The 97 Percent Solution
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by Ian Tuttle October 8, 2015 4:00 AM
@iptuttle
Unable to address Texas senator Ted Cruz’s questions about “the Pause” —
the apparent global-warming standstill, now almost 19 years long — at
Tuesday’s meeting of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Oversight,
Sierra Club president Aaron Mair, after an uncomfortable pause of his
own, appealed to authority: “Ninety-seven percent of scientists concur
and agree that there is global warming and anthropogenic impact,” he
stated multiple times.
The relevant exchange begins at 1:39 (though the whole segment is worth
watching):
The myth of an almost-unanimous climate-change consensus is pervasive.
Last May, the White House tweeted: “Ninety-seven percent of scientists
agree: #climate change is real, man-made and dangerous.” A few days
later, Secretary of State John Kerry announced, “Ninety-seven percent of
the world’s scientists tell us this is urgent.”
“Ninety-seven percent of the world’s scientists” say no such thing.
There are multiple relevant questions: (1) Has the earth generally
warmed since 1800? (An overwhelming majority of scientists assent to
this.) (2) Has that warming been caused primarily by human activity?
And, if (1) and (2), is anthropogenic global warming a problem so
significant that we ought to take action?
In 2004, University of California-San Diego professor Naomi Oreskes
reported that, of 928 scientific abstracts from papers published by
refereed scientific journals between 1993 and 2003, “75% . . . either
explicitly or implicitly accept[ed] the consensus view; 25% dealt with
methods or paleoclimate, taking no position on current anthropogenic
climate change. Remarkably, none of the papers disagreed with the
consensus position.” Also remarkably, the papers chosen excluded several
written by prominent scientists skeptical of that consensus.
Furthermore, the claims made in abstracts — short summaries of academic
papers — often differ from those made in the papers themselves. And
Oreskes’s analysis did not take up whether scientists who subscribe to
anthropogenic global warming think the phenomenon merits changes in
public policy.
RELATED: On Climate, Science and Politics Are Diverging
The “97 percent” statistic first appeared prominently in a 2009 study by
University of Illinois master’s student Kendall Zimmerman and her
adviser, Peter Doran. Based on a two-question online survey, Zimmerman
and Doran concluded that “the debate on the authenticity of global
warming and the role played by human activity is largely nonexistent
among those who understand the nuances and scientific bases of long-term
climate processes” — even though only 5 percent of respondents, or
about 160 scientists, were climate scientists. In fact, the “97 percent”
statistic was drawn from an even smaller subset: the 79 respondents who
were both self-reported climate scientists and had “published more than
50% of their recent peer-reviewed papers on the subject of climate
change.” These 77 scientists agreed that global temperatures had
generally risen since 1800, and that human activity is a “significant
contributing factor.”
A year later, William R. Love Anderegg, a student at Stanford
University, used Google Scholar to determine that “97–98% of the climate
researchers most actively publishing in the field surveyed here support
the tenets of ACC [anthropogenic climate change] outlined by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.” The sample size did not much
improve on Zimmerman and Doran’s: Anderegg surveyed about 200
scientists.
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Surely the most suspicious “97 percent” study was conducted in 2013 by
Australian scientist John Cook — author of the 2011 book Climate Change
Denial: Heads in the Sand and creator of the blog Skeptical Science
(subtitle: “Getting skeptical about global warming skepticism.”). In an
analysis of 12,000 abstracts, he found “a 97% consensus among papers
taking a position on the cause of global warming in the peer-reviewed
literature that humans are responsible.” “Among papers taking a
position” is a significant qualifier: Only 34 percent of the papers Cook
examined expressed any opinion about anthropogenic climate change at
all. Since 33 percent appeared to endorse anthropogenic climate change,
he divided 33 by 34 and — voilà — 97 percent! When David Legates, a
University of Delaware professor who formerly headed the university’s
Center for Climatic Research, recreated Cook’s study, he found that
“only 41 papers — 0.3 percent of all 11,944 abstracts or 1.0 percent of
the 4,014 expressing an opinion, and not 97.1 percent,” endorsed what
Cook claimed. Several scientists whose papers were included in Cook’s
initial sample also protested that they had been misinterpreted.
“Significant questions about anthropogenic influences on climate
remain,” Legates concluded.
RELATED: Scientists Don’t Actually Know What’s Causing ‘Extreme Weather’
Studies showing a wider range of opinion often go unremarked. A 2008
survey by two German scientists, Dennis Bray and Hans von Storch, found
that a significant number of scientists were skeptical of the ability of
existing global climate models to accurately predict global
temperatures, precipitation, sea-level changes, or extreme weather
events even over a decade; they were far more skeptical as the time
horizon increased. Most did express concerns about global warming and a
desire for “immediate action to mitigate climate change” — but not 97
percent.
More Global Warming
The Assault on Science
Climate Hustle: An Impressive, though Flawed, Exposé of Global-Warming
Alarmism
Tale of Two Tribes: ‘Climate Refugees’ vs. EPA Victims
A 2012 poll of American Meteorological Society members also reported a
diversity of opinion. Of the 1,862 members who responded (a quarter of
the organization), 59 percent stated that human activity was the primary
cause of global warming, and 11 percent attributed the phenomenon to
human activity and natural causes in about equal measure, while just
under a quarter (23 percent) said enough is not yet known to make any
determination. Seventy-six percent said that warming over the next
century would be “very” or “somewhat” harmful, but of those, only 22
percent thought that “all” or a “large” amount of the harm could be
prevented “through mitigation and adaptation measures.”
And according to a study of 1,868 scientists working in climate-related
fields, conducted just this year by the PBL Netherlands Environment
Assessment Agency, three in ten respondents said that less than half of
global warming since 1951 could be attributed to human activity, or that
they did not know.
Given the politics of modern academia and the scientific community, it’s
not unlikely that most scientists involved in climate-related studies
believe in anthropogenic global warming, and likely believe, too, that
it presents a problem. However, there is no consensus approaching 97
percent. A vigorous, vocal minority exists. The science is far from
settled.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/425232/climate-change-no-its-not-97-percent-consensus-ian-tuttle
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/425232/climate-change-no-its-not-97-percent-consensus-ian-tuttle
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