This essay from Willis appeared on WUWT overnight Saturday while I slept. After reading it this morning, I decided to make it a sticky at the top of WUWT (I also added the open letter reference) because it says everything that needs to be said about the current state of affairs in climate science and the skeptic position. I ask readers not only to read it, but to disseminate it widely at other websites and forums. Hopefully, the right people will read this. Thanks for your consideration, and thank you, Willis.
UPDATE: I’ve made this essay available as a PDF here: Willis_Trenberth_WUWT_Essay suitable for printing and emailing. – Anthony
UPDATE2: Trenberth reacts: edits speech to fix copying, leaves “deniers”
Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I would like to take as my text the following quote from the recent paper (PDF, 270k also on web here) by Dr. Kevin Trenberth:
Given that global warming is “unequivocal”, to quote the 2007 IPCC report, the null hypothesis should now be reversed, thereby placing the burden of proof on showing that there is no human influence [on the climate].
Figure 1. The game of Monopoly’s “Community Chest” card that was randomly drawn by Dr. Kevin Trenberth. Some guys are just lucky, I guess.
The “null hypothesis” in science is the condition that would result if what you are trying to establish is not true. For example, if your hypothesis is that air pressure affects plant growth rates, the null hypothesis is that air pressure has no effect on plant growth rates. Once you have both hypotheses, then you can see which hypothesis is supported by the evidence.
In climate science, the AGW hypothesis states that human GHG emissions significantly affect the climate. As such, the null hypothesis is that human GHG emissions do not significantly affect the climate, that the climate variations are the result of natural processes. This null hypothesis is what Doctor T wants to reverse.
As Steve McIntyre has often commented, with these folks you really have to keep your eye on the pea under the walnut shell. These folks seem to have sub-specialties in the “three-card monte” sub-species of science. Did you notice when the pea went from under one walnut shell to another in Dr. T’s quotation above? Take another look at it.
The first part of Dr. T’s statement is true. There is general scientific agreement that the globe has been warming, in fits and starts of course, for the last three centuries or so. And since it has been thusly warming for centuries, the obvious null hypothesis would have to be that the half-degree of warming we experienced in the 20th century was a continuation of some long-term ongoing natural trend.
But that’s not what Dr. Trenberth is doing here. Keep your eye on the pea. He has smoothly segued from the IPCC saying “global warming is ‘unequivocal'”, which is true, and stitched that idea so cleverly onto another idea, ‘and thus humans affect the climate’, that you can’t even see the seam.
The pea is already under the other walnut shell. He is implying that the IPCC says that scientists have “unequivocally” shown that humans are the cause of weather ills, and if I don’t take that as an article of faith, it’s my job to prove that we are not the cause of floods in Brisbane.
Now, lest you think that the IPCC actually did mean that ‘humans are the cause’ when they said (in his words) that ‘global warming was “unequivocal”‘, here’s their full statement from the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Summary For Policymakers (2007) (PDF, 3.7 MB):
Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, as is now evident from observations of increases in global average air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice, and rising global mean sea level (see Figure SPM-3).
Despite the vagueness of a lack of a timeframe, that is generally true, but it says nothing about humans being the cause. So he is totally misrepresenting the IPCC findings (which he helped write, remember, so it’s not a misunderstanding) to advance his argument. The IPCC said nothing like what he is implying.
Gotta love the style, though, simply proclaiming by imperial fiat that his side is the winner in one of the longest-running modern scientific debates. And his only proffered “evidence” for this claim? It is the unequivocal fact that Phil Jones and Michael Mann and Caspar Amman and Gene Wahl and the other good old boys of the IPCC all agree with him. That is to say, Dr. T’s justification for reversing the null hypothesis is that the IPCC report that Dr. T helped write agrees with Dr. T. That’s recursive enough to make Ouroboros weep in envy …
And the IPCC not only says it’s true, it’s “unequivocal”. Just plain truth wouldn’t be scientific enough for those guys, I guess. Instead, it is “unequivocal” truth. Here’s what “unequivocal” means (emphasis mine):
unequivocal: adjective: admitting of no doubt or misunderstanding; having only one meaning or interpretation and leading to only one conclusion (“Unequivocal evidence”)
Notice how well crafted Dr. T’s sentence is. After bringing in “global warming”, he introduces the word “unequivocal”, meaning we can only draw one conclusion. Then in the second half of the sentence, he falsely attaches that “unequivocal” certainty of conclusion to his own curious conclusion, that the normal rules of science should be reversed for the benefit of … … well, not to put too fine a point on it, he’s claiming that normal scientific rules should be reversed for the benefit of Dr. Kevin Trenberth and the IPCC and those he supports. Probably just a coincidence, though.
For Dr. Trenberth to call for the usual null hypothesis (which is that what we observe in nature is, you know, natural) to be reversed, citing as his evidence the IPCC statement that the earth is actually warming, is nonsense. However, it is not meaningless nonsense. It is pernicious, insidious, and dangerous nonsense. He wants us to spend billions of dollars based on this level of thinking, and he has cleverly conflated two ideas to push his agenda.
I understand that Dr. T has a scientific hypothesis. This hypothesis, generally called the “AGW hypothesis”, is that if greenhouse gases (GHGs) go up, the temperature must follow, and nothing else matters. The hypothesis is that the GHGs are the master thermostat for the globe, everything else just averages out in the long run, nothing could possibly affect the long-term climate but GHGs, nothing to see here, folks, move along. No other forcings, feedbacks, or hypotheses need apply. GHGs rule, OK?
Which is an interesting hypothesis, but it is woefully short of either theoretical or observational support. In part, of course, this is because the AGW hypothesis provides almost nothing in the way of a statement or a prediction which can be falsified. This difficulty in falsification of the hypothesis, while perhaps attractive to the proponents of the hypothesis, inevitably implies a corresponding difficulty in verification or support of the hypothesis.
In addition, a number of arguably cogent and certainly feasible scientific objections have been raised against various parts of the hypothesis, from the nature and sign of the forcings considered and unconsidered, to the existence of natural thermostatic mechanisms.
Finally, to that we have to add the general failure of what few predictions have come from the teraflops of model churning in support of the AGW hypothesis. We haven’t seen any acceleration in sea level rise. We haven’t seen any climate refugees. The climate model Pinatubo prediction was way off the mark. The number and power of hurricanes hasn’t increased as predicted. And you remember the coral atolls and Bangladesh that you and the IPCC warned us about, Dr. T, the ones that were going to get washed away by the oncoming Thermageddon? Bangladesh and the atoll islands are both getting bigger, not smaller. We were promised a warming of two, maybe even three tenths of a degree per decade this century if we didn’t mend our evil carbon-loving ways, and so far we haven’t mended one thing, and we have seen … well … zero tenths of a degree for the first decade.
So to date, the evidentiary scorecard looks real bad for the AGW hypothesis. Might change tomorrow, I’m not saying the game’s over, that’s AGW nonsense that I’ll leave to Dr. T. I’m just saying that after a quarter century of having unlimited funding and teraflops of computer horsepower and hundreds of thousands of hours of grad students’ and scientists’ time and the full-throated support of the media and university departments dedicated to establishing the hypothesis, AGW supporters have not yet come up with much observational evidence to show for the time and money invested. Which should give you a clue as to why Dr. T is focused on the rules of the game. As the hoary lawyer’s axiom has it, if you can’t argue facts argue the law [the rules of the game], and if you can’t argue the law pound the table and loudly proclaim your innocence …
So now, taking both tacks at once in his paper, Dr. T. is both re-asserting his innocence and proposing that we re-write the rules of the whole game … I find myself cracking up laughing over my keyboard at the raw nerve of the man. If he and his ideas weren’t so dangerous, it would be truly funny.
Look, I’m sorry to be the one to break the bad news to you, Dr. T, but you can’t change the rules of scientific inquiry this late in the game. Here are the 2011 rules, which curiously are just like the 1811 rules.
First, you have to show that some aspect of the climate is historically anomalous or unusual. As far as I know, no one has done that, including you. So the game is in serious danger before it is even begun. If you can’t show me where the climate has gone off its natural rails, if you can’t point to where the climate is acting unusually or anomalously, then what good are your explanations as to why it supposedly went off the rails at some mystery location you can’t identify?
(And of course, this is exactly what Dr. T would gain by changing the rules, and may relate to his desire to change them. With so few examples to give to support his position, after a quarter century of searching for such evidence, it would certainly be tempting to try to change the rules … but I digress.)
But perhaps, Dr. T., perhaps you have found some such climate anomaly which cannot be explained as natural variation and you just haven’t made it public yet.
If you have evidence that the climate is acting anomalously, then Second, you have to show that the anomaly can be explained by human actions. And no, Dr. T., you can’t just wave your hands and say something like “Willis, the IPCC sez you have to prove that what generations of people called ‘natural’, actually is natural”. There’s an arcane technical scientific name for that, too. It’s called “cheating”, Dr. T., and is frowned on in the better circles of scientific inquiry …
(N.B. – pulling variables out of a tuned computer model and then proudly announcing that the model doesn’t work without the missing variables doesn’t mean you have established that humans affect the climate. It simply means that you tuned your computer model to reproduce the historical record using all the variables, and as an inevitable result, when using only part of those variables your model doesn’t do as well at reproducing the historical record. No points for that claim.)
Third, you have to defend your work, and not just from the softball questions of your specially selected peer reviewers who “know what to say” to get you published in scientific journals. In 2011, curiously, we’ve gone back to the customs of the 1800s, the public marketplace of ideas — except this time it’s an electronic marketplace of ideas, rather than people speaking from the dais and in the halls of the Royal Society in London. If you won’t stand up and publicly defend your work, it’s simple – you won’t be believed. And not just by me. Other scientists are watching, and considering, and evaluating.
This doesn’t mean you have to reply to every idiot with a half-baked objection and a tin-foil hat. It does mean that if you refuse to answer serious scientific questions, people will take note of that refusal. You must have noticed how such refusal to answer scientific questions totally destroyed the scientific credibility of the website RealClimate. Well, they’re your friends, so perhaps you didn’t notice, but if not, you should notice, here’s an example. (PDF, 147K) Running from serious scientific questions, as they make a practice of doing at RealClimate, makes you look weak whether you are or not.
And Always, you have to show your work. You have to archive your data. You have to reveal your computer algorithms. You have to expose everything that supports and sustains your claims to the brutal light of public inquiry, warts and all.
Dr. T., I fear you’ll have to get used to the sea change, this is not your father’s climate science. The bottom line is we’re no longer willing to trust you. You could publish in the Akashic Records and I wouldn’t believe what you said until I checked the figures myself. I’m sorry to say it, but by the actions of you and your colleagues, you have forfeited the public’s trust. You blew your credibility, Dr. T, and you have not yet rebuilt it.
And further actions like your current attempt to re-write the rules of science aren’t helping at all. Nor is trying to convince us that you look good with a coat of the finest English whitewash from the “investigations” into Climategate. Didn’t you guys notice the lesson of Watergate, that the coverup is more damaging than the original malfeasance?
Dr. T, you had a good run, you were feted and honored, but the day of reckoning up the cost has come and gone. Like some book said, you and the other un-indicted co-conspirators have been weighed in the balances, and found wanting. At this point, you have two choices — accept it and move on, or bitch about it. I strongly advise the former, but so far all I see is the latter.
You want to regain the trust of the public, for yourself and for climate science? It won’t be easy, but it can be done. Here’s my shortlist of recommendations for you and other mainstream climate scientists:
• Stop trying to sell the idea that the science is settled. Climate science is a new science, we don’t even have agreement on whether clouds warm or cool the planet, we don’t know if there are thermostatic interactions that tend to maintain some temperature in preference to others. Or as you wrote to Tom Wigley, Dr. T,
How come you do not agree with a statement that says we are no where close to knowing where energy is going or whether clouds are changing to make the planet brighter. We are not close to balancing the energy budget. The fact that we can not account for what is happening in the climate system makes any consideration of geoengineering quite hopeless as we will never be able to tell if it is successful or not! It is a travesty!
SOURCE: email 1255550975
Curious. You state strongly to your friend that we’re not close to knowing where the energy is going or to balancing the energy budget, yet you say in public that we know enough to take the most extraordinary step of reversing the null hypothesis … how does that work again?
At this point, there’s not much about climate science that is “unequivocal” except that the climate is always changing.
• Don’t try to change the rules of the game in mid-stream. It makes you look desperate, whether you are or not.
• Stop calling people “deniers”, my goodness, after multiple requests that’s just common courtesy and decency, where are your manners? It makes you look surly and uncivilized, whether you are or not.
• Stop avoiding public discussion and debate of your work. You are asking us to spend billions of dollars based on your conclusions. If you won’t bother to defend those conclusions, don’t bother us with them. Refusing to publicly defend your billion dollar claims make it look like you can’t defend them, whether you can or not.
• Stop secretly moving the pea under the walnut shells. You obviously think we are blind, you also clearly believe we wouldn’t remember that you said we have a poor understanding of the climate system. Disabuse yourself of the idea that you are dealing with fools or idiots, and do it immediately. As I have found to my cost, exposing my scientific claims to the cruel basilisk gaze of the internet is like playing chess with Deep Blue … individual processors have different abilities, but overall any faults in my ideas will certainly be exposed. Too many people looking at my ideas from too many sides for much to slip through. Trying anything but absolute honesty on the collective memory and wisdom of the internet makes you look like both a fool and con man, whether you are one or not.
• Write scientific papers that don’t center around words like “possibly” or “conceivably” or “might”. Yes, possibly all of the water molecules in my glass of water might be heading upwards at the same instant, and I could conceivably win the Mega-Ball lottery, and I might still play third base for the New York Yankees, but that is idle speculation that has no place in scientific inquiry. Give us facts, give us uncertainties, but spare us the stuff like “This raises the possibility that by 2050, this could lead to the total dissolution of all inter-atomic bonds …”. Yeah, I suppose it could. So what, should I buy a lottery ticket?
• Stop lauding the pathetic purveyors of failed prophecies. Perhaps you climate guys haven’t noticed, but Paul Ehrlich was not a visionary genius. He was a failure whose only exceptional talent is the making of apocalyptic forecasts that didn’t come true. In any business he would not have lasted one minute past the cratering collapse of his first ridiculous forecast of widespread food riots and worldwide deaths from global famine in the 1980s … but in academia, despite repeating his initial “We’re all gonna crash and burn, end of the world coming up soon, you betcha” prognostication method several more times with no corresponding crashing burning or ending, he’s still a professor at Stanford. Now that’s understandable under tenure rules, you can’t fire him for being a serially unsuccessful doomcaster. But he also appears to be one of your senior AGW thinkers and public representatives, which is totally incomprehensible to me.
His string of predicted global catastrophes that never came anywhere near true was only matched by the inimitable collapses of the prophecies of his wife Anne, and of his cohorts John Holdren and the late Stephen Schneider. I fear we’ll never see their like again, a fearsome foursome who between them never made one single prediction that actually came to pass. Stop using them as your spokesmodels, it doesn’t increase confidence in your claims.
• Enough with the scary scenarios, already. You’ve done the Chicken Little thing to death, give it a rest, it is sooo last century. It makes you look both out-of-date and hysterical whether you are or not.
• Speak out against scientific malfeasance whenever and wherever you see it. This is critical to the restoration of trust. I’m sick of watching climate scientists doing backflips to avoid saying to Lonnie Thompson “Hey, idiot, archive all of your data, you’re ruining all of our reputations!”. The overwhelming silence of mainstream AGW scientists on these matters is one of the (unfortunately numerous) reasons that the public doesn’t trust climate scientists, and justifiably so. You absolutely must clean up your own house to restore public trust, no one else can do it. Speak up. We can’t hear you.
• Stop re-asserting the innocence of you and your friends. It makes you all look guilty, whether you are or not … and since the CRU emails unequivocally favor the “guilty” possibility, it makes you look unapologetic as well as guilty. Whether you are or not.
• STOP HIDING THINGS!!! Give your most private data and your most top-secret computer codes directly to your worst enemies and see if they can poke holes in your ideas. If they can’t, then you’re home free. That is true science, not hiding your data and gaming the IPCC rules to your advantage.
• Admit the true uncertainties. The mis-treatment of uncertainty in the IPCC reports, and the underestimation of true uncertainty in climate science in general, is a scandal.
• Scrap the IPCC. It has run its race. Do you truly think that whatever comes out of the next IPCC report will make the slightest difference to the debate? You’ve had four IPCC reports in a row, each one more alarmist than the previous one. You’ve had every environmental organization shilling for you. You’ve had billions of dollars in support, Al Gore alone spent $300 million on advertising and advocacy. You’ve had 25 years to make your case, with huge resources and supercomputers and entire governments on your side, and you are still losing the public debate … after all of that, do you really think another IPCC report will change anything?
If it is another politically driven error-fest like the last one, I don’t think so. And what are the odds of it being an honest assessment of the science? Either way the next IPCC report won’t settle a single discussion, even if it is honest science. Again, Dr. T, you have only yourself and your friends to blame. You used the IPCC to flog bad science like the Hokeyschtick, your friends abused the IPCC to sneak in papers y’all favored and keep out papers you didn’t like, you didn’t check your references so stupid errors were proclaimed as gospel truth, it’s all a matter of record.
Do you truly think that after Climategate, and after the revelations of things like IPCC citations of WWF propaganda pieces as if they were solid science, and after Pachauri’s ludicrous claim that it was “voodoo science” to point out the Himalayan glacier errors, after all that do you think anyone with half a brain still believes the IPCC is some neutral arbiter of climate science whose ex-cathedra pronouncements can be relied upon?
Because if you do think people still believe that, you really should get out more. At this point people don’t trust the IPCC any more than they trust you and your friends. Another IPCC report will be roundly ignored by one side, and cited as inerrant gospel by the other side. How will that help anyone? Forget about the IPCC, it is a meaningless distraction, and get back to the science.
That’s my free advice, Dr. T., and I’m sure it’s worth every penny you paid for it. Look, I don’t think you’re a bad guy. Sadly for you, but fortunately for us, you got caught hanging out with the bad boys who had their hands in the cookie jar. And tragically for everyone, all of you were seduced by “noble cause corruption”. Hey, it’s nothing to be ashamed of, it’s happened to me too, you’re not the first guy to think that the nobility of your cause justified improper actions.
But as far as subsequently proclaiming your innocence and saying that you and your friends did nothing wrong? Sorry, Dr. T, the jury has already come in on that one, and they weren’t distracted by either the nobility of your cause, nor by the unequivocal fact that you and your friends were whitewashed as pure as the driven snow in the investigation done by your other friends … instead, they noted your emails saying things like:
In that regard I don’t think you can ignore it all, as Mike [Mann] suggests as one option, but the response should try to somehow label these guys a[s] lazy and incompetent and unable to do the huge amount of work it takes to construct such a database.
Indeed technology and data handling capabilities have evolved and not everything was saved. So my feeble suggestion is to indeed cast aspersions on their motives and throw in some counter rhetoric. Labeling them as lazy with nothing better to do seems like a good thing to do.
SOURCE: email 1177158252
Yeah, that’s the ticket, that’s how a real scientist defends his scientific claims …
w.

And, sorry for repeating myself. but I thought the 3:25 comment had somehow got lost.
If Dr. T believes it to be true when he writes: ”We are not close to balancing the energy budget. The fact that we can not account for what is happening in the climate system makes any consideration of geoengineering quite hopeless as we will never be able to tell if it is successful or not!”
Then he cannot possibly also believe that his “well balanced energy budget” is genuine
Willis:
Thankyou! Brilliant! And entertaining, too!
I was going to answer Smokey but you did it first (and better than I could).
Now we have Izen (I think he intended Izal) who claims that if the null hypothesis cannot be disproved then it should be ignored. That claim is another attack on the scientific method.
The null hypothesis is the governing hypothesis in any scientific investigation. It says that if no change is observed then nothing has changed. Therefore, if an alternative to “no change” is suggested then evidence of a change has to be produced. Importantly, “no change” has to be assumed unless and until that evidence exists.
So, an inability to disprove the null hypothesis says that the ONLY scientific assumption is that “no change” has happened.
It does not matter what the reasons are for suggesting that a change may have happened or is likely to have happened. The null hypothesis HAS to be accepted unless and until evidence of the suggested change exists.
In the case of AGW the change to be discerned is a change to climate behaviour which differs from climate behaviour prior to the postulated anthropogenic effect. If it is not possible to discern such a change then the ONLY scientific hypothesis is that AGW has not changed climate behaviour.
So, according to a fundamental principle of the scientific method, when Izen says,
“I am not aware of any paleoclimate proxy reconstruction of past temperature that would enable you to identify periods during the Holocene when temperature trends equaled or exceeded those seen over the last century”,
he is asserting that – according to his knowledge – it has to be assumed that AGW is not happening.
Richard
Lucy Skywalker says:
January 15, 2011 at 3:40 pm
“I know a lot of AGW skeptics believe that we are serious contributors to the rise of CO2 but I’m not one of those, and quite apart from that, the hypothesis should be stated correctly here. I could explain just why I think our contribution to CO2 is virtually zilch and just how the MLO CO2 record could still be a steadily climbing staircase to heaven… but that would be a whole topic for a separate post here…”
I’m with you on this Lucy.
R. Gates says: January 15, 2011 at 2:48 pm
“The best GCM’s are extremely complicated affairs that take into account tens of thousands of different variables and require massive supercomputers to run.”
No doubt, very complex and very expensive, but the models are reliant on input data. Earth is approximately 4.5 Billion years old. We’ve been reasonably accuratly measuring the Thermohalin Circulation with Argo since 2007. How statistically significant do you think our sample of historical data is?
“They certainly take into account many aspects of thermohalin circulation on a global basis. ”
Well let’s see. Based on my review of the Community Climate System Model (CCSM) site;
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/
There appear to be two Ocean Models. The Parallel Ocean Program (POP2) model;
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/pop2/
and the Climatological/Slab-Ocean Data (DOCN) model:
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/data8/
Looking on the POP2 model page, there are three user guides provided. The first, the Parallel Ocean Program (POP) User Guide does not include any references to the Thermohaline Circulation. It does have a section on Temperature and salinity distribution;
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/pop2/doc/users/node36.html
but it seems that to make it work you need to input “initial ocean conditions from a file OR create conditions from an input mean ocean profile OR create initial conditions based on 1992 Levitus mean ocean profile computed internally”. This seems to indicate that initial ocean conditions are based on user input or the Levitus profile that doesn’t have historical data before 1992.
The second is the CESM Ocean Ecosystem Model User’s Guide:
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/pop2/doc/users/POPecosys_main.html
There is no mention of the Thermohaline Circulation, and interestingly the word “temperature” only appears once in the guide, and that instance is a reference.
The third is the Parallel Ocean Program (POP) Reference Manual;
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/pop2/doc/sci/POPRefManual.pdf
that does have two to references to Thermohaline Circulation in its Bibliography:
“Ferrari, R. and D. L. Rudnick, 2000: Thermohaline variability in the upper
ocean. Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans, 105, 16 857–16 883.
Ferrari, R. and W. R. Young, 1997: On the development of thermohaline
correlations as a result of nonlinear diffusive parameterizations. Journal
of Marine Research, 55, 1069–1101.”
However, both are old references, i.e. Ferrari, R. and D. L. Rudnick, 2000 leverages “temperature and salinity were measured on a range of scales from 4 m to 1000 km, towing a SeaSoar along isobars and isopycnals in the subtropical gyre of the North Pacific, during the winter of 1997towing a SeaSoar along isobars and isopycnals in the subtropical gyre of the North Pacific, during the winter of 1997”, well before Argo deployments began in 2000.
Furthermore, there is plenty of new and relevant literature Thermohaline Circulation;
http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/full/10.1175/1520-0442%282002%29015%3C0179%3ALPOTFT%3E2.0.CO%3B2
http://scholarsarchive.library.oregonstate.edu/xmlui/handle/1957/15124
http://www.springerlink.com/content/g7ln6156g3v82655/
but no indication that “these models are always being refined as the science advances”.
In terms of the second CCSM Ocean Models, Climatological/Slab-Ocean Data (DOCN) model, looking at the homepage;
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/data8/
there is one Data Model v8 User’s Guide:
http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/cesm1.0/data8/data8_doc/ug.pdf
There is no mention of Thermohaline Circulation in the User Guide, but Chapter 7 is about the Data Ocean Model. It is states that;
“SOM (“slab ocean model”) mode is a prognostic mode. … Note that while this mode runs out of the box, the default SOM forcing file is not scientifically appropriate and is provided for testing and development purposes only. Users must create scientifically appropriate data for their particular application. A tool is available to derive valid SOM forcing. More information on creating the SOM forcing is available
at: http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/ccsm4.0/data8/SOM.pdf”
So the Climatological/Slab-Ocean Data (DOCN) model “is not scientifically appropriate” and is reliant on the user to “create of scientifically appropriate data”.
So to create “create of scientifically appropriate data”, we look back to our historical datasets. “The first automated technique for determining SST was accomplished by measuring the temperature of water in the intake port of large ships, which was underway by 1963. These observations have a warm bias of around 0.6 °C (1 °F) due to the heat of the engine room.[1] Fixed buoys measure the water temperature at a depth of 3 metres (9.8 ft). Many different drifting buoys exist around the world that vary in design and the location of reliable temperature sensors varies. These measurements are beamed to satellites for automated and immediate data distribution.[2] A large network of coastal buoys in U.S. waters is maintained by the National Data Buoy Center (NDBC).[3] Between 1985 and 1994, an extensive array of moored and drifting buoys was deployed across the equatorial Pacific Ocean”;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_surface_temperature
and as stated in my prior post that “Argo deployments began in 2000 and by November 2007 the array is 100% complete. ”
http://www.argo.ucsd.edu/
Given the tremendous complexity of accurately measuring the Thermohaline Circulation, the brevity of the historical record and the long cycle time of the Thermohaline Circulation, it seems safe to assume that the garbage in garbage out maxim applies to CCSM’s ocean models. Do you have more confidence in the historical ocean temperature and salinity data going into these models?
How can we accurately predict the behavior of the Thermohaline Circulation a century in the future when we can barely measure and understand its current behavior?
It has been argued above that a proper null for climate must EXPLAIN the natural pattern of climate. Sorry, wrong. We have data of varying quality, over various time spans, in different media (ice, sea floor sediments, tree rings) which do not always agree. Figuring out the pattern in this past data is difficult (I have published on this question) but the characterization of this pattern is KEY to the global warming question. Mann’s hockey stick claimed to solve the problem by showing a very flat (featureless) past 1000 years thereby proving that recent warming was anomalous. This is why the fight to defend Mann has been so vociferous. In the absence of the hockey stick, the past looks so confusingly variable that it is hard indeed to see any obvious anomalous behavior post-1950 in the global temperature data. But it is up to the advocates for catastrophe to demonstrate that THEY have characterized this pattern properly and that recent changes do not fit it. Handwaving is not so scientific. In addition, attempts to test climate models against the past are also thwarted by the noise and incoherence of paleorecords of climate. Some teams were very happy to fit their climate model against the Team model (Mann’s hockey stick) because the models do fine against a flat null climate, but if this hockey stick is broken, what about those model results?
I suspect that Dr. Trenberth is suffering from the Dr Percival Lowell syndrome.
Mr Lowell spent his career mapping the martian canals from an observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona and laid the ground work for the discovery of Pluto. Unfortunately Pluto has now been discredited as a planet and the Martian canals are believed by many to be a map of the veins in Lowell’s eyeballs.
Lengthy but very readable. Thank you, Willis.
Minor typo alert: people speaking from the dias and in the halls of the Royal Society in London. That should be “dais”.
[fixed thanks ~moderator]
Willis, excellent isn’t a good enough word, it’s better than that.
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Willis Eschenbach says:
January 15, 2011 at 4:17 pm
No, no, and no. Dr. Trenberth is many things, but it has never even crossed my mind that he might be a fraud.
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Willis, It has crossed mine.
I don’t think these guys are saying things out of ignorance, or just totally crackers like some people think.
Let’s give them some credit. They are climate scientists after all.
They know their time is running out. They do know enough about the PDO (why they don’t mention it), etc. to know it’s over.
Either pull out all the stops, try anything at the last minute, to seal the deal…..
We can only expect to hear things even more outrageous from them in the next few months, their time really is running out.
Joe Bastardi calls them on it in his latest blog.
Also says to watch out, we haven’t seen anything yet – from the weather or the climate scientists.
http://climaterealists.com/index.php?id=7037
stephan says: “AW: have you seen this probably major major story apologies if already done here
http://www.suite101.com/content/court-orders-university-to-surrender-global-warming-records-a328888
Seems Mann will be nailed”
This is apparently misinformation. That link leads to week-old links that do not say anything like “court orders university to surrender…”
Trenberth is a master at misdirection.
His energy balance is perhaps the greatest misdirection in all of science. He carefully showed each energy transfer in the Earth system except one. For the radiative exchange between the surface and the atmosphere he didn’t show the net energy change he switched to the fluxes.
That third walnut shell there created the appearance that radiative heat transfer was dominant in the system. Truly Trenberth is a magician at misdirection and deceit.
http://theinconvenientskeptic.com/2010/11/the-energy-balance-and-the-greenhouse-effect-1-of-3/
Another year, another four billion.
According to this link that is what is being requested for climate change studies this year in the US.
Future postmortems on AGW will take many quotes and ideas from this post by Willis Eschenbach.
Harold Pierce Jr says:
January 15, 2011 at 4:38 pm
Now, that’s science. Keep it up.
I read this twice before even thinking about posting a response and usually don’t bother when there are already this many that basically say what I feel, but this article is so good I felt the need. As a former debater I must say that was a truly crushing rebuttal. I dream of responding to trolls/disagreeable people with that kind of weight and eloquence. I have forwarded this along to as many people as I think will read it and hope it goes viral.
Bravo sir
Jennifer Marohasy says:
January 15, 2011 at 4:31 pm
“This is an extension of what Professor Ian Lowe has been advocating for some time. He calls it sustainability science and says we must embrace it, and reject the traditional scientific approach, because time is running out to save the planet.”
Why does he use the word ‘science’? Why not just call it sustainability studies? It has nothing to do with science. Science pursues truth and interests those who pursue truth. If you are out to save the world, I can recommend a religion.
Smokey says:
January 15, 2011 at 5:54 am
CO2 has risen about 40%. That is significant. If increased CO2 caused global harm, we would surely have seen evidence of it by now. But there is no verifiable evidence that anything unusual is occurring, except for the substantial increase in agricultural production.
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What we should be asking is why were CO2 levels that low to begin with.
Every time CO2 levels have been high, in the thousands ppm, CO2 levels have crashed.
This planet seems to want to do everything in it’s power to lower CO2, and we need it. Without it, we die.
From the looks of things, this planet is very good at sequestering CO2 on its own. Even lowering CO2 to the point where it threatens plant growth.
We should be taking care of plants, without them we all die………
“Look, I don’t think you’re a bad guy.”…..
Wrong Willis. I really do think he is a bad guy.
There has never been any good come of a man who’ll deceive unto destruction, all who believe in him.
izen,
You still don’t grasp the concept of a null hypothesis. I’ve given you a straightforward definition of it: ‘it is the statistical hypothesis that states that there are no differences between observed and expected data.’
You should do a web search for “null hypothesis,” and try to get up to speed. Most everyone else here seems to understand it, and how it relates to an alternate hypothesis. So let me change tack, and try to explain in simple terms what’s going on:
Kevin Trenberth would not have made a major issue of the long-accepted null hypothesis if it were not a serious stumbling block for his catastrophic AGW hypothesis. It shows that the effect of CO2 is minuscule. [Let me quantify that by saying that anything less than 1°C for a doubling of CO2 from pre-industrial levels will result in substantially more benefits than costs.]
Trenberth made a center-piece in his article his intention to replace the long-held null hypothesis of natural climate variability with his alternate hypothesis, putting skeptical scientists in the position of having to prove a negative.
The rationale is that with a planet to save, ignoring the scientific method is excusable – a noble cause. But it is non-science, which is why the rest of us are not going to let him get away with changing the rules, just so he doesn’t have to put up with that irksome null hypothesis. He wants to replace it with his alternate hypothesis, and Voilà! That pesky scientific method is no longer in the way.
The null hypothesis does not need to provide an explanation of all the mechanisms that make the climate tick. If we knew that, there would be no need for a debate.
All the null does is show that the current climate is no different than it was before the industrial revolution and the rise of CO2; the cycles are the same, current temperatures are very mild, and the planet is nowhere near its extreme warmest or coldest parameters.
It has been much warmer, and much colder, in the past – when CO2 remained steady at 300 ppmv or less for centuries. Therefore, CO2 is not a major driver of temperature. QED.
CO2 probably has an effect, but that effect is so minor it is inconsequential. That’s what the null hypothesis tells us, and that is why Trenberth has his feet to the fire with no wiggle room. So he proposes to put the cart before the horse, and claim that his alternate hypothesis [and there can be many different alternate hypotheses] should now be labeled the null hypothesis.
His shenanigans make “post-normal science” look rational.
Izen said
“I am not aware of any paleoclimate proxy reconstruction of past temperature that would enable you to identify periods during the Holocene when temperature trends equaled or exceeded those seen over the last century. Perhaps if you have a link to such data with sufficient accuracy to show this you could link it?”
Instead of climate proxies maybe you could study a little archaeology. The history of Greenland was well documented before the hockey stick debate.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Grtemp.png
Willis: “The mis-treatment of uncertainty in the IPCC reports, and the underestimation of true uncertainty in climate science in general, is a scandal.”
Right on, Willis. That’s what brought me into the game.
I read this paper(pdf, 373 kb) , W. Soon, S. Baliunas, S. B. Idso, K. Y. Kondratyev and E. S. Posmentier (2001) “Modeling climatic effects of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions: unknowns and uncertainties” Climate Research 18, 259-275, and, being shocked, looked further. And the further I looked, the worse it got. As you wrote, it’s a scandal. IMO, the worst scientific scandal, ever. Ever.
Robb876 says:
January 15, 2011 at 3:55 am
Could anybody actually make it through that entire post??
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Well I did…. and made two posts as well. What’s wrong with you Robb876? Did you fail at reading and comprehension while at school, did you?…..;-)
Doesn’t it follow that if AGW is now a matter of fact, unequivicolly so as we are repeatedly told, that we can stop funding research on it with taxpayer money? What’s the point of continuing to prove it?
The biggest harm done to science, with the global warming theory, is that everything that is unexplainable, is now due to global warming – no matter the field we select to study. It’s a cheap, dirty way to explain the unexplainable for scientists of all sects and all they need to justify their conclusions is? Global Warming. Makes for lazy science and scientists. Switch up the rules and it will be even more so.
Hmm, this is rather cool – I’ve replied to the “cold fusion is dead” claims a few times, it’s nice to see some other people are chiming now too.
I kept up with cold fusion for a few years through the beginning, and occasionally check in to see what’s happening. It’s an observation that refuses to go away. Too many experiments yield very interesting results. It’s also a complex field, there is a lot to be learned, a theory hasn’t provide much guidance.
David L says:
January 15, 2011 at 9:17 am
On P&F – I think the answer is that it’s been replicated, but not very reliably. There are other test setups that are more interesting. Focusing on P&F’s experiment is akin to focusing on CO2 in climate changes – there’s more going on!
Dead as research? Well, one person is dead of natural causes, Les Case. He had some interesting experiments with gaseous deuterium and without energy input (making it a lot easier to measure the anomalous heat). We both live(d) in New Hampshire. He was past MIT professor, I believe, and rather weird guy. (The founder of “Infinite Energy” magazine, Eugene Mallove, was also from NH, he was murdered by ex-renters of his parents’ property in Connecticut.) There is other other research in the US, that Navy work mentioned above is one.
People doing cold fusion research don’t do research on Bigfoot, UFOs, or even think the Earth is flat. Just because people study UFOs doesn’t mean cold fusion doesn’t exist. Oh come on yourself, quit sounding like Al Gore.
One thing that has changed is the term “cold fusion,” which isn’t always cold, is being supplanted by abbreviations LENR and CANR (Low Energy Nuclear Reactions and Chemically Assisted Nuclear Reactions). See http://www.lenr-canr.org/Experiments.htm for a description of several experimental setups.
One thing we missed today was a press conference in Italy about a 10 kW nickel/hydrogen reactor, see http://www.journal-of-nuclear-physics.com/ see also http://nickpalmer.blogspot.com/2011/01/extraordinarily-important-announcement.html (Full title “Extraordinarily important announcement or not?”) BTW, Nick Palmer is a climate warmist, fan of Climate Crock of the Week, and has Anthony’s http://wattsupwiththat.com/widget/ in his rightside bar. I hope he comes across this post!
There’s also interesting work done with sonofusion. That relies on sound energy to generate small bubbles that then collapse generating huge pressure in the uncompressable liquid.
So no it’s not dead Dave, cold fusion research is doing quite well! It’s probably good that it’s not getting the attention it did in its early days. In fact, climate research could do better if it didn’t get the current attention and let scientists be scientists instead of personalities.
Richard S Courtney @ur momisugly January 15, 2011 at 5:27 pm
“…. if the null hypothesis cannot be disproved then it should be ignored. That claim is another attack on the scientific method.”
I’m not sure I agree. If the null is not falsifiable then the scientific method can’t proceed so it’s hardly an attack on it. I used a slightly different characterisation a bit earlier in this thread – I suggested such a null is useless.
The null hypothesis is the governing hypothesis in any scientific investigation. It says that if no change is observed then nothing has changed. Therefore, if an alternative to “no change” is suggested then evidence of a change has to be produced. Importantly, “no change” has to be assumed unless and until that evidence exists.
I think this is a narrow view of a null. The null can be about the fit between any statistical model and observations. It’s perfectly acceptable to have a null that man made GHGs cause >50% of recent observed temperature increases, and seek to falsify that. My point would be that the interesting conversations happen as one sets this up properly as a null; evaluates the capacity of the data to falsify it; and discusses the meaning (if anything) of the results.
Rational and reasonable. A noteworthy piece of writing that should be passed far and wide.