The Dog Ate Global Warming
Interpreting climate data can be hard enough. What if some key data have been fiddled?
By Patrick J. Michaels, National Review Online

Imagine if there were no reliable records of global surface temperature. Raucous policy debates such as cap-and-trade would have no scientific basis, Al Gore would at this point be little more than a historical footnote, and President Obama would not be spending this U.N. session talking up a (likely unattainable) international climate deal in Copenhagen in December.
Steel yourself for the new reality, because the data needed to verify the gloom-and-doom warming forecasts have disappeared.
Or so it seems. Apparently, they were either lost or purged from some discarded computer. Only a very few people know what really happened, and they aren’t talking much. And what little they are saying makes no sense.
In the early 1980s, with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, scientists at the United Kingdom’s University of East Anglia established the Climate Research Unit (CRU) to produce the world’s first comprehensive history of surface temperature. It’s known in the trade as the “Jones and Wigley” record for its authors, Phil Jones and Tom Wigley, and it served as the primary reference standard for the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) until 2007. It was this record that prompted the IPCC to claim a “discernible human influence on global climate.”
Putting together such a record isn’t at all easy. Weather stations weren’t really designed to monitor global climate. Long-standing ones were usually established at points of commerce, which tend to grow into cities that induce spurious warming trends in their records. Trees grow up around thermometers and lower the afternoon temperature. Further, as documented by the University of Colorado’s Roger Pielke Sr., many of the stations themselves are placed in locations, such as in parking lots or near heat vents, where artificially high temperatures are bound to be recorded.
So the weather data that go into the historical climate records that are required to verify models of global warming aren’t the original records at all. Jones and Wigley, however, weren’t specific about what was done to which station in order to produce their record, which, according to the IPCC, showed a warming of 0.6° +/– 0.2°C in the 20th century.
Now begins the fun. Warwick Hughes, an Australian scientist, wondered where that “+/–” came from, so he politely wrote Phil Jones in early 2005, asking for the original data. Jones’s response to a fellow scientist attempting to replicate his work was, “We have 25 years or so invested in the work. Why should I make the data available to you, when your aim is to try and find something wrong with it?”
Reread that statement, for it is breathtaking in its anti-scientific thrust. In fact, the entire purpose of replication is to “try and find something wrong.” The ultimate objective of science is to do things so well that, indeed, nothing is wrong.
Then the story changed. In June 2009, Georgia Tech’s Peter Webster told Canadian researcher Stephen McIntyre that he had requested raw data, and Jones freely gave it to him. So McIntyre promptly filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the same data. Despite having been invited by the National Academy of Sciences to present his analyses of millennial temperatures, McIntyre was told that he couldn’t have the data because he wasn’t an “academic.” So his colleague Ross McKitrick, an economist at the University of Guelph, asked for the data. He was turned down, too.
Faced with a growing number of such requests, Jones refused them all, saying that there were “confidentiality” agreements regarding the data between CRU and nations that supplied the data. McIntyre’s blog readers then requested those agreements, country by country, but only a handful turned out to exist, mainly from Third World countries and written in very vague language.
It’s worth noting that McKitrick and I had published papers demonstrating that the quality of land-based records is so poor that the warming trend estimated since 1979 (the first year for which we could compare those records to independent data from satellites) may have been overestimated by 50 percent. Webster, who received the CRU data, published studies linking changes in hurricane patterns to warming (while others have found otherwise).
Enter the dog that ate global warming.
Roger Pielke Jr., an esteemed professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado, then requested the raw data from Jones. Jones responded:
Since the 1980s, we have merged the data we have received into existing series or begun new ones, so it is impossible to say if all stations within a particular country or if all of an individual record should be freely available. Data storage availability in the 1980s meant that we were not able to keep the multiple sources for some sites, only the station series after adjustment for homogeneity issues. We, therefore, do not hold the original raw data but only the value-added (i.e., quality controlled and homogenized) data.
The statement about “data storage” is balderdash. They got the records from somewhere. The files went onto a computer. All of the original data could easily fit on the 9-inch tape drives common in the mid-1980s. I had all of the world’s surface barometric pressure data on one such tape in 1979.
If we are to believe Jones’s note to the younger Pielke, CRU adjusted the original data and then lost or destroyed them over twenty years ago. The letter to Warwick Hughes may have been an outright lie. After all, Peter Webster received some of the data this year. So the question remains: What was destroyed or lost, when was it destroyed or lost, and why?
All of this is much more than an academic spat. It now appears likely that the U.S. Senate will drop cap-and-trade climate legislation from its docket this fall — whereupon the Obama Environmental Protection Agency is going to step in and issue regulations on carbon-dioxide emissions. Unlike a law, which can’t be challenged on a scientific basis, a regulation can. If there are no data, there’s no science. U.S. taxpayers deserve to know the answer to the question posed above.
— Patrick J. Michaels is a senior fellow in environmental studies at the Cato Institute and author of Climate of Extremes: Global Warming Science They Don’t Want You to Know.
h/t to WUWT reader Bill Kurdziel
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It really seems to me now like the whole AGW stuff is going to crumble around the OTT data records, that haven’t allowed sufficiently for UHI, that have been “corrected” using faulty methods re UHI, that have station siting warming biases, that are missing, truncated, in airfields, etc. And stuff that has not been available for public scrutiny.
Not a conspiracy. Except insofar as occasional conspiracy energy is a part of life, like influenza. More the combination of coincidental issues.
I’m hoping Jeff Id will post my next temperatures piece “Circling Yamal” today. I’ve still been catching up with replies to the last, but it seems that the temperature data stuff is really coming out now and it seems important. I’ve been corresponding with Ellie from Belfast on the GISS UK records, and well, it’s like not just “dog ate my homework” but “and poo’d in my satchel” so I’m checking these records and their provenance and “completeness” as carefully as possible first, because I think there’s another post in all of this.
Regarding the spike: Arctic temperatures vary a lot, just have a look at the Longyearbyen statistics: http://www.yr.no/place/Norway/Svalbard/Longyearbyen/statistics.html
As you can see, the last week or so was colder than (the Airport-based…) average until the recent mild weather. The long term forecast indicates a return to colder than normal weather: http://www.yr.no/place/Norway/Svalbard/Longyearbyen/long.html
The weather in one place doesn’t explain the whole of the arctic, but as others have mentioned, the reason was mild air flowing into the Arctic east of Greenland.
Regarding the conspiracy theories, here is what I struggle with, hoping it isn’t so.
While the Soviet Union was in existence, the vast majority of its so-called espionage budget – 85% by one account – was spent training subversives. A subversive is a pliable citizen of a free nation who is recruited, indoctrinated in Marxism and, well, subversion, and returns to or remains in a respectable position in free society as a sleeper. At some future date, they rise up and behave in precisely the manner exhibited by Jones, Wigley, Schneider, Hansen, Schmidt, Mann, Gore, Obama, et. al, to undermine the basic institutions of free society with the goal of causing their collapse.
When subversion of this nature is threatened with exposure, one counter-attack employed by the subversive is to use the McCarthy defense, which is to mock those who expose their perfidy as being on a witch-hunt. This is usually quite effective, given that a strategic advantage of using subversives is that they operate under cover of plausible deniability. The McCarthy defense is even more effective if the issue on which the subversion is based can be framed as an internal ideological conflict, e.g. conservative vs. progressive.
This is a science blog and needs to remain so, but I think it is worth stating that Occam’s Razor suggests that perhaps Green _is_ the new Red. [Watch for the rebirth of the Soviet Empire as Russia sheds its disguise as a “democratic” nation.]
“with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, scientists at the United Kingdom’s University of East Anglia established the Climate Research Unit”
Initially, I was very surprised at the source of funding…
Why not create a Climate Research Unit with US dollars in the USA?
Then the penny dropped…
Perhaps the British are credible fall guys when you need a dodgy dossier or some dodgy data…
As for scientists coming clean…. remember Dr David Kelly…
So anyone going to Copenhagen needs to be extra careful…
It’s not just teddy bears picnics that happen in the woods today…..
E.M.Smith (02:04:56) : “…GIStemp fabricates data.”
We really need Dave Carr to take those words and do a “United Breaks Guitars” with them, E.M. …
Pops (03:34:10),
Exactly right. When the Berlin Wall came down, the KGB changed its acronym to the FSB. But the same people working to destroy the West didn’t change. And now the former head of the FSB rules Russia.
All is not lost. In reality, CRU did not measure so much as collect. Many of the original records are kept by the collectors, often Meteorological organisations, who passed them on to CRU. (The Brits were good administrators and would often start weather stations each time they invaded a country). Indeed, some of it is even in unadjusted form. In theory, it should be possible to recreate the story and use proper adjustments if they are needed.
Also, there are other places where temperatures have been taken for some time. Some countries with missile capability had an interest in local silo conditions all the time, in case they had to target and launch. So there is a set of temperatures going back some decades in several countries, under somewhat standardised conditions. I’m sure an interested Gov’t could shake these loose.
There’s a lot of aviation and sea ship data as well. I think we can presume that some of this has been kept in mothballs until now. Then there are newspapers, which would commonly report a daily temperature. Some private farms have long records. And so on and so on.
It’s an organisational problem more than a data loss problem. I have written on CA how the early work on Australian data by CRU appeared to cherry pick UHI stations to create the original alarm that “we are all going to die”. Warwick Hughes picked this up. He was the one who got the famous reply.
While on Australia, I have looked at the last 40 years of Tmax and Tmin of a few dozen stations that are really rural, before GISS got to them. About half of them show essentially no trend from zero. Some even fall. It’s almost enough to falsify the whole temperature rise theory.
It may be a silly question to ask, but doesn’t that data still exist at source? I mean, Hadley is just a processing centre. Is it not possible that individual nations still house the original raw datasets? But on the other hand, as I’m writing this, it’s beginning to sound like an impossible minefield to navigate.
Oh, well. Lets hope it is forced out one way or another by litigation.
MartinGAtkins (15:56:20) :
Mr. McIntyre is an exhaustive and perceptive investigator, a mathematician and a good one at that. If he was on my case I would worry,
If people like McIntyre are on your case there is be no need to worry.
you only have to worry if you have something to hide.
If there is an yearly uptick in temperature at the same time as the equinox’s, it is possible that there is a physical cause but it is also very possible that the code is now going into a different path and the temperature spike is a programming problem probably due to seasonal adjustments at the equinox.
>>>As I understand it, the Admiralty has recently released
>>>hundreds of years of global temperature records, contained
>>>in the RN ship’s daily logs. Why not use those records instead;
>>>they will not need ‘adjusting’.
Now that would be a game and a half. Plotting the temperatures for monitoring stations that are never in the same place twice and could be anywhere in the world in any one year.
Rather you than me, but perhaps a super-computer and super-software might get something out of it.
.
I would like to ask Tom Wigley to please step in and clear this up. I have always felt that while his job tended to make him a bit too easy to convince on AGW, that he was none the less an honest scientist. If we can not replicate your work Tom, then it isn’t science at all.
I long gave up on the trend maps of NOAA (thier monthly maps with colored dots); GISS or HadCrut. I doesn’t surprise me in the least bit that Hadley “lost” the raw station records.
However, if someone had the money and the political clout they could request from the USAF its archived data. The USAF was tasked decades ago to collect and transmit weather information via its Automated Weather Network (AWN). The other DOD services depended on this network to get not only hourly observations, but also rawinsonde data, numerical guidence, etc… I worked with the AWN in the mid 1980s at Carswell AFB, TX. I heard it moved to Offutt AFB NE in the 1990s when Carswell closed.
I pretty sure the USAF has fairly complete data base of archived wx reports going back to at least WWII. This would include weather intercepts from the Warsaw Pact, Africa, and Asia as well as any artic reporting stations and the old DEW reporting stations.
“ralph (05:38:38) :
>>>As I understand it, the Admiralty has recently released
>>>hundreds of years of global temperature records, contained
>>>in the RN ship’s daily logs. Why not use those records instead;
>>>they will not need ‘adjusting’.”
I’ve mentioned this before, and the records show not one jot of significant change, at all, over longer timeframe the IPCC likes to use (In their models).
A regulation has to be based on something. If there is no data on which to base it on, then it ought to be challenged.
*yawn*
par for the course if you ask me
Anybody hear about this new movie called The Age of Stupid? It is a pro-AGW climate change diatribe reflecting their level of desperation. The irony is, you have to be stupid to believe climate change is really our fault, but they are calling us stupid. If you can’t with with facts, try to win by making the other side look bad. If it didn’t work, they wouldn’t do it.
But, sadly for them, most people are reasonable enough to be won over with facts. I have turned several global warming proponents into skeptics just by rattling off fact after fact after fact, and all they had was “the science is settled” type arguments. Unless you encounter a devout believer or a member of the clergy of AGW, you can generally win them over with facts.
pft (01:27:54) :
Most scientists are honest folks, but they are limited to what they know, which is their specialty, and they need to eat too. The only ones speaking out seem to be the retired scientists.
I have noticed this too. It is not insignificant that those with absolutely nothing to lose (in terms of income), and the most experience to boot, are the most ardent sceptics.
Government controls the data collection and storage. 1+ 1 = 3 so says the models.
Actually, 1 + 1 can equal 3, but only for extremely large values of ‘1’….
Would it be possible to set up an equivalent project to http://www.surfacestations.org/ which starts to collect the original raw data from as many temperature recording stations around the world as possible and make it available online? A proper peer reviewed reconstruction of temperature past could then be produced.
In the U.S., look at the Land Grant Universities. University of MO, Texas, etc. University of MO has weather records that are truly rural, going back to at least the turn of the century. Time to get away from all this “official record” and start putting together some alternatives. I can contact the Meteorology dept at MU, if requested, or alternatively, call and ask for Pat Guinan, head of the dept. He’s a nice guy, and originally the one who got me started on this quest.
Pofarmer (07:40:59) :
In the U.S., look at the University of MO.
I’ve done it for 7 sites. No trend.
I’ve done it for 7 sites. No trend.
Yep.
Although, just don’t take the averages, do the highs, and the lows. IIRC, what I found, was the highs actually decreasing, and the lows increasing, which kept the averages more or less in tact, which is pretty much how I would expect temperatures to act if they were responding to cloud cover. I wish the series went back further on line.
I would love to see them merge the NEMS and SCAMS data into the microwave sounder record. It would extend the record backward to the early 1970s instead of just starting at 1980. But given reality, I suspect that the tapes of both raw data and retrieved profiles have been thrown in the trashbin long since.
An enquirer, that there has been warming and that some of the shrinking of glaciers is caused by the warming is possible. There are two questions to be answered though. Was that warming caused by man rather than othe reasons and is it significant? Neither has been shown yet and not by a long way
KBK (16:25:52) :
“crosspatch (15:25:46) :
‘… both Greenland and Antarctica are experiencing “runaway” melting.’
The article is based on a recent paper in Nature reporting on laser measurements of elevation, i.e. glacier thickness, in Greenland and the Antarctic.”
—
My understanding is that an ice sheet above a critical height compresses vertically and pushes out horizontally, which is how a glacier “grows.” So the natural condition of the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets is that they lose height.
They “replenish” their height by snowfall on top. It would seem to make sense that, when snow is falling, the ice sheets would get taller, but when there’s no snow falling, they shrink in height.
Shrinking because of lack of snowfall certainly isn’t the same as melting. But, is this what they’re measuring when they say the sheets are melting?
This is possibly a monumentally stupid suggestion, but why not define a new standard set of measuring elements for UHI areas, and then get them applied to private or amateur sites. Documented with images, and tested by site monitors from this group. Quit messing with organizations with a vested interest in keeping information hidden.
When local digital weather stations are available – here on WUWT for example, for the modest prices asked, there’s not much reason for us to keep gnashing our teeth about poor siting of government stations.
Amateur information acquisition was the rule in the US long before NOAA, we can do it again, and we can do it better. We just need to know the quality of the data.
REPLY: not a stupid idea at all, I’ve been looking into just such a project. – Anthony