I've just finished reading the most important climate change book available today. Steven Koonin's Unsettled addresses "what climate science tells us, what it doesn't, and why it matters". Koonin was a professor at CalTech for 30 years, provost for 10 of those years, chief scientist at BP focused on renewable energy technologies, Undersecretary for Science at the Department of Energy in the Obama Administration and is now a professor at NYU.
His book uses available data from many government and academic sources and applies his cross-functional knowledge in physics, computer modelling, statistics, climate science, etc to understand what the data tells us–and more importantly, what it doesn't tell us. Over 14 chapters, his analysis is devastating to "The Science" that our politicians and climate activists claim is all settled. By eliminating the cherry picking of data that occurs via selecting narrow windows of time or geography, adding the statistical confidence intervals to measurements that get headlines and noting the counterbalancing effects of some forms of emissions Koonin shows that the media (and some unscrupulous academics and government agencies) are misleading the public.
The book is technical as it must be, but he has written it for the general public so it's very readable if you have some basic knowledge of chemistry, physics and math–mostly statistics. I've listed this post as Part 1 because I plan to serialize some parts of the book. Here in B'game we have banned natural gas in new construction, begun worrying about sea level rise, promoted electric cars and issued warnings about all sorts of natural disasters supposedly related to climate change. Before we get too far into these restrictions and expenses wouldn't it be good to know more about how human activity is really affecting the climate.



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