State of Fear

They went inside.

 

They were in a narrow corridor, with a locked door at the far end. Evans realized it was a security lock--two doors to get inside.

 

"What was that all about?" he said, indicating the guards.

 

"We've had a little trouble."

 

"What kind of trouble?"

 

"People want to know what's going on here."

 

"Uh-huh..."

 

"We've learned to be careful."

 

She held her card against the door, and it buzzed open.

 

They entered an old warehouse--a vast, high-ceilinged space, separated into large rooms by glass partitions. Immediately to his left, behind glass, Evans saw a room filled with computer terminals, each manned by a young person with a stack of documents beside their keyboard. In big lettering on the glass it said, "data-raw."

 

To his right, there was a matching conference room labeled "satellites/radiosonde." Evans saw four people inside that room, busily discussing huge blowups of a graph on the wall, jagged lines on a grid.

 

Farther along there was another room marked "general circulation models (gcms)." Here the walls were plastered with large maps of the world, graphical representations in many colors.

 

"Wow," Evans said. "Big operation."

 

"Big lawsuit," Jennifer Haynes replied. "These are all our issue teams. They're mostly graduate students in climate science, not attorneys. Each team is researching a different issue for us." She pointed around the warehouse. "The first group does raw data, meaning processed data from the Goddard Institute for Space Studies at Columbia University, in New York, from the USHCN at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and from Hadley Center in East Anglia, England. Those are the major sources of temperature data from around the world."

 

"I see," Evans said.

 

"Then the group over there works on satellite data. Orbiting satellites have recorded temperatures of the upper atmosphere since 1979, so there is more than a twenty-year record. We're trying to figure out what to do about it."

 

"What to do about it?"

 

"The satellite data's a problem," she said.

 

"Why?"

 

As though she hadn't heard him, she pointed to the next room. "The team there is doing comparative analyses of GCMs--meaning the computer-generated climate models--from the 1970s to the present. As you know, these models are immensely complex, manipulating a million variables or more at once. They are by far the most complex computer models ever created by man. We're dealing with American, British, and German models, primarily."

 

"I see..." Evans was starting to feel overwhelmed.

 

"And the team down there is doing sea-level issues. Around the corner is paleoclimate. Those're proxy studies, of course. And the final team is dealing with solar irradiance and aerosols. Then we have an off-site team at UCLA that is doing atmospheric feedback mechanisms, primarily focusing on cloud cover as it varies with temperature change. And that's about all of it." She paused, seeing the confusion on Evans's face. "I'm sorry. Since you work with George Morton, I assumed you were familiar with all this stuff."

 

"Who said I work with George Morton?"

 

She smiled. "We know our job, Mr. Evans."

 

They passed a final glass-walled room that had no label. It was filled with charts and huge photographs, and three-dimensional models of the earth set inside plastic cubes. "What's this?" he said.

 

"Our AV team. They prepare visuals for the jury. Some of the data is extremely complex, and we're trying to find the simplest and most forceful way to present it."

 

They walked on. Evans said, "Is it really that complicated?"

 

"That's correct," she said. "The island nation of Vanutu is actually four coral atolls in the southern Pacific, which have a maximum elevation of twenty feet above sea level. The eight thousand inhabitants of those islands are at risk of being flooded out by rising sea levels caused by global warming."

 

"Yes," Evans said. "I understand that. But why do you have so many people working on the science?"

 

She looked at him oddly. "Because we're trying to win the case."

 

"Yes..."

 

"And it's not an easy case to win."

 

"What do you mean?" Evans said. "This is global warming. Everybody knows that global warming is--"

 

A voice boomed from the other end of the warehouse. "Iswhat? "

 

A bald, bespectacled man came toward them. He had an ungainly gait, and looked like his nickname: the Bald Eagle. As always, John Balder was dressed all in blue: a blue suit, a blue shirt, and a blue tie. His manner was intense, his eyes narrowed as he looked at Evans. In spite of himself, Evans was intimidated to meet the famous litigator.

 

Evans extended his hand. "Peter Evans, Hassle and Black."

 

"And you work with George Morton?"

 

"Yes sir, I do."

 

"We are indebted to Mr. Morton's generosity. We strive to be worthy of his support."

 

"I'll tell him that, sir."

 

"I'm sure you will. You were speaking of global warming, Mr. Evans. Is it a subject that interests you?"

 

"Yes, sir, it does. And every concerned citizen of the planet."