Can we really prove that yesterday’s storm is evidence of human-induced climate change?

Sep 28, 2023 by

By Karl D Stephan, Mercatornet.

A recent issue of Physics Today described a new field called “attribution science” which endeavours to attribute certain extreme weather events to human-caused climate change. I’m not going to get into the specifics of the particular examples it cites, because they are many and varied.

But I will note that this kind of activity is becoming quite popular, not only in the physics community but in geosciences as well. I have read several papers in which the authors make statements like “This Japanese heat wave is virtually certain to have been caused by human-induced climate change.”

What I would like to examine is the philosophical bona fides of this type of activity. That is, what is the logical chain, assuming there is one, from the starting premises of such a statement’s argument that leads to such disturbing and definite conclusions?

To say A is caused by B with some degree of confidence, we can do one of a number of things. One way to verify such a statement is to take B away and see if A still happens. Unfortunately, we can’t just take another identical Earth, remove most of the carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and then see how it runs after that. The experiment we are running with this planet is unique, as far as we know, and so our ability to fiddle with the variables in different experimental runs is nil.

Another way to verify causality is to show that when A happens, B happens shortly afterwards and not when A doesn’t happen. The Physics Today article calls this kind of causality “Granger causality” and says there are statistical methods to predict B happening based on statistics concerning A and B, whatever they might be. But, as the article points out, this kind of test is subject to the post hoc, propter hoc fallacy (meaning roughly “afterwards, therefore because of”). That is, just because the New York City blackout of 1965 happened right after a kid hit a light pole with a stick doesn’t mean that the kid caused the blackout—despite what the terror-stricken kid confessed to his mother when he got home.

What the attributionists typically do is to gin up some atmospheric models that produce probabilities of this or that event that they are trying to blame on people. Then they tinker with the atmosphere’s CO2 levels, or concentration of aerosols, or something that is pretty clearly due to human activity. And then they run their models again to see if they get the same disastrous weather that happened before, or whether leaving the human activity out makes it less likely.

The logical problem with this game is that no climate model I know of includes absolutely everything that affects the climate. They all approximate or ignore certain factors. So anything claimed for these models can be answered by asking, “Sez who? And how do you know that something you ignored wouldn’t give you different results than you got?” Logically speaking, there is no defensible reply to that question.

Read here.

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