IPCC gate Du Jour – Antarctic Sea Ice Increase Underestimated by 50%

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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February 17, 2010 9:23 am

I’m not wishing to get into a theological discussion here, but this has to be corrected.
Person of Choler (04:34:40) :
“it is recorded that Adam and Eve had only two sons, one of whom killed the other. No daughters of any kind from anywhere achieved mention. Tell that to some Bible thumpers, ask how they think the human race was propagated post-Genesis, and note how that makes them rethink their beliefs…………..”
Wrong. In the KJV Gen 5:3 Further, it doesn’t say they were exclusive.(Either more children of Adam and Eve or otherwise. Please note an earlier post referencing Cain’s wife.) Also, remember, in many cultures, it was common place not to place much significance on females. In the Bible, wives and concubines are often mentioned, but not always.
Sigh, I really don’t understand how otherwise intelligent people can remain so blissfully ignorant when it comes to religion(Christianity more specifically). TRY READING THE BOOK before attempting to butcher what it is saying. As many people do, you’ll find plenty of opportunity to butcher it’s meaning after reading, but any Bible thumper I know already understands the thoughts I’ve just expressed.
Kindest regards,
James Sexton

Tom P
February 17, 2010 9:24 am

pcknappenberger (08:51:17) :
“Comiso obviously knew, prior to now, of the discrepancy.”
He sounded genuinely surprised when I talked to him and wanted to look in to this. If this is indeed an error, I wouldn’t assume any conspiracy.

NickB.
February 17, 2010 9:25 am

RockyRoad (06:43:48)
I love how he says “they should add a summary of all the errors and wild exaggerations made by the climate skeptics — and where they get their funding”
Stuff like this really makes me want to start spouting various colorful words that should not be used in polite company… maybe even the Q-word.
What about all the errors and wild exaggerations made by AGW Believers – and where they get their funding. Then he quotes Romm… what a [snipping] [snip] of a [snip]
Hey Friedman and Romm, how about Congressional investigations (chaired by Al Gore?) where all these skeptics can be brought in under oath so allegiances to “Big Coal”, “Big Oil”, the Chamber of Commerce and, most frightening of all, “Conservatives” can be uncovered and the vastness of the conspiracy can be shown to the world.
“[I have here in my hand the names of 205 deniers who are still working at schools and major universities]”

Tom P
February 17, 2010 9:27 am

Basil (09:03:11)
Apologies. Of course it should be gain. Hope you’re feeling better.

Richard Telford
February 17, 2010 9:29 am

So quick to condemn.
If the IPCC had offered the figure from Zwally et al 2002 (of which Comiso is the second author), and the trend had become more positive since then, would you not now be equally scandalised? Of course they had an update of the trend calculated. Whether Comiso got the calculation right, I cannot tell without having the data as was available to him in 2005.
And what is so scandalous about Comiso 2003 being a book chaper?

Richard Sharpe
February 17, 2010 9:48 am

Richard Telford (09:29:58) said:

So quick to condemn.
If the IPCC had offered the figure from Zwally et al 2002 (of which Comiso is the second author), and the trend had become more positive since then, would you not now be equally scandalised? Of course they had an update of the trend calculated. Whether Comiso got the calculation right, I cannot tell without having the data as was available to him in 2005.
And what is so scandalous about Comiso 2003 being a book chaper?

Remind me again who were the ones calling us skeptics denialists and implying that we are morally equivalent to that other type of denialist?

A C Osborn
February 17, 2010 9:50 am

Herman L (05:36:11) :
Didn’t you read this part then?
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.

A C Osborn
February 17, 2010 9:52 am

Tom P (04:13:52) :
Neven (05:50:03) :
Didn’t you read this part then?
They Cherry Picked, don’t you get that?
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.

A C Osborn
February 17, 2010 9:54 am

Basil (09:03:11) :
Thank you for the explanation on yesterday’s thread.

Veronica
February 17, 2010 9:54 am

Tom P
Re “Comiso sounded genuinely surprised…”
of course, what we forget, is that nobody, not even “scientists” reads all the small print before signing. There aren’t enough hours in the day!

February 17, 2010 9:55 am

A visit to the impressive antarctic centre in Christchurch NZ in 2005 drew my attention to the increasing ice, the AGW scam and I have closely followed your web site since then. Because 80% of the worlds ice is on the continent a bit south of us and the sunspot thing looks dodgy I have enlarged my woodshed. Keep up he good work.

Veronica
February 17, 2010 9:56 am

Rocky Road?
The Q Word…?
Quisling?
Quarantine?
Quicksand?
Quidditch?
give me a clue!

Herman L
February 17, 2010 9:58 am

Chip Knappenberger,
You are missing my point entirely. I am not addressing the science. I have not read the science. As you say, the IPCC estimate may very well be “the odd man out.” But that is not my point.
I am only addressing the fact that no one can call this a “gate” (as Anthony does in his title), or call this an “IPCC error” (as Cato has done) if to do so requires referencing research that was not available to the IPCC authors and reviewers at the time they were writing the IPCC report. We all know the IPCC process very well: there was a cut-off date for material, and two of the items in the Cato study fall AFTER that date.
If Cato can rewrite its article to remove all references to what was not available to the IPCC for the 4AR material then, fine — call it what you will. But I have already read a number of post from people here who are jumping to the conclusion that this is evidence of another “IPCC scandal” and,as currently written, that is simply untrue in the case of this Cato article.

February 17, 2010 9:59 am

Re: Peter (Feb 17 04:37),
Which brings up a point about collating all these “gate” posts into one post/article with it’s own link. Has such a post been done?
I have a list at my website.
This includes the the IPCC’s false claim about Antarctic sea ice here.
My version has a couple of other papers, not mentioned in the World Climate Report story, that also confirm increasing ice extent.
Another amusing related IPCC trick is to hide the decline in Antarctic temperatures simply by omitting Antarctica from their world map!

pcknappenberger
February 17, 2010 10:00 am

Richard Telford (09:29:58) :
Zwally et al. (2002) for the period 1979-1998 found a rate of increase of Antarctic sea ice of 11.2 ± 4.2 x 10^3 km^2 yr^-1 or 0.98 ± 0.37% dec^-1. The IPCC, for the period 1978-2005 found 5.6 ± 9.2 x 10^3 km^2 yr^-1 or 0.47 ± 0.80% dec^-1. Comiso and Nishio (2008), for the period 1978-2006 found an increase of 10.8 ± 2.6 x 10^3 km^2 yr^-1 or 0.95 ± 0.23% dec^-1.
I appreciate that the IPCC wanted the most updated data as possible (that’s why they went to an updated analysis from a book chapter), but by moving outside the peer-reviewed literature they assumed a certain risk (and they got an answer that seemed to better fit their cause than the actual facts).
If you have been following the overall issue at all, you will see that we are not being overly quick to condemn. The IPCC has made its bed, now they are finding that laying in it is not so comfortable.
-Chip

George E. Smith
February 17, 2010 10:06 am

“”” Veronica (08:42:12) :
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. “””
Well one thing I am not, is a bio-chemist; nor a PhD. But I do have at least a smattering of ordinary non bio chemistry; and to me it would seem that CO2 is simply the effluent from one of the two most apparent stored chemical energy combustion reactions; the other one being H2O which is the effluent from combusting Hydrogen.
So that leads me (being naturally inquisitive) to enquire whether you are aware of; as a PhD Bio-Chemist, biological processes in (any) living organisms; which process Oxygen into some final waste product (effluent)that is not CO2.
It is my understanding (but I can’t cite any references) that in fact (at least in humans), an excess of CO2 in the lungs, triggers a natural (involuntary) gasping reaction; that would result in expulsion of the CO2 buildup, and taking a new breath. Apparently, deep free divers, have to train themselves to resist this gasping reaction, in order to hold their breath for much longer than is normal.
Folklore has it, that the old Maori treatment for a drowning or near drowning victim, was to hang him upside down over a fire damped with wet palm leaves, so his head was in the rising steam and smoke. The CO2 evidently would in many cases result in gasping which expelled the water from the lungs. The upside down helped in that.
So which incapacitates humans or mamals first; a lack of Oxygen, or an excess of CO2 ? My understanding is that Cyanide poisoning operates by saturating the Oxygen sites in Haemoglobin with CN; which prevents it from carrying Oxygen to the cells. That reaction would seem to be not connected with CO2.
But I certainly agree; we should not be worshipping CO2.

JackStraw
February 17, 2010 10:11 am

>>David Segesta (09:04:31) :
>>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.
Get into the way back machine to the Stockholm conference and follow the trail of characters from there to Rio and finally to Copenhagen. Look who created the IPCC with this stated mission:
“the scientific, technical and socioeconomic information relevant for the understanding of the risk of human-induced climate change.”
Look at how NGO’s were given status of gov’t agencies at the UN (and look who did it). Look who is behind the carbon exchanges in the UK, in Chicago, in China. Look at the pr/communications group that coordinates all messaging for these seemingly independent groups (hint: starts with Fenton and ends with Communications and it’s science arm Environmental Media Services aka creator of RealClimate.org).
You will see the same list of lefty politicians, liberal advocacy groups and one world gov’t activists over and over since day 1. These people all share the same mindset, man is killing the planet and must be stopped. AGW is just the latest and most visible tactic they have used to try and control man and funnel enormous sums of money through the UN to their pet causes.
It’s about money and power. It’s always been about money and power. It’s not about science and it’s not about saving the planet, it’s about money and power. If there was a shred of truth to this scam do you really think it would be collapsing so fast and the science proving to be so fraudulent?

RockyRoad
February 17, 2010 10:13 am

rbateman (08:20:04) :
C02 is NOT, I repeat NOT, a toxic gas in any amount.
——————–
Reply:
Well, true, Mr Bateman, to a point. But ask the astronauts on Apollo 13 what they feared near the end of their ill-fated trip and it was the CO2 level from their own respiration.
CO2 is toxic in higher concentrations: 1% (10,000 ppm) will make some people feel drowsy. Concentrations of 7% to 10% cause dizziness, headache, visual and hearing dysfunction, and unconsciousness within a few minutes to an hour. Death can then be the result.
However, CO2 at levels 3 to 6 times ambient are what greenhouses are elevated to, and at these levels there is no adverse physiological impact to humans. And plants really benefit from levels of CO2 in this range of from 1,000 to 2,000 ppm.
One estimate I saw of maximum atmospheric CO2 from burning all of the available fossil fuels was ~600 ppm. Such levels will never get high enough to where most plants would see the greatest benefit.

geo
February 17, 2010 10:14 am

They are very large reports, so to some degree it is not surprising there would be a few errors. It would be much more comforting, however, if someone came up with some “underestimated” errors as well. Otherwise we’re left with something that was once pretty well described over 200 years ago:
“But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design. . . “

Phil A
February 17, 2010 10:14 am

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/technology/shanerichmond/100004663/iphone-app-aims-to-defeat-climate-change-deniers-with-science/comment-page-1/#comment-100003080
Ironically this appeared in today’s UK Telegraph – an iPhone app “to defeat climate change deniers with science”. Amusingly, the bottom “myth” on its list appears to be “But Antarctica is gaining ice”…

Steve Goddard
February 17, 2010 10:15 am

Even Hansen believes that a primary factor in Arctic ice trends is soot.

February 17, 2010 10:16 am

From my analysis of the gridded satellite data I caluclated an average trend of 14.5 x 10e3 Km^2. The post shows a significance value on the trend which should be ignored. The value for significance is smaller than indicated because the lag 1 value is nearly 1.
http://noconsensus.wordpress.com/2009/12/09/sea-ice-copenhagen-update/
I believe after the huge time I put into the sea ice calculations that my value is quite accurate.

February 17, 2010 10:17 am

Re: Richard Telford (Feb 17 09:29),
And what is so scandalous about Comiso 2003 being a book chaper?
Books are not peer reviewed.
The IPCC has relied on a single book chapter that gives a very low rate of increase of Antarctic sea ice, and they have completely ignored several peer-reviewed papers that give a larger rate of increase (see the WCR report and my page linked above).

Basil
Editor
February 17, 2010 10:20 am

Tom P (09:27:38) :
Basil (09:03:11)
Apologies. Of course it should be gain. Hope you’re feeling better.

Much better, especially knowing that I wasn’t seeing things upside down.

Phil A
February 17, 2010 10:21 am

“So which incapacitates humans or mamals first; a lack of Oxygen, or an excess of CO2 ? ” – George E Smith
AIUI an excess of CO2 can cause asphyxiation even when there is still plenty of oxygen. Otherwise submariners would not be in nearly so much danger when things go wrong. Or indeed the astronauts in Apollo 13 who still had lots of oxygen in their tanks but had to fix the CO2 scrubbers to stay alive.
That said, the lethal concentration for CO2 (death in 30 minutes) is 10% (100,000 ppm). The “maximum safe level” is 3% (30,000 ppm). Our atmosphere is currently at about, what a bit under 400 ppm? So we have a fair amount of headroom on this one…