"And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." - John 8:32
Date: July 30, 2008
The following letter is from an APS member, Roger W. Cohen, and is in support of Lord Monckton's paper published in the July APS newsletter:
I have been involved in climate change for nearly 30 years. In 1980, a few of us in the research
organization of a large multinational energy corporation realized that the climate issue was likely
to affect our future business environment. We subsequently started the only industrial research
activity in the basic science of climate change. The move was justified by the fact that the best
way to really understand a complex technical issue is to actually work in the area, interacting with
other scientists. I have supervised climate scientists working in the area of climate change and
have followed the area closely. Over the years our researchers have served as authors of key
IPCC report chapters. I would like to share some perspectives with you.
I retired four years ago, and at the time of my retirement I was well convinced, as were most
technically trained people, that the IPCC's case for Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) is very
tight. However, upon taking the time to get into the details of the science, I was appalled at how
flimsy the case really is. I was also appalled at the behavior of many of those who helped
produce the IPCC reports and by many of those who promote it. In particular I am referring to the
arrogance; the activities aimed at shutting down debate; the outright fabrications; the mindless
defense of bogus science, and the politicization of the IPCC process and the science process
itself.
At this point there is little doubt that the IPCC position is seriously flawed in its central position
that humanity is responsible for most of the observed warming of the last third of the 20th century,
and in its projections for effects in the 21st century. Here are five key reasons for this:
The recorded temperature rise is neither exceptional nor persistent. For example, the earth
has not warmed since around 1997 and may in fact be in a cooling trend. Also, in particular, the
Arctic and contiguous 48 states are at about the same temperature as they were in the 1930s.
Also in particular the rate of global warming in the early 20th century was as great as the last third
of the century, and no one seriously ascribes the early century increase to greenhouse gas
emissions.
Predictions of climate models are demonstrably too high, indicating a significant overestimate
of the climate sensitivity (the response of the earth to increases in the incident radiation caused
by atmospheric greenhouse gases). This is because the models, upon which the IPCC relies for
their future projections, err in their calculations of key feedback and driving forces in the climate
system.
Natural effects have been and continue to be important contributors to variations in the earth's
climate, especially solar variability and decadal and multidecadal ocean cycles.
The recorded land-based temperature increase data are significantly exaggerated due to
widespread errors in data gathering and inadequately corrected contamination by human activity.
The multitude of environmental and ecological effects blamed on climate change to date is
either exaggerated or nonexistent. Examples are claims of more frequent and ferocious storms,
accelerated melting of terrestrial icecaps, Mount Kilimanjaro's glacier, polar bear populations, and
expansive mosquito-borne diseases. All of these and many others have been claimed and
ascribed to global warming and by extension to human activity, and all are bogus or highly
exaggerated.
I would be pleased to provide details on any of these five key reasons. Many others can do so as
well.
As contrary evidence has accumulated, proponents of strong AGW have begun to display signs
of cognitive dissonance. The famed social psychologist Leon Festinger, developer of the concept
of cognitive dissonance, conducted early studies of the phenomenon. One study looked at
people who bought bomb shelters during the cold war. It was found that such people tended to
exaggerate the threat of nuclear war, and nothing could dissuade them. Good news about
relaxed tensions and peace initiatives was rejected. Such developments brought about cognitive
dissonance, bizarrely almost as if they were invested in nuclear war. The psychological model is
that their belief system became part of their identity, their self, and information at odds with that
belief system became an attack on the self. This helps explain why such people can be resistant
to information that would be judged positive on a rational basis. Festinger's book, When
Prophecy Fails, tells of a group of doomsday believers who predicted the end of the world on a
particular date. When that didn't happen, the believers became even more determined they were
right. And they become even louder and proselytized even more aggressively after the
disconfirmation. So we can expect ever more extreme, opaque, and strange defenses from
proponents as evidence continues to mount. For example we are now told that even cooling fits
in with global warming.
Having said all this, it does not mean that there is no threat or that we should not debate some
kind of action to control atmospheric CO2. It does mean that the case for immediate draconian
measures that will have the effect or restricting world economic growth is poor. It does mean
that the climate is unpredictable, even with modern tools, and this implies that continuing to load
the atmosphere poses imponderable risks to terrestrial life. I believe that the way to a solution
lies with new technology for both energy supply and for directly controlling net emissions. In this
regard the role of governments is not to enact restrictive economic measures via market
interventions, or to choose the winners in a technology race. Its proper role is to encourage the
development and deployment of new technology through direct funding of R&D and through tax
incentives for industries that research, develop, and deploy such technology.