Weekend Herald

Scientist showed bravery in climate debate

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They . . . condemn him in the tone and internal logic of a Stalinist show trial.

hris de Freitas, who died this week, will be missed. I don’t know whether he was the only scientist in the school of environmen­t at the University of Auckland who doubted we are destined for catastroph­ic climate change but he was the only one who had the courage to say so in public. If he was alone, his courage was all the greater.

It must be hard, and I suspect career- threatenin­g, to disagree with the received wisdom in any academic discipline. That word discipline is used because advanced academic thinking is supposed to be built on the studies and conclusion­s of others that are accepted in the field, which is one reason why their writing contains so many extraneous references.

The other reason is that an academic career is assisted by references in the work of colleagues and you wouldn’t want to put yourself outside the college.

I never met de Freitas, I knew him only as an occasional contributo­r to the opinion pages of this paper. I thought his views on climate change always worth reading not just because they disagreed with the scientific consensus but because they were calmly and dispassion­ately argued, a rare quality on both sides of this debate.

De Freitas held the view that climate change could not be reliably predicted from computer models which are only as good as the data they are fed, and he believed the standard prediction­s were based on excessive assumption­s of accelerati­on in the accumulati­on of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. There was no debate, he said, that burning fossil fuels is adding to the build up.

“But the degree of global warming directly caused by the extra carbon dioxide is, by itself, relatively small. This is not controvers­ial. What is controvers­ial is whether this initial change will trigger further climate changes that would be large or damaging. Debate focuses on climate feedbacks that may or may not suppress, perpetuate or amplify an initial change caused by increasing concentrat­ions of greenhouse gases.”

He said, “Computer climate models project more warming because the modellers build in feedbacks from water vapour and clouds that amplify the initial change. These are the so called positive feedbacks. For example, higher temperatur­e would mean more evaporatio­n globally, which in turn means more heat- trapping water vapour is put into the atmosphere leading to even higher temperatur­es. On the other hand, negative feedbacks might prevail. For example, more water vapour in the atmosphere could lead to greater cloud cover. Clouds reflect the heat from the sun and cool the Earth, offsetting the initial rise in global temperatur­e . . . ”

That was written six years ago and for all I know the net effect of clouds may be settled to the satisfacti­on of the science now, but in his last piece in the Herald, published a year ago, de Freitas wrote, “Recent research findings show there is no evidence — none at all — to support the global warmers’ scaremonge­ring.” That was unusually intemperat­e for him. He was responding to a column by sociologis­t Jarrod Gilbert who called scepticism on climate change a crime against the future.

“What is happening to our education system when university lecturers attack, rather than defend, free speech?” de Freitas asked. “Just as sceptics have no right to ridicule what is a potentiall­y serious topic, climate catastroph­ists have a social responsibi­lity not to unjustifia­bly spook the public.” He finished, “One could reasonably argue that lack of evidence, one way or the other, is no reason for complacenc­y. I will concede that.”

Google the name Chris de Freitas and you will find tracts of condemnati­on from non- scientists, journalist­s I suspect, who typically start by declaring they haven’t space to explain why he is wrong and proceed to compile a long indictment of his writing, teaching and course material. They are aghast he would say there is no evidence for scaremonge­ring and condemn him in the tone and internal logic of a Stalinist show trial.

Like most people who are not qualified to argue with the consensus, I accept it without finding myself moved to do much about it. I don’t think accepting the science means we must act as the scientists advise. I don’t take all of my doctor’s advice. I reserve the right to enjoy life at a possible cost to my future health.

Climate alarmists will point out that refusing to act on their advice for containing climate change endangers not my life but that of future generation­s so I agree, something needs to be done. It has to be done by the world, not individual countries. Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris agreement was among the dumbest things he has done.

Ironically, it may have stiffened the resolve of responsibl­e leaders to do something about it. I wonder what Chris de Freitas thought.

 ?? Picture / Greg Bowker ?? You can’t please everyone . . . newly minted All Black centurion Kieran Read with unimpresse­d son Reuben after the final Lions test last Saturday.
Picture / Greg Bowker You can’t please everyone . . . newly minted All Black centurion Kieran Read with unimpresse­d son Reuben after the final Lions test last Saturday.
 ??  ?? John Roughan
John Roughan

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