Poster's note : I think this piece is very useful in framing the global
warming debate. The systematic under-reporting of climate risks pushes us
into a world where we may have to geoengineer suddenly and with inadequate
preparation.

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2013/01/31/1524981/why-climate-scientists-have-consistently-underestimated-key-global-warming-impacts/?mobile=wt

Why Climate Scientists Have Consistently UNDERestimated Key Global Warming
Impacts

By Joe Romm on Jan 31, 2013 at 6:12 pmClimate Scientists Erring on the Side
of Least Dramaby Dana Nuccitelli, via Skeptical ScienceA paper recently
published in Global Environmental Change by Brysse et al. (2012) examined a
number of past predictions made by climate scientists, and found that that
they have tended to be too conservative in their projections of the impacts
of climate change.  The authors thus suggest that climate scientists are
biased toward overly cautious estimates, erring on the side of less rather
than more alarming predictions, which they call “erring on the side of
least drama” (ESLD).In this paper, Brysse et al. examined research
evaluating past climate projections, and considered the pressures which
might cause climate scientists to ESLD.

Conservative Climate Projections

While we have recently shown that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) temperature projections have been exceptionally accurate,
several other projections in the IPCC reports have been far too
conservative.

Sea Level Rise

For example, Rahmstorf (2007) and more recently Rahmstorf et al.
(2012) showed that sea level is rising at a rate inconsistent with all but
the highest IPCC scenarios (Figure 1).  Rahmstorf et al. (2012)
concluded,“The satellite-based linear trend 1993–2011 is 3.2 ± 0.5 mm yr-1,
which is 60% faster than the best IPCC estimate of 2.0 mm yr-1 for the same
interval.”Figure 1: Sea level measured by satellite altimeter (red with
linear trend line; AVISO datafrom (Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales) and
reconstructed from tide gauges (orange, monthly data from Church and White
(2011)). Tide gauge data were aligned to give the same mean during
1993–2010 as the altimeter data. The scenarios of the IPCC are again shown
in blue (third assessment) and green (fourth assessment); the former have
been published starting in the year 1990 and the latter from 2000.The main
reason these sea level rise projections have been too low and that the IPCC
almost certainly underestimates future sea level rise is that their models
do not include the effects of dynamic ice processes from chunks of ice
breaking off into the ocean (“calving”), then melting.  The IPCC approach
in attempting to account for these processes considers recent contributions
to sea level rise from ice sheet melt, then “assume that this contribution
will persist unchanged.”  This is certainly a conservative approach, and
the primary reason their sea level projections have been low.

Arctic Sea Ice Decline

Three years after the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report was drafted, the 2009
Copenhagen Diagnosis examined the latest climate research to effectively
update the IPCC report.  In addition to confirming the Rahmstorf finding
that the IPCC has underestimated sea level rise, the Copenhagen Diagnosis
also found that the IPCC has dramatically understimated the decline in
Arctic sea ice extent (Figure 2).Figure 2: Observed vs. IPCC modeled annual
minimum Arctic sea ice extentIn 2012, Arctic sea ice melt shattered the
previous record low, to levels unseen in millennia, increasing the margin
by which IPCC projections have been too conservative.

CO2 Emissions

A 2009 report by the US National Research Council (NRC), Committee on
Strategic Advice on the U.S. Climate Change Science Program found that the
IPCC had also underestimated recent CO2 emissions from developing
countries.“The IPCC projections are based on estimates that CO2 emissions
in China increased at an annual rate of about 3 to 4 percent during the
past 10 years (IPCC, 2007a; IEA, 2007), but a subsequent province-based
inventory concluded that emissions actually increased at a higher rate of
about 10 to 11 percent (Auffhammer and Carson, 2008)….Emissions from a
number of other developed countries were also higher than agreed-to
targets.”The Copenhagen Diagnosis similarly found that in addition to
underestimating sea level rise, human CO2 emissions have tracked towards
the highest IPCC scenarios.Figure 3: IEA fossil fuel CO2 emissions
estimates vs. IPCC SRES emissions scenarios.

Permafrost Melt and Carbon Feedback

The Copenhagen Diagnosis notes that the global warming amplification
(feedback) from carbon released as a result of permafrost melting has not
been accounted for in any of the IPCC projections.  A recent UN Environment
Programme report warned that failing to account for this feedback will
result in an underestimate of future warming.

Other Climate Impacts

The NRC report notes that according to Déry and Brown (2007), northern
hemisphere snow cover may also be declining at a faster-than-expected rate,
and the Copenhagen Diagnosis states that rainfall has become more intense
in already rainy areas, and “recent changes have occurred faster than
predicted“.So while the IPCC and the climate science community in general
has under-predicted quite a few climate impacts, there are very few
examples where they have over-predicted these changes.

“Erring on the Side of Least Drama” (ESLD) to Avoid Alarmism

The IPCC and climate scientists are often accused of “alarmism”, but
clearly Brysse et al. demonstrates that these accusations are wholly
unfounded and misplaced.“Our analysis of the available studies suggests
that if a bias is operative in the work of climate scientists, it is in the
direction of under-predicting, rather than over-predicting, the rate and
extent of anthropogenic climate change.”In fact, Brysse et al. suggest that
these frequent accusations of “alarmism” and other climate contrarian
attacks on climate scientists may be one reason why climate scientists have
under-predicted climate change, or erred on the side of least drama.“The
frequent attacks on Stephen Schneider—as well as attacks on other climate
scientists such as Benjamin Santer and Michael Mann—suggests that one
possible reason why scientists may have underestimated the threat of
anthropogenic warming is the fear that if they don’t, they will be accused
by contrarians (as was Schneider) of being alarmist fear-mongers. That is
to say, pressure from skeptics and contrarians and the risk of being
accused of alarmism may have caused scientists to understate their
results.”However, Brysse et al. note that from a scientific and statistical
standpoint, under-predicting an effect by 10% is no less wrong than
over-predicting an effect by 10%.  Therefore, ESLD can introduce a
systematic bias that leads to a reduction in the accuracy of climate
projections.

The Ozone Example

Between 2008 and 2011, Brysse et al. conducted a series of interviews with
numerous scientists studying and assessing ozone depletion.  In February of
1992, NASA scientists studying the Arctic atmosphere issued a press release
warning that a major Arctic ozone hole, like the one over Antarctica, could
develop that spring.  While the science behind the prediction was correct,
unexpected factors intervened, and Arctic ozone depletion in 1992 was not
as severe as the scientists anticipated.“In the aftermath of the unrealized
1992 Arctic ozone hole prediction, NASA scientists were severely criticized
in the conservative press for crying wolf, causing unnecessary panic, and
acting according to emotional imperatives or an environmental agenda
instead of according to the dictates of scientific objectivity.”Subsequent
to the barrage of criticism over this event, NASA has become more cautious
in issuing press releases.  Many scientists who researched ozone depletion
have now become involved in the IPCC reports.  In an interview in 2009,
ozone researcher Jonathan Shanklin suggested that scientific assessments
operate according to the “crying wolf principle: if you cry wolf too often,
then nobody believes you anymore, and the sky does fall in“, and also
suggested that in the case of recent IPCC predictions of future climate
change, scientists’ “best guess for many of these [scenarios] were actually
worse than those in the report.”In other words, Shanklin suggests that the
IPCC under-predicts climate impacts in order to avoid losing credibility
due to …accusations of “alarmism”.  Other scientists interviewed by
Brysse who were involved in ozone research and the IPCC reports shared
similar opinions.

Other Causes of ESLD

In addition to fear of being labeled as “alarmist” Brysse et al. discusses
other possible causes of ESLD.  For example, scientists tend to invoke the
“principle of least astonishment”, whereby they typically choose the
simplest of two possible hypotheses.  However, the rate that climate
impacts like Arctic sea loss and sea level rise are occurring and will
occur is rather astonishing.  Similarly, scientific conservatism introduces
“an inherent bias in favor of existing knowledge and presumptions, and the
avoidance of conclusions that seem excessively dramatic.”Brysse et al. also
believe “that the basic, core values of scientific rationality contribute
to an unintended bias against dramatic outcomes…scientists are skeptical of
all new claims, and ceteris paribus, the more dramatic the claim, the more
skeptical they are likely to be.“  Dramatic claims open scientists to
criticisms not just from climate contrarians, but to their own peers as
well.

The Dangers of ESLD

To sum up, climate scientists have tended to systematically under-predict
many impacts resulting from climate change.  Brysse et al. suggest they do
so in “erring on the side of least drama” (ESLD)in order to avoid
accusations of “alarmism” from climate contrarians;because scientists are
skeptical by nature whereas climate impacts are dramatic;and because
dramatic claims open scientists to criticism from their peers.However, the
conservative bias imposed by ESLD produces a dangerous result.“If climate
scientists and assessors are erring on the side of least drama in their
predictions, then they are not preparing policymakers and the public for
the worst, because they are underpredicting what the worst outcomes might
be.”We will give the final word to Brysse et al.“Our hypothesis of ESLD is
not meant as a criticism of scientists. The culture of science has in most
respects served humanity very well. Rather, ESLD provides a context for
interpreting scientists’ assessments of risk-laden situations, a challenge
faced by the public and policy-makers. In attempting to avoid drama, the
scientific community may be biasing its own work—a bias that needs to be
appreciated because it could prevent the full recognition, articulation,
and acknowledgment of dramatic natural phenomena that may, in fact, be
occurring. After all, some phenomena in nature are dramatic. If the drama
arises primarily from social, political, or economic impacts, then it is
crucial that the associated risk be understood fully, and not
discounted.”– This piece was originally published at Skeptical Science and
was re-printed with permission.Related Post:Bombshell: Koch-Funded Study
Finds ‘Global Warming Is Real’, ‘On The High End’ And ‘Essentially All’ Due
To Carbon Pollution

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