
Key degrees of difference
Cameron Stewart, Associate editor | August 09, 2008
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24148862-11949,00.html
HAS global warming stopped? The question alone is enough to provoke scorn from the mainstream scientific community and from the Government, which says the earth has never been hotter. But tell that to a new army of sceptics who have mushroomed on internet blog sites and elsewhere in recent months to challenge some of the most basic assumptions and claims of climate change science.
Their claims are provocative and contentious but they are also attracting attention, so much sothat mainstream scientists are being forced torespond.
The bloggers and others make several key claims. They say the way of measuring the world’s temperature is frighteningly imprecise and open to manipulation. They argue that far from becoming hotter, the world’s temperatures have cooled in the past decade, contrary to the overwhelming impression conveyed by scientists and politicians.
As such, they say there should be far greater scepticism towards the apocalyptic predictions about climate change. Even widely accepted claims, such as that made by Climate Change Minister Penny Wong that “the 12 hottest years in history have all been in the last 13 years”, are being openly challenged.
“She is just plain wrong,” says Jennifer Marohasy, a biologist and senior fellow of the Institute of Public Affairs. “It’s not a question of debate. What about the medieval warming period? The historical record shows they were growing wine in England, for goodness sake; come on. It is not disputed by anyone that the Vikings arrived in Greenland in AD900 and it was warmer than Greenland is now. What Penny Wong is doing is being selective and saying that is a long time ago.”
But selective use of facts and data is fast becoming an art form on both sides of the climate change debate now that real money is at stake as the West ponders concrete schemes to reduce carbon emissions. So what is the validity of some of the key claims being made by these new blogger sceptics?
Their first claim is that the most basic aspect of climate change science – the measurement of global warming – is flawed, imprecise and open to manipulation.
The earth’s temperature is measured using land-based weather stations – in effect, a network of thermometers scattered unevenly across the globe – as well as via satellites and ocean-based weather sensors. There are four agencies that measure the world’s temperatures and each has different methodology and produces varying, although not dramatically different, results.
Sceptics accuse climate change believers of always quoting the agency that shows the highest level of warming, the US National Aeronautic and Space Administration’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies run by prominent climate change scientist and activist James Hansen.
An independent study by Yale University in the US shows GISS says the earth has warmed by 0.025C a year during the past eight years while the other best-known measurement agency, London’s Hadley Centre, says it warmed by only 0.014C a year during the same period. Not surprisingly, the Hadley figures are the most quoted by climate change sceptics while the GISS figures are most popular with climate change believers.
David Evans, former consultant to the Australian Greenhouse Office, says Hansen’s GISS is unreliable because it is the only measurement agency that relies almost wholly on land-based data instead of satellites.
“Land-based temperature readings are corrupted by the urban heat island effect,” he says. “Urban areas encroaching on thermometer stations warm the micro-climate around the thermometer due to vegetation changes, concrete, cars and houses.”
As such, he alleges that the GISS figures – which are enormously influential in the climate change debate – are “hopelessly corrupted” and may even be manipulated to suit Hansen’s views on global warming.
A group of weather buffs in the US also has attacked GISS’s methodology, putting together an online photo gallery of US weather stations at website www.surfacestations.org that shows some thermometers situated next to asphalt runways and parking lots where they would pick up excess warming.
But GISS says the distorting impact of this urban warming is negated because data from these stations is modified to remove these effects and give a true reading. Hansen acknowledges there may be flaws in the weather station data because temperature measurement is not always a precise science. But he says this does not mean big-picture trends can’t be drawn from the data.
He says: “That doesn’t mean you give up on the science and that you can’t draw valid conclusions about the nature of earth’s temperature change.”
Hansen has been infuriated by the attacks on GISS by climate change critics. Last year Canadian blogger and retired businessman Stephen McIntyre exposed a minor mistake in Hansen’s figures that had caused GISS to overstate US temperatures by a statistically small 0.15C since 2000.
Sceptics were energised. “We have proof of man-made global warming,” roared conservative American radio host Rush Limbaugh. “The man-made global warming is inside NASA.”
Hansen struck back, saying he would “not joust with court jesters” who sought to “create a brouhaha and muddy the waters in the climate change story”.
What the bloggers have succeeded in doing is to highlight that measuring climate change is an evolving science. But their success has been at the margins only. So far they have failed to prove that these discrepancies negate the broader core arguments about the trends of global warming.
However, the second argument being put forward by blogger sceptics is more accessible to the public and therefore is having a greater impact. They argue that, contrary to the impressions given about global warming, the earth’s temperatures have plateaued during the past decade and may have cooled in recent years. This, they argue, should not be happening when carbon emissions are growing rapidly. This was not what the climate change modellers predicted. Their conclusion therefore is that carbon emissions are not the driver of warming and climate change and that the earth is not heading for a climate change apocalypse caused by greenhouse gases.
“All official measures of global temperature show that it peaked in 1998 and has been declining since at least 2002,” says climate change sceptic Bob Carter, a science adviser to the Australian Climate Science Coalition. “And this is in the face of an almost 5 per cent increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide since 1998. Spot the problem?”
A careful analysis of global temperature graphs from each of the measurement agencies confirm that – despite variations between them – there has not been any notable warming since 2000. Depending on which graphs you use, global temperatures since 2000 have been more or less flat. Some, such as the GISS data, show a modest rise, while others show negligible movement and even a small fall in recent years.
Sceptics like to use graphs that date from 1998 because that was the hottest year on record due to El Nino influences and therefore the temperature trends for the decade look flattest when 1998 is the starting point.
But ultimately this is a phony war because most mainstream scientists do not dispute that global temperatures have remained relatively flat during the past decade. Where they differ with the sceptics is on how this outcome should be interpreted.
“The changes in temperature over the past 10 years have basically plateaued,” says Andy Pitman, co-director of the Climate Change Research Centre at the University of NSW. “But scientists did not anticipate a gradual year-by-year warming in temperature. What matters is the long-term trend. This outcome does not change any of the science but it does change the spin climate deniers can put on it.”
The sceptics are having a field day with this trend. The IPA’s Marohasy says: “In the last 10 years we have seen an increase in carbon dioxide levels yet temperatures are coming down. That, if anyone looks at the actual data, is not disputable. Carbon dioxide is not driving temperatures because there are other important climatic factors at play.”
Most scientists are adamant that any assessment of climate change based on only 10 years of data is not only meaningless but reckless.
“From a climate standpoint it is far too short a period to have any significance,” says Amanda Lynch, a climate change scientist at Melbourne’s Monash University. “What we are seeing now is consistent with our understanding of variability between decades. If we hung about for another 30 years and it kept going down, then you might start to think there is something we don’t understand. But the evidence at this point suggests this is not something we should hang around and wait for.”
Climate change scientists say we must go back much further than the past decade and pay attention to the longer-term trend lines that run through the temperature data and clearly trend upwards. Lynch says other factors beyond temperature are also relevant. “In the last 10 years there has been a catastrophic and massive Arctic sea ice retreat. We’ve seen glacial retreat, permafrost thaw and ocean thermal expansion, so temperature is not the whole story.”
But the sceptics are undeterred. “It is widely alleged that the science of global warming is settled,” says the US-based Science and Public Policy Institute. “This implies that all the major scientific aspects of climate change are well understood and uncontroversial. The allegation is profoundly untrue … even the most widely held opinions should never be regarded as an ultimate truth.”
Matthew England, from the Climate Change Research Centre, describes the latest blog war by climate change sceptics as an amazing phenomenon. “Climate change is a robust area of science and there is plenty that is still being debated and new discoveries are still being made,” he says. “It is a topic (that) will keep attracting different opinions from enthusiasts and from bloggers. They are a minority but they are proving to be a very vocal group.”
By all means, if you wish, consider Beck’s analysis to be useful. I think it is a complete joke, by the standards of this very blog which is concerned about the accuracy of measurement. Shall we agree to differ?
Actual measurements from the mid lattitudes with verified methodology from somewhere other than ice drilled from the arctic are a complete joke? Really????? Is that what you wanna hang with? Ice plugs and completely unverified computer models that you “beleive” in?
Steven Talbot: Hey are you same guy who used to play Gilbert Bates in Leave it to Beaver? Just wondering
iceFree – hee hee, no – I looked him up, and his first name’s with a ‘ph’ 🙂
Pofarmer,
My primary issue with the Beck stuff is not any special faith in ice core data, but rather the suggestion of a hugely and rapidly varying C02 concentration (from c410ppm in the 1940s to c315ppm in the 1950s) up to the point at which Mauna Loa takes over, after which it shows a monotonic steady rise. I find the notion that CO2 concentration ‘just happened’ to stop jumping all over the place once ML measurements began to be entirely implausible.
Wasn’t there some big all over the world thingy going on in the 1940’s???
Anyway, I don’t necessarily take Becks numbers as absolutes, but, what it does show us, is that we are well within the “normal” ranges.
O.K. I read a summary of Becks paper again. It’s very well explained. I think it needs more than just a summary dismissal.
Pofarmer,
I am not wishing to be dismissive (it’s somewhat unavoidable when writing on a BB, I guess).
All I can do is to list some of the reasons that make me highly sceptical of what I’ve looked at:
1. The discontinuity in C02 ‘variability’ between pre and post-1950s, as I’ve said above.
2. The physical sampling method of the periods, which does not give any confidence that the sampler’s own CO2 would be isolated from the sample.
3. The sampling locations. Whilst Beck states that these are non-urban, there is no detail beyond that. The locations are overwhelmingly listed as urban references – Paris, Dieppe, etc. Even if not in the obvious urban zone, there is no way of knowing that they’re not subject to urban influence.
4. Even if not obviously urban they are still evidently within highly-populated regions. We know that C02 is not immediately well-mixed. See here for an idea of this from the ‘Carbon tracker’ system –
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/carbontracker/
5. The number of data points really is not very large (to represent an idea of global CO2!), and there’s no analysis of what coverage they represent.
6. Try taking a CO2 meter around to various random locations and see what it throws up. I suggest it will be all over the place.
Those are my immediate thoughts. I’ll point out that the reservations I have are much in line with a familiar theme of this blog, which is to question the quality of the sampling conditions!
So, basically then, what you would be saying is that the historical CO2 record sucks, and it make sense to get all bent up over 30 years worth of “good” data?
Profarmer,
Well, if you want my entirely personal opinion, then I would say yes – though I think it’s more like 50+ years of ‘good’ data. IMV, if we knew absolutely nothing about the climate before 1950 (so forget the hockey stick, etc.!) then the physics still makes sense to me. What happens if you increase GHGs? There will be a warming influence. Even Spencer, Lindzen, etc. agree with that. The question remains of how much that will be, and there is uncertainty (you’ll know that the IPCC’s projections suggest a considerable range of uncertainty). I’m not particularly comforted by uncertainty! I consider it to be a notable risk. It’s possible that outcomes may be to the low end of expectations, but also possible they’ll be to the high end. I am persuaded that we’re affecting the climate, and that there’s very good evidence of that just from recent times.
Steven Talbot:
If you believe that highly educated physicists of your great grandfather’s generation were complete dunderheads and stupid beyond belief, who breathed heavily onto their CO2 experiments, or took readings in crowded subways, then maybe you believe that their CO2 measurements were an astonishing 10% too high [although they could have been 10% too low, incompetent fools that you believe they were].
So even if their 90,000 individual CO2 measurements were an amazing 10% too high, that would still indicate that atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations in the early 1800’s wereevery bit as high as today’s.
Ya know, Steven, it’s really time to invent a new argument.
Smokey,
I am no more suggesting that scientists of previous generations were ‘stupid’ than you are suggesting scientists of today are ‘stupid’, I trust.
You do realise, I hope, that of the 90,000 measurements reported only 70,000 are used, of which 64,000 come from one station, in Gessen, for an 18 month period during 1939–1941?!!! The Gessen station was “in periphery of the city”. The Gessen record shows monthly C02 +/-variations of up to 100ppm and more! I would be interested in any plausible theory as to how that global level of C02 flux could be explained.
So, given that 91% of the data comes from this one city-side location for an 18 month period, it is difficult to understand Beck’s assertions of “broad geographic coverage,” “high data density” and “no contamination is known
from human or natural sources”.
Steven Talbot:
Ri-i-i-i-i-i-ght.
And then, ‘climate catastrophe.’ Right?
What has always troubled me with Hanson/Giss is that they use station pairs, they compare a pristine rural weather station with a nearby hotter urban heat island effected station then try to extract the uhi effect from the urban data with a SECRET algorithm.
If they were honest scientists, they would only use the most pristine rural stations, you do not need that many as long as they are equally spaced, there are not that many covering the oceans and the oceans account for over 75 percent of the planets surface and we are talking about global temps. In fact using pristine stations to check your manipulated data is correct would appear to be obvious to most people.
Hanson will not use the data from these more accurate rural stations as he is fully aware these show LITTLE if ANY ground temperature increase since the early 1900`s. There are many studies that show temperature increases of upwards of 8 degrees c within urban areas with neighboring rural stations showing little or no rise in temps, try Hong Kong for a start.