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It has become the go-to for climate alarmists and their corporate media collaborators to blame all types of weather on “climate change.”  However, as Roger Pielke Jr. explains, climate is the statistical outcome of the weather.  As such it cannot be the cause of and does not fuel or influence weather.

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Climate-Fuelled Extreme Weather

By Roger Pielke Jr.

It is now a ubiquitous cultural ritual to blame any and every weather event on climate change. Those hot days? Climate change. That hurricane? Climate change. The flood somewhere that I saw on social media? Climate change.

With today’s post, the first in a series, I go beyond the cartoonish media caricatures of climate change, which I expect are here to stay, and explore the actual science of extreme events – how they may or may not be changing, and how we think we know what we know, and what we simply cannot know.

Quite apart from the outsized and oversimplified role of climate-fuelled extreme weather in culture and politics, climate is fascinating and important – and worth understanding as more than a meme. This post lays the groundwork for this new The Honest Broker (“TBH”) series, starting with some important definitions and a quantitative thought experiment.

Let’s start with the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) definition of climate” (bold emphasis added):

Climate refers to a “statistical description”1 of the climate systemdefined as:

The climate system Source NRC 2005 HT Pielke Sr Note that the sun volcanoes and human activities are all defined to be outside the climate system

The climate system is complicated, but at a high level, we can get our brains around it (above). There is a deeper discussion to be had about why the climate research community decided that people are not included as part of the “climate system,” but let’s leave that for another day.2

That brings us to climate change:

Let’s correct one pervasive and pathological misunderstanding endemic across the media and in policy, and sometimes spotted seeping into peer-reviewed scientific research: Neither climate nor climate change cause, fuel or influence weather.

Yes, you read that right.

Climate change is a change in the statistics of weather – it is an outcome, not a cause.

I often use hitting in baseball as an analogy. A hitter’s batting average does not cause hits. Instead, a batter’s hits result in their overall batting average. Lots of things can change a batter’s hitting performance, but batting average change is not one of them.

As the Google NGrams figure below indicates, the idea that climate change is a causal agent has become increasingly common in recent decades, departing dramatically from its use in the IPCC and much of the scientific community. I am sure you can point to examples that you encounter every day.

Using the IPCC definitions, how would we identify “climate change” in the statistics of weather?

The IPCC explains how we detect climate change:

Let’s illustrate this through a practical analogy. Hold on to your wallet.

Imagine that you are dealt two cards from a standard combined blackjack deck of 6×52 cards (that is, six combined 52-card decks). From this combined deck, the chances of being dealt at least one ace in a two-card hand is about 14.8%.4

Let’s say that I stack the combined deck by adding one additional ace – raising the total from 24 to 25 total aces. Now, what are the chances of getting at least one ace in a two-card hand? The chances have now increased to 15.3%.5

I next add five more aces, for a total of six. Now, in a two-card hand, the chances of receiving at least one ace increases to 18.2%.

We thus have three different decks in our thought experiment:

  1. a standard combined 6×52 deck,
  2. a stacked deck with 1 additional ace – a ~4.1% increase in aces,
  3. a stacked deck with 6 additional aces – a massive 25% increase in aces.

We can next ask: if we did not know that two of the decks were stacked – (2) and (3) – how many hands would we have to play to have a certain degree of confidence that the deck was actually stacked?

To reach a 50% confidence level that the 6×52 card deck was stacked with one additional ace, we would need to play 99 two-card hands. For the stacked deck with 6 additional aces, we’d need just 22 two-card hands.

The table below shows results for different levels of confidence for each of the two stacked decks.

Let’s take the recommended IPCC threshold for detection of change of 90%, and let’s also assume that we play 3 hands per year (comparable to the average number of major hurricanes in the Atlantic every year). In this example to detect a ~4% increase in aces at a 90% level of confidence would require more than 100 years (=329/3).6 Detection of a 25% increase in aces would require almost 25 years (=~73/3).

Note that in this example, the fact and exact magnitude of change (“deck change”) are completely certain. The question is not “Has there been deck change?” (Yes!) but rather, “How quickly does our confidence increase in the existence of that change based on evolving experience?”

The questions become much more complicated if we do not in fact know the magnitude of “deck change” and instead try to use evolving experience to estimate the magnitude of whatever “deck change” may have occurred – for instance, if we are trying to discern whether the change was one or two added aces, or somewhere in between. Complexities multiply further if the number of aces is allowed to change as we are experiencing new hands.

Detection of change is difficult – even in a trivial, stationary statistical process like a very simple card game!

Just imagine if, instead, we were playing Texas Hold’em or Three Legged Knock7 or some other, much more complicated poker game.

Also, “deck change” cannot be used to attribute the cause of receiving an ace in a single hand. If you know that you have a stacked deck with one additional ace, then you can say with certainty that the odds of receiving at least one ace in your next hand increased from 14.8% to 15.3%.

Did that increase of 0.5% increase cause the ace to appear in your most recent hand?

After 329 hands, you can be 90% confident that the greater number of aces that you received over those hands than you would have expected from an unstacked deck are due to the addition of the extra ace.

A final point for today – the thought experiment described today is a pure statistical example. Dealing two cards from a deck does not remotely describe how weather occurs on planet Earth.

Weather can be characterised statistically, but weather does not occur as a result of simple statistical processes.8 Weather is the integrated result of at least: dynamical, thermodynamical, chaotic, societal, biospheric, cryospheric, lithospheric, oceanic, vulcanological, solar, and, yes, stochastic processes.

We are underway, much more to come . . .

Notes:

  • 1 Statistics: “a mathematical body of science that pertains to the collection, analysis, interpretation or explanation, and presentation of data.”
  • 2 Remind me down the road – I have an interesting first-hand account of the origins of the so-called “Bretherton Diagram” that shapes climate research and policy to this day.
  • 3 The IPCC notes that the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (“UNFCCC”) employs a different definition of climate change, a consequential decision that I discussed in Pielke (2005): “Note that the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), in its Article 1, defines climate change as: ’a change of climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which is in addition to natural climate variability observed over comparable time periods’. The UNFCCC thus makes a distinction between climate change attributable to human activities altering the atmospheric composition and climate variability attributable to natural causes.”
  • 4 All math in this post courtesy ChatGPT.
  • 5 This raises the issue of statistical significance vs. practical significance – at what level of change can a sophisticated card player exploit the change? I probably could not make money knowing this level of change to the deck.
  • 6 I’ll refer back to this in a future post.
  • 7 Trademark, Chip H.
  • 8 No one is pulling a ball from an urn that says – 11 hurricanes this year!

About the Author

Roger Pielke Jr. is a climate science policy writer and professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. He holds academic degrees in mathematics, public policy and political science. His research focuses on science, innovation, and politics, and he has written extensively on the governance of sports organisations.  As well as on his blog. Pielke publishes articles on a Substack page titled ‘The Honest Broker’ which you can subscribe to and follow HERE.

Featured image adapted from How Climate Works, American Museum of Natural History

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author avatar
Rhoda Wilson
While previously it was a hobby culminating in writing articles for Wikipedia (until things made a drastic and undeniable turn in 2020) and a few books for private consumption, since March 2020 I have become a full-time researcher and writer in reaction to the global takeover that came into full view with the introduction of covid-19. For most of my life, I have tried to raise awareness that a small group of people planned to take over the world for their own benefit. There was no way I was going to sit back quietly and simply let them do it once they made their final move.

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Dave Owen
Dave Owen
1 year ago

Hi Rhoda,
Yesterday, Friday, it was quite a nice sunny day.
Then there was heavy Chemtrailing over Yorkshire UK.
Today, Saturday, it’s cold and very cloudy.
Am I seeing something here ?

Petra
Petra
1 year ago

One more complication: measuring the number of Aces you get is something you can do with 100% accuracy and no discussion.
How about measuring annual global temperature? There the accuracy and amount of discussion is a serious issue.
Other weather artefacts are similar in difficulty to measure and hence uncertainty of of we actually got is an important aspect of the business.

The fact that data has been proven altered and hence falsified at several occasions makes it once again worse.

In the end this is of course not helpful in determining of a change has happened or not.

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1 year ago

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Mr O
Mr O

Climate is weathers 30 years average.

Mary
Mary
1 year ago

Heavy chemtrails over rural Durham Region in Ontario, Canada. The only weather we’re having is whatever Bill Gates wants. Scientists are now saying the amount of aluminum in the earth has increased to such an extent the damage is unlikely to be repairable.
I’ve written to my rep in Ottawa who ignored me. My provincial premier and finance minister have both ignored my emails beyond referring me to the US govt.

Dave Owen
Dave Owen
Reply to  Mary
1 year ago

Hi Mary,
Same in the UK.
My MP Ed Miliband never replies to my letters.
Yet he just got elected again.
Nothing will change until people wake up.

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1 year ago

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1 year ago

[…] Read more: Climate and climate change do not cause or influence weather […]

Jeff
Jeff
1 year ago

People are fed up with the fake clouds blocking the UK skies. Chem trails everywhere, every day now.

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1 year ago

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1 year ago

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