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
Sponsored IT training links:
Pass your 4A0-103 exam in first try by using 156-515.65 practice questions written and formulated by SSCP certified experts.
![The research aircraft Polar 5 "in Bremerhaven [Source: AWI] Das Forschungsflugzeug "Polar 5" in Bremerhaven [Quelle: AWI]](https://i0.wp.com/www.radiobremen.de/wissen/nachrichten/polarfuenf100_v-content16x9.jpg?w=1110&quality=83)



Some calculations:
1500 holes in 39 days = 38.46 holes per day. (This is from their spreadsheet)
Ice drills drill about 3mm per revolution (Cassandra King).
Average thickness = 1.8 meters or 600 revolutions of drill.
Assume each revolution takes 1 second.
Assume measurements take 2 minutes.
Assume packing/unpacking drill equipment takes 4 minutes.
With the above we have each hole takes 16 minutes.
With 38.46 holes per day this means they drilled for a total of 10.25 hours per day.
Assume 10 hours sleep per day.
Assume 1 hour for each food break and 3 food breaks per day.
This breaks down their drilling days as follows:
10 Hours sleep.
10.25 Hours drilling.
3 Hours setting up, preparing and eating food.
This leaves a total of 45 minutes for travel on every drilling day. If you take into account the holes they drilled then they travelled for 1 minute 17 seconds between drilling each hole.
From BBC report on Catlin Expedition, April 9 2009:
“But when the expedition, the Catlin Arctic Survey, set off in late February, it encountered an unexpected wind chill as low as minus 70 degrees Celsius, and the technology failed.”
From BBC report on April 14 2009:
“The expedition was blighted in the first few weeks by temperatures well below minus 40 Celsius, the equivalent of minus 70 allowing for the wind chill.”
Gee, Louise! How unexpected was that! I mean the expedition surely couldn’t have expected a warmer welcome than that faced by previous explorers. Or did they?
And how about this for and an unashamed and blatant shifting of the goal-posts? From BBC report on Catlin expedition, February 21. This is before the expedition set off:
“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.
“We would like to use this information in real time to determine our skill in representing the observed ice thickness,” he told BBC News.
…
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.”
Now that the expedition is over, BBC has this piece of info on October 14 under the headline “Arctic to be ‘ice-free in summer'”:
“Professor Wadhams said: “The Catlin Arctic Survey data supports the new consensus view – based on seasonal variation of ice extent and thickness, changes in temperatures, winds and especially ice composition – that the Arctic will be ice-free in summer within about 20 years, and that much of the decrease will be happening within 10 years.”
What? Do they mean to say arctic to be ice-free in summer not in 2016 but in 2029? Was this fresh irreversible appointment with doomsday gathered from the raw Catlin expedition data?
Nope! It seems Catlin data merely “supports the new consensus view”. The new consensus was reached while the ridiculous expedition was away slogging hard to prove the imminent disappearance of Artic ice.
I can imagine a few of them, rich, unashamed and unrepentant, looking at the the vast white Arctic landscape in 2029 and saying: “Gee, Louise! That was unexpected!”
MarcH (13:24:34) :
According to the Catlin Group press release Hadow’s data will be worked into a publication by Professor Wadhams under the title of “Verification of Catlin Arctic Survey Surface Observation Techniques” (N. Toberg & P. Wadhams), for submission to the scientific journal “Cold Regions Science and Technology” (Elsevier).
From the “Cold Regions Science and Technology” ethical guidelines for authors:
“Authors may be asked to provide the raw data in connection with a paper for editorial review, and should be prepared to provide public access to such data (consistent with the ALPSP-STM Statement on Data and Databases), if practicable, and should in any event be prepared to retain such data for a reasonable time after publication.”
Best chuckle today!
eye8eon (12:01:03) :
[…amusing rant…]
dont reply, because i won’t read it or acknowledge it. you’re an idiot
REPLY: Thanks for your brilliant insight and list of “probablys”, which all happen to be wrong. The website you put in the name entry is interesting also http://eye8eon.wordpress.com
– Anthony
Now, count ’em…
Jeff Shifrin (12:05:03) :
…that’s one and…
Andy Pag (12:15:04) :
…that’s two, and the very next post…
eye8eon (12:39:54) :
“thanks for the advert for my anti-E.ON website……by the way, how can you call satellite footage of depleted ice shelves, “wrong” – you truly are an idiot.”
Not so keen on keeping promises eh, eye8eon?
In the immortal words of Bugs Bunny, “What a maroon!”
Not sure if your blogging system is working for me ATM – delete if duplicates appear:
This blog appeared on The Australian newspaper this morning from former minieter for resources, and also finance minister, Peter Walsh:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,26215154-5015664,00.html
Oddly The Australian also ran the disappearing arctic ice story since yesterday. Hence my somewhat terse blog reply (copied here in case it gets nipped in the bud there)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Peter – your assessment is dead on accurate, but you will cop it from the dogma swilling crowd and the rent-seekers. You are wrong in saying only Fairfax and the ABC are supporting AGW (I almost threw up watching the naive responses from the young girl on Q&A last night … that was pathetic), because this paper is not averse to the odd AGW fairy story.
Witness the disappearing arctic ice story:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,26215581-11949,00.html
Within a day this story was shown to be a complete fraud here:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/10/15/top-ten-reasons-why-i-think-catlin-arctic-ice-survey-data-cant-be-trusted/
Most importantly it clearly shows the rent-seeking behaviour in action (how topical), because the expedition sponsor was none other than Catlin Underwriting Ambition:
http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/sponsors
Three guesses what the major sponsor (Catlin) does for crust? You guessed it:
http://www.catlin.com/
They (in their own words):
“Catlin Group Limited is a leading global specialty insurer and reinsurer. We provide creative risk management solutions and excellent financial security to clients worldwide.”
I did all this in a few minutes and a few mouse clicks and I am not even a journo…. so why, oh why, do stories like this even see the light of day? It is an embarrassment to journalism.
(No doubt this will not be blogged up so I have taken the liberty to copy my response to Wahtsupwiththat for posterity.)
Bill Tuttle (02:57:28) :
I can’t believe no one has done this today. The story is wrong – I think they rounded up the number of data points (1,350) to 1,500.
The spreadsheet at http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/science is an incredibly poorly laid out mess, but the number of data points is easy to fish out:
Ice Free Snow Column Column Month Totals Thick board Depth grams Height Temp March 60 3 3 46 8 0 0 April 1002 142 142 610 108 0 0 May 288 30 30 138 30 30 30 ---- Total 1350This says they drilled 175 holes, I see they drilled 10 on several days, but that’s what settles into 39 averaged ice depth readings. The majority of the 1500, err, 1350 were snow depth, a much easier thing
to measure than ice depth.
Here’s hoping the <pre> stuff works as intended.
It looks like this Prof Wadhams has been involved with the expedition since the early days.
Here’s an excerpt from http://www.catlinarcticsurvey.com/assets/downloads/CAS%20Snow%20and%20Ice%20Measurements%20Methodology.pdf which will strike awe in the hearts and minds of anyone who appreciates good data:
In other words, they drilled where it was easy to be easy on the team and equipment. I guess modal thickness is the most common thickness, so you can write off the ridges immediately, escpecially the 5 meter ice because that’s too thick to measure.
I sure seems like that airborne radar was the way to go!
In case anyone was thinking I was being overly harsh about the “young girl’s” comments on yesterday’s Q and A program, you can view it here:
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/
and read the transcript here:
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/txt/s2708880.htm?show=transcript
The young girl (Deepa Gupta) made such priceless comments as:
“Yes, I understand that they do both want more electricity but I think that that lies in renewables. Like, for Australia it is one of the windiest, one of the sunniest countries in the world. It’s surrounded by ocean. It has the best hot rocks and, you know, for Australia – the CSIRO’s study, I think, says that in the next 15 years we can actually generate 1 million clean energy jobs. ”
Sign me up for them jobs! and…
” To be honest, it just feels like non on here actually cares about the issue of climate change. Like this is threatening the survival of – like the future of my generation and all future generation and you’re sitting here debating – you know, one party debating like 10 per cent for 2020 and another party debating whether we do anything or not, full stop.”
and…
“But to ensure the survival of like all nations and people and to stop – like, you know, to stop countries from going underwater, we need to aim for like 350 parts per million as a safe – like the upper limit of safe carbon – carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. And for that, like, Australia needs to be taking targets of like 40 per cent of more by 2020 and none of you guys are even talking about it. ”
Her comments at one point were met with the loudest audience applause for the entire show.
There is still a lot of work to be done gents if her understanding of the issues is anything to go by…
Thank you Anthony for putting up with this one more time.
For reference, here’s a montage “demonstrational” articles you may have missed.
Catlin Survey Begins Arctic Trek:
Supported by some 16 tons of aviation fuel left in depots across the Arctic Ocean ice, the Catlin Expedition team launched its environmental survey of just how fast global warming is melting the pole.
Follow the Catlin Expedition Online:
You can follow the progress of the Catlin Expedition Online. Track location, blogs, and in a first, live data on the team’s Physiometric progress.
“For the first time on an Arctic expedition you can monitor what parts of the team are frostbitten and to what degree. The page will show how many toes and fingers each member still has in real time!”
Rough Start For Catlin Explorers:
The expedition reports it will be relying on manually dug holes for data after their ice radar failed.
“It’s bloody cold here. We actually had to burn most of our electronics to dry our soggy sleeping bags. However, we suffer no loss of data. I drill a 2 m hole in sea ice formed at -40C in about a minute and a half,” Pen Hadow reported.
In Ironic Twist, Polar Bears Endanger Catlin Team:
Sadly, Polar Bears ate one of the Catlin explorers yesterday.
“Ann was taking a sun reading and a pack apparently ganged up and attacked her. There were so many. I thought these things were extinct!”
The team’s mission control confirmed the loss of Ann despite the online Physiometrics showing she still has all ten toes and fingers.
Catlin Team Announces Progress
After only a month and a half, the Catlin Expedition announced the team has traveled half the distance to their destination, the North Pole.
When asked why their reported Lat-Long appears stationary, expedition leaders replied, “First year ice appears not only vulnerable to summer melting, but remarkably fast moving, but we’re keeping up.”
Catlin Team Rescued
Pen “The Human Drill” Hadow gave the rescuers two thumbs up. “We will miss the Arctic. Every time I leave, I feel like I’m leaving a piece of me behind.”
Physiometrics confirmed Hadow leaves with only two thumbs remaining.
Catlin Team Reaches North Pole – July 31, 2009
“The expedition was a complete team effort and we consider our equipment part of the team. Yesterday, our fuel barrels crossed over the North Pole. We’re very proud of our team for finally accomplishing this important goal. We didn’t expect first year drums to make it so far.”
Arctic Open to Navigation in Ten Years
The Catlin team reported yesterday that in ten years time the Arctic will be considered an open navigable waterway.
Maritime stocks skyrocketed on the report.
Nice wrap up and interesting information explored in the comments, as well.
I would like to clarify one issue (pertaining to my statement WRT preconceived “goals” and data) and to Anthony’s point #7.
Having an idea about “the outcome” when you start an experiment is of course not wrong or suspect in itself. On the contrary, it is likely the most frequent approach in hypothesis testing.
When adressing the question: has ice in the N of Canada/Greenland become thinner, this can be regarded as a test hypothesis stating:
“The ice in a specific sudy are is observable thinner” (than a specified and well-defined/representative thickness).
Standard procedure would then be to define a zero hypothesis (H0) and to test if observations enables you to reject the zero-hypothesis (and thereby accepting the the test hypothesis e.g. “The ice in the study area has become thinner”) The philosophically inclined would know that this apparently cumbersome detour via a zero-hypothesis is caused by the inherent logical weakness of inference from “INDUCTION”.
Anyway, the appropriate and decent thing(s) to do would be to
a) When you do not have such data , to acknowledge that you do not have sufficcient data (or of sufficient quality) to reject the zero-hypothesis
b) Specify the test, the statistical sgnificance AND THE STATISTICAL POWER of the tests employed to reach you eventual conclusions
Anyway, The Catlin team has glaring errors in almost any aspect of proper hypothesis testing. All the way from the representativeness of the sample sites (omitting pack-ice), too few samples, poor definition of benchmark ice- situation etc etc.
Cassanders
In Cod we trust
Bulldust:
“Her [Deepa Gupta] comments at one point were met with the loudest audience applause for the entire show.”
The Aussie’s must be completely wacko. I suspect in the UK she would be met with disinterested silence – unless the audience where handpicked enviro’s. Could that be the reason?
http://www.hulu.com/watch/101706/castle-fool-me-once
Latest episode of Castle portrays a con artist who cons the schools of NYC into funding an arctic expedition that consisted of webcam broadcasts from a tent in his upper west side apartment. Sounds like Castle’s script writers are taking tips from Pen Hadow…
Data collection on thin ice
http://blogs.theaustralian.news.com.au/letters/index.php/theaustralian/comments/data_collection_on_thin_ice/
I know the BBC Department that’s been involved with this deserves a good (virtual) kicking.
But thanks to another BBC team, there is some great video evidence to the contrary. In May 2007, the BBC Top Gear team drove in Toyota pick-up trucks all the way to the magnetic North Pole. Yes, they did find some thin ice, but their main challenge was too much ice, not a shortage!
Here’s a BBC video of the event – please have a look!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/topgear/extras/production_notes/polar_special.shtml
and a Wiki article
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilux_Arctic_Challenge
Nonetheless, here is the latest pronouncement involving the Catlin survey from Fox News: “Scientist: Arctic Ocean to Be Ice-Free in Summer”
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,566601,00.html
“LONDON — Global warming will leave the Arctic Ocean ice-free during the summer within 20 years, raising sea levels and harming wildlife such as seals and polar bears, a leading British polar scientist said on Thursday.
Peter Wadhams, professor of ocean physics at the University of Cambridge, said much of the melting will take place within a decade…
…Wadhams, one of the world’s leading experts on sea ice cover in the North Pole region, compared ice thickness measurements taken by a Royal Navy submarine in 2007 with evidence gathered by the British explorer Pen Hadow earlier this year.
…Hadow and his team on the Catlin Arctic Survey drilled 1,500 holes to gather evidence during a 280 mile walk across the Arctic. They found the average thickness of ice-floes was 1.8 metres, a depth considered too thin to survive the summer’s ice melt….”
The usual catastrophic predictions follow…
Sigh.
Moderator – sorry used old email address in submission. New one is attached to this one.
For those keeping track, eye8eon posted a very insightful comment on his blog http://eye8eon.wordpress.com/ today:
eye8eon Says:
16/10/2009 at 20:29
“But I will say this…I totally believe what I write, give or take a few omissions or errors, after all, I’m self educated. I left school with no GCSE’s and was in prison whilst my school friends were learning how to be adults, etc. I was fighting for my sanity and health in a young offenders jail. Thats my own fault. Whilst there, i met an anarchist named john, from brum. He told me a few things, and it all clicked with the stuff I heard as I was growing up around rebels and political activists. The government lies and kills, capitalism is bad, etc, etc.
So my views will never be changed, ever…certainly not by someones comments, even well formed arguments, because this guys not for turning…….”
WWF is probably the World Wildlife fund. This site is as biased as the artic expeditions was flawed. Would the authors bet their kids lives that the global climate will not slip out of equilibrium? It appears they may do just that. I prefer to take a more conservative course and moderate our behavior and lifestyles to assure we have a proper functioning climate system 50 years from now.
I’ve copied this reply from Richard Black’s BBC blog
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/richardblack/2009/10/climate_issue.html#comments
Post #280
A number of comments here have raised issues connected with our reporting of Arctic stories in general, and in particular of the Catlin Arctic survey. As Catlin was David Shukman’s story, and as David has covered the Arctic regularly over the years, I asked him if he’d like to respond to some of the points you raised – here’s his reply:
Hi,
The messages cover a range of questions so I hope the following provides answers:
The Catlin Arctic Survey: We never shrank from covering the failures and mishaps of the expedition, reporting on the breakdown of the Sprite portable radar and the telemetry system among others. We explained how a combination of equipment failures and bad weather forced the team to abandon the original objective of the North Pole. The delay in resupply flights and the resulting shortage of food were also part of our coverage. It’s hard to see how that constitutes granting the expedition unwarranted publicity.
However, the fact remains that the expedition did then adapt and managed to gather ice measurements by hand-drilling, albeit over a shorter distance than planned. Several readers question the validity of the data, with one quoting Dr Walt Meier of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado as saying that he did not “anticipate using the Catlin data”. However, that phrase was extracted from a blog in which Dr Meier goes on to say that the Catlin survey could provide “ground truth” to corrobate other sources.
This is where the Catlin expedition can be particularly valuable. To have a group out on the ice taking direct measurements of thickness across a relatively large region (compared to most field expeditions) of the Arctic is something that has only rarely, if ever, been done before. It is unfortunate that the radar may not have worked as well as hoped, but that is the nature of field work, especially in harsh polar environments – things almost never go according to plan. The radar would essentially provide a continuous transect of thickness estimates over several hundred kilometers. However, the drill hole measurements taken regularly over the route will still likely be valuable.
The data has since been passed via Professor Wadhams to a network of Arctic researchers including the NSIDC and the European Damocles project.
Readers further question how the terrible weather which the survey encountered can be squared with the notion of warming. The expedition took place in the tail-end of winter. That was always the plan both because it’s the state of the winter ice that scientists find most useful (before the summer melt) and because any expedition needs to be completed before the ice breaks up.
Professor Peter Wadhams: Like any academic he inevitably needs funding – there’s nothing unusual in that – but his credentials as a polar specialist are surely hard to deny. A veteran of submarine missions under the ice with the Royal Navy and numerous expeditions on the ice itself over the past 40 years, he has never been someone content only with computer modelling. And he is not alone in bringing forward the forecasts for the timing of Arctic melt. Since the record melt of September 2007, a growing number in this field have radically revised their forecasts too. Muyin Wang and James Overland, two noted US specialists, suggested a similar timeframe – 30 years – for seeing a nearly ice-free Arctic Ocean, in a paper published last year in Geophysical Research Letters.
Apparent contradictions: several readers have complained that the findings of the Catlin Arctic Survey, and associated comments from Professor Wadhams, are contradicted by the results of an airborne survey, known as PAM-ARCMIP, carried out by an international consortium of researchers including the Alfred Wegener Institute of Germany. It reported finding ice which was thicker than expected. As I understand, the airborne survey did not follow the route taken on the Catlin expedition but instead focused on areas further east and north.
The fact that the aerial measurements found thicker ice along the northern coasts of Ellesmere Island and Greenland is explained by Professor Wadhams. He and others have for some years forecast that warming would have the effect of dislodging older, multi-year ice allowing the ocean currents to drive it into that very area, on its approach to the Fram Strait and out of the Arctic Ocean. It does not mean that the Arctic ice is “getting thicker”, as some have written; instead, it means that the thickest ice appears to be breaking up and then accumulating, as predicted, in one particular region.
Patterns of melting: more than one reader has suggested that we are ignorant of the fact that much of the Arctic sea ice melts in the summer and re-freezes in the winter, and that we are also somehow ignoring evidence that the ice is regrowing. This follows the confirmation that the peak melt this year did not set a new record. My colleague Richard Black has addressed this in this blog post. But to restate this: the data show that this year’s melt was the third in a row to be well below the average since the satellite record began in 1979. The past five years have seen the five lowest ice extents since that record started and, according to the NSIDC, the rate of decline is currently running at 11.2% per decade. It’s worth noting that in September 2007, the sea-ice shrank to the extent originally forecast for 2055.
David Shukman
“It’s worth noting that in September 2007, the sea-ice shrank to the extent originally forecast for 2055.”
Just shows how useless their forecasts are.
What peer reviewed scientific media was this study published in? (if it wasn’t, why are we even discussing it?)
How old is the oldest ice in the Arctic? The impression I get regarding perennial ice at the NP is that it should be permanent. However, I would have thought that with the currents and wind the ice gets completely replaced over a period of time. So, what is an expected age of this ice, because it is not the same as land based perennial ice?
From the BBC (October 2009)
Pen Hadow said he was shocked by the image of how “in my lifetime we’re looking at changing how the planet looks from space.”
He also described how polar explorers were having to change their methods from the days when sledges could be pulled by dogs over the ice.
“Dogs can swim but they can’t tow a sledge through water which is what’s needed now.”
“Now we have to wear immersion suits and swim and we need sledges that can float. I can foresee needing sledges that are more like canoes that you also pull over the ice.”
From the National Geographic (March 1991)
‘The hard way to the North Pole’
“We were crossing ocean covered by a crust of moving ice that cracked and buckled constantly, leaving leads of open water, some so wide we could not see the other side. These we had to ski along until we found a narrow neck to cross…
Past expeditions would wait for days for water to freeze over, but we didn’t let smaller leads stop us. We had designed our sledges extra wide and high to act as boats.”
I have NGs going back to the 1960s. There have been numerous articles on the Arctic, and I remember always about the unpredictably of the ice and how expeditions have a short time before the spring breakup.
The Catlin story was photocopied by the St. Petersburg Times blog site on energy and the environment. I posted a link to WUWT. The reporter actually responded, saying that Anthony is a weatherman, not a climatologist. Also, the reporter claimed to have contacted Dr. Meier regarding his previous submission to WUWT on the Catlin expedition, and that Anthony has taken Dr. Meier’s comment (“I don’t anticipate using the Catlin data.”) out of context.
The posting is here. Anthony, you might want to drop by and comment if you think its important. Its unusual that this reporter is responding to blog comments.
http://blogs.tampabay.com/energy/2009/10/arctic-to-be-largely-icefree-in-summer-months-within-a-decade-says-new-study.html#comments
Hi All,
I spotted this comment from the UK Met Office (who are usually first in line when banging the drum for AGW):
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/corporate/pressoffice/2009/pr20091015b.html
Seems they are now backtracking furiously and have little faith in the Pen Hadow “research”.