Climate Science Fraud at Albany University?

From the Scientific Misconduct Blog, 2 May 2009 (h/t to Benny Peiser)

by Dr.Aubrey Blumsohn

Professor Wei-Chyung Wang is a star scientist in the Atmospheric Sciences Research Center at the University at Albany, New York. He is a key player in the climate change debate (see his self-description here). Wang has been accused of scientific fraud.

I have no inclination to “weigh in” on the topic of climate change. However the case involves issues of integrity that are at the very core of proper science. These issues are the same whether they are raised in a pharmaceutical clinical trial, in a basic science laboratory, by a climate change “denialist” or a “warmist”. The case involves the hiding of data, access to data, and the proper description of “method” in science.

The case is also of interest because it provides yet another example of how *not* to create trust in a scientific misconduct investigation. It adds to the litany of cases suggesting that Universities cannot be allowed to investigate misconduct of their own star academics. The University response has so far been incoherent on its face.

Doug Keenan, the mathematician who raised the case of Wang is on the “sceptic” side of the climate change debate. He maintains that “almost by itself, the withholding of their raw data by [climate] scientists tells us that they are not scientists”.

Below is my own summary of the straightforward substance of this case. I wrote to Wei-Chyung Wang, to Lynn Videka (VP at Albany, responsible for the investigation), and to John H. Reilly (a lawyer at Albany) asking for any correction or comments on the details presented below. My request was acknowledged prior to publication, but no factual correction was suggested.

Case Summary

  1. The allegations concern two publications. These are:
    • Jones P.D., Groisman P.Y., Coughlan M., Plummer N., Wang W.-C., Karl T.R. (1990), “Assessment of urbanization effects in time series of surface air temperature over land”, Nature, 347: 169–172. (PDF here)
    • Wang W.-C., Zeng Z., Karl T.R. (1990), “Urban heat islands in China”, Geophysical Research Letters, 17: 2377–2380. (PDF here)
  2. The publications concern temperature at a variety of measuring stations over three decades (1954-1983). Stations are denoted by name or number. A potential confounder in such research is that measuring stations may be moved to different locations at different points in time. It is clearly important that readers of publications understand the methodology, and important confounders.
  3. The publications make the following statements:
    • (Statement A) “The stations were selected on the basis of station history: we chose those with few, if any, changes in instrumentation, location or observation times.” [Jones et al.]
    • (Statement B) “They were chosen based on station histories: selected stations have relatively few, if any, changes in instrumentation, location, or observation times….” [Wang et al.]
  4. The publications refer to a report produced jointly by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) which details station moves, and the publications further suggest that stations with few if any moves or changes were selected on the basis of that report. However:
    • Of 84 stations that were selected, Keenan found that information about only 35 are available in the DOE/CAS report
    • Of those 35 stations at least half did have substantial moves (e.g 25 km). One station had five different locations during 1954–1983 as far as 41 km apart.
  5. It therefore appears that Statements A and B must be false. If false, readers would have been misled both in terms of the status of the stations and the manner in which they had been selected (or not selected).
  6. Keenan then communicated with the author of one of the publications (Jones) to ask about the source of location information pertaining to the other 49 stations that had not been selected using the described methodology. Jones informed Keenan that his co-author Wang had selected those stations in urban and rural China based on his “extensive knowledge of those networks”.
  7. On 11 April 2007 Keenan E-mailed Wang, asking “How did you ensure the quality of the data?”. Wang did not answer for several weeks, but on 30 April 2007 he replied as follows:

    “The discussion with Ms. Zeng last week in Beijing have re-affirmed that she used the hard copies of station histories to make sure that the selected stations for the study of urban warming in China have relatively few, if any, changes in instrumentation, location, or observation times over the study period (1954-1983)”

  8. Keenan points out that the “hard copies” to which Wang refers were not found by the authors of the DOE/CAS report, who had endeavored to be “comprehensive” (and that the DOE/CAS report was authored in part by Zeng, one of the co-authors on Wang). Keenan further notes that any form of comprehensive data covering these stations during the Cultural Revolution would be implausible.
  9. In August 2007 Keenan submitted a report to the University at Albany, alleging fraud. Wang could at that stage have made the “hard copy” details of the stations selected available to the scientific community. However, he failed to do so.
  10. In May 2008, the University at Albany wrote to Keenan that they had conducted an investigation and asked him to comment on it (see the rather odd letter). However they refused to show him the report of the investigation or any of the evidence to allow any comment (further odd letter).
  11. In August 2008 the University sent Keenan an astonishing letter of “determination” stating that they did not find that Wang had fabricated data, but that they refused to provide any investigation report or any other information at all because “the Office of Research Integrity regulations preclude discussion of any information pertaining to this case with others who were not directly involved in the investigation”.
  12. Wang has still not made the station records available to the scientific community. If he provided such records to the University as part of a misconduct investigation, then the University has apparently concealed them.

Comments

  1. In the absence of any explanation to the contrary, it seems that the methodology for station selection as described in these two publications was false and misleading.
  2. Wang maintains that hard copy records do exist detailing the location of stations selected by himself outwith the published methodology. However the refusal to clarify “method” is inappropriate and a form of misconduct in and of itself. It does not lend credence to Wang’s assertion that fraud did not take place. It would also be necessary to see records of stations that were not selected, in order to confirm that selection was indeed random, and only “on the basis of station history”.
  3. The University at Albany is in a difficult position.
    • If the University received such records as part of the supposed misconduct investigation, then they could easily resolve the problem by making them available to the scientific community and to readers.
    • If the University does not have such records then they have been complicit in misconduct and in coverup of misconduct.
    • If the University at Albany does have such records, but such records are not in accordance with the stated methodology of the publications, then the University has more serious difficulties.
  4. “Investigations” of scientific misconduct should themselves align with the usual principles of scientific discourse (open discussion, honesty, transparency of method, public disclosure of evidence, open public analysis and public discussion and reasoning underlying any conclusion). This was not the case at the University at Albany. When you see universities reluctant to investigate things properly, it provides reasonable evidence that they really don’t want to investigate things properly.

For further information on this case see here and here.

=====================

(2) THE FRAUD ALLEGATION AGAINST SOME CLIMATIC RESEARCH OF WEI-CHYUNG WANG

Informath, April 2009

http://www.informath.org/apprise/a5620.htm

Douglas J. Keenan

Following are some remarks about my exposé, “The fraud allegation against some climatic research of Wei-Chyung Wang“.


Wei-Chyung Wang is a professor at the University at Albany, State University of New York. He has been doing research on climate for over 30 years, and he has authored or co-authored more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific articles. He has also received an Appreciation Plaque from the Office of Science in the U.S.A., commending him, “For your insightful counsel and excellent science. …”. The plaque resulted in particular from his research on global warming.

I have formally alleged that Wang committed fraud in important parts of his global-warming research. Below is a relevant timeline.

03 August 2007 My report, “Wei-Chyung Wang fabricated some scientific claims“, is sent to the Vice President for Research at Wang’s university.
31 August 2007 The university notifies me that it is initiating an inquiry into suspected research misconduct by Wang. (The notification includes a copy of the university’s Policy and Procedures on Misconduct in Research and Scholarship.)
12 November 2007 My exposé on Wang’s alleged fraud is published (reference below).
07 December 2007 Myself and the university’s Inquiry Committee have a conference call.
20 February 2008 The university sends me the Report of the Inquiry Committee. The Committee unanimously concluded that “there was no data” (thus implicitly concluding Wang must have fabricated data) and that a full investigation should be undertaken.
23 May 2008 The university sends me a notice: the Investigation Committee has completed its work and found no evidence of fraud. The investigation was conducted without interviewing me, which is a violation of the university’s policy. The university asks me to comment on the Committee’s report; I am, however, not allowed to see the report.
04 June 2008 The university informs me that I am not allowed to see the report because they did not interview me when preparing it.
06 June 2008 I submit comments to the university, listing ways in which I believe the university has acted in breach of U.S. regulations and its own policy.
11 July 2008 I submit a complaint to the Public Integrity Bureau at the Office of the Attorney General of New York State, alleging criminal fraud.
12 August 2008 The university sends me the determination for its investigation, saying that there is “no evidence whatsoever [of] … any research misconduct”.
07 October 2008 I telephone the Public Integrity Bureau and am told that it might be some months before the Bureau begins to review the complaint.
17 March 2009 I telephone the Public Integrity Bureau and am told that the complaint is under review by an attorney.
18 March 2009 I file three requests under the Freedom of Information Law of New York State: for a copy of the full report by the Inquiry Committee; for a copy of the full report by the Investigation Committee; and, given that the relevant federal funding agencies are required to be notified when a misconduct investigation is initiated, for copies of all such notifications that were sent by the university and pertain to the investigation of Wang.
24 March 2009 Given that Wang received funding for the fraudulent research from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and that the DOE has since supplied more funding to Wang, I report the fraud and the university’s apparent cover up to the Office of Inspector General at the DOE.

This web page will be updated with news about the case, as the investigations progress.

===========

(3) KAFKA AT ALBANY

Freeborn John, 15 March 2009

http://freebornjohn.blogspot.com/2009/03/kafka-at-albany.html

Peter Risdon

Last June I reported on the allegations of academic fraud levelled by a British mathematician, Doug Keenan, against Professor Wei-Chyung Wang of New York State University at Albany.

Dr Keenan alleged that in work that has come to be widely cited in climate studies, work that included the collation of data from temperature measuring stations in China, Professor Wang made statements that “cannot be true and could not be in error by accident. The statements are fabricated.”

In August 2007, Dr Keenan submitted a report (pdf) of his allegations to the Vice President for Research at Wang’s university and an inquiry was initiated. In February 2008 this was escalated into a full investigation by the Inquiry Committee.

All this was summarised in my earlier post, together with quotations from Dr Keenan’s allegation.

So far, things had run as might be expected. A fraud had been alleged, the University at Albany looked into it and decided to hold a formal investigation. Dr Keenan waited to be contacted by the investigation and asked to put his case, in line with the university’s Policy and Procedures on Misconduct in Research and Scholarship (.doc). The relevant section of this document runs as follows (emphasis added):

III. A. Rights and Responsibilities of the Complainant

Rights: The Vice President for Research will make every effort to ensure the privacy and confidentiality of complainants. The University will protect, to the maximum extent possible, the position and the reputation of those who in good faith report alleged misconduct in research.

The Vice President for Research will work to ensure that complainants will not be retaliated against in the terms and conditions of their employment or other status at the University and will review instances of alleged retaliation for appropriate action. Any alleged or apparent retaliation should be reported immediately to the Vice President for Research.

The complainant will be provided a copy of the formal allegations when and if an inquiry is opened. The complainant will have the opportunity to review portions of the inquiry and investigation reports pertinent to the complainant’s report or testimony, and will be informed in writing of the results of the inquiry and investigation, and of the final determination. After the final determination and upon request to the Vice President for Research, the complainant shall be given access to the full documentation.

Responsibilities: The complainant is responsible for making allegations in good faith, maintaining confidentiality, and cooperating fully with an inquiry and/or investigation.

Dr Keenan lived up to the responsibility as stated in the final paragraph above so far as he could. He had made the allegation in good faith and given Professor Wang an opportunity to explain how he had reached his results, an opportunity the Professor had not taken. Keenan maintained confidentiality. In order to cooperate with the investigation, though he would first have to be contacted by it. Dr Keenan waited.

Late in May 2008 a communication arrived from Albany. It said:

After careful review of the evidence and thoughtful deliberation, the Investigation Committee finds no evidence of the alleged fabrication of results and nothing that rises to the level of research misconduct having been committed by DR. Wang.

As the institutional official responsible for this case, I have accepted the Committee’s findings and the Report. You have fourteen (14) calendar days from the date of this letter to provide any comments to add to the report for the record.

Contrary to its own rules, the Committee had not given Keenan the opportunity to “review portions of the inquiry and investigation reports”.

That’s astonishing, but here’s where it becomes Kafkaesque. Keenan was being asked, in this most recent communication, to comment on the report of the Committee. But he was not sent a copy of the report. When he challenged this, he received an email from Adrienne Bonilla explaining that:

[Keenan] did not receive a copy of the Investigation report because the report did not include portions addressing your role and opinions in the investigation phase.

Per the UAlbany Misconduct policy:

VI. E. Investigation Report and Recommendations of the Vice President for Research

“…The Vice President for Research will provide the respondent with a copy of the draft investigation report for comment and rebuttal and will provide the complainant with those portions of the draft report that address the complainant’s role and opinions in the investigation. The respondent and complainant will be given 14 calendar days from the transmission of the report to provide their written comments. Any written responses to the report by either party will be made part of the report and record.

Keenan then wrote to the Vice President for Research at Albany, Lynn Videka, pointing out the various ways in which the University had breached its own policy, stating that its behaviour was consistent with a cover up, and pointing out that Professor Wang has received more than $7 million in grants from a couple of US federal agencies.

In August 2008, Lynn Videka wrote to Keenan enclosing a final copy of a “determination” of the investigation. In her covering note, she stated:

I am notifying you of the case outcome because you were the complainant in this case. The University’s misconduct policies and the Office of Research Integrity regulations preclude discussion of any information pertaining to this case with others who were not directly involved in the investigation.

To summarise, the university initiated an investigation, then broke its own rules by not involving Dr Keenan. It then produced a report that carefully avoided mentioning Dr Keenan, so it could claim he was not entitled to see a copy of this report. It then asked Keenan to comment on the report. It has completely disregarded its own policy that “After the final determination and upon request to the Vice President for Research, the complainant shall be given access to the full documentation.”

But Doug Keenan is a tenacious man. In July 2008, after being refused sight of the report, he submitted a formal complaint (pdf) to the Public Integrity Bureau at the Office of the Attorney General of New York State, alleging criminal fraud. In this complaint, he said:

Wei-Chyung Wang is a professor at the University at Albany, State University of New York. He has been doing research for over 30 years. For this research, Wang has received at least $7 million. The funds have come primarily from the Department of Energy, with additional funding from other federal agencies (DOD, FAA, NSF). I have formally alleged that Wang committed fraud in important parts of his research. My allegation was submitted to the University at Albany; a copy is enclosed.

The university conducted a preliminary inquiry; a copy of the report from the inquiry is enclosed (redacted, by the university). Briefly, Wang claimed that there were some documents that could exonerate him. The inquiry concluded that there should be a full investigation, which should be “charged with obtaining and reviewing any such additional evidence … so that a final resolution may be made regarding the allegation against Dr. Wang”.

Wang had been claiming the existence of such exonerating documents for nearly a year, but he has not been able to produce them. Additionally, there was a report published in 1991 (with a second version in 1997) explicitly stating that no such documents exist. Moreover, the report was published as part of the Department of Energy Carbon Dioxide Research Program, and Wang was the Chief Scientist of that program.

The university conducted an investigation. The investigation concluded that Wang is innocent. I believe that the case against Wang is strong and clear, and that the university is trying to cover up the fraud so as to protect its reputation. Wang is one of the university’s star professors. The conduct of the investigation violated several of the university’s own stated policies: details are given in an attached e-mail (dated 06 June 2008).

The e-mail was sent to Lynn Videka, Vice President for Research at the university: Videka was in charge of overseeing the investigation. Note, in particular, that the documents that Wang was relying on were never produced.

I have only examined a little of Wang’s research; so I do not know the full extent of the fraud. It is difficult to examine more in part because Wang has not willingly made his data available: when asked for the data from the research that I later reported as fraudulent, Wang refused. For that research, though, Wang had a co-worker in Britain. In Britain, the Freedom of Information Act requires that data from publicly-funded research be made available. I was able to get the data by requiring Wang’s co-worker to release it, under British law. It was only then that I was able to confirm that Wang had committed fraud. Details are given in my report to the university (page 4, last paragraph). I would be willing to help examine other research that Wang has done, if more data were made available.

There was another case of research fraud with a professor at the University of Vermont, in 2005. There, Prof. Eric Poehlman was convicted of making false statements on federal grant applications; he was sentenced to a year and a day in prison. Wang has done the same as Poehlman. The fraudulent work described in my report dates from 1990; Wang has been relyingon that work in some of his grant applications since then. As I understand things, each of those applications is a violation of statute. (Additionally, Wang has been using the grants to go on frequent trips to China.)

In October 2008 Dr Keenan was told there could be a wait of several months while his complaint is investigated.

I’ll let you know when there are any further developments.

UPDATE: I didn’t mention this in the main piece above, but I did mail the relevant person at Albany myself, some time ago, asking for news of the investigation against Professor Wang. I received no reply.

However, within a couple of hours of this being posted, someone at Albany came to look at it, from the host aspmini-cc326.cc.albany.edu (169.226.172.35), having apparently been sent an email about it.

So even if they are not communicative about this case, it seems someone at Albany is keeping their eyes open for reports of it.

UPDATE: On reflection, the hit from Albany is also consistent with someone using Google Alerts to monitor coverage of this issue.

UPDATE: Doug Keenan has been told on the telephone that this case is now under review by an attorney at the OAG Public Integrity Bureau.

UPDATE: Also see new findings on the effect of urban warming.

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Paul Vaughan
May 3, 2009 3:05 pm

From the intro above: “It adds to the litany of cases suggesting that Universities cannot be allowed to investigate misconduct of their own star academics.”
This statement is eerily true – an ominous reminder of the darker side of human nature that many know from their own first-hand dealings with the politics of such institutions.
The allegiances are not confined to single universities, so a lead investigator is tasked with a formidable exercise, particularly if a case involves a narrow specialty.

May 3, 2009 3:13 pm

Mark (12:49:44) :
“What the heck is “google alerts?” I’ve never heard of this.”
Google has a cool feature, a google alert, by which one can have google’s search engine scan thousands of websites for a keyword or phrase, then report any findings back to any email address.
click here to get started. Enjoy…
http://www.google.com/alerts

Paul Vaughan
May 3, 2009 3:27 pm

Anthony: “Review methodology however, is fair game.”
Thank you for clarifying this.

May 3, 2009 3:29 pm

I have been attacked in the past for using the term ‘fraud’ when addressing issues with various climate data / research. One individual I have applied the term to has been Wang. At the very least he has been guilty, as it appears to me, of misrepresenting the integrity of his data and making false statements in that regard.
Amazingly one of the defenses offered is that the work was “peer reviewed”. However, the peer review process makes assumptions and is not geared to detect fraud. To an extent the term “peer reviewed” in modern times is not necessarily a signifier of good science.
As a lay person I, anymore, find that the information openly debated on blogs such as WUWT, CA, etc to be far more accurate and honest than many papers published by Nature or Science. If nothing else the data, codes, debate are available and openly released.
On top of what appears to be corruption of the “peer review” process in modern times within the ‘climate’ sciences world the apparent actions of Wang serve to further cause a public distrust of science in general. Perhaps the worse thing is that funding dollars go to the seemingly corrupt like Wang while those desiring to produce good, honest, scientific work are denied funds. Since some of those funds come from tax dollars, as a taxpayer, I strongly object.

old construction worker
May 3, 2009 3:34 pm

Isn’t this what the DATA QUALITY ACT all about?

Arn Riewe
May 3, 2009 3:55 pm

Phillip Bratby (11:07:00) :
“There are six co-authors with Wang for the two papers. I am surprised that not one of them saw the data or was suspicious of the data. It makes you wonder what the co-authors’ contributions to the papers were. If I were a co-author of a paper, I would want to be pretty certain of the contents of the paper to which I was putting my name and reputation.
These people either have no integrity or they just want to get their names for citation on as many papers as possible, regardless of the content.”
You shouldn’t be surprised. Steve McIntyre has had numerous go arounds on this having to resort to FOI docs to try to get datasets. The most recent, I believe was Ben Santer. All the co-authors denied ever having seen the data. There is a definite “scratch each others back” mentality and some very lazy behavior on the part of both co-authors and peer reviewers. Steve likes to refer to the as “The Team”. I think of them more as “The Club”.

Simon Evans
May 3, 2009 4:05 pm

Recent correction by Jones stated that “urban-related warming over China is shown to be about 0.1 degree per decade over the period 1951–2004…
Have any of you actually bothered to read Wang’s (supposedly ‘fraudulent’) paper? –
“The rate of warming at urban stations is over 0.1C per decade relative to more rural stations”
http://www.informath.org/apprise/a5620/b23.pdf
Did you get that? Did you spot the purported fraud? Wang was saying back in 1990 what you are now claiming is the statement of ‘correction’ to the supposed fraud!
(And no, I am not planning to take up posting here again, beyond a reaction to this piling on).

braddles
May 3, 2009 4:11 pm

I don’t agree that all this misbehavioiur is driven primarily by a desire for money on the part of scientists. What really drives scientists is a desire for status and recognition from their peers and the wider community. Under the banner of AGW, climate science has grown from run-of-the-mill into the most important field of science in the world. This must be heady stuff for those at the center of it all.
Monetary gain is secondary, probably more important to the universities than to the scientists.

May 3, 2009 4:12 pm

I hope this doesn’t affect Keenan’s future prospects. Whistleblowers in the UK are treated worse than paedophiles. Hopefully he’s delivered a staggering blow to the warmist cause. If true his actions will be neither forgiven nor forgotten.
Keenan is a very brave man. A man of integrity. I hope there are more where he comes from.
I’ll be following this story with interest. Thanks WUWT for putting it in the public domain.

Leon Brozyna
May 3, 2009 4:18 pm

Once again into that minefield called peer review. And what a mess it is. I have a rather admittedly simplistic way of looking at the matter; if the data upon which a paper is built isn’t there, the paper isn’t there. It is a curio, nothing more. Pure speculative fantasy. It’s on a level with an opinion piece written for and appearing on the editorial page of your local newspaper.
Coincidentally, there is a piece on the subject of peer review entitled Peer Review Needs Improvement that appeared today on American Thinker.
There are a few lines in that piece I think worthy of mention:
“…as John Moore writes in Nature,
‘It’s been peer reviewed so it must be right, right? Wrong! Not everything in the peer-reviewed literature is correct. Indeed, some of it is downright bad science.'”
(John Moore, “Perspective: Does peer review mean the same to the public as it does to scientists?,” Nature, (2006), doi: 10.1038/nature05009)
Or this one:
“Yet, the term ‘peer review’ is often equated with ‘gold standard’. Hence, the politically motivated, lazy or unscrupulous can use the peer-reviewed literature selectively to make arguments that are seriously flawed, or even damaging to public policy.”
Check it out; it’s an interesting opinion piece. And it’s not only about peer-reviewed climate studies, it also covers medical studies as examples of the problem with the whole concept of peer-reviewed literature.

MattN
May 3, 2009 4:19 pm

It’s about damn time….

Steve in SC
May 3, 2009 4:24 pm

This whole affair will get about as much attention as USC or Notre Dame being investigated by the NCAA for football violations or UNC or Duke for basketball violations. Not happening. The word will be “Nothing to see here. Move along.”
The challenger should at this time start fearing for his personal safety.
Be armed at all times.

Mike Ramsey
May 3, 2009 4:30 pm

I have been wondering where all the scientist are hiding.  I was taught that scientist should be skeptical.  For example, triple check that you don’t have a systemic error in your own experimental setup.  Don’t believe results until independently replicated by others.
When I look at published scientific papers on climate, I don’t see scientist as much as I see apparatchiki (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparatchik).
Has the education of our scientist totally collapsed?
When I look at what the press (e.g. BBC) publishes on climate, I am reminded of what Thomas Jefferson wrote long ago.
“The most effectual engines for [pacifying a nation] are the public papers… [A despotic] government always [keeps] a kind of standing army of newswriters who, without any regard to truth or to what should be like truth, [invent] and put into the papers whatever might serve the ministers. This suffices with the mass of the people who have no means of distinguishing the false from the true paragraphs of a newspaper.” –Thomas Jefferson to G. K. van Hogendorp, Oct. 13, 1785. (*) ME 5:181, Papers 8:632
I wonder if the main stream press has been concentrated into too few hands and that those hands have lost their regard for “truth or to what should be like truth”.
God save WUWT.
–Mike Ramsey

May 3, 2009 4:36 pm

Jeremy (11:09:53):
I fear that bogus research is unfortunately becoming all too common everywhere (not just Climate science). Many professors publish as many as five papers a year.
Yes, you’re right, although climate science is under beholder scrutiny due to its constant violations to the scientific methodology. Paleontologists, geologists, physicists, astronomers, biologists, etc., are suffering also of “viral modelitis”.
Almost all arguments on biodiversity’s depletion are coming from models, not from nature.
Corals bleach, honeybees’ colony collapse disorder (CCD) and frogs’ population collapse, for example. When a scientist in his/her five senses have assessed the problems, that scientist immediately finds the misguiding side of modelitis. On honeybees’ CCD, for example, biomodelers said it was a problem derived of anthropogenic global warming; when investigated consciously the problem, biologists found it was a quite common acute paralysis virus disease which caused a pandemic. This kind of pandemic among honeybees’ colonies has been happened many times before humans drove cars.

stan
May 3, 2009 4:44 pm

Isn’t the Jones study the one where he used the “dog ate my homework” defense regarding a request for his data?

hunter
May 3, 2009 4:50 pm

AGW is to climate science what eugenics was to evolution: both are frauds.

Robinson
May 3, 2009 4:53 pm

Fantastic article and a great piece of work. This is my number one concern: public trust in the integrity of the scientific process. I care not about SUV’s and power stations. What will be, will be. It’s clear to me that this kind of thing is all too common and it’s about time that people started filling charges. The lack of integrity in Climate Science is bewildering and extremely depressing.
Anyway, applause to the author ;).

May 3, 2009 4:54 pm

Dave Middleton (13:23:19) :
If for-profit scientists behave this way in the oil and gas industry behave this way…They get fired…If not sued.

This is true in every private company not funded by “nobody”´s money, when it is “other people´s money” and no one can possibly appear asking what you did with his/her money you just happily and irresponsably spend it.
That is why socialism did not work even among so disciplined a people as germans in “Democratic Republic of East Germany “, not to mention in a caribbean island.

Ron de Haan
May 3, 2009 4:54 pm

BoM declines to give Australian journalist Antarctic temperature data
May 3rd, 2009 by Warwick Hughes
Read this latest illustration of the famous saying by Sir Walter Scott along lines, “..what a tangled web we weave when we set out to deceive..”
May 2 article in “The Australian”, no compromise over the length of this headline.
“Bureau blows hot and cold over Antarctica warm-up as Bureau of Metereology backs down from a claim that temperatures at Australia’s three bases in Antarctica have been warming over the past three decades”
You need to read right to the end of the article for the lines,
“Dr Watkins declined to release the temperature data to The Weekend Australian. He said it had still to be fully analysed by the bureau.”
Can I please add – but it was quite OK for Dr Watkins to trumpet his version to the media.
Here you can see some graphics of BoM data from Australian Antarctic stations, thanks to Geoff Sherrington and to the stalwart observers who ventured out in thick and thin to record these data over the decades.
Below here for the article text, in case it vanishes.
Bureau blows hot and cold over Antarctica warm-up as Bureau of Metereology backs down from a claim that temperatures at Australia’s three bases in Antarctica have been warming over the past three decades
Greg Roberts | May 02, 2009
Article from: The Australian
THE Bureau of Metereology has backed down from a claim that temperatures at Australia’s three bases in Antarctica have been warming over the past three decades.
A senior bureau climatologist had accused The Weekend Australian of manufacturing a report that temperatures were cooling in East Antarctica, where Australia’s Mawson, Davis and Casey bases are located.
The trend of temperatures and ice conditions in Antarctica is central to the debate on global warming because substantial melting of the Antarctic ice cap, which contains 90 per cent of the world’s ice, would be required for sea levels to rise.
While calvings from ice shelves in parts of West Antarctica have generated headlines, evidence has emerged that temperatures are cooling in the east of the continent, which is four times the size of West Antarctica.
Contrary to widespread public perceptions, the area of sea ice around the continent is expanding.
The Weekend Australian reported last month a claim by Bureau of Metereology senior climatologist Andrew Watkins that monitoring at Australia’s Antarctic bases since the 1950s indicated temperatures were rising. A study was then published by the British Antarctic Survey that concluded the ozone hole was responsible for the cooling and expansion of sea ice around much of the continent.
The head of the study project, John Turner, said at the time that the section of Antarctica that included the Australian bases was among the areas that had cooled.
Dr Watkins said The Weekend Australian had misrepresented the results of the BAS study, which made no findings about temperatures at Australian bases.
When it was pointed out to Dr Watkins that Professor Turner had been quoted directly, Dr Watkins said his bureau, and not the BAS, was the agency collecting temperature data.
“You kept going until you got the answer you wanted,” Dr Watkins said.
“You were told explicitly that the data collected by the Bureau of Metereology at the Australian bases shows a warming for maximum temperatures at all bases, and minimum temperatures at all but Mawson.”
However, Professor Turner told The Weekend Australian the data showed a cooling of the East Antarctica coast associated with the onset of the ozone layer from 1980 onwards. Professor Turner said the monthly mean temperatures for Casey station from 1980 to 2005 showed a cooling of 0.45C per decade. In autumn, the temperature trend has been a cooling of 0.93C per decade.
“These fairly small temperature trends seem to be consistent to me with the small increase in sea ice extent off the coast,” he said.
Dr Watkins did not dispute the figures referred to by Professor Turner.
Referring to the bureau’s data collection since the 1950s, Dr Watkins said Professor Turner’s figures were “only half of the full data set”.
However, Dr Watkins admitted that analysis of the data might show “an ozone-induced cooling trend in the latter half of the record” — a reference to the past three decades.
Dr Watkins declined to release the temperature data to The Weekend Australian. He said it had still to be fully analysed by the bureau.
Nationals Senate leader Barnaby Joyce said he hoped all government agencies would co-operate in helping to inform the global warming debate.
“These agencies need to be able to dispense the facts without fear or bias,” he said.
http://www.warwickhughes.com/blog/?p=217

Sandy
May 3, 2009 5:00 pm

” I have lived in rural areas most of my life and its commonly known that it gets colder outside the city!! Why is it so hard to test this and get a “correction factor” or whatever they want to use (and not the ridiculous one suggested in the paper above)?”
Since there is less area of city than non-city on earth, try only taking measurements a long way from cities, side-stepping the UHI argument.
Alternatively ignore all data from city influenced stations.
Oops, signal to noise ratio goes silly.

jorgekafkazar
May 3, 2009 5:12 pm

“The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present and is gravely to be regarded. Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite.” –DDE, Jan.17,1961.

Evan Jones
Editor
May 3, 2009 5:28 pm

UHI claim at 0.005 deg C/decade is obvious nonsense for anybody with experience of living in a city.
Well, I did look at raw results for USHCN sites designated as urban. They showed 0.05°C more warming per decade than non-urban.
BUT
Urban sites comprise only 9% of the USHCN network.
THEREFORE,
If the adjustment is applied to the overall statistic for ALL sites and not merely to urban sites, it is probably in the ballpark.
This assumes that the FILNET data on USCHN trends I am provided with does not include “final” (i.e., UHI) adjustment, and I am informed (reliably) that it does not. There may be some sort of miscommunication, but that is my understanding.
I can’t speak for China at all; I only am looking at US HCN stations.
Note also, I am speaking trends, not offsets. Temperatures in cities are a LOT higher than rural areas. Trends are a different matter, though US trends are higher than non-urban (about half that of the urbanization trend delta of China).

Mr Lynn
May 3, 2009 5:29 pm

Just Want Truth… (13:53:33) :
. . . Given that Steven Chu is Secretary of Energy at the DOE, and that he himself uses the questionable science of the Mann Hockey Hockey Stick graph, there may not be much concern coming from the DOE to crack down on activities like this that are related to global warming.

Right. The DOE can simply stonewall, by saying it is “looking into” the matter, but “these things take time.” If the accusations of scientific fraud could be presented to the media as a large-enough scandal, conceivably the DOE and Chu might be pressured to act. The usual strategy is to then throw the miscreant “under the bus,” saying, “It’s just an isolated incident.”
The real trick would be to convince the media that the whole edifice of ‘global warming’ claims is at stake, in which case some might bite. Another couple of such scandals, ones that are easy for the public to understand, would help immensely.
/Mr Lynn

Robert Wood
May 3, 2009 5:32 pm

I’ve been following this story since the start. I originally thought “fraud” was too strong a term to use.
I sense a lot of covering of arses, although with such transparency we can all see …
First rule of scandal – the cover-up only makes it worse!!
Albany has only one option now – PRODUCE THE HARDCOPY RECORDS!!!

Evan Jones
Editor
May 3, 2009 5:34 pm

History of station moves in the US seems very spotty, and I do not trust it, either the comprehensiveness or the given coordinates.
I cannot imagine China is anything but much worse. I would not trust Chinese records, especially not as an aggregate.

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