In a short article on the Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media, Keith Kloor compares online climate change discourse to a "roller derby" and a "street fight"
Taken together, the intimidation tactics of climate science bashers and the new pressure campaigns, by allies of the concerned climate community, promise to, if nothing else, ratchet up the rhetoric of both sides and deepen the politicization of global warming. Just what the public discourse doesn’t need. Meanwhile, the conflict-loving media will eat it up and stoke the fires.
For climate campaigners and their adversaries, the escalating war of wits is a fait accompli. They are not constrained by how they might be perceived by the public at large. But the stakes are higher for the climate science community, which must defend itself against scurrilous attacks while staying above the fray. Not an easy balancing act.
I've written and spoken about the need for humility among climate scientists and climate bloggers countless times in the past two years. A recent academic paper of mine on history, belief and climate communication concluded with this statement:
Reforming public communication about anthropogenic climate change will require humility on the part of scientists and educators. Climate scientists, for whom any inherent doubts about the possible extent of human influence on the climate were overcome by years of training in physics and chemistry of the climate system, need to accept that there are rational cultural, religious, and historical reasons why the public may fail to believe that anthropogenic climate change is real, let alone that it warrants a policy response.
Ironically, online "coverage" of that paper drew some amazingly angry and personal comments. Had I followed the ethos of the Nature editorial (which Keith cites) arguing that climate scientists need to realize they are in a street fight, then I suppose I would have fought back in kind.
To what end? You don't change the tone of the discussion by spewing venom. I am interested in the long game here. I certainly hope the same is true for other climate scientists. Better we make the effort to understand why people are so angry about this issue than we win cheap short-term points by responding in kind to every slight. Even if our siblings wish we did (sorry sis).
If climate discourse is a street fight, then we need to do more than fight back. We need to learn how to take a punch.
Changing the tone of the Climate Change discourse
Authored by:
Simon Donner
Simon Donner is a professor in the Geography Department at the University of British Columbia who studies why the climate matters to people and aquatic ecosystems, including rivers and coral reefs.
Other Posts by Simon Donner
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Jared Satrom says:
I want to thank the author for his position on this difficult topic, and I celebrate an increasing trend in seeking humility and nuance in public discource. I think there is a reaction by especially the younger generation to the vitrolic discource in the public sphere and media. Thanks for applying this to the debate on climate change; your acknowledgement of the difficulties of climate change skeptics is laudable, and your suggested approach for bridging the gap between the parties is probably the only realistic way forward.
I'm curious as to where the author is motivated to push for humilty in this discussion? I find a lot of similarities in my spiritual life pursuing humility and consideration for those I disagree with (though admittedly I fall short more often than I succeed). I am convinced anthropogenic climate chage is a real problem, and I am perplexed as to why many who hold to the Christian tradition (following Jesus as the ultimate example of humility) doubt the science without much thought or investigation, therebuy failing to practice the values they hold so dearly.
I'd appreciate any advice from the author or others who are trying to communicate the very likely dangers of climate change in this type of culture (whether within a spiritual community or not) where we hold to certain values on one hand but in practice are quick to judge. How can we advocate for more humilty and nuance when it takes more time and more work?
A guest says:
First, it must be noted that both Simon Donner and Keith Kloor appear to approach this issue as members of the "scientific consensus" regarding global warming, anthropogenic global warming and catastrophic anthropogenic global warming. That explains both their observations regarding the " intimidation tactics of climate science bashers" and the "new pressure campaigns, by allies of the concerned climate community". The selection of terminology displays their objectivity as no simple assertion could.
I would certainly not argue against an increase in "humility" on the part of climate scientists in the presentation of their positions. I would argue for an increase in the civility of the discourse as well. Little of value is accomplished by referring to those with whom we do not agree as "deniers" or "anti-science" or "climate zombies".
I would argue, however, that the increase in humility and civility should be accompanied by an increase in candor, an increase in the careful communication of their positions (to avoid confusion among their various audiences), a substantial increase in transparency with regard to data and computer code and a return to ethical treatment of those who do not agree with their positions.
The Climategate 1 & 2 e-mails reveal a degree of candor internal to the "team" which is sorely lacking in their public communications. Kevin Trenberth's version of Clara Peller's "Where's the beef?" is a case in point.
The continual careless use of the terms global warming, anthropogenic global warming and catastrophic anthropogenic global warming as if they were all identical merely confuses the situation. Global warming is a historical fact, as is global cooling. Repeated occurrences of both are well documented. Anthropogenic global warming is a hypothesis. Catastrophic anthropogenic global warming is a projection of a potential future event. They are different. Vanishingly few individuals with any interest in climate "deny" that climate has changed in the past, is changing in the present and will change in the future. More individuals question the extent of the contribution of human activities to the current changes in the climate. Even more individuals question the projections of the future "spewed out" by the various climate models, especially since these models have demonstrated relatively little skill in hindcasting the instrumentally documented past or forecasting the instrumentally documented period since their development. Many understand that their skill in predicting (projecting) the future is unknown and unknowable.
The continuing efforts on the part of the "team" to avoid disclosing data and computer code requested by the scientific community and ultimately demanded by the scientific community under FOIA are execrable. Valid criticism, even if uncomfortable and inconvenient, is part of the scientific process.
Finally, the surreptitious efforts of the "team" to destroy the careers of those who fail to agree with them, such as Chris de Frietas, Chris Landsea and Patrick Michaels display, at least to me, a significant failure to treat other scientists in the field ethically.
The revelations in the Climategate 1 e-mails, combined with the additional context provided by the Climategate 2 e-mails, shed light on the activities of a group of scientists for whom a little humility and a little more ethical behavior would be a major improvement.
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