
The Media does not neutrally transmit IPCC findings. It applies its own filters, consistently tilting toward greater drama and urgency.
This is a predictable outcome of journalistic incentives rather than a conspiracy, but it underscores the value of going to primary sources (full reports, Technical Summaries) for balanced understanding. Independent AI-driven analyses like Galiani et al. offer promising tools for quantifying these distortions going forward.
Media framing of the IPCC tends to amplify urgency and severity, often emphasizing worst-case or dramatic elements while simplifying or compressing uncertainty language.
This aligns with the Galiani et al. preprint discussed in Roger Pielke Jr.’s Substack, which found a consistent severity shift (+5% to +9% on their scale) and uncertainty compression as IPCC content moves into newspaper coverage from major US/UK outlets.
Pielke’s June 8, 2026 Substack piece presents the Galiani et al. preprint as potentially groundbreaking empirical evidence of systematic amplification bias in the IPCC’s communication pipeline—specifically from Technical Summary (TS) to Summary for Policymakers (SPM), and then to media. This isn’t a broad attack on climate science fundamentals but a focused critique of how information is framed, simplified, and escalated as it moves toward policy and public consumption.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Does the IPCC Exaggerate Climate Science?
A new study finds the IPCC Summary for Policymakers has systematically amplified climate science beyond what the underlying report actually says
A potentially very significant new preprint by Galiani et al. documents how the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) and the media introduce bias into assessment and reporting on climate change — A bias toward more extreme claims. The Honest Broker has the story.
The paper is a preprint and its data files are not yet available, so the findings should be considered preliminary.
Specifically, the paper claims that the IPCC Summary for Policymakers (SPM) is biased toward making claims more extreme than the underlying science represented elsewhere in the IPCC reports. This assertion has often been made by critics of the IPCC, but this is the first analysis that I am aware of that seeks to systematically evaluate the claim with data.
Today’s post shares my interpretation of the new analysis.
What Galiani et al. Did
Scientific findings of the IPCC — especially those projecting climate futures — can be thought of as the result of a linear process, shown in the figure below. The process begins with the selection and prioritization of scenarios to be used in projective climate research. Researchers then apply those scenarios in further modeling, ultimately publishing results in the peer reviewed literature.

Then the IPCC, which is organized into more or less independent chapter teams, assesses the published literature producing a chapter (which goes through multiple drafts and comment stages). The IPCC Chapters are the basis for the IPCC Technical Summary and Synthesis Report, which then feed into a Summary for Policymakers (SPM). The SPM is typically what drives media coverage and policy.2
The figure above also shows with the red dashed-line the focus of Galiani et al. which represents a subset of this communiation chain. The paper focuses on three dimensions of potential bias: severity shift, uncertainty compression, and scenario salience.
- Severity shift measures whether emphasis is given to the more extreme end of a source document’s reported quantitative range. The paper scores severity shift on a five-point ordinal scale: −2, −1, 0, +1, +2. Percentages in aggregate results — such as +13% — are averages across many scored pairs. Table 1 illustrates each level with a sea level rise example.

- Uncertainty compression measures whether summaries strip out the IPCC’s formal probabilistic vocabulary — such as, virtually certain (99–100%), very likely (>90%), likely (>66%).
- Scenario salience measures selective citation of individual scenario results.
The range of outcomes for any variable across scenarios — such as 0.28 m to 1.01 m of sea level rise by 2100 in AR6, or 1.4°C to 4.4°C of warming — is not a probabilistic distribution of real-world outcomes. The exercise reveals a design flaw in the IPCC — while some specialists may understand that projected ranges across scenarios for any variable are neither forecasts nor a probabilistic range, most others will not.
What Galiani et al. Found
Galiani et al. scored ~114,000 matched claim pairs drawn from all six IPCC Assessment Reports (1990–2023) and 116,000 newspaper articles from ten major US and UK outlets, using three independent large language models — GPT-5-mini, Claude Haiku 4.5, and Gemini 2.5 Flash — to evaluate each pair on the three dimensions: severity shift, uncertainty compression, and scenario salience. The headline result is unambiguous: at every measured stage, in every Assessment Report, claims shift systematically toward the more severe end of the scientific ranges presented by the IPCC in its Technical Summary.
The dominant effect is severity shift — the tendency to emphasize the upper end of reported quantitative ranges while backgrounding or ignoring the lower end. At the TS-to-SPM stage, severity shift ranges from +4% to +13% of the maximum possible upward distortion under their unitless ordinal scale (across the six Assessment Reports, peaking in AR4 (2007). Media coverage adds a further +5% to +9% bias on top of what the SPM already contains.
Uncertainty compression — the stripping of calibrated IPCC confidence qualifiers — is a secondary but consistent effect. Scenario salience is the smallest channel, which the authors interpret as evidence the cascade does not depend on scenario cherry-picking. However, the analysis fails to recognize that the largest scenario bias effect is already baked into the severity shift.
The figure below from the paper shows that the “amplification cascade” is documented across all IPCC assessment cycles, with the most recent three assessments showing greater bias in the SPMs towards amplifying scientific claims than the first three IPCC assessments.

Three further findings stand out.
- First, in the AR6 cycle, left-leaning and right-leaning media outlets show virtually identical amplification patterns, after a divergence over the three previous cycles.
- Second, the media results are robust across five alternative sample restrictions including removing The Guardian (most amplification), removing the Wall Street Journal (most de-amplification), and equalizing outlet weights — none of which changes the direction or qualitative magnitude of the findings.Interestingly, the media outlet judged to have played things the most straight? Fox News!

- Third, the pattern reproduces independently across all three LLMs, with Gemini scoring systematically lower than GPT and Claude but all three showing the same directional cascade.
The fact that the media has a bias toward amplifying climate science will come as a surprise to absolutely nobody. However, the finding that the IPCC SPMs also reflect that same bias is a very significant finding.
Why Galiani et al. Matters
Galiani et al. offer the first evidence that the IPCC process amplifies climate science in the direction of more extreme conclusions, beyond those reported in the Technical Summaries, and by extension, beyond that found in the peer revewed literature. Because Galiani et al. look at only a subset of the climate science communication chain, their results should be interpreted as just a floor of possible amplification bias.
As I’ve documented here at THB at length, the over-reliance on extreme climate scenarios in research and policy represents an enormous source of bias, beyond that documented in this new preprint.
Read the full story here.
Discover more from Climate- Science.press
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
