Nov 24 Statement from UEA on the CRU files

Climatic Research Unit update – November 24, 3.30pm

The University of East Anglia has released statements from Prof Trevor Davies, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Research, Prof Phil Jones, head of the Climatic Research Unit, and from CRU.

Statement from Professor Trevor Davies, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Research

The publication of a selection of the emails and data stolen from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) has led to some questioning of the climate science research published by CRU and others. There is nothing in the stolen material which indicates that peer-reviewed publications by CRU, and others, on the nature of global warming and related climate change are not of the highest-quality of scientific investigation and interpretation. CRU’s peer-reviewed publications are consistent with, and have contributed to, the overwhelming scientific consensus that the climate is being strongly influenced by human activity. The interactions of the atmosphere, oceans, land, and ice mean that the strongly-increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere do not produce a uniform year-on-year increase in global temperature. On time-scales of 5-10 years, however, there is a broad scientific consensus that the Earth will continue to warm, with attendant changes in the climate, for the foreseeable future. It is important, for all countries, that this warming is slowed down, through substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions to reduce the most dangerous impacts of climate change. Respected international research groups, using other data sets, have come to the same conclusion.

The University of East Anglia and CRU are committed to scientific integrity, open debate and enhancing understanding. This includes a commitment to the international peer-review system upon which progress in science relies. It is this tried and tested system which has underpinned the assessments of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. It is through that process that we can engage in respectful and informed debate with scientists whose analyses appear not to be consistent with the current overwhelming consensus on climate change

The publication of a selection of stolen data is the latest example of a sustained and, in some instances, a vexatious campaign which may have been designed to distract from reasoned debate about the nature of the urgent action which world governments must consider to mitigate, and adapt to, climate change. We are committed to furthering this debate despite being faced with difficult circumstances related to a criminal breach of our security systems and our concern to protect colleagues from the more extreme behaviour of some who have responded in irrational and unpleasant ways to the publication of personal information.

There has been understandable interest in the progress and outcome of the numerous requests under information legislation for large numbers of the data series held by CRU. The University takes its responsibilities under the Freedom of Information Act 2000, Environmental Information Regulations 2004, and the Data Protection Act 1998 very seriously and has, in all cases, handled and responded to requests in accordance with its obligations under each particular piece of legislation. Where appropriate, we have consulted with the Information Commissioners Office and have followed their advice.

In relation to the specific requests at issue here, we have handled and responded to each request in a consistent manner in compliance with the appropriate legislation. No record has been deleted, altered, or otherwise dealt with in any fashion with the intent of preventing the disclosure of all, or any part, of the requested information. Where information has not been disclosed, we have done so in accordance with the provisions of the relevant legislation and have so informed the requester.

The Climatic Research Unit holds many data series, provided to the Unit over a period of several decades, from a number of nationally-funded institutions and other research organisations around the world, with specific agreements made over restrictions in the dissemination of those original data. All of these individual series have been used in CRU’s analyses. It is a time-consuming process to attempt to gain approval from these organisations to release the data. Since some of them were provided decades ago, it has sometimes been necessary to track down the successors of the original organisations. It is clearly in the public interest that these data are released once we have succeeded in gaining the approval of collaborators. Some who have requested the data will have been aware of the scale of the exercise we have had to undertake. Much of these data are already available from the websites of the Global Historical Climate Data Network and the Goddard Institute for Space Science.

Given the degree to which we collaborate with other organisations around the world, there is also an understandable interest in the computer security systems we have in place in CRU and UEA. Although we were confident that our systems were appropriate, experience has shown that determined and skilled people, who are prepared to engage in criminal activity, can sometimes hack into apparently secure systems. Highly-protected government organisations around the world have also learned this to their cost.

We have, therefore, decided to conduct an independent review, which will address the issue of data security, an assessment of how we responded to a deluge of Freedom of Information requests, and any other relevant issues which the independent reviewer advises should be addressed.

Statement from Professor Phil Jones, Head of the Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia.

In the frenzy of the past few days, the most vital issue is being overshadowed: we face enormous challenges ahead if we are to continue to live on this planet.

One has to wonder if it is a coincidence that this email correspondence has been stolen and published at this time. This may be a concerted attempt to put a question mark over the science of climate change in the run-up to the Copenhagen talks.

That the world is warming is based on a range of sources: not only temperature records but other indicators such as sea level rise, glacier retreat and less Arctic sea ice.

Our global temperature series tallies with those of other, completely independent, groups of scientists working for NASA and the National Climate Data Center in the United States, among others. Even if you were to ignore our findings, theirs show the same results. The facts speak for themselves; there is no need for anyone to manipulate them.

We have been bombarded by Freedom of Information requests to release the temperature data that are provided to us by meteorological services around the world via a large network of weather stations. This information is not ours to give without the permission of the meteorological services involved. We have responded to these Freedom of Information requests appropriately and with the knowledge and guidance of the Information Commissioner.

We have stated that we hope to gain permission from each of these services to publish their data in the future and we are in the process of doing so.

My colleagues and I accept that some of the published emails do not read well. I regret any upset or confusion caused as a result. Some were clearly written in the heat of the moment, others use colloquialisms frequently used between close colleagues.

We are, and have always been, scrupulous in ensuring that our science publications are robust and honest.

CRU statement

Recently thousands of files and emails illegally obtained from a research server at the University of East Anglia (UEA) have been posted on various sites on the web. The emails relate to messages received or sent by the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) over the period 1996-2009.

A selection of these emails have been taken out of context and misinterpreted as evidence that CRU has manipulated climate data to present an unrealistic picture of global warming.

This conclusion is entirely unfounded and the evidence from CRU research is entirely consistent with independent evidence assembled by various research groups around the world.

There is excellent agreement on the course of temperature change since 1881 between the data set that we contribute to (HadCRUT3) and two other, independent analyses of worldwide temperature measurements. There are no statistically significant differences between the warming trends in the three series since the start of the 20th century. The three independent global temperature data series have been assembled by:

• CRU and the Met Office Hadley Centre (HadCRUT3) in the UK.

• The National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Asheville, NC, USA.

• The Goddard Institute of Space Studies (GISS), part of the National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) in New York.

The warming shown by the HadCRUT3 series between the averages of the two periods (1850-99 and 2001-2005) was 0.76±0.19°C, and this is corroborated by the other two data sets.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its 4th Assessment Report (AR4) published in 2007 concluded that the warming of the climate system was unequivocal. This conclusion was based not only on the observational temperature record, although this is the key piece of evidence, but on multiple strands of evidence. These factors include: long-term retreat of glaciers in most alpine regions of the world; reductions in the area of the Northern Hemisphere (NH) snow cover during the spring season; reductions in the length of the freeze season in many NH rivers and lakes; reduction in Arctic sea-ice extent in all seasons, but especially in the summer; increases in global average sea level since the 19th century; increases in the heat content of the ocean and warming of temperatures in the lower part of the atmosphere since the late 1950s.

CRU has also been involved in reconstructions of temperature (primarily for the Northern Hemisphere) from proxy data (non-instrumental sources such as tree rings, ice cores, corals and documentary records). Similar temperature reconstructions have been developed by numerous other groups around the world. The level of uncertainty in this indirect evidence for temperature change is much greater than for the picture of temperature change shown by the instrumental data. But different reconstructions of temperature change over a longer period, produced by different researchers using different methods, show essentially the same picture of highly unusual warmth across the NH during the 20th century. The principal conclusion from these studies (summarized in IPCC AR4) is that the second half of the 20th century was very likely (90% probable) warmer than any other 50-year period in the last 500 years and likely (66% probable) the warmest in the past 1300 years.

One particular, illegally obtained, email relates to the preparation of a figure for the WMO Statement on the Status of the Global Climate in 1999. This email referred to a “trick” of adding recent instrumental data to the end of temperature reconstructions that were based on proxy data. The requirement for the WMO Statement was for up-to-date evidence showing how temperatures may have changed over the last 1000 years. To produce temperature series that were completely up-to-date (i.e. through to 1999) it was necessary to combine the temperature reconstructions with the instrumental record, because the temperature reconstructions from proxy data ended many years earlier whereas the instrumental record is updated every month. The use of the word “trick” was not intended to imply any deception.

Phil Jones comments further: “One of the three temperature reconstructions was based entirely on a particular set of tree-ring data that shows a strong correlation with temperature from the 19th century through to the mid-20th century, but does not show a realistic trend of temperature after 1960. This is well known and is called the ‘decline’ or ‘divergence’. The use of the term ‘hiding the decline’ was in an email written in haste. CRU has not sought to hide the decline. Indeed, CRU has published a number of articles that both illustrate, and discuss the implications of, this recent tree-ring decline, including the article that is listed in the legend of the WMO Statement figure. It is because of this trend in these tree-ring data that we know does not represent temperature change that I only show this series up to 1960 in the WMO Statement.”

The ‘decline’ in this set of tree-ring data should not be taken to mean that there is any problem with the instrumental temperature data. As for the tree-ring decline, various manifestations of this phenomenon have been discussed by numerous authors, and its implications are clearly signposted in Chapter 6 of the IPCC AR4 report.

Included here is a copy of the figure used in the WMO statement, together with an alternative version where the climate reconstructions and the instrumental temperatures are shown separately.

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November 24, 2009 10:10 am

Yes, Professors, we might listen when you help to:
1. Free the data
2. Free the code
3. Free the debate
So say it all together: Free the data. Free the code. Free the debate.

rbateman
November 24, 2009 10:11 am

Insteresting the Dr. John P. Holdren should come up:
1066337021.txt
You quote them from the NYT in 1998, referring to a study Mann and co-authors
published in that year, as saying
“Our conclusion was that the warming of the past few decades appears to be closely
tied to emission of greenhouse gases by humans and not any of the natural factors.”
and you ask “Does that seem to be careful in the nature of a claim?” My answer is:
Yes, absolutely, their formulation is careful and appropriate. Please note that they
did NOT say “Global warming is closely tied to emission of greenhouse gases by humans
and not any of the natural factors.” They said that THEIR CONCLUSION (from a
particular, specified study, published in NATURE) was that the warming of THE PAST FEW
DECADES (that is, a particular, specified part of the historical record) APPEARS (from
the evidence adduced in the specified study) to be closely tied… This is a carefully
specified, multiply bounded statement, which accurately reflects what they looked at and
what they found. And it is appropriately contingent –“APPEARS to be closely tied” —
allowing for the possibility that further analysis or new data could later lead to a
different perspective on what appears to be true.
With respect, it does not require a PhD in science to notice the appropriate boundedness
and contingency in the Mann et al. formulation. It only requires an open mind, a
careful reading, and a degree of understanding of the character of scientific claims and
the wording appropriate to convey them that is accessible to any thoughtful citizen.
__________________________________________________
After further review, in light of the acts of data expunging, peer-review hijacking, blacklisting from publication and other nefarious acts, the aspect of Mann et al monopolizing the soapbox to the extent of ensuring that they have the preponderance is the position of ‘settled science’ to be proven wrong is concocted.
In a level playing field, Mann et al would never have gotten as far as holding the scientific preponderance of expertise high ground to be disproven. They got there by rigging the process.

Bernie
November 24, 2009 10:13 am

Can you imagine the skit that could be created by SNL or Jon Stewart using the content of this PR statement together with interleafed snippets from the emails and comment files?

Arijigoku
November 24, 2009 10:18 am

I can believe this use of the word “trick” to mean a clever method. Harder to explain is the use of the phrase “hide the decline” and this is the one that made Professor Watson blush when Paxo asked him about it on Newsnight:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/newsnight
His answer was a bit odd too – apologising and conceding that they needed to change their language when he should have been able to hold his head high and explain what the phrase meant.
Another classic piece of body language he displays (especially in the VT clip) are the quick little shrugs of the shoulders. You can see this same behaviour in other television interviews with people who later turned out to be lying. For example, Shannon Mathews’ mother and Falcon Heene’s parents. Its a subconscious gesture that adds distance and ambiguity as if saying “hey – I don’t know everything…”
To criticise Newsnight, there are much juicier emails Newsnight they could have asked about and the mantras of consensus and models is beyond a joke now. They do deserve credit though for giving this subject air time.

George E. Smith
November 24, 2009 10:19 am

Well the CYA statement from those two eminent Professors, can be said to be generally consistent with the range of quality of the highly regarded output of carefully manipulated data construction that the Institute is known for; and is in conformance with the usual high standards of academic cloud formation.
The two gentelmen are to be commended for their forthright statement, under difficult circumstances.
It must be stressful beyond belief for such distinguished educators to operate normally, with Scotland Yard personel climbing all over the institution; and getting in the way of renowned scientologists seeking further revelations of Nature’s wonders.
It is so generous of these eminent academicians to take time out from their busy schedules of scientific data doctoring; to explain the nature of the serious mishap that has befallen such a noble establishment.

RobRoy
November 24, 2009 10:21 am

“…Go back to sleep america(UK,World)…go back to sleep…..your government is in control……go back to sleep…..”

geronimo
November 24, 2009 10:24 am

The MSM is still skating over the importance of this, and until it does there is a risk that these people won’t have to answer to public opinion via an investigation.
For my part, naively, I’d assumed that, although they agreed with the AGW camp, Revkin and Richard Black of the BBC were regular reporters. Froom the emails it looks like a certain Associate Professor in the US believes he can pull their chain whenever he wants.
As for the UEA I have just been to Norwich today, it is a fine university whose name will go down in history as the University that supported scientists found fiddling the books. The best approach the VC could have taken would be to stay quiet, or rather put out a statement saying that they were looking into the leak of the emails and documents and the associated allegations. This rebuttal makes sure that if the ship does go down then the VC will go with it.
I feel sorry for Trevor Davies, he’s an academic, not a politician, or a businessman, and would probably think that by denying any malfeasance which subsequently came to be proved he could say he did so in good faith and will get into the lifeboats. Sorry Trev, you’ve now put yourself four square into the conspirators’ camp and you’ll be called to account with them.

pedanticbastard
November 24, 2009 10:27 am

It seems to me that the three different statements were written, or edited, by the same person (who has a real problem with writing decent prose, and has particular difficulties when punctuating dependent clauses).

James Chamberlain
November 24, 2009 10:27 am

It’s too bad that SNL and Jon Stewart (along with most other media outlets) are hopelessly left-aimed and would never make such a skit about this.

Pamela Gray
November 24, 2009 10:32 am

And you can see Russia from my house!

November 24, 2009 10:36 am

It’s entirely likely that Phil Jones wrote the piece attributed to the VC. The VC was happy to go with it until he realises that he is riding the tiger and wants to get off.

supercritical
November 24, 2009 10:36 am

No need for a skit;
Here is Professor Julia Slingo, Chief Scientist of the Met Office, in an interview on this morning’s ‘Today programme’, defending AGW. It is really amusing:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b00nxcrz
She appears about 2 hrs 50 minutes in, and ironically it is the last item at the end of the show, and is about the end of the world …..
She actually admits that the ‘science’ is not actually settled.

Bob Meyer
November 24, 2009 10:38 am

“There is nothing in the stolen material which indicates that peer-reviewed publications by CRU, and others, on the nature of global warming and related climate change are not of the highest-quality of scientific investigation and interpretation. CRU’s peer-reviewed publications are consistent with, and have contributed to, the overwhelming scientific consensus that the climate is being strongly influenced by human activity.
I am so happy to hear that Baghdad Bob not only survived but has found gainful employment.

November 24, 2009 10:48 am

Did they mention, how the whole UEA agreed in stonewalling the FOIA requests? [Snip] them.
Cheers
Phil

November 24, 2009 10:53 am

Address the illegality, call it vexatious, whinge about the bombardment of FoI requests — in fact, anything to avoid addressing the substantive points. Typical, entirely unexpected, and very, very sad!

ShrNfr
November 24, 2009 10:59 am

I note that they have now increased the release of the data to the category of “stolen”. To be sure the data was not officially released, but stolen may be substantially less than correct. The Pwince of Whales, Pwince (Up)Chuck must be having a bad moment of it.

geogrl
November 24, 2009 11:01 am

Hmm…..could one of their “peer-reviewed publications” include the Journal of Irreproducible Results? No offense intended to JIR or its readers.

Mike Core
November 24, 2009 11:11 am

Its a shame they did not study the laws of geology….
Allen’s Laws of Field Geology
General scientific laws which apply:
1. The Basic Law (Murphy’s Law): If anything can go wrong, it will go wrong.
2. Law of Recognition: The more you know, the more you will see.
a. First corollary: You see what you are looking for.
b. Second corollary: You don’t see anything that you aren’t looking for.
Laws of Field Geology
1. Law of Complexity:
a. Coat’s First Law: The geology of an area is always more complicated than you think it is going to be.
b. The complexity of the geology is directly proportional to the area that is outcrop.
2. Law of Accuracy (Callaghan’s Law): The accuracy of mapping is inversely proportional to the distance from the main roads and the edge of the map.

paul revere
November 24, 2009 11:16 am

Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!

Jeremy
November 24, 2009 11:18 am

What a fool Trevor Davies is. His best chance of survival would have been to condemn Phil Jones et al and force him to resign. Distance himself and perform some damage control as fast as possible.
The way I see it Trevor’s head will inevitably roll also – simply for making such a stupid denial and publically supporting Phil when the facts speak so plainly.
It conflates the whole scandal – it is no longer possible to claim that this is teh work of a few rogue scientists who need to be punished – Trevor’s support mean that this whole pattern of systematic fraudulent behaviour is backed at the highest level of East Anglia University.
What a complete and utter fool.

jpkatlarge
November 24, 2009 11:18 am

Worth noting that Prof Trevor Davies is not the Vice Chancellor, but the Pro-Vice Chancellor – Research; presumably the Vice Chancellor, a historian (an Acton, no less) is being held in reserve.
But Trevor Davies is not just anyone: he was, for five years, the head of the CRU, until 1998, and has amongst other things a directorship of something called the Carbon Connections Development Fund, also based at UEA. So not exactly a disinterested superior, then. Maybe he’s the Al Gore of the East of England?

woodentop
November 24, 2009 11:21 am

The subject is about to be covered by C4 News (UK), it was given a short “heads-up” segment at the start of the news at 7pm…

DRE
November 24, 2009 11:28 am

How much overhead does UEA get from the CRU grants? I don’t think they are going to bite the hand that feeds them.

scientist
November 24, 2009 11:28 am

Phil Jones says:
“the world is warming is based on a range of sources: not only temperature records but other indicators such as sea level rise, glacier retreat and less Arctic sea ice.”
Oh yeah. That’s right. I forgot. The sea levels are rising. Didn’t Al Gore tell us that? And, oh yeah, the glaciers are melting. So you must not have been trying to mislead anyone, or keep real data from anyone, etc. And we’ll take it for granted, because Al Gore does, that humans make glaciers melt.
Phil Jones is appealing to the popular sentiment of whose who want to believe that AGW is happening. He’s fighting for global warming as a means of explaining away his emails. In other words, he’s saying “The glaciers are melting, so I must not be hiding anything or deceiving anyone.” In effect: The hypothesis proves the experiment.
He betrays the fact that this is about perception, “consensus”, media noise, hype, grant money, faith, etc.
Phil Jones is hardly a scientist, much less a person of integrity.

Trev
November 24, 2009 11:28 am

Scottie’s post says it all.