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Curzon
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Curzon

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January 17th, 2008

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Forecast: Gloom and Doom

In a follow-up to Younghusband’s post on The Economist stating that climate change would be the big issue of 2008 comes this dated, but relevant, article from the January 1 edition of the New York Times.

Findings
In 2008, a 100 Percent Chance of Alarm
By JOHN TIERNEY - January 1, 2008

You’re in for very bad weather. In 2008, your television will bring you image after frightening image of natural havoc linked to global warming. You will be told that such bizarre weather must be a sign of dangerous climate change — and that these images are a mere preview of what’s in store unless we act quickly to cool the planet.

Unfortunately, I can’t be more specific. I don’t know if disaster will come by flood or drought, hurricane or blizzard, fire or ice. Nor do I have any idea how much the planet will warm this year or what that means for your local forecast. Long-term climate models cannot explain short-term weather.

But there’s bound to be some weird weather somewhere, and we will react like the sailors in the Book of Jonah. When a storm hit their ship, they didn’t ascribe it to a seasonal weather pattern. They quickly identified the cause (Jonah’s sinfulness) and agreed to an appropriate policy response (throw Jonah overboard).

Today’s interpreters of the weather are what social scientists call availability entrepreneurs: the activists, journalists and publicity-savvy scientists who selectively monitor the globe looking for newsworthy evidence of a new form of sinfulness, burning fossil fuels.

A year ago, British meteorologists made headlines predicting that the buildup of greenhouse gases would help make 2007 the hottest year on record. At year’s end, even though the British scientists reported the global temperature average was not a new record — it was actually lower than any year since 2001 — the BBC confidently proclaimed, “2007 Data Confirms Warming Trend.”

When the Arctic sea ice last year hit the lowest level ever recorded by satellites, it was big news and heralded as a sign that the whole planet was warming. When the Antarctic sea ice last year reached the highest level ever recorded by satellites, it was pretty much ignored. A large part of Antarctica has been cooling recently, but most coverage of that continent has focused on one small part that has warmed.

When Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans in 2005, it was supposed to be a harbinger of the stormier world predicted by some climate modelers. When the next two hurricane seasons were fairly calm — by some measures, last season in the Northern Hemisphere was the calmest in three decades — the availability entrepreneurs changed the subject. Droughts in California and Australia became the new harbingers of climate change (never mind that a warmer planet is projected to have more, not less, precipitation over all).

The most charitable excuse for this bias in weather divination is that the entrepreneurs are trying to offset another bias. The planet has indeed gotten warmer, and it is projected to keep warming because of greenhouse emissions, but this process is too slow to make much impact on the public.

When judging risks, we often go wrong by using what’s called the availability heuristic: we gauge a danger according to how many examples of it are readily available in our minds. Thus we overestimate the odds of dying in a terrorist attack or a plane crash because we’ve seen such dramatic deaths so often on television; we underestimate the risks of dying from a stroke because we don’t have so many vivid images readily available.

Slow warming doesn’t make for memorable images on television or in people’s minds, so activists, journalists and scientists have looked to hurricanes, wild fires and starving polar bears instead. They have used these images to start an “availability cascade,” a term coined by Timur Kuran, a professor of economics and law at the University of Southern California, and Cass R. Sunstein, a law professor at the University of Chicago.

The availability cascade is a self-perpetuating process: the more attention a danger gets, the more worried people become, leading to more news coverage and more fear. Once the images of Sept. 11 made terrorism seem a major threat, the press and the police lavished attention on potential new attacks and supposed plots. After Three Mile Island and “The China Syndrome,” minor malfunctions at nuclear power plants suddenly became newsworthy.

Once a cascade is under way, it becomes tough to sort out risks because experts become reluctant to dispute the popular wisdom, and are ignored if they do. Now that the melting Arctic has become the symbol of global warming, there’s not much interest in hearing other explanations of why the ice is melting—or why the globe’s other pole isn’t melting, too.

Global warming has an impact on both polar regions, but they’re also strongly influenced by regional weather patterns and ocean currents. Two studies by NASA and university scientists last year concluded that much of the recent melting of Arctic sea ice was related to a cyclical change in ocean currents and winds, but those studies got relatively little attention—and were certainly no match for the images of struggling polar bears so popular with availability entrepreneurs.

Roger A. Pielke Jr., a professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado, recently noted the very different reception received last year by two conflicting papers on the link between hurricanes and global warming. He counted 79 news articles about a paper in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, and only 3 news articles about one in a far more prestigious journal, Nature.

Guess which paper jibed with the theory — and image of Katrina — presented by Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth”?

It was, of course, the paper in the more obscure journal, which suggested that global warming is creating more hurricanes. The paper in Nature concluded that global warming has a minimal effect on hurricanes. It was published in December — by coincidence, the same week that Mr. Gore received his Nobel Peace Prize.

In his acceptance speech, Mr. Gore didn’t dwell on the complexities of the hurricane debate. Nor, in his roundup of the 2007 weather, did he mention how calm the hurricane season had been. Instead, he alluded somewhat mysteriously to “stronger storms in the Atlantic and Pacific,” and focused on other kinds of disasters, like “massive droughts” and “massive flooding.”

“In the last few months,” Mr. Gore said, “it has been harder and harder to misinterpret the signs that our world is spinning out of kilter.” But he was being too modest. Thanks to availability entrepreneurs like him, misinterpreting the weather is getting easier and easier.

Comments to this entry

Michael Hancock
January 17, 2008
12:58 am
Thanks for posting this article. One more reason why I foam at the mouth when people tell me how great Al Gore is. I strongly recommend the book Cool It, a calm look at the myths and truths of Global Warming as told by an actual environmentalist, not an enviro-activist.
Trampa 22 :: El calentamiento global no será televisado :: January :: 2008
January 17, 2008
11:40 am
[...] esto lo explicaba el 1 de Enero en el New York Times un científico que no parece ser precisamente de la escuela de Bjorn Lomborg, sino un defensor de [...]
ElamBend
January 18, 2008
4:00 am
I have a friend that has worked within the international environmental movement for the last four years. This has involved working with NGOs and national environmental ministries at the highest levels and he was pretty active in the coming together of the Montreal Protocol (which limits anti-ozone agents within existing laws, treaties, etc.).
I disagree with some (okay, a lot) of his environmental beliefs, but am subtle about my disagreement.
He actually attended to the most recent conference at Bali and his unsolicited comments from that trip were enlightening. Without prodding from me, he cast a very cynical tone on the whole venture. His comments were along two lines:
a) many smaller, poorer countries had come to recognize the global warming movement as a chance to squeeze richer countries for money [in the form of development aid so that they can catch up to the first world in terms of low polution]
b) European countries were acting in a very cynical manner by casting the U.S. as the devil while not even living up to their own mandated Kyoto targets.

Finally, he expressed concern about the sheer number of people who showed up at the conference who were very 'fervent' about global warming, yet had very little conception of the science behind it. That is to say it had become a movement and it disturbed him a little.

This phenomenon is quite succinctly summed up by Lexington Green "here":http://www.tdaxp.com/archive/2007/12/19/world-peace.html#c1837340
"Modern mass political movements often have become cisterns for the religious fervor which has drained out of the traditional religions of the world. This is the source of much misery, since eschatological goals cannot be humanly achievable, only frustration and worse can result by attempting to achieve them."
A.R.Yngve
January 18, 2008
3:26 pm
"There's been a storm in..."
"Repent, sinners, the end is nigh!"

I had enough of doomsayers in the 1970s and 1980s. What was it they said again...? Oh yes: in the year 2000 the overpopulated Earth's population would starve to death while they were searcing for gasoline on the roads blocked by the glaciers of the new Ice Age, just before the super powers would unleash global nuclear war for no reason whatsoever.

Or something.
Monte Davis
January 18, 2008
6:58 pm
Tierney's right: there's been a strong religious streak running through environmentalism since the first Earth Day, drawing in all kinds of "penitential" feelings: we're too numerous, too rich, too heedless, too corporate and globalized and oil-addicted, and nature (standing in for older deities) will surely punish us!

It would be nice if when you stripped all that away, there was nothing left to be concerned about: no hard core of undisputed data and atmospheric physics, no consistently improving (if always imperfect) models and projections, no additional Germany's worth of coal power generation being added in China and India every year.

Unfortunately, the numbers don't care how many irrelevant culture-war arguments each side layers onto its position. They are what they are. They're changing in the direction they're changing. And they will continue to do so no matter how vehemently (or even accurately) anyone says "you're worried [or not worried] about the numbers for the *wrong reason.*"
» Una buena cr
January 19, 2008
10:08 am
[...] d
jim
January 19, 2008
8:22 pm
I've still yet to see serious evidence presented that the costs of global warming will be very high. Or that the costs of preventing global warming would not be vastly higher than the costs of global warming. A cure worse than the poison is not sound policy.

Yes, I know Al Gore shows pictures of Manhattan underwater, but that was obvious nonsense. Mild temp rise and mild sea level rise will be adapted to and dealt with, just like in the past.

Kyoto was basically a joke, given that even incurring it's costs wouldn't do anything to affect global warming.

It's all a show to gain political advantage. Nobody on the mainstream Left is willing to implement draconian enough policies to really effect global emissions.

All that's happened in the last two decades is 1) a lot of older Communist era plants in eastern europe have been shuttered and 2) the West has shifted a lot of dirtier manufacturing to China and the developing world.

We'll be fine. It's 98% nutter hype by the eco-crazies. Who don't even believe their own lies judging by how they live their life. Besides the core of the enviro ethic is deeply anti-human, anti-progress and basically evil. The enviros stand against practically everything good since the Enlightenment. It's a Rousseauian backlash against progress, technology, and modern civilization.

There's also a non-trivial watermelon factor. And the petty tyranny of the progressive busy-bodies.

The enviros do impressively unite most of the anti-human, anti-progress, anti-freedom forces in the world today. So that's something.
John Datson
January 20, 2008
3:22 am
The real question is: Why are so many Americans in denial about the fact of global warming? Here we have a bunch of arrogant non-scientists who assume they know better than the vast majority of the world's climate scientists.

I agree that there is a obsessive, quasi-religious irrationality to some of the rhetoric of certain persons, but Monte above has it right. The doomsday predictions may not come about, but mankind is slowly but surely changing the world in which he lives. The questions relating to the way in which this change will occur and what consequences it will hold for us cannot really be answered, but they must be asked, and not merely be swept under the carpet.

Let me ask you this: Given that climate change is a fact, and all prejudices aside, is it not better to proceed cautiously and try to mitigate/retard the changes that are probably coming, at least until we can really do something about them?
One can only assume that the posters above have not followed the scientific debate on climate change.
Michael
January 20, 2008
4:34 am
“Modern mass political movements often have become cisterns for the religious fervor which has drained out of the traditional religions of the world. This is the source of much misery, since eschatological goals cannot be humanly achievable, only frustration and worse can result by attempting to achieve them.”

Assuming such religious fervor cannot be done away with altogether, what would the best (or least worst) place to put such energies?
Michael Hancock
January 20, 2008
11:59 pm
Cool it.
Amenazas y mercados » Ecoperiodico
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[...] la amenaza de la guerra ciertamente produce muchos beneficios a algunos. Pero en el otro lado, vender la amenaza del medio ambiente también genera enormes beneficios, y no solo está bien visto, si no que el escenario de la lucha, y por tanto el mercado, es mucho [...]