IOP fires back over criticism of their submission to Parliament

WUWT reported on Feb 27th of the IOP submission here:Institute of Physics on Climategate

IOP issued a no holds barred statement on Climategate to the UK Parliamentary Committee.

Some criticism ensued. Now IOP fires back:

Concerns raised over Institute of Physics climate submission

A statement submitted by the Institute of Physics (IOP) to a parliamentary inquiry on climate change continues to draw criticism, with one senior physicist saying that it is “not worthy” of the organization. Others have complained that the statement appears to play into the hands of climate “sceptics”, as it criticizes scientists for withholding climate data when requested using the UK’s Freedom of Information Act. The IOP, which owns the company that publishes physicsworld.com, has responded by making it clear that it believes in man-made climate change and that its submission was criticizing instead the practices of the climate scientists at the centre of the inquiry.

The IOP’s submission was sent last month to a House of Commons Science and Technology Committee inquiry into the disclosure of climate data from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia in the UK. The inquiry is investigating the alleged hacking of CRU servers, which resulted in hundreds of private e-mails between researchers over the last 14 years being disclosed online last November. The inquiry solicited responses about what possible implications the e-mail disclosures might have for the integrity of scientific research and whether the scope of a separate independent inquiry – led by Muir Russell, a former vice-chancellor of the University of Glasgow – into the CRU’s practices is adequate.

Some of the e-mails reveal that CRU director Phil Jones, who has since stepped down from the post until the Russell review is published, withheld data from being released even after freedom-of-information requests. One particular e-mail sent by Jones on 16 November 1999 caused a media furore when it was revealed that he wrote “I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years and from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline.”

The [IOP’s] evidence is both misinformed and misguided Stefan Rahmstorf, Potsdam University

“Mike’s Nature trick” refers to a paper published in the journal Nature (392 779) in 1998 by Michael Mann from Pennsylvania State University, Raymond Bradley from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Malcolm Hughes of the University of Arizona. In the paper, the researchers sought to estimate how the mean temperature of the northern hemisphere has changed over the past millennium by combining various “proxy” temperature records, such as the diameter of tree rings and the presence of hydrogen and oxygen isotopes in ice cores, with thermometer temperature measurements.

[We] focused on the need to maintain the integrity, openness and unbiased nature of the scientific process IOP statement

The resulting “hockey stick” plot shows a relatively flat, but fluctuating, temperature for more than 900 years, from A D 1000 onwards (the shaft of the hockey stick) that then rises suddenly in the past 100 years (the blade). The hockey-stick graph, which is widely considered as a valid result in the climate-research community, was later included into the third assessment report by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in 2001.

The “trick”, as mentioned by Jones in one of his e-mails to Mann, Bradley and Hughes, is a statistical method that is widely accepted in the climate community and is applied to proxy measurements in the years since 1960. It deals with the problem that some tree rings in certain parts of the world have stopped getting bigger since that time, when they ought to have been increasing in size if the world is warming. According to physicist Rasmus Benestad from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and a blogger for realclimate.org, Jones’ reference to “hiding the decline” could have involved removing some tree-ring proxy data from the analysis after 1960 to produce a curve that agrees better with the evidence for global warming.

However, sceptics of man-made climate change jumped on the phrase used by Jones saying that he and the CRU were hiding temperature decreases in their data and using certain sections of the full data set that most support the conclusions they want to report.

Under fire

The IOP’s submission to the inquiry, which was sent on 10 February following approval by the Institute’s Science Board, says that the disclosed e-mails from the CRU threaten the “integrity of scientific research in this field”. The submission argues that the integrity of the scientific process should not have to depend on appeals to freedom-of-information legislation and says that refusals to comply with such requests harm “honourable scientific traditions”. It also states that the possibility that only a part of the raw data set was included in Jones’ temperature reconstructions was “evidently the reason behind some of the (rejected) requests for further information”.

Arnold Wolfendale, who was president of the IOP from 1994 to 1996, says that the evidence is “not worthy” of the Institute and that the submission “further muddies the waters regarding global warming”. Oceanographer and climatologist Stefan Rahmstorf from Potsdam University, Germany, has gone further, calling on the IOP to retract the statement from parliament. “I was taken aback when I first read it,” he says. “The evidence is both misinformed and misguided.” Rahmstorf, who is a board member of Environmental Research Letters (ERL), an open-access journal published by the IOP, wants the Institute to withdraw the evidence or clarify who wrote and reviewed it.

In a statement, the IOP says it regrets that its submission to the inquiry has become the focus of what it calls “extraordinary media hype” and that the evidence “has been interpreted by some individuals to imply that the IOP does not support the scientific evidence that the rising concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is contributing to global warming”. The Institute adds that it has long had a “clear” position on global warming, namely that “there is no doubt that climate change is happening, that it is linked to man-made emissions of greenhouse gases, and that we should be taking action to address it now”.

The Institute says that its evidence to the House of Commons committee was “like that of other learned societies, focused on the need to maintain the integrity, openness and unbiased nature of the scientific process. The key points it makes are ones to which we are deeply committed – that science should be communicated openly and reviewed in an unbiased way, however much we sympathise with the way in which CRU researchers have been confronted with hostile requests for information.”

There have also been concerns that the IOP’s submission appears to prejudge the outcome of the inquiry. “I consider it not only inappropriate but highly irresponsible for a body like the IOP to appear to presume a judgment on what is clearly not a simple issue without having the full facts and without presumably knowing the full context,” says atmospheric physicist John Houghton, who is currently president of the educational charity The John Ray Initiative and is a former director-general of the UK Meteorological Office. Houghton has also been the lead editor of three IPCC reports.

That view is echoed by Andy Russell, a climate researcher from the University of Manchester in the UK, who has written an open letter to the Institute about the submission. “As it stands, they have written a judgment rather than an evidence statement,” he says. Russell calls on the Institute to retract its evidence and points to a statement by the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) that, he says, essentially makes the same points as the IOP but in what he calls a much more diplomatic way. One statement in the RSC’s submission says, for example, that “a lack of willingness to disseminate scientific information may infer that the scientific results or methods used are not robust enough to face scrutiny, even if this conjecture is not well founded”.

Process issues

Benestad, however, does not think that the Institute should retract the evidence to the inquiry, although he wants more transparency about how it submitted the evidence. “I thought the evidence sent the wrong message. Transparency should be the same for all sciences and not just single out climate change,” says Benestad. “Regarding being more open about how the submission was written, the IOP should practise what it preaches and say how this was submitted.” He wants it to be made clear who specifically wrote the document, as well as who independently checked it before it was submitted.

In its statement, the Institute says that the evidence submitted to parliament followed “the process we always use for agreeing documents of this kind”, noting that it submits 40 to 50 evidence statements to parliamentary inquiries per year. “We asked the energy sub-group of our Science Board to prepare the evidence, based on its analysis of material that is in the public domain following the hacking of the CRU e-mails last year,” says the IOP. “The draft was circulated to the Science Board, which is a formal committee of the Institute with delegated authority from its trustees to oversee its policy work, and approved. However, we are already reviewing our consultation process for preparing policy submissions, and the comments we have received on this submission reinforce the need to make sure our procedures are as robust as possible.”

The Institute also says it “strongly rebuts” accusations of “being overly influenced by one ‘climate-change sceptic’ on the energy sub-group, and then of a lack of openness about the authorship of our evidence”. It adds that “The individual in question had no significant influence on the preparation of the evidence. Responsibility for the evidence rests with our Science Board, whose members’ names are openly available on our website.”

The parliamentary inquiry came as the UK’s Meteorological Office published a review of the latest climate-change science. The report says it is “very likely” that man-made greenhouse-gas emissions are causing the climate to change and that the changes bear the “fingerprint” of human influence. The House of Commons Science and Technology Committee is expected to publish its findings in late April.

About the author

Michael Banks is news editor of Physics World

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Editor
March 13, 2010 5:32 pm

Not surprised that the alarmist ranters are bringing out the torches and pitchforks, demanding to know who wrote the submission. The Alinsky techniques of personal destruction/character assasination remain alive and well in our scientific community among the climate jihadists.

ShrNfr
March 13, 2010 5:36 pm

It is the duty of a scientist to be a skeptic. His/her role in the pursuit of knowledge is to knock holes in current theories and discover new things and effects. Every time we knock a hole in a theory by showing where a hypothesis does not explain an observation, we learn something. That, in the long run, is what it is all about.

Anticlimactic
March 13, 2010 5:42 pm

PS. If left in the Japanese form it could probably be sneaked in to Wikipedia!
Sadly impossible in English – any non-AGW comments will be removed rapidly – in as little as 60 seconds! Read about one man’s attempts here :
http://www.philosophical-investigations.org/Wikipedia_on_Climate_Change

March 13, 2010 5:49 pm

old construction worker (16:24:28) :
“When ever someone says to me ‘Climate Change’ I ask, ‘Are you referring to CO2 induced global warming?'”
Exactly right. The climate always changes, naturally. CO2 is such an insignificant player that its effect can’t even be measured.

Roger Knights
March 13, 2010 5:49 pm

believes? I that is a verb for religion, not for science.

It is sometimes thought that there is only one definition of “belief,” namely “the acceptance of an idea without a provable basis in reality”: That’s only one of the dictionary definitions of belief. There are others, below, found at http://www.dictionary.net/belief :

BELIEF. The conviction of the mind, arising from evidence received, or from information derived, not from actual perception by our senses, but from the relation or information of others who have had the means of acquiring actual knowledge of the facts and in whose qualifications for acquiring that knowledge, and retaining it, and afterwards in communicating it, we can place confidence.
“Without recurring to the books of metaphysicians’ “says Chief Justice Tilghman, “let any man of plain common sense, examine the operations of, his own mind, he will assuredly find that on different subjects his belief is different. I have a firm belief that the moon revolves round the earth. I may believe, too, that there are mountains and valleys in the moon; but this belief is not so strong, because the evidence is weaker.”
Source: Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)
Belief \Be*lief”\, n. [OE. bileafe, bileve; cf. AS. gele[‘a]fa. See Believe.]
1. Assent to a proposition or affirmation, or the acceptance of a fact, opinion, or assertion as real or true, without immediate personal knowledge; reliance upon word or testimony; partial or full assurance without positive knowledge or absolute certainty; persuasion; conviction; confidence; as, belief of a witness; the belief of our senses. [1913 Webster]
Belief admits of all degrees, from the slightest suspicion to the fullest assurance. –Reid. [1913 Webster]

2. (Theol.) A persuasion of the truths of religion; faith. [1913 Webster]
No man can attain [to] belief by the bare contemplation of heaven and earth. –Hooker. [1913 Webster]
3. The thing believed; the object of belief. [1913 Webster]
Superstitious prophecies are not only the belief of fools, but the talk sometimes of wise men. –Bacon. [1913 Webster]
4. A tenet, or the body of tenets, held by the advocates of any class of views; doctrine; creed. [1913 Webster]
In the heat of persecution to which Christian belief was subject upon its first promulgation. –Hooker. [1913 Webster]
Ultimate belief, a first principle incapable of proof; an intuitive truth; an intuition. –Sir W. Hamilton. [1913 Webster]
Syn: Credence; trust; reliance; assurance; opinion. [1913 Webster]
Source: The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48

David Alan Evans
March 13, 2010 6:13 pm

I see far too much of phrases like this…

is a statistical method that is widely accepted in the climate community

Yes, widely accepted in the climate community but nowhere else!
WTF makes them so special?
DaveE.

R.S.Brown
March 13, 2010 6:18 pm

On being noteworthy:
The prestigious British Institute of Physics (IOP) issued a
single-paged Memorandum to the British
Parliment’s House of Commons Select Committee on
Science and Technology concerning

‘The disclosure of climate data from the Climatic Research Unit at he University of East Anglia’. It was enrolled as document (CRU 39). See:

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/memo/climatedata/uc3902.htm
The Instutute of Physics expressed concerns that the lack
of transparency, verifiability, replicability, and openness
of raw data and coding used to interpret that
data as expessed in the CRU emails and data release were
not such that would inspire confidence in good scientific
processes in general and in climate science in particular.
The Instutute was especially adamant that FOIA requests
were not, are not, and should not be a part of the scientific process. They imply that the necessity of using an FOI
request to obtain data or code, especially when made by
a reseacher, represent a profound failure of the scientific
process in that instance.
The IOP never expressed doubts about the validity of the
science or raw data involved, only the interpretative
processes and practices employed after basic data
collection, and only because those processes are obscured
by procedural clouds of the researchers own creation. They
don’t second guess the motives of reseachers in their initial
sample selections.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
We now see a variation of the complex CRU/IPCC peer
review publicity steamroller trying to shame an objective
view into conformity with the nebulous “consensus”
on the state of the art of climate science.
The supporters of this “consensus” treat any public
message conerning climate science as if it needed
their collective permission to have any
validity in claiming space on the printed page or
in the annals of climate science history.
To the “consensus” followers, the IOP memorandum
appears to be a dissonent note in the tune the popular
piper has been calling as the proper melody for climate
science these past few years.
Sadly, dissonent notes are destined to be treated as
dissident challenges.
Readers of this blog are all too familiar with the “shoot
the messenger” tactic employed against any action not
comporting with the concensus view of reality. The
more objective and authoritative the message, the more
guns called in to do the shooting.
The IOP was generally bland in their no-nonsense
memorandum to Parliment. Given the forces at work,
this has become either a very bold or a very naive
statement of principles.
It is noteworthy.

R. Craigen
March 13, 2010 6:32 pm

Let the witch-hunt begin…

Norman
March 13, 2010 6:39 pm

While trying to figure the influence of “Greenhouse gasses” on Climate I pulled up some climate data on 3 cities across the U.S.
Las Vegas, Tulsa and Knoxville
Las Vegas: 36.17 N Latitude
Tulsa: 36.15 N
Knoxville: 35.98 N
These cities are close in Latitude so will receive the same amount of solar flux. I wanted to see what effect water vapor had on temperature.
Yearly Relative Humidity (A.M. and P.M.)
Las Vegas: 39% and 21%
Tulsa: 81% and 58%
Knoxville: 86% and 59%
July Temp: (High/Low/Average) F
Las Vegas: 104.1/78.2/91.15
Tulsa: 93.8/73.1/83.45
Knoxville: 86.9/68.5/77.7
July Sunshine Hours:
Las Vegas: 88%
Tulsa: 74%
Knoxville: 64%
Albedo:
Desert sand: 0.4 (Las Vegas)
Green grass: 0.25 (maybe Tulsa)
Decidious trees: (0.15 to 0.18)
Las Vegas has much less water vapor in its air than Knoxville, Water vapor is noted as the most significant greenhouse gas (numbers given from 70% and up). Las Vegas also reflects much more of the energy that hits the ground relative to Knoxville. Yet Knoxville has an average temperature much below Las Vegas. The other significant data was hours of sunshine. Las Vegas is exposed to a considerable more sunshine than Knoxville (all due to clouds as they are close in Latitude). Tulsa also has a warmer average temperature and is exposed to more sunshine (humidity levels are similar between Knoxville and Tulsa).
I can only conclude (and perhaps indirectly) that the “greenhouse effect” is a fairly small effect when compared to the effect of clouds. The higher water vapor in Knoxville cannot come close to countering the cooling effect of the cloud cover.
I know clouds are a big debate in what causes Global warming. One study links solar activity to cloud formation. Lower solar activity, more clouds via increase in cosmic rays that promote the development of clouds.
I was wondering if you could have another cycle that would take place even if the sun has a constant activity level. Since clouds seem to be far more important to global temp than any greenhouse effect. The idea I am thinking is a warming/cooling cycle based on evaporation. In a cool earth, less water evaporates from the oceans and there is less moisture in the air for cloud formation. Because of this, more solar energy will be absorbed by the oceans and they will slowly warm (high heat capacity). As they warm the air above warms and you get the global warming cycle. More moisture evaporates and you start getting more clouds. The increase in the clouds will start the cooling cycle as less radiation hits the oceans and earth (just like Knoxville vs Las Vegas). Because of the momentum of the system and large heat capacity of the oceans, these warming and cooling cycles take decades and can explain the warmth in the 1930’s (also a warm Greenland), then the cooling period following this one with the cold 1970’s and early 1980’s. Now we are in a warming cycle again and it seems to have reached a peak and the cloud cover will increase leading to a cooling cycle.
Long post, if anyone reads it let me know if it seems logical. Thanks!

Jeff Alberts
March 13, 2010 6:48 pm

Dave Andrews (13:11:31) :
I’ll repeat here a question I just asked at Lucia’s.
It is known that tree rings have not responded to temperature in the last 50 years as it was thought they should. This is the source of ‘hide the decline’ where the tree ring proxies have continued to be used as ‘proving’ AGW.
My question was, if they don’t understand what is happening to tree rings at the moment how can they claim any certainty about what tree rings represent hundreds of years ago?

That’s the question we’ve all been asking.

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 13, 2010 7:14 pm

Oceanographer and climatologist Stefan Rahmstorf from Potsdam University, Germany, has gone further, calling on the IOP to retract the statement from parliament. “I was taken aback when I first read it,” he says. “The evidence is both misinformed and misguided.”
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
No mention in the article that Stefan Rahmstorf has coauthored on RealClimate with Gavin Schmidt of ClimateGate fame.
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/01
/climatepredictionnet-climate-challenges-and-climate-sensitivity/
also
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2007/03/the-ipcc-sea-level-numbers/
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
From looking at Stefan Rahmstorf’s home page it appears his entire career is all about global warming—no mention of this in the article:
http://www.pik-potsdam.de/~stefan/

March 13, 2010 7:17 pm

Wouldn’t it be nice if the Natural climate variability mechanisms were understood better? Would that not help sort out the problems they have with forecasting and modeling the weather and climate by extension?
I am tired of people just talking about the weather so I did some about it.
25 years of independent self funded research has led to some good conclusions as to where to start to find the important answers to solve the problems that have created this air of not knowing so real science cannot proceed and fictitious stuff cannot be discarded.
http://research.aerology.com/aerology-analog-weather-forecasting-method/
Discusses a method of defining the patterns in the Natural climate background variability, so as to provide a stable base to go forward with the answers needed to progress with the truth in hand.
Long read but worth it, Realclimate keeps asking for a “skeptic scientific answer” to the problems rather than just more distractions from their “truth”, well here is my answer to their challenge.

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 13, 2010 7:21 pm

Arnold Wolfendale, who was president of the IOP from 1994 to 1996, says that the evidence is “not worthy” of the Institute and that the submission “further muddies the waters regarding global warming”.
Arnold Wolfendales’ home page shows a lot of work in the area of cosmic rays. I wonder if he knows about Svensmark’s work? It could challenge his viewpoint on global warming.
http://www.dur.ac.uk/physics/staff/profiles/?id=1822

Alvin
March 13, 2010 7:35 pm

We should all know the reason that major petrochemical organization were supporting the alarmists is that they know any carbon taxes forced upon them are simply passed on to the consumer. After the past few years inflated fuel costs, the general public in all countries have become accustomed to higher fuel costs. We would all just buck-up and pay the ever increasing costs and they would be more than happy to vaccuum up the added monies.

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 13, 2010 7:36 pm

Mike’s Nature trick”…..The “trick”, as mentioned by Jones in one of his e-mails to Mann, Bradley and Hughes, is a statistical method that is widely accepted in the climate community….
………………………………………………………………………………………………
whitewash!
But it is true that it is accepted in some parts of the climate community, as ClimateGate has revealed.

Marlene Anderson
March 13, 2010 7:39 pm

The beatings inflicted on the IOP are standard procedure for the pro-AGW crowd. They’ve put the IOP on the defensive and rather than come out swinging against these bullying tactics the IOP is backpedalling.
Is there any wonder finding working scientists, who’d like to keep on working, who are skeptical of AGW is so bloody difficult?
This is the shame of our generation. We should be thinking ahead about ‘what next’ when Mann and Jones are exonerated and reinstated with honours. I have no faith in the integrity of anyone who breathes the same air as the pro-AGW scientists. They’ve shown themselves to be mean, vindictive and ruthless against those who stand in their way.

GerardB
March 13, 2010 7:39 pm

How many mistakes, and incidences of corrupted data and unethical practice are required to be revealed before belief in AGW and its affects are suspended?

Alvin
March 13, 2010 7:39 pm

Holle (19:17:07)
So you are working on Deep Thought? 🙂

SOYLENT GREEN
March 13, 2010 7:45 pm

So which Carbon Extortionist yanked their chain?

D. King
March 13, 2010 7:47 pm

I really don’t think they get it. This is their moment.
This is their history being made. Their detractors are
lost, and will be looked upon as fools. Rembemer, you
can always work in the private sector, where being
right matters.

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 13, 2010 7:49 pm

Peter Taylor (14:35:57) :
Thanks for your comment Peter. I appreciate it!

derek
March 13, 2010 7:54 pm

The gods will not be happy about another point of view on GW.

Doug in Dunedin
March 13, 2010 8:00 pm

David Alan Evans (18:13:08) :
I see far too much of phrases like this…
is a statistical method that is widely accepted in the climate community.
Yep and it’s said with condescension pursed lips, eyes looking down the nose and a—se clenched tightly.

D. King
March 13, 2010 8:03 pm

Remember…Sorry.

March 13, 2010 8:22 pm

Alvin (19:39:34) :
Holle (19:17:07)
So you are working on Deep Thought? 🙂
It is a lot of work and somebody with a really boring day job had to do it.
since I resemble that remark why not?