A devastating response to "There's nothing to see here, move along"

Guest post by John A

The usual armwaving denial that we should not trust our own lying eyes was delivered by a Harvard Professor in the Boston Globe:

James McCarthy, a respected Harvard professor who was a former Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change lead author, sent a letter to Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) today stressing that e-mails stolen from climate scientists do not undermine the evidenc[e] for manmade global warming.

McCarthy is board chair of both the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).

The letter reads “The scientific process depends on open access to methodology, data, and a rigorous peer-review process. The robust exchange of ideas in the peer-reviewed literature regarding climate science is evidence of the high degree of integrity in this process. The body of evidence that human activity is prominent agent in global warming is overwhelming. The content of these a few personal emails has no impact what-so-ever on our overall understanding that human activity is driving dangerous levels of global warming.”

In the words of Frank Drebin: “Nothing to see here, move along!”

Nothing to see here...from the Naked Gun 2 1/2

And then comes this response (comment 13) to which I’ve added a few paragraph breaks and one piece of emphasis:

I am a climate scientist, and it is clear that the evidence that “human activity is prominent [sic] agent in global warming” is NOT overwhelming. The repeated statement that it is does not make it so. Further, even if we accepted the hypothesis, cap-and-trade legislation does not do anything about it.

Here are the facts. We have known for years that the Mann hockey stick model was wrong, and we know why it was wrong (Mann used only selected data to normalize the principal component analysis, not all of it). He retracted the model. We have known for years that the Medieval Warm period occurred, where the temperatures were higher than they are now (Chaucer spoke of vineyards in northern England).

Long before ClimateGate it was known that the IPCC people were trying to fudge the data to get rid of the MWP. And for good reason. If the MWP is “allowed” to exist, this means that temperatures higher than today did not then create a “runaway greenhouse” in the Middle Ages with methane released from the Arctic tundra, ice cap albedo lost, sea levels rising to flood London, etc. etc.), and means that Jim Hansen’s runaway greenhouse that posits only amplifying feedbacks (and no damping feedbacks) will not happen now. We now know that the models on which the IPCC alarms are based to not do clouds, they do not do the biosphere, they do not explain the Pliocene warming, and they have never predicted anything, ever, correctly.

As the believers know but, like religious faithful, every wrong prediction (IPCC underestimated some trends) is claimed to justify even greater alarm (not that the models are poor approximations for reality); the underpredictions (where are the storms? Why “hide the decline”?) are ignored or hidden.

As for CO2, we have known for years that CO2 increases have never in the past 300,000 years caused temperature rise (CO2 rise trails temperature increase). IPCC scientists know this too (see their “Copenhagen Diagnosis”); we know that their mathematical fudges that dismiss the fact that CO2 has not been historically causative of temperature rise are incorrect as well. We have also known for years that the alleged one degree temperature rise from 1880 vanishes if sites exposed to urban heat islands are not considered.

We have long known that Jones’s paper dismissing this explanation (Jones, et al. 1990. Assessment of urbanization effects in time series of surface air temperature over land, Nature 347 169- 172) is wrong and potentially fraudulent (see the same data used to confirm urban heat islands in Wang, W-C, Z. Zeng, T. R Karl, 1990. Urban Heat Islands in China. Geophys. Res. Lett. 17, 2377-2380). Everyone except Briffa knows that the Briffa conclusions are wrong, and why they are wrong; groups in Finland, Canada (lots of places actually) show cooling by this proxy, not warming; the IPCC even printed the Finn’s plot upside down to convert the fact (cooling) into the dogma (warming).

Prof. McCarthy is, of course, part of the IPCC that has suppressed dissenting viewpoints based on solid climate science. His claim to support by “peer review” is nonsense; he has helped corrupt the peer review process. We now have documentary evidence that Jones, Mann, and the other IPCC scientists have been gaming peer review and blackballing opponents. On this point, the entire IPCC staff, including Prof. McCarthy, neither have nor deserve our trust.

We have tolerated years of the refusal of Mann and Jones to release data. Now, we learn that much of these data were discarded (one of about 4 data sets that exist), something that would in any other field of science lead to disbarment. We have been annoyed by Al Gore, who declared this science “settled”, refused to debate, and demonized skeptics (this is anti-science: debate and skepticism are the core of real science, which is never settled). The very fact that Prof. McCarthy attempts to bluff Congress by asserting the existence of fictional “overwhelming evidence” continues this anti-science activity.

All of this was known before Climategate. What was not known until now was the extent to which Jones and Mann were simply deceiving themselves (which happens often in science) or fraudently attempting to deceive others. I am not willing to crucify Jones on the word “trick”. Nor, for that matter, on the loss of primary data, keeping only “value added” data (which is hopelessly bad science, but still conceivably not fraud).

But the computer code is transparently fraudulent. Here, one finds matrices that add unexplained numbers to recent temperatures and subtract them from older temperatures (these numbers are hard-programmed in), splining observational data to model data, and other smoking guns, all showing that they were doing what was necessary to get the answers that the IPCC wanted, not the answers that the data held. They knew what they were doing, and why they were doing it.

If, as Prof. McCarthy insists, “peer review” was functioning, and the IPCC reports are rigorously peer reviewed, why was this not caught? When placing it in context made it highly likely that this type of fraud was occurring?

The second question is: Will this revelation be enough to cause the “global warming believers” to abandon their crusade, and for people to return to sensible environmental science (water use, habitat destruction, land use, this kind of thing)? Perhaps it will.

Contrary to Prof. McCarthy’s assertion, we have not lost just one research project amid dozens of others that survive. A huge set of primary data are apparently gone. Satellite data are scarcely 40 years old. Everything is interconnected, and anchored on these few studies. Even without the corruption of the peer review process, this is as big a change as quantum mechanics was in physics a century ago.

But now we know that peer review was corrupted, and that no “consensus” exists. The “2500 scientists agree” number is fiction (God knows who they are counting, but to get to this number, they must be including referees, spouses, and pets).

The best argument now for AGW is to argue that CO2 is, after all, a greenhouse gas, its concentration is, after all, increasing, and feedbacks that regulated climate for millions of years might (we can hypothesize) be overwhelmed by human CO2 emissions. It is a hypothesis worthy of investigation, but it has little evidentiary support.

Thus, there is hope that Climategate will bring to an end the field of political climatology, and allow climatology to again become a science. That said, people intrinsically become committed to ideas. The Pope will not become a Protestant even if angel Gabriel taps him on the shoulder and asks him to. Likewise, Prof. McCarthy may claim until the day he retires that there remains “overwhelming support” for his position, even if every last piece of data supporting it is controverted. As a graduate student at Harvard, I was told that fields do not advance because people change their minds; rather, fields advance because people die.

Posted by Sean December 2, 09 11:26 PM

Wowza! I can only hope that more people in the climate field stick their heads above the parapet and tell it like it is.


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Mark in Portland
December 4, 2009 9:24 am

Sean’s comment should be posted in blogs and newspapers around the world. Incredibly clear and devastating. It should be read aloud at the Hopenchangin’ Summit with a request that the esteemed members respond honestly and intelligently to it. I’d very much like to see what a vigorous response to Sean’s comment would amount to.
Thank you Sean, and of course Anthony Watts.

Alba
December 4, 2009 9:27 am

This would be a good article if the author had avoided admitting that he has prejudices. Admitting you have prejudices can undermine other things you say.
“As the believers know but, like religious faithful, every wrong prediction (IPCC underestimated some trends) is claimed to justify even greater alarm (not that the models are poor approximations for reality); the underpredictions (where are the storms? Why “hide the decline”?) are ignored or hidden.”

tj
December 4, 2009 9:27 am

At top levels. in many areas of research, most universities have been tainted by grant monies. The Ivy League leads the way. MIT is every bit as guilty as Harvard as Stanford as ….. down the line of both public and private institutions.
No more time to proofread. Sorry for the gaffes.

peat
December 4, 2009 9:31 am

I also would like to know who Sean is. His writing style makes him sound legit. I occasionally leave comments (benign) without revealing my name — so I understand that. I am a physics professor, not involved in climate research, and have followed WUWT and other sites for the past 1.5 years. I signed the Oregon petition back in the 90’s without realizing my name would be published on the internet as a signer. In the last year, I have received some flack about it from my colleagues and others at my university (including professors in geology, chemistry) who noticed my name there. They use the ‘authority’ argument a lot. The immediate instinct of scientists is to trust other scientists outside their field who are mainstream and knowledgeable. Frankly, this attitude almost always works for the best, and so you have to wonder when you go against the grain. But I refuse to remove my name from the petition as long as I am unable convinced that global warming is a problem.
I can say by watching progress in my own field of laser physics, that there arise fashions and trends in science that tend to self perpetuate for a time. My impression is that the present field of climate science in large part was developed in response to the global-warming hypothesis. This means that young scientists trained in this field generally need to accept the premise before they can even start. Otherwise, they have no access to a graduate research stipend nor an advisor (with a few exceptions). This is a strong feedback mechanism that seems to have passed a tipping point years ago. I have confidence in science in the long run, however, that a correct understanding will be reached. This is because scientists in general enjoy proving something previously accepted to be wrong. In any case, as the climate record unfolds in the coming years, the answer will become clear — whatever that outcome. The world is doing the experiment now.

dbleader61
December 4, 2009 9:32 am

21st Century McCarthyism….we all know how well the 20th century version served us.

Bill Marsh
December 4, 2009 9:32 am

“The scientific process depends on open access to methodology, data, and a rigorous peer-review process.”
I have no idea how the esteemed Prof can make this statement and imply that nothing of the sort wnet on with Jones, Mann, et al clearly stating they withheld data, methodology, and peer review from those wishing to check thier work. It’s astounding.
Someone needs to point out to Sen Boxer that the emperor has no clothes. Not that she’d listen

John
December 4, 2009 9:33 am

The “eight steps” after people get caught:
1. Denial
2. Profession of innocence
3. Admission of “possible wrongdoing”
4. Shift of blame
5. Rationalize the behavior
6. Ask for understanding
7. Beg forgiveness
8. Write a book about it

Mike Kelley
December 4, 2009 9:43 am

I love the term “political climatology”. I suppose it’s taught in some of our more “elite” universities.

Linda
December 4, 2009 9:43 am

I suggest we refer to our Climategate whistle blower as ‘Deep Temp’…

Cold Englishman
December 4, 2009 9:46 am

Slightly OT but worth considering is the story of Captain Robert Fizroy, who was Captain of HMS Beagle when it took Charles Darwin on his famous expedition to Cape Horn and The Galapagos.
Fitzroy eventually created The Met Office. As a Cartographic Land Surveyor for over 50 years, I can attest to his outstanding abilities as a navigator and cartographer. HMS Beagle did much more than take Darwin to look at finches.
Fitzroy mapped most of Cape Horn, Tierra Del Fuego, Magellan Straits etc. Robert Fitzroy was a much more interesting character than Darwin. He was precise in every detail and meticulous with his records.
I would argue therefore, that his Met Office today would have continued with his standards of excellence, wouldn’t they? Surely they wouldn’t have given all their raw data to these ecowarriors at UEA. The Met Office must still have it. Needs an FOI request from someone who knows what to do with it.
If you are still interested in Fitzroy try this or the US equivalent:-
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Evolutions-Captain-Tragic-FitzRoy-Charles/dp/1861974515
BTW HE committed suicide, when they wouldn’t publish his weather forecasts.
We only need resignations.

KenB
December 4, 2009 9:47 am

Re Anthony’s headline: “A devastating response” …
The jury is still out, IMO, on who or what will be devastated by the indisputable persuasiveness of the skeptic argument. I see no compelling evidence (yet) that the firestorm ignited IN the blogosphere by Climategate has spread to any important precincts BEYOND it.

R
December 4, 2009 9:49 am

Thanks you,
I couldn’t have said it better. So I sent a copy of this article to my senators and congressmen.
R

Theo
December 4, 2009 9:54 am

Outdoor Alliance has provided an action page so you can send this to your reps.

Alvin
December 4, 2009 10:04 am

The Union of Concerned Scientists has been trying to blame “deniers” on Big Oil backed groups for years. Again, political agendas and science mixing.

starzmom
December 4, 2009 10:06 am

Some of these folks wouldn’t pay attention if the naked emperor were dancing a jig in their office. All the same, I am enjoying the show!

starzmom
December 4, 2009 10:08 am

ps. thank you Sean, whoever you are!

d thompson
December 4, 2009 10:10 am

Milliband on sky news was spouting his settled science nonsense ans was interrupted by breaking news ….. Beckham had arrived for the world cup draw. They still don’t get it

Wondering Aloud
December 4, 2009 10:11 am

The letter reads “The scientific process depends on open access to methodology, data, and a rigorous peer-review process.”
Absolutely the point. since this is proven to be lacking the hypothesis is unsupported. In other words catastrophic climate change due to human activity is NOT supported by science.

Anton
December 4, 2009 10:11 am

Sean, magnificent.
Re: this section of your essay:
“But the computer code is transparently fraudulent. Here, one finds matrices that add unexplained numbers to recent temperatures and subtract them from older temperatures (these numbers are hard-programmed in), splining observational data to model data, and other smoking guns, all showing that they were doing what was necessary to get the answers that the IPCC wanted, not the answers that the data held. They knew what they were doing, and why they were doing it”
McCarthy is channeling Winston Churchill (tongue-in-cheek):
“I gather, young man, that you wish to be a Member of Parliament. The first lesson that you must learn is, when I call for statistics about the rate of infant mortality, what I want is proof that fewer babies died when I was Prime Minister than when anyone else was Prime Minister. That is a political statistic.”
—Winston Churchill (1874–1965)

Calvin Ball
December 4, 2009 10:13 am

Reading the comments on the Boston article, it’s becoming clear to me that this is much, much bigger than the climate change issue. The peasants are revolting against their intellectual “betters”. Not only is the UEA risking credibility over this, but every time someone like this opens his mouth, he risks taking some of Harvard’s credibility down with him.
Meanwhile, Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas are having difficulty getting their message out, even though their message would help Harvard’s credibility. It’s a sign of our times when this many people are this skeptical of the academic excellence of Harvard. I believe that this is without precedent. First the economic geniuses there blow it horrendously, and now this.
This is going to leave a mark.

DanPL
December 4, 2009 10:14 am

We are making noise on this site, and the “warmists” are making much more noise on the MSM. We will lose unless we go after the money sources. I see slick TV programs and former prestigious magazines doing fantastic spreads promoting the GW propaganda. My daughters and granddaughters haven’t even heard of “Claimategate”. They get National Geographic. Who are the organizations funding these people? Who are the people in these organizations? Who are the congressmen voting for funding? We need to get the funding stopped.
If anyone has access to the addresses, please publish them so we can send them a barrage of emails.
Dan

Paul Linsay
December 4, 2009 10:16 am

Jeremy (07:57:47) : Richard Lindzen is at MIT and one of the most vocal opponents of AGW. On the other hand we there is John Holdren, Obama’s climate czar and eco-catastophist extrodinare, who was a department chairman at Harvard.

mariwarcwm
December 4, 2009 10:24 am

Such a good letter. It was a pleasure to read.
About CO2. I thought that plants struggle to survive below 200 ppm. How was it that plants survived in an atmosphere with only 170ppm? Somebody ought to explain CO2, its properties and its importance to life. In the good old days it would be David Bellamy on the BBC. No more.
If there is a Lord God Almighty up there he must be getting pretty fed up with the level of gratitude down here towards such a beautifully designed gas, which gave us life, gives us food, and keeps us warm. If I were He I would plunge the whole world into an Ice Age.

Karl Maki
December 4, 2009 10:25 am

…fields do not advance because people change their minds; rather, fields advance because people die.
Great quote!

James F. Evans
December 4, 2009 10:27 am

A concise and powerful statement.
But it is testament to the power of “blackballing” in scientific circles that Sean chose to make his statement anonymously.
But hey, I’ll take it and hope more statements like Sean’s are made and as time moves on, more statements are made by scientists willing to identify themselves.
Perhaps, when all is said and done, the silver lining in all this will be an improved scientific process in all fields of science that lives up to the ideals of the Scientific Method.
Maybe, in 20 years time, the AGW hoax and its being exposed will be looked at as the turning point that ushered in a golden age of scientific advancement.
Because Humanity needs all the help we can get.