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Aug 9, 2021 36 tweets 11 min read Read on X
IPCC AR6 WG1 🧵
Some initial comments
Think of these as working notes
Comments welcomed
Let's go . . .
Let's start with scenarios

This is rather huge
"In general, no likelihood is attached to the scenarios assessed in this Report"

So that means that users of the scenarios have to independently assess likelihoods Image
That said: "the likelihood of high emission scenarios such as RCP8.5 or SSP5-8.5 is considered low"

They also said that an appropriate scenario for "absence of additional climate policies" (aka BAU) is "RCP4.5, RCP6.0 and SSP2-4.5 scenarios:

They said it, kudos to IPCC WG1🔥🔥 Image
I won't get down too far in the weeds but the IPCC WG1 has returned to the SRES storyline approach

That means that interpretation of the scenarios and the resulting projections will be trickier than saying that the IPCC is projecting X or Y future

It is a healthy development! Image
Underscoring this absolutely essential point
"the socio-economic assumptions and the feasibility or likelihood of individual scenarios is not part of the assessment"

Fortunately, you are in good hands here as we have been studying feasibility in great detail, more on that later Image
Very important:
"IPCC is neutral with regard to the assumptions underlying the SSPs"

So IPCC recognizes that 8.5 scenarios have "low likelihood" but nonetheless choose to remain "neutral" with respect to scenario assumptions

As we will see, this is not quite right in practice Image
So which scenarios does IPCC focus AR6?

If "neutral" we might assume a fairly equal focus of attention across scenarios (similar to how SRES was used) since WG1 AR6 judges none more likely than another

On the other hand the literature is heavily biased to extreme scenarios...
So this is a BIG problem

The scenarios IPCC admits are unlikely dominate the report w/ 41.5% of all scenario mentions

The scenarios judged most likely under current trends get only 18.4% of mentions

Implausible scenarios (8.5 + 7.0) total 53% of mentions, more than half! Image
From AR5 WG1 to AR6 WG1 the emphasis on 8.5 scenarios increased dramatically

Table below shows RCP8.5 mentions in AR5 WG1 were 31.4% of total scenario mentions, that has increased to 41.5% in AR6

Focus on more realistic scenarios (4.5 & 6.0) dropped from 44.5% to 18.4%

Wow Image
AR5 table in previous Tweet from this paper:
doi.org/10.1016/j.erss…
The IPCC AR6 WG1 is not in fact neutral w/ respect to scenario assumptions because it has a overwhelming emphasis on unlikely (it's word), implausible (our word) scenarios

Because IPCC also claims no likelihoods associated w/ scenarios the emphasis on 8.5 needs interpretation
We have already explained the over-reliance on implausible 8.5 scenarios in terms of momentum in science

Other factors at play also
See these two papers:

1-Readable overview (free to read): issues.org/climate-change…

2-Lots of details (DM for a copy): doi.org/10.1016/j.erss…
But with its over-reliance on 8.5 scenarios the IPCC WG1 has set itself up for appropriate criticism from friends and foes alike

The unexpected u-turn in use of scenarios from AR5 has also set the stage for confusion among experts, media and policy makers
This also is big & it's v good news
The IPCC has for the first time reduced its top end estimate of climate sensitivity

IPCC judges Higher magnitude climate change to be less likely than it has been since 1990
Best estimate remains same, lower end certainty increased as well Image
Please keep the comments & requests for our paper coming

OK, now to extremes . . .
Ch.8 on flooding:
"the assessment of observed trends in the magnitude of runoff, streamflow, and flooding remains challenging, due to the spatial heterogeneity of the signal and to multiple drivers"

Same as AR5
Are floods increasing? Evidence doesn't say that
Temperature extremes
Heat waves increasing at global scale (virtually certain) Image
Heavy precipitation
Frequency and intensity have increased at a global scale (of note, only "likely" >66% certainty) Image
I'm very happy to see that the IPCC has acknowledged that heavier precipitation does not equate to increased flooding: "heavier rainfall does not always lead to greater flooding"

We explained this in 1999 (Pielke and Downton 1999)😎 Image
Flooding
Confidence in global trends is low
Some places up, some down
Same as AR5

So don't claim floods are increasing
Don't say they are "climate driven" Image
Obviously in the absence of detected trends, there won't be much ability to attribute

Don't say floods are caused by, driven by, intensified by climate change. The evidence doesn't support that. Image
AR5 discussed "drought"
AR6 discusses 4 types: meteorological, hydrological, agricultural, ecological

Different conclusions for each

Like AR5, little confidence in changes to M or H droughts but medium confidence in changes to A & E Image
Detecting trends in tropical cyclones remains difficult, same as AR5

There might be trends, but we can't detect them (I always love this statement, if we can't detect it, it can't be that significant!) Image
This is awesome
A clear indication that I am Voldemort at IPCC ;-)
Also clear evidence of cherry picking tsk tsk

They reference normalized hurricane damage & cite a fringe analysis with 24 citations while ignoring the definitive work with 1196 citations ImageImageImage
The IPCC really stretches to say something about TCs, relying on a few studies that start analysis in 1980 when much more evidence is available Image
You know what the IPCC doesn't mention?
Global TC landfalls (they do mention landfalls in Madagascar and the US)
I wonder why not?
Our dataset was updated & published in recent WMO TC assessment Image
Curious about what the IPCC forgot to include?

For NA & WP, about 70% of all landfalls, "the overall number of landfalling hurricanes has decreased dramatically since the 1940s, while the number of major hurricane landfalls has shown no trend"
rogerpielkejr.substack.com/p/a-remarkable… Image
Last point on the cherry picking by IPCC

I & colleagues certainly must be the most widely cited authors on extremes & climate not to make it into the IPCC AR6 extreme chapter

It's fine
Says a lot more about IPCC than it does our peer-reviewed work

Back to the report . . .
Winter storms
Low confidence in past century trends in frequency and intensity Image
Thunderstorms, tornadoes, hail, lightning
No upwards trends detected
Same as AR5 Image
Extreme winds
A new variable in AR6
Interesting, IPCC finds less extreme winds between 60N (~Juneau) and 60S (~Antarctica), so pretty much everywhere there are people

There goes the derecho attribution Image
Fire weather
"There is medium confidence that weather conditions that promote wildfires (fire weather) have become more probable in southern Europe, northern Eurasia, the US, and Australia over the last century" Image
Summary:
Highly consistent with AR5 (of course, just a few more years of data)

Little evidence of increasing trends in floods, M&H drought, TCs, tornadoes, strong winds

But evidence for increases in high temps, extreme precip, heat waves, fire weather, A&E drought
That's all for now
I'll now catch up on the many comments
Respond to paper requests
Thanks for reading!
I found this IPCC figure on drought to be surprising

No expected increase in drought in most of North America, eastern Australia, Northern Europe, Asia - including India, Russia and China ... in other words where almost all of humanity lives

This has to be v good news, right? Image
Reporting on IPCC report hasn't been great

L-Wash Post
No
IPCC says current policies give 2.7 deg C for 2100

R-The Atlantic
No
IPCC says nothing remotely like this

This isn't about specific reporters but about reporting

There is a apocalypse auction going on
And we're buying ImageImage

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More from @RogerPielkeJr

Feb 23
I have been digging into methodological and data errors in Grinsted et al. 2019, some of which you can see in the thread below

This nerdy thread on US hurricane loss data documents how bad data gets created (surely accidentally) . . .
A time series of base (i.e., current-year) loses was first compiled from annual reports published in the Monthly Weather Review by Chris Landsea in 1989 for 1949-1989

I extended the data using same methods to 1996

Chris and I extended back to 1900 for Pielke and Landsea 1998 Image
Then, Pielke et al. 2008 extend the dataset to 2005, again using the same methods

The heavy lifting was done by my then-student Joel Gratz

Joel graduated and went to an insurance company called ICAT . . . Image
Read 5 tweets
Feb 22
Last month I revealed based on files part of the public record of the Michael Mann trial how Mann coordinated peer review of a paper of mine to ensure that it "would not see the light of day"

I only had a snippet of the relevant Mann email

Now I have the whole thing

And JFC... Image
First
New: the editor of GRL, Jay Familigetti, originally sent our submission to Mann!

That's right
A paper by Pielke & @ClimateAudit was sent to Mann to peer review

Mann wisely didn't accept but instead recommended hostile reviewers so that "it would not see the light of day" Image
@ClimateAudit Mann emails his partners Caspar Amann (NCAR) and Gavin Schmidt (NASA) to express his glee that this gives him an opportunity to cause harm

"Pielke Jr has finally made his bed!!" Image
Read 9 tweets
Feb 20
🧵
"The U.S. installed 1,700 miles of new high-voltage transmission miles per year on average in the first half of the 2010s but dropped to only 645 miles per year on average in the second half of the 2010s"

Take that 645 miles/year to the next Tweet...

gridstrategiesllc.com/wp-content/upl…
The US has 240,000 miles of high voltage transmission capacity

An expansion of 645 miles/year is just about 0.3%/yr

Take that 0.3%/year HV grid expansion to the next Tweet
The Princeton study (@JesseJenkins) used to promote the Inflation Reduction Act claimed the HV grid has been expanding at a rate of 1% per year based on a newsletter from JP Morgan

That 1% is >3x greater than actual recent grid expansion rates of 0.3%

repeatproject.org/docs/REPEAT_IR…
Image
Read 7 tweets
Feb 15
SpringerNature held off sending my submission for peer review because:

"We thought it prudent to seek advice on the potential risks of publishing claims that may appear to criticise the actions of government bodies"

Now under review

Read it here:
osf.io/preprints/soca…
Image
I was only informed of the evaluation of my paper for political risk after that review took place

This is a plain vanilla policy evaluation, but that should not matter

So in addition to passing peer review it had to pass political review

Just when you think you've seen it all
I was just asked if I am worried that commenting on this publicly might hurt my paper's chances of being published

Ha! Simply having my name on a paper probably does that ;-)

But sunshine is far more important
Read 4 tweets
Jan 26
Biden: LNG exports—>historic hurricanes & floods
But is that true?
🧵⤵️
How about hurricanes?
Not increasing Image
Well, what about major hurricanes?
Not increasing Image
Read 8 tweets
Dec 14, 2023
🧵
I have a new favorite example of bad statistics on disasters

By 2085, climate-fueled natural disasters will cost more than $100 trillion, or more than the entire US GDP

Big if true!

What is the methodology? Image
EM-DAT of course

Misinterpretation Left
What EM-DAT says right:
"what the figure is really showing is the evolution of the registration of natural disaster events over time"

Whoopsy
Image
Image
Media clickbait in 3..2..1.. Image
Read 4 tweets

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