Month: May 2017

Bret Stephens Is Right About Progressives and Science

Bret Stephens Is Right About Progressives and Science

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

When Bret Stephens, former columnist at the Wall Street Journal before joining the New York Times, wrote his inaugural column on April 28th, he broke the Internet. His argument that global warming and the human influence on it are real and undisputable, but that many other facets of the climate change debate are “a matter of probabilities”, did not sit well with opposing pundits. Challenging the accepted orthodoxy on climate change, it seems, is verboten.

The ensuing media storm was scathing. While grudgingly noting that “technically he doesn’t get any facts wrong”, Slate argued the suggestion by Stephens that “reasonable people can be skeptical about the dangers of climate change” is “not actually true.” Only unreasonable people can be, presumably. Going a step further, New Republic contended that the article was merely a further manifestation of the American conservative movement’s ubiquitous attempt to drag any issue inexorably towards the conclusion that the only possible answer is a hands-off, small government.

With threats to cancel subscriptions pouring in, Stephens’ NYT stable mate, public editor Liz Spayd, was compelled to grab the mic and try to intercede between the new columnist and her publication’s incensed liberal readership. The outraged missives complained that climate change was a “meaningful and disturbing choice” for a first column, simply “too important” to cast any doubt on and that the newspaper really shouldn’t be producing content questioning “the fundamental believability of facts.”

However, this is not only fallacious. It also misses the point. And so, the lambasting of Bret Stephens’s first column for the NYT reveals how polarized the debate on science has become: the basic scientific truism that there is no absolute certainty is no longer tolerated.

In fact, asserting that science is fallible is not a denial of it, but on the contrary, a question of its honesty. Without it, the credibility of this noble pursuit couldn’t be upheld. Many “facts” once held sacred – that the earth was flat, the miasma theory of disease – have now all been thoroughly debunked. Scientific consensus and advances in human knowledge are predicated on the idea that there is no absolute knowledge, only premises that haven’t been disproven yet. Even Dave Levitan, science writer and passionate supporter of tackling climate change, points out that in science, nothing is a certainty.

This is what Stephens was discussing in his article, and the angry response rather proves the point. The problem with this reactionary thought process is not limited to the deep corners of the web or the front pages of the New York Times. Rather, it’s in the legislative effect that such scientific misperceptions create. The GOP’s opposition to any meaningful action on climate change, pointing to a couple of fringe studies and think tanks (such as the Heartland Institute) to justify their opposition is well known.

But liberals should know that they are not above reproach either. The general idea of scientific orthodoxy on the left has become divorced from actual scientific consensus. On climate change things line up, while on issues like vaccines or pesticides they don’t. On climate change, one aberrant study is rejected as an outlier. On pesticides and vaccines, one aberrant study becomes the rule setter.

When California’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) decided in late March to place glyphosate, a popular herbicide, on the Proposition 65 list of carcinogenic chemicals, it did so precisely by succumbing to reactionary public pressure. The regulator based its edict on one outlier study by the controversial International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and, probably more pertinently, on the assumption that herbicides are evil. This point of view that has been exacerbated by a skewed debate that successfully linked the issue with another highly discussed topic: GMOs.

But in labeling glyphosate a carcinogen, California is out of step with other authorities, such as the US Environmental Protection Agency and the European Food Safety Authority, who have found no carcinogenic effects of substance. The reason these other agencies aren’t troubled by glyphosate is that the science is telling them that they shouldn’t be troubled by it. The European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) assessed the substance again in March of this year. The verdict? Not a carcinogen.

Aiding the reactionary dynamic of public discourse is the increasingly blurry line between scientists and activists that actively feed confirmation bias. Italy’s Ramazzini Institute is currently conducting a study on glyphosate ahead of a crucial EU vote. Although preliminary results don’t show adverse effects, the fact that the Ramazzini researchers have a history of anti-glyphosate activism and strong links to IARC warrants skepticism about what the final results will turn out to be. Establishing the result before the method contributes to the general decay of the traditional foundations erstwhile upholding the scientific consensus. In other words, ideology is masquerading as science.

Unfortunately, the uncertainty of science allows for its politicization. Selena Kyle, senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council gleefully said that putting glyphosate on the Prop. 65 list – despite contrary evidence – was the “choice of California’s voters.” But what the people consider to be the inalienably correct course of action doesn’t always tally with the data, which is often messy, unpredictable and contradictory – something that can be difficult for those who prefer to think in black and white.

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via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

May 15, 2017 at 01:47AM

In Fight Against U.S. Shale Oil, OPEC Risks Lower for Longer

In Fight Against U.S. Shale Oil, OPEC Risks Lower for Longer

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

US shale oil has defied the naysayers. By the time OPEC meets in Vienna on May 25, U.S. output will be approaching the 9.5 million barrels a day mark — higher than in November 2014 when OPEC started a two-year price war.

When Khalid Al-Falih arrived at Davos in late January, the Saudi oil minister was exultant. The output cuts he’d painstakingly arranged with fellow OPEC states and Russia were working so well, he said, they could probably be phased out by June.

Almost five months later, U.S. production is rising faster than anyone predicted and his plan has been shredded. In a series of phone calls and WhatsApp messages late last week, Al-Falih told his fellow ministers more was needed, according to people briefed on the talks, asking not to be named because the conversations are private.

In their battle to revive the global oil market, OPEC and its allies are digging in for a long war of attrition against shale.

“OPEC is now recognizing they need longer — and potentially deeper — production cuts than they have anticipated,” said Jamie Webster, a senior director for oil at the Boston Consulting Group Inc. in New York.

From the beginning, Saudi Arabia saw a quick one-off intervention: reduce production for a few months and speed up the recovery. The strategy had an option for a six-month extension, but Riyadh initially thought it wouldn’t be needed. U.S. shale, the plan assumed, wouldn’t recover fast enough.

And yet, shale has defied the naysayers. By the time OPEC meets in Vienna on May 25, U.S. output will be approaching the 9.5 million barrels a day mark — higher than in November 2014 when OPEC started a two-year price war. The rebound has been powered by turbocharged output in the Permian basin straddling Texas and New Mexico.

Forced to adjust to lower prices, shale firms reshaped themselves into leaner operations that can thrive with oil just above $50 a barrel. Brent crude, the global benchmark, added 5 cents to $50.82 a barrel as of 9:59 a.m. in New York.

Since OPEC agreed to cut output six months ago, U.S. shale production has risen by about 600,000 barrels a day, wiping out half of the cartel’s cut of 1.2 million barrels a day and turning the rapid victory Saudi Arabia foresaw is turning into a stalemate. Al-Falih said this week Saudi Arabia is now pushing to extend the cuts “into the second half of the year and possibly beyond.”

On Thursday, OPEC’s own monthly oil market report said that production from non-members would rise 64 percent faster than previously forecast this year, driven mainly by U.S. shale fields.

So far, OPEC hasn’t been able to “cut supplies faster than shale oil can increase,”  said Olivier Jakob of consultant Petromatrix GmbH.

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via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

May 15, 2017 at 01:40AM

Priebus cracks down on news given Trump after fake Time cover gets circulated

Priebus cracks down on news given Trump after fake Time cover gets circulated

via Climate Change Dispatch
http://ift.tt/2jXMFWN

From The Hill: President’s Trump’s deputy national security adviser reportedly gave the president fake information, leading to a crackdown at the White House. K.T. McFarland handed the president a printout of two covers of Time magazine, Politico reported, citing four White House officials familiar with the matter. One of the covers appeared to be from […]

via Climate Change Dispatch http://ift.tt/2jXMFWN

May 15, 2017 at 01:23AM

Arctic Surprise

Arctic Surprise

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

Something surprising is happening with Arctic ice.  It is May and ice should be melting, but instead it is growing and in the unlikely place of Barents Sea.

 The images above show the ice positions since April, and you can see on the left how ice refused to leave Newfoundland, and on the right how Barents is not backing down but increasing.

The graph below shows how in recent days 2017 NH ice extents have grown way above average, even including the exceptionally low amounts of ice in the Pacific, Bering in particular.

Much of the growth is due to Barents adding 85k m2 in the last 5 days to reach 572k km2, an extent last seen two weeks ago.

The graph below shows Arctic ice excluding the Pacific seas of Bering and Okhotsk.  This provides an even more dramatic view of this years ice extents.  Mid April Arctic ice was average, and look what has happened since May began on day 121.

Some insight into the unusual Arctic ice growth comes from AER Arctic Report and Forecast May 8, 2017

Currently positive pressure/geopotential height anomalies are mostly focused on the North Atlantic side of the Arctic with mostly negative pressure/geopotential height anomalies across the mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere (NH). This is resulting in a near record low Arctic Oscillation (AO) and North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) for May.

It might be the second week of May but an unusually strong block/high pressure exists in the northern North Atlantic including Iceland and Greenland and is more commonly associated with winter. The unusually strong block is contributing to not only below normal temperatures to both sides of the North Atlantic, including Europe and the Eastern US but late season snowfall to Southeastern Canada, the Northeastern US and Russia. The negative geopotential height anomalies that have developed both downstream across western Eurasia including Europe and upstream across the Eastern US are predicted to persist for much of the month of May helping to ensure a relatively cool month of May for both Europe and the Eastern US.

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via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

May 15, 2017 at 01:11AM