Climate chaos? Don't believe
it
By Christopher Monckton, Sunday Telegraph
05/11/2006
The Stern report last week predicted dire economic and social effects of unchecked
global warming. In what many will see as a highly controversial polemic, Christopher
Monckton disputes the 'facts' of this impending apocalypse and accuses the UN
and its scientists of distorting the truth
Biblical droughts, floods, plagues and extinctions?
Last week, Gordon Brown and his chief economist both said global warming was
the worst "market failure" ever. That loaded soundbite suggests that
the "climate-change" scare is less about saving the planet than, in
Jacques Chirac's chilling phrase, "creating world government". This
week and next, I'll reveal how politicians, scientists and bureaucrats contrived
a threat of Biblical floods, droughts, plagues, and extinctions worthier of
St John the Divine than of science.
Sir Nicholas Stern's report on the economics of climate change, which was published
last week, says that the debate is over. It isn't. There are more greenhouse
gases in the air than there were, so the world should warm a bit, but that's
as far as the "consensus" goes. After the recent hysteria, you may
not find the truth easy to believe. So you can find all my references and detailed
calculations here.
The Royal Society says there's a worldwide scientific consensus. It brands Apocalypse-deniers
as paid lackeys of coal and oil corporations. I declare my interest: I once
took the taxpayer's shilling and advised Margaret Thatcher, FRS, on scientific
scams and scares. Alas, not a red cent from Exxon.
In 1988, James Hansen, a climatologist, told the US Congress that temperature
would rise 0.3C by the end of the century (it rose 0.1C), and that sea level
would rise several feet (no, one inch). The UN set up a transnational bureaucracy,
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The UK taxpayer unwittingly
meets the entire cost of its scientific team, which, in 2001, produced the Third
Assessment Report, a Bible-length document presenting apocalyptic conclusions
well beyond previous reports.
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This week, I'll show how the UN undervalued the sun's effects on historical
and contemporary climate, slashed the natural greenhouse effect, overstated
the past century's temperature increase, repealed a fundamental law of physics
and tripled the man-made greenhouse effect.
Next week, I'll demonstrate the atrocious economic, political and environmental
cost of the high-tax, zero-freedom, bureaucratic centralism implicit in Stern's
report; I'll compare the global-warming scare with previous sci-fi alarums;
and I'll show how the environmentalists' "precautionary principle"
(get the state to interfere now, just in case) is killing people.
So to the scare. First, the UN implies that carbon dioxide ended the last four
ice ages. It displays two 450,000-year graphs: a sawtooth curve of temperature
and a sawtooth of airborne CO2 that's scaled to look similar. Usually, similar
curves are superimposed for comparison. The UN didn't do that. If it had, the
truth would have shown: the changes in temperature preceded the changes in CO2
levels.
Next, the UN abolished the medieval warm period (the global warming at the end
of the First Millennium AD). In 1995, David Deming, a geoscientist at the University
of Oklahoma, had written an article reconstructing 150 years of North American
temperatures from borehole data. He later wrote: "With the publication
of the article in Science, I gained significant credibility in the community
of scientists working on climate change. They thought I was one of them, someone
who would pervert science in the service of social and political causes. One
of them let his guard down. A major person working in the area of climate change
and global warming sent me an astonishing email that said: 'We have to get rid
of the Medieval Warm Period.' "
So they did. The UN's second assessment report, in 1996, showed a 1,000-year
graph demonstrating that temperature in the Middle Ages was warmer than today.
But the 2001 report contained a new graph showing no medieval warm period. It
wrongly concluded that the 20th century was the warmest for 1,000 years. The
graph looked like an ice hockey-stick. The wrongly flat AD1000-AD1900 temperature
line was the shaft: the uptick from 1900 to 2000 was the blade. Here's how they
did it:
They gave one technique for reconstructing pre-thermometer temperature
390 times more weight than any other (but didn't say so).
The technique they overweighted was one which the UN's 1996 report had
said was unsafe: measurement of tree-rings from bristlecone pines. Tree-rings
are wider in warmer years, but pine-rings are also wider when there's more carbon
dioxide in the air: it's plant food. This carbon dioxide fertilisation distorts
the calculations.
They said they had included 24 data sets going back to 1400. Without
saying so, they left out the set showing the medieval warm period, tucking it
into a folder marked "Censored Data".
They used a computer model to draw the graph from the data, but scientists
later found that the model almost always drew hockey-sticks even if they fed
in random, electronic "red noise".
The large, full-colour "hockey-stick" was the key graph in the UN's
2001 report, and the only one to appear six times. The Canadian Government copied
it to every household. Four years passed before a leading scientific journal
would publish the truth about the graph. Did the UN or the Canadian government
apologise? Of course not. The UN still uses the graph in its publications.
Even after the "hockey stick" graph was exposed, scientific papers
apparently confirming its abolition of the medieval warm period appeared. The
US Senate asked independent statisticians to investigate. They found that the
graph was meretricious, and that known associates of the scientists who had
compiled it had written many of the papers supporting its conclusion.
The UN, echoed by Stern, says the graph isn't important. It is. Scores of scientific
papers show that the medieval warm period was real, global and up to 3C warmer
than now. Then, there were no glaciers in the tropical Andes: today they're
there. There were Viking farms in Greenland: now they're under permafrost. There
was little ice at the North Pole: a Chinese naval squadron sailed right round
the Arctic in 1421 and found none.
The Antarctic, which holds 90 per cent of the world's ice and nearly all its
160,000 glaciers, has cooled and gained ice-mass in the past 30 years, reversing
a 6,000-year melting trend. Data from 6,000 boreholes worldwide show global
temperatures were higher in the Middle Ages than now. And the snows of Kilimanjaro
are vanishing not because summit temperature is rising (it isn't) but because
post-colonial deforestation has dried the air. Al Gore please note.
In some places it was also warmer than now in the Bronze Age and in Roman times.
It wasn't CO2 that caused those warm periods. It was the sun. So the UN adjusted
the maths and all but extinguished the sun's role in today's warming. Here's
how:
The UN dated its list of "forcings" (influences on temperature)
from 1750, when the sun, and consequently air temperature, was almost as warm
as now. But its start-date for the increase in world temperature was 1900, when
the sun, and temperature, were much cooler.
Every "forcing" produces "climate feedbacks" making
temperature rise faster. For instance, as temperature rises in response to a
forcing, the air carries more water vapour, the most important greenhouse gas;
and polar ice melts, increasing heat absorption. Up goes the temperature again.
The UN more than doubled the base forcings from greenhouse gases to allow for
climate feedbacks. It didn't do the same for the base solar forcing.
Two centuries ago, the astronomer William Herschel was reading Adam Smith's
Wealth of Nations when he noticed that quoted grain prices fell when the number
of sunspots rose. Gales of laughter ensued, but he was right. At solar maxima,
when the sun was at its hottest and sunspots showed, temperature was warmer,
grain grew faster and prices fell. Such observations show that even small solar
changes affect climate detectably. But recent solar changes have been big.
Sami Solanki, a solar physicist, says that in the past half-century the sun
has been warmer, for longer, than at any time in at least the past 11,400 years,
contributing a base forcing equivalent to a quarter of the past century's warming.
That's before adding climate feedbacks.
The UN expresses its heat-energy forcings in watts per square metre per second.
It estimates that the sun caused just 0.3 watts of forcing since 1750. Begin
in 1900 to match the temperature start-date, and the base solar forcing more
than doubles to 0.7 watts. Multiply by 2.7, which the Royal Society suggests
is the UN's current factor for climate feedbacks, and you get 1.9 watts
more than six times the UN's figure.
The entire 20th-century warming from all sources was below 2 watts. The sun
could have caused just about all of it.
Next, the UN slashed the natural greenhouse effect by 40 per cent from 33C in
the climate-physics textbooks to 20C, making the man-made additions appear bigger.
Then the UN chose the biggest 20th-century temperature increase it could find.
Stern says: "As anticipated by scientists, global mean surface temperatures
have risen over the past century." As anticipated? Only 30 years ago, scientists
were anticipating a new Ice Age and writing books called The Cooling.
In the US, where weather records have been more reliable than elsewhere, 20th-century
temperature went up by only 0.3C. AccuWeather, a worldwide meteorological service,
reckons world temperature rose by 0.45C. The US National Climate Data Centre
says 0.5C. Any advance on 0.5? The UN went for 0.6C, probably distorted by urban
growth near many of the world's fast-disappearing temperature stations.
The number of temperature stations round the world peaked at 6,000 in 1970.
It's fallen by two-thirds to 2,000 now: a real "hockey-stick" curve,
and an instance of the UN's growing reliance on computer guesswork rather than
facts.
Even a 0.6C temperature rise wasn't enough. So the UN repealed a fundamental
physical law. Buried in a sub-chapter in its 2001 report is a short but revealing
section discussing "lambda": the crucial factor converting forcings
to temperature. The UN said its climate models had found lambda near-invariant
at 0.5C per watt of forcing.
You don't need computer models to "find" lambda. Its value is given
by a century-old law, derived experimentally by a Slovenian professor and proved
by his Austrian student (who later committed suicide when his scientific compatriots
refused to believe in atoms). The Stefan-Boltzmann law, not mentioned once in
the UN's 2001 report, is as central to the thermodynamics of climate as Einstein's
later equation is to astrophysics. Like Einstein's, it relates energy to the
square of the speed of light, but by reference to temperature rather than mass.
The bigger the value of lambda, the bigger the temperature increase the UN could
predict. Using poor Ludwig Boltzmann's law, lambda's true value is just 0.22-0.3C
per watt. In 2001, the UN effectively repealed the law, doubling lambda to 0.5C
per watt. A recent paper by James Hansen says lambda should be 0.67, 0.75 or
1C: take your pick. Sir John Houghton, who chaired the UN's scientific assessment
working group until recently, tells me it now puts lambda at 0.8C: that's 3C
for a 3.7-watt doubling of airborne CO2. Most of the UN's computer models have
used 1C. Stern implies 1.9C.
On the UN's figures, the entire greenhouse-gas forcing in the 20th century was
2 watts. Multiplying by the correct value of lambda gives a temperature increase
of 0.44 to 0.6C, in line with observation. But using Stern's 1.9C per watt gives
3.8C. Where did 85 per cent of his imagined 20th-century warming go? As Professor
Dick Lindzen of MIT pointed out in The Sunday Telegraph last week, the UK's
Hadley Centre had the same problem, and solved it by dividing its modelled output
by three to "predict" 20th-century temperature correctly.
A spate of recent scientific papers, gearing up for the UN's fourth report next
year, gives a different reason for the failure of reality to keep up with prediction.
The oceans, we're now told, are acting as a giant heat-sink. In these papers
the well-known, central flaw (not mentioned by Stern) is that the computer models'
"predictions" of past ocean temperature changes only approach reality
if they are averaged over a depth of at least a mile and a quarter.
Deep-ocean temperature hasn't changed at all, it's barely above freezing. The
models tend to over-predict the warming of the climate-relevant surface layer
up to threefold. A recent paper by John Lyman, of the US National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Association, reports that the oceans have cooled sharply in the
past two years. The computers didn't predict this. Sea level is scarcely rising
faster today than a century ago: an inch every 15 years. Hansen now says that
the oceanic "flywheel effect" gives us extra time to act, so Stern's
alarmism is misplaced.
Finally, the UN's predictions are founded not only on an exaggerated forcing-to-temperature
conversion factor justified neither by observation nor by physical law, but
also on an excessive rate of increase in airborne carbon dioxide. The true rate
is 0.38 per cent year on year since records began in 1958. The models assume
1 per cent per annum, more than two and a half times too high. In 2001, the
UN used these and other adjustments to predict a 21st-century temperature increase
of 1.5 to 6C. Stern suggests up to 10C.
Dick Lindzen emailed me last week to say that constant repetition of wrong numbers
doesn't make them right. Removing the UN's solecisms, and using reasonable data
and assumptions, a simple global model shows that temperature will rise by just
0.1 to 1.4C in the coming century, with a best estimate of 0.6C, well within
the medieval temperature range and only a fifth of the UN's new, central projection.
Why haven't air or sea temperatures turned out as the UN's models predicted?
Because the science is bad, the "consensus" is wrong, and Herr Professor
Ludwig Boltzmann, FRS, was as right about energy-to-temperature as he was about
atoms.