From World Climate Report:
Another IPCC Error: Antarctic Sea Ice Increase Underestimated by 50%
Figure 1. Trend in Antarctic ice extent, November 1978 through December 2006 (source: Comiso and Nishio, 2008).
Several errors have been recently uncovered in the 4th Assessment Report (AR4) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). These include problems with Himalayan glaciers, African agriculture, Amazon rainforests, Dutch geography, and attribution of damages from extreme weather events. More seem to turn up daily. Most of these errors stem from the IPCC’s reliance on non-peer reviewed sources.
The defenders of the IPCC have contended that most of these errors are minor in significance and are confined to the Working Group II Report (the one on impacts, adaptation and vulnerability) of the IPCC which was put together by representatives from various regional interests and that there was not as much hard science available to call upon as there was in the Working Group I report (“The Physical Science Basis”). The IPCC defenders argue that there have been no (or practically no) problems identified in the Working Group I (WGI) report on the science.
We humbly disagree.
In fact, the WGI report is built upon a process which, as revealed by the Climategate emails, is, by its very nature, designed not to produce an accurate view of the state of climate science, but instead to be an “assessment” of the state of climate science—an assessment largely driven by preconceived ideas of the IPCC design team and promulgated by various elite chapter authors. The end result of this “assessment” is to elevate evidence which supports the preconceived ideas and denigrate (or ignore) ideas that run counter to it.
These practices are clearly laid bare in several recent Petitions to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)—petitions asking the EPA to reconsider its “Endangerment Finding” that anthropogenic greenhouse gases endanger our public health and welfare. The basis of the various petitions is that the process is so flawed that the IPCC cannot be considered a reliable provider of the true state of climate science, something that the EPA heavily relies on the IPCC to be. The most thorough of these petitions contains over 200 pages of descriptions of IPCC problems and it a true eye-opener into how bad things had become.
There is no doubt that the 200+ pages would continue to swell further had the submission deadline not been so tight. New material is being revealed daily.
Just last week, the IPCC’s (and thus EPA’s) primary assertion that “Most of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic GHG [greenhouse gas] concentrations” was shown to be wrong. This argument isn’t included in the Petition.
This adds yet another problem to the growing list of errors in the IPCC WGI report, this one concerns Antarctic sea ice trends.
While all the press is about the observed declines in Arctic sea ice extent in recent decades, little attention at all is paid to the fact that the sea ice extent in the Antarctic has been on the increase. No doubt the dearth of press coverage stems from the IPCC treatment of this topic.
In the IPCC AR4 the situation is described like this in Chapter 4, “Observations: Changes in Snow, Ice, and Frozen Ground” (p. 351):
As an example, an updated version of the analysis done by Comiso (2003), spanning the period from November 1978 through December 2005, is shown in Figure 4.8. The annual mean ice extent anomalies are shown. There is a significant decreasing trend in arctic sea ice extent of –33 ± 7.4 × 103 km2 yr–1 (equivalent to –2.7 ± 0.6% per decade), whereas the Antarctic results show a small positive trend of 5.6 ± 9.2 × 103 km2 yr–1 (0.47 ± 0.8% per decade), which is not statistically significant. The uncertainties represent the 90% confidence interval around the trend estimate and the percentages are based on the 1978 to 2005 mean.
Notice that the IPCC states that the Antarctic increase in sea ice extent from November 1979-December 2005 is “not statistically significant” which seems to give them good reason to play it down. For instance, in the Chapter 4, Executive Summary (p. 339), the sea ice bullet reads:
Satellite data indicate a continuation of the 2.7 ± 0.6% per decade decline in annual mean arctic sea ice extent since 1978. The decline for summer extent is larger than for winter, with the summer minimum declining at a rate of 7.4 ± 2.4% per decade since 1979. Other data indicate that the summer decline began around 1970. Similar observations in the Antarctic reveal larger interannual variability but no consistent trends.
Which in the AR4 Summary For Policymakers becomes two separate items:
Satellite data since 1978 show that annual average arctic sea ice extent has shrunk by 2.7 [2.1 to 3.3]% per decade, with larger decreases in summer of 7.4 [5.0 to 9.8]% per decade. These values are consistent with those reported in the TAR. {4.4}
and,
Antarctic sea ice extent continues to show interannual variability and localised changes but no statistically significant average trends, consistent with the lack of warming reflected in atmospheric temperatures averaged across the region. {3.2, 4.4}
“Continues to show…no statistically significant average trends”? Continues?
This is what the IPCC Third Assessment Report (TAR), released in 2001, had to say about Antarctic sea ice trends (Chapter 3, p. 125):
Over the period 1979 to 1996, the Antarctic (Cavalieri et al., 1997; Parkinson et al., 1999) shows a weak increase of 1.3 ± 0.2%/decade.
By anyone’s reckoning, that is a statistically significant increase.
In the IPCC TAR Chapter 3 Executive Summary is this bullet point:
…Satellite data indicate that after a possible initial decrease in the mid-1970s, Antarctic sea-ice extent has stayed almost stable or even increased since 1978.
So, the IPCC AR4’s contention that sea ice trends in Antarctica “continues” to show “no statistically significant average trends” contrasts with what it had concluded in the TAR.
Interestingly, the AR4 did not include references to any previous study that showed that Antarctic sea ice trends were increasing in a statistically significant way. The AR4 did not include the TAR references of either Cavalieri et al., 1997, or Parkinson et al., 1999. Nor did the IPCC AR4 include a reference to Zwally et al., 2002, which found that:
The derived 20 year trend in sea ice extent from the monthly deviations is 11.18 ± 4.19 x 103 km2yr-1 or 0.98 ± 0.37% (decade)-1 for the entire Antarctic sea ice cover, which is significantly positive. [emphasis added]
and (also from Zwally et al. 2002),
Also, a recent analysis of Antarctic sea ice trends for 1978–1996 by Watkins and Simmonds [2000] found significant increases in both Antarctic sea ice extent and ice area, similar to the results in this paper. [emphasis added]
Watkins and Simmonds (2000) was also not cited by the AR4.
So just what did the IPCC AR4 authors cite in support of their “assessment” that Antarctic sea ice extent was not increasing in a statistically significant manner? The answer is “an updated version of the analysis done by Comiso (2003).” And just what is “Comiso (2003)”? A book chapter!
Comiso, J.C., 2003: Large scale characteristics and variability of the global sea ice cover. In: Sea Ice – An Introduction to its Physics, Biology, Chemistry, and Geology [Thomas, D. and G.S. Dieckmann (eds.)]. Blackwell Science, Oxford, UK, pp. 112–142.
And the IPCC didn’t actually even use what was in the book chapter, but instead “an updated version” of the “analysis” that was in the book chapter.
And from this “updated” analysis, the IPCC reported that the increase in Antarctic sea ice extent was an insignificant 5.6 ± 9.2 × 103 km2 yr–1 (0.47 ± 0.8% per decade)—a value that was only about one-half of the increase reported in the peer-reviewed literature.
There are a few more things worth considering.
1) Josefino Comiso (the author of the above mentioned book chapter) was a contributing author of the IPCC AR4 Chapter 4, so the coordinating lead authors probably just turned directly to Comiso to provide an unpeer-reviewed update. (how convenient)
and 2) Comiso published a subsequent paper (along with Fumihiko Nishio) in 2008 that added only one additional year to the IPCC analysis (i.e. through 2006 instead of 2005), and once again found a statistically significant increase in Antarctic sea ice extent, with a value very similar to the value reported in the old TAR, that is:
When updated to 2006, the trends in ice extent and area …in the Antarctic remains slight but positive at 0.9 ± 0.2 and 1.7 ± 0.3% per decade.
These trends are, again, by anyone’s reckoning, statistically significant.
Figure 1. Trend in Antarctic ice extent, November 1978 through December 2006 (source: Comiso and Nishio, 2008).
And just in case further evidence is needed, and recent 2009 paper by Turner et al. (on which Comiso was a co-author), concluded that:
Based on a new analysis of passive microwave satellite data, we demonstrate that the annual mean extent of Antarctic sea ice has increased at a statistically significant rate of 0.97% dec-1 since the late 1970s.
This rate of increase is nearly twice as great as the value given in the AR4 (from its non-peer-reviewed source).
So, the peer reviewed literature, both extant at the time of the AR4 as well as published since the release of the AR4, shows that there has been a significant increase in the extent of sea ice around Antarctica since the time of the first satellite observations observed in the late 1970s. And yet the AR4 somehow “assessed” the evidence and determined not only that the increase was only half the rate established in the peer-reviewed literature, but also that it was statistically insignificant as well. And thus, the increase in sea ice in the Antarctic was downplayed in preference to highlighting the observed decline in sea ice in the Arctic.
It is little wonder why, considering that the AR4 found that “Sea ice is projected to shrink in both the Arctic and Antarctic under all SRES scenarios.”
References:
Cavalieri, D. J., P. Gloersen, C. L. Parkinson, J. C. Comiso, and H. J. Zwally, 1997. Observed hemispheric asymmetry in global sea ice changes. Science, 278, 1104–1106.
Cavalieri, D. J., C. L. Parkinson, P. Gloersen, J. C. Comiso, and H. J. Zwally, 1999. Deriving long-term time series of sea ice cover from satellite passivemicrowave multisensor data sets. Journal of Geophysical Research, 104, 15803–15814.
Comiso, J. C., and F. Nishio, 2008. Trends in the sea ice cover using enhanced and compatible AMSR-E, SSM/I, and SMMR data. Journal of Geophysical Research, 113, C02S07, doi:10.1029/2007JC004257.
Parkinson, C. L., D. J. Cavalieri, P. Gloersen, H. J. Zwally, and J. C. Comiso, 1999. Arctic sea ice extents, areas, and trends, 1978– 1996. Journal of Geophysical Research, 104, 20837–20856.
Turner, J., J. C. Comiso, G. J. Marshall, T. A. Lachlan-Cope, T. Bracegirdle, T. Maksym, M. P. Meredith, Z. Wang, and A. Orr, 2009. Non-annular atmospheric circulation change induced by stratospheric ozone depletion and its role in the recent increase of Antarctic sea ice extent. Geophysical Research Letters, 36, L08502, doi:10.1029/2009GL037524.
Watkins, A. B., and I. Simmonds, Current trends in Antarctic sea ice: The 1990s impact on a short climatology, 2000. Journal of Climate, 13, 4441–4451.
Zwally, H.J., J. C. Comiso, C. L. Parkinson, D. J. Cavalieri, and P. Gloersen, 2002. Variability of Antarctic sea ice 1979-1998. Journal of Geophysical Research, 107, C53041.
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The data is available here:
http://neptune.gsfc.nasa.gov/csb/index.php?section=59
A regression analysis for 11/1978 to 12/2004 gives a loss in antarctic ice extent of 1.20 +/- 0.25 % a decade. This is a statistically significant value and consistent with the subsequent published value of 0.94 +/-0.23 % a decade from Cosimo and Nishio (2008) cited in the article.
Hence, I agree the value of 5.6 +/- 9.2 x 10^3 km^2 a yr, equivalent to 0.49 +/- 0.81 % a decade given in AR4 does not appear correct, although I don’t know the actual data that was used for that calculation.
It might have been worth the author of this article contacting Dr Comiso. I’ve just emailed him this calculation and he is looking into this apparent discrepancy.
Any shift from a gain of 0.5 % to 1.2% a decade in the antarctic should be seen in the context of the arctic loss. This was given as 7.4 +/- 2.4% a decade in AR4 but has been updated by Cosimo and Nishio in 2008 to a loss of 8.4 +/- 1.4% a decade.
C02 is NOT, I repeat NOT, a toxic gas in any amount.
It is a simple asphyxiant in significant concentrations, and it does that by definition of asphyxiation.
There is no danger of asphyxiating the planet due to burning of fossil fuels.
To do that would require all the fossil fuels to be unearthed and lit on fire simultaneously. The accomplishment of gathering all remaining fossil fuels to a mass-ignition is nigh impossible. The stuff is too expensive to mine & pump for that purpose.
If anyone is naive enough or tired-of-living enough to burn fossil fuels in an enclosed space with no ventilation, the C0 will get you long before the C02 ever will.
If C02 were truly toxic, millions of citizens would be found dead from Soda Pop gas inhalation every year.
Lisa Jackson and the EPA’s sum knowledge on the subject rise no higher than high-school dropout status, and are better described as superstitious.
As a newbie, I’m still trying to catch up with the back stories. I don’t hear a lot about Svenmark’s theory here regarding cosmic rays and solar activity. It’s completely consistent with a colder Antarctic (and hence increasing ice) while the rest of the planet is warmer. Any comments? Is The Chilling Stars a quality book?
You know, I keep hearing these terms thrown around, “IPCC Reform” or “Restructure the IPCC” ..
Reform, restructure my ass. GET RID OF THEM PERIOD!!!
There is NOTHING to reform. There is NOTHING to restructure. It is all a total waste of time and money!!!
Paul Z
Where are you?
“In a country like the UK (which no longer has natural resources or manufacturing capability)”
They are still pumping oil out of the North Sea, I believe, and we do make a few things other than money.
Perosn of Choler
In the book of Genesis somewhere, Cain took a wife from the Land of Nod, I believe. Her parentage is not recorded, but she was apparently not a local girl.
Pamela Gray
Chisel the marble thus: “Believed all he read. Died from malicious sarcasm”
After extended digs through Laci’s responses (see the comments section of the Lacis post) I think there is a core unresolved question/disagreement in regards to the IPCC reports… and that is “[what is the purpose of the IPCC process]”?
Is the IPCC there to make the case for, and build a consensus around AGW… or is it to accurately portray the science in all its fuzzy/uncertain/sausage-making glory?
Take, for axample, this nugget from Lacis’ first reply:
The other aspect of the IPPC AR4 report is the political posturing component as exemplified by the Executive Summaries. Here, the need for group consensus appears to trump the need for factual correctness.
Notice that he said this issue is exemplified by, but does not say limited to, the Executive Summaries
@ur momisugly MinB (08:23:49)
I think everyone’s waiting for the results of the CLOUD experiment, which I believe are due out sometime this year
Re CO2 as a “toxin”.
One might with all good reason state that CO2 is toxic because it is a waste product of human metabolism. We breathe it out because we have to eliminate it from our bodies, otherwise it would do us harm. The breathing into a paper bag thing – obviously the concentrations in the bag are not high enough to have ill effects.
It is a waste product of mammalian metabolism, which comes from the burning of food hydrocarbons. Not essentially different from the burning of fossil fuels, just more controlled as it is mediated by a series of biochemical reactions.
Trust me on this, I am a PhD biochemist.
Calling it harmless and beneficial and being a friend of CO2, just winds up the warmists. If that is what you are trying to do, well done, but it probably isn’t constructive.
Herman L (05:36:11)
As pointed out in the World Climate Report (WCR) article, there was plenty of extant literature that the IPCC had to go on in preparing the AR4 (e.g. Zwally et al., 2002; Watkins and Simmonds, 2000; Parkinson et al., 1999, Cavalieri et al. 1997). This literature generally found a significant increasing trend in Antarctic sea ice at a rate about twice the IPCC value. Yet somehow, the update of the Comiso (2003) book chapter found a smaller, insignificant trend. When Comiso got around to actually publishing an updated analysis in the peer-review literature, he found that the increasing trend was about twice the IPCC estimate. So, the IPCC estimate is the odd man out.
-Chip Knappenberger
75% of US below normal today, frost-freeze warnings in Fla, and Texas suing the US Govt. over EPA emissions ruling claiming economic damage and States Rights infringement. Go Texas.
EPA C02 Emissions Ruling: requires economic bleeding remedy to cure the fever. Calls into question from which Century the EPA’s thinking process originated in…21st AD or 21st BC?
rbateman
I am NOT saying that CO2 in the atmosphere will ever get to toxic levels! I’m just being pedantic about adjectives!
“not as much hard science to call upon” What right have these people to circulate such a hugely important document (possibly the most important document that the world has ever produced) that doesn’t have absolutely ‘hard science,’ peer reviewed, to back it up?. A document that is clearly intended to mislead governments across the world and which could have such a profound effect on the worlds economies. They should be severely punished and locked up for their intended misdemeanours
vboring (06:02:08) :
You asert and ask:
“No offense, but this is a pretty boring story- statistics, lack of peer-review.
If you want anyone to actually talk about the story, you have to find out who Comiso is, and affix devil horns to his head.
What are the evil motives that drive a scientist to fudge the facts?”
And Baa Humbug (07:28:26) responds:
“Put this forth to the relevant chapter review editor and the response you’ll get is……
“Rejected. The suggestion does not add to clarity or brevity.”
Richard S Courtney would understand…and chuckle behind gritted teeth. :)”
Yes I do “understand…and chuckle behind gritted teeth” so I suppose I had better explain.
The IPCC is NOT a scientific organisation. The IPCC never has been and never was intended to be a scientific organisation. Its purpose is indicated in its title and is stated in its Charter.
The InterGOVERNMENTal Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) exists to obtain scientific information that governments (i.e. politicians) can use to justify government (i.e. political) policies. Its entire purpose is to collate scientific information that supports those policies.
Importantly, scientific information that contradicts the IPCC’s political purpose is not considered then rejected by the IPCC. Instead, it is ignored or demeaned. All scientific information that disproves – or provides doubt – to the political policies is rejected or ignored for publication usually (as Baa Humbug says) without any real explanation.
Paul Reiter is the world’s foremost authority on vector borne diseases, Niils Axel-Morner is the world’s foremost authority on sea-level change, and Vincent Gray is the world’s foremost authority on hurricanes. But Reiter had to resort to law to get his name removed as an IPCC Author when he objected to the IPCC publishing falsehoods instead of facts concerning his specialism. Morner and Gray have each spoken out concerning the distortions of their specialisms in IPCC reports. (And the IPCC made no mention of one our 2005 papers that proves it cannot be known whether or not the recent rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration is anthropogenic or natural despite my citing that paper and its findings as part of my AR4 peer review).
So, the example in the above article is but one of many such distortions included in IPCC so-called scientific reports in attempt to fulfil the IPCC’s purpose.
Indeed, information that is complete rubbish is included in IPCC so-called scientific reports when the rubbish provides support for the IPCC’s political purpose (as glaciergate and Africagate demonstrate). Glaciergate occurred because India’s scientific authorities on Himalayan glaciers told their government that the IPCC assertion of complete loss of the glaciers by 2035 was impossible – a fact that all glaciologists knew – but the IPCC Chairman (Rajendra Pechauri) replied that this fact was “voodoo science”.
The Climategate emails prove that IPCC supporters used claims of ‘peer review’ as proof that information is correct (such claims are a denial of the scientific principle that information is assessed on its falsifiability). They then accepted for publication information of their own supply that had yet to be published in the peer reviewed literature (e.g. MBH 1998), and information from advocacy organisations (e.g. WWF) that had never been submitted for peer review.
But the flow of real scientific information continued and this was a problem to the agenda of the self-named ‘Team’ that collated information for inclusion in IPCC reports. So, as the Climategate emails prove, the Team suborned the peer review process and the Editorial Boards of journals that continued to publish untainted science. After that, also as the Climategate emails prove, when some journals continued to publish real science the Team attempted to redefine peer review so the Team could ignore anything published in those journals. Meanwhile, the Team continued to put completely unpublished nonsense (e.g. from WWF) in the IPCC reports.
“Evil motives”? No, the IPCC compilers were merely doing their job.
Richard
The most ironic d-word — and one that I therefore urge us to adopt as our own — is “deviationist,” a term from the 30s that subtly implies that the orthodoxy from which we are deviating is a fatheaded, unprincipled, tyrannical “party line.”
Tom P (08:13:09) :
Thanks for this information.
Comiso obviously knew, prior to now, of the discrepancy. He was a contributing author of the IPCC chapter, and co-author of both Comiso and Nishio (2008) and Turner et al. (2009). Turner et al. (2009) remarked on the IPCC’s low number–in fact, it was in reading that paper that this issue came to my attention.
-Chip
I understand what those who don’t like the word “gate” are saying. They want us to believe this stuff (all of the wrong statements in the IPCC ) are not done on purpose. I am not sure I believe that. I think some of them are done on propose, however, I think others aren’t. I think that many of the scientists on the IPCC are like mainstream journalist, and to some extent like everyone else, they have their own biases and therefore look for evidence that confirms their bias, and disregard evidence that doesn’t confirm their bias. They aren’t necessarily trying to mislead, but their bias prevents them from seeing another point of view.
It really does not matter, however, if they are doing it on purpose or not, If is wrong, it is wrong. It needs to be corrected.
If none of these issues matter to whether or not humans are causing global warming, why are the included in the first place? The answer to that is clear, the people who included them thought they mattered.
Type Svensmark (with two S’s) into the search box at the top right of the page and several WUWT articles will come up.
Tom P (08:13:09) :
The data is available here:
http://neptune.gsfc.nasa.gov/csb/index.php?section=59
A regression analysis for 11/1978 to 12/2004 gives a loss in antarctic ice extent of 1.20 +/- 0.25 % a decade.
Help me understand what you’ve done. Are you basically calculating a regression/trend line for the data shown in this chart:
http://neptune.gsfc.nasa.gov/uploads/sea_ice/antarctic_trend_plot.jpg
How do you get a “loss of … a decade” from this data? A loss of antarctic ice extent is inconsistent with the premise of this article, which is that the increase has been underestimated.
I’m in a bit of a fog right now, just having come back from the dentist, but I don’t think that explains what I’m missing here.
Its hard to believe that a rogue group of scientists conspired, on their own, to to create an AGW scare. Someone with lots of power was pushing them to do it. When the AGW scenario is finally laid to rest we need to find out who and why and then bring them to justice.
The carbon cycle before humans
No lack of hubris here.
This is a new one on me. Were there large-scale changes to the carbon cycle nearly 100 million years ago?
@ur momisugly Imran (03:31:35) : I don’t think that is really quite that easy to see how wrong this is. But in general I share your frustration. For years I have try to point out inconsistencies with AGW and have been met with personal attacks, and have had my points dismissed and ignored. I have been called stupid by someone who did not know the difference between carbon-dioxide and carbon-monoxide.
When I point out that in the ice core data shows that temperature rises 800-1000 years before CO2, I am met with blank stares, or I am asked to prove it I can cite at least 6 peer reviewed study and cite the page number in the IPCC report where that is stated. None of that makes the slightest difference.
Slowly though I think we are finally being vindicated. I think a mistake was made in the beginning. That mistake was to believe the science would win out. We underestimated how powerfully the political view would control the debate.
@Tom T:
They seem very unlikely to be random errors, because every single error found so far – and there seem to be a lot – are all in the direction of alarmism.
So if they’re not random errors, they either represent (1) deliberate errors, or an (2) severe underlying bias in the methodology.
Neither looks particular good, both are scandalous.
Obviously deliberate errors are terrible, but even if they only an underlying bias, it tells the IPCC is nothing like what it was represented to be — an impartial body fairly reporting scientific evidence.
Actually rbateman,
CO2 and O2 are deadly to animal life in high concentrations – volcanic venting is a good example of CO2 in high concentrations and its effect when animals stumble into it.
Marine Modeling and Analysis Branch of the Environmental Modeling Center:
http://polar.ncep.noaa.gov/seaice/support/ssmi.advice.shtml
Advice on Interpreting the MMAB Ice concentrations
“Things other than ice can give an ice signature. This includes high seas and high precipitation rates. There is a filter which removes most of this contamination from the ice field, but it is not always effective. Most of the time, the false ice reports are for low concentration. This occurred on 8 January 1997, for example, at a time when Russ Page, in the Anchorage WSFO, tells me there were 60 knot winds in the Bering Sea. In the summer, the layers and puddles of water which can accumulate on the surface of the ice floes mislead the algorithm in to underestimating the total ice concentration.”
Its been interesting watching The Cryosphere Today reports; http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/
There’s approximately 3-4 more weeks of ice growth ahead and we’re currently -0.757 (million sq. km) of the 1979-2008 mean:
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/seaice.recent.arctic.png
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/seaice.area.arctic.png
The Sea of Okhotsk ice pack appears to be effected by currents in El Nino years.