenic CO2. Christopher Monckton recently
reviewed
the pertinent science and concluded that a doubling of CO2 should
result in a temperature increase of about 1 deg C. If this temperature
increase mirrors those in the geologic past, most of it will occur
at high latitudes. These areas will become more habitable for man,
plants, and other animals. Biodiversity will increase. Growing seasons
will lengthen. Why is this a bad thing?
Any temperature
increase over 1 deg C for a doubling of CO2 must come from a positive
feedback from water vapor. Water vapor is the dominant greenhouse
gas in Earth's atmosphere, and warm air holds more water than cold
air. The theory is that an increased concentration of water vapor
in the atmosphere will lead to a positive feedback that amplifies
the warming from CO2 by as much as a factor of three to five. But
this is nothing more that speculation. Water vapor also leads to
cloud formation. Clouds have a cooling effect. At the current time,
no one knows if the feedback from water vapor will be positive or
negative.
Global warming
predictions cannot be tested with mathematical models. It is impossible
to validate computer models of complex natural systems. The only
way to corroborate such models is to compare model predictions with
what will happen in a hundred years. And one such result by itself
won't be significant because of the possible compounding effects
of other variables in the climate system. The experiment will have
to repeated over several one-hundred year cycles. In other words,
the theory of catastrophic global warming cannot be tested or empirically
corroborated in a human time frame.
It is hardly
conclusive to argue that models are correct because they have reproduced
past temperatures. I'm sure they have. General circulation models
have so many degrees of freedom that it is possible to endlessly
tweak them until the desired result is obtained. Hindsight is always
20-20. This tells us exactly nothing about a model's ability to
accurately predict what will happen in the future.
The entire
field of climate science and its coverage in the media is tendentious
to the point of being outright fraudulent. Why is it that every
media report on CO2 – an invisible gas – is invariably accompanied
by a photograph of a smokestack emitting particulate matter? Even
the cover of Al Gore's movie, An
Inconvenient Truth, shows a smokestack. Could it be that
its difficult to get people worked up about an invisible, odorless
gas that is an integral component of the photosynthetic cycle? A
gas that is essential to most animal and plant life on Earth? A
gas that is emitted by their own bodies through respiration? So
you have to deliberately mislead people by showing pictures of smoke
to them. Showing one thing when you're talking about another is
fraud. If the case for global warming alarmism is so settled, so
conclusive, so irrefutable...why is it necessary to repeatedly resort
to fraud?
A few years
ago it was widely reported
that the increased concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
would cause poison ivy to grow faster. But of course carbon dioxide
causes almost all plants to grow faster. And nearly all of these
plants have beneficial human uses. Carbon dioxide fertilizes hundreds
or thousands of human food sources. More CO2 means trees grow faster.
So carbon dioxide promotes reforestation and biodiversity. Its good
for the environment. But none of this was reported. Instead, the
media only reported that global warming makes poison ivy grow faster.
And this is but one example of hundreds or thousands of such misleading
reports. If sea ice in the Arctic diminishes, it is cited as irrefutable
proof of global warming. But if sea ice in the Antarctic increases,
it is ignored. Even cold weather events are commonly invoked
as evidence for global warming. People living in the future will
look back and wonder how we could have been so delusional.
For the past
few years I have remained silent concerning the Climategate emails.
But what they revealed is what many of us already knew was going
on: global warming research has largely degenerated into what is
known as pathological
science, a "process of wishful data interpretation." When I
testified
before the US Senate in 2006, I stated that a major climate researcher
told me in 1995 that "we have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period."
The existence and global nature of the Medieval
Warm Period had been substantiated by literally hundreds of
research articles published over decades. But it had to be erased
from history for ideological reasons. A few years later the infamous
"hockey stick" appeared. The "hockey stick" was a revisionist attempt
to rewrite the temperature history of the last thousand years. It
has been discredited
as being deeply flawed.
In one Climategate
email, a supposed climate scientist admitted to "hiding
the decline." In other words, hiding data that tended to disprove
his ideological agenda. Another email described how alarmists would
try to keep critical manuscripts from being published in the peer-reviewed
scientific literature. One of them wrote, we'll "keep
them out somehow – even if we have to redefine what the peer-review
literature is!" Gee. If the climate science that validates global
warming is so unequivocal, why is it necessary to work behind the
scenes to suppress dissent? You "doth protest too much."
As described
in my book, Science
and Technology in World History: The Ancient World and Classical
Civilization, systematic science began with the invocation
of naturalism by Greek philosophers and Hippocratic physicians c.
600-400 BC. But the critical attitude adopted by the Greeks was
as important as naturalism. Students were not only allowed to criticize
their teachers, but were encouraged to do so. From its beginnings
in Greek natural philosophy, science has been an idealistic and
dispassionate search for truth. As Plato explained, anyone who could
point out a mistake "shall carry off the palm, not as an enemy,
but as a friend." This is one reason that scientists enjoy so much
respect. The public assumes that a scientist's pursuit of truth
is unencumbered by political agendas.
But science
does not come easy to men. "Science," George Sarton reminded us,
"is a joykiller." The proper conduct of science requires a high
degree of intellectual discipline and rigor. Scientists are supposed
to use multiple
working hypotheses and sort through these by the processes of
corroboration and falsification.
The most valuable evidence is that which tends to falsify or disprove
a theory. A scientist, by the very definition of his activity, must
be skeptical. A scientist engaged in a dispassionate search for
truth elevates the critical – he does not suppress it. Knowledge
begins with skepticism and ends with conceit.
Finally, I'm
happy to be known as a "denier" because the label of "denier" says
nothing about me, but everything about the person making the charge.
Scientific theories are never denied or believed, they are only
corroborated or falsified. Scientific knowledge, by its very nature,
is provisional and subject to revision. The provisional nature of
scientific knowledge is a necessary consequence of the epistemological
basis of science. Science is based on observation. We never have
all the data. As our body of data grows, our theories and ideas
must necessarily evolve. Anyone who thinks scientific knowledge
is final and complete must necessarily endorse as a corollary the
absurd proposition that the process of history has stopped.
A scientific
theory cannot be "denied." Only a belief can be denied. The person
who uses the word "denier" thus reveals that they hold global warming
as a belief, not a scientific theory. Beliefs are the basis of revealed
religion. Revelations cannot be corroborated or studied in the laboratory,
so religions are based on dogmatic beliefs conservatively held.
Religions tend to be closed systems of belief that reject criticism.
But the sciences are open systems of knowledge that welcome criticism.
I'm a scientist, and therefore I must happily confess to being a
denier.
October
19, 2011
David
Deming [send him mail] is
a geophysicist, associate professor of arts and sciences at the
University of Oklahoma, and author of the books Science
and Technology in World History, Vols. 1 & 2.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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