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The newest Michael Crichton thriller, State of Fear, is a
real page turner--in more ways than one, unfortunately. The book starts
off in classic Michael Crichton tradition, with the bad guys gathering
a baffling set of very specialized and expensive high-tech
equipment--hypersonic cavitation generators, wire-guided projectiles,
shaped explosives, a deep-diving submersible. They also quietly seek
out a mysterious and worrisome collection of information, including
data on hurricanes, tsunamis, use of explosives in seismic recordings,
and more. As the bodies of those who get in their way begin piling up,
it is clear we are dealing with a ruthless, well-organized foe with
plans for major high-tech mayhem. The story is exciting and the pages
turn quickly as we read on to find out just what kind of mayhem lies
ahead.
We meet the main character, Peter Evans, a Los Angeles lawyer with an
interesting romantic life and a very interesting primary
client--millionaire environmental philanthropist George Morton. Morton
bankrolls the National Environmental Resource Fund (NERF), an
environmental group suing the U.S. on behalf of the island nation of
Vanutu for damages caused by Global Warming-induced sea level rises. We
watch Peter Evans as he meets the legal and scientific team assembled
by NERF to prosecute the sea level rise lawsuit, and here the story
really slows down as the NERF team tries to educate Evans about the
uncertainties of the Global Warming theory. As you might suspect from
the NERF group's name, Crichton is not a fan of environmentalists--nor
of the Global Warming theory. As the book progresses, Crichton
repeatedly attacks environmentalists and the science behind Global
Warming though a series of mock trials that Evans sits though.
As the plot and action moves ahead in fits and starts between
Global Warming science lectures, we find that the bads guys are a group
of eco-terrorists, with possible ties to George Morton's NERF
organization. We meet the main hero of the story, Dr. John Kenner,
professor of Geoenvironmental Engineering at MIT, and secret agent for
an unnamed national security organization. Kenner, along with Evans and
two of his romantic interests, relentlessly pursue the baddies to
Antarctica, Arizona, and a remote Pacific island infested with
cannibals. Kenner also happens to be a brilliant and well-informed
critic of Global Warming, and proceeds to "educate" Evans (and the
reader) about the truth about Global Warming through a series of
conversations throughout the rest of the book. The conversations come
complete with page after page of graphs and charts and footnotes. Mixed
in with the lectures on Global Warming are formulations of Crichton's
more general environmental philosophy--that a new politico-legal-media
complex has taken over control from the military industrial complex,
and is dedicated to controlling the population by promoting a state of
fear about false environmental scares like catastrophic Global Warming.
The story finally ends, mercifully, after 567 pages, of which at
least 100 are devoted to anti-environmental sermons and Global Warming
"education". A full 20 pages of scientific references follow, along
with a few pages of the author's comments on his environmental
philosophy and what he feels should be done to fix the State of Fear
created by the politico-legal-media complex.
I give Crichton credit for attempting to weave what is obviously to
him a very important bit of personal philosophy into an action-thriller
novel. I also give him credit for taking the initiative to educate
himself on the Global Warming issue, something that I believe all
citizens should do (if you've got 10 minutes, a good place to start is
the latest scientific
summary of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC), a group of over 2000 scientists from 100 countries working
under a mandate from the United Nations in the largest peer-reviewed
scientific collaboration in history). However, "State of Fear" is a
disappointment both as an action-thriller novel, and as a credible
source of science on the Global Warming issue. The action is fun when
it happens, but is way too bogged down by the excessive sermonizing and
"educating" that Crichton interjects at every opportunity in the story.
I found myself skipping page after page of his characters' interminable
griping to get to the action parts. And Crichton's obvious gloom about
the harm excessive environmentalism is doing to the world is reflected
in the book, making the mood of the story very dark, and not much fun
to read.
On a scientific level, Crichton has obviously done a lot of
research. The high-tech schemes of the baddies to create fake climate
mayhem are all delightfully improbable, but based in fact just enough
to leave you wondering if such things are really possible (not!).
Unfortunately, Crichton presents a error-filled and distorted version
of the Global Warming science, favoring views of the handful of
contrarians that attack the consensus science of the IPCC. I list a few of the errors and
distortions below:
Crichton informs us, "A large high-pressure mass was beginning to
rotate, forming the ragged beginnings of a hurricane." This is false, a
hurricane forms from a large mass of LOW pressure.
Dr. Kenner attacks the notion that extreme weather has increased in
the past 15 years, or that Global Warming will cause an increase in
extreme weather, noting, "If anything, global warming theory predicts
less extreme weather." This is false, global warming theory does
not predict less extreme weather. The latest IPCC Assessment
Report concludes that we don't know enough to determine if events
like hurricanes, tornados, and hailstorms will increase or decrease in
frequency due to Global Warming. However, the report does say it is
very likely that there will be more intense precipitation events
over many areas, and that peak winds and rainfall rates from hurricanes
are also likely to be higher. This is a logical result of the fact that
a warmer Earth will have increased evaporation from the oceans, and
thus more moisture will be available for precipitation.
Dr. Kenner asserts that Mt. Kilamanjaro's glaciers are not melting because of
global warming, stating: "So why is it melting? Because of
deforestation." However, the lead author of the study Crichton cites in
the footnote for this assertion stated in a New
York Times interview that he objected to his study being used by greenhouse
skeptics to portray the melting of Kilimanjaro's glaciers as a
"black-and-white picture that says it is either global warming or not
global warming". Another author of the study noted that, "Using these
preliminary findings to refute or even question global warming borders
on the absurd". As discussed at great length in realclimate.org post, the research which supposedly supports Crichton's claims has been widely misquoted and misinterpreted, and much of Kilimanjaro's melting can indeed be ascribed to warming of the atmosphere since 1960. Crichton also fails to mention that all glaciers in the tropics have retreated in the past century, and at accelerated rates in the past few decades.
In a debate about whether the U.S. should sign the Kyoto Protocol
to combat Global Warming, Dr. Kenner asks why we should sign a treaty
that "won't, in effect, do anything at all?", stating: "The effect of
Kyoto would be to reduce warming by .04 degrees Celsius in the year
2100". Again, this assertion has serious problems. The Kyoto Protocol
calls for the industrialized countries to cut their greenhouse gas
emissions to 5.2% below 1990 emission levels for the period 2005 -
2012. Developing countries do not have to cut emissions. Since the
Kyoto treaty expires in 2012, it is absurd to talk about the worth of
the Kyoto Protocol by extending it to 2100, assuming no emission
control demands will be put on developing countries at some point in
the future. A true measure of the Kyoto Protocol's worth must be
measured by combining its effect with the effect of new treaties that
must be negotiated to succeed Kyoto in 2012. All of the IPCC Assessment
Reports have noted the need for greenhouse gas emission cuts of 50%
or more by all nations by the mid- to late- 21st century, and
little or no emissions by the century's end, to meet the goal of
stabilizing atmospheric CO2 concentrations below a doubling of
pre-industrial values. Kyoto is a small first step in achieving this
goal.
Many more flawed or misleading presentations of Global Warming
science exist in the book, including those on Arctic sea ice thinning,
correction of land-based temperature measurements for the urban heat
island effect, and satellite vs. ground-based measurements of Earth's
warming. I will spare
the reader additional details. On the positive side, Crichton does
emphasize the little-appreciated fact that while most of the world has
been warming the past few decades, most of Antarctica has seen a cooling
trend. The Antarctic ice sheet is actually expected in increase in mass
over the next 100
years due to increased precipitation, according to the IPCC
(although recent findings
by NASA call this result into question). He also makes some reasonable challenges to the notion that global warming is increasing hurricane activity. That link has not been proven yet.
In a conversation about trying to educate an ignorant
environmentalist about the realities of Global Warming, Kenner sums up
for me the essence of Crichton's presentation of science in State of
Fear:
"Her intentions are good,
and her information is bad," Kenner said. "A prescription for
disaster."
The excessive interruptions of an otherwise good story by Crichton's
bad science make State of Fear a bad buy. Save a tree and put it on
your library wait list. When will we get a fictionalized story with good Global
Warming science in it? Both the pro-environmental Day After Tomorrow movie and now Crichton's book have done the public a disservice by fueling misconceptions about the Global Warming issue with their bad science.
For further reading
Some of the climate scientists that Crichton consulted during his research for the book have published a detailed analysis of the many errors in the book at realclimate.org. For one of the more balanced and up-to-date views of the
controversies surrounding the Global Warming issue, see Dr. Stephen
Schneider's web site. Dr. Schneider, one of the world's foremost
climate experts, has testified frequently before Congress on
environmental issues and is one of the lead authors of the IPCC
scientific reports. He has criticized both industry-funded skeptics and
environmental groups on their biased treatment of the Global Warming
issue.
Skeptics have routinely called global warming "a hoax", and attacked the
credibility of scientists promoting the idea. Are the skeptics right? To
shed light on the issue, it is helpful to review how the same skeptics
treated the ozone hole issue. Read the Weather Underground opinion
feature, The Skeptics vs. The Ozone Hole.
The latest IPCC
summary has an excellent summary of what the best scientists in the
field figure we know and don't know about Global Warming. |