|
by Steven E. Koonin
reviewed by Rupert Darwall from RealClearEnergy Website
The debate, hosted by the APS, revealed
consensus-supporting climate scientists harboring doubts and
uncertainties and admitting to holes in climate science - in marked
contrast to the emphatic messaging of bodies such as
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Computer model-simulated responses to forcings - the term used by climate scientists for changes of energy flows into and out of the climate system, such as changes in solar radiation, volcanic eruptions, and changes in the concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,
This scaling included greenhouse gas forcings.
Koonin was uncommonly well-suited to lead the APS climate workshop.
He has a deep understanding of computer models, which have become the workhorses of climate science. As a young man, Koonin wrote a paper on computer modeling of nuclear reaction in stars and taught a course on computational physics at Caltech.
In the early 1990s, he was involved in a program using satellites to measure the Earth's albedo - that is, the reflection of incoming solar radiation back into space.
As a student at Caltech in the late 1960s, he was
taught by Nobel physicist Richard Feynman and absorbed what Koonin
calls Feynman's "absolute intellectual honesty."
Assignments included,
In 2009, Koonin was appointed an under-secretary
at the Department of Energy in the Obama administration.
"Unsettled" is an authoritative primer on the science of climate change that lifts the lid on The Science and finds plenty that isn't as it should be.
Koonin's aim is to right that wrong.
Usefully describing the earth's climate, writes Koonin, is,
Models divide the atmosphere into pancake-shaped boxes of around 100km wide and one kilometer deep.
But the upward flow of energy from tropical thunder clouds, which is more than thirty times larger than that from human influences, occurs over smaller scales than the programmed boxes.
This forces climate modellers to make assumptions about what happens inside those boxes.
As one modeller confesses,
Inevitably, this leaves considerable scope for modelers' subjective views and preferences.
A key question climate models are meant to solve is estimating the equilibrium climate sensitivity of carbon dioxide (ECS), which aims to tell us by how much temperatures rise from a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Yet in 2020, climate modelers from Germany's Max Planck Institute admitted to tuning their model by targeting an ECS of about 3° Centigrade.
The proof of the pudding, as they say, is in the eating.
Self-evidently, computer projections can't be tested against a future that's yet to happen, but they can be tested against climates present and past.
Climate models can't even agree on what the current global average temperature is.
Another embarrassing feature of climate models concerns the earlier of the two twentieth-century warmings from 1910 to 1940, when human influences were much smaller.
The failure of the latest models to warm fast enough in those decades suggest that it's possible, even likely, that internal climate variability is a significant contributor to the warming of recent decades, Koonin suggests.
Neither is it reassuring that for the years after 1960, the latest generation of climate models show a larger spread and greater uncertainty than earlier ones - implying that, far from advancing, The Science has been going backwards.
That is not how science is meant to work.
As an example, Koonin takes a "shockingly misleading" claim and associated graph in the United States government's 2017 Climate Science Special Report that the number of high-temperature records set in the past two decades far exceeds the number of low-temperature records across the 48 contiguous states.
Koonin demonstrates that the sharp uptick in highs over the last two decades is an artifact of a methodology chosen to mislead.
After re-running the data, record highs show a clear peak in the 1930s, but there is no significant trend over the 120 years of observations starting in 1895, or even since 1980, when human influences on the climate grew strongly.
In contrast, the number of record cold
temperatures has declined over more than a century, with the trend
accelerating after 1985.
Similarly, a key message in the 2014 National Climate Assessment of an upward trend in hurricane frequency and intensity, repeated in the 2017 assessment, is contradicted 728 pages later by a statement buried in an appendix stating that there has been no significant trend in the global number of tropical cyclones,
That might surprise many politicians.
The sacrifice of scientific truth in the form of objective empirical data for the sake of a catastrophist climate narrative is plain to see.
As Koonin summarizes the case:
Koonin also has sharp words for the policy side of the climate change consensus, which asserts that although climate change is an existential threat, solving it by totally decarbonizing society is straightforward and relatively painless.
Unlike many scientists and most politicians, Koonin displays a sure grasp of the split between developed and developing nations, for whom decarbonization is a luxury good that they can't afford.
The fissure dates back to the earliest days of the U.N. climate process at the end of the 1980s.
Indeed, it's why developing nations insisted on the U.N. route as opposed to an intergovernmental one that produced the 1987 Montreal Protocol on ozone-depleting substances.
The most unsettling part of "Unsettled" concerns science and the role of scientists.
That condition does not pertain in climate science, where errors are embedded in a political narrative and criticism is suppressed.
In a recent essay, the philosopher Matthew B. Crawford observes that the pride of science as a way of generating knowledge - unlike religion - is to be falsifiable.
That changes when science is pressed into duty as authority in order to absolve politicians of responsibility for justifying their policy choices ("the science says," we're repeatedly told).
At the outset of "Unsettled," Feynman's axiom of absolute intellectual honesty is contrasted with climate scientist Stephen Schneider's "double ethical bind."
On the one hand, scientists are ethically bound by the scientific method to tell the truth. On the other, they are human beings who want to reduce the risk of potentially disastrous climate change.
"Being effective" helps explain the pressure on climate scientists to conform to The Science and the emergence of a climate science knowledge monopoly.
Its function is, as Crawford puts it,
This sees climate scientist gatekeepers deciding who can and cannot opine on climate science.
Another scientist criticizes Koonin for giving ammunition to "the deniers," and a third writes an op-ed urging New York University to reconsider Koonin's position there.
It goes wider than scientists...
The moratorium on the asking of questions represents the death of science as understood and described by Popper, a victim of the conflicting requirements of political utility and scientific integrity.
Many scientists take this lying down. Koonin won't...
For his forensic skill and making his findings
accessible to non-specialists, Koonin has written
the most important
book on climate science in decades...
Video Clip
|