No, climate scientists aren鈥檛 being forced to exaggerate

IT READS like a climate denier鈥檚 dream come true: A prestigious climate scientist publicly confesses he fudged research in order to get published.
That鈥檚 basically how excited headlines in right-wing media have portrayed scientist Patrick Brown鈥檚 this week that he oversold the influence of climate change on wildfire risks in order to get a paper published recently in the prestigious journal Nature.
But the real story isn鈥檛 quite that simple.
At the top of his would-be mea culpa, Brown links to a about last month鈥檚 Maui wildfires, citing it as an example of how the media contributes to a narrative that such conflagrations are 鈥渕ostly the result of climate change.鈥 While I appreciate the link, I must point out that nowhere in my column do I argue climate change was the primary cause of the Maui fires. I do strongly suggest it was a contributing factor, with much of the leeward side of the Hawaiian islands trapped in a drought cycle that has and will continue to be exacerbated by global warming.
But of course a host of other factors contributed to the Maui disaster, from questionable land management to human error. Assigning a precise percentage of the blame to climate change is impossible, at least for me, and probably for any actual scientists.
That sort of thinking should feel familiar to Brown, because that鈥檚 pretty much exactly how his about wildfires begins, except more science-y:
鈥Some portion of the change in wildfire behavior is attributable to anthropogenic climate warming, but formally quantifying this contribution is difficult because of numerous confounding factors…鈥
In the rest of the paper, Brown and his seven co-authors use machine learning to try to figure out how climate change has affected, and will continue to affect, the risk of wildfires, mainly by drying out fuel such as undergrowth and grass (as happened in Maui, for example). They found, to a reasonable degree of certainty, that climate change has in fact increased wildfire risk in the recent past and will increase it even more in the near future. The paper is well-reasoned, not obviously overhyped, and peer-reviewed. It echoes recent with similar . Brown even stands by it.
But Brown also claims, in his column in The Free Press, a media company founded by former New York Times writer Bari Weiss, that he and his co-authors 鈥渄idn鈥檛 bother to study鈥 other factors contributing to wildfires, limiting their analysis to climate change. This decision was made, according to Brown, to ensure the paper fit a narrative that climate change is the world鈥檚 primary problem and that reducing greenhouse-gas emissions is the only solution. Veering from that path will cause prestigious journal editors and peer reviewers to reject your paper, Brown says, forcing you to resort to lesser publications, to the detriment of your career.
鈥淸T]he editors of these journals have made it abundantly clear, both by what they publish and what they reject, that they want climate papers that support certain preapproved narratives 鈥 even when those narratives come at the expense of broader knowledge for society,鈥 Brown writes.
And yet energy and climate consultant Richard Black did a quick of just the past month鈥檚 publications in Nature and found papers:
鈥 suggesting is primarily the result of shoddy law enforcement;
鈥 blaming a event in Japan on ocean waters mixing;
鈥 suggesting were more to blame than climate for extreme-weather disasters.
That third paper was co-authored by Friederike Otto, a in the burgeoning science of attributing extreme weather events to climate change. That work has practically won her household-name status as a climate Cassandra, a high-profile career she apparently doesn鈥檛 mind risking by countering Brown鈥檚 alleged narrative.
All of which suggests Nature has no problem publishing research that counters said narrative. Nature鈥檚 editor in chief, Magdalena Skipper, has denied that her publication pushes any agenda and criticized Brown for trying to manipulate it.
Skipper also pointed out that peer reviewers should include other wildfire factors in his research beyond climate, but he argued (pretty convincingly) that it wasn鈥檛 necessary for the purposes of his paper. This suggests not only that Brown鈥檚 work might have had an easier time getting published had those factors been included, but also that, if any censorship was happening in the climate-science community, it was Brown censoring himself.
It鈥檚 true that there is an allure, at least for those of us in the media, to lean into the lurid when it comes to climate. It鈥檚 difficult to get readers to pay much attention otherwise. If it bleeds it leads, and all that. But it鈥檚 also true that most climate scientists and writers still take great pains to avoid being too apocalyptic or definitive in their declarations, lest they be accused of doom-mongering that would incite climate deniers and trigger unproductive despair in normal people. Many of us think and argue constantly about such messaging. That鈥檚 a healthy thing.
Pretending otherwise, as Brown鈥檚 piece and its jubilant aggregators in right-wing media are doing, only gives comfort to climate deniers, confuses the science and makes real action far more difficult.
It so happens that Brown is the co-director of the climate and energy team at the Breakthrough Institute, a nonprofit known for and pushing 鈥渆comodernism,鈥 or relying on technology to help humanity adapt to climate change. Implied is the idea that global warming isn鈥檛 as catastrophic as many scientists warn it could be, further implying that action to transition from fossil fuels isn鈥檛 so urgent. If any narrative is dangerous and needs debunking, it鈥檚 that one.
BLOOMBERG OPINION


