Pielke Jr. –A Takeover of the IPCC

Charles Rotter

Roger Pielke Jr.’s “A Takeover of the IPCC” offers a timely post-mortem on what’s left of scientific rigor in the world’s most influential climate assessment body, of which Pielke Jr. has long been a supporter. The article chronicles not just a change in personnel at the IPCC, but a seismic shift in methodology and purpose—a transformation best described as a hostile takeover by advocates of “Extreme Event Attribution” (EEA). The implications for public policy, scientific integrity, and even the basic credibility of climate science are staggering, and long overdue for public scrutiny.

Pielke is unambiguous from the opening lines:

“The IPCC’s longstanding framework for detection and attribution looks DOA in AR7”.

The gravestone image—marking the death of the IPCC’s “Detection and Attribution Framework, 1988–2025”—sets the tone. What we are witnessing is the burial, not of a bureaucratic process, but of one of the last vestiges of disciplined scientific skepticism inside the IPCC.

He explains,

“The author list for its Chapter 3—Changes in regional climate and extremes, and their causes—suggests strongly that the IPCC will be shifting from its longstanding focus on detection and attribution (D&A) of extreme events to a focus on ‘extreme event attribution’ (EEA)”.

This isn’t an arcane distinction. The traditional D&A framework involved the slow, often frustrating, but necessary work of looking for actual changes in the statistics of weather over many decades, and then trying to assign causes—usually with a healthy dose of uncertainty and humility about what could or could not be claimed.

Here, the IPCC’s previous D&A approach was

“scientifically rigorous, consistent with the IPCC’s definition of climate change, and treats extreme events in the same manner as other phenomena, like global temperatures and sea level rise.”

In contrast, Pielke states,

“The EEA approach is scientifically problematic, inconsistent with the IPCC’s findings on extreme weather, and is explicitly grounded in climate advocacy”.

In other words, we are trading disciplined science for press releases, advocacy, and, more insidiously, ammunition for climate litigation.

Pielke takes care to document the makeup of the new IPCC author list for Chapter 3.

“The chapter’s author list shows that it is stacked with people who focus on extreme event attribution—far out of proportion to their presence in the field. With the help of Google Scholar and ChatGPT I created the table below, which shows that 9 of the chapter’s 20 authors focus their research on extreme event attribution. Two of the three coordinating lead authors focus on EEA. Few of the authors, if any, have expertise in the IPCC’s conventional framework for detection and attribution, and so have no publications on either detection or attribution”.

The table spells this out visually: only a minority of the authors have any background in the original detection and attribution methodology. Instead, there’s a glut of “attributionists”—scientists whose careers are based not on understanding long-term climate shifts, but on drawing direct lines from today’s weather headlines to anthropogenic climate change. This is not “science as a conversation,” it’s science as a megaphone.

Pielke provides a textbook example with the recent coverage of flooding in Pakistan.

“World Weather Attribution (WWA) in the media (6 Aug 2025): ‘Every tenth of a degree of warming will lead to heavier monsoon rainfall, highlighting why a rapid transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy is so urgent.’ The WWA analysis (not peer-reviewed, issued as a press release) claimed: ‘Historical trends associated with global warming in observational datasets show the 30-day maximum rainfall over the study region is now approximately 22% more intense . . . heavy rainfall events such as this one are expected to become more frequent and intense.’”

But as Pielke points out, this narrative falls apart under actual scientific scrutiny. A new peer-reviewed study, published July 9, 2025, concluded: “‘[U]nderstanding how climate change affects monsoon regions in South Asia is not straightforward, contrary to what some media commentators suggested when reporting the Pakistan floods in 2022.’” Even more damning, their projections indicate “a non-significant reduction by approximately 5% of the ensemble mean rainfall has been found.” And a 2022 study on flood incidence? “Annual maximum flows exhibited negative trends at 15 (10 significant) stations while positive trends were shown at 7 (2 significant) between 1981 and 2016 . . . Counter to common belief, the most profound and decreasing pattern of flows was observed in summer”.

These claims are, as Pielke notes, “impossible to reconcile.” Is Pakistan’s flooding getting worse? Is it tied to climate change at all? Is rainfall going up or down? Are emissions reductions relevant to monsoon behavior? The science—when you look past the headlines and advocacy—simply doesn’t support the sweeping certainty promoted by extreme event attributionists.

He notes that media outlets have become complicit in this shift, echoing EEA talking points without any critical scrutiny. The New York Times, for example, reports, “Once a Source of Life and Renewal, Monsoon Brings Death to Pakistan . . . climate change has brought a catastrophic new normal to the country.” Pielke retorts, “In reality, there is no ‘new normal.’ Pakistan has long been one of the most flood prone and flood impacted nations on the planet”. Table 1 backs this up, listing deadly floods going back decades—a grim but factual reminder that disasters are a feature of history, not a “new” byproduct of fossil fuels.

What’s really happening is that “extreme events have become a political football. Climate advocacy has emphasized connecting extreme events with climate change, promoting the idea that ‘every tenth of degree’ of global temperature increase is associated with more extreme events and more disasters. If only we reduce emissions, the argument goes, we can also modulate extreme weather. In this logic, every extreme event becomes about energy use, and not about exposure, vulnerability, and the local decisions that have seen disaster deaths drop to their lowest in human history. EEA has been central to such advocacy”.

This is a sleight of hand: instead of improving resilience, strengthening infrastructure, or investing in risk reduction—the things that actually save lives—policy is redirected into the dead end of emission controls and carbon accounting. EEA, according to Pielke, is now “central to such advocacy,” and the takeover of the IPCC chapter ensures that this will be the party line for years to come.

Perhaps the most important takeaway is that this transformation is not merely a “scientific debate.” It represents the replacement of scientific skepticism with groupthink and advocacy, all dressed up as expertise. “Scientific assessment can be challenging in the best of circumstances. When an assessment is taken over to serve politics it ceases to be an assessment and turns into something else”.

Pielke’s article, in short, is a wakeup call. The so-called “settled science” is more unsettled than ever, and the very structures meant to provide honest assessment are being repurposed for advocacy. The cost, inevitably, will be paid in public trust, misallocated resources, and a continued failure to address the real drivers of disaster risk.

There’s an old saying in science: extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. The new IPCC, sadly, seems content to settle for extraordinary press releases. The public deserves better. It’s time to ask, loudly, whose interests are really being served by this shift—and to demand a return to genuine scientific skepticism before the last shreds of credibility are gone for good.


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August 24, 2025 at 12:05AM

Renewable Energy Tales from Enron: Part I

Ed. Note: Rob Bradely, founder of MasterResource and CEO and founder of the Institute for Energy Research (IER), worked at Enron Corp. from 1985 until 2001, where he was director of public policy analysis. This series will share memos and debate at Enron for the historical record.

In mid-1999, I gave a speech in Houston that caught the ire of a principle of Enron Renewablesw, H. David Ramm. His memo to me dated June 10, 1999, follows.

I saw the agenda for the Energy Law Institute (scheduled for 5-6 August in Houston) which includes your talk on “Why Renewables Energies are ‘Depleting’ and Nonrenewable Energies are Not.”

I find it contradictory and potentially harmful that you would be publically promoting this powition. While apparently there is no control over your expressing your opinion as “President, Institute for Energy Research,” the implications of making these statements as “Director, Public Policy Analysis Enron Corp.” are very negative.

We own one of the world’s largest wind companies, are actively developing hydro projects, have been a leader in pushing “green energy” concepts in the U.S. and have a Chairman who publicly declares renewables to be positive and important.

I’d like the opportunity to review your presentation prior to the August forum, and I’d like to dicuss haw we prevent these potential conflicts in the future.

Comment

The post Renewable Energy Tales from Enron: Part I appeared first on Master Resource.

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August 23, 2025 at 10:17PM

Net Zero Rebellion Growing in Australia

Essay by Eric Worrall

Three state branches of Australia’s main opposition party have voted to dump Net Zero.

Queensland Liberals vote to ditch net zero

Andrew Tillett Foreign affairs, defence correspondent
Aug 22, 2025 – 3.48pm

The convention passed a motion calling for a “flexible” approach to emissions reduction and for the federal party to abandon the commitment to achieving net zero emissions by 2050, a policy adopted under Scott Morrison’s prime ministership.

The motion is not binding on the federal party room but follows similar resolutions passed by the West Australian and South Australian branches, putting pressure on Ley amid a sweeping review into the Coalition’s policies.

Home affairs spokesman Andrew Hastie and former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce are the highest profile members to call for the net zero pledge to be axed, while conservative activist group Advance is lobbying MPs to dump the policy.

Read more: https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/queensland-libs-vote-to-ditch-net-zero-despite-ley-plea-to-modernise-20250822-p5mp1e

This political shift is encouraging, though it is sad the federal leader of the Liberals is still clinging to the failed politics of yesterday.

Something needs to change. Mining and heavy industry in Australia is in big trouble, thanks to skyrocketing prices.

BlueScope warns soaring energy costs threaten Australian manufacturing as profit drops 90pc

By Kelly Fuller

ABC Illawarra
Topic:Steel
Mon 18 Aug

In short:

BlueScope reports a 90 per cent fall in full-year profit amid soaring energy costs and volatile trade policies.

CEO Mark Vassella says urgent reforms are needed to secure Australia’s manufacturing future.

What’s next?

It has argued its case for reform in a submission to the federal government’s Gas Market Review.

BlueScope has sounded the alarm over Australia’s energy crisis, warning that unsustainably high gas prices are pushing domestic manufacturing to a “tipping point”.

The steelmaker has reported a full year profit of $84 million, a 90 per cent drop from the $721 million reported a year ago.

Speaking after the company’s AGM, BlueScope CEO Mark Vassella said energy costs in Australia are now three to four times higher than in the US and risked undermining the country’s Future Made in Australia vision.

Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-08-18/bluescope-warns-energy-costs-threaten-made-in-australia/105666186

BlueScope goes on to argue for a bigger protected domestic market, to shield producers from international gas prices, but reducing the return on investment for energy producers probably isn’t the best solution to a price and availability crisis.

The reality is, Australia is not short of energy resources – we have some of the most abundant coal and gas fields in the world, not to mention our world class uranium and Thorium deposits. But all of our Uranium is exported, and domestic exploitation of fossil fuel resources has been systematically discouraged for decades, by politicians whose focus has been on issues other than economic development.


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August 23, 2025 at 08:03PM

WUWT Upgrade Coming, Some Downtime Required

Hello everyone! I just wanted to let you know that in the next week we will begin a process of upgrading WUWT’s internal components and the web page theme. The current theme we use is almost 10 years old and is no longer working well in today’s Internet environment.

Starting Wednesday, you might see that the website has been switched into maintenance mode and you will not be able to view any new articles or make any new comments. We have to do this in order to be able to have a stop and starting point for migrating all of the content over to the new setup. I don’t yet know how long it will take or how long the site will be in maintenance mode.

At the same time, we are going to make some other adjustments to make the website run faster. One of our biggest problems in getting better SEO ranking is web page load time, which can be traced to the huge database of articles (34,995 articles and nearly 4 million comments as of this writing ) we have going back 18 years. It simply takes too long for WordPress to respond with such a large database to query. To that end, we will likely split up the WUWT website into an archive section and a current section. By doing this we should be able to improve load times significantly both for web browsers and mobile phone delivery. This way, you’ll still be able to find older articles and comments.

Another thing that will happen is that we are going to increase our advertising load on pages. This can’t be helped, as costs to run and maintain WUWT have significantly increased over the past year. I’ve always preferred to have a light touch when it comes to advertising but I really don’t have a choice at this point except to increase it. If you want to continue to view the website with no advertising at all you can sign up for one of our subscription programs.

Also, at this time I welcome any ideas that you might have for improving content or features or the way this website operates. This would include the kinds of stories we put up, editorial content, the way commenting is run, and anything else you think needs adjustment or updating.

As always, thank you for continuing to visit and thank you for supporting truth and sanity in the climate debate. – Anthony


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August 23, 2025 at 04:02PM