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Is Global Climate Change A Threat to National Parks? Another Response

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Editor's note: The following is a rebuttal to Dr. Daniel Botkin's Oct 26 column on climate change, and his contention that global warming is not being caused by human activities. Collaborating on this response were Dr. John Lemons1, Dr. Owen Hoffman2, Lyndel Meikle3, and Ron Mackie4

 

Introduction

We have a lifelong dedication to national parks and are concerned about Dr. Daniel Botkin’s recent guest article in National Parks Traveler. Our combined backgrounds as scientists and as National Park Service employees leads us to question Dr. Botkin’s use of outdated information and data not accepted by an overwhelming majority of climate change scientists in his article “Climate is Changing, and Some Parks are Endangered, But Humans Aren’t the Cause.” This was his rebuttal to the report on threats to the parks by staff from the Union of Concerned Scientists. Dr. Botkin’s use of information makes it more difficult for the U.S to develop meaningful responses to human–induced global climate change, including protection of National Park Service lands. Our intended audience is people who are not experts in global climate change but who want solid, verifiable and current wisdom about its human attribution.

The sound counter–rebuttal by staff from the Union of Concerned Scientists ably addressed many of our concerns. Some concerns remain. Our concerns and the evidence we provide in rebuttal to Dr. Botkin’s article are supported by overwhelming scientific conclusions that there is a very high probability that human–induced global climate change, due primarily to fossil fuel use and secondarily to land use changes, is already happening. There are numerous reports from the world’s most authoritative scientific body on global climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; reports from over 20 nations’ national academies of sciences; several reports from the U.S. National Academies of Sciences; reports from the U.S. Global Change Program; and literally many hundreds of independent scientific studies. Further, every scientific organization in the United States that deals with global climate change agrees with the scientific conclusions mentioned above.

Much of Dr. Botkin’s article focuses on a few arguments that there is no evidence of human–induced global climate change. The evidence he uses to support his views are not accepted by the overwhelming majority of global climate scientists, creating a false impression among people who are not experts in climate change that such scientists are uncertain about whether human–induced global climate change is already occurring and that it will become much more serious and irreversible unless urgent mitigation measures are adopted. A few examples of serious and for all practical purposes irreversible changes are loss of summer north pole sea ice; destabilization of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets; significant sea level rise; some regions becoming warmer and others cooler; increases in regional droughts and floods; shifts and losses of food producing regions; increases in various human health diseases; significant losses of biodiversity; and increases in regional wars due to conflicts over dwindling and impacted resources and whose livelihoods people depend. Recent surveys show that about 98 percent of climate scientists believe that human–induced global climate change is occurring. So, if Dr. Botkin wishes to go against the grain of the aforementioned conclusions and scientific consensus, he should present some firm evidence. And this, he failed to do.

For the most part, we limit our discussion and use of evidence to issues Dr. Botkin discusses directly; however, in some sections, including our concluding thoughts, we raise some additional issues because of their importance.

Has the Earth Been Warming?

Dr. Botkin devotes three paragraphs to the Medieval Warm Period followed by mention of the ‘Little Ice Age.’ But, he does not say why he discusses these climate events or their significance to conclusions about human–induced global climate change. Perhaps the reason he discusses these events is to demonstrate that historically there has been natural climate variability.

Scientists know very well about natural climate variability and take it into account when making conclusions about global climate change. However, Dr. Botkin does not mention that the Medieval Warm Period and the ‘Little Ice Age’ were regional to parts of Europe and other areas in northern latitudes, and largely irrelevant to the contemporary issue of human–induced global climate change. Further, Dr. Botkin mentions a single paper by Ross McKitrick, an economist, as the basis for his conclusion that there has been no warming of the earth’s atmosphere during the past few hundred years. McKitrick’s paper has gained no traction in altering the consensus of scientific conclusions about the significance of human–induced global climate change.

Consider some of the conclusions in the recent AR 5 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. One, that human influence on the climate system is unequivocal, and many recent observed changes are unprecedented over decades to millennia with widespread impacts on human and natural systems–the atmosphere and oceans have warmed, the amounts of snow and ice have diminished, and sea level has risen. The changes also are unprecedented with respect to both the amount of change and the rate of change. Two, each of the last three decades has been successively warmer at the earth’s surface than any decade since 1850. The period 1983–2012 was very likely the warmest 30–period of the last 800 years and likely the warmest 30–year period of the past 1400 years. Three, ocean warming dominates increases in energy stored in the climate system with subsequent changes in regions of high salinity where evaporation dominates and in regions of low salinity where precipitation dominates. Parenthetically, because of potential interest to readers of National Parks Traveler, recent estimates of global loss of biodiversity due to human–induced climate change range around 25 percent or more by 2050 -– such loss stemming from both the changes of a human–induced climate system and their rate of change.

Further, Dr. Botkin includes a graph courtesy of John Christy, a meteorologist from Alabama State. The source of the graph is The State of the Climate in 2012; the graph uses mid–troposphere temperature five-year averages. On first consideration, the graph shows that there is no correspondence between the forecasts of general circulation models used in global climate change studies and observed temperature changes since 1980. Dr. Botkin’s conclusion based on the graph is that although atmospheric temperature varies, it does so only a little if at all and, further, models are poor predictors of actual temperature changes.

Dr. Botkin ignores the main conclusion of the State of the Climate Report –- that there is a continuation of warming at the Earth’s surface, sea surface, and surface and deep ocean layers. This is the very report he uses for the data he selected in support of his own conclusions. Further, Christy uses mid–troposphere temperatures as a fundamental indicator of human–induced global climate change despite the fact that legitimacy of using mid–troposphere temperatures is thought to be small, not only by the authors of The State of the Climate in 2012 but by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and other scientific organization with a focus on the use of temperature indicators for determining human–induced global climate change. 

Frequency of Severe Storms and Extremely Hot Days

Dr. Botkin’s discussion of the frequency of severe storms is problematic; for example, he asserts that a claim of the report by the Union of Concerned Scientists is that the danger of flooding simply stems from the rise of sea–level. But the Union of Concerned Scientists does not make this claim, and neither do the reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or nations’ academies of sciences. As noted in the AR 5 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, changes in extreme weather and climate events have been observed since about 1950 and linked to human influences, including decreases in cold temperature extremes, increases in warm temperature extremes, increases in extreme high sea level, and increases in the number of heavy precipitation events in a number of regions.

Dr. Botkin presents a graph purportedly showing that the number of 95 F degree temperature readings at U.S. weather stations since 1930 shows no increase on an annual basis of days with temperatures above this level. There are two problems with his use and lack of discussion about the data. First, these data pertain to the U.S.; consequently, the data are regional and not a reliable indicator of the state of the global climate. Second, and more importantly, Dr. Botkin fails to note that in, say, a stationary climate, as the years go by there will be a statistical drop in the number of daily heat records. However, during periods of global warming, as per the conclusions of numerous scientific reports and studies we reference, the frequency of heat records has declined much less than expected in a stationary climate.

Concluding Thoughts

Dr. Botkin’s article ignores several issues relevant to global climate change and its possible effects on national parks and protected areas. We discuss these in no particular order of importance.

First, it ignores the issue of ‘finger printing,’ or data that conclusively demonstrate a human attribution to global climate change. One example is that the ratio of certain carbon isotopes in the atmosphere has been decreasing since the Industrial Revolution. The ratio of carbon–13 to carbon–12 is an example because plants preferentially take up the lighter isotope and, hence, since fossil fuels are comprised of plant matter, their burning decreases the ratio in the atmosphere and this decrease has been observed since the Industrial Revolution. Another example is that empirical evidence shows that the upper troposphere has warmed while the lower stratosphere has cooled and this evidence is entirely consistent with the theory about the observable impacts of increased heat energy from greenhouse gases being trapped in the lower levels of the Earth’s atmosphere. A final example is research that identifies how global climate change is related to the amount of carbon emissions by humans since the late 1800s.

Second, the editor of National Parks Traveler, Kurt Repanshek, makes an inadvertent but potentially confusing comment in his October 28th response to Dr. Botkin’s article, wherein Repanshek states, ‘Antarctic sea ice is at record levels.’ Although this statement is true, the more important considerations are empirical data that show instabilities and declines in the mass of ice in the Antarctic (and Greenland) ice sheets; these instabilities and mass declines prompt concerns about significant rises of sea level.

Third, one of the most disturbing things about Dr. Botkin’s article is that he denies there is even a minor probability that human–induced global climate change exists. We wish to make clear that we believe, consistent with our own work, the numerous studies we have referenced, and the very high scientific consensus we have referenced, that the probability of human–induced global climate change is very high.

But for purposes of argument and certainly germane to protected areas of the National Park Service, let us assume that there might be some chance that human–induced global climate change is occurring, but also a chance it is not. Under conditions of scientific uncertainty, the precautionary principle should be invoked. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change recognizes the precautionary principle; the Convention has been ratified by over 190 nations, including the United States, and the Convention has the force of an international legal treaty.

As many readers of National Parks Traveler know, the precautionary principle states that in matters affecting environmental and human health that are serious and irreversible even if some uncertainties exist about risks or impacts, actions to mitigate them should be taken. In other words, erring in making a conclusion that there is an effect when in fact there is none is more protective than erring by making a conclusion there is no effect when in fact there is. By his denial of any chance that human–induced climate change is occurring, Dr. Botkin rules out use of the precautionary principle and therefore offers a lesser degree of protection to National Park Service lands.

Fourth, scientific conclusions are always open to debate, and independent testing is one of the hallmarks of scientific norms. But are we to believe that a single paper Dr. Botkin mentions from McKitrick, an economist, one from Christy, and Dr. Botkin’s article in National Parks Traveler overthrow the weight of evidence from the numerous scientific reports we have referenced that conclude human–induced global climate change already is here? Within the scientific community the debate about whether human–induced global climate change is occurring is outdated and akin to the question of whether the Earth is flat. Newspapers such as the New York Times have indicated publically that they will no longer publish articles concerned solely with the question: Is global climate change occurring? We are not advocating censorship, but only reiterating that the question and major thrust of Dr. Botkin’s article are outdated and have been settled within the scientific community.

Fifth, National Parks Traveler is not a scientific peer–reviewed journal and we are not advocating that it becomes one. We understand that the purpose of National Parks Traveler is to offer a platform for differing points of view. Yet, because Dr. Botkin made use of some scientific evidence and conclusions, this raises the question of whether some outside review would serve to strengthen articles that rely on empirical evidence and its interpretation.

Sixth and finally, we wish to be clear that we value Kurt’s dedication to the lands the National Park Service tries to protect. He provides a much–needed voice for the parks while not being an employee of the parks. We hope that he will continue to take into consideration the enormous effect stories in National Parks Traveler can have on the public, especially as human–induced global climate change increasingly threatens our National Park Service lands.

 

References

2014 National Climate Assessment, 2014, U.S. Global Change Research Program, Washington, DC (http://nca2014.globalchange.gov) Accessed 14 November 2014

Anderegg WRL, Prall JW, Harold J, Schneider SH, 2010, Expert Credibility in Climate Change, Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, 107: 12107–12109 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2901439/) Accessed 15 November 2014

Burns CE, Johnston KM, Schmitz OJ, 2003, Global Climate Change and Mammalian Species Diversity in U.S. National Parks, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 100: 11474–11477 (http://www.pnas.org/content/100/20/11474.full) Accessed 24 November 2014

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 2012, State of the Climate–2012 (http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/bams-state-of-the-climate/2012.php) Accessed 15 November 2014

Climate Change at the National Academies, Washington DC, (http://nas-sites.org/americasclimatechoices/sample-page/panel-reports/) Accessed 14 November 2014

Convention on Biological Diversity, 2010, Global Biodiversity Outlook 3, Montreal, Canada (http://www.cbd.int/gbo3/) Accessed 26 November 2014

Goodwin P, Williams RG, Ridgwell A, 2014 Sensitivity of Climate to Cumulative Carbon Emissions Due to Compensation of Ocean Heat and Carbon Uptake, Nature Geoscience DOI: 10.1038/ngeo2304 (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141201113036.htm)

Harvard School of Public Health, 2014, Climate Change and Biodiversity Loss, in: Biodiversity and Human Health (http://www.chgeharvard.org/topic/climate-change-and-biodiversity-loss) Accessed 26 November 2014

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2014, The Fifth Assessment Report, The World Meteorological Organization, Geneva, Switzerland (http://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/) Accessed 14 November 2014

Oreskes, N, 2004, Beyond the Ivory Tower: The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change, Science 306: 1686 (http://www.sciencemag.org/content/306/5702/1686.full) Accessed 15 November 2014

Shepherd A and 46 others, A Reconciled Estimate of Ice–Sheet Mass Balance 2012, 338 (6111): 1183-1189, Science (http://www.sciencemag.org/content/338/6111/1183.abstract) Accessed 15 November 2014

Skeptical Science, 2014, Is There a Scientific Consensus on Global Warming? (http://www.skepticalscience.com/global-warming-scientific-consensus-intermediate.htm) Accessed 15 November 2014

 

1Professor Emeritus of Biology and Environmental Science, Department of Environmental Studies, University of New England, Biddeford, ME 04005 ([email protected]); 2Dr. Owen Hoffman, President, Oak Ridge Center for Risk Analysis, Oak Ridge, TN 37830; 3Lyndel Meikle, National Park Service, Grant–Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site, Deer Lodge, MT 59722; 4Ron Mackie, Retired National Park Service Ranger. Address all correspondence to Dr. John Lemons.

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Comments

Yeah, for a hundred years co2 warms the air and then all of a sudden it decides to warm the oceans instead.  Did any of the AGW models predict that?  Of course not.  The models have been horribly wrong. 


Lee, you are correct. Much more information about this can be obtained from the joint NAS/RS report, which has been authored by a collective team of climate scientists and peer reviewed.   I find that "global climate change deniers" are actively engaged in a political campaign repeating the same pseudo facts over and over again in online media.  I have a very high regard for the following report. It's worth your time to look through. 

http://dels.nas.edu/resources/static-assets/exec-office-other/climate-ch...


At least the NAS is more honest about the status of the debate.

           " However, due to the nature of science, not every single detail is ever totally settled or completely certain. Nor has every pertinent question yet been answered. Scientific evidence continues to be gathered around the world, and assumptions and findings about climate change are continually analysed and tested. Some areas of active debate and ongoing research include the link between ocean heat content and the rate of warming, estimates of how much warming to expect in the future, and the connections between climate change and extreme weather events"

But interesting - their proof of man causing warming is that models showed increasing CO2 would warm the lower atmosphere more than the upper.  They then claim that has been what has happened.  Yet for the last 18 years that is not the case.  Their models have been horribly wrong.


I saw a wonderful program on the Science Channel the other day. Apparently, 3.5 billion years ago--give or take a few million years--the earth had no oxygen period. It was all carbon dioxide then. Comets and asteroids were bombarding the planet. And then something CHANGED. The first CO2 loving microbes somehow appeared, and began generating oxygen as a waste product. Imagine. Oxygen as a waste product. Now why didn’t Al Gore think of that?

Because the best he could do is “think” about it. Evolution needs to do the rest. My cat is sitting right now in front of my computer screen. Thanks to evolution. her species can replicate itself, but I could never make a cat from scratch.

But I digress. 3.5 billion years later, here we are--arguing about how much oxygen is needed versus CO2 before we are plunged back into the abyss.

Dan Botkin’s point remains. The earth simply doesn't care. It has five billion more years to run before the sun, as a red giant, swallows it up. Until then, there is no “tipping point,” for the earth is forever changing. Just as likely, the next ‘tipping point’ will result in ice.

The human race, barely three million years old, just can't be sold on the idea that a warming planet is so bad. With the exception of a few hundred thousand people hugging the Arctic Circle, no one likes being cold. You people in Anchorage and Fairbanks should be the first to get down on your hands and knees and thank the earth for warming up. Every year you take the great locomotive in the sky down to Seattle to get warm, where I meet you in our finer coffee houses. There you admit that you prefer our crappy eight-hour day to your nonexistent day. Or you go to Hawaii. As for the global warming caused by all those airplanes, I doubt you even think about it when the sun barely inches above the horizon.

Some of us do sail—and walk—and bicycle. The problem is not enough. For every bicyclist on Seattle’s streets, there is a Cadillac Escalade with a bicycle rack carrying the bicycles, especially on rainy days.

No matter, “feel good” Seattle is building bicycle lanes all over the city on the assurance it is “right,” even as we build a $2 billion waterfront tunnel for cars, although yes, the drilling rig is hopelessly mired in all of that glacial till left over from the ice sheets 10,000 years ago.

The ancient Greeks knew to call it hubris, even if we prefer to call it “planning.” “We have met the enemy, and he is us.” How can humans possibly “deny” global warming when their entire lifestyle is about denial? The Chinese just denied the problem again until 2030, but of course, those using the bicycle lanes of Seattle were thrilled before remounting the bicycles on their SUVs.

As a species, we simply lucked out. The volcanoes were calm. The asteroids had stopped coming in. The dinosaurs and tropical plants had changed to oil. Now that we have found what we like, yes, we would like to keep it just that way. I want my house on the barrier islands of North Carolina. I want mine next to the caldera known as Yellowstone National Park. Good luck with that, people. Fifteen minutes may save your fifteen percent on your car insurance, but it won’t save you from a changing earth.

All we can do is hang on and enjoy the ride. And now that seven billion of us are on the carousel, it promises to be a wild ride indeed. And someday even that will end, possibly sooner if ever Yellowstone reawakens from its “perfect” slumber. At that point, the Union of Concerned Scientists will really have something to be concerned about. Of course, they will be under a dozen feet of ash with the rest of us, as will everything once known as the national park system.

Who will write that report? The next lucky species, provided they evolve before a changing earth—solar system—universe—gets them, too.


Hmmmmm.  Well, okay, Dr. Runte.  If you are correct, may I be the first to wish you Good Bye?

But is is okay with you if I would rather not go down without putting up a good fight?


My colleague, Dr. John Lemons, who is currently on foreign travel, has asked me to submit the following commentary.  This commentary is in response to remarks made above by Dr. Alfred Runte suggesting that the only solution to climate change is to recognize that change is inevitable and that all that remains for human-kind and natural ecosystems to do in response to this change is to adapt.  

 

<<On 10 December 2014, I along with my coauthors for the publication in NPT “Global Climate Change and National Parks: Another Response,” published a comment in response to some people who commented on our article–a rebuttal response to Dr. Daniel Botkin’s article “Climate Is Changing, and Some Parks are Endangered, But Humans Aren’t the Cause.” In our comment, we stated why we wrote our original article and also stated that nevertheless we feel that the “to and fro” regarding human–induced climate change merely fosters confusion among those who are not experts in climate change by sowing doubt where, in fact, there should be none because the fundamental aspects of human attribution of global climate change is settled as a scientific question.

 

In his 4 December 2014 comment on our article, Dr. Runte states that Dr. Botkin is not in the least saying what we “accused” him of saying. The only thing our article focused on was Dr. Botkin’s use of scant and questionable scientific information to conclude there is no human attribution of global climate change. Dr. Runte does not offer one shred of evidence that supports Dr. Botkin’s views or that refutes ours–perhaps Dr. Runte can be excused for this lapse because he is not, after all, a scientist but rather a historian. But Dr. Runte, for some inexplicable reason, does lecture readers on how the so–called “balance of nature” is a myth. As ecologists, we understand very well such a myth, but this myth had nothing to do with our article and we did not even mention it.

 

In his 15 December 2014 comment, Dr. Runte seems to be taking an implicit stance about some of the moral aspects of human–induced global climate change. Dr. Runte states, “the earth doesn’t care” about climate change, human–induced or not. This is true–the earth does not care. And then, Dr. Runte seems to take to task people in Seattle and in Alaska for trying, as best they might, to do something to help solve human–induced global climate change. I would agree that solutions are difficult, but I am unaware that most scientists are full of hubris as charged by Dr. Runte.

 

But the salient albeit implicit view of Dr. Runte’s is that while change is inevitable (and it is), that a simple acknowledgment of this is all that is required and then, therefore, we can all go happily forward with changing the earth, regardless of the changes we have wrought that do or might bring havoc not only to the earth but to people both contemporary and future.

 

Fundamentally, human–induced global climate change is a moral problem. Historically, the United States is responsible for around 30 percent of the greenhouse gas emissions since first being informed of the problem around 1965, despite having less than 5 percent of the world’s population. Although as a nation China now exceeds the United States in annual greenhouse emissions, the United States still ranks (by far) number one in the per capita emissions of greenhouse gases (excepting the small oil producing nations in the middle east).

 

Dr. Runte seems to be saying never–mind, the earth changes so there is no problem. Yet, almost all secular and religious morals and ethical frameworks would say there is, indeed, a huge problem. Dr. Runte is guilty of making a gross mistake that most first–year university students would be criticized for, i.e., the “naturalistic fallacy,” which is tantamount to accepting that the “is implies the ought.”

 

Human–induced global climate change is, mostly, due to the more wealthy people of the world using fossil fuels as well as contributing to deforestation that has a major consequence harming vulnerable people, those contemporary and future who are poor and who have contributed least to the global climate change problem. Again, this violates every secular and religious moral philosophy I can think of, because none justify harming other people without their knowledge or consent. Yet, this is exactly what has been happening and will continue to happen, especially under an implicit view of Dr. Runte’s that because the earth is constantly changing, we can or should simply “wash our hands” of the whole mess.

 

I have lived in Alaska and seen first–hand the effects of human–induced global climate change on people and animals. I have seen the same in arid and semi–arid regions of many developing nations. Who, and how, are the more than 10 million environmental refugees from the Nile River Delta suppose to adapt to loss of their land and agriculture through no fault of their own? No problem, says Dr. Runte, the earth is always changing. None of the people in these areas have consented to be harmed, to say nothing of the impacts to loss of biodiversity. Human rights, as defined by the United Nations, are being violated by human–induced global climate change. I urge readers to look up references to points in this and the paragraph above.

 

So, is the earth always changing? Yes. But in terms of moral and ethical considerations  it matters whether we bear some responsibilities and duties to others. And if we do, we need to figure out what they are. In our view, supporting the lifestyles of wealthy people by the use of fossil fuels that harms the most vulnerable and those least responsible for human–induced global climate change is not a just option. (I recommend interested readers about the ethics of climate change peruse http://blogs.law.widener.edu/climate/)

 

Dr. John Lemons>>

 


Mr Lemons - thanks for exposing your true agenda.  An attack on "wealthy people".  How dare they be wealthy. 

 


Actually, most of the world's poor are most vulnerable to impediments to progress .


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