FYI. 

 

Open letter abut IPCC process
Dear Colleagues:

We have written an open letter (below) about the IPCC process, media
attention, errors, and suggestions for improvement, which we are circulating
to both IPCC authors and other scientists in the US. If you would like to be
a co-signer of the letter, please send your name and institutional
affiliation to Gary Yohe at [email protected] by close of business, Friday
March 12.

We plan to send the letter to the State Department, EPA, NOAA, the Office of
Science and Technology Policy, the Council on the Environment and other
relevant US agencies and organizations.

Because it won't be possible to coordinate multiple versions, we do not plan
to edit this letter further at this juncture. However, if you do have
comments, please feel free to include them in your email response.

Please circulate the open letter to your colleagues if you would like. We
apologize for any cross-listings in advance.

Best,
Gary Yohe
Steve Schneider
Cynthia Rosenzweig
Bill Easterling



An Open Letter from Scientists in the United States on the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change and Errors Contained in the Fourth Assessment
Report: Climate Change 2007


       Many in the popular press and other media, as well as some in the
halls of Congress, are seizing on a few errors that have been found in the
Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) in an attempt to discredit the entire report.  None of the
handful of mis-statements (out of hundreds and hundreds of unchallenged
statements), remotely undermines the conclusion that the planet is warming
unequivocally and that most of the observed increase in global average
temperatures since the mid-twentieth century is very likely due to observed
increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations. Despite its
excellent performance for accurately reporting the state-of-the-science, we
certainly acknowledge that the IPCC should become even better, more
forthcoming in openly acknowledging errors in a timely fashion, and
continuing to improve its assessment procedures to further lower the already
very low rate of error.

       It is our intention in offering this open letter to bring the focus
back to credible science, rather than invented hyperbole, so that it can
bear on the policy debate in the United States and throughout the world.  We
first discuss some of the key messages from climate science and then
elaborate on IPCC procedures, with particular attention on the
quality-control mechanisms of the IPCC.  Finally we offer some suggestions
about what might be done next to improve IPCC practices and restore full
trust in climate science.

The Climate Challenge

       Our understanding of human contributions to climate change and the
associated urgency for humans to respond has improved dramatically over the
past two decades.  Many of the major components of the climate system are
now well understood, though there are still some sources of significant
uncertainty (like the processes that produce the observed rapid ice-sheet
melting and/or collapse in the polar regions).  It is now well established,
for example, that atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases from human
sources have increased rapidly since the Industrial Revolution.  Increasing
concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere change the heat going
into and out of the climate system, i.e., the radiation balance of the earth
- and so first principles of physics tell us to expect, with a very high
likelihood, that higher temperatures should have been observed.

       Indeed, measurements of global average temperatures show an increase
of about 0.6 degrees C over the past century and about 0.8 degrees C warming
since mid-19th century.  The pattern of increase has not been smooth or
monotonic.  There have been several 10- or 15-year periods of stable or
declining temperatures over the past 150 years, but 1998 was the warmest (or
slightly in second place) year in this period and 11 of the warmest years
have been experienced in the 12 years between 1995-2006.  Since 1970,
observational evidence from all continents and most oceans shows that many
natural systems are already being affected by these temperature increases.

       Because the long-term warming trends demonstrate extraordinarily high
statistical significance, the current decadal period of stable global mean
temperature does nothing to alter a fundamental conclusion from the AR4:
warming has unequivocally been observed and documented.  Moreover,
well-understood lags in the responsiveness of the climate system to
disturbances like greenhouse gas increases mean that the current temperature
plateau will very likely not persist much longer. Global climate model
projections show that present-day greenhouse gas concentrations have already
committed the planet to more than another 1 degree C in warming over the
coming decades.

       Increasing emissions of carbon dioxide from the consumption of coal,
oil and natural gas as well as deforestation have been the major drivers of
this observed warming.  While we cannot predict the details of our climate
future with a high degree of certainty, the majority of studies from a large
number of research groups in the US and elsewhere project that unabated
emissions could produce between 1 and 6 degrees C more warming through the
year 2100.

       Other research has identified  multiple reasons  to be concerned
about climate change; these apply to the United States as well as globally.
They include (1) risks to unique and threatened systems (including human
communities), (2) risks from extreme events (like coastal storms, floods,
droughts, heat waves, and wildfires), (3) economic damages (driven by, for
example, pest infestations or inequities in the capacity to adapt), (4)
risks from large-scale abrupt climate change (e.g., ice-sheet collapse,
ocean circulation slowing, sharply increased methane emissions from
permafrost) or abrupt impacts of more predictable climate change (generated
by thresholds in the coping capacities of natural and human systems to
climate variability), and (5) risks to national security (driven largely by
extreme events across the world interacting with already-stressed
situations).

       These sources of risk and the potential for triggering
temperature-driven impacts at lower thresholds, as well as the explicit
recognition in the AR4 that risk is the product of likelihood and
consequence, led the nations of the world to take note of the Copenhagen
Accord last December.  The Accord highlights 2 degrees C in warming above
preindustrial temperature levels as a target that might reduce the chance of
"dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system" to more
manageable levels.  Research has shown that significantly increasing the
likelihood of achieving this goal over the next century is economically and
technically feasible with emission reduction measures and changes in
consumption patterns; but it will not be easy without major national and
international actions to deviate substantially from the status quo.

The IPCC and the Fourth Assessment Report

       The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) established the IPCC in 1988 to provide policy
makers regularly with balanced assessments of the state of knowledge on
climate change.  In so doing, they created an open intergovernmental
organization to which policy analysts, engineers, resource managers and
renowned scientists from all over the world  were asked to collaborate.  At
present, more than 150 countries including the United States participate in
the IPCC.  IPCC publishes an assessment report approximately every six
years.  The most recent Fourth Assessment, approved by member countries and
released in 2007, contained three volumes: The Physical Science Basis
(Working Group I); Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability (Working Group II)
and Mitigation of Climate Change (Working Group III) and a Synthesis Report.
More than 44 writing teams and 450 lead authors contributed to the Fourth
Assessment - authors who hav!
 e been selected on the basis of their expertise in consultation with all
member countries and who were assisted by another 800 scientists and
analysts who served as contributing authors on specific topics.  Authors
donated their time gratis, and the entire process was supported by four
Technical Support Units (TSUs) that employ 5 to 10 people each.

Errors in the Fourth Assessment Report

       It was hard not to notice the extraordinary commotion that erupted
around errors that were eventually found in the AR4.  The wrong year for the
projected disappearance of the Himalayan glaciers and the wrong percentage
of 'land below sea level' in the Netherlands are examples of errors that
need to be acknowledged frankly and rectified promptly.  In a few other
cases, like the discussion of the correlations between crop yields, climate
change, and climate variability in North Africa, caveats that were carefully
crafted within chapters were not included when language was shortened for
the Working Group II Summary for Policymakers and the Synthesis Report.
While striving to simplify technical details and summarize major points,
some important qualifications were left behind. These errors of omission in
the summary process should also be recognized and corrected. Other claims,
like the one reported at the end of February suggesting that the AR4 did not
mention the numbe!
 r of people who will see increases in water availability that were reported
in the cited literature along with the millions of more people who will be
at risk of water shortage, are simply not true.  In any case, it is
essential to emphasize that none of these interventions from outside the
IPCC alter the key finding from the AR4 that human beings are very likely
changing the climate, with far-reaching impacts in the long run.

       The heated debates that have emerged around these instances have even
led some to question the quality and integrity of the IPCC.  Recent events
have made it clear that the quality control procedures of the IPCC are not
watertight, but claims of widespread and deliberate manipulation of
scientific data and fundamental conclusions in the AR4 are not supported by
the facts.  We also strongly contest the impression that the main
conclusions of the report are based on dubious sources. The reference list
of the AR4 contains about 18,000 citations, the vast majority of which were
published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. The IPCC also has
transparent procedures for using published but not peer-reviewed sources in
their reports.  These procedures were not properly followed in the isolated
Himalaya case, but that statement was never elevated into the Summary for
Policymakers of either Working Group II or the Synthesis Report - documents
that were approved unanimously a!
 nd word for word by all member nations.

       Nonetheless, failsafe compliance with these procedures requires extra
attention in the writing of the next round of assessments.  We propose
implementing a topic-based cross-chapter review process by which experts in
an impact area of climate change, such as changes in water resources,
scrutinize the assessment of related vulnerability, risk analyses, and
adaptation strategies that work downstream from such changes.  Here we mean,
to continue the example, assessments of  possible increases in flooding
damage in river basins and the potential for wetlands to provide buffers in
the  sectoral and regional chapters. This would be most productively
implemented just before the first-order draft, so that chapter authors can
be alerted to potential problems before the major review step.

Quality Control within the IPCC and US Review

       The impression that the IPCC does not have a proper quality-control
procedure is deeply mistaken. The procedure for compiling reports and
assuring its quality control are governed by well-documented principles that
are reviewed regularly and amended as appropriate.  Even now, every step in
the preparation of every chapter can be traced on a website: First Order
Drafts (with comments by many scientists as well as author responses to
those comments), Second Order Drafts in which those comments are
incorporated (and comments by experts and country representatives on revised
versions as well as another round of author responses), and so on, up
through the final, plenary-approved versions.

       To be clear, 2,500 reviewers together provided  about 90,000 comments
on the 44 chapters for the AR4.  Each comment is documented on a website
that also describes how and why the comment was or was not incorporated in
the next revision.  Review editors for each chapter worked with the authors
to guarantee that each comment was treated properly and honestly in the
revision; in fact, no chapter can ever move forward for publication without
the approval of its set of two or three review editors.

       The US Government opened its reviews of the draft IPCC report to any
US expert who wanted to review it. In order to protect against having this
preliminary pre-reviewed draft leaked before its ultimate approval by the
IPCC Plenary, the US Government asked all potential reviewers to agree not
to disclose the contents of the draft.  For each report, the US Government
assembled its own independent panel of government experts to vet the
comments before submission to the IPCC. Anything with scientific merit was
forwarded.  There were multiple rounds for each of the Working Group reports
and the Synthesis Report, and opportunities for US experts to review the
drafts were posted as Federal Register notices.

       IPCC principles also govern how authors treat published but non-peer
reviewed sources. These procedures acknowledge that peer-reviewed scientific
journals contain little information about on-the-ground implementation of
adaptation or mitigation - matters such as the emission reduction potential
in a given industrial sector or country, for example, or catalogues of the
specific vulnerabilities and adaptation strategies of sectors and regions
with regard to climate change.  This information is frequently only
available in reports from research institutes, reports of workshops and
conferences, or in publications from industries or other non-governmental
organizations.  This is the so-called gray literature. The IPCC procedure
prescribes that authors are obliged critically to assess any gray source
that they wish to include. The quality and validity of a finding from a
non-peer reviewed source needs to be verified before its finding may be
included in a chapter text.  Ea!
 ch source needs to be completely traceable; and in cases where gray sources
are used, a copy must be deposited at the IPCC Secretariat to guarantee that
it is available upon request for third parties.

       We conclude that the IPCC procedures are transparent and thorough,
even though they are not infallible.  Nonetheless, we are confident that no
single scholar or small group of scholars can manipulate the process to
include or to exclude a specific line of research; authors of that research
can (and are fully encouraged to) participate in the review process.
Moreover, the work of every scientist, regardless of whether it supports or
rejects the premise of human-induced climate change, is subject to inclusion
in the reports.  The work is included or rejected for consideration based on
its scientific merit.

       It is important to note, at least in passing, that we are not
addressing here the criteria and procedures by which the IPCC selects chairs
and authors. These are handled exclusively by the IPCC and its members
according to terms of reference that were initially defined in the
authorizing language of 1988.  That is to say, governments or their
appointees frame and implement these policies; and they create, approve and
staff Technical Support Units for each working group. We have no suggestions
to offer on these topics since they lie well beyond our purview.



What comes next?

       The National Academies of Sciences will shortly release a series of
subsequent assessments under the America's Climate Choices rubric.  We
expect that the robust findings of the AR4 will be supported by new
information gleaned from literature published since 2006, and that IPCC
findings will be confirmed - i.e., that the climate change issue is serious
and urgent and deserves the serious, urgent and non-partisan consideration
of the country's legislative and administrative leaders.  In short, we feel
strongly that exaggerated focus on a few errors from 2007 cannot be allowed
to detract from open and honest deliberations about how to respond to
climate risk by reducing emissions and promoting adaptation at home and
abroad.

       As the process of producing the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (AR5)
begins, the IPCC should become more responsive in acknowledging errors
rapidly and openly as they become known. To this end, we urge the IPCC to
put an erratum on its website that rectifies all errors that have been
discovered in the text after publication.  In doing so, a clear distinction
needs to be made between errors and progressing knowledge.  IPCC assessments
are detailed snapshots of the state of scientific knowledge at a given time,
while knowledge evolves continuously through ongoing research and
experience; it is the errors in the assessments that need immediate
attention.  In contrast, progressing knowledge is published in new
scientific journal articles and reports; this information should be used as
a basis for the AR5, but it cannot be listed as errata for the AR4 because
it was not available when that assessment was conducted.  The website
should, as well, respond rapidly and openly wh!
 en reports of errors in past assessments are themselves in error.  We
cannot let misperceptions fester anymore than errors go uncorrected.

       Climate research and the IPCC reports on the state of knowledge
provide a scientific foundation for climate policy making, whose agenda is
defined by the governments of the IPCC not the lead authors per se.  The
quality of and the balance in the knowledge delivered by any assessment is
certainly essential, as is clear and explicit communication of associated
uncertainties.  Given the recent political and media commotion surrounding a
few clear errors, it is now equally essential that we find ways to restore
full trust in the integrity of the overwhelming majority of the climate
change research and policy communities.  To that end, we are pleased that an
independent critical evaluation of IPCC procedures will be conducted; we
hope that the process will solicit participation by the National Academies
of the member nations.

       The significance of IPCC errors has been greatly exaggerated by many
sensationalist accounts, but that is no reason to avoid implementing
procedures to make the assessment process even better. The public has a
right to know the risks of climate change as scientists currently understand
them. We are dedicated to working with our colleagues and government in
furthering that task.


March 12, 2010

Signed:
Gary W. Yohe                    Wesleyan University
Stephen H. Schneider            Stanford University
Cynthia Rosenzweig              NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
William E. Easterling           Pennsylvania State University

 

Reply via email to