Climate change sceptics bet $10,000 on cooler world 

Russian pair challenge UK expert over global warming 

David Adam, science correspondent
Friday August 19, 2005
The Guardian 


Two climate change sceptics, who believe the dangers of global 
warming are overstated, have put their money where their mouth is 
and bet $10,000 that the planet will cool over the next decade.
The Russian solar physicists Galina Mashnich and Vladimir 
Bashkirtsev have agreed the wager with a British climate expert, 
James Annan.

The pair, based in Irkutsk, at the Institute of Solar-Terrestrial 
Physics, believe that global temperatures are driven more by changes 
in the sun's activity than by the emission of greenhouse gases. They 
say the Earth warms and cools in response to changes in the number 
and size of sunspots. Most mainstream scientists dismiss the idea, 
but as the sun is expected to enter a less active phase over the 
next few decades the Russian duo are confident they will see a drop 
in global temperatures.


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Dr Annan, who works on the Japanese Earth Simulator supercomputer, 
in Yokohama, said: "There isn't much money in climate science and 
I'm still looking for that gold watch at retirement. A pay-off would 
be a nice top-up to my pension."
To decide who wins the bet, the scientists have agreed to compare 
the average global surface temperature recorded by a US climate 
centre between 1998 and 2003, with temperatures they will record 
between 2012 and 2017.

If the temperature drops Dr Annan will stump up the $10,000 (now 
equivalent to about £5,800) in 2018. If the Earth continues to warm, 
the money will go the other way.

The bet is the latest in an increasingly popular field of scientific 
wagers, and comes after a string of climate change sceptics have 
refused challenges to back their controversial ideas with cash.

Dr Annan first challenged Richard Lindzen, a meteorologist at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology who is dubious about the 
extent of human activity influencing the climate. Professor Lindzen 
had been willing to bet that global temperatures would drop over the 
next 20 years.

No bet was agreed on that; Dr Annan said Prof Lindzen wanted odds of 
50-1 against falling temperatures, so would win $10,000 if the Earth 
cooled but pay out only £200 if it warmed. Seven other prominent 
climate change sceptics also failed to agree betting terms.

In May, during BBC Radio 4's Today programme, the environmental 
activist and Guardian columnist George Monbiot challenged Myron 
Ebell, a climate sceptic at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, in 
Washington DC, to a £5,000 bet. Mr Ebell declined, saying he had 
four children to put through university and did not want to take 
risks.

Most climate change sceptics dispute the findings of the 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which suggest that human 
activity will drive global temperatures up by between 1.4C and 5.8C 
by the end of the century.

Others, such as the Danish economist Bjorn Lomborg, argue that, 
although global warming is real, there is little we can do to 
prevent it and that we would be better off trying to adapt to living 
in an altered climate.

Dr Annan said bets like the one he made with the Russian sceptics 
are one way to confront the ideas. He also suggests setting up a 
financial-style futures market to allow those with critical stakes 
in the outcome of climate change to gamble on predictions and hedge 
against future risk.

"Betting on sea level rise would have a very real relevance to 
Pacific islanders," he said. "By betting on rapid sea-level rise, 
they would either be able to stay in their homes at the cost of 
losing the bet if sea level rise was slow, or would win the bet and 
have money to pay for sea defences or relocation if sea level rise 
was rapid."

Similar agricultural commodity markets already allow farmers to 
hedge against bad weather that ruins harvests.





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