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« The future of UK energy - diesel | Main | Tamsin's SciFoo talk »
Wednesday
Jun122013

Public understanding of climate - the evidence

The Science and Technology Committee have published the submissions of evidence to their inquiry on "Climate: Public understanding and policy implications". Readers are cordially invited to leave details of any interesting contributions in the comments.

Amusingly, the witnesses who are going to provide oral evidence to the inquiry are:

Dr Catherine Happer, Glasgow University Media Group, Professor Greg Philo, Glasgow University Media Group and Tom Sheldon, Senior Press Officer, Science Media Centre.

The Glasgow University Media Group is a very strange choice as the source of witnesses. Apparently they have been characterised as "a band of Marxist conspiracy theorists". And if you search their website for the words "climate change" or "global warming" you discover that they have never actually done any work in the area at all. I'm intrigued to know how they came to be invited, since they don't seem to have submitted any written evidence.[Update: it's there now. Maybe I missed it.]

I think it's fair to say that the inquiry is a bit of charade.

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Reader Comments (80)

Ed,
I agree with Cumbrian Lad and Jack Hughes on the subject of climate science in schools. It is anti-science as currently taught.

I also think that your Article 2.7 is either very naive or willfully disingenuous. I have a mental picture of an empty office with cobwebs across the entrance door, and a sign outside saying, "Office for super-efficient publication of corrections to your previous papers". There is a long, long list of climate science papers with known errors which are not acknowledged by the authors. There is a shorter list of papers with known errors which are not acknowledged by the broader climate science community - at least not publicly. In some instances, their peers have gathered around the authors to protect them! The idea that climate science authors are just awaiting the right mechanism to speed up their corrections and self-rebuttal seems somewhat far-fetched.

Jun 13, 2013 at 5:54 AM | Unregistered CommenterPaul_K

Hilary - the Met Office is collaborating with EDF Energy (the French power company) on a programme for schools:

The Met Office and EDF Energy are working together, through EDF Energy's the Pod, to educate schoolchildren. The aim is to help children understand basic weather and climate science in the context of sustainable energy.

http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/education/collaboration/edf

Jun 13, 2013 at 8:02 AM | Registered CommenterRuth Dixon

Thanks for the comments so far on the NCAS submission.

2.7 - given my recent experience with David Rose's Daily Mail article which plagarised and misrepresented my figure I don't think this is particularly controversial. James Annan has successfully complained to the PCC about the same article and achieved a correction. Note that we state that corrections to overly zealous exaggerating articles in newspapers also need to be made. I also agree that corrections to scientific papers need to be more prominent.

2.11 - I agree with the comments about teaching fundamental science and enabling students to learn for themselves. It is a shame that climate is not in the proposed GCSE physics curriculum, but in chemistry instead. In physics, some of the more fundamental aspects could be taught.

Ed.
PS. Will see if I am free for the Oxford pub meet when the date is fixed. If someone can email me the time & date, even better! ;-)

Jun 13, 2013 at 9:07 AM | Unregistered CommenterEd Hawkins

Ed says above:
//
2.11 - I agree with the comments about teaching fundamental science and enabling students to learn for themselves. It is a shame that climate is not in the proposed GCSE physics curriculum, but in chemistry instead. In physics, some of the more fundamental aspects could be taught.
//
Ed please can you tell us in a few clear GCSE standard sentences what these fundamentals are?

Jun 13, 2013 at 9:22 AM | Unregistered Commenternot banned yet

Ed, it looks like Monday 8th July at the King's Arms.

..and it always looked to me that your correction of David Rose was although accurate a technical quibble over something which was as broadbrush as a MoS article has to be. But as you are here and a real climate scientist of unsullied reputation, let me ask, are we going with back radiation now, or increased height of TOA. Is NCAS aboard with the heat in the ocean meme, which I would expect to cause modellers and scientists a whole heap of trouble in keeping the story straight without looking like hand-wavers?

Jun 13, 2013 at 9:24 AM | Unregistered CommenterRhoda

Ed, hopefully this constitutes a constructive reply. The overall feel was fine but because 2.1 hasn’t been done yet, the rest is more of what has gone before and will probably have the same result.

2.1 “a key aspect of improving public understanding about climate change is appreciating, understanding and addressing the man different reasons why members of the public are sceptical.”- yes, this is very important and cannot necessarily be done with tick box surveys. It would also be useful to examine those who claim not to be sceptical, exploring their understanding of the science and a measure of how their concern relates to action on cutting CO2.

2.3 “It is not the role of publicly funded climate scientists to advocate any specific policy responses”. This I completely disagree with. It is considered very unsafe to shout ‘fire’ in a crowded theatre. At the moment, climate scientists are delivering their open ended predictions of doom without accepting any responsibility for the people who might be trampled in the rush for the exits. Eg those scientists who warn against rising global populations need to consider to what lengths they would go to reduce population – genocide, removing medical aid, removing food aid, etc. In reality most would only suggest a free supply of contraceptives and a forest load of leaflets. At the one end the response is wild panic/madness and the other is vague concern and a fingers crossed approach. Climate scientists can’t claim that ‘fire!’ is merely an observation and what theatregoers do with that potentially incorrect data is up to them.

2.4-2.6 Desperation has led to the theory that if climate scientists themselves communicated the science then their added credibility would swing public opinion. This is wrong. What they currently have on offer is unlikely to sway the public because better communicators than them have already failed with it. The difference in credibility levels is a minor effect. It would be better to introduce some of the safeguards that we impose on industry to ensure that good practice is not just followed but seen to be followed. I cannot stress enough that peer review is for academics not real life.

2.7 Yes, there are a lot of inaccurate articles, from BOTH sides of the debate. It’s a pity there’s no flurry of activity when a pro CAGW article gets the facts wrong. One area where climate scientists could score points is by being very consistent about the facts they and others who support them, come out with.

2.9 Climate science isn’t an old science. One bit of it is oldish (other sciences have far, far older roots) but since many of the useful observations of the elements of climate are all set in the satellite age it is most definitely a new science. Of the really old sciences, none of them get a carte blanche when it comes to being trusted on the claims made. Most sciences that matter have made crippling mistakes at one time or another. We no longer leave credibility up to chance and we try to improve on human frailty with systems and external monitoring.

2.11 There is an amusing theory that if we ‘get em young’ then future generations will accept AGW like they accept flying. ROTFLMAO. Never has there been a generation that wastes more energy. They might want compensation for the Baby Boomers ruining the planet with CO2 but they’ll spend it on more stuff. A better way to educate youngsters would be to ban gadgets and designer clothes in schools and teach them thrift and thoughtfulness towards others.

2.12 Yes, public understanding is very important. However, few members of the public understand climate science better than the sceptics at Bishop Hill, do you see them becoming more accepting of government policies on CO2?

Jun 13, 2013 at 10:06 AM | Unregistered CommenterTinyCO2

A little illustration if I may? A couple of weeks ago I was in the garden with two sixthformers who were studying for impending science AS level exams. They were wondering why the temperature on the electronic sensor I have in the garden (mounted inside a wooden shelter approx 1m above the ground, in the shade) was showing only 17C when they were 'baking' in the sun. I brought out a max/min mercury thermometer that we've had for years, and placed it in the sun with them to show the difference in temperature between the air temperature, and that in full sunlight, and discussed with them the reasons for the difference.

What struck me was that they'd never come across a min/max thermometer (which I think we did in geography, if not general science, years ago quite early in secondary school), and for all the course content covering 'climate' they, as science students, had apparently never discussed the correct ways of making temperature measurements.

It is this level of detail lacking in the courses offered to children that leads one to suppose that children are being fed platitude, not science.

Jun 13, 2013 at 10:48 AM | Unregistered CommenterCumbrian Lad

"Dr Catherine Happer was awarded a First in Sociology" Who but a crypto-Marxist would want one of these?

Jun 13, 2013 at 12:11 PM | Unregistered CommenterBrian Williams

"The Science and Technology Committee" About as oxymoronic as "the Committee for Public Safety" during the Reign of Terror after the French Revolution.

"Committe for State Sanctioned Interpretations of Science and Technology" might be a better title.

Jun 13, 2013 at 12:15 PM | Unregistered CommenterBrian Williams

@TinyCO2 - thanks for the constructive comments. Some additional comments below.

2.3 - for many skeptics I speak to (including many here on BH), this is the key point - they want the science without any policy recommendations attached. I am happy to say something like: "under business as usual emissions, we expect to see these impacts (with associated uncertainties)" - but I don't believe that climate scientists should go further and suggest how or even whether emissions might be reduced, as that is not our expertise, and the science is only one part of any decision. I know others disagree however.

2.7 - I agree that more criticism of exaggerated climate science in the media would be useful. In a recent public talk, I criticised a Guardian article for precisely this (Barry Woods was there, if he remembers!). Also, the Met Office have recently criticised the Arctic Methane Emergency Group for similar reasons. More examples are required however.

2.9 - Climate science started with understanding the basic physics with Fourier in 1824, Tyndall in 1861, Arrhenius in 1896 etc etc. The first observations of a warming planet were made by Callendar in 1938. I think emphasising this is very important - the basic science predates more modern environmental activism.

2.12 - again, we (try and) communicate the science, and others decide the policies!

cheers,
Ed.

Jun 13, 2013 at 12:32 PM | Unregistered CommenterEd Hawkins

@Rhoda:
NCAS is actually involved in work examining the recent hiatus in detail, and to try and determine the causes. Ocean heat uptake is one leading candidate, but not the only one! We are not trying to avoid trouble - just trying to get at the answers!

@not banned yet:
I think the basic absorption of infra-red radiation by CO2 would be a good start! Students could even do Tyndall's original 1861 experiment in the lab!

Ed.

Jun 13, 2013 at 12:44 PM | Unregistered CommenterEd Hawkins

Ed, would you characterise absorption of IR by CO2 (undisputed by anybody) as 'CO2 trapping heat' which we have from the Met Office'. Isn't it more complex than that? Doesn't CO2 re-emit, and not trap anything? Do we know to what extent it thermalises neighbouring molecules of N and O? If so, how?

(You seem to have missed the back-radiation vs TOA question. What I am trying to do is complete the chain of logic which links the IR absorption/re-emission to actual atmospheric temperature increases, a bit that most alarmists leave out.)

Jun 13, 2013 at 12:52 PM | Unregistered Commenterrhoda

Ed, your submission seems mostly OK.
2.1 raises an excellent question, but you guys are the wrong people to be trying to answer it. You know perfectly well that the main reason for scepticism is the exaggerated claims made by your own activist wing. It's a pity that you can't bring yourselves to acknowledge this.
2.7 starts well, and can be read both ways, but goes seriously of the rails at the end with the recommendation of the Science Media Centre. These activist lobby groups are another part of the problem. Their leader Fiona Fox has no science background, and is "a former leading member of the Revolutionary Communist Party." She also gave false evidence to the Leveson inquiry (explaine in Andrew M's submission to Leveson)
I'm going to assume you didn't know all this. But it does show a lack of awareness.

Jun 13, 2013 at 1:15 PM | Registered CommenterPaul Matthews

I want to see the evidence that... "sceptics are a well organised and well funded group".

EVERYONE WANTS TO SEE THE EVIDENCE.

Please provide the evidence. I beg you. Please make the evidence public. Please, please, please.

Jun 13, 2013 at 2:14 PM | Unregistered CommenterBrute

Just received this:

From: Science & Technology Committee <scitechcom@parliament.uk>

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE

Select Committee Announcement

No. 11 (13-14): 13 June 2013

 ORAL EVIDENCE SESSION ANNOUNCED

Climate: Public understanding and policy implications

The Science and Technology Committee will hold the following oral evidence session in
its inquiry into ?Climate: Public understanding and policy implications?:

Wednesday 19 June 2013
Thatcher Room, Portcullis House

At 9.15 am

·         Dr Catherine Happer, Glasgow University Media Group

·         Professor Greg Philo, Glasgow University Media Group

·         Tom Sheldon, Senior Press Officer, Science Media Centre

 
Further evidence sessions will be announced in due course.

Follow the Committee's business on Twitter @CommonsSTC

...

 
The session is open to the public on a first come, first served basis. Portcullis
House is the building directly above Westminster Station, entrance to which is via
Victoria Embankment.  There is no system for the prior reservation of seats in
Committee Rooms.  It is advisable to allow about 30 minutes to pass through security
checks.  Committee rooms and the timing of meetings are subject to change.

 
Specific Committee information:  scitechcom@parliament.uk / 020 7219 2793

Media information: Nick Davies  daviesnick@parliament.uk / 020 7219 3297

Committee website: www.parliament.uk/science

Jun 13, 2013 at 2:59 PM | Registered CommenterPaul Matthews

Ed:
//
@not banned yet:
I think the basic absorption of infra-red radiation by CO2 would be a good start! Students could even do Tyndall's original 1861 experiment in the lab!

Ed.
//
Is that it Ed? That is climate science for GCSE?

Jun 13, 2013 at 3:48 PM | Unregistered Commenternot banned yet

I want to see the evidence that... "sceptics are a well organised and well funded group".

EVERYONE WANTS TO SEE THE EVIDENCE.

Please provide the evidence. I beg you. Please make the evidence public. Please, please, please.

Jun 13, 2013 at 2:14 PM | Unregistered CommenterBrute

--------
FORGET the evidence... I just want a cheque. (sarc off)

sorry Ed, I forget which meeting you were talking about.

if scientists call out the activists amongst them, and tell the NGO's to stop exaggerating, there would not be any sceptics.

One thought, if by 2020, temps are no more than say 0.1C higer or less.. how do the models come out of that scenario?

Jun 13, 2013 at 10:30 PM | Unregistered CommenterBarry Woods

@Rhoda - yes it is more complicated. The key point is that the re-emission of the radiation by carbon dioxide occurs in all directions & happens at higher altitudes and lower temperatures than the surface, therefore effectively trapping heat.
Ed.

Jun 14, 2013 at 12:03 AM | Unregistered CommenterEd Hawkins

"I want to see the evidence that... "sceptics are a well organised and well funded group".


Brute.

Lord Donahue, Peter Lilley, George Stringer and Doug Keenan are showing a considerable degree of coordination. That's the well organised part.

Who's paying them? Hopefully, nobody.

If payment is occuring, the only one legally able to accept it is Doug Keenan. GWPF have paid Andrew Montford fees for professional services in the past; perhaps Nigel Lawson is paying Keenan's fees.

Jun 14, 2013 at 1:06 AM | Unregistered CommenterEntropic Man

So is that just 4 people you are making insinuations about there, Entropic Man?
Perhaps we should try and get Arlo Guthrie to change his famous lyrics....

"Shrink, You can get anything you want, at Alice's restaurant." [..]
You know, if one person, just one person does it they may think he's really sick and they won't take him.
And if two people, two people do it, in harmony, they may think they're both faggots and they won't take either of them.
And three people do it, three, can you imagine, three people walking in singin a bar of Alice's Restaurant and walking out. They may think it's an organization.
And four people.... they may think it's a bunch of big-oil-funded climate sceptics.

Jun 14, 2013 at 2:21 AM | Unregistered Commentermichael hart

EM

I think what you are trying to say is that you have no evidence re "well-funded" and only some speculation about "well-organised"

Jun 14, 2013 at 7:41 AM | Registered CommenterBishop Hill

EM gives four names and gets two of them wrong.

Jun 14, 2013 at 9:57 AM | Unregistered CommenterRhoda

Bishop Hill

Actually, I think they're badly organised. So far their questions have been poorly designed and asked in random order. The answers they received have been routine, uncontroversial and could have been predicted by any intelligent observer. The impact has been minimal beyond the sceptic propoganda sites.

The Heartland Institute would have done a much better job.

Jun 14, 2013 at 12:58 PM | Unregistered CommenterEntropic Man

You have just contradicted yourself then.

Jun 14, 2013 at 1:25 PM | Registered CommenterBishop Hill

Bishop Hill

I'm just throwing out ideas. You are the ones in the know, not me.

I have is a few snippets from the Parliament website and what you write here, which suggests a coordinated attack on the Met Office by a sceptic statistician and a couple of Parliamentary sock puppets.

Jun 14, 2013 at 3:17 PM | Unregistered CommenterEntropic Man

One man's co-ordinated attack is another man's holding to account in parliament. Don't you think the Met should be required to clarify what look to some like dodgy statements? Do you think it has never been warmer than now? If they think they have proven the range of natural variation should they not explain that other than by the use of models?

Jun 14, 2013 at 3:26 PM | Unregistered Commenterrhoda

Ed, you are playing a dead bat here. In your last comment the 'trap heat' bit does not follow from the first part. Or, it may be obvious to you, but I'd want to see a proposed mechanism and some observations. Maybe you have that, with all the budget and planes and what-all. Don't hold back, give it to us straight.

Many warmists, the kind who believe there is a consensus and that all those scientists must know what they are talking about, can accept the superficial 'radiation is absorbed so it must end up trapped, that's conservation of energy' but sceptics ought to ask a few more questions. The kind I ask here time and time again and never get a decent reply.

Jun 14, 2013 at 3:52 PM | Unregistered Commenterrhoda

Rhoda

You put forward a logical fallacy. At various times in the past it has been warmer than now, for a variety of reasons. This does not invalidate the argument that the most recent warming is down to us.

Producing good quantitative evidence that natural forcings provide enough energy to drive the observed changes in the temperature record would be sufficient.

Jun 14, 2013 at 10:43 PM | Unregistered CommenterEntropic Man

EM, are you saying the previous temp excursions were NOT natural? Clearly they were, as there can be no man-made effects in that timescale. That establishes a range for natural variations. For whatever reason. We are currently within that range, so we are within the range of natural variations. There is no logical fallacy or contradiction here. Now if the Met Office or anybody else can explain the reason for the range of natural variation (which may not even be the LIMITS to natural variation). I made no argument about forcings. I don't even really accept the concept of forcings as the climate folks use it. What you are trying to do here is extend my original statement into areas which it did not enter. Which I regard as a trick of argumentation inappropriate for our little well-mannered discussion here.

Jun 15, 2013 at 8:18 AM | Unregistered CommenterRhoda

Rather late correction to the Bish’s article above. Happer and Philo of The Glasgow University Media Group did a large scale survey of public opinion on climate change and energy security last year for the UK Energy Research Centre. It can be downloaded at
www.ukerc.ac.uk/support/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=2900

Jun 18, 2013 at 8:57 PM | Registered Commentergeoffchambers

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