How a Physicist Became a Climate
Truth Teller
After a stint at the
Obama Energy Department, Steven Koonin reclaims the
science of a warming planet from the propaganda peddlers.
By Holman W.
Jenkins, Jr.
April 16, 2021 2:20
pm ET
Barack Obama is one of many who have declared an
"epistemological crisis," in which our society is losing its handle on
something called truth.
Thus an interesting experiment will
be his and other Democrats' response to a book by Steven Koonin,
who was chief scientist of the Obama Energy Department. Mr. Koonin
argues not against current climate science but that what the media and
politicians and activists say about climate science has drifted so far out of
touch with the actual science as to be absurdly, demonstrably false.
This is not an altogether innocent drifting, he points out
in a videoconference interview from his home in Cold Spring, N.Y. In 2019 a
report by the presidents of the National Academies of Sciences claimed the
"magnitude and frequency of certain extreme events are increasing." The United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which is deemed to compile
the best science, says all such claims should be treated with "low confidence."
In 2017 the U.S. government's Climate Science Special Report
claimed that, in the lower 48 states, the "number of high temperature records
set in the past two decades far exceeds the number of low temperature records."
On closer inspection, that's because there's been no
increase in the rate of new record highs since 1900, only a decline in the
number of new lows.
Mr. Koonin, 69, and I are of one
mind on 2018's U.S. Fourth National Climate Assessment,
issued in Donald Trump's second year, which relied on such overegged worst-case
emissions and temperature projections that even climate activists were abashed
(a revoltcontinues to this day). "The report was
written more to persuade than to inform," he says. "It masquerades as objective
science but was written as--all right, I'll use the word--propaganda."
Mr. Koonin is a Brooklyn-born math
whiz and theoretical physicist, a product of New York's selective Stuyvesant
High School. His parents, with less than a year of college between them,
nevertheless intuited in 1968 exactly how to handle an unusually talented and
motivated youngster: You want to go cross the country
to Caltech at age 16? "Whatever you think is right, go ahead," they told him.
"I wanted to know how the world works," Mr. Koonin
says now. "I wanted to do physics since I was 6 years old, when I didn't know
it was called physics."
He would teach at Caltech for nearly three decades, serving
as provost in charge of setting the scientific agenda for one of the country's
premier scientific institutions. Along the way he opened himself to the world
beyond the lab. He was recruited at an early age by the Institute for Defense
Analyses, a nonprofit group with Pentagon connections, for what he calls
"national security summer camp: meeting generals and people in congress,
touring installations, getting out on battleships." The federal government
sought "engagement" with the country's rising scientist elite. It worked.
He joined and eventually chaired JASON, an elite private
group that provides classified and unclassified advisory analysis to federal
agencies. (The name isn't an acronym and comes from a
character in Greek mythology.) He got involved in the cold-fusion controversy.
He arbitrated a debate between private and government teams competing to map
the human genome on whether the target error rate should be 1 in 10,000 or
whether 1 in 100 was good enough.
He began planting seeds as an institutionalist. He joined
the oil giant BP as chief scientist, working for John Browne, now Baron Browne
of Madingley, who had redubbed the company "Beyond
Petroleum." Using $500 million of BP's money, Mr. Koonin
created the Energy Biosciences Institute at Berkeley that's
still going strong. Mr. Koonin found his interest in
climate science growing, "first of all because it's wonderful science. It's the most multidisciplinary thing I know. It goes from
the isotopic composition of microfossils in the sea floor all the way through
to the regulation of power plants."
From deeply examining the world's energy system, he also
became convinced that the real climate crisis was a crisis of political and
scientific candor. He went to his boss and said, "John, the world isn't going
to be able to reduce emissions enough to make much difference."
Mr. Koonin still has a lot of
Brooklyn in him: a robust laugh, a gift for expression and for cutting to the
heart of any matter. His thoughts seem to be governed by an all-embracing
realism. Hence the book coming out next month, "Unsettled: What Climate Science
Tells Us, What It Doesn't, and Why It Matters."
Any reader would benefit from its deft, lucid tour of
climate science, the best I've seen. His rigorous
parsing of the evidence will have you questioning the political class's compulsion
to manufacture certainty where certainty doesn't
exist. You will come to doubt the usefulness of centurylong
forecasts claiming to know how 1% shifts in variables will affect a global
climate that we don't understand with anything
resembling 1% precision.
His book lands at crucial moment. In its first new
assessment of climate science in eight years, the U.N. climate panel--sharer of
Al Gore's Nobel Peace Prize in 2007--will rule anew next year on a conundrum
that has not advanced in 40 years: How much warming should we expect from a
slightly enhanced greenhouse effect?
The panel is expected to consult 40-plus climate computer
simulations--testament to its inability to pick out a single trusted one. Worse,
the models have been diverging, not coming together as you might hope. Without
tweaking, they don't even agree on current simulated
global average surface temperature--varying by 3 degrees Celsius, three times
the observed change over the past century. (If you wonder why the IPCC
expresses itself in terms of a temperature "anomaly" above a baseline,
it's because the models produce different baselines.)
Mr. Koonin is a practitioner and
fan of computer modeling. "There are situations where models do a wonderful
job. Nuclear weapons, when we model them because we
don't test them anymore. And when Boeing builds an airplane, they will model
the heck out of it before they bend any metal."
"But these are much more controlled, engineered situations,"
he adds, "whereas the climate is a natural phenomenon. It's
going to do whatever it's going to do. And it's hard
to observe. You need long, precise observations to understand its natural
variability and how it responds to external influences."
Yet these models supply most of our insight into how the
weather might change when emissions raise the atmosphere's CO2 component from
0.028% in preindustrial times to 0.056% later in this century. "I've been
building models and watching others build models for 45 years," he says.
Climate models "are not to the standard you would trust your life to or even
your trillions of dollars to." Younger scientists in particular lose sight of
the difference between reality and simulation: "They have grown up with the
models. They don't have the kind of mathematical or physical intuition you get
when you have to do things by pencil and paper."
All this you can hear from climate modelers themselves, and
from scientists nearer the "consensus" than Mr. Koonin
is. Yet the caveats seem to fall away when plans to spend trillions of dollars
are bruited.
For the record, Mr. Koonin agrees
that the world has warmed by 1 degree Celsius since 1900 and will warm by
another degree this century, placing him near the middle of the consensus.
Neither he nor most economic studies have seen anything in the offing that
would justify the rapid and wholesale abandoning of fossil fuels, even if
China, India, Brazil, Indonesia and others could be
dissuaded from pursuing prosperity.
He's a fan of advanced nuclear
power eventually to provide carbon free base-load power. He sees a bright
future for electric passenger vehicles. "The main reason isn't emissions.
They're just shifted to the power grid, and transportation
anyway is only about 15% of global greenhouse-gas emissions. There are other
advantages: Local pollution is much less and noise
pollution is less. You're sitting in a traffic jam and all of these six- or
four-cylinder engines are throbbing up and down burning fuel and just doing no
good at all."
But these are changes it makes no economic sense to force.
Let technology and markets work at their own pace. The climate might continue
to change, at a pace that's hard to perceive, but
societies will adapt. "As a species, we're very good at adapting."
The public now believes CO2 is something that can be turned
up and down, but about 40% of the CO2 emitted a century ago remains in the
atmosphere. Any warming it causes emerges slowly, so any benefit of reducing
emissions would be small and distant. Everything Mr. Koonin
and others see in the science suggests a slow, modest effect, not a runaway
warming. If they're wrong, we don't have tools to
apply yet anyway. Decades from now, we might have carbon capture--removing CO2
directly from the atmosphere at a manageable cost.
He's less keen, except in the most
extreme circumstances, on what many see as the cheaper, easier fix of
augmenting the aerosol effect, which already partially offsets the warming
caused by greenhouse gases, by injecting particles into the upper atmosphere.
The political and practical unknowns are large. "You could have some country or
even some individual do it. The policy community is
just starting to grapple with that."
Mr. Koonin does not drive an
electric car. He drives what he jokes is the official car of Putnam County, a
Subaru Outback, while he and his wife weather the pandemic in a woodsy enclave
along the Hudson River. An Audi meant to haul them and the dog back to New York
City, where he started and ran New York University's Center for Urban Science
and Progress, collects dust.
Mr. Koonin says he wants voters, politicians and business leaders to have an accurate account
of the science. He doesn't care where the debate
lands. Yet his expectations are ruled by a keen sense of realities. I mention,
along with some names, that I never met anyone of serious judgment who
didn't privately pooh-pooh the idea that humanity will
control CO2 by means other than the mostly unregulated progress of markets and
technology. Mr. Koonin nods his agreement.
He speaks of "could," "should" and "will"--and what "will"
happen is a lot less than elites, in response to current reward structures, are
pretending will happen. Even John Kerry, Joe Biden's climate czar, recently
admitted that Mr. Biden's "net-zero" climate plan will have zero effect on the
climate if developing countries don't go along (and
they have little incentive to do so). Mr. Koonin
hopes that "a graceful out for everybody" will be to see the impulse for global
climate regulation "morph into much more impactful local environmental action:
smog, plastic, green jobs. Forget the global aspect of this."
This is a view widely shared and little expressed. First,
the mainstream climate community will try to ignore his book, even as his
publicists work the TV bookers in hopes of making a splash. Then Mr. Koonin knows will come the avalanche of name-calling that
befalls anybody trying to inject some practical nuance into political
discussions of climate.
He adds with a laugh: "My married daughter is happy that
she's got a different last name."
Mr. Jenkins writes the Journal�s Business World column.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-a-physicist-became-a-climate-truth-teller-11618597216?mod=opinion_lead_pos6