What Actually Is ‘Climate Change’?

One of the really weird things about the whole debate around global warming, or the monologue as alarmists would have it, is that we keep being told some big bad abstract thing called ‘climate change’ is causing stuff like more tornadoes, more dry spells, more heat waves, more snowstorms or whatever

Everywhere you look you see claims likeClimate change is expected to crank up temperatures in winter more than any other season in Canada”.

Expected to. Expected, not has.

Or “Greece faces an uphill battle to cope with the growing impacts of climate change”.

But ‘climate change’ isn’t a cause of changes in climate. Nor is it an effect. It’s the thing itself.

If winter temperatures rise, it’s not because of ‘climate change’, it’s an example of it.

If there are more floods or tornadoes, or indeed fewer, it doesn’t cause climate to change, it is a change in the climate.

And the idea that weather getting worse can cause weather to get worse is silly. It’s a confusion of categories. A very widespread one. This kind of rhetoric is everywhere.

For instance in The AtlanticAs climate change brings disasters and increasingly unlivable conditions to growing swaths of the United States, it also has the potential to remake America’s economic landscape”.

But again, ‘climate change’ doesn’t bring disasters. More disasters, if it were happening, would be an example of ‘climate change’. And when one reads on MSN, from Espresso, that “Fighting climate change and its damaging effects – destructive floods, raging storms, runaway wildfires and so on – is one of humankind’s greatest challenges” it’s easy to cheer, or jeer, and move along.

But stay a moment and ponder what this statement actually means, or could mean.

If these are the ‘effects’ of ‘climate change’, what is ‘climate change’ itself? Is it a man or a horse? Or a big scary monster on a movie screen?

Because when, say, Godzilla trashes Tokyo, the effects are smashed buildings, raging fires, floodwaters and so forth. And the cause is a guy in a bad allosaurus suit with big pointy claws and ‘atomic breath’ whatever that is.

But there isn’t some big scary thing in a ‘climate change’ suit that causes hurricanes, wildfires and sea level and thermometer rise. Or is there?

Many people seem to think so. And this mechanistic metaphor, while especially odd in people you’d think would regard nature as holistic, also explains the notion of ‘climate breakdown’, which is not just a piece of rhetorical escalation but also of intellectual seize-up.

In the Guardian, a good place for it, Bill McKibben rants about “the increasingly extreme weather that will be driven by climate breakdown.” Driven by it, please note. Not described by it.

But increasingly extreme weather isn’t caused by ‘climate breakdown’, it is climate breakdown. Or might be if it happened, unless it turns out that weather has typically been ‘extreme’ and we had a lucky break and it calmed down for a bit.

Otherwise ‘climate breakdown’ would have to be this cosmic thing where the weather didn’t get worse until something we call ‘climate’ broke, and then things around it got ugly.

It’s nonsense on stilts. And a good thing too, since McKibben predicts dreadful flooding.

A characteristic version of this error, from something inappropriately called Climate Reality Canada, the local branch of an outfit “Founded and chaired by Nobel Laureate and former US Vice President Al Gore”, and which calls itself “a non-Indigenous organization working on climate education in what is now known as Canada”, is:

“Rural and remote communities are integral to Canada’s economic, cultural, and social fabric.

However, these communities face heightened susceptibility to the adverse effects of climate change, including droughts, floods, crop failures, and wildfires.”

Granted we don’t expect much from an organization whose financial statements for 2022 list $28,184 in “donations with receipts,” $35,418 in “donations without receipts,” $201,832 in “government funding” and $46,733 in “other revenue” which they claim somehow totals $731,167.

These things, if they were getting worse, would not be ‘adverse effects of climate change’. They would be adverse changes in the climate.

Ditto a claim like: “There is some evidence that visiting an ecosystem threatened by climate change could lead people to become more aware of their impact on the environment.”

Again, an ecosystem isn’t threatened by some big bad thing out there called ‘climate change’ that will, like Godzilla, suddenly burst into view and toast it with atomic breath. An ecosystem disintegrating, or transforming, or flourishing, in a long-term sustained way, is ‘climate change’.

This tendency to mistake abstractions for the concrete realities they are intended to make manageable can be seen in a number of fields. Including economics, or more particularly macroeconomics, where for instance the ‘cost push’ theory says that rising prices cause inflation when actually ‘inflation’ is just a term for a general price rise.

Inflation can’t cause prices to rise, or vice versa. It is the generalized phenomenon of prices rising.

By the same token, ‘climate change’ can’t cause more drought or more rain or both. It can’t cause it to get warmer in one place, colder in another, windier in a third and less windy in a fourth, although alarmists claim, without a shred of evidence, that’s exactly what it does.

All these things, if they should occur, would be examples of climate change not results or causes of it.

They might of course be examples of climate variability instead. Sometimes conditions fluctuate, often dramatically, but there is no underlying long-term trend.

But if things really do change, for instance North Africa going from moist and verdant during the Holocene Climatic Optimum to dry and brown today, it isn’t because of ‘climate change’. It is climate change.

One reason people fall into this careless habit, verbal and mental, is their tendency to think of the climate as some sort of machine constructed to run smoothly in just one way.

And if it somehow breaks down, the bindle rotor torques out due to feeding in too much CO2 or something, then it overheats, bits fly off and so on. So ‘climate change’ is like your engine seizing up.

But the climate is not a manufactured machine with one good dependable state and disaster if you put in too much fuel or too little, run it too fast or too slow, get the mix of oxygen and gasoline wrong.

It’s an incredibly complex and dynamic system with very poorly understood feedback mechanisms, and it is composed of the various things we call weather including big phenomena like atmospheric rivers, ocean currents and trade-winds.

The temptation to “reify” climate, to reduce it to a supposed vast single entity, is pervasive. Thus a New York Times piece by David Wallace-Wells bears the headlineWhat will we do when we see the climate more clearly?

Which is an interesting question, in that it invites us to ponder what seeing ‘the climate’ would entail.

Possibly the famous Apollo 8 “Earthrise” shot that helped galvanize the modern environmental movement. In some sense seeing the entire planet from the outside all at once, indescribably beautiful but also apparently tiny and fragile, is seeing ‘the climate’.

But from inside, it’s not one thing and it’s not small and it’s not fragile. Try to withstand hurricane-force winds and see who buckles first.

What Wallace-Wells has in mind is, well, confused.

The target of his enthusiasm is that:

“This month MethaneSAT, an $88 million, 770-pound surveillance satellite conceived by the Environmental Defense Fund and designed at Harvard to precisely track the human sources of methane being released so promiscuously into the atmosphere, was launched by SpaceX, to great fanfare.

Methane, a somewhat less notorious greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, is produced by industrial and natural processes – leaking oil and gas infrastructure, decomposing melted permafrost, the belching of cows and the microbial activity of wetlands.

We’ve known that methane is producing a lot of warming and that there is a lot more of it in the atmosphere now, but we didn’t have the full picture.

Beginning next year, MethaneSAT will begin beaming down everything picked up by its spectrometer, providing a publicly available quick-turnaround methane-monitoring system that has filled the hearts of climate advocates and data nerds with anticipation.

What will it see? The hope is that it will see a map of climate malfeasance that doubles as a global to-do list.”

Well, no. It will see the planet as we already do and, if it works as they hope, it will also show approximately where methane is produced and in roughly what amounts.

But we won’t be seeing ‘the climate’. You just can’t see ‘the climate’. It’s not a thing. It’s an abstraction.

If the satellite works as intended, what we’ll be seeing is traces of methane in the atmosphere in parts per billion. If the satellite tells us more about methane, good.

But it won’t show us ‘the climate’ and people who think it will are engaged in a massive, pervasive confusion of categories.

See more here climatediscussionnexus

Bold emphasis added

Editor’s note: none of the effects alarmists claim will happen because they can’t. With the amount of regulation now in force, the planet is healthier than it was a century ago, human activity has no effect on the climate at all, and certainly not any of the so-called ‘greenhouse gases’ which, apart from being an absurd notion, violates the Second Law of Thermodynamics, as Joe Postma has so ably demonstrated on PSI before.

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    Koen Vogel

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    “Promiscuous” methane emissions? I’m glad we now have a satellite.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    John V

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    All I can say is, just like some folks in Berlin stated back in the 30’s and 40’s, if you tell a lie long enough, it becomes fact. It has been proven with AGW and CV19. It really irks me that people are too lazy to think for themselves, and have been brainwashed by co-opted “science” and medical “authorities”, whom are laughing all the way to the bank.

    I will state to alarmists that every doom and gloom prediction over the last 40+ years has not come to pass, and never will. And they are amazed at that because their frigging eyes are closed and can’t rationalize and observe for themselves.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Graeme Mcmillan

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    I enjoyed reading this article. It addresses the misuse of language and the manipulation of thought for political, economic, religious, and philosophical reasons.
    “The temptation to “reify” climate, to reduce it to a supposed vast single entity, is pervasive.” The term “climate change” is meaningless and tautological. It also fails to acknowledge that there are many different climates. For instance the climate in Scotland is not the same climate as South Africa. The climate in any area can, has and will change. It’s not that long ago that the Sahara was a lush wet grassland.
    “Climate change” is not only reified but also deified. We are all encouraged to change our behaviour in order to quell the anger of the mighty God, Climate Change.
    Thus we build windmills and solar arrays, symbols of worship, in the hope that Climate Change will look favourably on us poor humans and not send down plagues, floods and general nastiness. Like any religion, heretics will be persecuted, ostracised and ridiculed. The scriptures of the great Lord, Climate Change are now termed, “The Science”. Woe betide some of our latter day Galileo’s who dare to question “The Science”.
    “The crux of the biscuit is the apostrophe” said Frank Zappa. It’s said that he meant that the most important bits of any message are those that are left out.
    Climate change is a concept that begs us to question the bits that are left out and to criticise the liturgies of the Faithfull.

    Reply

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