NOTE: This will be a “sticky” top post for awhile, new posts appear below this one. UPDATE: Josh weighs in with a new cartoon.
I was hoping to have a quiet holiday weekend away from WUWT doing some household chores. Apparently that isn’t in the cards.
Below, I have reposted an essay from Dr. Roger Pielke Senior regarding an opinion piece published in The Daily Climate attacking Dr. John Christy and Dr. Roy Spencer for their ongoing work in satellite based measurement of the Earth’s temperature. Dr. Pielke does an excellent job of summarizing his rebuttal points, and I’ll point out that he’s used some very strong unconventional language in the title of his piece.
One point Dr. Pielke touches on related to an orbital decay correction applied to the UAH satellite measurement comes from his first hand experience, and I urge readers to read it fully to get the history. One line from the op-ed in The Daily Climate bothered me in particular:
Over the years, Spencer and Christy developed a reputation for making serial mistakes that other scientists have been forced to uncover.
This my friends, is breathtaking for its sheer arrogance, agenda, and the scuttling of the scientific process in one sentence.
The entire process of science is about building on early incomplete knowledge with new knowledge, and discarding old knowledge in favor of new evidence that is better understood and supported by observational evidence. All scientists make mistakes, it is part of the learning process of science. Any scientist who believes he/she hasn’t made mistakes, has never made a correction, or hasn’t built upon the mistakes of others to improve the science is deluding themselves.
And that crack about “…mistakes that other scientists have been forced to uncover.” is ludicrous. By the very nature of the scientific process, scientists work to uncover flaws in the work of others, and when mistakes and irrelevancies are burned away by this process, what is left in the crucible of scientific inquiry is regarded as the pure product.
I could say the same thing about GISS related to Hansen and Gavin’s Y2K temperature problem which required a correction, also something other scientists were “forced to uncover”.
Even Einstein made mistakes, from Physics Today in 2005 Einstein’s Mistakes by Steven Weinberg:
In thinking of Einstein’s mistakes, one immediately recalls what Einstein (in a conversation with George Gamow2) called the biggest blunder he had made in his life: the introduction of the cosmological constant. After Einstein had completed the formulation of his theory of space, time, and gravitation—the general theory of relativity—he turned in 1917 to a consideration of the spacetime structure of the whole universe. He then encountered a problem. Einstein was assuming that, when suitably averaged over many stars, the universe is uniform and essentially static, but the equations of general relativity did not seem to allow a time-independent solution for a universe with a uniform distribution of matter. So Einstein modified his equations, by including a new term involving a quantity that he called the cosmological constant. Then it was discovered that the universe is not static, but expanding. Einstein came to regret that he had needlessly mutilated his original theory. It may also have bothered him that he had missed predicting the expansion of the universe.
For those reading who are prone to eye rolling, I would never presume to compare anyone in climate science to Einstein, but there’s an important and germane science history lesson here worth noting that parallels what has happened with the Spencer and Braswell paper challenging climate models and climate sensitivity.
Consider Edwin Hubble’s discovery of an expanding universe based on observational evidence. Einstein created a mathematical model of the universe, and as Wikipedia reports: Earlier, in 1917, Albert Einstein had found that his newly developed theory of general relativity indicated that the universe must be either expanding or contracting. Unable to believe what his own equations were telling him, Einstein introduced a cosmological constant (a “fudge factor“) to the equations to avoid this “problem”.
Einstein didn’t launch a tirade in the press. Instead, Einstein was humble enough to consider that he’d made a mistake and modified his mathematical model to fit the new observation. He later came to regret the cosmological constant, but it demonstrates his ability to assimilate new observational evidence.
Like Spencer and Braswell, Einstein too got his share of public drubbing for his work. Hitler commissioned a group of 100 top scientists in Germany write a book called “Hundert Autoren gegen Einstein” (Hundred authors against Einstein).
Einstein was asked: `Doesn’t it bother you Dr Einstein that you’ve got so many scientists against you?’
And he said: `It doesn’t take 100 scientists to prove me wrong, it takes a single fact’. Source
And that is the way of science. Opinions don’t matter, certificates, awards, and accolades don’t matter. Only the provable evidence matters. In the case of Spencer and Braswell, they too bring observational evidence to bear that may require adjustments to mathematical models. The difference here has been that rather than take the path of reconsideration, and arguing using the science following the peer review process, Abraham, Gleick, and Trenberth ignore that process and resort to a diatribe of ad hominem attacks, which in my opinion with that one sentence referencing to “…serial mistakes that other scientists have been forced to uncover.”, crosses the threshold from argument to libel.
Apparently, it is impossible for them to consider observational evidence supporting a lower climate sensitivity, and thus they’ve scuttled the scientific process of correcting and building on new knowledge in favor of a tabloid style attack.
Clearly, Abraham, Gleick, and Trenberth share none of the humble virtue demonstrated by Einstein.
Here’s Dr. Pielke’s essay:
Hatchet Job On John Christy and Roy Spencer By Kevin Trenberth, John Abraham and Peter Gleick

There is an opinion article at Daily Climate that perpetuates serious misunderstandings regarding the research of Roy Spencer and John Christy. It also is an inappropriate (and unwarranted) person attack on their professional integrity. Since I have first hand information on this issue, I am using my weblog to document the lack of professional decorum by Keven Trenberth, John Abraham and Peter Gleick.
The inappropriate article I am referring to is
Opinion: The damaging impact of Roy Spencer’s science
published on the Daily Climate on September 2 2011. The article is by Kevin Trenberth, John Abraham, and Peter Gleick.
Their headline reads
In his bid to cast doubts on the seriousness of climate change, University of Alabama’s Roy Spencer creates a media splash but claims a journal’s editor-in-chief.
The science doesn’t hold up.
I am reproducing the text of the article below with my comments inserted.
The text of their article starts with [highlights added]
The widely publicized paper by Roy Spencer and Danny Braswell, published in the journal Remote Sensing in July, has seen a number of follow-ups and repercussions.
Unfortunately this is not the first time the science conducted by Roy Spencer and colleagues has been found lacking. The latest came Friday in a remarkable development, when the journal’s editor-in-chief, Wolfgang Wagner, submitted his resignation and apologized for the paper.
As we noted on RealClimate.org when the paper was published, the hype surrounding Spencer’s and Braswell’s paper was impressive; unfortunately the paper itself was not. Remote Sensing is a fine journal for geographers, but it does not deal much with atmospheric and climate science, and it is evident that this paper did not get an adequate peer review. It should have received an honest vetting.
My Comment:
The claim that a journal on remote sensing, which publishes paper on the climate system “but…does not deal much with atmospheric and climate science”, is not climate science is obviously incorrect. This trivialization of the journal in this manner illustrates the inappropriately narrow view of the climate system by the authors. That the paper “should have received an honest vetting”, I assume means that they or their close colleagues should have reviewed it (and presumably recommended rejection).
The Trenberth et al text continues
Friday that truth became apparent. Kevin Trenberth received a personal note of apology from both the editor-in-chief and the publisher of Remote Sensing. Wagner took this unusual and admirable step after becoming aware of the paper’s serious flaws. By resigning publicly in an editorial posted online, Wagner hopes that at least some of this damage can be undone.
My Comment:
My son has posted on this (see). I agree; for Kevin Trenberth to receive an apology is quite bizarre.
Their text continues
Unfortunately this is not the first time the science conducted by Roy Spencer and colleagues has been found lacking.
Spencer, a University of Alabama, Huntsville, climatologist, and his colleagues have a history of making serious technical errors in their effort to cast doubt on the seriousness of climate change. Their errors date to the mid-1990s, when their satellite temperature record reportedly showed the lower atmosphere was cooling. As obvious and serious errors in that analysis were made public, Spencer and Christy were forced to revise their work several times and, not surprisingly, their findings agree better with those of other scientists around the world: the atmosphere is warming.
My Comment:
This statement of the history is a fabrication and is an ad hominem attack. The errors in their analysis were all minor and were identified as soon as found. Such corrections are a normal part of the scientific process as exemplified recently in the finding of a substantial error in the ERA-40 reanalysis;
Screen, James A., Ian Simmonds, 2011: Erroneous Arctic Temperature Trends in the ERA-40 Reanalysis: A Closer Look. J. Climate, 24, 2620–2627. doi: 10.1175/2010JCLI4054.1.
My direct experience with the UAH-MSU data analysis has been over more than a decade. I will share two examples here of the rigor with which they assess and correct, when needed, their analyses.
First, at one of the CCSP 1.1 committee meetings that I attended [for the report Temperature Trends in the Lower Atmosphere: Steps for Understanding and Reconciling Differences (in Chicago)], an error was brought to the attention of Roy Spencer and John Christy by the lead investigators of the RSS MSU project (Mears and Wentz).
The venue at which this error was brought up (in our committee meeting) was a clear attempt to discredit John and Roy’s research as we sat around the table. Roy found a fix within a few minutes, and concluded it was minor. This fix was implemented when he returned to Alabama.
When I saw how this “exposure” of an error was presented (in front of all of us, instead of in private via e-mail or phone call), I became convinced that a major goal of this committee (under the leadership of Tom Karl) was to discredit them. I told John this at a break right after this occurred. At a later meeting (in December 2008),
I explicitly saw Tom Karl disparage the Christy and Spencer research.
In order to further examine the robustness of the Christy and Spencer analyses, in 2006 I asked Professor Ben Herman, who is an internationally well-respect expert in atmospheric remote sensing, to examine the Christy and Spencer UAH MSU and the Wentz and Mears RSS MSU data analyses. He worked with a student to do this and completed the following study
Randall, R. M., and B. M. Herman (2007), Using Limited Time Period Trends as a Means to Determine Attribution of Discrepancies in Microwave Sounding Unit Derived Tropospheric Temperature Time Series, J. Geophys. Res., doi:10.1029/2007JD008864
which includes the finding that
“Comparison of MSU data with the reduced Radiosonde Atmospheric Temperature Products for Assessing Climate radiosonde data set indicates that RSS’s method (use of climate model) of determining diurnal effects is likely overestimating the correction in the LT channel. Diurnal correction signatures still exist in the RSS LT time series and are likely affecting the long-term trend with a warm bias.”
The robustness of the UAH MSU [the Christy and Spencer analysis] is summarized in the text
“Figure 5 shows that 10-year trends center on the mid-1994’s through 10 year trends centered on the mid-1995’s indicates the RSS−Sonde trends are significantly different from zero where the Sonde−UAH trends are not. In addition, for 10-year trends centered on late-1999 through 10- years trend centered on early 2000 the RSS−Sonde trends are significantly different from zero where Sonde−UAH are marginally not. Another key feature in the RSS−Sonde series is the rapid departure in trend magnitude from trends centered on 1995 through trends centered on late-1999 where the Sonde−UAH magnitude in trends is nearly constant. These features are consistent with the diurnal correction signatures previously discussed. These findings [in] the RSS method for creating the diurnal correction (use of a climate model) is [the] cause for discrepancies between RSS and UAH databases in the LT channel.”
The latest Trenberth et al article is a continuation of this ad hominem effort to discredit John Christy and Roy Spencer.
The Trenberth et al article continues
Over the years, Spencer and Christy developed a reputation for making serial mistakes that other scientists have been forced to uncover. Last Thursday, for instance, the Journal of Geophysical Research – Atmospheres published a study led by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory climate scientist Ben Santer. Their findings showed that Christy erred in claiming that recent atmospheric temperature trends are not replicated in models.
This trend continues: On Tuesday the journal Geophysical Research Letters will publish a peer-reviewed study by Texas A&M University atmospheric scientist Andrew Dessler that undermines Spencer’s arguments about the role of clouds in the Earth’s energy budget.
We only wish the media would cover these scientific discoveries with similar vigor and enthusiasm that they displayed in tackling Spencer’s now-discredited findings.
My Comment:
Roy Spencer is hardly discredited because there are papers that disagree with his analysis and conclusions. This will sort itself out in the peer-reviewed literature after he has an opportunity to respond with a follow on paper, and/or a Comment/Reply exchange. Similarly, John Christy can respond to the Santer et al paper that is referred to in the Trenberth et al article.
What is disturbing, however, in the Trenberth et al article is its tone and disparagement of two outstanding scientists. Instead of addressing the science issues, they resort to statements such as Spencer and Christy making “serial mistakes”. This is truly a hatchet job and will only further polarize the climate science debate
Here is a quote from Trenberth et al. : “…it is evident that this paper did not get an adequate peer review. It should have received an honest vetting.” First, I disagree that it did not get an adequate peer review. Reading Wagner’s resignation statement shows that it did. They simply didn’t like the results of that peer review, took it out on Wagner, and forced him to resign.
[]As to a paper not receiving an honest vetting, an article Trenberth is a prime example of that. It appeared in 16 April 2010 issue of Science and is called „Tracking Earth’s Energy.“ Global net energy budget is shown as a graph that takes account of net radiation received, ocean heat content change and other net energy changes from melting glaciers etc. His graph shows it all adding up neatly until 2004 then energy starts to disappear. By 2008 eighty percent of global energy is “missing“ and he has no explanation for that.
[]I thought at first that some physical process could be behind it but upon re-reading the paper I noticed this sentence: “Since 2004 ~3000 Argo floats have provided regular temperature soundings of the upper 2000 m of the ocean, giving new confidence in the ocean heat content assessment.“ Now what do you know, new equipment goes on line and energy does a disappearing act! If I had been the reviewer I would have sent him back rechecking and calibrating the equipment until the discrepancy was resolved. But apparently papers by global warming big shots just get waved through.
William, interesting article, I suggest all read it. [snip]
Bob Tisdale says:
September 5, 2011 at 8:06 am
“And what’s the common denominator for Spencer and Braswell (2011) and McLean et al (2009)? ENSO.”
Absolutely. I wonder if they will ever figure out that ENSO is something more than statistical noise? I doubt it.
Thanks for your great work on ENSO, especially the challenge to Warmista that you posted recently, and all your great posts.
re: The Daily Climate blog. This quote from an article there: (emphasis mine)
From Dr. Pielke Sr.’s blog, http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2011/09/03/e-mail-interaction-between-peter-gleick-and-i-on-wolfgang-wagners-resignation/
How, indeed. And to expand on this question – how can Mr. Gleick participate in this blatant ad hominem attack on a fellow scientist when another does not? The answer that I am most comfortable with is one party lacks character and principle. Considering all the participants, this answer solves for all the authors in this sham response to the Spencer & Braswell paper.
The Pacific Institute where Mr. Gleick has been doing the people’s work for 24 years, really needs to reevaluate the disrepute Mr. Gleick brings to that organization. They would be better served to hire a curious scientist for the position.
Too see this in perspective, I strongly suggest readers spend some time studying Lysenkoism. This climate scam is not a religion, it is a political movement, where the main propagators manipulate and control the academic process for their own motives and benefit. They also indoctrinate the children … Which I find most despicable.
I have to admit, after reading this article I was too P.O.’d last night night to leave a comment. So far I have a perfect record at WUWT for not being [snipped] and I didn’t want to endanger that. First, I’d like to thank WillR for the wonderful link from SPPI re: Trenberth. In my estimation Trenberth is beneath contempt (along with Karl, Mann, Romm, Oppenheimer, Santer, Hanson, Schmidt, Jones, et al).
Drs. Spencer and Christy are amazing individuals. They are pure researchers and are at the absolute apex in their field. No other “climate scientist” (not even a ’72 Sc.D. from Berkley) on the planet comes close to the expertise these fine men possess. So let’s take a gander at their detractors. We have handy Andy Dessler from Texas A&M. Being the brightest bulb in the A&M climate string is like being being the smartest kid in the remedial reading class. A while back Spencer and Dessler had an email back and forth that Roy posted on his site. In my view Dessler succeeded in proving he’s a dolt.
Then we have “climate scientist” John Abraham who is an associate professor of engineering at some no-name college up north. He teaches undergraduate engineering classes and is “expert” in heat transfer. He’s your go-to guy for air conditioning questions but he doesn’t know spit from fat meat when it comes to climate. It’s interesting that I had never heard of Peter Gleick until this little dust up. Maybe it’s just me, but I wouldn’t turn to a hydrologist and professional activist for insightful commentary on satellite analysis.
That leaves us with Kevin “missing heat” Trenberth. Let’s just hope that in 2013 President Perry will completely defund NCAR. Perhaps the odious Trenberth will slither back to New Zealand and fabricate data in his home country.
When you receive this much flak, you know you’re over a prized target. Dr. Spencer on his blog is calling for reinforcements today. Others need to step up.
Ahhh … climate scientists, rising to the occasion once again. A great big circle of friends, each reviewing each other’s works and each grabbing fistfuls of the billions in dollars of research grants. And if you’re not a part of that circle, look out! Reminds me of a cartoon by Thomas Nast on the corruption of the Tammany Ring, where each member points to the person next to him when asked, “‘Who stole the people’s money.’ Do tell … ‘Twas him.”
One would think that these three scientists would behave in the normal manner if they have such a huge problem with this paper. They would publish their own paper in response. They would firmly but politely respond with factual arguments
But they have chosen a much different response using personal insults, innuendo and smears.
You can almost smell the fear in their childish response. Fear that what they have known for a long time and have concealed has now been revealed. Fear that their primo positions on the AGW Gravy train are in jeopardy, fear their life’s work will soon be piled on the junk heap of other failed “science” fads and group thinking like Eugenics and Lysenkoism.
Yes it is fear and we can smell it because this trio reeks of it. An idiot could figure out this cheap & tawdry personal attack is a desperate attempt to preserve their top spot on the science fraud pecking order.
>> Hugh Pepper says:
September 5, 2011 at 8:26 am
Where’s the libel? Legitimate criticism does not equal libel. <<
Thanks. Your response is another data point to add to the growing list of proof that climate science is just a greedy new-age religion. No one but a religious fanatic would consider a pack of lies, exaggerations and halftruths to be 'legitimate criticism.'
Richard M says (September 4, 2011 at 6:34 pm): “It appears that Trenberth is extremely angry.”
Because Dr. Spencer found his “missing heat”??? Heck, if I’ve lost something and somebody finds it for me, I’m usually pretty happy about it.
We can’t ever underestimate the lengths that Trenberth and his CAGW colleagues will go to in order to save their reputations and funding. They know full well that climate science is not just a science, but a very high profile political and economic horse that they are strapped to. If that horse stumbles, they are toast. They cannot afford to lose because their careers, their income, and quite possibly their very sense of self, would be lost.
They are far past the point of scientific criticism… we are witnessing compromised advocate scientists scrambling to protect the very definition of who they think they are. They are motivated by the simplest of primal concerns.
Tilo Reber says:
September 5, 2011 at 9:44 am
Three.
Can you guess their names?
This trend continues: On Tuesday the journal Geophysical Research Letters will publish a peer-reviewed study by Texas A&M University atmospheric scientist Andrew Dessler that undermines Spencer’s arguments about the role of clouds in the Earth’s energy budget.
We only wish the media would cover these scientific discoveries with similar vigor and enthusiasm that they displayed in tackling Spencer’s now-discredited findings.
First off, the climate ‘rapid response team’ has a journal’s editorial board on their side if they can get the paper written, reviewed, and published that fast. Second of all, you can’t get much more of a ‘rapid response’ than declaring findings ‘now discredited’ before the paper is even published.
Tilo Reber says:
September 5, 2011 at 9:44 am
I find it amazing that it took three of them to come up with this short personal attack. I read the article, and I thought to myself, “this is the kind of article that many internet trolls could manufacture in about 15 minutes”. It makes me wonder how many PhD climate alarmists it takes to screw in a light bulb.
It makes me wonder how many PhD climate alarmists it takes to screw up a light bulb.
There. Fixed that minor typo for you. 8<)
RockyRoad, how about Moe, Larry, and Curly?
The bottom line is the team are caught up in a situation that is hinting at being a house of cards.
They can’t account for the missing energy from the “budget” and they are terrified Spencer is onto something.
This is the endgame, and the flat temps can’t be explained away forever.
Gary Hladik says:
September 5, 2011 at 10:49 am
Works for me, especially if The Three don their respective Moe, Larry and Curly masks. Maybe Halloween has come early this year.
Mr Christy, when Trenberth was your adviser, was he even then discussing papers that should not have been published?
RACookPE1978 on September 5, 2011 at 10:48 am responding to Tilo Reber says:
RESPONSE: None, if it’s a CFL. It comes screwed up!
They are mercurial, to say the least.
It is this massive discrepancy between the content of the published paper and the claims made for it that resulted in Wagner concluding that the RS journal had damaged its reputation because of his decision to publish a paper that was then exploited to make claims beyond its range or remit.
What specious reasoning…
Neither the publisher of a journal, nor its editorial board, are responsible for media or blog treatments of any article that appeared there—unless they placed the media treatments themselves.
Otherwise, we’d expect to see the editors of journals that published pro-CAGW articles being fired after Al Gore mentioned the articles.
Good luck with that.
Dr. Dave says:
September 5, 2011 at 10:07 am
“…Being the brightest bulb in the A&M climate string is like being being the smartest kid in the remedial reading class…”
______________________________________________________
No Aggie Joakes!
Applying Occam’s Razor to the Missing Heat Problem — perhaps there is no missing heat.
It makes me wonder how many Phd climate alarmists it takes to screw in a light bulb.
Just the one. He just stands holding the bulb in the socket and the whole world revolves around him.