August
2007
S. Fred Singer
Professor Emeritus, Environmental Sciences
University of Virginia
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S. Fred Singer
is professor emeritus of environmental sciences at the University of Virginia, a distinguished research professor at George
Mason University, and president of the Science and Environmental Policy Project. He performed his undergraduate studies at
Ohio State University and earned his Ph.D. in Physics from Princeton University. He was the founding dean of the School of
Environmental and Planetary Sciences at the University of Miami, the founding director of the U.S. National Weather Satellite
Service, and served for five years as vice chairman of the U.S. National Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmosphere. Dr.
Singer has written or edited over a dozen books and mono-graphs, including, most recently, Unstoppable Global Warming: Every
1,500 Years.
The
following is adapted from a lecture delivered on the Hillsdale College campus on June 30, 2007, during a seminar entitled
“Economics and the Environment,” sponsored by the Charles R. and Kathleen K. Hoogland Center for Teacher Excellence.
Global Warming: Man-Made or
Natural?
IN THE PAST few years there has been increasing concern
about global climate change on the part of the media, politicians, and the public. It has been stimulated by the idea that
human activities may influence global climate adversely and that therefore corrective action is required on the part of governments.
Recent evidence suggests that this concern is misplaced. Human activities are not influencing the global climate in a perceptible way. Climate will
continue to change, as it always has in the past, warming and cooling on different time scales and for different reasons, regardless of human action. I would also argue that—should
it occur—a modest warming would be on the whole beneficial.
This is not to say that we don’t face a serious
problem. But the problem is political. Because of the mistaken idea that governments can and must do something about climate,
pressures are building that have the potential of distorting energy policies in a way that will severely damage national economies,
decrease standards of living, and increase poverty. This misdirection of resources will adversely affect human health and
welfare in industrialized nations, and even more in developing nations. Thus it could well lead to increased social tensions
within nations and conflict between them.
If not for this economic and political damage, one
might consider the present concern about climate change nothing more than just another environmentalist fad, like the Alar
apple scare or the global cooling fears of the 1970s. Given that so much is at stake, however, it is essential that people
better understand the issue.
Man-Made
Warming?
The most fundamental question is scientific: Is the
observed warming of the past 30 years due to natural causes or are human activities a main or even a contributing factor?
At first glance, it is quite plausible that humans
could be responsible for warming the climate. After all, the burning of fossil fuels to generate energy releases large quantities
of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The CO2 level has been increasing steadily since the beginning of the industrial
revolution and is now 35 percent higher than it was 200 years ago. Also, we know from direct measurements that CO2
is a “greenhouse gas” which strongly absorbs infrared (heat) radiation. So the idea that burning fossil fuels
causes an enhanced “greenhouse effect” needs to be taken seriously.
But in seeking to understand recent warming, we also
have to consider the natural factors that have regularly warmed the climate prior to the industrial revolution and, indeed,
prior to any human presence on the earth. After all, the geological record shows a persistent 1,500-year cycle of warming
and cooling extending back at least one million years.
In identifying the burning of fossil fuels as the
chief cause of warming today, many politicians and environmental activists simply appeal to a so-called “scientific
consensus.” There are two things wrong with this. First, there is no such consensus: An increasing number of climate
scientists are raising serious questions about the political rush to judgment on this issue. For example, the widely touted
“consensus” of 2,500 scientists on the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is an illusion:
Most of the panelists have no scientific qualifications, and many of the others object to some part of the IPCC’s report.
The Associated Press reported recently that only 52 climate scientists contributed to the report’s “Summary for
Policymakers.”
Likewise, only about a dozen members of the governing
board voted on the “consensus statement” on climate change by the American Meteorological Society (AMS). Rank
and file AMS scientists never had a say, which is why so many of them are now openly rebelling. Estimates of skepticism within
the AMS regarding man-made global warming are well over 50 percent.
The second reason not to rely on a “scientific
consensus” in these matters is that this is not how science works. After all, scientific advances customarily come from
a minority of scientists who challenge the majority view—or even just a single person (think of Galileo or Einstein).
Science proceeds by the scientific method and draws conclusions based on evidence, not on a show of hands.
But aren’t glaciers melting? Isn’t
sea ice shrinking?
Yes, but that’s not proof for human-caused warming. Any kind of warming, whether natural or human-caused, will melt ice. To assert that melting
glaciers prove human causation is just bad logic.
What about the fact that carbon dioxide
levels are increasing at the same time temperatures are rising? That’s an interesting correlation; but as every scientist
knows, correlation is not causation. During much of the last century the climate was cooling
while CO2 levels were rising. And we should note that the climate has not warmed in the past eight years, even
though greenhouse gas levels have increased rapidly.
What about the fact—as cited by,
among others, those who produced the IPCC report—that every major greenhouse computer model (there are two dozen or
so) shows a large temperature increase due to human burning of fossil fuels? Fortunately, there is a scientific way of testing
these models to see whether current warming is due to a man-made greenhouse effect. It involves comparing the actual or observed
pattern of warming with the warming pattern predicted by or calculated from the
models. Essentially, we try to see if the “fingerprints” match—“fingerprints” meaning the rates
of warming at different latitudes and altitudes.
For instance, theoretically,
greenhouse warming in the tropics should register at increasingly high rates as one moves from the surface of the earth up
into the atmosphere, peaking at about six miles above the earth’s surface. At that point, the level should be greater
than at the surface by about a factor of three and quite pronounced, according to all the computer models. In reality, however,
there is no increase at all. In fact, the data from balloon-borne radiosondes show the very opposite: a slight decrease in warming over the equator.
The fact that the observed and predicted patterns
of warming don’t match indicates that the man-made greenhouse contribution to current temperature change is insignificant. This fact emerges from data and graphs collected in the Climate Change Science Program Report 1.1, published by the federal government in April 2006 (see http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/sap/sap1-1/finalreport/default.htm). It is remarkable and puzzling that few have noticed this disparity between observed and predicted patterns of warming and drawn the obvious scientific conclusion.
What explains why greenhouse computer models predict
temperature trends that are so much larger than those observed? The answer lies in the proper evaluation of feedback within
the models. Remember that in addition to carbon dioxide, the real atmosphere contains water vapor, the most powerful greenhouse
gas. Every one of the climate models calculates a significant positive feedback from water vapor—i.e., a feedback that
amplifies the warming effect of the CO2 increase by an average factor of two or three. But it is quite possible
that the water vapor feedback is negative rather than positive and thereby reduces
the effect of
increased CO2.
There are several ways this might occur. For example,
when increased CO2 produces a warming of the ocean, a higher rate of evaporation might lead to more humidity and
cloudiness (provided the atmosphere contains a sufficient number of cloud condensation nuclei). These low clouds reflect incoming
solar radiation back into space and thereby cool the earth. Climate researchers have discovered other possible feedbacks and
are busy evaluating which ones enhance and which diminish the effect of increasing CO2.
Natural
Causes of Warming
A quite different question, but scientifically interesting,
has to do with the natural factors influencing climate. This is a big topic about which much has been written. Natural factors
include continental drift and mountain-building, changes in the Earth’s orbit, volcanic eruptions, and solar variability.
Different factors operate on different time scales. But on a time scale important for human experience—a scale of decades,
let’s say—solar variability may be the most important.
Solar influence can manifest itself in different
ways: fluctuations of solar irradiance (total energy), which has been measured in satellites and related to the sunspot cycle;
variability of the ultraviolet portion of the solar spectrum, which in turn affects the amount of ozone in the stratosphere;
and variations in the solar wind that modulate the intensity of cosmic rays (which, upon impact into the earth’s atmosphere,
produce cloud condensation nuclei, affecting cloudiness and thus climate).
Scientists have been able to trace the impact of the
sun on past climate using proxy data (since thermometers are relatively modern). A conventional proxy for temperature is the
ratio of the heavy isotope of oxygen, Oxygen-18, to the most common form, Oxygen-16.
A paper published in Nature in 2001 describes the Oxygen-18 data (reflecting temperature) from a stalagmite in a cave in Oman, covering
a period of over 3,000 years. It also shows corresponding Carbon-14 data, which are directly related to the intensity of cosmic
rays striking the earth’s atmosphere. One sees there a remarkably detailed correlation, almost on a year-by-year basis.
While such research cannot establish the detailed mechanism of climate change, the causal connection is quite clear: Since
the stalagmite temperature cannot affect the sun, it is the sun that affects climate.
Policy Consequences
If this line of reasoning is correct, human-caused
increases in the CO2 level are quite insignificant to climate change. Natural causes of climate change, for their
part, cannot be controlled by man. They are unstoppable. Several policy consequences would follow from this simple fact:
None of this is intended to argue against energy
conservation. On the contrary, conserving energy reduces waste, saves money, and lowers energy prices—irrespective of
what one may believe about global warming.
Science vs. Hysteria
You will note that this has been a rational discussion.
We asked the important question of whether there is appreciable man-made warming today. We presented evidence that indicates
there is not, thereby suggesting that attempts by governments to control greenhouse-gas emissions are pointless and unwise.
Nevertheless, we have state governors calling for CO2 emissions limits on cars; we have city mayors calling for
mandatory CO2 controls; we have the Supreme Court declaring CO2 a pollutant that may have to be regulated;
we have every industrialized nation (with the exception of the U.S. and Australia) signed on to the Kyoto Protocol; and we
have ongoing international demands for even more stringent controls when Kyoto expires in 2012. What’s going on here?
To begin, perhaps even some of the advocates
of these anti-warming policies are not so serious about them, as seen in a feature of the Kyoto Protocol called the Clean Development Mechanism,
which allows a
CO2 emitter—i.e., an energy user—to support a fanciful CO2 reduction scheme in developing nations in exchange for the right to keep
on emitting CO2
unabated. “Emission trading” among those countries that have ratified Kyoto allows for the sale of certificates of unused emission
quotas. In many cases,
the initial quota was simply given away by governments to power companies and other entities, which in turn collect a windfall fee from consumers. All of this has become a huge financial racket that
could someday make the UN’s “Oil for Food” scandal in Iraq seem minor by comparison. Even more fraudulent,
these schemes do not reduce total CO2 emissions—not even in theory.
It is also worth noting that tens of thousands of
interested persons benefit directly from the global warming scare—at the expense of the ordinary consumer. Environmental
organizations globally, such as Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, and the Environmental Defense Fund, have raked in billions of
dollars. Multi-billion-dollar government subsidies for useless mitigation schemes are large and growing. Emission trading
programs will soon reach the $100 billion a year level, with large fees paid to brokers and those who operate the scams. In
other words, many people have discovered they can benefit from climate scares and have formed an entrenched interest. Of course,
there are also many sincere believers in an impending global warming catastrophe, spurred on in their fears by the growing
number of one-sided books, movies, and media coverage.
The irony is that a slightly warmer climate with
more carbon dioxide is in many ways beneficial rather than damaging. Economic studies have demonstrated that a modest warming
and higher CO2 levels will increase GNP and raise standards of living, primarily by improving agriculture and forestry.
It’s a well-known fact that CO2 is plant food and essential to the growth of crops and trees—and ultimately
to the well-being of animals and humans.
You wouldn’t know it from Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth, but there are many upsides to global warming: Northern homes
could save on heating fuel. Canadian farmers could harvest bumper crops. Greenland may become awash in cod and oil riches.
Shippers could count on an Arctic shortcut between the Atlantic and Pacific. Forests may expand.
Mongolia could become an economic superpower. This
is all speculative, even a little facetious. But still, might there be a silver lining for the frigid regions of Canada and
Russia? “It’s not that there won’t be bad things happening in those countries,” economics professor
Robert O. Mendelsohn of the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies says. “But the idea is that they will
get such large gains, especially in agriculture, that they will be bigger than the losses.” Mendelsohn has looked at
how gross domestic product around the world would be affected under different warming scenarios through 2100. Canada and Russia
tend to come out as clear gainers, as does much of northern Europe and Mongolia, largely because of projected increases in
agricultural production.
To repeat a point made at the beginning: Climate has
been changing cyclically for at least a million years and has shown huge variations over geological time. Human beings have
adapted well, and will continue to do so.
* * *
The nations of the world face many difficult problems.
Many have societal problems like poverty, disease, lack of sanitation, and shortage of clean water. There are grave security
problems arising from global terrorism and the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Any of these problems are vastly more important
than the imaginary problem of man-made global warming. It is a great shame that so many of our resources are being diverted
from real problems to this non-problem. Perhaps in ten or 20 years this will become apparent to everyone, particularly if
the climate should stop warming (as it has for eight years now) or even begin to cool.
We can only trust that reason will prevail in the face of an onslaught of
propaganda like Al Gore’s movie and despite the incessant misinformation generated by the media. Today, the imposed
costs are still modest, and mostly hidden in taxes and in charges for electricity and motor fuels. If the scaremongers have
their way, these costs will become enormous. But I believe that sound science and good sense will prevail in the face of irrational
and scientifically baseless climate fears.
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