The Denver Post

Scare tactics fail climate science

- CLIVE CROOK Bloomberg News

Why aren’t climate scientists winning the argument on climate policy? It sure isn’t for lack of effort. The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change just published another vast pile of material, this time focused on “impacts, adaptation and vulnerabil­ity.” The IPCC says that the new report’s “30 chapters, supported by a number of annexes and supplement­ary material” were produced by a “total of 243 Coordinati­ng and Lead Authors and 66 review editors from 70 countries and 436 Contributi­ng Authors from 54 countries.” And that refers to just one of three working groups engaged in producing the IPCC’s fifth assessment report.

Yet this staggering outlay of time and trouble has failed to move public opinion and public policy very far. Climate-change activists are exasperate­d beyond endurance by the gullibilit­y of the people, the willful stupidity of climate-change “deniers,” the cynicism of energy producers and other corporate interests, and the dithering incapacity of our democratic institutio­ns.

Doubtless there’s some truth in those complaints, but I’d give more weight to another theory. The main reason for the disconnect between the science and the public is the gross tactical incompeten­ce of the climate-science community, as it’s called, and its political champions.

Consider this latest installmen­t of the IPCC’s survey of the science. It’s more carefully hedged than its predecesso­rs— and rightly so. There are fewer specific claims about the future that the science can’t fully support or that might turn out to be simply wrong. The emphasis is more on prudent actions to avoid risks, and less on precise prediction­s aboutwhat’s coming if those actions aren’t taken. That’s the approach that the unsettled science of climate change dictates.

Yet look at how Secretary of State John Kerry, for instance, responded to the new publicatio­n: “Read this report and you can’t deny the reality. Unless we act dramatical­ly and quickly, science tells us our climate and our way of life are literally in jeopardy. Denial of the science is malpractic­e. ... The costs of inaction are catastroph­ic.”

The new report doesn’t say any of that. The science doesn’t predict a catastroph­e that would threaten the American way of life. The most cost-effective responses to the risks of climate change are measured and gradual, not dramatic and quick. And denying the wisdom of Kerry’s call for action isn’t “denial of the science”— because the science by itself can’t say how much to spend on mitigation of, or adaptation to, climate change. That’s a political question.

I take seriously the harms thatman-made climate changemigh­t cause. Action does make sense: It’s a question of insuring against risk. I’m for a gradually escalating carbon tax and for ample public support for other mitigation and adaptation efforts— including more nuclear power and research and developmen­t on cheap alternativ­e fuels. But this cause isn’t advanced by exaggerati­ngwhat is known in order to scare people into action, nor by denouncing everybodyw­ho disagrees with such proposals as evil or idiotic.

The scientists themselves— some of them, at least— are partly to blame. They chose to become political advocates, no doubt out of a sincere belief that policies needed to change a lot and at once. But scientist-advocates can’t expect to be seen as objective or disinteres­ted. Once they’re suspected of spinning the science or opining on questions outside their area of expertise, as political advocacy is bound to require, they lose authority.

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