John M. Wallace tried to steer Al Gore away from global warming.
The year was 1994 and the vice president was convinced rising
temperatures were responsible for recent floods in the Mississippi River
Valley.
He invited Wallace, a distinguished climate researcher from the
University of Washington, to join a small group of scientists for a
breakfast discussion in Washington, D.C.
As Gore sipped Diet Coke, Wallace nervously left the eggs on his own
plate untouched.
"It was one of the more awkward audiences I've ever had," he recalled
with a chuckle. "I was trying, in a polite way, to tell him he was coming
on too strong about global warming."
Like many of his peers, Wallace wasn't convinced greenhouse gases were
altering the world's climate, and he thought Gore was straining scientific
credibility to score political points.
More than a decade later, Wallace still won't blame global warming for
any specific heat wave, drought or flood — including the recent
devastating hurricanes. But he no longer doubts the problem is real and
the risks profound.
"With each passing year the evidence has gotten stronger — and is
getting stronger still."
1995 was the hottest year on record until it was eclipsed by 1997 —
then 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004. Melting ice has driven Alaska
Natives from seal-hunting areas used for generations. Glaciers around the
globe are shrinking so rapidly many could disappear before the middle of
the century.
As one study after another has pointed to carbon dioxide and other
man-made emissions as the most plausible explanation, the cautious
community of science has embraced an idea initially dismissed as
far-fetched. The result is a convergence of opinion rarely seen in a
profession where attacking each other's work is part of the process. Every
major scientific body to examine the evidence has come to the same
conclusion: The planet is getting hotter; man is to blame; and it's going
to get worse.
"There's an overwhelming consensus among scientists," said UW climate
researcher David Battisti, who also was dubious about early claims of
greenhouse warming.
Yet the message doesn't seem to be getting through to the public and
policy-makers.
Oklahoma Sen. James Inhofe, chairman of the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee, calls global warming "the greatest hoax ever
perpetuated on the American people." Novelist Michael Crichton's "State of
Fear" landed on the best-seller list this year by depicting global warming
as a scare tactic of diabolical tree-huggers. A Gallup Poll in June found
only about half of Americans believe the effects of global warming have
already started.
At the G8 summit of world leaders this summer, President Bush
acknowledged man is warming the planet. But he stood alone in opposition
to mandatory emissions controls, which he called too costly.
"There's a huge disconnect between what professional scientists have
studied and learned in the last 30 years, and what is out there in the
popular culture," said Naomi Oreskes, a science historian at the
University of California, San Diego.
Fuel companies contribute to that gap by supporting a small cadre of
global-warming skeptics, whose views are widely disseminated by
like-minded think tanks and Web sites.
Most scientists don't know how to communicate their complex results to
the public. Others are scared off by the shrill political debate over the
issue. So their work goes on largely unseen, and largely pointing toward a
warmer future.
Oreskes decided to quantify the extent of scientific agreement after a
conversation with her hairdresser, who said she doesn't worry about global
warming because scientists don't know what's going on.
"That made me wonder why there's this weird public perception of what's
been happening in climate science," Oreskes said.
She analyzed 1,000 research papers on climate change selected randomly
from those published between 1993 and 2003. The results were surprising:
Not a single study explicitly rejected the idea that people are warming
the planet.
That doesn't mean there aren't any. But it does mean the number must be
small, since none showed up in a sample that represents about 10 percent
of the body of research, Oreskes said.
The consensus is most clearly embodied in the reports of the 100-nation
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), established by the
United Nations in 1988. Every five to six years, the panel evaluates the
science and issues voluminous reports reviewed by more than 2,000
scientists and every member government, including the United States.
The early reports reflected the squishy state of the science, but by
2001, the conclusion was unequivocal: "There is new and stronger evidence
that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable
to human activities."
A closer look
A
world of evidence
A graphic view of how greenhouse gases
are changing the world around us and what is to come.
Pollution's
effects
From melting glaciers to disappearing
islands.
Stunned by the strong language, the Bush administration asked the
prestigious National Academy of Sciences to evaluate the international
group's work. The UW's Wallace served on the academy's panel, which
assured the president the IPCC wasn't exaggerating.
The next IPCC report is due in 2007. Among the new evidence it will
include are the deepest ice cores ever drilled, which show carbon-dioxide
levels are higher now than any time in the past 650,000 years.
In the history of science, no subject has been as meticulously reviewed
and debated as global warming, said science historian Spencer Weart,
author of "The Discovery of Global Warming" and director of the Center for
History of Physics.
"The most important thing to realize is that most scientists didn't
originally believe in global warming," he said. "They were dragged —
reluctant step by step — by the facts."
A reluctant convert
Thawing Russian deer carcasses trigger scientific
inquiry
Few were more reluctant converts than Wallace. A self-described weather
nut who built a backyard meteorology station as a kid, he has spent his
career trying to understand how the atmosphere behaves on a grand scale.
By analyzing a decade of global climate records, Wallace was among the
first to recognize El Niño's effects in the Pacific Northwest.
He was recruited to the UW's fledgling meteorology program in 1966 and
has helped build it into one of the world's top centers for atmospheric
and ocean research.
His first foray into climate change came in the early 1990s after
Russian friends told him deer carcasses stored in their "Siberian freezer"
— the porch — were thawing out.
Some scientists blamed global warming. Wallace examined the
meteorological records and concluded natural wind shifts were blowing
milder ocean air across the land.
He briefly thought he had debunked global warming.
Then he realized winds could account for only a small fraction of the
warming in the planet's northernmost reaches, where average temperatures
have now risen between 5 and 8 degrees in the past 50 years.
"It was an evolution in my thinking," said Wallace, 64. "Like it or
not, I could see global warming was going to become quite a big
issue."
That's pretty much how the science of global warming has
progressed.
Researchers skeptical of the idea have suggested alternative causes for
rising temperatures and carbon-dioxide levels. They've theorized about
natural forces that might mitigate the effects of greenhouse gases. But no
one has been able to explain it away.
"You would need to develop a Rube Goldberg-type of argument to say
climate is not changing because of increasing carbon dioxide," said
Battisti, 49, who directs the UW's Earth Initiative to apply science to
environmental problems.
Global average air temperatures have risen about 1.2 degrees over the
past century. The warming is also apparent in the oceans, in boreholes
sunk deep in the ground, in thawing tundra and vanishing glaciers.
Earth's climate has swung from steamy to icy many times in the past,
but scientists believe they know what triggered many of those
fluctuations. Erupting volcanoes and slow ocean upwelling release carbon
dioxide, which leads to warming. Mountain uplifting and continental drift
expose new rock, which absorbs carbon dioxide and causes cooling. Periodic
wobbles in the planet's orbit reduce sunlight and set off a feedback loop
that results in ice ages.
All of those shifts happened over tens of thousands of years — and
science shows none of them is happening now.
Instead, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide are increasing at a rate
that precisely tracks man's automotive and industrial emissions.
"The process is 1,000 times faster than nature can do it," Battisti
said.
Climate reconstructions show that average global temperatures for the
past 2 million years have never been more than 2 to 4 degrees higher than
now. That means if greenhouse emissions continued unchecked, temperatures
would likely be higher by the end of the century than any time since the
human species evolved.
Skeptics often dominate discussion
Geochemist bridges the gap between science and popular
perception
Eric Steig looks for answers about global warming in some of the
Earth's most frigid spots. His walk-in freezers at the University of
Washington are stacked with boxed ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland
kept so cold he wears a parka and gloves to retrieve them.
Steig, a geochemist, analyzes air bubbles and isotopes in the ice to
reconstruct past temperatures and carbon-dioxide levels. He planned a
career in physics until an undergraduate field project on the Juneau
glacier fields kindled his passion for snow and ice.
Ask the scientist
Join us at noon Tuesday, when University of Washington
climate researcher John M. Wallace will answer your questions about global
warming.
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Your comments may be edited for publication.
I'm
under 13.
At 39, he belongs to a generation of climate researchers more open to
global warming than the older guard, including Wallace and Battisti. Steig
is also more frustrated by the way a handful of skeptics has dominated
public debate.
"Many of us have felt our voices are drowned out by the very
well-funded industry viewpoint."
He and several colleagues set out this year to bridge the gap between
science and popular perception with a Web log called RealClimate.org. Researchers
communicate directly with the public and debunk what they see as
misinformation and misconceptions. By giving equal coverage to skeptics on
the fringe of legitimate science, journalists fuel the perception that the
field is racked with disagreement.
"You get the impression it's 50-50, when it's really 99-to-1," Steig
said.
Over the past decade, coal and oil interests have funneled more than $1
million to about a dozen individual global-warming skeptics as part of an
effort to "reposition global warming as theory rather than fact,"
according to industry memos first uncovered by former Boston Globe
journalist Ross Gelbspan.
From 2001 to 2003, Exxon Mobile donated more than $6.5 million to
organizations that attack mainstream climate science and oppose
greenhouse-gas controls. These think tanks and advocacy groups issue
reports, sponsor briefings and maintain Web sites that reach a far wider
audience than scholarly climate journals.
Of course, there's nothing wrong with business questioning whether
global-warming science justifies actions that may have profound economic
impacts. And science can't advance without an open exchange of ideas.
But climate researchers say skeptics are recycling discredited
arguments or selectively using data to make points. And as Oreskes showed,
few skeptics publish in peer-reviewed journals, which check for accuracy
and omissions.
Industry funds some skeptics
An Oregon climatologist finds a niche challenging
global-warming science
Oregon State Climatologist George Taylor is a featured author on the
Web site Tech Central Station, funded by Exxon and other corporations and
described as the place where "free markets meet technology."
He has a master's degree in meteorology and runs a state office based
at Oregon State University that compiles weather data and supplies it to
policy- makers, farmers and other customers.
Taylor is not a member of OSU's academic faculty and has no published
research on Arctic climate, but Sen. Inhofe cited Taylor's claim that
Arctic temperatures were much warmer in the 1930s as proof global warming
is bogus.
James Overland, a Seattle-based oceanographer who has studied the
Arctic for nearly 40 years, analyzed temperatures across a wider area than
Taylor. His conclusion: The 1930s were warm — but the 1990s were warmer.
Two other peer-reviewed analyses agree.
Even more significant, Overland found the 1930s warming was typical of
natural climate variation: Siberia might be warm one year and normal the
next, while another part of the Arctic experienced unusual heat. Now
there's persistent warming everywhere.
Taylor said in an e-mail that Tech Central Station paid him $500 for
global-warming articles. United for Jobs, an industry coalition that
opposes higher fuel-efficiency standards and greenhouse-gas limits, also
paid Taylor and a co-author $4,000 for an article published on Tech
Central Station.
Mainstream climate scientists, including Wallace, Steig and Battisti,
generally get their research money from the federal government.
That doesn't make them immune from bias, said Patrick Michaels, one of
the most widely quoted global-warming skeptics. Exaggerating the dangers
of climate change can ensure a steady stream of money.
"Global warming competes with cancer and competes with AIDS for a
finite amount of money," said Michaels, a University of Virginia
climatologist and fellow of the libertarian Cato Institute. "Nobody ever
won that fight by saying: My issue isn't important."
Michaels has received more than $165,000 in fuel-industry funding,
including money from the coal industry to publish his own climate
journal.
Skeptics portray themselves as Davids versus the Goliath of organized
science, which is always resistant to new ideas. But global warming
is the new idea, said Oreskes. Skeptics, she said, represent the
old school of thought — that climate is so stable man could never tip it
out of whack.
Climate models debated
But scientists say the uncertainty lies only in how much
warming to expect
Battisti planned to run his grandparents' dairy farm in upstate New
York until a persistent professor nudged him toward science. A study on
beach formation got him excited about hands-on oceanography, then he
switched to atmospheric sciences in graduate school.
He has analyzed some of the more cataclysmic climate-change scenarios,
including the sudden shift depicted in the movie "The Day After Tomorrow,"
and concluded they're highly unlikely.
These days, Battisti ponders the Eocene, a period 35 million to 50
million years ago when alligators lived near the Arctic Circle and palm
trees grew in Wyoming.
The world was hot because carbon-dioxide levels were three to five
times higher than today — the result of a gradual buildup from volcanic
eruptions. But global-climate computer models, which use mathematical
formulas to represent complex atmospheric interactions, aren't able to
reproduce that warming. When Battisti runs the models under Eocene-like
conditions, they come up with much lower temperatures than actually
existed — which means something was going on that scientists don't yet
understand.
Models have improved greatly in the past 30 years but still can't
anticipate all the ways the atmosphere will respond as greenhouse gases
climb. The dozen models in use today predict average temperature increases
of 3 to 11 degrees by the end of the century.
Though the numbers sound modest, it took only a 10-degree drop to
encase much of North America in mile-deep glaciers during the ice age that
ended about 12,000 years ago.
Skeptics point to uncertainties in the models and conclude the actual
temperature changes will be lower than the predictions. Battisti points to
the Eocene and warns that unknown factors could just as easily make things
worse.
Could the skeptics be right, and the majority of the world's experts
wrong?
The history of science shows consensus doesn't guarantee success. The
collective wisdom of the early 1900s declared continental drift bunk. Some
Nobel laureates attacked Einstein's theory of relativity.
Those blunders occurred when science was less sophisticated and
connected than it is now, said Weart, the historian. With the
unprecedented study devoted to climate change, the odds that this
consensus is wrong are slim, he added.
"The fact that so many scientists think it's likely a truck is heading
for us means that the last thing we want to do is close our eyes and lie
down in the road."
Sandi Doughton: 206-464-2491