Does Climate Change Cause Extreme Weather Now?
The Pacific Northwest was hit with a record-shattering heat wave in June, with temperatures over 35 degrees higher than normal in some places. On June 28, Portland, Ore., reached 116 degrees. Late last week the region suffered another blast of hot weather, with a high in Portland of 103 degrees. The New York Times didn’t hesitate to pronounce the region’s bouts of extreme weather proof that the climate wasn’t just changing, but catastrophically so.
To make
that claim, the Times relied on a “consortium of climate experts” that calls
itself World Weather Attribution, a group organized not just to attribute
extreme weather events to climate change, but to do so quickly. Within days of
the June heat wave, the researchers released an analysis, declaring that the
torrid spell “was virtually impossible without human-caused climate change”.
World
Weather Attribution and its alarming report were trumpeted
by Time magazine,
touted by the NOAA website Climate.gov ,
and featured by CBS, CMBC. Scientific Amewrican, CNN, the Washington
Post, USAToday, and the New York Times, among others.
The group’s
claim that global warming was to blame was perhaps less significant than the
speed with which that conclusion was provided to the media. Previous efforts to
tie extreme weather events to climate change hadn’t had the impact scientists
had hoped for, according to Time, because it “wasn’t producing results fast
enough to get attention from people outside the climate science world.”
“Being able
to confidently say that a given weather disaster was caused by climate change
while said event still has the world’s attention,” Time explained, approvingly,
“can be an enormously useful tool to convince leaders, lawmakers and others
that climate change is a threat that must be addressed.” In other words, the
value of rapid attribution is primarily political, not scientific.
Inconveniently
for World Weather Attribution, an atmospheric scientist with extensive
knowledge of the Pacific Northwest climate was actively running weather models
that accurately predicted the heatwave. Cliff Mass rejected the
notion that global warming was to blame for the scorching temperatures. He
calculated that global warming might have been responsible for two degrees of
the near 40-degree anomaly. With or without climate change, Mass wrote, the
region “still would have experienced the most severe heat wave in the past
century”.
Mass has no
shortage of credentials relevant to the issue: A professor of atmospheric
sciences at the University of Washington, he is author of the book “The weather of
the Pacific Northwest”.
Mass took
on the World Weather Attribution group directly: “Unfortunately, there are
serious flaws in their approach.” According to Mass, the heatwave was the
result of “natural variability.” The models being used by the international
group lacked the “resolution to correctly simulate critical intense, local
precipitation features,” and “they generally use unrealistic greenhouse gas
emissions.”
WWA issued
a “rebuttal” calling Mass’ criticisms “misleading and incorrect” But
the gauntlet thrown down by Mass did seem to affect WWA’s confidence in its
claims. The group, which had originally declared the heatwave would have been
“virtually impossible without human-caused climate change,” altered its tone. In
subsequent public statements, it emphasized that it had merely been making
“best estimates” and had presented them “with the appropriate caveats and
uncertainties.” Scientists with the attribution group did not respond to
questions about Mass’s criticisms posed by RealClearInvestigations.
But what of
the group’s basic mission, the attribution of individual weather events to
climate change? Hasn’t it been a fundamental rule of discussing extreme
temperatures in a given place not to conflate weather with climate? Weather, it
is regularly pointed out, refers to conditions during a short time in a limited
area; climate is said to describe longer-term atmospheric patterns over large
areas.
Donald
Trump once joked, on a cold day in 2017, that he could go for some global
warming ... ... and his comment was denounced as "scientifically
ridiculous" by Anthony Leiserowitz of Yale University, above. But
today it's hardly unusual for climate advocates to conflate weather with
climate.
Yale School
of the Environment
When Donald
Trump joked, on a cold day, that he could go for some global warming, he was
chastised for confusing weather with climate. The director of Yale University's
project on climate change communication, Anthony Leiserowitz, denounced Trump’s
comment as "scientifically ridiculous and demonstrably false."
"There
is a fundamental difference in scale between what weather is and what climate
is," Leiserowitz added. "What's going on in one small corner of the
world at a given moment does not reflect what's going on with the planet."
Until
recently, at least, climate scientists long warned against using individual
weather events to ponder the existence or otherwise of global warming. Typically,
that argument is used to respond to those who might argue a spate of extreme
cold is reason to doubt the planet is warming. Using individual weather events
to say anything about the climate is “dangerous nonsense,” the New Scientist
warned a decade ago.
Perhaps,
but it happens all the time now that climate advocates have found it to be an
effective tool. In 2019, The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public
Affairs Research and the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago
found that three-fourths of those polled said their views about climate change
had been shaped by estreme weather events”. Leah Sprain, in the book “Ethics
and Practice in Science”.,” says that even though it may be legitimate to make
the broad claim that climate change “may result in future extreme weather,”
when one tries “arguing weather patterns were caused by climate change, things
get dicey.” Which creates a tension: “For some communicators, the ultimate goal
– mobilizing political action – warrants rhetorical use of extreme weather
events.” But that makes scientists nervous, Sprain writes, because
“misrepresenting science will undermine the credibility of arguments for
climate change.”
Which is
exactly what happened with the World Weather Attribution group, according to
Mass: “Many of the climate attribution studies are resulting in headlines that
are deceptive and result in people coming to incorrect conclusions about the
relative roles of global warming and natural variability in current extreme
weather,” he wrote at his blog. “Scary headlines and apocayptic
attribution studies needlessly provoke fear”.
Sweltering
in Portland.
(AP
Photo/Nathan Howard)
Covering
the back-and-forth between the World Weather Attribution and Mass, the Seattle
Times labeled the local atmosphere academic a “controversial figure” The
newspaper noted that “Mass has sometimes gotten into very public disputes with
other scientists.” He has also been critical of the news media — “including the
Seattle Times,” wrote the Seattle Times — for what he says is alarmist coverage
of the climate. The Seattle Times did not respond to questions from RCI.
The
newspaper was not wrong that Mass has disagreed with his fellow climate
scientists. He didn’t hesitate to take on any and all comers at the Real
Climate blog. But he doesn’t think that should make him controversial. “Science
is all about conflict,” Mass has said. “Somebody has an idea; and then someone
else criticizes it.”
Mass also counts as “controversial” because he spoke out last summer against the rioting and looting taking place nightly in Seattle. A recurring segment he had on Tacoma public radio was canceled after Mass – on his own blog, not on the radio — likened the shattering of glass in Seattle to the shattered glass of Kristallnacht, the Nazi anti-Semitic pogrom.
The blogging professor laments that atmospheric sciences have been “poisoned” by politics. “It’s damaged climate science,” he told RCI.
And not just politics – Mass also says that the accepted
tenets of global warming have become a sort of religion. Consider the language
used, he says, such as the question of whether one “believes” in anthropogenic
climate change. “You
don’t believe in gravity,” he says. The religious metaphor also
explains why colleagues get so bent out of shape with him, Mass says: “There’s
nothing worse than an apostate priest.”
That goes
even for those who are merely mild apostates. Mass doesn’t dispute warming, he
merely questions how big a problem it is. “We need to worry about climate
change,” he has said. “But hype and exaggeration of its impacts only undermine
the potential for effective action.”
Reality
Check
By Eric
Felten, RealClearInvestigations
August 17, 2021
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