Georgia
Op-Ed in Heartland Environment and Climate
News
Politics,
not science, drives the United Nations' work on climate
change, warns Dr. Richard Lindzen, one of the world's leading
atmospheric physicists.
The Third
Assessment Report (TAR) of the United Nations'
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), expected to
be released sometime in 2001, is already coming under heavy
criticism from various directions. But none has been more
devastating than the one delivered on March 1 by one of the
report's lead authors.
Dr. Richard S.
Lindzen, the Alfred P. Sloan professor of meteorology at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and one of the world's
leading atmospheric scientists, told a standing-room only
audience at a briefing sponsored by the Cooler Heads Coalition
in the U.S. Senate Environment Committee Room, that the IPCC
process is driven by politics rather than science.
What are some of
the problems with the IPCC process, according to Lindzen? It
uses summaries to misrepresent what scientists say. It uses
language that means different things to scientists and laymen.
It exploits public ignorance over quantitative matters. It
exploits what scientists can agree on, while ignoring
disagreements, to support the global warming agenda. And it
exaggerates scientific accuracy and certainty and the
authority of undistinguished scientists.
No consensus
here
The "most
egregious" problem with the IPCC's forthcoming report, said
Lindzen, "is that it is presented as a consensus that involves
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of scientists . . . and none of
them was asked if they agreed with anything in the report
except for the one or two pages they worked on."
Indeed, most press
accounts covering the January release of the TAR's "Summary
for Policymakers" characterized the report as the work of
2,000 (3,000 in some instances) of the world's leading climate
scientists. IPCC's emphasis, however, isn't on getting
qualified scientists, but on getting representatives from over
100 countries, said Lindzen. The truth is only a handful of
countries do quality climate research. Most of the so-called
experts served merely to pad the numbers.
"It is no small
matter," said Lindzen, "that routine weather service
functionaries from New Zealand to Tanzania are referred to as
'the world's leading climate scientists.' It should come as no
surprise that they will be determinedly supportive of the
process."
The IPCC clearly
uses the Summary for Policymakers to misrepresent what is in
the report, said Lindzen. He gave an example from the chapter
he worked on, chapter 7, addressing physical
processes.
The 35-page
chapter, said Lindzen, pointed out many problems with the way
climate computer models treat specific physical processes,
such as water vapor, clouds, ocean currents, and so on. Clouds
and water vapor in clouds, for example, are badly
misrepresented in the models. The physics are all wrong, he
said. Those things the models do well are irrelevant to the
all-important feedback effects.
"The treatment of
water vapor in clouds is crucial to models producing a lot of
warming," explained Lindzen. "Without them [positive
feedbacks], no model would produce much warming."
The IPCC
summarizes the 35-page chapter in one sentence: "Understanding
of climate processes and their incorporation in climate models
have improved, including water vapor, sea dynamics and ocean
heat transport."
That, said
Lindzen, does not summarize the chapter at all. "That is why a
lot of us have said that the document itself is informative;
the summary is not."
Lindzen briefly
discussed a paper he published in the March 2001 issue of the
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society,
clarifying the water vapor feedback issue. Using detailed
daily measurements, Lindzen and his coauthors from NASA showed
that cloud cover in the tropics diminishes as temperatures
rise, cooling the planet by allowing more heat to
escape.
"The effect
observed," said Lindzen, "is sufficient such that if current
models are absolutely correct, except for missing this, models
that predict between 1.5 and 4.5 degrees warming go down to
about .4 to 1.2 degrees warming."
Not the way
science is done
The IPCC claims
its report is peer-reviewed, which simply isn't true, Lindzen
said. Under true peer-review, he explained, a panel of
reviewers must accept a study before it can be published in a
scientific journal. If the reviewers have objections, the
author must answer them or change the article to take
reviewers' objections into account.
Under the IPCC
review process, by contrast, the authors are at liberty to
ignore criticisms. After having his review comments ignored by
the IPCC in 1990 and 1995, Lindzen asked to have his name
removed from the list of reviewers. The group
refused.
The IPCC has
resorted to using scenario-building in its policymakers'
summary to paint a frightening picture not supported by the
science, Lindzen charged. Ignoring the science allows the IPCC
to build a scenario, for example, that assumes man will burn
300 years' worth of coal in 100 years. They plug that into the
most sensitive climate model available and arrive at a truly
frightening global warming scenario.
"People wouldn't
normally take that very seriously," said Lindzen, "but I think
the IPCC understands the media will report the top number. I
don't think, any longer, that this is
unintentional."
The IPCC also
exploits what scientists do agree on to support its agenda,
according to Lindzen. For example, Lindzen said, scientists
can more-or-less live with the idea conveyed in the IPCC
report that everything is connected to everything else, and
everything is uncertain.
Lindzen himself
doesn't think these ideas are particularly reasonable. But
politicians and environmentalists take this minimal area of
agreement, and then claim that anything can cause anything and
we must act to stop it.
Scientists agree,
for example, that atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse
gases have increased over the last 100 years. They also
generally agree the climate has warmed slightly. Uncertainties
remain, however, regarding even those basic propositions.
Contrary to the impression given by the IPCC, there is no
widespread agreement on what these two "facts" mean for
mankind. Yet they are deemed by the IPCC sufficient to justify
precipitous action.
Fun with
numbers
Perhaps Lindzen's
most devastating critique is aimed at the IPCC's use of
statistics.
The IPCC's
infamous hockey stick graph, for example, shows global
temperatures have been stable or falling over the last 1,000
years, and that only in the industrial age has there been an
unnatural warming of the planet. But if you look at the margin
of error in that graph, "You can no longer maintain that
statement," said Lindzen.
Lindzen also noted
the margin of error used in the IPCC report is much smaller, a
60 percent confidence level, than traditionally used by
scientists, who generally report results at the 95 or even 99
percent confidence level. The IPCC is thus publicizing results
much less likely to be correct than scientific research is
generally expected to be.
To illustrate his
point, Lindzen showed estimates of some of the most precise
numbers in physics with their error bars. He showed different
measurements of the speed of light, for instance, from 1929 to
the 1980s. The error bars for the estimated speed of light in
1932 and 1940 do not even include the value we think
is the correct speed of light today. "Error bars should not be
taken lightly," warned Lindzen. "There is genuine uncertainty
in them."
Incentives
matter
"Scientists are
human beings," Lindzen concluded, "subject to normal instincts
and weaknesses." They respond to incentives just like everyone
else. "Current government funding creates incentives to behave
poorly by maintaining the relevance of the subject," he said,
noting that on some issues financial support for science
depends on "alarming the world."
Indeed, Lindzen
noted, Mario Molina and Sherwood Rowland were awarded the 1995
Nobel Prize in chemistry for their work on ozone
depletion--not for alerting the world, but for "alarming" it.
"You don't want scientists to get hooked on this as the key to
fame and glory," he warned.
There's
little doubt, Lindzen said, that the IPCC process has become
politicized to the point of uselessness. He advised U.S.
policymakers simply to ignore it.
Copyright
© 2001 by The Heartland Institute