First, I loathe having to write another story about Pen Hadow and his Catlin Arctic Ice expedition, which I consider the scientific joke of 2009. But these opportunistic explorers are once again getting some press over the “science” data, and of course it is being used to make the usual alarmist pronouncements such as this badly written story in the BBC:

WUWT followed the entire activist affair disguised as a science expedition from the start. You can see all of the coverage here. It’s not pretty. When I say this expedition was the “scientific joke of 2009”, I mean it.
On to the Top Ten List.
Top Ten Reasons why the Catlin Arctic Ice Survey data can’t be trusted
10.
High profile news and PR from the beginning, plus an unrealistic vision of self importance related to the mission. The entire venture was publicized well in advance of the actual expedition, and the mission was “too important to fail” according to the January 23rd interview with The Guardian Catlin team leader Pen Hadow said:
“During this mammoth expedition we will gather the essential data that scientists need to more accurately determine when the permanent floating sea ice will disappear altogether. We cannot afford to fail on this mission – there is too much at stake.”
With pronouncements like that, you also can’t afford not to bring home a result consistent with the theme of the expedition.
9.
Reality Show Science as reported here, “The trio will be sending in regular diary entries, videos and photographs to BBC News throughout their expedition.” When you tie science too closely to the media from the beginning, it predetermines some outcomes. That pressure is always there to produce the story rather than focus on the task. This is why most proper science is done well away from the media and the results are reported afterwards.
8.
Hadow, by his own admission, has an unrealistic and biased warmer view of the Arctic that doesn’t match the current data. In his Curriculum Vitae posted here, he writes:
“Twenty years ago, you could walk to the North Pole – now you have to swim part of the way there.”
Only problem is, the satellite data showed a completely different picture of solid ice, and Hadow’s expedition encountered temperatures of -44F (-42C) along the way, and the vast majority of the trip was below 32F (0C). He didn’t encounter vast leads of water along the way, and in fact encountered ice conditions far worse than he expected. This shows his bias for a warmer trip from the start.
7.
The Catlin team’s scientific advisor at the beginning of the trip seemed to already have a predetermined outcome for the Arctic. In this BBC article and interview they write of Professor Wieslaw Maslowski, a science advisor to the survey:
“Ultimately, Professor Maslowski hopes to finesse his forecast for when the first ice-free summer might arrive.
Currently, he has it down for 2013 – but with an uncertainty range between 2010 and 2016.”
So if they already had this figured out from the beginning, why make the trip at all? Is it so the BBC could recycle the headline again today saying Arctic to be ‘ice-free in summer’? Why do “science” at great personal risk when you already are sure of the end game? There’s also another nugget of predisposition wisdom by Catlin’s science advisor Professor Maslowski. Read on.
6.
They failed to advise of major equipment failure in a timely manner, inviting suspicion. The ice radar sounding equipment that was designed to do the thickness survey failed miserably, almost from day one, yet even though they were “sending in regular diary entries, videos and photographs to BBC News throughout their expedition,” the world didn’t learn of that failure until day 44 of the 73 day expedition. When Apollo 13 had a problem, the world knew about it almost immediately. When Catlin had a problem, it was covered up for well over a month, yet that didn’t stop the BBC from paraphrasing Apollo 13’s famous words for a headline ‘London, we have a problem’ as if there was some parallel in integrity and timeliness here.
5.
Hadow and his scientific advisor erroneously believed that their expedition was the only way ice thickness measurements could be done, and they seemed oblivious to other efforts and systems.
From this BBC article and interview:
“No other information on ice thickness like this is expected to be made available to the scientific community in 2009,” explained Arctic ice modeller Professor Wieslaw Maslowski, a science advisor to the survey.
While this was obviously a selling point to sponsors and an ego boost for the team, it was flat wrong. For example, there’s a bouy network that provides ice thickness data,. Then there’s ICEsat which provides mass and balance measurements, as well as ice thickness maps, shown below:


ICESat data for Fall 2008, source NASA Scientific Visualization Studio
As reported on WUWT, another data source of Arctic Ice thickness in 2009 came in the form of an aerial survey with a towed radar array from the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research. They didn’t have to risk lives, create drama, or bleat constant headlines to the BBC while doing the science. They simply flew the plane over the ice a few times.
Here’s some excerpts of what was reported on WUWT in the story Inconvenient Eisdicken – “surprising results” from the Arctic
At the North Pole ice sheet is thicker than expected
The “Polar 5″ in Bremerhaven
The research aircraft Polar 5 “ended today in Canada’s recent Arctic expedition. During the flight, researchers have measured the current Eisstärke measured at the North Pole, and in areas that have never before been overflown. Result: The sea-ice in the surveyed areas is apparently thicker than the researchers had suspected.
Normally, ice is newly formed after two years, over two meters thick. “Here were Eisdicken up to four meters,” said a spokesman of Bremerhaven’s Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research. For scientists, this result is still in contradiction to the warming of the seawater.
Gosh. Where’s the polar death defying drama in that?
4.
Due to the extreme cold conditions they were not fully prepared for, they completed less than half of the planned trip. Originally it was to be a 1000 kilometer trip to the North Pole which according to early interviews given by Hadow was easily done, yet they failed. The original start point was to be at 81N 130W but they actually started closer to the pole by about 100 kilometers.
Click here to explore the Catlin Arctic Survey in Google Earth (right click and save as)
According to the Google Earth KML file provided by Catlin, they started at 81.7N 129.7W and ended at 85.5N 125.6W for a total distance of approximately 435 kilometers over 73 days. Hardly a broad survey of the Arctic Ice when put into perspective on the Google Earth and ICEsat maps shown below:

Here’s the Catlin Arctic Ice Survey Route overlaid on the ICEsat map. You can see just how little of the ice was actually surveyed.

Note that the ICEsat image is from Fall 2008, while the Catlin trip was in the Spring of 2009. Since we all know sea ice moves, often connected to the Beaufort Gyre, it is likely that the path depicted does not represent the ice Catlin actually traveled over. The sea ice may have moved so that the Catlin path traversed some of the thinner ice to the west, though some thickening of the ice would also be expected during the winter of 2009. The point of this map was to put the route in perspective.
3.
There’s very little actual data return for 73 days on the ice, only 39 datapoints. See the dataset they provide in the Excel file here:
CAS Snow Ice Measurements – Final 2009
Final surveying results from the 2009 expedition.
The actual number of holes drilled and measured for ice thickness by Pen Hadow is said to be in the hundreds, and what we see in the Excel file is the average of those many holes at each drilling session. While I commend them for providing the raw hole data, problems with potential measurement bias don’t appear to be well addressed in the methodology paper they provide here (PDF) while it is mentioned in the preliminary June report:
“One further consideration, when interpreting the ice thickness measurements made by the Catlin Arctic Survey team, may be navigational bias. Typically, the surface of First Year Ice floes are flatterthan that of multi‐year ice floes and because the team systematically seeks out flatter ice which is easier to travel over and camp on, there is a risk that the ice surveyed will not be representative.”
Since they make no mention of the potential measurement bias in the final report, it appears that there wasn’t anything but lip service consideration given to it in the early report, possibly to appease critics.
2.
One of the most prominent sea ice researchers in the world, Dr. Walt Meier of NSIDC said he would not use the Catlin data saying in a post here on WUWT:
“I don’t anticipate using the Catlin data.”
That begs the question then, beyond the use of the data for generating news stories like we’ve seen in the BBC and other media outlets, who will? Even the media outlets have ignored the actual data Catlin made available, preferring sound bites over data bytes.
1.
The Catlin Arctic Ice Survey knowingly presented false data to the public and to the media in their web presentation.
As many WUWT readers recall, it was here that it was discovered that Catlin’s website had bogus telemetry data on it, giving the impression of “live data from the ice” when in fact the data repeated in an endless loop from a short period.
Here’s the story from WUWT
Catlin Arctic Survey website recycles biotelemetry data?
Something quite odd is going on at the Catlin Arctic Survey website at: http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/
It appears that they are presenting recycled data from the biotelemetry sensors on the team. The “live from the ice” biotelemetry data for each team member is presented here:
http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/live_from_the_ice.aspx
Here is a screencap of what the biotelemetry section of that webpage looks like:
A WUWT commenter posted this:
karl heuer (07:40:46) :
The “Live from the Ice” biotelemetry is definitely not live:
When the data loads,
Pen Hadow core temp starts at 33.25 C every time the page loads, then increments up to 33.57, 33.64, 33.7, 33.75
every time, I have refreshed, cleared temp files and rebooted — still the same
WUWT commenter “hotrod” did his own check:
I just tried it looking at Pen Haddow’s pulse rate — Hmmm what are the odds that 32 consecutive pulse rate measurements would be identical?
Yes looks like the bio metric data is just white was to make their site look nifty, and has absolutely no value at all — perhaps they already have all their ice measurements in the can too?
When called out on the bogus telemetry data issue, the Catlin support team, rather than addressing the issue head on and with transparency, simply changed the web page for “live” telemetry to read “demonstrational”, and it remains that way today.
This is what it originally showed:
Of course they could just end the farce and remove it. Because, well, who needs demonstrational biotelemetry anyway?
They also posted this at the bottom of the main page:
An apology
We’d like to apologise to anybody who felt misled by our recent biometric data. The data was initially displayed in error in a way that gave the impression that it was live. The intended qualification and explanation that it was, in fact, delayed information, was at first missing. We have subsequently corrected this with specific information concerning the above data. We apologise for the errors and to anyone who may have found the data misleading.
The real question is: how long would they have let that “live” impression go on had WUWT not called them on it? Originally the URL for the “biotelemetry” was
http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/live_from_the_ice.aspx
Now that URL if typed in your browser is automatically redirected to:
http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/latestfromtheice
So with the words “telemetry” and “live_from_the_ice.aspx” it is clear what the original intent was. The apology is about saving face, nothing else.
So the question to readers and media is: with these sorts of issues listed above, do you really want to trust the data from a group of people that perform and present “science” in this way? If you do, it would seem to me that you are putting form over substance. Even if we didn’t have these trust issues, are 39 datapoints over a short section of the Arctic really that useful given the other tools shown to be at the disposal of real science?
The Catlin Arctic Ice Survey is in my opinion, nothing more than a badly executed public relations stunt covered with the thinnest veneer of attempted science.
Update: On the morning of 10/15 I fixed about a half dozen typographical and grammatical errors in the essay. h/t to Harold Ambler and others for the tips on these. This included changing the description to “opportunistic explorers” in the first paragraph as in retrospect I felt my original description of was too harsh, since despite the shortcomings, omissions, and PR fluff, these people did a physical feat that few could do. My conclusion above remains unchanged by that fact though. – Anthony
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![The research aircraft Polar 5 "in Bremerhaven [Source: AWI] Das Forschungsflugzeug "Polar 5" in Bremerhaven [Quelle: AWI]](http://www.radiobremen.de/wissen/nachrichten/polarfuenf100_v-content16x9.jpg)



Correction it has disappeared from the Fox News home page in the latest news section which previously listed it but if you scroll waaaay down the page it does still appear in the scitech section on the bottom of the front page, but no longer as a bolded headline in latest news.
Larry
The catlin circus claim in their methodology that they drilled “up to 10” holes in the evening of each day, the location chosen to reflect the terrain over which they had travelled that day.
Given that their spreadsheet summary only shows records for 39 out of the 73 days, then the absolute maximum number of holes would be 390. But of course we all know what “up to 10 “means – they probably managed it once then decided it was too much hassle and cut it down to 1 subsequently. But to make up for the differences they stuck their tape measure down the hole a few times to get an average (it’s a bit difficult to tell from the top of a 2 to 4m hole only a few cm in diameter where the ice/water interface actually is). The difficulty will of course be compounded by the fact that the slush in the hole will be freezing pretty quickly. Hm, might have to clear it again with the auger – hey, call that another hole, no-one is looking! Also, I didn’t nitice a level or plumb-bob in the pictures so there is no certainty that the holes were vertical.
My vote for the actual number of holes drilled is therefore 48 at unique locations.
For those who missed it, the “full” data for March, April and May is on the last three pages of the spreadsheet referenced by our host in his ten points.
Still, it is better to base a report on ice decline on 39 measurements than base the whole theory of AGW on one Siberian tree!
I would get some popcorn and a supersize drink and sit around for the ‘eye8eon show’ but i suspect he won’t be back (and if he is I’m sure it will be with some more ‘capitalist pigs’ statements).
If he does come back, perhaps he will tell us how to live a puritan earth-friendly life.
Cassandra King (10:44:34) :
does anyone actually know the actual number they claimed to have drilled?
We have one photo-op with the light so bright that you can’t tell where Pen is.
We scrutinized it in this forum best we could, but there are no clues to be found that say “By golly, he really was there and drilled a hole”.
Most of the expedition was like that… thin evidence.
just the facts: i didn’t say anything about the antartic…..i said all over the world. you prove to me that it isn’t melting all over the world, and i’ll shut up and go home……..[snip].
Roger (13:46:16) : “OK which of you jokers wrote in pretending to be an alarmist using the soubriquet Eye8eon. Nice try but you overdid it – nobody is that stupid….. are they?”
I think Anthony forged it as a bonus joke for this amusing thread. The giveaway is the repeated presence of the word “idiot”, which I believe the moderators usually snip. No doubt he’s illustrating the very real extremist religious CAGW view via dramatization, i.e. “fake but accurate”. 🙂
On topic: Whereas the Catlin “Expedition” is fake and inaccurate.
*sigh* Some day I’ll learn proper HTML use:
…fake and inaccurate…
I wonder if this might possibly be the last we hear from them, at least in the UK.
A couple of years ago Newsnight (BBC) raised the issue that temperatures had been flat for years, and wasn’t this “extraordinary”? (IIRC that’s the word they used)
This last Wednesday, Newsnight has been on again, this time confronting the leader of the Green Party, the director of Greenpeace, and a Conservative politician, on whether the greens, having brought the environment to our attention, have now become too unpragmatic to be of further use, actually becoming the roadblocks to any solutions.
Personally, it looked like they ducked and dodged the accusation, whilst in the end, when pressed, they simply restated their view that, “small” changes will lead to “everything” changing.
Absent from the discussion was any reference to data, past or present, about the climate. No figures, no charts, no “unprecedented warming”, no ice data, no nothing.
The politician in the group simply noted that he didn’t think people would change their behavior, but he did think there was an interest in green that politicians could listen to (as a way to get elected, methinks).
But absent any fresh startling “evidence” of global warming, nor any newsworthy “unprecedented” discoveries, perhaps the media is now using greens for a different kind of story–the ineffectual idealists who are too lacking in pragmatism to actually solve the problems they’ve been so preachy about. The opening introductory clips were of people running around fully naked, with sound clips of them looking forward to the end of ambition and capitalism.
Those clips, stuff like Burning Man, were always available, it is just that I’ve not seen the media choose to show them before in this way.
Roger (13:46:16)
Well I hope it is parody but I suspect not. Unfortunately it has claimed to have bred. Shows that some women aren’t very fussy or discerning.
And can I just add, I’m glad Newsnight showed those green figureheads up for lacking real solutions. The environment is absolutely critical for life, as everybody knows, and has always known. But simply asking that we stop growing and stop developing and stop engineering high technology is not the answer and never has been–that’s just three men trapped in a mine deciding to breathe more slowly until they can be rescued–there is no rescue, there is nothing that “conservation” will grant us in the long run, there is only higher development and progress, for when we run out of brain power, then our species will go extinct.
Promoting “conservation&efficiency” as “sustainability” is the most ironic thing. A highly efficient system has no spare capacity for a crisis. A highly conserved system has no flexibility for a crisis. The people who want an end to “ambition” are the ones who lack the drive to get anything done, especially when it comes to the big problems. (Really, the greens make a weird study in shadow psychology.)
Well it’s still “hot” news here in Australia- on radio news early this a.m. I nearly fell out of bed laughing (FOOBL???). Not proof of global warming, but proof of global PR.
And last night on Catalyst, a “science” show, we had our top climate adviser Will Steffen proclaiming it’s worse than we thought- ocean temperatures at the upper level of projections, ice breaking off Antarctica raising sea level, a recent surge in CO2 concentration showing a weakening of the ocean sinks. Trouble is, otherwise intelligent people believe this nonsense.
Must be a climate conference coming up…
I’m really not concerned about number 1, I don’t even see it as an issue. I am really concerned about number 3 though. That to me is the really important aspect of this.
“I’m not asking anybody…I’m just telling everybody. We can look for the North Pole, or we can play ‘Here we go gathering Nuts in May’….”
Oh, I am sorry Eye8, I thought you said Eeyore.
Listening to my fascist local talk show this morning whilst driving to work I heard Fox radio news give the Club Med moving to Baffin Island report. I honestly never imagined it could be the Caitlin frostbite in the Summer report after what you did to them in the event, Anthony. They have no shame…uh,duh.
As per someone above suggesting the drilling by hand of all the holes is suspect, perhaps an audit is in order. Mr. McIntyre has experience with trees. I am sure there will be easy access to a Starbuck’s at the lakeside in Toronto this winter.
This was posted on this site a couple of months ago:
Here’s the Catlin linked re the drums:
All gone quite since then.
http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/
“From the Ice
Logistically, all the loose ends of the expedition have now been tied up.
On the 5th June, Kenn Borek Air scooped up the remaining fuel drums from our fuel cache on the Arctic Ocean, before returning to the base at Resolute.
At Cassandra King: I, too have found drilling ice with an augur to be incredibly exhausting. Their cutting edges are simply up to the task. Therefore I have begun to use augers, which function much more effectively.
I think I’m missing something.
Has “all over the world” become a new scientific method of measurement for ice extent?
And is the Antarctic not part of the world anymore?
I think this eye8eon must be a Klingon. The name certainly reminds me of something I met last time I visited Planet Gore.
DMI out of action for a week now what is happening. I would suspect ALL NH ice cryosphere etc from the past week or so except JAXA?
eye8eon (14:33:59) :
“just the facts: i didn’t say anything about the antartic…..i said all over the world.”
The second link that I provided is “Global” Sea Ice Area:
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/global.daily.ice.area.withtrend.jpg
It is from Cryoshpere Today;
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/
which bases its data on “Snow and ice data provided by the National Center for Environmental Prediction/NOAA”.
I think eye8eon is a language called txtork. It’s a variation of Newspeak.
In English I think it means ‘I hate Eon’ though I can’t be sure. I gave up on learning new languages after 50. (Unless they’re useful languages 😉 ).
DaveE.
I don’t let it sour me on all arctic expeditions. There was one taken by Birkeland who directly observed the auroral lights, which yielded tremendous results to science. Also, I believe Alfred Wegener froze in Greenland taking supplies back to some stranded fellows from his team, if I remember. He was a great man.
These other types always have an entourage and a catering service and lots of cameras following them around.
As for the antartic, again not sure.
An ‘artic’ is an abbreviation for an articulated lorry, (Semi on the U.S.A.), so I suppose it means not an articulated lorry, (semi).
DaveE.
“eye8eon (14:33:59) :
just the facts: i didn’t say anything about the antartic…..i said all over the world. you prove to me that it isn’t melting all over the world, and i’ll shut up and go home……..[snip].”
I didn’t know Antartica wasn’t part of this world, nor did I know there was ice melt in Jamaica (But only in my pina colada). The world is populated with people with very little insight into reality.
I would like to draw your attention to the BBC news website dated 12th October which had an article by Paul Hudson ,the climate correspondent BBc news ,with the title WHATS HAPPENED TO GLOBAL WARMING ? in which he puts forward the case for GLOBAL COOLING ! Please read because this is the first time the BBC has ever admitted the possibility that its normal stand on global warming ( ie. that man made CO2 emissins are responsible), may be wrong . An astounding turn around .
Another bad prediction by Al Gore!?!
http://blog.algore.com/2009/10/a_prediction.html
Come on all, what was the reason for the “expedition” in the first place? It wasn’t science! It was – -well, let’s follow the money:
The European Climate Exchange (ECX) was started in 2005 by the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) started in 2003 with initial funding of $1 million from the Chicago-based Joyce Foundation whose advisory board (which approved the funding) included one Illinois State Senator by the name of Barack Obama amongst 18 other members. Obama’s early connections to and approval of “cap-and-trade” taxation schemes is well documented. The Joyce Foundation president, Paula DePerna, became CCX’s VP at the point of a second and much larger tranche of money.
The ECX and the CCX, along with Chicago Climate Futures Exchange (CCFE) are now (as of 2006) held (owned) by an entity call the Climate Exchange, PLC. The CLE is a holding company of sorts registered in The Isle of Man. The CCFE also started the California Climate Action Registry, (CCAR) a kind of futures exchange.
The CLE has also started the California Climate Exchange (CACX), the Montreal Climate Exchange (MCEX) AND the Insurance Futures Exchange (IFEX). Any bets as to which “insurance” company is a member of the exchange?? Here are some members of the CACX: the cities of – CHICAGO, OAKLAND, BERKELEY, BOULDER AND PORTLAND, PLUS VARIOUS COUNTIES LIKE SACRAMENTO AND STATES LIKE NEW MEXICO. I’m sure I do not need to spell out where the money is coming from that they are paying to these “exchanges” to “off set” their carbon foot prints.
I have a lovely chart of all of this, but have no clue as to how to paste it into a blog…..
So what you say, you do not live in any of those locations. Well, here are some the other advisory board members of the CHICAGO CLIMATE EXCHANGE:
Elizabeth Dowdeswell, former head of the UN Environmental Program (UNEP) who is remembered for leading the organization into the deepest crisis in its history during her five-year tenure from 1993 to 1998.
Rajenra Pachauri, head of the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; the panel’s reports over a 10 year period tracked scientific studies and in 2007 concluded that the weight of scientific evidence now showed not only that global warming was occurring, but that it was a man-made phenomenon and that its consequences were immediate and dire. The reports have become the basis for all the proposals to bring about drastic reductions in man-made greenhouse gases, starting immediately.
Michael Jammit Cutajar, former executive director of the U.N. Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC); The UNFCCC is supposed to keep the Kyoto Accords process moving forward by setting up meeting between member states like the summit on climate change in Copenhagen later this year, where a successor to the Kyoto Accords is expected to be drafted and signed. Thomas Lovejoy, former science adviser to UNEP and currently senior adviser to the president of the U.N. Foundation, which was originally founded with a $1 billion gift from CNN founder Ted Turner. The foundation calls itself “an advocate for the U.N. and a platform for connecting people, ideas and resources to help the United Nations solve global problems. He is also chief biodiversity advisor to the World Bank and senior adviser to the president of the United Nations Foundation. He is noted for developing “debt-for-nature swaps,” under which environmental groups purchase troubled foreign debt at low prices. They then convert the discounted debt into local currency to purchase environmentally sensitive tracts of land. Critics of the scheme argue that the plan deprives poor nations of a chance to extract raw materials that are critical to their economic growth.
And the most controversial figure is, Maurice Strong, whom was one of former Secretary General Kofi Annan’s key aides at the U.N. for years until the Iraq Oil-for-Food scandal forced him to leave. Since then Strong has lived mostly in China.
On one level Strong’s involvement in the exchange is not surprising. He has been a player in virtually all the U.N.’s environmental initiatives over the past four decades. His work includes organizing the 1972 U.N. conference on the environment in Stockholm, which was a launch pad for the worldwide environmental movement, as well as the 1992 Earth Summit and the Kyoto Accords.
Strong left the U.N. under a cloud in 2005, after an investigation into the corruption ravaged Oil-for-Food Program revealed that he had received nearly $1 million in cash from Tongsun Park, a South Korean businessman who was later convicted of conspiring to bribe U.N. officials who ran the program. Strong claimed that the money was an investment by Park in a company owned by Strong’s son. He admitted personally taking other money from Park but claimed it was for an “office rental.” After the revelations Strong resigned his last U.N. post as Annan’s North Korea envoy and moved to China.
So what was the purpose of the expedition? Right, 1,500 holes of propaganda that would make Joseph Goebbels proud.