18 annual climate gabfests:
16 years without warming
CHRISTOPHER MONCKTON of BRENCHLEY
DELEGATES at the 18th annual UN climate gabfest at the dismal, echoing Doha conference center – one of the least exotic locations chosen for these rebarbatively repetitive exercises in pointlessness – have an Oops! problem.
No,
not the sand-flies. Not the questionable food. Not the near-record low
attendance. The Oops! problem is this. For the past 16 of the 18-year
series of annual hot-air sessions about hot air, the world’s hot air has
not gotten hotter. There has been no global warming. At all. Zilch.
Nada. Zip. Bupkis.
The
equations of classical physics do not require the arrow of time to flow
only forward. However, observation indicates this is what always
happens. So tomorrow’s predicted warming that has not happened today
cannot have caused yesterday’s superstorms, now, can it?
That
means They can’t even get away with claiming that tropical storm Sandy
and other recent extreme-weather happenings were All Our Fault. After
more than a decade and a half without any global warming at all, one
does not need to be a climate scientist to know that global warming
cannot have been to blame.
Or,
rather, one needs not to be a climate scientist. The wearisomely
elaborate choreography of these yearly galah sessions has followed its
usual course this time, with a spate of suspiciously-timed reports in
the once-mainstream media solemnly recording that “Scientists Say” their
predictions of doom are worse than ever. But the reports are no longer
front-page news. The people have tuned out.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPeCaC), the grim, supranational
bureaucracy that makes up turgid, multi-thousand-page climate
assessments every five years, has not even been invited to Doha.
Oversight or calculated insult? It’s your call.
IPeCaC
is about to churn out yet another futile tome. And how will its
upcoming Fifth Assessment Report deal with the absence of global warming
since a year after the Second Assessment report? Simple. The
global-warming profiteers’ bible won’t mention it.
There
will be absolutely nothing about the embarrassing 16-year
global-warming stasis in the thousands of pages of the new report.
Zilch. Nada. Zip. Bupkis.
Instead,
the report will hilariously suggest that up to 1.4 Cº of the 0.6 Cº
global warming observed in the past 60 years was manmade.
No,
that is not a typesetting error. The new official meme will be that if
it had not been for all those naughty emissions of carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases the world would have gotten up to 0.8 Cº cooler
since the 1950s. Yeah, right.
If you will believe that, as the Duke of Wellington used to say, you will believe anything.
The
smarter minds at the conference (all two of us) are beginning to ask
what it was that the much-trumpeted “consensus” got wrong. The answer is
that two-thirds of the warming predicted by the models is uneducated
guesswork. The computer models assume that any warming causes further
warming, by various “temperature feedbacks”.
Trouble
is, not one of the supposed feedbacks can be established reliably
either by measurement or by theory. A growing body of scientists think
feedbacks may even be net-negative, countervailing against the tiny
direct warming from greenhouse gases rather than arbitrarily multiplying
it by three to spin up a scare out of not a lot.
IPeCaC’s
official prediction in its First Assessment Report in 1990 was that the
world would warm at a rate equivalent to 0.3 Cº/decade, or more than
0.6 Cº by now.
But
the real-world, measured outturn was 0.14 Cº/decade, and just 0.3 Cº in
the quarter of a century since 1990: less than half of what the
“consensus” had over-predicted.
In
2008, the world’s “consensus” climate modelers wrote a paper saying ten
years without global warming was to be expected (though their
billion-dollar brains had somehow failed to predict it). They added that
15 years or more without global warming would establish a discrepancy
between real-world observation and their X-boxes’ predictions. You will
find their paper in NOAA’s State of the Climate Report for 2008.
By
the modelers’ own criterion, then, HAL has failed its most basic test –
trying to predict how much global warming will happen.
Yet
Ms. Christina Figurehead, chief executive of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change, says “centralization” of global governing
power (in her hands, natch) is the solution. Solution to what? READ MORE
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