It’s by far the most important scientific question of our age: Do human emissions of CO2 and other such “greenhouse gases” cause significant global warming, aka “climate change”?
Based on the belief that an affirmative answer to that question is a universally accepted truth, our government has embarked on a multi-trillion dollar campaign to transform our economy by, among other things, eliminating hydrocarbon fuels from electricity generation (without any demonstrated workable plan for the replacement), outlawing the kinds of vehicles we currently drive, suppressing fossil fuel extraction, banning pipeline construction, making all your appliances work less well, and much more. [emphasis, links added]
Express any doubt about the causal connection between human activities and climate change, and you could very well get labeled as a “climate denier,” fired from your academic job, demonetized by Google or Facebook, or even completely ostracized from polite society.
But is there actually any real proof of the proposition at issue? In fact, there is not.
I had two important posts on this subject back in 2021: one from January 2, titled: “Causation Of Climate Change, And The Scientific Method,” and the other from October 28, titled: “ ‘The Climate Is Changing And Human Activities Are The Cause’: How, Exactly, Do We Know That?”
Those posts covered the basics of how causation is generally established under the scientific method. Those posts also reviewed certain articles published at the time that gave good reasons to doubt the truth of the proposition that human greenhouse gas emissions are a main driver of significant climate change.
Go to those posts for discussions of and links to the 2020/21 articles that I reviewed at the time.
The reason for today’s post is that a couple of important new articles have come to my attention that further make clear that the proposition that human activities, particularly “greenhouse gas” emissions, are causing significant climate change has not been proved and, based on existing data, cannot be proved.
I’ll provide links and summaries, and let you draw your own conclusions as to the significance of these new articles.
But before that, let’s review one more time the basics of how causation is established under the scientific method. This is from my January 2, 2021 post:
We start with the basic maxim that “correlation does not prove causation.” Instead, causation is established by [the] disproof of all relevant alternative (“null”) hypotheses.
Everybody knows how this works from drug testing. We can’t prove that drug A cures disease X by administering drug A a thousand times and observing that disease X almost always goes away. Disease X might have gone away for other reasons, or on its own. Even if we administer drug A a million times, and disease X almost always goes away, we have only proved correlation, not causation.
To prove causation, we must disprove the null hypothesis by testing drug A against a placebo. The placebo represents the null hypothesis that something else (call it “natural factors”) is curing disease X. When drug A is significantly more effective at curing disease X than the placebo, then we have disproved the null hypothesis, and established, at least provisionally, the effectiveness of drug A.
And yet somehow these principles don’t apply in the field of climate science.
Instead, all the inside cliques of the climate science community have decided to agree that the new way to prove causation is to show a really, really good correlation with the preferred hypothesis, in which case subjecting the proposition at issue to a test of invalidation against a null hypothesis can be dispensed with.
The climate science community calls its system for establishing causation “detection and attribution” studies.
The basic idea is to come up with a model (i.e., a hypothesis) that predicts global warming based on increased greenhouse gases, and then collect data that show a very close match between what the model predicted and the data.
Correlation with the model’s predictions is the claimed proof of causation. There are hundreds of such studies in the climate literature.
My January 2, 2021, post linked to a classic of the genre, a 2018 IPCC-sponsored article written by a collection of some 36 co-authors who constitute a virtual “who’s who” of the insiders of the climate science cult (e.g., Michael Mann, Phil Jones, Tom Wigley, Ben Santer, etc., etc., etc.).
The title is “Detection of Climate Change and Attribution of Causes.” Key quote:
There is a wide range of evidence of qualitative consistencies between observed climate changes and model responses to anthropogenic forcing, including global warming, increasing land-ocean temperature contrast, diminishing Arctic sea-ice extent, glacial retreat, and increases in precipitation in Northern Hemisphere high latitudes.
Just get yourself enough “qualitative consistencies” with your hypothesis and proof of causation will be yours!
The authors of the two new papers beg to differ.
First, we have a paper by John Dagsvik and Sigmund Moen of Statistics Norway, dated September 2023, titled “To what extent are temperature levels changing due to greenhouse gas emissions?”
This paper is particularly significant because it has been issued by a governmental agency — the government statistical agencies being otherwise all in lockstep in support of the human-caused global warming narrative.
Excerpt from the Dagsvik and Moen paper (page 5):
At present, there is apparently a high degree of consensus among many climate researchers that the temperature increase of the last decades is systematic (and partly man-made). This is certainly the impression conveyed by the mass media.
For non-experts, it is very difficult to obtain a comprehensive picture of the research in this field, and it is almost impossible to obtain an overview and understanding of the scientific basis for such a consensus (Koonin, 2021, Curry, 2023).
By looking at these issues in more detail, this article reviews past observed and reconstructed temperature data as well as properties and tests of the global climate models (GCMs).
Moreover, we conduct statistical analyses of observed and reconstructed temperature series and test whether the recent fluctuation in temperatures differs systematically from previous temperature cycles, due possibly to the emission of greenhouse gases.
And the conclusion of Dagsvik and Moen (from the abstract):
[W]e find … that the effect of man-made CO2 emissions does not appear to be strong enough to cause systematic changes in the temperature fluctuations during the last 200 years.
A good deal of the discussion in Dagsvik and Moen covers various deficiencies and inadequacies of the existing temperature data series — inadequacies that make it impossible to draw conclusions from existing data about the causation of temperature increases from human greenhouse gas emissions.
Here is one comment on the data from page 10 that I find particularly significant:
For all three surface air temperature records, but especially NCDC and GISS, administrative changes to anomaly values are quite often introduced, even for observations several years back in time.
Some changes may be due to the delayed reductions of stations or the addition of new station data, while others probably have their origin in a change of technique to calculate average values.
It is impossible to evaluate the validity of such administrative changes for an outside user of these records.
For more than you will ever want to know on that subject, see my thirty-part series “The Greatest Scientific Fraud Of All Time.”
Bureaucrats altering the data to support their preferred narrative have rendered the data completely useless for any legitimate public policy purpose.
A second important new paper is from Antonis Christofides and co-authors dated September 26, 2023. They introduce their paper with a long post of that date at Climate, Etc. titled “Causality and Climate.”
The part of the full technical paper relating to the climate science application can be found at this link. If you go to that last link and try to read through it, you will find technical math that will quickly have your head swimming, even if you are a quasi-math geek like myself.
However, their fundamental point as to causality in climate science is not very complicated: if you plot recent temperature increases against increases in CO2 in the atmosphere, it’s the temperature increases that come first, and the CO2 increases follow.
Thus, if there is causality, it must be that the temperature increase is causing the CO2 increase, [not] the other way around.
Here is the key chart from the post at Climate, Etc. The authors present it as a quiz: look at the chart, and the explanations, and without any further mathematical analysis, draw a conclusion as to the direction of causation:
From the technical paper:
[T]he surprising finding [is] that, while in general the causal relationship of atmospheric T and CO2 concentration, as obtained by proxy data, appears to be of hen-or-egg type with principal direction 𝑇 → [CO2], in the recent decades the more accurate modern data support a conclusion that this principal direction has become exclusive.
In other words, it is the increase in temperature that caused increased CO2 concentration.
Though this conclusion may sound counterintuitive at first glance, because it contradicts common perception (and for this reason we have assessed the case with an alternative parametric methodology in the Supplementary Information, section SI2.4, with results confirming those presented here), in fact, it is reasonable.
The temperature increase began at the end of the Little Ice Period, in the early 19th century, when human CO2 emissions were negligible; hence other factors, such as solar activity (measured by sunspot numbers), as well as internal long-range mechanisms of the complex climatic systems had to play their roles.
I would make this comment as to both the Sagsvik and Christofides work: They both are using the only available data, which is data emanating from government sources that have been tampered with and altered.
However, the important point is that even that data would appear to refute, and certainly does not prove the endlessly repeated claims of impending climate doom from human CO2 emissions.
Read more at Manhattan Contrarian
How big is the Carbon Footprints of the Eco-Freaks Greenpeace in their Fossil Fueled Ships Arctic Sunrise and Rainbow Warrior II how big it the Carbon Footprints of Gore and DiCaprio?
The mainstay of the climate crisis campaign stems from the original “Kill Big Oil” move that has so far not succeeded. Unfortunately, the fanatics about global warming are getting the edge on this issue and stand to send our civilization into a tailspin. I am not a climate denier, but a Climate Rejector in that I completely dismiss the idea of human-caused climate change. As a geologist for 40 years, I have knowledge and understanding about planetary processes that support my position.
Manmade causes of climate change include
CO2 emissions
SO2 emissions
Urban heat island effect and other albedo changes
inaccurate measurments biased to show more warming
You may be a geologist but you are ignorant about climate science.
People who claim humans have no effect on the climate are just as dumb as those who blame almost every problem on climate change.
I don’t know how one would rate a climate scientist, but one thing they have in common is impotence. They can study the atmosphere all they want but they can’t do anything to tame it. 30+ years of blah blah blah.
The simplist possible climate forecast would be to look at climate change in the past 30 to 50 years and assume that trend will continue for the next 30 to 50 years.
Since 1900, such extrapolation forecasts have been inaccurate.
The obvious conclusion is humans can not predict long term climate trends … but people love predictions … and they really listen when there are predictions of doom … so we have been hearing predictions of climate doom for the past 50 years.
What really matters is the local climate where you live and work.
Here in SE Michigan, USA our winters are much warmer, with much less snow than in the 1970s. We LOVE global warming. Which has had no effect on our summers. In fact, last summer was unusually cool with an unusual amount of rain. We never had to water our lawn. And last winter we snow shoveled our driveway only three times — versus once a week in the 1970s. Once a month versus once a week. We LOVE climate change.
The IPCC said it best. “Climate is a non-linear chaotic system and cannot be modeled.”
Here along the Front Range of Colorado there’s no easy way to tell any trends because the Rockies so affect our weather. Earlier this last week we had temps in the 80s (low 60s is average) but today it is snowing and the next couple of nights will have temps in the teens and highs in the 20s to maybe 30. But by Thursday we will be back to average. We had a very wet and cool temps from mid-May through June. But that’s the way our weather is.
“The temperature increase began at the end of the Little Ice Period.”
I would have thought that the “temperature increase” began from the very depths of the little ice age. Of course there wasn’t too much ‘extra’ carbon dioxide being added during that period of time. “It doesn’t support the consensus, just ignore it.”
The fact that the climate of our planet is always changing does not refute the claim that manmade CO2 emissions are a relatively new climate change variable.
This is te first article this year at Manhattan Contrarian that I have not recommended on my blog with it’s daily list of 24 to 40 good articles by conservative authors.
The first failure is no definition of significant.
The second failure is ignoring a century of lab spectroscopy experiments showing the infrared absorption characteristics of CO2
The third failure is assuming CO2 levels and global average temperature always have to correlate, as if there are not many more climate change variables, both natural and manmade
The fourth failure is using any pre-1970s data to talk about the effects of manmade CO2 emissions when there were low levels of manmade CO2 emissions
This report is a complete failure and proves absolutely nothing
Notice that all those urging us to live a Primitive way are the typical Hollywood elites and Congress Critters(Gore,DiCaprio) that still live in their penthouses and mansions and run up their utility bills into the thousands $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Presumably anybody who believes that there is a direct correlation between increased CO2 emissions and climate change will never own a Rolls-Royce. This is because there is a very clear correlation between that and developing gout.
If human activity really did effect the climate it would been eons ago not just in our Modern age and their getting snow in Montana its going to snow there