An initial reaction to Garnaut
Wednesday, 16 July 2008
By Don Aitkin 

Professor Garnaut’s Draft Report has been coming in dribs and drabs, and now we have the biggest chunk of it, nearly 550 pages, with a supplementary report still to come.

It is impossible not to feel sorry for him. He himself writes, in a much quoted phrase, that “climate change is a diabolical policy problem”, and the his anxiety comes through again and again. “Why did I take this on?” must have been a constant mental refrain: “this issue might be too hard for rational policy making” (page 2). There is only a “slender chance” that the world can pull this one off. The first five pages provide much evidence of the mental agony of the Draft Report’s author.

He was not helped by the Terms of Reference, which committed him to the IPCC view of things, a view to which Garnaut refers, all too easily, as “the weight of scientific evidence”. The first term asks him to consider “the likely effect of human induced climate change”. Thereafter, human causation is simply assumed: the subject is simply “climate change”. Professor Garnaut follows the same path. “Climate change” is what he is about, and humans have caused it. His job: find out how to stop them.
Advertisement

But he is too sharp not to know that this is a form of sleight of hand. Climate change occurs everywhere and is a slow natural process. “Human-induced climate change”, or “Anthropogenic Global Warming”(AGW), is something else again. Human beings have to adapt to climate change, whatever causes it, and they do. If human beings actually cause climate to change adversely, then it is possible that they could do something to prevent that change. The sleight of hand is most obvious in his recognition that a substantial body of opinion has it that the onward and upward rise in measured global temperature has faltered since 1998, and that there has been no sustained increase since.

He asked some econometricians to help him out there, and they told him that “the temperatures in most of the last decade lie above the confidence level produced by any model that does not allow for a warming trend”. Setting their constipated prose aside, the issue of course is not the existence of a warming trend (that seems almost universally accepted), but the extent to which it is and has been caused by human activity. Again and again he ducks that question, which is central to the debate. (No, the science is not settled.)

The same econometricians point out (Box 5.1) “that the upward movement [in temperatures] over the last 130-160 years is persistent”, and Professor Garnaut must surely have wondered how much of that century-and-a-half rise was due to human activity. The adjacent Figure 5.1 shows, at least to the untutored eye, that the warming trend from 1910 to 1940 has virtually the same shape as the warming trend from 1975 to 1998, if it is not actually steeper. But of course the great increase in CO2 that so worries the IPCC is the recent one. Let us assume that it did produce the increase in temperatures in the latter part of the 20th century. What then produced an equivalent increase in the earlier part?

That issue must have engaged his attention, for it almost leaps from the graph. But my guess is that finally he simply gave a shrug. “The outsider to climate science,” he writes, “has no rational choice but to accept that, on the balance of probabilities, the mainstream science is right”. And then immediately he covers himself, in case later on it turns out that the mainstream was wrong, as it sometimes is. “There are nevertheless large uncertainties in the science.”

He recognises that there are “sceptics”, but he is only prepared to concede validity to the views of “a small number of climate scientists of professional repute”. It is not clear who they are, and I could not find a sceptic known to me by publication in any of the references save one whose words are used to establish a basic point that no one would disagree with. The others, he says, “hold strongly to the view that the mainstream science is wrong”.

With that out of the way, Professor Garnaut uses the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment report as the source of his science, summarises that for us, and then moves, one imagines much more happily, into the economics of what to do about it. He refers much more than once in the scientific chapters to “uncertainty”, but simply accepts, it seems to me, that the IPCC has dealt with that problem of uncertainty itself, and that he can rest confident that whatever uncertainties exist do not disturb what should be done. The balance of probability, he says a number of times, is that things are so.

In my view this is a most rigid account of what seems to me a most fluid debate. By setting up critics as people who say “the science is wrong” he trivialises what is going on. As I read them, the critics never say that the science is “wrong”, only that the science is not “settled”, and that there are, as Professor Garnaut repeatedly says, “large uncertainties” in what is hypothesised.

The critics then go on to offer whatever course of action they think appropriate to a situation of uncertainty. This critic, interested in data and their measurement, thinks that any educated person can understand the issues, and is puzzled at Professor Garnaut’s decision that it was not his job to “debate the existence or extent of human-induced climate change”. I could accept that the existence of AGW was taken as given by his terms of reference. But its extent? Surely that is the nub of the question. How much has human activity contributed to the warming of the last 50 years, the last 100, the last 200? Isn’t that the question we have to answer before we get on to solutions?

The IPCC doesn’t tell us the answer to those questions in its Fourth Assessment Report, and so of course the Garnaut Draft Report cannot either. It must take as a basic assumption, given the lack of contrary evidence, that global warming since 1975 is entirely, or virtually entirely, caused by the emission of greenhouse gases. But if it does, what are we to assume about the message of Figure 5.1, with its very similar warming from 1910 to 1940?

The failure to recognise that these are real issues for any government trying to grapple with climate change is the most disappointing aspect of the Draft Report. Garnaut admits uncertainty, but says that delay is not a solution, because it cancels the possibility of low-cost mitigation put in place now. You would have thought that logically he would first have to look at the probability of the IPCC scenario’s being correct. But no.

Reading the scientific chapters is deeply depressing. Again and again a summary statement is made for which one can produce a series of contestations. For example, even the “scientifically reputed sceptics” (oh dear) accept that an increase in CO2 concentrations will lead to warming. I guess they do, as do I, but they would also point out that the effect is logarithmic and diminishing. Does Garnaut? No, there’s not a word about that, and it is most important.

Section 3.1.4 is entitled “Are humans causing the earth to warm?” Great, you think, let’s learn. What we learn is that the IPCC is 90 per cent confident that what humans have done since 1750 has led to warming. But how much warming have we caused? Ah, well, we don’t know about that. But he says we need more research to find out, and I agree. Yet if the human contribution were small in scale, what would that mean? We seem to be rushing ahead as though, to restate the point, the human contribution is all or nearly all.

Garnaut gives no evidence to support his position and his ally, the IPCC, meanders around with what its models say. Later on (sections 5.1.2 and 5.3.3) we learn that the seas are rising. Not a word there about the Argo buoys, which have been measuring ocean temperatures for the last five years in the largest and most sophisticated experiment in oceanography of recent times. These buoys say that there has been no warming - if anything, there has been a slight cooling. What does that mean? Glaciers have been retreating since 1850 - because of CO2 concentrations?

How this Report will help the Rudd Government I cannot imagine. There’s nothing new in it that would cause those who take an interest in the debate to sit up and take notice, notwithstanding the screaming headlines that accompanied its release. Fuel prices are going up, but warming isn’t.

Getting us all to imbibe some Dunkirk spirit and accept a decline in our living standards, after 16 years of increasing prosperity, would be a huge ask at any time. It is really impossible now, and Garnaut has made it harder. He must have wished, more than once, that he’d had the good sense to decline the original invitation.

Don Aitkin has been an academic and vice-chancellor. His latest book, What Was It All For? The Reshaping of Australia was published by Allen & Unwin.


An opinion provided by OnlineOpinion.com.au - Australia's e-journal of social and political debate.
Comments
Add New
posted by: A.J.H. Viirlaid 19-Jul-08 22:38:38
To the question of a way out, I can initially think of 2 options, not equally tasteful:

1. Challenge the Terms of Reference and suggest that the so-called Certainty is Anything But

2. Conclude that Nothing Meaningful Can Immediately be Done, even if the so-called Certainty were to be Correct

At least both of these positions are intellectually more honest than to furtively deliver findings that are anything but.

One statement above glares out with its absurdity: “Garnaut admits uncertainty, but says that delay is not a solution, because it cancels the possibility of low-cost mitigation put in place now.”

Where does one arrive at "low-cost mitigation [now]"? "Mitigation" if it ever proves necessary, may be of much lower cost in the future, than it is today.

And WHO has VERIFIED that “Delay is not a Solution”? No one has, that's WHO!

This is an OPINION only held by a few prominent people who have gotten it repeated so often as a mainstream media mantra that it has become the Truth.

This is like the now-discredited idea that hypnosis can uncover Repressed Memories. Let’s please be a little more discriminating in our thinking.

Vladimir Lenin: “A lie told often enough becomes truth.”

Joseph Goebbels: “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.”
posted by: A.J.H. Viirlaid 19-Jul-08 22:46:03
Professor Garnaut would be well-served to read Tom Harris and John McLean's excellent article at http://www.sciencealert.com.au/opinions/20081007-17643.html
posted by: Sams 20-Jul-08 01:06:10
The main comments on this article are going on at online opinion. Turns out either Don Aitkin can't read graphs or scientific papers, or he is a bald-faced liar. When confronted with the counter evidence from NASA (GISS):

"'Global warming stopped in 1998,' has become a recent mantra of those who wish to deny the reality of human-caused global warming. The continued rapid increase of the five-year running mean temperature exposes this assertion as nonsense."
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/2007/

his response was:

"Sorry, Sams, you're off the list of people I'll respond to in future"

I suggest you pick up the thread at OLO.

posted by: Sams 20-Jul-08 01:07:44
Viirlaid wrote: "Tom Harris and John McLean's"

They was also giving a pasting on OLO: no relevant qualifications, and vested interests. Again, see OLO for details.

posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 20-Jul-08 02:27:14
Global warming or not, these debates are rather ideological wars with wasted interests in the background. This is not science. This is rather politics in scientific disguise. And Don Aitkin does not look very well in such disguise.

Throughout our planet’s history nature was creating safe storages. What we have managed in the last couple of centuries is to tap into these safe storages and turn their content into carbon dioxide and heat. While we are starting to run short on oil, we still have plenty of coal. But for how long?

Population growth and increased living standards drive energy demands through the roof. AGW, GW, global cooling or no change in the climate at all are almost irrelevant. Global warming can only aggravate the issue.

Even some GW/AGW sceptics will agree that we cannot continue with rapidly increasing burning of fossil fuels. And sooner is better than crash landing later.
posted by: A.J.H. Viirlaid 22-Jul-08 23:11:18
Hi Damir,

Now you are on to something that I can agree with.

But it has nothing to do with the article above.

The use of fossil fuels will fall. That is inevitable. There is a limited supply of such fuel. But the future need for energy will not diminish, at least in not in any near term. Not unless there is a World War which kills 50 percent of humankind.

Since humans need energy they will derive that energy from other sources. No disagreement from me on that either.

And I have to agree with you that if one's motivation is purely ideological, then debating is usually a waste of time.

I do, however, slightly disagree with your imputation that there will be a "crash landing".

Any time a diminishing supply of any commodity meets the increasing demand for that commodity, a price rise will occur for that commodity. The supply will then increase (if such a ready supply exists) and/or the demand will decrease. That is the most basic law of economics -- it is referred to as the Law of Supply and Demand.

As well a search for SUBSTITUTES usually happens contemporaneously.

Thus there is unlikely to be a “crash” with regard to the relevant commodity.

Of course oil is no ordinary commodity, nor are the other fossil fuels ‘ordinary’. They are quite special. They are the very lifeblood of our modern way of living.

However, short of a war that immediately disrupts the worldwide supply, there would be no “crash”.

There could be a “Long Emergency” as outlined by James Howard Kunstler at http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/7203633/the_long_emergency

And there could be a Financial Crash (not directly related to oil but directly related to Central Bank and Central Government mismanagement of various leading economies – but that is another story for another time – I have gone more off the topic than you have – apologies!).

I am also forced to agree with your leading comment about "politics in scientific disguise".

But then is that not what writers like Tom Harris, John McLean, and Don Aitken are SAYING? Where do you actually disagree with what they are saying?

You write that “Don Aitken does not look very well in such [a] disguise.”

How then do you feel about the “scientific disguise” that the editors of the IPCC are wearing?

Because doesn’t THAT disguise SIMILARLY make the IPCC look somewhat “not well”?
posted by: Damir Ibrisimovic 26-Jul-08 01:01:03
Dear A.J.H. Viirlaid,

Why tempers flare publicly only when a debate is about AGW?

In this forum op eds rarely receive one or two comments, except when an op ed tackles AGW, GW or global cooling. (We are yet to start using GC for global cooling since claims about it are quite rare; quite indicative.)

Yes, we do have frequent disagreements about other theories, but they rarely spill over into the public.

Big business has much greater influence in US and Australia than in any other developed country. This is why AGW debates spilled into public, so passionately, only in these two developed countries. In US, energy companies were quietly funding all oppositions to AGW. There was even a petition in US against AGW. And my question still begs an answer. Why we do not have such petitions elsewhere?

Don Aitkin, in disguise of a scientist, will attack anything that will even indicate that we need to change. If the dominant theory is global cooling, he would attack it with GW arguments. He would probably even advocate increased CO2 emissions to induce AGW.

Passion, in this case, means noise. Under illusion that we will simply silence opposition, we repeat and repeat what we say without ever hearing what opposition says. This is why AGW debates never see the end of a tunnel.

If we are, or wish to be, scientists, we need to put an end to the noise and give the scientific method a chance. And this means published, peer reviewed theory and test of time. (Not attacks on another.)

Kind regards,
Write comment
Name:

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
         Add to Google Reader or Homepage RSS Alerts           Email Alerts