This is waaaaaaaaay too many words when all they want to say is “RCP8.5 is now unrealistic given progress towards climate goals, and the “business as usual” scenario should be updated in the next IPCC report”
Thank you. This seemed like it was written by a student who was saying the same thing over and over in order to satisfy a 4,500-word target, and I was wondering what I was missing.
Unfortunately I feel like submissions on the site, as well as general content online, of the same type for significantly less academic subjects (this new cool web framework I'll spend 6000 words writing about) are the norm now.
And before anyone says so, no it has nothing to do with the supposed lessened attention span smartphones have caused. I'm not wasting 15 minutes of my life reading about social media recommendation algorithms [1] when not even a single paragraph is dedicated to at least some rudimentary technical explanation behind them.
Same goes for 30-minute YouTube videos attempting to maximize monetization for subjects whose explanation in less than 10 minutes for an average intelligence person is adequate.
Here's also a recent example of ideal, imo, technical writing that is sadly getting more scarce:
Ever since I saw a comment on HN about low information density on the internet, I haven’t been able to unsee it. They were commenting on a YouTube video that had an 8-second bit of content but was nearly 2 minutes long. But it’s so much worse than that.
Recipes tell you how their great grandmother moved to the Americas and made the first apple pie ever. And then detail the entire history of apples and how to make the entire recipe. And then, 70% of the way down the page, right before the comment section, is what you wanted at first glance: what’s in this pie, and how long will it take me to make?
I agree that there is a lot of blabla and that is not beneficial to anyone.
But sometimes things that may seem as blabla actually may not be. You say that you care about technical information and every paragraph should contain some. But there is more than just tech, and it is important to motivate why we should care about the tech topic we are reading about. This will require paragraphs here and there that deal with ethical, social, philosophical considerations, and they may seem like space-fillers, however the contents are not trivial. Maybe you know that recommendation algorithms can have negative impacts, still it cant hurt to see arguments for this position. And other people besides you may not think so, and thus it is important to present them with such positions so that there can be a discussion. Whatever "average intelligence" is supposed to mean, not everyone knows the same things I do, no matter how "smart" they are.
I agree, so I used ChatGPT to summarize this for us:
In the article "Climate Change Scenarios Have Lost Touch with Reality," written by Roger Pielke Jr. and Justin Ritchie and published in Issues in Science and Technology, the authors argue that the climate change scenarios used by policymakers and scientists have become disconnected from empirical reality. They suggest that this has led to an overreliance on untested and unrealistic assumptions, which in turn undermines the credibility of climate change projections and makes it more difficult to develop effective policies.
The authors note that climate change projections are typically based on a set of assumptions about future greenhouse gas emissions, which are then used to generate a range of potential climate outcomes. However, these assumptions often fail to account for a range of important factors, such as economic growth, technological innovation, and changes in land use patterns, which can have a significant impact on emissions and climate outcomes.
Pielke and Ritchie argue that policymakers and scientists need to take a more pragmatic and evidence-based approach to climate change projections, one that is grounded in real-world data and incorporates a wider range of factors. They suggest that this could involve developing more diverse and flexible scenarios that are better able to capture the complexity and uncertainty of the real world.
Overall, the authors stress the importance of ensuring that climate change policies are based on realistic and evidence-based projections, rather than relying on overly simplistic or unrealistic assumptions. They argue that this will require a fundamental rethinking of the way that climate change scenarios are developed and used, and a greater emphasis on collaboration and dialogue between policymakers, scientists, and other stakeholders.
Summarization is one the areas ChatGPT is most reliable. I’ve been using it frequently for research and work and antidotally found it to be quite reliable and helpful.
Please don't. Anyone on HN who wants a ChatGPT summary can make one themselves; when I read a person's post I want to know what that person has to say about a topic, not what they can produce with a machine. It's the same reason we don't need comments along the lines of 'I used a spell checker to identify the typos in your comment' or consisting of tables generated in MS Excel.
edit: it's not due to any antipathy to AI. I love using ChatGPT myself.
Wikipedia is authored and curated by people who, by and large, know what they're talking about. When they make things up, it's verified and corrected by other people, usually within the decade.
I get the sense that they are trying very carefully not to sound like climate change denialists, so that they won't get conflated with people much further from the scientific consensus. If they just said "the IPCC models are BS," they would likely be dismissed out of hand, at least in the scientific community.
Pielke Jr is a climate-action "denialist" from a long way back, no? (claims to accept the science but then concludes there's nothing we can do about it for the foreseeable future other than adapt. This article seems to be saying "well ok some of the changes we've made are making a difference to emissions, but now there's no real need to make any more...").
Only because I don't believe he's ever denied climate change was happening or that if it is it's not our fault, which are the usual first two phases of denialism.
I don’t follow. You’re responding to a point about the author not being a climate change denialist by saying that he doesn’t think action against climate change is justified.
What point are you actually trying to make? It seems like you’re trying to equate one with the other, especially given your novel use of the word “denialism”. I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but I’m still unclear on what exactly you are implying.
I just got the impression the OP wasn't aware of Pielke Jr's background. Actually he's probably better described as a contrarian than a denialist, though he's been called out by no less than Michael Mann as belonging to the latter camp.
Roger A. Pielke Jr. is an American political scientist and professor, and was the director of the Sports Governance Center within the Department of Athletics at the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research at the University of Colorado Boulder.
But yes, a long time denialist amd one frequently steadfastly wrong in the face of evidence independantly confirmed by multiple third parties of standing.
He got that from his father who was also an AGW denialist (a climate change believer, but a denier that humans play any meaningful role), albeit one with more relevant credentuals:
Roger A. Pielke Sr. is an American meteorologist with interests in climate variability and climate change, environmental vulnerability, numerical modeling, atmospheric dynamics, land/ocean – atmosphere interactions, and large eddy/turbulent boundary layer modeling.
FWiW it is universally acknowledged that Jnr. does have considerable expertise and knowledge in the field of water polo.
Despite the provocative title this seems well-intentioned. The scientific accuracy needs to be top-priority, these particular elements of the projections should be assessed and reevaluated if necessary.
I imagine there are several 100M of those on the planet. Most do not get to address the UN, nor have well-off parents who are using her to get publicity that they couldn't get for their own views.
So the argument here is that there are tens of millions of children who are worried not about video games, TikTok, school etc but about how they are being denied the ability to speak at the UN ?
And her parents appear to be upper middle-class given their careers have been limited in success.
And why average people? If we waited for the average person to care about problems then that would usually cause action to be taken much later than ideal.
I think the entire article could be summarized as “historically there were a bunch of scenarios projecting possible future emissions. We have made progress on reducing emissions, so therefore we should emphasize some of the lower-emissions scenarios and retire the high-emissions scenarios.”
It’s an eminently reasonable request, one that should be celebrated. I don’t know why it’s necessary to write thousands of words impugning the scientific integrity of climate science.
What is much scarier to me are possible effects of GHGs that could make any emissions path much worse. Methane levels seem to be increasing, which could make current projections obsolete very quickly.
Agreed, but organizations the the IPCC are famous for the level of caution and caveats on their predictions. It would be irresponsible for them to use provocative/apocalyptic predictions. But it seems equally irresponsible to use provocative titles on well-intentioned articles, given the extremely obvious likelihood that climate denialists will exploit the hyperbolic title to misrepresent the content and arguments of the paper.
I'm gonna plug Roger Pielke Jr (obligatory not a climate change denier by any means disclaimer) who talks a lot about issues like these. Climate change has become an industry now. A lot of people are selling research and solutions and they hype up the problem as much as they can even if it's not realistic. Nobody on the center or left has been checking them because they don't want to be labeled a climate change denier. Good to see that's starting to change.
The article argues that the models are still using baselines from the 90s, while the world as it is today has already made significant progress toward decarbonizing industry. Therefore the projection are far more onerous than they should be.
Not the point. We use less carbon today than the scenarios looking forward to today did. Such that our path forward does not start from where many models assume.
Yes, you have to look at the whole picture. But you also have to look from where you are. Not where someone else thought you could be. Right?
I mean, sorta? I mostly agree, but that is what I'm asking.
I'm reminded of folks that were against LED lightbulbs because folks could just turn off their lights a few hours earlier. Not only would that have been a drastic change in behavior, it is comically incomparable in impact. To get the same impact, you would have to turn off your lights basically all day to get close to the same change. Such that sometimes we do have much better levers than previous drastic changes could have even dreamed of achieving.
As such, it really depends on the drastic action. For the most part, I don't see how aggressive goals for electric vehicles is harming folks. So if that is what we are looking at, fully back on board with you.
With a major caveat of not liking fear mongering. Honesty of where we are is important for its own reasons. Trust in future plans, at the least.
I get that, but how much more? And what is the reason for the error?
That is, are the models bad, or the scenarios? The models don't control the inputs, after all. If it is just the inputs are different from actuals, that is very different from the outputs are wrong
Eeh. Misguided article. The article itself starts by recognizing the challenge of making scenarios because of the feedback loop they embody. Then seemingly forgets about all that and basically says "coal has likely peaked already, why are assuming it will grow in the future?"
Well, because of that feedback loop. Coal is still a cheap way of making energy, as it is in the business-as-usual economics of the scenarios. If we say "coal is not a problem", the pressure shifts away from coal and its usage may linger longer than it should.
The scenarios are about the forces impacting the trends, not the trends themselves.
The IPCC report made some really questionable assumptions, reached conclusions based on those, which were then exacerbated by the journalists treating the worst case scenarios as absolute certainties. Creating fear and panic around stuff usually works and has worked well for a long time.
It's true that we reduced the usage of coal in last few years. It's a big assumption that it happened because of a worst case scenario popularized by IPCC.
From this article[1], IPCC's 8.5 was based on the assumption that between 2017-2100 we will use 5x as much coal as we had done in our entire lifetime. That's a like a "coal boom". The world was already moving away from coal, even before the report, and at best the report and faulty scenario created more panic.
> Everyone knew about the decades of coal-powered economic growth in China, but those working closely on the future of energy had already grown somewhat skeptical that the same model would be deployed across the developing world — and even more skeptical that the rich nations of the world would ever return to coal in a sustained way.
> The most conspicuous example was an emissions pathway called RCP8.5, which required at least a fivefold growth of coal use over the course of the 21st century. Because it was the darkest available do-nothing path, RCP8.5 was reflexively called, in the scientific literature and by journalists covering it, “business as usual.”
Feedback loop as you call it probably slowed down the pace turning the whole thing into a culture war, creating mass hysteria, and getting people to fight each other when they were likely already moving away from coal. We don't have a control group in this case, and climate action is needed, though I am not sure if creating panic was justified at any time.
> Feedback loop as you call it probably slowed down the pace turning the whole thing into a culture war, creating mass hysteria, and getting people to fight each other when they were likely already moving away from coal.
What made it a culture war was the fossil fuel companies pumping billions of dollars into politics for decades. The Republicans didn’t used to be the anti-science party – that took years of investment building think tanks, the media bubble, etc. which turned that into a litmus test for candidates and making any sort of consensus off limits (a Republican lobbyist I know socially used to represent the fishing & hunting interests. Around the Obama era, those old coalitions fell apart as politicians would tell him that he was right but there was no way they could support environmental protections and survive the primary media cycle).
It’s very easy to look at coal declining and say it was inevitable but that ignores how it was hard won at each step. As you had countries like China booming it’s really not hard to see how deniers having a little more clout could have lead to locking in decades of elevated emissions.
Consider that if highly accurate models were really possible someone could make one that would accurately predict NFL game outcomes. When that happens we will know it because Sports Books would no longer take bets on NFL games. Sports Books profit because they get a slight statistical advantage which pays off due to bettor volume.
So we know they can't make an accurately predicting model for football. How accurate can they possibly get with climate change modeling? It's orders of magnitude more difficult. Football is formally rule bounded and tons of data on a long history of games is readily available. In contrast, the vast majority of climate data is based on theoretical methods. This isn't bad, it's just far less precise because the variance of all those theory based estimators accumulates across the model, widening the confidence interval of its outputs to a point where it may not be useful.
Finally, climate scientists are people. They have careers, families, financial responsibilities. What happens if they say the climate is fine? Some other crisis gets the funding and their careers are destroyed. They can't just switch to a different science, they've invested a lot of time and money becoming a specific thing.
I found this article very wordy and skimmed parts, but it looks to me like a goalpost moving exercise to explain why their aggressive predictions for the present time didn't come true.
I'm sorry, but the sports betting analogy is hilariously wrongheaded. In order to set any prices at all, books have reasonably good models for the sports they offer, including NFL. But these models are not and do not need to be perfect, in order for a profitable business model to exist. There are in fact, plenty of "sharps" who can beat the books on certain sports or certain types of markets (e.g. maybe you can model O/U markets very well, but money line not so much).
The book does not "stop taking bets" on the entire event in question. The book simply has to limit the "sharp" individually. Of course then we get into the whole cat and mouse game of chasing sharp action through straw bettors and playing games of information theory (i.e. how much money can a sharp win while still plausibly not outing themselves as an obvious sharp).
The book only would have a serious problem, if the entire world became sharp and every bettor was betting sharply. But alas there you have a paradox: anyone who is currently a sharp, has a strong self interest to preserve the secrecy of their models and methods, because knowing something that nobody else knows is precisely what creates their edge. And so therefore, as long as sharps have this self-interest, then there is no problem for books to keep operating, and the problem is reduced to one of identifying and limiting sharps occasionally (basically a "cost of doing business" that books acknowledge).
The only way for the scenario you describe to happen, is for disinterested actors with no thought of profit for themselves, to not only "solve" a particular market, but also release it to the entire world and make it a commodity. I'm not saying it's impossible, but I'm saying that normal economic incentives work against this outcome.
The book just moves the line so they're covered in either direction.
The sharp works on inside knowledge, not advanced mathematic modeling. The sharp is someone with inside information, e.g. star player twisted his ankle recently and no one knows.
Bit if any moron could pull up a perfect model of the game outcome they'd all do it and the book would have no line to play. Books are happy to take action on anything where they have the advantage and are always wary of sharps ( won't take their money if known).
I really could have picked any prediction model though so we shouldn't get hung up on sports Books.
For example, why are banks still lending big money on expensive sea side property? Shouldn't their internal modeling be showing that these places will soon be flooded? Oceanside property should be a bargain right now. It isn't though, because the people on charge don't actually believe in the climate change models they push.
> How accurate can they possibly get with climate change modeling?
At least as accurate as weather reports, which can be pretty reliable days in advance. The outcome of a football match often can't be predicted accurately during the match. This should suggest that the atmosphere and a sport are qualitatively different things.
> What happens if they say the climate is fine?
They go into some other statistical modelling field, probably to do with meteorology, and we start to get accurate weather reports two weeks in advance.
It's not like high-level sports players, who have specialised into that sport, and are unlikely to ever be high-level players of any other sport. (If anything, there are incentives for high-level sports players to throw games to keep them more exciting! Maybe that's why we can't predict the games? It's not, but what if it were?)
I cant tell whether the parent comment is disingenuous though it looks a lot like it, but I will take it at face value.
The models created by the oil companies back in the 70s seem to be “breathtakingly accurate” [1]
Second, the problem with your analogy is that with football you expect the prediction to be X team will win, and similarly expect the predictions to be X weather event at $place will occur. The problem with your expectations of predictions regarding the latter is the sample space.
The sample space is so large that extreme weather events will occur $somewhere. Predicting exactly where and their trajectories is difficult due to chaos and the complexity of the system. There is a bound on our capacity to predict exact events long ahead of time. However, what we can do is give a probability of the event occurring over a large enough region. When you scale said region to the earth, we can ignore very small details and focus on the bigger picture, which is that the variance in weather in creases.
The problem with an increasing variance is that extreme events occur more frequently in all directions. Meaning high and low temperatures, droughts and floods and so on.
To observe this in action, a year or so ago europe had severe floods that killed many people and simultaneously over the next summer experienced historic droughts.
The sample space strikes again and we saw historic droughts in China too.
1. Climate is a long-term average. Long-time averages are much simpler to predict than individual outcomes. You cannot predict the result of a coin toss, but you can be reasonably confident that among 1000 tosses there will be between 400 and 600 occurrences of heads.
2. Scientists, especially young ones, have an incentive to challenge dominating scientific views because that is how you make yourself known in the scientific community. Being known can be transformed to getting the next academic position.
We have millions of years of climate history of which only a tiny fraction has substantial data.
The rest is theoretical data that can only be verified by a web of theoretical means.
Variance accumulates across models. The less actual data you have the wider the variance is on your estimators. When your data is mostly projected the confidence interval on your outcome makes it meaningless, e.g. average temperatures will change by plus or minus 20 degrees.
Why exactly is it bad science if the most pessimistic scenario is slightly more pessimistic than reality?
IPPC reports are too conservative because insufficient attention has been paid to the importance of tipping points, feedback loops, and outlier events forecasts. The nature of consensus building has tended to marginalize more extreme scenarios.
Humanity already has a non-zero probability that wars and general political trends will reverse technological progress and waste the resources needed to adapt to climate change and transform the economy. Then the RPC8.5 scenario might be too optimistic, not too pessimistic.
Saying that RPC8.5 is based on wrong assumptions and then explaining that we should take IEA's scenario as a new basis seems weird. IEA is not exactly very good at predictions either...
The problem with scenarios is that every resource is entangled with many others and that evolution of each one is wildly non-linear. Example : copper availability depends upon energy availability. However sustainable energy deployment depends upon copper extraction (as long as we're in the "up" part of the development S-curve).
Another less important example is helium : helium is necessary for high end electronics, and electronics are necessary for modern cars. However car manufacturers are generally completely oblivious of their very real dependency upon helium, which came mostly from the US and Russia.
I've just watched an interesting conference by a researcher who's working on new, complex models to build scenarios taking all these entanglements into account, managing thousands of different resources across the whole globe. At the moment there's like 5 of them working on these. Unsurprisingly, these complex, stochastic models treated with lot of Monte-Carlo analyses and now even AI are far from being stable and precise enough for projects such as IPCC. So that's where we are for now.
Classical economics are wildly out of touch with reality here (Nordhaus even got the Nobel in economics with a completely bonkers linear extrapolation of climate effect on global GDP), and these sorts of interdependencies are everywhere.
So OK, I've got it, the scenarios are too simple. But the IPCC working group II is composed of mainstream economists, and mainstream economists are wildly out of their league (in my opinion I'd go as far as saying that macro economy is a pseudo-science at this point anyway), so they're doing what's possible in a mainstream environment. Too bad.
This takes a long time to get to the point, but it's hard to deny this part of the article?
> It associated the RCP scenarios with not just plausibility but also likelihoods when it labeled the scenario leading to the greatest amount of climate change, called RCP8.5 (indicating a radiative forcing of 8.5 W/m2 in 2100), as the single business-as-usual scenario of the set.
> For instance, RCP8.5 projects to 2100 a six-fold growth in global coal consumption per capita, while the International Energy Agency and other energy forecasting groups collectively agree that coal consumption has already or will soon peak. Also, RCP8.5 foresees carbon dioxide emissions growing rapidly to at least the year 2300 when Earth reaches more than 2,000 ppm of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. But again, according to the IEA and other groups, fossil energy emissions have likely plateaued, and it is plausible to achieve net-zero emissions before the end of the century, if not much sooner. Today, projections that carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels will increase dramatically for the next 50, 100, or 300 years are simply implausible.
The reason RCP 8.5 remains relavant despite changes to the mix is that our historical CO2 output is closer to it than of the other scenarios. Its predictions remain the most likely after 15 years from this scenario being created given what we have already released into the atmosphere. RCP 8.5 is the scenario best tracking the actual emissions of the last 15 years.
The article makes a newbie mistake: the job of the IPCC is not now, if it ever was, scientific. It is political.
Scientifically climate change has been a growing concern since at least 1972. In 1990 there was zero support politically for the sort of action that is now starting.
The IPCC's work still matters, the political changes are not bedded in ( see the GOP in USA that is still clinging to its old ideas, but not for much longer). But the urgent, political work it was established for is almost done.
Droughts, wildfires, hurricanes/typhoons seem as real to me as "scientists" continue to squabble. Critical viewpoints are integral to the "integrity of science", but without application/action where is the actual contribution?
Maybe the article authors are suggesting: just set at RCP2.6 or favor the IEA baseline range and call it a day? I would think they would lose funding, speaker fees, followers, etc...
One missing variable in the socioeconomic assumption input to RCP assessment is the proliferation of dis/mis information or lack of open data access.
As the west looks on, some global partners are displaying excellence in cooperative data sharing and full disclosure on consumption patterns to help inform policy development: https://youtu.be/gfIoS9NB0Wg
> some global partners are displaying excellence in cooperative data sharing and full disclosure on consumption patterns to help inform policy development: https://youtu.be/gfIoS9NB0Wg
Are you serious?
Two tourists with anecdotes
The topic is science and data not tourist's reckons
84 comments
[ 22.7 ms ] story [ 2416 ms ] threadAnd before anyone says so, no it has nothing to do with the supposed lessened attention span smartphones have caused. I'm not wasting 15 minutes of my life reading about social media recommendation algorithms [1] when not even a single paragraph is dedicated to at least some rudimentary technical explanation behind them.
Same goes for 30-minute YouTube videos attempting to maximize monetization for subjects whose explanation in less than 10 minutes for an average intelligence person is adequate.
Here's also a recent example of ideal, imo, technical writing that is sadly getting more scarce:
https://www.bunniestudios.com/blog/?p=6712
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35087973
Recipes tell you how their great grandmother moved to the Americas and made the first apple pie ever. And then detail the entire history of apples and how to make the entire recipe. And then, 70% of the way down the page, right before the comment section, is what you wanted at first glance: what’s in this pie, and how long will it take me to make?
It’s everywhere.
I agree, so I used ChatGPT to summarize this for us:
In the article "Climate Change Scenarios Have Lost Touch with Reality," written by Roger Pielke Jr. and Justin Ritchie and published in Issues in Science and Technology, the authors argue that the climate change scenarios used by policymakers and scientists have become disconnected from empirical reality. They suggest that this has led to an overreliance on untested and unrealistic assumptions, which in turn undermines the credibility of climate change projections and makes it more difficult to develop effective policies.
The authors note that climate change projections are typically based on a set of assumptions about future greenhouse gas emissions, which are then used to generate a range of potential climate outcomes. However, these assumptions often fail to account for a range of important factors, such as economic growth, technological innovation, and changes in land use patterns, which can have a significant impact on emissions and climate outcomes.
Pielke and Ritchie argue that policymakers and scientists need to take a more pragmatic and evidence-based approach to climate change projections, one that is grounded in real-world data and incorporates a wider range of factors. They suggest that this could involve developing more diverse and flexible scenarios that are better able to capture the complexity and uncertainty of the real world.
Overall, the authors stress the importance of ensuring that climate change policies are based on realistic and evidence-based projections, rather than relying on overly simplistic or unrealistic assumptions. They argue that this will require a fundamental rethinking of the way that climate change scenarios are developed and used, and a greater emphasis on collaboration and dialogue between policymakers, scientists, and other stakeholders.
edit: it's not due to any antipathy to AI. I love using ChatGPT myself.
Why?
What point are you actually trying to make? It seems like you’re trying to equate one with the other, especially given your novel use of the word “denialism”. I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but I’m still unclear on what exactly you are implying.
He got that from his father who was also an AGW denialist (a climate change believer, but a denier that humans play any meaningful role), albeit one with more relevant credentuals:
FWiW it is universally acknowledged that Jnr. does have considerable expertise and knowledge in the field of water polo.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_A._Pielke_Jr.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_A._Pielke
I imagine there are several 100M of those on the planet. Most do not get to address the UN, nor have well-off parents who are using her to get publicity that they couldn't get for their own views.
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10059484/greta-thunberg-parent...
So the argument here is that there are tens of millions of children who are worried not about video games, TikTok, school etc but about how they are being denied the ability to speak at the UN ?
And her parents appear to be upper middle-class given their careers have been limited in success.
I could see that argument moreso for Al Gore as he's a politician by trade but Gate's really?
And even then, where do you personally draw the line between "engaging in culture wars" and "advocating for something you believe in"
In what way were average people mentioned? Who are the villains? Who's going after them?
It’s an eminently reasonable request, one that should be celebrated. I don’t know why it’s necessary to write thousands of words impugning the scientific integrity of climate science.
What is much scarier to me are possible effects of GHGs that could make any emissions path much worse. Methane levels seem to be increasing, which could make current projections obsolete very quickly.
- Atmospheric CO2, 1960-now.[1]
- Ocean temperature, 1880-now. [2]
- Annual arctic sea ice minimum area, 1978-now. [3]
[1] https://gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/trends/
[2] https://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/global-temperature/
[3] https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5036
https://xenetwork.org/ets/episodes/episode-176-climate-scena...
To see all episodes related:
https://xenetwork.org/ets/topics/rcp8-5/
https://rogerpielkejr.substack.com/archive
Put differently, are the models precise but inaccurate or both? If inaccurate only, are they still instructive?
Yes, you have to look at the whole picture. But you also have to look from where you are. Not where someone else thought you could be. Right?
But also: if we take drastic action “wrongly” and the end result is a healthier plant? I’m good with that.
I'm reminded of folks that were against LED lightbulbs because folks could just turn off their lights a few hours earlier. Not only would that have been a drastic change in behavior, it is comically incomparable in impact. To get the same impact, you would have to turn off your lights basically all day to get close to the same change. Such that sometimes we do have much better levers than previous drastic changes could have even dreamed of achieving.
As such, it really depends on the drastic action. For the most part, I don't see how aggressive goals for electric vehicles is harming folks. So if that is what we are looking at, fully back on board with you.
With a major caveat of not liking fear mongering. Honesty of where we are is important for its own reasons. Trust in future plans, at the least.
That is, are the models bad, or the scenarios? The models don't control the inputs, after all. If it is just the inputs are different from actuals, that is very different from the outputs are wrong
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-00177-3
Well, because of that feedback loop. Coal is still a cheap way of making energy, as it is in the business-as-usual economics of the scenarios. If we say "coal is not a problem", the pressure shifts away from coal and its usage may linger longer than it should.
The scenarios are about the forces impacting the trends, not the trends themselves.
It's true that we reduced the usage of coal in last few years. It's a big assumption that it happened because of a worst case scenario popularized by IPCC.
From this article[1], IPCC's 8.5 was based on the assumption that between 2017-2100 we will use 5x as much coal as we had done in our entire lifetime. That's a like a "coal boom". The world was already moving away from coal, even before the report, and at best the report and faulty scenario created more panic.
> Everyone knew about the decades of coal-powered economic growth in China, but those working closely on the future of energy had already grown somewhat skeptical that the same model would be deployed across the developing world — and even more skeptical that the rich nations of the world would ever return to coal in a sustained way.
> The most conspicuous example was an emissions pathway called RCP8.5, which required at least a fivefold growth of coal use over the course of the 21st century. Because it was the darkest available do-nothing path, RCP8.5 was reflexively called, in the scientific literature and by journalists covering it, “business as usual.”
Feedback loop as you call it probably slowed down the pace turning the whole thing into a culture war, creating mass hysteria, and getting people to fight each other when they were likely already moving away from coal. We don't have a control group in this case, and climate action is needed, though I am not sure if creating panic was justified at any time.
[1]: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/10/26/magazine/clim...
What made it a culture war was the fossil fuel companies pumping billions of dollars into politics for decades. The Republicans didn’t used to be the anti-science party – that took years of investment building think tanks, the media bubble, etc. which turned that into a litmus test for candidates and making any sort of consensus off limits (a Republican lobbyist I know socially used to represent the fishing & hunting interests. Around the Obama era, those old coalitions fell apart as politicians would tell him that he was right but there was no way they could support environmental protections and survive the primary media cycle).
It’s very easy to look at coal declining and say it was inevitable but that ignores how it was hard won at each step. As you had countries like China booming it’s really not hard to see how deniers having a little more clout could have lead to locking in decades of elevated emissions.
Consider that if highly accurate models were really possible someone could make one that would accurately predict NFL game outcomes. When that happens we will know it because Sports Books would no longer take bets on NFL games. Sports Books profit because they get a slight statistical advantage which pays off due to bettor volume.
So we know they can't make an accurately predicting model for football. How accurate can they possibly get with climate change modeling? It's orders of magnitude more difficult. Football is formally rule bounded and tons of data on a long history of games is readily available. In contrast, the vast majority of climate data is based on theoretical methods. This isn't bad, it's just far less precise because the variance of all those theory based estimators accumulates across the model, widening the confidence interval of its outputs to a point where it may not be useful.
Finally, climate scientists are people. They have careers, families, financial responsibilities. What happens if they say the climate is fine? Some other crisis gets the funding and their careers are destroyed. They can't just switch to a different science, they've invested a lot of time and money becoming a specific thing.
I found this article very wordy and skimmed parts, but it looks to me like a goalpost moving exercise to explain why their aggressive predictions for the present time didn't come true.
The book does not "stop taking bets" on the entire event in question. The book simply has to limit the "sharp" individually. Of course then we get into the whole cat and mouse game of chasing sharp action through straw bettors and playing games of information theory (i.e. how much money can a sharp win while still plausibly not outing themselves as an obvious sharp).
The book only would have a serious problem, if the entire world became sharp and every bettor was betting sharply. But alas there you have a paradox: anyone who is currently a sharp, has a strong self interest to preserve the secrecy of their models and methods, because knowing something that nobody else knows is precisely what creates their edge. And so therefore, as long as sharps have this self-interest, then there is no problem for books to keep operating, and the problem is reduced to one of identifying and limiting sharps occasionally (basically a "cost of doing business" that books acknowledge).
The only way for the scenario you describe to happen, is for disinterested actors with no thought of profit for themselves, to not only "solve" a particular market, but also release it to the entire world and make it a commodity. I'm not saying it's impossible, but I'm saying that normal economic incentives work against this outcome.
The sharp works on inside knowledge, not advanced mathematic modeling. The sharp is someone with inside information, e.g. star player twisted his ankle recently and no one knows.
Bit if any moron could pull up a perfect model of the game outcome they'd all do it and the book would have no line to play. Books are happy to take action on anything where they have the advantage and are always wary of sharps ( won't take their money if known).
I really could have picked any prediction model though so we shouldn't get hung up on sports Books.
For example, why are banks still lending big money on expensive sea side property? Shouldn't their internal modeling be showing that these places will soon be flooded? Oceanside property should be a bargain right now. It isn't though, because the people on charge don't actually believe in the climate change models they push.
At least as accurate as weather reports, which can be pretty reliable days in advance. The outcome of a football match often can't be predicted accurately during the match. This should suggest that the atmosphere and a sport are qualitatively different things.
> What happens if they say the climate is fine?
They go into some other statistical modelling field, probably to do with meteorology, and we start to get accurate weather reports two weeks in advance.
It's not like high-level sports players, who have specialised into that sport, and are unlikely to ever be high-level players of any other sport. (If anything, there are incentives for high-level sports players to throw games to keep them more exciting! Maybe that's why we can't predict the games? It's not, but what if it were?)
The models created by the oil companies back in the 70s seem to be “breathtakingly accurate” [1]
Second, the problem with your analogy is that with football you expect the prediction to be X team will win, and similarly expect the predictions to be X weather event at $place will occur. The problem with your expectations of predictions regarding the latter is the sample space.
The sample space is so large that extreme weather events will occur $somewhere. Predicting exactly where and their trajectories is difficult due to chaos and the complexity of the system. There is a bound on our capacity to predict exact events long ahead of time. However, what we can do is give a probability of the event occurring over a large enough region. When you scale said region to the earth, we can ignore very small details and focus on the bigger picture, which is that the variance in weather in creases.
The problem with an increasing variance is that extreme events occur more frequently in all directions. Meaning high and low temperatures, droughts and floods and so on.
To observe this in action, a year or so ago europe had severe floods that killed many people and simultaneously over the next summer experienced historic droughts.
The sample space strikes again and we saw historic droughts in China too.
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/12/exxon-clima...
[2] Firmament, by Dr Simon Clark
2. Scientists, especially young ones, have an incentive to challenge dominating scientific views because that is how you make yourself known in the scientific community. Being known can be transformed to getting the next academic position.
Variance accumulates across models. The less actual data you have the wider the variance is on your estimators. When your data is mostly projected the confidence interval on your outcome makes it meaningless, e.g. average temperatures will change by plus or minus 20 degrees.
IPPC reports are too conservative because insufficient attention has been paid to the importance of tipping points, feedback loops, and outlier events forecasts. The nature of consensus building has tended to marginalize more extreme scenarios.
Humanity already has a non-zero probability that wars and general political trends will reverse technological progress and waste the resources needed to adapt to climate change and transform the economy. Then the RPC8.5 scenario might be too optimistic, not too pessimistic.
Another less important example is helium : helium is necessary for high end electronics, and electronics are necessary for modern cars. However car manufacturers are generally completely oblivious of their very real dependency upon helium, which came mostly from the US and Russia.
I've just watched an interesting conference by a researcher who's working on new, complex models to build scenarios taking all these entanglements into account, managing thousands of different resources across the whole globe. At the moment there's like 5 of them working on these. Unsurprisingly, these complex, stochastic models treated with lot of Monte-Carlo analyses and now even AI are far from being stable and precise enough for projects such as IPCC. So that's where we are for now.
Classical economics are wildly out of touch with reality here (Nordhaus even got the Nobel in economics with a completely bonkers linear extrapolation of climate effect on global GDP), and these sorts of interdependencies are everywhere.
So OK, I've got it, the scenarios are too simple. But the IPCC working group II is composed of mainstream economists, and mainstream economists are wildly out of their league (in my opinion I'd go as far as saying that macro economy is a pseudo-science at this point anyway), so they're doing what's possible in a mainstream environment. Too bad.
> It associated the RCP scenarios with not just plausibility but also likelihoods when it labeled the scenario leading to the greatest amount of climate change, called RCP8.5 (indicating a radiative forcing of 8.5 W/m2 in 2100), as the single business-as-usual scenario of the set.
> For instance, RCP8.5 projects to 2100 a six-fold growth in global coal consumption per capita, while the International Energy Agency and other energy forecasting groups collectively agree that coal consumption has already or will soon peak. Also, RCP8.5 foresees carbon dioxide emissions growing rapidly to at least the year 2300 when Earth reaches more than 2,000 ppm of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. But again, according to the IEA and other groups, fossil energy emissions have likely plateaued, and it is plausible to achieve net-zero emissions before the end of the century, if not much sooner. Today, projections that carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels will increase dramatically for the next 50, 100, or 300 years are simply implausible.
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2007117117
Relevant image: https://www.pnas.org/cms/10.1073/pnas.2007117117/asset/56610...
Scientifically climate change has been a growing concern since at least 1972. In 1990 there was zero support politically for the sort of action that is now starting.
The IPCC's work still matters, the political changes are not bedded in ( see the GOP in USA that is still clinging to its old ideas, but not for much longer). But the urgent, political work it was established for is almost done.
They can take some credit if we save the world
Droughts, wildfires, hurricanes/typhoons seem as real to me as "scientists" continue to squabble. Critical viewpoints are integral to the "integrity of science", but without application/action where is the actual contribution?
Maybe the article authors are suggesting: just set at RCP2.6 or favor the IEA baseline range and call it a day? I would think they would lose funding, speaker fees, followers, etc...
One missing variable in the socioeconomic assumption input to RCP assessment is the proliferation of dis/mis information or lack of open data access.
As the west looks on, some global partners are displaying excellence in cooperative data sharing and full disclosure on consumption patterns to help inform policy development: https://youtu.be/gfIoS9NB0Wg
Stick that in RCP input.
Are you serious?
Two tourists with anecdotes
The topic is science and data not tourist's reckons