Expect the BEST, plan for the worst

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Clarification on BEST submitted to the House

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Quote of the Week – other scientists weigh in

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Well, I had hoped for the best from BEST, the new Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project looking at the global temperature record. I was disheartened, however, by the Congressional testimony of Dr. Richard Muller of BEST.

Photo Source He said (emphasis mine):

Global Warming

Prior groups at NOAA, NASA, and in the UK (HadCRU) estimate about a 1.2 degree C land temperature rise from the early 1900s to the present. This 1.2 degree rise is what we call global warming. Their work is excellent, and the Berkeley Earth project strives to build on it.

Human caused global warming is somewhat smaller. According to the most recent IPCC report (2007), the human component became apparent only after 1957, and it

amounts to “most” of the 0.7 degree rise since then. Let’s assume the human-caused warming is 0.6 degrees.

The magnitude of this temperature rise is a key scientific and public policy concern. A 0.2 degree uncertainty puts the human component between 0.4 and 0.8 degrees – a factor of two uncertainty. Policy depends on this number. It needs to be improved.

Why do I think his testimony doesn’t help in the slightest? Well, to start with, I’ve never heard anyone make the claim that the land surface air temperature (excluding oceans) of the earth has warmed 1.2°C since 1900.

He cites three land temperature datasets, NOAA , NASA (GISTEMP), and HadCRU (he presumably means CRUTEM, not HadCRU).

Here’s the problem. The actual land surface air temperature warming since 1900 according to the existing datasets is:

NASA GISTEMP: 0.72°C

NOAA NCDC: 0.86°C

CRUTEM: 0.92°C

So Dr. Muller, in his first and most public appearance on the subject, has made some of the more unusual claims about the existing temperature datasets I’ve heard to date.

1. Since the largest temperature rise in the three datasets is 30% greater than the smallest rise, their work is not “excellent” in any sense of the word. Nor should the BEST team “strive to build on it.” Instead, they should strive to understand why the three vary so widely. What decisions make the difference? Which decisions make little difference?

2. Not one of the three datasets shows a temperature rise anywhere near the 1.2°C rise Muller is claiming since 1900. The largest one shows only about 3/4 of his claimed rise.

3. He claims a “0.2 degree uncertainty”. But the difference between the largest and smallest calculated warming from the three datasets is 0.2°C, so the uncertainty has to be a lot more than that …

4. He says that the land warming since 1957 is 0.7°C. The records beg to differ. Here’s the land warming since 1957:

NASA GISTEMP: 0.83°C

NOAA NCDC: 1.10°C

CRUTEM: 0.93°C

Note that none of them are anywhere near 0.7°C. Note also the huge difference in the trends in these “excellent” datasets, a difference of half a degree per century.

5. He fails to distinguish CRUTEM (the land-only temperature record produced by the Climategate folks) from HadCRU (a land-ocean record produced jointly by the Hadley folks and the Climategate folks). A minor point to be sure, but one indicating his unfamiliarity with the underlying datasets he is discussing.

It can’t be a Celsius versus Fahrenheit error, because it goes both ways. He claims a larger rise 1900-present than the datasets show, and a smaller rise 1958-present than the datasets.

I must confess, I’m mystified by all of this. With his testimony, Dr. Muller has totally destroyed any credibility he might have had with me. He might be able to rebuild it by explaining his strange numbers. But to give that kind of erroneous testimony, not in a random paper he might written quickly, but to Congress itself, marks him to me as a man driven by a very serious agenda, a man who doesn’t check his work and who pays insufficient attention to facts in testimony. I had hoped we wouldn’t have another temperature record hag-ridden by people with an axe to grind … foolish me.

Perhaps someone who knows Dr. Muller could ask him to explain his cheerleading before Congress. I call it cheerleading because it certainly wasn’t scientific testimony of any kind I’m familiar with. I hear Dr. Muller is a good guy, and very popular with the students, but still … color me very disappointed.

w.

PS – Muller also said:

Let me now address the problem of

Poor Temperature Station Quality

Many temperature stations in the U.S. are located near buildings, in parking lots, or close to heat sources. Anthony Watts and his team has shown that most of the current stations in the US Historical Climatology Network would be ranked “poor” by NOAA’s own standards, with error uncertainties up to 5 degrees C.

Did such poor station quality exaggerate the estimates of global warming? We’ve studied this issue, and our preliminary answer is no.

The Berkeley Earth analysis shows that over the past 50 years the poor stations in the U.S. network do not show greater warming than do the good stations.

Thus, although poor station quality might affect absolute temperature, it does not appear to affect trends, and for global warming estimates, the trend is what is important.

Dr. Muller, I’m going to call foul on this one. For you to announce your pre-publication results on this issue is way, way out of line. You get to have your claim entered into the Congressional Record and you don’t even have to produce a single citation or publish a paper or show a scrap of data or code? That is scientific back-stabbing via Congressional testimony, and on my planet it is absolutely unacceptable.

That is taking unfair advantage of your fifteen minutes of fame. Show your work and numbers like anyone else and we’ll evaluate them. Then you may be able to crow, or not, before Congress.

But to stand up before Congress as an expert witness and refer solely to your own unpublished, uncited, and un-verifiable claims? Sorry, but if you want to make that most public scientific claim, that bad siting doesn’t affect temperature trends, you have to show your work just like anyone else. If you want to make that claim before Congress, then PUBLISH YOUR DATA AND CODE like the rest of us mortals. Put your results where your mouth is, or if not, leave it out of your Congressional testimony. Why is that not obvious?

Anthony’s unpublished and unverifiable claims are as strong as your similar claims. That is to say, neither have any strength or validity at all at this point … so how would you feel if Anthony trotted out his unverifiable claims before Congress to show that Dr. Richard Muller was wrong, and didn’t show his work?

Like I said … color me very disappointed, both scientifically and personally. Dr. Muller, I invite you to explain your Congressional testimony, because I certainly don’t understand it. I am totally confident that Anthony will be happy to publish your reply.

I also urge you to either a) publish the data and code that you think shows no difference in trends between good and poor stations, or b) publicly retract your premature and unverifiable claims. You don’t get to do one without the other, that’s not scientific in any sense of the word.

PPS – Does any of this mean that the BEST analysis is wrong or their numbers or data are wrong or that the BEST folks are fudging the results? ABSOLUTELY NOT. I am disappointed in Dr. Muller’s claims and his actions. The math and the data analysis is an entirely different question. Theirs may be flawless, we simply don’t know yet (nor would I expect to, it’s early days). I look forward to their results and their data and code, this kind of initiative is long overdue.

I want to be very clear than the validity of their actual methods depends only on the validity of their actual methods. The problem is, we don’t even know exactly what those methods are yet. We have rough descriptions, but not even any pseudocode, much less code. Which in part is why I find Dr. Muller’s testimony unsettling …

RELATED: See the rebuttal letter to congress:

Clarification on BEST submitted to the House

Pielke Sr. on the Muller testimony

=========================================================

UPDATE: in apparent response to Willis Eschenbach, BEST has added this below to their FAQs page. For fairness, I reproduce it here. – Anthony

NEW (4/1) – It appears that in Dr. Muller’s testimony he shows a temperature rise greater rise than others had previously published. Is this so? Can you explain?

The Berkeley Earth plot is for the land data only, since we have not yet begun analysis of ocean temperatures. Because we only analyze land, that was the fair comparison to make. The ocean temperature rise is less, and when included in, it reduces the value of the total temperature rise.

We started with the land data for several reasons:

  1. It is the data that is affected most by the most contentious issues: data selection bias, urban heat island, and station integrity issues. These are big concerns and we wanted to address them.
  2. The temperature rise on land is greater than on the oceans, mostly because the ocean distribute the heat over the mixed layer and thereby reduces the temperature rise. Land keeps the heat mostly on the surface. So the land temperature is actually more sensitive to greenhouse gases than is the world temperature.
  3. The land issue, with 1.6 billion measurements, was a huge one to tackle. It made sense to divide the effort into two stages.

The land only data for the other three groups are available on their websites, and agree with the plot provided in Dr. Richard Muller’s testimony.

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Roger Knights
March 31, 2011 9:34 pm

I recall the very subtle criticisms Chiefio (mostly) made here about the flaws in naively accepting uptrending statistics at face value, and the need for painstaking and sophisticated statistical analysis to see beneath the surface to what is really going on. It flumoxes me that Muller didn’t take this material seriously and “screw in his loupe,” but rather just gave his horseback opinion as though his impressionistic ‘take” on the data couldn’t possibly be far wrong.
This statistical naivety + arrogance is common among many groups of scientists, not just climatologists, it seems.
OTOH, if Muller and his bunch of merry men can be turned around by Our Side after putting their wrong foot forward, it’ll be doubly impressive.

JPeden
March 31, 2011 9:34 pm

Greg Goodknight says:
March 31, 2011 at 8:34 pm
Lighten up on Muller. Yes, he thinks the cAGW predicting models are probably right…
Since the “predicting models” haven’t got anything whatsoever “right”, by your own logic, Muller is a proven imbecile.

March 31, 2011 9:55 pm

Eric Anderson says:
March 31, 2011 at 8:55 pm
steven mosher,
Thanks for weighing in on the BEST status thus far. I have a great deal of respect for your views and measured position on most matters in this area, so it is definitely helpful to have your perspective. Hopefully we’ll have an opportunity to evaluate the BEST team’s approach and findings in a completely transparent manner as they continue to work through the project and make their approach and findings open.
###########
Thanks eric.
I’m basically try to hold all people to the same standard. When they publish their results I expect the code or data to be made available. Ideally, even when somebody posts preliminary results I’d like to see their code and data, but its not always feasible.
I know this from my own work. Code that I can make run, may not be so clear to you.
So it takes some work on the maintainability and supportability side of things. The situation now is so much better than the one we had with GISS and CRU where they fought us tooth and nail. I can say from working with the team ( very limited basis I dont want joe romm going batshit on me) that they are generous with their time, open to suggestions, and forthcoming with information.

JPeden
March 31, 2011 10:02 pm

steven mosher says:
March 31, 2011 at 5:19 pm
Lwhat exactly is the difference between publishing preliminary results on a blog
and testifying about preliminary results before congress? NOTHING.

“Congressional Testimony = a blog post”? Why do you even talk here, so it will be entered into the Congressional Record? Really, Mosher, there’s a limit beyond which you make no sense. You need to deal with it. No one else can.

March 31, 2011 10:09 pm

Ed Dahlgren says:
March 31, 2011 at 7:58 pm
steven mosher says:
March 31, 2011 at 5:19 pm
what exactly is the difference between publishing preliminary results on a blog
and testifying about preliminary results before congress? NOTHING.
=//=//=//=//=
I thought I saw this idea behind one of your comments to Anthony’s post, and I thank you for making it explicit.
I disagree strenuously. I feel there are between three and five orders of magnitude in difference in the impact of the two. Just for starters, appearing before Congress gives testimony an enormous imprimatur of legitimacy that doesn’t come with blogs
###########
maybe in your mind, but not in mind. let me be clear. Until I have the code and the data all results are rumours or advertisements of rumours. taken with a huge grain of salt. Zeke and I sat at Muller’s table and looked at many charts. I cared only about one thing: what was the analytical approach? not the result. The result is not science until I can reproduce it. preliminary results, un published, non replicatable results are nothing more than an adverstisment that you know how to do graphs. Period. You guys may think testifying before congress is a big deal. Personally, I don’t. Since I know the data and the math, my personal experience replicating the results is WAY more important to me than a blog post, science paper, or testimony before congress.
you might be impressed about what somebody said before congress. I’m not.

March 31, 2011 10:21 pm

REPLY: except that 2 and 3 were not applied to the data > conclusion > opinion presented to congress today, 4 was irrelevant to today. – Anthony
#######
That’s correct. 2 and 3 were not applied. That’s why people should give no notice
to the results. Let me be perfectly clear. Preliminary results are pretty much worthless.
There is no point in getting wrapped around the axel about preliminary results. Its basically marketing the fact that work is progressing. I have no issue with Muller presenting his opinion to congress. He said it was preliminary, subject to change, I fail to see what all the fuss is about.
Other people may take that opinion as fact. That’s their mistake.

Jim D
March 31, 2011 10:24 pm

If you look at the graph in the testimony link, you can see where 1.2 C comes from. He said early 1900’s and for sure it is near -0.6 there, increasing to +0.6 currently. Willis started in 1900 which was a warm blip, so his number may be correct too, but Muller’s one looks more representative on that graph. This solves the mystery, unless the graph itself is in dispute, which I didn’t see anyone doing.

Keith Grubb
March 31, 2011 10:57 pm

Lucky for us this group is connected with Berkley, that’s enough for most thinking people. It was a WTF moment for me when I read Anthony throwing out high hopes.

BillyBob
March 31, 2011 10:59 pm

Jim D: “He said early 1900′s”
Using HADCRU.
1900 to 1957 = -.225 to -.075 which is .15C
1957 t0 2010 = -.075 to .476 which is .551C
Not 1.2C at all. .701C
Maybe he means 1911 to 1998 = -.582 to .548 = 1.13C
Close. But more obviously cherry picking.
Why not 1878 to 2008 = .028 to .325 = .297C
130 years for .297C
Now I’m panicking.
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/data/temperature/hadcrut3gl.txt

rbateman
March 31, 2011 11:00 pm

I smell Kool-Aid.

Cassandra King
March 31, 2011 11:12 pm

Berkeley? Hmmm!
It looks like they knew the result BEFORE they examined any data and found that its worse than they thought BEFORE they started to think about it? They must have found a new type computer model that allows them to predict the future without looking at any data at all, what a wondrous new modern age we live in eh?
Now lets suppose that a pro CAGW group knew the three temperature series had lots of errors and those errors could not be hidden and when those errors surface it would endanger the entire foundation for CAGW theology(IPCC). I think you know where I am going with this already dont you?
Its all a little too convenient isnt it? A new supposedly more accurate more impartial and all round better temperature series would effectively take the spotlight off the old error riddled GAT series and at the same time enabling the pro CAGW side to claim that with this new more accurate record having cleaned up the data and looked anew at the evidence and taken into account all the uncertainties brought to light by those interfering pesky ill informed trouble making climate denying big oil funded denialists the new BEST temperature series comes to the surprising and CAGW confirming conclusion that….wait for it…..drum roll…this is going to knock yer socks off…
IT REALLY IS WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT!
The conclusion is obvious from the start isnt it? After no deliberation and no effort and no hard work it is clear that the three main temperature series while suffering from a few tiny flaws were found to have underestimated global temperatures and the new series has found that its far worse than ‘anyone’ thought.
Now colour me sceptical but lets face it folks, we were never ever in a million years going to get a fair and impartial new temperature series were we? A great many people just have too much to lose, too many reputations down the pan, too many cosy sinecures at risk and to much grant cash on the line. All we were ever gong to get was a reconfirmation of the old series with a little bit more fake warming added just to get peoples attention and you just know that this series is being set up for inclusion in the next IPCC bag of lies.

Manfred
March 31, 2011 11:12 pm

steven mosher says:
March 31, 2011 at 6:04 pm
3. … People should understand that UHI can’t possibly be a huge deal. .15C worst case. McKittrick would argue .3C, jones would say .05c. but the world is still warming, and C02 is responsible for a fair portion of that.
————————————————————————-
Isn’t this a very unpleasant companion for a comparison after climategate ?
Didn’t you regularly ask others to take more time to write a comment ?
Where is substantial evidence speaking against McKittrick’s publications?
Additionally, no mention of land use changes, which contribute to McKittricks conclusions and further reduce greenhouse gas influence. Troposheric trends also confirm, that there are very substantial overstatements in ground based trends.

March 31, 2011 11:16 pm

The BEST project will have merit or not, we will see, but the US House Committee performance was lacking.
But the problematic reasoning in the AGW-by-CO2 arguments will be the same after it is published, no matter what the findings are and whether the BEST process in open, transparent and all code/ data/ methodology is released.
The persistent problematic reasoning of AGW-by-CO2 supporters is shown in the following items #7 through #13; which are the common steps in the typical hanging reasoning we see in support of an AGW-by-CO2 position. These lines of reasoning in the AGW-by-CO2 arguments will not change with the BEST project’s finding. NOTE: It is a hanging line of reasoning because it starts in the middle of a longer chain of reasoning and ends long before a more complete logical chain of reasoning would end.
But being a hanging line of reasoning is just one of the major problems. Another is the reasoning is not valid in its claims.
Well here is the AGW-by-CO2 hanging line of reasoning:
7. the earth’s surface temperature was increasing over a past certain time period
8. the increase in the earth’s surface temperature over that past certain time period was not natural compared to variations in the earth’s surface temperature before (or since) that past certain time period
9. there must be something that caused the un-natural variation of the earth’s surface temperature over that past certain time period that needs to be discovered
10. human industrial civilization has, with year-by-year progressively increasing rates of CO2 release, caused critically significant increases in atmospheric CO2 levels during that past certain time period, but not before it
11. the increase in the earth’s surface temperature over that past certain time period is now known (IPCC) with enough certainly to have been caused by man’s increasingly released large scale CO2 during the same past certain time period
12. the observed impact on the earth system and on mankind of the man caused increases in the earth’s surface temperature over that past certain time period are significantly worse than the previous time periods
13. we need to stop the future increasing rate of CO2 release before it gets much worse than the current undesirable situation that occurred in that past certain time period
John

Stephan
March 31, 2011 11:22 pm

I think the skeptics should have been a lot more vigilant: About 6 months ago the AGW people decided to do a major effort to reverse the trend in surveys showing less and less people were believing in AGW. It is possible that Muller and Co were and pansy for this and we fell for it.

Alcheson
March 31, 2011 11:27 pm

Muller openly admits he believes in AGW and that it is serious. I personally think Muller just trashed the TEAM in his video because the TEAM’s reputation was already trashed. By trashing them, he hopes to acquire credibility for himself (and thereby the BEST project) so he can ressurect the warmist’s beloved global warming data that is tarnished by association. In his mind, the TEAM was already lost, but the data could be saved if someone with “credibility” could vouch for it.

Nylo
March 31, 2011 11:45 pm

We’ve studied this issue, and our preliminary answer is no.
If it is true that their preliminary results do not yet try to correct for UHI, then that sentence is a plain lie to the congress. They have NOT studied the issue yet.

P.G. Sharrow
March 31, 2011 11:49 pm

Dr Muller, an expert witness, has testified before Congress. That testimony is now a part of the Congressinal record and is a legal fact that will be sighted as scientific fact. Job done, no matter the outcome of the Berkley Project. pg

Alcheson
March 31, 2011 11:55 pm

I also think before someone testifies before congress with respect to global warming they should be asked the following question.
What position best describes your view on Global Warming?
1) The amount of warming in recent decades is very worrisome and is most likely due in large part to CO2 emissions of human origin and mitigation needs to start now.
2) There has been significant warming recently, but scientists have not yet established whether it is mostly natural in origin or mostly human in origin. Until we know more it would be foolish to proceed with mitigation efforts.
3) I do not believe that AGW is a major concern. Most of the recent warming is likely due to natural causes.
Until they answer this question they aren’t allowed to testify. I think it is best if you know exactly where someone stands before you evaluate the testimony they are presenting.
A true AGW believer could answer anyway except 1). Thus you know they would always skew any evidence to support their belief and disregard (hide) any evidence that doesn’t. I seriously doubt that Muller would answer with a 2).

Alcheson
March 31, 2011 11:57 pm

sorry…. “A true AGW believer could NOT answer anyway except 1). “

Kendra
April 1, 2011 12:04 am

Kendra – iirc from watching his lectures, he has given advise to the goverment on scientific issues in the past. Maybe that’s why he was invited ? He is not your random dude with an opionion…
——-
Thanks, Matt, thought of that but didn’t know how to check. Nevertheless, it seems as if the BEST project was also a reason or why bring it up when it still all boils down to guesswork. I’d prefer he’d stuck to the tried and true, whatever he’d testified to in the past.
Contrary to Mosher and a few others, adding the weight of guesswork definitely will influence the take-away from the committee. And, sorry don’t remember who brought it up, but the time constraints involved do not justify any testimony whatsoever of this nature. That’s the “prerogative” of the politicians in their own deliberations and that’s already often pretty egregious, thank you very much.
Mosher, you are starting to scare me a bit (I’m only a Curry 3, so that probably doesn’t cut any ice with you).

janama
April 1, 2011 12:31 am

simply go here:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/gistemp/from:1900/to
or here
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:1900/to
exactly where does he get 1.2C – I suspect he blew it and meant 1.2F
Judith is on this panel – she moved into the sceptic territory very well, she took her time and evaluated before she stood on the stage and played a song and has been singing ever since.
This guy is up on the stage demanding to be heard but he doesn’t know any of the songs.

Harold Pierce Jr
April 1, 2011 1:02 am

ATTN Larry in TEXAS
You all are the drink with branch water!

Ed Dahlgren
April 1, 2011 1:11 am

to steven mosher
re: March 31, 2011 at 10:09 pm
Thanks for your reply to my reply to your comment!

preliminary results, un published, non replicatable results are nothing more than an adverstisment that you know how to do graphs.

A good point and worth repeating.

you might be impressed about what somebody said before congress. I’m not.

In my newcomer eyes, you’re as entitled as anyone here to claim the honor of most sophisticated, but it’s not about you. The message was delivered to hundreds of millions of poor boobs, in this country and others, who believe something along the lines of, “What the U.S. Congress spends its time hearing about is more important than what passes down the great sewer drain of the blogosphere.”
A large subset of this group – a large majority, I’d bet – will also miss the significance of the information being preliminary and subject to a list of footnotes that they won’t pay attention to even if the warning is passed along by the politicians, reporters, bloggers, and co-workers who will be the secondary sources of the group’s information.
Well, I’m repeating my earlier reply. In my defense, though, you sidestepped the points that I raised there. Another shows up in your reply in passing,

Zeke and I sat at Muller’s table and looked at many charts. I cared only about one thing: what was the analytical approach?

To the extent that it was you and Zeke examining the process, and not everybody who got news of the Congressional session, BEST fails its transparency claim.
Other points concern the use of Anthony’s data.
I’ll finish by repeating one last thing. Good point:

Until I have the code and the data all results are rumours or advertisements of rumours. taken with a huge grain of salt.

We agree, I think, that transparency is or would be served by presenting such results in a way that doesn’t suggest that they’re final and doesn’t suggest that they’re big freakin’ news by themselves (and I would say, when the presentation is preceded by a disclosure and discussion of methodology and data quality).

DirkH
April 1, 2011 1:50 am

BEST = Berkeley Enacts Societal Transformation. 😉

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