Border Transgressions

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

There is a new paper out in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences called Linkages among climate change, crop yields and Mexico–US cross-border migration (hereinafter L2010). It has Supplementary Online Information (SOI) here. The editor of the paper is (the late) Dr. Stephen Schneider.

The paper basically advances the following theory of linkages:

Climate Change —> Reduced Mexican Crop Yields —> Migration to US

Hmmmm … their Abstract says:

Climate change is expected to cause mass human migration, including immigration across international borders. This study quantitatively examines the linkages among variations in climate, agricultural yields, and people’s migration responses by using an instrumental variables approach. Our method allows us to identify the relationship between crop yields and migration without explicitly controlling for all other confounding factors. Using state-level data from Mexico, we find a significant effect of climate-driven changes in crop yields on the rate of emigration to the United States. … Depending on the warming scenarios used and adaptation levels assumed, with other factors held constant, by approximately the year 2080, climate change is estimated to induce 1.4 to 6.7 million adult Mexicans (or 2% to 10% of the current population aged 15–65 y) to emigrate as a result of declines in agricultural productivity alone.

Although the results cannot be mechanically extrapolated to other areas and time periods, our findings are significant from a global perspective given that many regions, especially developing countries, are expected to experience significant declines in agricultural yields as a result of projected warming.

YIKES! … scary. Makes a man think seriously about mitigation.

Figure 1. Large-Scale Device for the Mitigation of the Effects of Climate Change. However, it appears that not everyone is convinced of the need for such climate mitigation, as the accompanying text says “Police in the Mexican border city of Tijuana say they have arrested six men for stealing pieces of the U.S. border fence to sell as scrap metal.”

I often divide things into the good, the bad, and the interesting. Regarding this study, first, the good. The authors have done a workmanlike job of pointing to the data that they used, all of which is online. This is to be highly commended, as it allows a quick determination of the validity of their work.

Next, the bad.

Because they were clear about their data, I was able to replicate their results exactly for the corn yields. My practice is to make replication the first step in any analysis of this type. It verifies whether they have done what they say they have done. In doing so, I discovered a most curious thing.

First, a small digression. “Yield” is how many tonnes of a crop are produced per hectare (or acre) harvested. Yield is affected by a number of things, including location, soil quality, and climate. If the yield in a certain location starts to fall, this is an indication that something is going wrong in the farming cycle in that location.

The curiosity that I discovered is that the paper calculates “yield” in a way that I had never seen. Yield is defined as how much crop production you get for every hectare (or acre) that was harvested. The authors, on the other hand, calculated yield as the amount produced for every hectare (or acre) that was planted. This often yields a very different number.

The source of their data is here.  Click on the “Maiz Grano” (Corn) in the first column, mid page. On the resulting page, click “Producción” (Production), second button from left. Then look in the far left column and click on the “Anuario” (Annual) button. Select 2004 as the year (“Año”) and press the “Consulta” button.

Now take a look at the data for 2004. The headings are:

Ubicación, Sup. Sembrada, Sup. Cosechada, Producción, Rendimiento

Or in English

Location, Area Planted (ha), Area Harvested (ha), Production (tonnes), Yield (tonnes/ha)

Over the period in question (1995-2004) Baja California averaged about 3 tonnes of corn per hectare. For Baja in 2004, their site says

BAJA CALIFORNIA, 592 hectares planted, 10 hectares harvested, 25 tonnes produced, yield 2.5 tonnes/ha

Note that, in common with other authorities, the Mexican web site itself calculated yield as production divided by area harvested, not divided by area planted. This is the normal definition of “yield” used by all other analyists. For example, from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) web site glossary we have (emphasis mine):

Title: Crop yield

Definition:

Harvested production per unit of harvested area for crop products. In most of the cases yield data are not recorded but obtained by dividing the production data by the data on area harvested. …

“Harvested area” in turn is defined as:

Title: Area harvested

Definition:

Data refer to the area from which a crop is gathered. Area harvested, therefore, excludes the area from which, although sown or planted, there was no harvest due to damage, failure, etc. …

From this, it is clear that the authors of L2010 are not calculating the yield correctly. They have calculated the yield for Baja 2004 as 25 tonnes / 592 hectares planted = 0.04 tonnes/ha, a meaningless result. This is why yield is always calculated based on the area harvested, not based on the area planted. Obviously, something happened in Baja in 2004 that wiped out most of the corn crop. But for the remaining area, the yield was 25 tonnes / 10 hectares harvested = 2.5 tonnes/ha, not far from normal.

Overall, this is a very significant error. To take one example of the effect of the error, Figure 2 shows the correlations between Mexican annual temperatures and corn crop yields (correctly and incorrectly calculated).

Figure 2. State by state correlations between annual temperature and corn crop yields, 1995-2004. “Yield” is production / area harvested. “Incorrect Yield” is production / area planted, as used in L2010.

Note that in some States (Aguascalientes, Campeche, Yucatan), one dataset shows a very small correlation between temperature and yield, while the other shows 20%-40% correlation. In some cases (Nueva Leon, Queretaro, San Luis Potosi) one shows positive and one shows negative correlation. Overall, there are many results which are significantly different.

Because the correlations of the yield are central to their analysis, this error invalidates the paper and requires the recalculation of all the relationships. Remember that their thesis is:

Climate Change —> Reduced Mexican Crop Yields —> Migration to US

Note that there are two separate mathematical relationships in their claim. One relates climate change (temperature and rainfall) to changes in yield. The other relates changes in yield to migration rates. An error in the yield, therefore, requires a recalculation of both relationships, with new error bounds, etc.

Since the original web site is in Spanish, this error may simply be a misunderstanding of what the web site says. However, that slides over the question of why they didn’t simply use the yield figures provided in their data source …

I have posted up the Area Planted, Area Harvested, Production, Annual Temperature, and Yield figures here as an Excel spreadsheet. To determine which one they used (area planted or area harvested), it is necessary to take 5-year averages of the data (1995-1999 and 2000-2004) and compare the answers to Table S1 of the Supplementary Online Information. I can reproduce their results only by the incorrect usage of area planted instead of area harvested. Note that “Log Corn Yield” in Table S1 of their paper is the natural log (ln) of the yield.

I have pointed out some good about the study, and some bad, so onwards to the interesting. One interesting thing to me is the variety of responses of different states to increased or decreased temperatures. In a third of the Mexican states, warmer is better for corn (positive correlation). In two-thirds of the Mexican states, on the other hand, cooler is better for corn. Hmmm …

Another interesting thing is the change in the Mexican country average yield for corn. Figure 3 shows both the country average yield and average annual temperature for 1995-2005:

Figure 3. Mexican Corn Yield (red line, left scale) and Temperature (blue line, right scale) Photo Source

Fig. 3 highlights one of the real shortcomings of their study. This is the very short time period that they are investigating. However, taken at face value, this graph does not give much credence to the idea that increasing temperatures will reduce Mexican corn yield … (note that I make no claim that this relationship is meaningful or statistically significant. I only say it does not support the authors’ argument.)

As noted above, there are two mathematical relationships involved in their claim. One is temperature/precipitation vs yield, and the other is yield vs emigration. For the yield vs. emigration, the Mexican dataset is short. So I understand that they have to make do with what they have. But yield versus temperature has a much longer dataset. The temperatures from their source span 1971 to the present, and the state-by-state crop data goes back to 1980. So they should have established the corn yield/temperature link using all of the data available (1980-2009), even though the other yield/emigration link has so much less data.

How does something like this get published? I suspect that this is another example of a member of PNAS using their “Proceedings” publication as a vanity press with little in the way of peer review. The article is edited by Stephen Schneider, who also edited the other recent “blacklist” paper, so it’s clandestinely flying across the border under the peer-review radar …

Hopefully, this will be the last of the posthumous Schneider “science” for us to deal with. The only good thing about Schneider was that when I saw his name on something, I knew I could likely find errors in it … made my job that much easier.

Look, I don’t like to speak ill of the dead. Stephen Schneider was probably a nice man who loved his family and petted puppies and brought the homeless blankets and dinner. But his general claims were often a “post-normal science” abomination, and his scientific work (as in the present instance) was sometimes very slipshod.

In particular, Schneider is noted for his statement regarding the obligations of scientists:

To capture the public imagination, we [scientists] have to offer up some scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements and little mention of any doubts one might have. Each of us has to decide the right balance between being effective, and being honest. This ‘double ethical bind’ we frequently find ourselves in cannot be solved by any formula. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest. I hope that means being both.

To me, the most scary scenario is scientists who balance their honesty with effectiveness, or with anything else for that matter. I don’t want scientists who make little mention of their doubts. I don’t want scary scenarios from scientists, that’s why God made Hollywood and the BBC.

I want scientists who are as honest as possible, about their doubts and everything else. Schneider’s view, that scientists should balance honesty and effectiveness, is extremely and insidiously dangerous to science.

So, as un-PC as my view might be, I am overjoyed to see the last post-mortem gasp of Schneider’s apocalyptic alarmism. Am I glad he is dead? No way. As the poet said,

Each man’s death diminishes me,

For I am involved in mankind.

I am very happy, however, that he is no longer teaching at Stanford, that he is no longer writing garbage for me to wade through, and that he is no longer busily filling up the porches of the Stanford students’ ears with “cursed hebenon” …

My regards to all,

w.

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wws
July 28, 2010 4:21 pm

“As the poet said,
Each man’s death diminishes me,
For I am involved in mankind.”
Suit yourself, but I prefer Clarence Darrow’s aphorism: “I’ve never killed a man, but I’ve read many an obituary with a great deal of satisfaction.”

JFD
July 28, 2010 4:21 pm

Thank you, Willis, for your continued excellent work in debunking flawed studies. Any immigration study that ignores developing nation population growth is seriously myopic. Mexico currently has 110 million population but is creating jobs for slightly less that half of the yearly increase. The long term birth rate in Mexico is 20 per 1000 or 2%, so the population gain is 2,000,000 persons per year, of which there is no jobs created for 1,000,000. Those one million unemployed persons per year need to find work to survive and look northward. By 2080, at the 2% growth rate, Mexico’s population will be 4 times what it is now. There will be 4,000,000 new jobless with their eyes turned to the north each year.
It will not be global warming that causes Mexicans to immigrate but overcrowding, lack of jobs, lack of irrigation water, lack of arable land and lack of money to buy fertilizer to grow corn that will cause the mass exodus to the north. There are two potential solutions to the problem: 1) increased purchasing of maquiladoras produced products by the US and Canada and 2) iron fisted birth control programs by the Mexican government. The first solution may be somewhat possible but the second will be exceedingly difficult.

Neo
July 28, 2010 4:39 pm

It’ probably possible to write a pervasive paper that “Global Warming” causes ordinarily sane politicians to act in insane ways, but who would fund it ?

Pascvaks
July 28, 2010 4:40 pm

“All’s fair in love and war.” (We tend to frequently forget that some among us do not think the same way we do. And that there are who some among the ‘some’ do not think the same way most of the ‘some’ think. It’s a ‘Bell Curve’ thing.)
Was this an honest ‘mistake’ with the column of source data used? Doubtful.
Was is intentional misinformation designed to ‘further the cause’? Probable.
What’s the trade off? Most real ‘scientists’ don’t care, and won’t say anything; the lie further’s the cause in a ‘big’ way; the Eschenbach’s and WUWT’s of the world are little ‘pests’ that won’t really make even a dent in the lie.
Decision? Publish! Publish! Publish!
On With The Revolution! All’s fair in love and war!
PS: We might be taking too much water from the Colorado river. California is really way too big for it’s britches. Maybe if we took the Colorado water we send to California and gave it to Mexico we could stop all this border crossing stuff. (But maybe the Drug Lords of Mexico will just grow more Pot too; hard to know what to do, ain’t it? Life’s a beach. Always changing, always the same.)

Gail Combs
July 28, 2010 4:42 pm

Milwaukee Bob says:
July 28, 2010 at 3:51 pm
Dang Gail, now you’ve got me seeing RED! I knew some of that but….. WOW!
Yeah, we sure do need more government – – don’t we?
“In this particular crisis, government isn’t the solution to the problem, government IS the problem!”
And looking back over the issues cover here, what percentage of the cases is THAT the cause? Far to many….
______________________________________________________
What most people do not see, and will not until it is too late, is that Mexico and India are not unique. There is an under the radar war going on over the control of the world food supply. “Free Trade Agreements” World Bank/IMF SAPs, patenting of animals, government regulations, traceability and “international harmonization” of laws are the weapons being used to remove our god given right to grow our own food.
For example there was a tooth and nail fight over HR875 last spring in the USA.
HR 875 included this.
“in any action to enforce the requirements of the food safety law, the connection with interstate commerce required for jurisdiction SHALL BE PRESUMED TO EXIST.”
The fact you are growing veggies for you and your family does not exclude you from the oversight of the US government!!!
The Commerce Clause:
A farmer, Mr. Filburn, grew wheat for his own use. “The government claimed that if Mr. Filburn grew wheat for his own use, he would not be buying it — and that affected interstate commerce” The Supreme court found against the farmer!!!
http://www.fff.org/freedom/0895g.asp
The “food safety bills” (there is more than one) will require US farmers to treat their farms as drug manufacturing plants with all the paper work and red tape that entails. A farmer in the UK said the paperwork takes over 60% of his time. The EU has managed to rid Portugal of 60% of their farmers. http://www.i-sis.org.uk/savePolishCountryside.php
If you want to see the model for the regulations, the UN/WTO international “Guide to Good Farming Practices” is: http://www.oie.int/boutique/extrait/25berlingueri823836_0.pdf
When you read it think of a subsistance farmer in Africa or South America or India. Heck think of Granny or your daughter having to tag their chickens or pony and report to the US government within 24 hours every time the animal leaves or enters your property. (NAIS -animal traceability) We have been fighting that law (NAIS) in the USA too. Australia, Canada and the EU already lost that battle.
Unfortunately all the independent farmers will be driven from their land: the land will be bought up by one of the ten big Ag transnational corporations: all the laws against individuals growing food will be in place (think drugs): and only then will the food prices be jacked out of sight. But of course by then it will be too late.
Welcome to the New Age of Colonization but this time it is the large corporations doing the colonizing and our land, property and labor the target.

L
July 28, 2010 4:43 pm

Got a news flash for these ivory tower nimrods: 10% of the Mexican-born population already lives in the US. And if the current rate of immigration continues, Mexico will run out of humans to export long before 2080 rolls around.

Mike
July 28, 2010 5:00 pm

On the other hand, if recent predictions that global cooling is in the offing are correct, then I suppose Mexico will be forced, in the near future, to produce copious amounts of CO2 to counteract the cooling so as to keep illegal American immigrants from flooding South across Mexico’s northern border. Some global cooling responses will surely include:
-A Mexico City based CO2 floor-and-trade exchange.
-A vast demand for CO2 generators that will dot the Mexican landscape
-A blockbuster film entitled “Another Inconvenient Truth.”
-Another Nobel prize for Mr. Gore
-Vast sums of money for research by Mexican universities into AGC.
-A complete revision of American textbooks to warn grade-school students of Gaia’s peril due to reckless use of low carbon renewable energy sources.
-A U. N. administered “CO2 Miser Tax” on those countries that don’t produce enough CO2.
-Foreign aid by Mexico to the U. S. so that America can develop its own CO2 generation capability.
Time for the prescient investor to get in on the “ground floor.”

Ed
July 28, 2010 5:02 pm

It looks like a play to capture the hearts and minds of people who are worried about immigration – but on the other hand, we need to praise the authors for their transparency.

Gail Combs
July 28, 2010 5:03 pm

grzejnik says:
July 28, 2010 at 4:05 pm
…. And GMO pollen won’t help the heirloom varieties either especially if any GMO company were to bring in lawyers to stop seed saving claiming to poor farmers that their seed is the company’s intellectual property after polluting it lol
___________________________________________
Yes they are already finding banned GMO genes in Mexican corn. Monsanto and the other transnationals are grabbing as many seed varieties as the can get their hands on. There is the “Global Diversity Treaty” that allows big Ag to patent the varieties and then go after the farmers for using “saved seed” containing the “patented” genes.
REFERENCES:
FAO is supporting harmonization of seed rules and regulations

Global Diversity Treaty: Standard Material Transfer Agreement (SMTA) a standardized contract that will enable much easier access to crop diversity. [ germplasm for patenting] royalty payment (1.1% of sales) is paid only if product is unavailable for further breeding and research. Funds will be devoted to conservation efforts. Translation: Bio-techs Corporations steal seed from third world farmers, patents it and pay money to Bioversity International
Monsanto, Cargill and Maseca-ADM establish regional seed banks in Mexico
ICAR: International Animal Patenting

Robert
July 28, 2010 5:10 pm

I thought this article was in bad taste. There was really no need to speak ill of schneider so often. I would hope that after the author of this article passes on that there are not bloggers out there getting in digs at him when really there was no need to do so. A paper was found to be erroneous: end of story. No need for the sarcasm “he probably pets puppies” or the post-mortem attacks.

July 28, 2010 5:10 pm

Milwaukee Bob says:
July 28, 2010 at 3:51 pm
Gail Combs says:
July 28, 2010 at 3:24 pm
“Dang Gail, now you’ve got me seeing RED! I knew some of that but….. WOW!
Yeah, we sure do need more government – – don’t we?
“In this particular crisis, government isn’t the solution to the problem, government IS the problem!”
And looking back over the issues cover here, what percentage of the cases is THAT the cause? Far to many….”
Government is not reason, it is not eloquent, like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master.———-(Apologies to George Washington if I missed a word or two.)…..I believe we’re in the “fearful master” stage.
Yes, we all know it isn’t climate change that brings us the immigrants. Specifically from Mexico, it is the governments on both sides of the border. Both incompetent and ineffectual in their own unique way. NAFTA, the WTO, and the UN, all steps in one direction. Of course, there are other steps being taken. The IPCC, being an extension of the UN is just another step. It is the advocacy papers such as this one we’re commenting on (and the others referenced here) that shakes my faith that we’ll eventually run these global totalitarians off the planet or hunt them down like the mad dogs they are.

July 28, 2010 5:11 pm

“we find a significant effect of climate-driven changes in crop yields on the rate of emigration to the United States.”
So, there is a statistically signifigant correlation between illegal immigration and climate change? We’d better put a stop to that immigration immediately!

latitude
July 28, 2010 5:14 pm

I suppose this would be one of the easiest and fastest ways to get a country to turn socialist too……………

Gail Combs
July 28, 2010 5:19 pm

wws says:
July 28, 2010 at 4:21 pm
“As the poet said,
Each man’s death diminishes me,
For I am involved in mankind.”
Suit yourself, but I prefer Clarence Darrow’s aphorism: “I’ve never killed a man, but I’ve read many an obituary with a great deal of satisfaction.”
_________________________________________________________________
I also prefer Clarence Darrow’s aphorism. My thoughts about Dan Amstutz are about the same as those about people I can not mention on this website. If the international agreements and US laws he wrote are not rescinded his death toll may well be similar to those people but will be stretched over years and uncounted.
I am a capitalist but this pretty much sums up good old Dan The Rat in the Grain
Connection between Goldman & Sachs and DAN G. AMSTUTZ

Niphredilflower
July 28, 2010 5:30 pm

If I’m right in thinking that the key point to the paper was to highlight the indirect danger to crops from climate change (caused by our CO2 increases), surely a more damaging study would research the direct effect on crop yields if we were reducing atmospheric CO2… although they would probably only conclude an increase in ‘rare crop’ site-seeing tourism.

Gail Combs
July 28, 2010 5:31 pm

Robert says:
July 28, 2010 at 5:10 pm
I thought this article was in bad taste. There was really no need to speak ill of schneider so often. I would hope that after the author of this article passes on that there are not bloggers out there getting in digs at him when really there was no need to do so. A paper was found to be erroneous: end of story. No need for the sarcasm “he probably pets puppies” or the post-mortem attacks.
_________________________________________________________________-
Robert, This is war although very few recognize it because it is a war without borders.
I can speak with admiration for “enemies” such as Robert E. Lee or Erwin Rommel but there are others I can not and those who intentionally support the starvation of children by falsifying studies such as Dan Amstutz are among them.

harrywr2
July 28, 2010 5:34 pm

“Obviously, something happened in Baja in 2004 that wiped out most of the corn crop.”
Not necessarily, since NAFTA the practice of dumping excess US corn production into Mexico is common. No point in harvesting a crop without a buyer.
US manufacturing jobs may have moved to Mexico, but Mexican farming jobs moved to the US.

Hector M.
July 28, 2010 5:39 pm

Michael Jankowski says:
July 28, 2010 at 3:30 pm
“Will this Mexican migration be as swift and overwhelming as the migration of those fleeing rising sea levels?”
You mean the 0.3-0.5 millimeters/year of sea level rise envisaged by the IPCC for this century, just above the 0.2 mm/year of the 20th century? A fearsome disaster!! Would drive millions away from the coasts and into the hinterland, and submerge most great cities. The end is nigh.

Gary Hladik
July 28, 2010 5:39 pm

Well done, Willis. Still keeping ’em honest…well, no, but at least exposing their dishonesty.

Pascvaks
July 28, 2010 5:47 pm

Ref – Robert says:
July 28, 2010 at 5:10 pm
“I thought this article was in bad taste.”
___________________________________
No, not at all. We always reap what we sow, even after we’ve gone on to the Happy Hunting Grounds. Dr. Stephen Schneider will long be remembered for his ‘accomplishments’, ‘failures’, and ‘methods’; and so will we all. Sorry if you think he’s getting more than he deserves, I haven’t heard or seen anything that even approaches what he deserves (IMHO).
May he learn from the mistakes of this life and one day return to do better. How’s that for empathy?

brad
July 28, 2010 5:55 pm

This paper is just insane…

Gail Combs
July 28, 2010 6:06 pm

Michael Jankowski says:
July 28, 2010 at 3:30 pm
“Will this Mexican migration be as swift and overwhelming as the migration of those fleeing rising sea levels?”
_________________________
Hector M. says:
July 28, 2010 at 5:39 pm
You mean the 0.3-0.5 millimeters/year of sea level rise envisaged by the IPCC for this century, just above the 0.2 mm/year of the 20th century? A fearsome disaster!! Would drive millions away from the coasts and into the hinterland, and submerge most great cities. The end is nigh
____________________________
That must be why Al Gore bought his seaside mansion in the home of the earthquakes…

July 28, 2010 6:19 pm

Stephen Schneider couldn’t have passed blacklist and faux science manuscripts at PNAS without Ralph Cicerone opening the door.

GAZ
July 28, 2010 6:21 pm

This climate-change-induced-migration is an old chestnut.
In Australia they have been beating this drum for some time now. See for example:
http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/ClimateChange/effects/security/migration.htm
and
http://www.workpermit.com/news/2008-08-18/australia/groups-urge-nz-australia-adjust-immigration-climate-change.htm