| Interview with Dr. Fred Singer 
 Fred Singer:
 
 He   is an atmospheric physicist at George Mason University and founder of   the Science and Environmental Policy Project, a think tank on climate   and environmental issues. Singer has been a leading skeptic of the   scientific consensus on global warming. He points out that the scenarios   are alarmist, computer models reflect real gaps in climate knowledge,   and future warming will be inconsequential or modest at most.
 
 Some   people hold that the threat of climate change is so great that we need   to fundamentally change the way we produce and use energy. What's your   response to this view
 
 Climate change is a natural  phenomenon.  Climate keeps changing all the time. The fact that climate  changes is  not in itself a threat, because, obviously, in the past  human beings  have adapted to all kinds of climate changes.
 
 The  argument is  that there's a new cause for climate change, which is human  beings. And  that the dimensions of this change might exceed what is  natural or  normal.
 
 Well, there's no question in my mind that  humanity is  able to affect climate on a local scale. We all know that  cities are  warmer than the suburbs or surrounding countryside. So  there's clear  indication that human beings, in producing energy, in  just living,  generate heat. We're not going to go back to living  without energy.
 
 Whether  or not human beings can produce a global  climate change is an important  question. This question is not at all  settled. It can only be settled  by actual measurements, data. And the  data are ambiguous. For example,  the data show that the climate warmed  between 1900 and 1940, long before  humanity used much energy. But then  the climate cooled between 1940 and  1975. Then it warmed again for a  very short period of time, for about  five years. But since 1979, our  best measurements show that the climate  has been cooling just slightly.  Certainly, it has not been warming.
 
 The surface record, however, continues to go up.
 
 The   surface record continues to go up. But you have to be very careful  with  the surface record. It is taken with thermometers that are mostly   located in or near cities. And as cities expand, they get warmer. And   therefore they affect the readings. And it's very difficult to eliminate   this--what's called the urban heat island effect. So I personally   prefer to trust in weather satellites.
 
 You've got one record   that goes back 100 years, which has got imperfections in data gathering,   and then you've got a much shorter record that also has questions  about  data gathering, the satellite record. From a statistical point of  view,  you get more power out of a longer record than a shorter record,  don't  you?
 
 A longer record, in general, will give you more  statistical  power, if there is a general overall trend. But, in fact,  the surface  record also shows a cooling. So, which part of the surface  record are  you going to believe? The part before 1940, that shows a  warming, or the  part after 1940, that shows a cooling? See, that's the  dilemma.
 
 The  curve--as the climate modelers have it--has three  segments. They would  say there was a warming, a cooling, and a sharp  warming now...they would  say...on the land surface. And that's their  problem.
 
 Well,  since we're using models to predict the  future--and the only way you can  predict the future is to use  models--the important question is: Can  these models be validated by  observations? And the models very clearly  show that the climate right  now should be warming at about the rate of  one degree Fahrenheit per  decade, in the middle troposphere, that is,  above the surface. But  that's not what the observations show. So until  the observations and  the models agree, or until one or the other is  resolved, it's very  difficult for people--and for myself, of course--to  believe in the  predictive power of the current models. Now, the models  are getting  better. And perhaps in ten years we will have models that  can be  trusted, that is, that agree with actual observations.
 
 Let's  go  back to the basic physical principles. People like John Tyndall did   experiments in the nineteenth century, where he filled tubes with   different gases and found that certain trace gases--CO2  and also gases  like water vapor-- had the ability to block infrared  radiation. And that  basic physics suggests the natural greenhouse  effect takes advantage of  this, suggests that part of the reason we  have the climate we have is  because of that, and that if you added to  it continually and for long  enough, you would increase the optical  thickness of these gases and,  therefore, would trap more heat in the  system. From that standpoint, you  don't deviate, do you?
 
 There's  nothing wrong with the basic  physics. There's nothing wrong with  laboratory physics, with  measurements taken in the laboratory. They can  be made very precisely,  and under controlled conditions.  Unfortunately, the atmosphere is not a  laboratory that you can put into  a building and control. The atmosphere  is much more complicated.
 
 For example, as carbon dioxide  increases, you would expect a warming.  But at the same time that you get  this warming or this slight warming,  you get more evaporation from the  ocean. That's inevitable. Everyone  agrees with that. Now, what is the  effect of this additional water  vapor in the atmosphere? Will it enhance  the warming, as the models now  calculate? Or will it create clouds,  which will reflect solar  radiation and reduce the warming? Or will it do  something else? You  see, the clouds are not captured by the models.  Models are not good  enough to either depict clouds or to even discuss  the creation of  clouds in a proper way. So it's not possible at this  time to be sure  how much warming one will get from an increase in carbon  dioxide.
 
 I  personally believe that there should be some slight  warming. But I  think the warming will be much less than the current  models predict.  Much less. And I think it will be barely detectable.  Perhaps it will be  detectable, perhaps not. And it certainly will not be  consequential.  That is, it won't make any difference to people. After  all, we get  climate changes by 100 degrees Fahrenheit in some places on  the earth.  So what difference does a 1-degree change make over 100  years?
 
 Well,  for instance, it might increase the size of oceans  through thermal  expansion. So, over time, it would increase the water  levels, which  have been increasing naturally.
 
 There's no question  that if the  ocean warms, the water will expand and sea level will rise.  But that's  just one factor. Another factor is that mountain glaciers  will tend to  melt and, therefore, add water to rivers, and rivers will  add the water  to the ocean, and that also will produce a rise.
 
 But   counterbalancing this is the fact that more water will evaporate from   the ocean because it's now warmer. And this will come down as rain all   over the earth. And some of the rain will come down over the Antarctic,   where it will turn into ice and accumulate. Then the question is: Which   is more important, the accumulation of ice --which will lower sea  level  because it takes water from the ocean and puts it on the ice  cap--or,  the other factors that raise sea level? You can't decide these  questions  by theory. You have to do measurements.
 
 I have now  looked at  the measurements and have analyzed them, and I find that the   accumulation of ice is more important. And, in fact, when I look at the   data from the early part of the century, when there was a strong   warming--I forget what caused it, but there was a strong warming between   1900 and 1940--during the same time, sea level actually fell. So we   have, you might say, an experimental verification. We have a check on   the idea that accumulation of ice will be more important if there is a   modest warming. Of course, if the warming is extreme, and melts all the   ice caps, all bets are off. But no one is talking about that.
 
 So,   basically, the issue depends on the kinds of particular feedbacks that   are operating. And the fact you've said-- it's so complicated and   nonlinear--that a warming can produce a cooling, a cooling can produce a   warming, all kinds of things like that can happen. But it is possible   in principle to have forcings that are powerful enough to  dominate. For  example, there have been times in history when it's been  very much  warmer than now, where there's been more CO2.
 
 In principle, you  can get forcings that will produce strong warming, and you get forcings   that produce strong cooling. For example, a volcanic eruption produces  a  strong cooling. No question about this. Changes in solar radiation  can  produce warming or cooling, depending on which way the change is  going.  But the feedbacks are the most important part. And these  feedbacks are  not properly described by models, because we don't  understand how they  work. That means we have to do a great deal of  physical research on the  atmosphere--that is, more observations--to  discover what the feedbacks  are, which way they operate. Are they  positive feedbacks that enhance  the warming, or are they negative  feedbacks that diminish the warming?  And the evidence, as far as I can  tell, seems to be that the negative  feedbacks must be important,  because we do not see the warming that's  expected from the current rise  in carbon dioxide.
 
 Some people  would say that we've got inertias in the system. All we're seeing are  delays caused by other anthropogenic forcings  we're putting into the  atmosphere--like aerosols--either directly or  producing clouds...or  ocean lag in the system...and that actually the  lack of warming isn't a  cause for complacency. It's really a worry,  because when it comes, it  will be hard to get out of. What about that  as an argument?
 
 We  have to distinguish between delays, which  have their cause in the heat  capacity of the ocean. That's one issue.  But we also must look carefully  at other human activities that can  produce a cooling, like the  production of aerosols. How are aerosols  produced? Well, one way is to  burn coal and release a lot of sulphur  into the atmosphere. Fortunately,  now we [are] beginning to use clean  coal. We're actually taking the  sulphur out of the smokestacks so that  the aerosol production is no  longer as important. Also biomass burning,  burning of forests, produces a  lot of smoke and particulates in the  atmosphere. Agriculture disturbs  the land surface so that winds can  then pick up dust. And dust in the  atmosphere is another aerosol.
 
 All  of these particles in the  atmosphere have some effect on climate. Some  will cause a cooling. Some  will cause a warming. Different particles  act in different ways. Depends  on whether the particles are black  (soot), in which case they absorb  solar energy, or whether they're  reflecting...whether they reflect solar  energy back into space. That  has to be done carefully.
 
 One of  the leading climate modelists  is Jim Hanson. He actually was the man  who, ten years ago, went out on  a limb and said he was sure the enhanced  greenhouse effect was here.  He now says we can't really tell. He says  the forcings are so uncertain that they're much more important than the  climate models. In other words, until we get the forcings straight, the  climate-model predictions are not worth very much. That is basically  what he said.
 
 But  there's this argument: Yes, the aerosols are  there and might  counteract some of the enhanced greenhouse effect. But,  they will be  washed out within a few days and, therefore, wouldn't  continue to  accumulate in the way that CO2 does. CO2  stays around for  100 years. Therefore, the two things really aren't in  balance. They  might balance for a bit, but over a long period of time,  if you go on  producing CO2, this will concentrate, while  the other will get washed  out. And if you look ahead and project the  use of fossil fuels, isn't it  going to overwhelm the other forcing  factors?
 
 Aerosols have a  very short lifetime in the atmosphere,  measured typically in a matter of  a week, two weeks, something like  that. And then they rain out, or they  fall out. Carbon dioxide has a  lifetime measured in decades. Some of it  survives even beyond 100  years. So if carbon dioxide effects were  important, then they would  eventually predominate.
 
 But the  question is: Are they important  in relation to the aerosol effects? Or,  put it this way: Are the  aerosol effects hiding the effect of carbon  dioxide now? We can tell.  We can find an answer to this, because we can  look for fingerprints in  the climate record. Since aerosols are mostly  emitted in the northern  hemisphere, where industrial activities are  rampant, we would expect  the northern hemisphere to be warming less  quickly than the southern  hemisphere. In fact, we would expect the  northern hemisphere to be  cooling. But the data show the opposite. Both  the surface data and the  satellite data agree that, in the last 20  years, the northern  hemisphere has warmed more quickly than the southern  hemisphere. So it  contradicts the whole idea that aerosols make an  important difference.
 
 This is very embarrassing to the  modelists,  because they have been using the aerosol as an excuse to  explain why  the models do not agree with observations. I suggest that  they now will  have to look for another excuse.
 
 Talk about the models. What is a computer model, and what isn't it? What is its purpose in science?
 
 There   are many kinds of computer models. But the ones that people mostly  talk  about these days are the giant models that try to model the whole   global atmosphere in a three-dimensional way. These models calculate   important parameters at different points around the globe--and these   points are roughly 200 miles apart--and at different levels of the   atmosphere. You can see that if you only calculate temperature, winds,   and so on at intervals of 200 miles, then you cannot depict clouds, or   even cloud systems, which are much smaller. So until the models have a   good enough resolution to be capable of depicting clouds, it's very   difficult to put much faith in them.
 
 But, still, they're playing   quite an important role in this debate. Take me through a history of   what the models have predicted. You've alluded to this, and how some of   their predictions have had to be scaled down. What can models do, and   what can't they do?
 
 You have to understand that these models are   calibrated to produce the seasons. That is to say, the models are   adjusted until they produce the present climate and the seasonal change.
 
 So they're faked, you're saying?
 
 They're  tweaked. I  think that's a polite way of putting it. They're adjusted,  or tweaked,  until they produce the present climate and the present  short-term  variation. You have to also understand there's something  like two dozen  climate models in the world. And one question to ask is:  Do they agree?  And the answer is: They do not. And these models are  all produced by  excellent meteorologists, fantastic computers. Why do  they not agree?  Why do some models predict a warming for a doubling of CO2,  of, let's  say, five degrees Centigrade--which is eight degrees  Fahrenheit)--and  why do other models predict something like one degree?
 
 Well,  there's a reason for this. These models differ in the  way they depict  clouds, primarily. In some models, clouds produce an  additional warming.  In some models, clouds produce a cooling. Which  models are correct?  There's no way of telling. Each modeler thinks that  his model is the  best. So I think we all have to wait until the  dispersion in the model  results shrinks a little bit--until they start  to agree with each other.
 
 What happens when you use these models to try and reproduce  past climates, when other forcings are known, like ice ages and so  forth? Can they succeed at that?
 
 They  fail spectacularly in  explaining, for example, why an ice age starts,  or why an ice age stops.  The most recent result on this was published  in early 1999. It's always  been known that, for example, the  deglaciation--that is, the transition  from an ice age to the warm  interglacial, which is  spectacular--suddenly the ice age ends and the  warming starts. And at  the same time, you see an increase in carbon  dioxide in the record. And  these are records taken from ice cores--good  measurements.
 
 They go up and down together.
 
 Well,   you certainly find an association between carbon dioxide changes and   temperature changes. Now, scientists have been very careful to just call   it an association without identifying which is the cause and which is   the effect. Politicians have been less careful. In fact, our Vice   President, Al Gore, has a standard presentation where he shows the   results of the Antarctic ice core (called the Vostok core), and you see   changes in temperature and changes in carbon dioxide. And he points to   this and says, "You see? These carbon dioxide changes caused a   temperature increase in the past."
 
 Well, it's not so. In fact,   in early 1999, there was a paper in Science in which they have now   gotten adequate resolution so they can measure which came first, the   temperature change or the carbon dioxide change. And guess what? The   temperature change came first, followed by the carbon dioxide change   about 600 years later. This means that something changed the   temperature, not the carbon dioxide. But then as the climate warmed,   more carbon dioxide apparently was released from the ocean into the   atmosphere.
 
 Which could of course, in principle, make a feedback.
 
 Yes,   I would expect so. But how much of a feedback, we cannot tell. In  other  words, we're back again to the question of how much of a  temperature  increase is produced by a change in carbon dioxide.
 
 But to go back to my question: What can the models do? Can they take an era and plug in some figures and reproduce what happens?
 
 A   number of researchers have actually tried to reproduce past climates,   using models. And to some extent, they've been successful. And to   another extent, they have not been successful, in the sense that you   cannot derive what is called the climate sensitivity. In other words,   what we really are after is some way of valiating these models. We'd   like to know how much of a temperature change is produced if carbon   dioxide doubles in the atmosphere? That's called the climate   sensitivity. What is the climate sensitivity? As I've mentioned earlier,   it can range from as little as one degree in some models to as much as   five degrees Centigrade, which equals eight degrees Fahrenheit, in  other  models. That's a big difference, a huge difference.
 
 Which  of  these numbers is correct, if any? You cannot just take the median  or the  average. There's no reason why the average should be correct.  Maybe  it's the high number; maybe it's the low number. We don't know.  We need  to find out by making observations and understanding really  what happens  in the atmosphere.
 
 Some say we don't have the time  for that,  and that it would be prudent, since this is at least a  plausible  scenario, that we do something about it now, because as you  said, these  measurements are very difficult to take. You need to do it  over a long  period of time and very accurately. It might take fifteen,  twenty,  twenty-five years. Should we do nothing until that point?
 
 Well,   the question is what you mean by "doing" something. I'm not a great   believer in buying insurance if the risks are small and the premiums are   high. Nobody in his right mind would do that. But this is the case   here. We're being asked to buy an insurance policy against a risk that   is very small, if at all, and pay a very heavy premium. We're being   asked to reduce energy use, not just by a few percent but, according to   the Kyoto Protocol, by about 35 percent within ten years. That means   giving up one-third of all energy use, using one-third less electricity,   throwing out one-third of all cars perhaps. It would be a huge   dislocation of our economy, and it would hit people very hard,   particularly people who can least afford it.
 
 For what? All the   Kyoto Protocol would do is to slightly reduce the current rate of   increase of carbon dioxide. And in fact, the UN Science Advisory Group   has published their results. And they clearly show that the Kyoto   Protocol would reduce, if it went into effect and were punctiliously   observed by all of the countries that have to observe it--by the year   2050, --about 50 years from now--it would reduce the calculated   temperature increase by .05 degrees Centigrade. That amount is not even   measurable. So this is what you are being asked to buy.
 
 With   regard to that range of model predictions, from one to five degrees:   Even if we assumed the climate was not very sensitive, clearly a   doubling of CO2 is bound to happen in the next century,  and probably a  trebling after that. If you look at the growth rates in  population and  the growth rates in standard of living that are  plausible, and if you  look at the dependence on fossil energy, which is  definite--85 percent  to 90 percent)--it seems very likely that you  would treble and probably  quadruple. At what stage does even a low  sensitivity climate become  vulnerable to climate change? There has to  come a point when the forcing  of greenhouse gases would become  significant. Do you accept that? Would  there come a point when you'd  have concern?
 
 Let me deal first of  all with the question of the  future levels of carbon dioxide in the  atmosphere. The fact is that  people disagree about this. Some good  experts believe that carbon  dioxide will never even double [in/near] the  atmosphere. They believe  that the so-called decarbonization of our  economy, which has been  ongoing for some time, will continue. That is,  we will use less and  less fossil fuels to produce a unit of GNP.
 
 They  also believe  that fossil fuels will become more expensive as they  become depleted,  and that therefore in a very natural way nonfossil  fuels will be used  to produce energy. Nuclear energy is a good example.  Nuclear energy  produces no carbon dioxide whatsoever. And now nuclear  energy is in bad  repute in the United States and in some other  countries. But in  France, it produces 75 percent of electricity. In  Japan, they've just  decided to build 20 more nuclear reactors in the  next ten years, which  would increase their electricity capacity by 50  percent, all nuclear.
 
 However,  the two largest countries for  population, India and China, have  enormous dependence on coal. Most  economists agree that as they expand,  they will burn a lot of coal and  produce a lot of CO2, and much more than the U.S. probably in thirty to  fifty years. So, in the short term, I don't see grounds for optimism  that CO2 won't go into the atmosphere.
 
 I'm  not a prophet. I  don't try to predict what the carbon dioxide levels  will be in the  future. But I can read and report on work that's being  published. And  certainly China and India, particularly China, will  continue to increase  its carbon dioxide emissions, no matter what we  do. And this will soon  dominate the world emissions, probably by the  year 2010, at least by the  year 2020. And beyond this, it really  doesn't matter what we do. It  will be determined by how many people are  living in China and India, how  much energy they consume, and whether  or not they use coal or other  fossil fuels. I think that's a given. The  question is: Why should we be  concerned about it? Is the carbon  dioxide level in the atmosphere any  sort of danger to us?
 
 That  was my question. The model scenario  you give is for a doubling. If we  had a trebling or a quadrupling, is  there a stage at which even an  insensitive model produces a climate  change that you would get serious  about? Because clearly, a five-degree  change is pretty significant,  true?
 
 Well, as I mentioned  earlier, I have no doubt that an  increase in carbon dioxide in the  atmosphere should lead to some  increase in global temperatures. The  question is: How much? We do have  some way of getting a handle on this  problem, because carbon dioxide  levels have already increased by 50  percent since the beginning of the  industrial era--let's say, in the  last hundred years. So where is the  temperature increase from this? Why  don't we see it? This is the way to  ask the question.
 
 And how  can we be sure that any temperature  increase that we do find in the  record is in fact due to this  additional carbon dioxide? Since we know  that the climate also changes  naturally--it warms, it cools)--how can  you distinguish a warming  produced by an increase in carbon dioxide from  a warming produced by  some other cause--let's say, by the sun? These  are important issues  that need to be settled.
 
 But let me go a  step further and ask:  Supposing carbon dioxide does increase by a factor  of four,  five--mention any number you wish. What has happened in the  past? We  have geologic evidence that carbon dioxide levels were twenty  times as  large during the fossil record as in the last 600 million  years, and  have been decreasing steadily. So carbon dioxide levels have  been  decreasing. The earth has experienced much, much higher levels than  we  have today, without any apparent ill effects, because life developed   quite well. In fact, it blossomed forth at the beginning of the   Cambrian period.
 
 And the only thing we are concerned about is   carbon dioxide levels becoming too low, because if carbon dioxide levels   were to fall below, let's say, one-half of the present level, as they   almost did during the last ice age...if they were to fall below  one-half  of the present level, then plants would be in real trouble.  After all,  carbon dioxide is plant food. Without carbon dioxide in the  atmosphere,  plants would disappear. And so would animals. And so would  human beings.  In other words, we do have a stake, a vested interest in  making sure  that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere does not fall to low  levels. High  levels of carbon dioxide should not concern us. They will  make plants  grow faster. They will make agriculture become more  productive. They  will encourage more diversity of animals, and they'll  make for a better  life for human beings. Obviously, lower costs for  food, more food, is a  better situation than higher costs and less food.
 
 Some  climatologists have argued that while there was indeed more CO2  if you  go back to when the dinosaurs lived, since there's been ice in  the  world--since the last few million years--there's never been this  much.  And if we go up higher, it's the combination of CO2  and ice that's the  issue. And then they would add to the argument that  also the world has  huge numbers of people on it, therefore it's less  adaptable than perhaps  it was before, in terms of consequence.
 
 I  think to argue that  the world is less adaptable because it has huge  numbers of people is a  specious argument. I think adaptability has to  do with technology.  Obviously, if people could adapt during the Ice  Age, as they did to very  low temperatures, and during the previous  interglacial--let's say,  120,000 years ago--they certainly should be  able to adapt to almost any  climate change that we can imagine, because  we have the technology to do  so. And also, people can move, and do  move. If we look at the historic  record--let's say, the last 3,000  years--we see that during the cold  periods, people really suffered.  During the Little Ice Age, from around  1400 to 1800 or 1850, things  were really cold in Europe, and we have  records of this. Harvests  failed. Food became scarce. People starved.  There was much disease. It  was a miserable period.
 
 Before that,  we had what's called the  medieval climate optimum--notice the word  "optimum" used by  climatologists here. The climate was warmer around the  year 1100. The  Vikings were able to settle Greenland, actually grow  crops in  Greenland, and life was good in Europe. Cathedrals were being  built.  There was plenty of food, plenty of surplus. So I think the  historic  record clearly shows that a warmer period is better for human  beings  than a colder period. And I would be much more afraid of adapting  to a  coming ice age than adapting to a coming warmer period.
 
 Another   argument sometimes made comes under the rubric of surprises--that there   have been these sudden temperature shifts in history, particularly  when  you're coming out of an ice age--some people have tried to link  them to  changes in ocean circulation--where you get maybe ten-,  fifteen-,  twenty-degree drops within a matter of a decade. And the  argument  sometimes is put that this proves that the climate system is  unstable at  some level, that it can be perturbed to switch states  quickly, and that  we're messing with fire, because maybe what you're  saying is true, but  we might just hit it and trigger it, causing a big  change. What do you  think of that argument?
 
 Well, climate does  change rapidly at  times. But I think you should note that this all  happened without any  human intervention. Actually, we do have historic  records again of  climate changes that were faster and greater than  anything predicted by  the UN science group. For example we have records  from ocean sediments  with very good resolution, where we can actually  resolve the  temperatures that existed year by year. And we see climate  changes that  are really quite fast, without any human intervention. So I  think these  sorts of climate changes will keep occurring.
 
 Now, it's  interesting that the variability of climate is greater when the climate  is cold and when CO2  content is low. It's just a historic fact. When you  analyze the data,  you find that the variability of climate during the  last ice age was  much greater than it is during the present warm  interglacial. So if you  believe this, it would argue that we should have  a warmer climate with  more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, because it  will make the  climate more stable.
 
 While there are scientists  who hold views  similar to yours on this subject, there are a very large  number who  don't. I want your reflections on what's happened in terms of  the way  this has played out with the intergovernmental panel on change,  with  the statements that a majority of scientists believe this or that,   because there are a lot of scientists who feel very passionately there   is an issue here. What do you think has been going on? Because there's a   tremendous amount of people involved in modeling, an activity which  you  think is fairly limited in terms of what it's delivered so far. How  are  they getting away with it?
 
 Well, when you start talking  about  the question of scientific consensus, I think one should be very  careful  to say, first of all, that science is not decided by vote. I  don't take  a poll and then determine what is the correct answer.  Science is  decided by observations that either confirm or deny a  theory, a  hypothesis. And if they confirm the theory, you go on to the  next set of  observations and see whether it still holds. And if it  works against  the hypothesis, you try to develop a new hypothesis.
 
 That's how science makes progress.
 
 And,   in fact, historically, every bit of scientific progress has come about   because the observations or the experimental facts did not support the   current theory. And, usually, these new experiments were done by a  small  group, or the new theory was proposed by a single individual,  even.  Take Albert Einstein, as an example, against the great opposition  of the  large scientific community. But science is a wonderful subject.  It  works itself out. The truth eventually emerges. So, this is my  preface.
 
 In  the climate business, the situation is more  complicated because there  are also political factors involved, and  frankly, there's also money  involved. This is an unusual situation.  There's no politics attached to  the theory of relativity, for example.  But there is to climate science.  There are no large sums of money  attached to relativity, but there are  to climate science.
 
 The  federal government pumps about $2  billion a year into climate research.  Now, this money has to be spent by  someone. It supports a lot of jobs.  It supports a lot of people. And  inevitably, many of these people  begin to feel that what they're doing  is tremendously important and  vital. Otherwise, they couldn't really  live with themselves. They've  talked themselves into the fact that the  work they're doing is somehow  helping humanity deal with some kind of a  problem.
 
 You're not saying they're dishonest, are you?
 
 I'm   not saying that they're dishonest at all. No. No one has been caught   falsifying data. No one has been caught falsifying calculations. But   inevitably, when you have a particular point of view--(and this works   both ways--you tend to suppress facts or data that disagree with your   point of view, and you tend to favor data, observations that support   your point of view. You become selective in the way you present your   observations.
 
 Take an example. Take the UN Science Advisory   Group, the IPCC. In their report--which is a very good report, by the   way...which is close to 600 pages without an index, so no one really   reads it except dedicated people like me--there's a five-page summary of   the report that everyone reads, including politicians and the media.   And if you look through the summary, you will find no mention of the   fact that the weather satellite observations of the last twenty years   show no global warming. In fact, a slight cooling. In fact, you will not   even find satellites mentioned in the summary.
 
 Now, why is   that? These are the only global observations we have. These are the best   observations we have. They cover the whole globe. The surface   observations don't cover the whole globe. They leave out large chunks of   the globe. They don't cover the oceans very well, which is 70 percent   of the globe. So you see, the summary uses data selectively, or at  least  it suppresses data that are inconvenient, that disagree with the   paradigm, with what they're trying to prove. This happens often,   unfortunately.
 
 Now, you'll also notice that people who are   skeptical about global warming generally do not have government support   for their work. They don't have to write proposals to government   agencies to get money. They tend to be people who have other sources of   income. They might even be retired and live on pensions, or they might   [have] other sources of income that do not depend on writing research   proposals to federal agencies. And if you look at research proposals to   federal agencies, you will find that people who write a proposal  saying,  "I'm going to do research to show that global warming is not a  real  threat"...they're not likely to get funding from any of the  government  agencies.
 
 Do you think, then, this is no longer operating as "normal" science, that there's some kind of pathological mechanism here?
 
 I   think climate science is on its way to becoming pathological, to   becoming abnormal in the sense that it is being guided by the money   that's being made available to people. I don't blame people for   accepting money. And the people who take the money and do research, by   and large, are doing very competent research. [But] you'll find them   very careful not to speak out against the global warming "threat"--(I'm   putting "threat" in quotes, of course. And you'll find also that when   they do speak out, as many of them do, they suffer consequences. They   lose support. And I can give you examples of that. Or they have other   consequences that are equally disagreeable. And if you're a young   professor at a university and want to get tenure, or if you want to get a   permanent academic position, you must do published research. And to do   published research, you must write proposals to get money to do the   research. So you're locked into a vicious spiral here. You have to go   along with the current wisdom that global warming is a threat.   Otherwise, you're not going to get the job that you want.
 
 If   you're right and they're wrong, then is what they're doing falsifiable?   If, for instance, the next ten years was unusually cold, would that  make  them give up their theory?
 
 The climate business doesn't  work the  way laboratory science does. If the next ten years turn out to  be cold,  this by itself does not prove anything. It just makes it less  likely  that global warming is important. Because people will say,  "Well, now  instead of having 20 years of satellite data, we have 30  years of  satellite data." They'll say, "Well, that's not really long  enough. We  need 100 years of satellite data that show cooling." And  inevitably  during the next 100 years, you're going to have some  warming, because  the climate is constantly changing. Certainly it will  change as the  solar radiation becomes stronger or weaker. And we know  solar radiation  does fluctuate on an 11-year cycle and on longer  cycles.
 
 But my  question is: What could convince you that you  were wrong? What could  convince them they were wrong? What could  actually resolve this debate  to the satisfaction of honest scientists?  If people can always interpret  what happened within their model, how do  you resolve it?
 
 I think  that we would have to try to get the  models to become better, and try  to find more specific fingerprints-as I  call them-- in the observations  that can either be verified or  falsified by models. And the global  average temperature simply isn't  good enough. It has to be based on  geographic variation, or variation  with altitude, or temporal variation,  or much more detailed  measurements. Certainly we know that the models  do not agree amongst  themselves. So I think the first step is to find  out why this is so,  and work very hard to at least resolve the  differences between  [models], and then try to resolve differences  between models and  observations.
 
 I want to finally get at this  mix-up some people  have between weather and climate. When we see Al Gore  standing in front  of forest fires in Florida, or talking about the  droughts in Texas, or  people saying, "Last July was extremely hot," does  this constitute  evidence of global warming? Or, the hot summer of  1998--is that  evidence of global warming? Yes or no? What's going on  there?
 
 A  hot summer, a warm winter, is no evidence for global  warming. Don't  forget, we've had a warm winter in the United States, but  temperatures  in Europe and Russia were extremely cold. Of course, we  don't hear  about this because we read American papers describing weather  in the  United States.
 
 So all of these observations that we are   bombarded with tend to be anecdotal. And if we have cold weather, that   doesn't mean that an ice age is coming. But if we have many, many cold   periods in succession, as we did, for example, between 1940 and 1975,   where even global temperatures were decreasing, then people become quite   concerned--and I do remember this period--about a coming ice age. And   it's interesting that many of the kind of people who are now concerned   about a coming global warming catastrophe were then concerned about a   coming global cooling catastrophe.
 
 And what was their   recommendation? Government has to do something about this. The National   Academy of Sciences published a report in 1971, saying, as best as I   recall, that a coming ice age was a definite probability within the next   hundred years. The National Academy of Sciences...supposedly a   collection of the best scientific minds to deal with this issue.   Naturally, they're not--they're only as good as the particular panel   that was chosen to do this work.
 
 Anything else? . . .
 
 Let   me say something about this idea of scientific consensus. Well, you   really shouldn't go by numbers. I think it's significant to straighten   out misconceptions. One misconception is that 2,500 IPCC scientists   agree that global warming is coming, and it's going to be two degrees   Centigrade by the year 2100. That's just not so. In the first place, if   you count the names in the IPCC report, it's less than 2,000. If you   count the number of climate scientists, it's about 100. If you then ask   how many of them agree, the answer is: You can't tell because there was   never a poll taken. These scientists actually worked on the report.  They  agree with the report, obviously, in particular with the chapter  that  they wrote. They do not necessarily agree with the summary,  because the  summary was written by a different group, a handful of  government  scientists who had a particular point of view, and they  extracted from  the report those facts that tended to support their  point of view.
 
 For  example, they came up with a conclusion--the  only conclusion of this  1996 report--that there's a discernible human  influence on climate. I  don't know what that means. Nobody really knows  what that means. On the  one hand, it's easy to agree with a statement  "a discernible human  influence on global climate." Sure, why not?  Nights are getting warmer.  Maybe that's it. On the other hand, it  certainly does not mean--as  politicians think it does--it does not mean  that the climate models have  been validated, that there's going to be a  major warming in the next  century. It does not mean that. And they  don't say that. They just imply  it.
 
 If people can't rely on  statements like "most scientists  agree" and so forth, like that, with  an issue of this complexity, how  are they supposed to come to an  opinion on it?
 
 How should people  come to some conclusion when  scientists disagree? I think this is a  problem that people will have to  ask themselves. They'll have to say:  What happens in the worst case?  Supposing the scientists who say it will  warm are correct, is that good  or bad? And the answer is: If it warms,  it will be good. So what is  the concern, really? Even if the warming  should take place, and the  warming will be noticeable...if that should  be the case, if it is  measurable, that does not mean that it is  economically damaging. In  fact, the opposite is true.
 
 But you  might get, for instance,  flooding in Bangladesh or in the [Maldive]  Islands, or in southern  United States. Those have to be scenarios. If  you have a warming  up,four or five degrees, those are possibilities,  aren't they?
 
 We  have to ask, what is the impact of a warmer  climate? It's not the  warming itself that we should be concerned about.  It is the impact. So  we have to then ask: What is the impact on  agriculture? The answer is:  It's positive. It's good. What's the impact  on forests of greater  levels of CO2 and greater temperatures? It's good.  What  is the impact on water supplies? It's neutral. What is the impact  on  sea level? It will produce a reduction in sea-level rise. It will not   raise sea levels. What is the impact on recreation? It's mixed. You   get, on the one hand, perhaps less skiing; on the other hand, you get   more sunshine and maybe better beach weather.
 
 Let's face it.   People like warmer climates. There's a good reason why much of the U.S.   population is moving into the Sun Belt, and not just people who are   retiring.
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