It’s Time to Stop the Misleading ‘Extreme Weather’ Headlines

For years now, headlines linking ‘climate change’ to ‘extreme’ weather events have dominated public debate

Articles suggesting ‘extreme’ weather events were made many times worse because of ‘climate change’ are bound to grab people’s attention.

However, their scientific basis is fundamentally flawed. A new report from the Global Warming Policy Foundation explains the mistaken reasoning behind these dramatic claims.

So-called attribution science attempts to simulate ‘extreme’ weather events without the impact of ‘anthropogenic climate change’.

But the global climate is notoriously unpredictable and complex, meaning that modelling a world that separates our already variable climate from man-made ‘climate change’ is nigh-on impossible.

The risks of using such uncertain projections to dictate policy include misallocating resources, imposing unnecessary economic burdens and limiting flexibility to adapt as scientific understanding evolves.

Consider the reporting of a recent heatwave in the Southern US and Mexico. World Weather Attribution stated that this event was 35 times as likely to happen due to man-made ‘climate change’.

Detailed extreme weather records have only been around in the modern era, and in many countries these records only go back a matter of decades, if at all. How can a body accurately model a world without any human activity at all?

Attribution claims simply assume that these modelled results are correct: a logical fallacy known as ‘begging the question’.

Despite claiming to represent the scientific community, attribution researchers have developed ways of avoiding scrutiny from their peers. Rapid attribution studies are often promoted through press releases, giving striking figures time to hit the headlines without the scrutiny of peer review.

By the time anyone can examine the assumptions behind the claims, they have already been reported around the world.

In the report, Ralph Alexander explains the origin of these studies: developed with cynical objectives in mind. He describes how a 2012 meeting of climate scientists, lawyers and policy experts was revealed to have promoted rapid attribution studies to pursue climate litigation against ‘fossil fuel’ companies.

Climate lawfare activists needed stronger evidence than the IPCC was able to provide from conventional observational studies showing that most forms of ‘extreme’ weather were not becoming more frequent.

Too often, alarming statistics on ‘extreme’ weather events are released to suit political goals and the news cycle rather than being firmly underpinned by science. This may be accompanied by reputational damage for those who stray from the judgement of major climate bodies.

For example, Roger Pielke Jr., a well-respected climate scientist, was branded a ‘denier’ by critics after challenging what he described as the politicisation of climate science.

Pielke received condemnation for declaring in a Wall Street Journal article:

“I believe climate change is real and that human emissions of greenhouse gases risk justifying action. … But my research led me to a conclusion that… there is scant evidence to indicate that hurricanes, floods, tornadoes or drought have become more frequent or intense.”

The scientific community ought to hear dissenting views, provided they are supported by evidence. The reality, unfortunately, is that critics can be demonised and hounded out, even if they are criticising ‘extreme’ weather attribution models, which cannot be proven with certainty.

After every ‘extreme’ weather event, experts face pressure to attribute its origin to global warming. The reality is much more nuanced. In the report, Ralph Alexander states that:

“attribution studies rely on computer climate models that have a dismal track record in predicting the future, or indeed of hindcasting the past”.

Models cited in Al Gore’s 2009 UN speech suggesting that, in summer, the North Polar Ice Cap could be “completely ice-free within the next five to seven years” cannot be taken seriously.

Observational evidence suggests that claims about global warming making weather events more extreme are overstated. Even the IPCC acknowledges low confidence in long-term trends linking global warming to tropical cyclones, floods, droughts or tornadoes.

In addition, by relying on datasets that do not extend to pre-industrial times, scientists may miss key distinctions when measuring human impacts on global weather. By failing to link current weather events to similar occurrences in the past, and by discussing global warming alongside them, researchers and journalists give the impression that ‘extreme’ weather events are directly attributable to global warming.

This must surely influence decision-making.

Over the past few decades, some reports have presented claims later shown to be unsubstantiated. One widely shared claim suggested that humans could go extinct if they don’t stop using ‘fossil fuels’ within five years.

That claim, shared online in 2018 by Greta Thunberg, was later challenged and criticised for relying on flawed modelling.

Weather attribution studies just aren’t robust enough to guide policy decisions. Unfalsifiable studies that base their conclusions on assumptions cannot be taken as a reliable guide.

When reports from just a few years ago are challenged and new ones present equally startling claims, the public should remain mindful of past inaccuracies.

See more here dailysceptic.org

Header image: The Conversation

Please Donate Below To Support Our Ongoing Work To Defend The Scientific Method

Leave a comment

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Share via
Share via